1980 Stanley Cup Finals

1980 Stanley Cup Finals
Teams1*23456*Games
New York Islanders 4365354
Philadelphia Flyers  3 8 22 6 4 2

* overtime periods

Location:Uniondale (Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum) (3,4,6)
Philadelphia (Spectrum) (1,2,5)
Format:Best-of-seven
Coaches:New York: Al Arbour
Philadelphia: Pat Quinn
Captains:New York: Denis Potvin
Philadelphia: Mel Bridgman
Referees:Andy Van Hellemond (1,4)
Wally Harris (2,5)
Bob Myers (3,6)
Dates:May 13 – May 24
MVP:Bryan Trottier (New York Islanders)
Series-winning
goal:
Bob Nystrom (7:11, OT,G6)
Networks:CBC (Canada-English), SRC (Canada-French), Hughes (United States, Games 1–5), CBS (United States, Game 6)
 < 1979Stanley Cup Finals1981 > 

The 1980 Stanley Cup Final was contested by the New York Islanders in their first-ever Finals appearance and the Philadelphia Flyers, in their fourth Finals appearance, first since 1976. The Islanders would win the best-of-seven series four games to two, to win their first Stanley Cup and the third for a post-1967 expansion team after Philadelphia's Cup wins in 1974 and 1975.

Paths to the Final

For more details on this topic, see 1980 Stanley Cup playoffs.

New York defeated the Los Angeles Kings 3–1, the Boston Bruins 4–1 and the Buffalo Sabres 4–2 to advance to the final.

Philadelphia defeated the Edmonton Oilers 3–0, the New York Rangers 4–1 and the Minnesota North Stars 4–1 to make it to the final.

The series

In game one, Denis Potvin scored the first power-play overtime goal in Stanley Cup Final history. In game six, Bob Nystrom scored the Cup winner in overtime, his fourth career overtime goal, at the time putting him alone behind Maurice Richard's six on the all-time overtime goal-scoring list. Ken Morrow joined the team after winning the Olympic gold medal and added the Stanley Cup to cap a remarkable season.

In the United States, the first five games were syndicated by the Hughes Television Network. Hughes used CBC's Hockey Night in Canada feeds for the American coverage. Game six was televised in the United States by the CBS network, as a special edition of its CBS Sports Spectacular anthology series. This would be the last NHL game to air on U.S. network television until 1990, when the All-Star Game was televised on NBC. As of 2015, it is also the last Stanley Cup Finals game to be played in the afternoon (earlier than 5:00 local time).

The deciding game six was marred by one of the most infamous blown official calls in NHL playoff history. With the game tied 1-1, the Islanders Butch Goring picked up a drop pass from New York left wing Clark Gillies which had clearly gone back over the Flyers' defensive zone blue line into center ice. Linesman Leon Stickle waved the play as safe and Goring threaded a pass to right wing Duane Sutter who beat Philadelphia goalie Pete Peeters for a 2-1 New York lead. The Flyers argued vehemently to no avail. The Flyers defense and Peeters appeared to relax as if play had been blown dead once the puck went over the blue line. Flyers captain Mel Bridgman stated the play changed the momentum of the game at a critical time even though the Flyers scored shortly afterwards to tie the score 2-2. Stickle admitted after the game that he had blown the call.[1]

The series-winning overtime goal in game six was scored by Bobby Nystrom and assisted by fellow third liners John Tonelli and Lorne Henning. Nystrom's redirection of Tonelli's cross ice pass from just above the Flyers left side face-off circle, floated up and over goalie Pete Peeters' blocker before the Philadelphia keeper could slide over to stop the puck. Henning's "thread the needle" pass was a key component, of the goal.

Date Visitors Score Home Score Notes
Tue, May 13 New York4 Philadelphia 3 OT
Thu, May 15 New York3 Philadelphia 8
Sat, May 17 Philadelphia 2New York 6
Mon, May 19 Philadelphia 2 New York 5
Thu, May 22 New York3 Philadelphia 6
Sat, May 24 Philadelphia 4 New York 5 OT

New York wins the series 4–2.

New York Islanders - 1980 Stanley Cup champions

Roster

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders


  Coaching and administrative staff

Stanley Cup engraving

^-Steve Corais (Director of Public Relations) was included on the team, but his name was left off the Stanley Cup.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Blumenstock, Kathy (June 2, 1980). "Putting the Hammer to the Old Bugaboo". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
Preceded by
Montreal Canadiens
1979
New York Islanders
Stanley Cup Champions

1980
Succeeded by
New York Islanders
1981
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