So Many Seasons, So Little Time
By Glenn Guzzo
Here’s a
twist on those great-team tournaments that could be just right for gamers who
have more Strat-O-Matic seasons than they can play.
This gaming
method is especially useful for hockey and football gamers who have enjoyed
receiving three historic seasons per year and now have a string of consecutive
seasons. Unlike the traditional great-team tournaments involving cross-era
play, this one takes teams from several seasons in the same era.
In this
example, four regular-season champions from a five-year period of the National
Hockey League’s Original Six era faced off in a tournament akin to the
four-team playoffs of the era.
Two rounds
of best-of-seven series would give any gamer familiarity with all of these
teams.
1962-63 Toronto:
35 wins, 82 points, +41 goal differential.
The Maple Leafs haven’t won a
Stanley Cup since the end of the Original Six era in 1967, but from 1961-62
through 1966-67, they won four. This was the best of them, the first (and last)
Toronto squad since 1947-48 to finish
best in the NHL during the regular season.
Frank Mahovlich
and Dave Keon led the offense, while the blueline foursome of Tim Horton (a 5), Allan Stanley, Carl
Brewer and Bob Baun (all 4s) added imposing defense.
Johnny Bower was the steady stand-up goaltender. The team had 10 future Hall of Famers.
1964-65 Detroit:
40 wins, 87 points, +49 goal differential
After a
drought since the 1950s, the Red Wings had a formidable team again, preceding
an even longer drought after expansion. Though atop the standings, Detroit
did not win the Stanley Cup.
Hall of
Fame forwards Gordie Howe, Norm Ullman
and Alex Delvecchio led the offense, supported by HOF
defensemen Bill Gadsby and Marcel Pronovost
and spectacular young goalie Roger Crozier.
1965-66 Montreal:
41 wins, 90 points, +66 goal differential
The Canadiens managed to win consecutive Stanley Cups in 1965
and 1966 with players who marked transition from the Habs’
dynasty of the late 1950s (Jean Beliveau, Henri
Richard, Ralph Backstrom, Claude Provost and Jean-Guy
Talbot) and their dynasty of the late 1970s (Yvan Cournoyer, Jimmy Roberts).
In 1965-66, young, but experienced
players like Jacques Laperriere, J.C. Tremblay, Bobby
Rousseau and Gilles Tremblay played major roles. HOF Goalie Gump Worsley, long a New York Ranger and recently a Canadien, was at his best this season.
1966-67 Chicago:
41 wins, 94 points, +74 differential
In all the
years since Chicago’s only Stanley
Cup in 1961, this team may have had the best chance to repeat the success. Of
the teams in this fantasy playoff, the Hawks scored the most goals and allowed
the fewest. Alas, Chicago did not
even make it to the Stanley Cup finals.
Bobby
Hull’s 52 goals in ’66-67 were the most of any player in this playoff. Stan Mikita’s 62 assists and 97 points were tops, too. Mikita’s Scooter Line mates, Kenny Wharram
and Doug Mohns, Hull’s
centerman Phil Esposito and mobile defenseman Pierre Pilote added to the attack. Young Denis DeJordy
and veteran HOF’er Glenn Hall formed a potent
goaltending tandem.
I had no
trouble eliminating Boston and New
York from the playoffs, since they did such a
consistent job of it themselves. The Rangers and Bruins finished fifth and
sixth every season from 1963-67 except in the final year, when New
York finished fourth, then made a hasty exit from the
playoffs.
The two Stanley Cup winners earned
the top seeds and home-ice advantage. Montreal,
the more dominant of the two, should draw the weaker non-Cup winner, Detroit.
That seemed fitting. After Detroit
won the regular season in ’64-65, Montreal
knocked them off in the first round of the playoffs, and then won the Cup. The
next season, the two teams met in the finals and the Red Wings shocked all of
hockey by winning the first two games at the Montreal Forum. But the Canadiens retaliated by taking the next two in Detroit
and clinching the Cup in six games.
The stalwart defenders in Toronto
had to deal with high-scoring Chicago.
This seemed fitting, too. When the Maple Leafs finished first in 1962-63, they
were one point ahead of the Blackhawks. When Chicago
finished first in 1966-67, it was Toronto
that knocked the Blackhawks out in the first round of
the playoffs, and then won the Cup.
Semi-Finals: (1) Montreal vs. (4) Detroit
Down 3-1 in
the first game at the Montreal Forum, Detroit
makes it 3-2 in the final 44 seconds of the second period on a goal by Delvecchio, and then steals the game with three
third-period goals. Howe’s second goal of the game ties it, Pit Martin’s puts
the Red Wings ahead and Floyd Smith’s seals the win, 5-3. Detroit
out-shoots Montreal, 42-21.
Montreal
never trailed again, winning 4-1, 4-2, 3-0 and 4-0, clinching the series at the
Forum. Beliveau and Gilles Tremblay each had three goals
and J.C. Tremblay led the Canadiens with seven
points.
Worsley,
with a card that should stop 72 percent of Goalie Rating challenges, turned
aside 86 percent of them – 30 in all, 23 of 24 after Game 1 and all 9 in the
his Game 5 shutout. He was the first star of the game in three of Montreal’s
victories.
Winner: Montreal, 4 games to 1.
Semi-Finals: (2) Toronto vs. (3) Chicago
Toronto
play classic defensive hockey in Game 1 at Maple
Leaf Gardens,
suffocating the flashy Chicago
offense before giving up a meaningless late goal in a 5-2 victory. The Blackhawks manage just 11 shots in the first two periods
and find themselves behind 3-0 midway in the third on goals by Bob Nevin, Horton and Baun. After Chicago makes it 3-1 on Eric Nesterenko’s goal, Mahovlich scores twice to put the game away against a shaky
Glenn Hall.
Chicago
turns it on and turns it around in Game 2, with Hull’s
hat trick and a 7-2 victory in a bombardment that includes 12 Goalie Rating
shots and two straight Goals against the beleaguered Bower. But the series
really turns in Game 3 at Chicago Stadium. It is the Leafs’ type of game, 1-1,
with Bower stopping all six Goalie Rating challenges through regulation. In
overtime, Mohns fails to penetrate against Nevin, but Nevin then mishandles
the puck, Mohns converts it into a breakaway and beats
Bower on one last Goalie Rating.
The
dispirited Leafs and Bower surrender four goals – two by Hull
– on Chicago’s first six shots in
Game 4 and the Hawks take command of the series, 7-3. DeJordy
had played every minute of the three Chicago
victories and the Hawks may have been overconfident on return to Toronto
for Game 5. They gave Hall another start and Mahovlich
beats him three times for a 5-2 win to keep the Leafs alive.
DeJordy is back in goal for Game 6 in Chicago
and the Hawks clinch the series 5-3. Mikita, who led
all scorers with 13 points in the series, puts the Hawks ahead
2-1 in the first period and then scores the game winner in the second.
For the
series, Hull and Wharram had six goals each. The Hawks intimidated with 55
Goalie Rating chances and nine straight-out goals. For Toronto,
Mahovlich was a force with seven goals, but Keon was a huge disappointment, with zero goals and only
two assists. His line managed just one goal all series.
Winner:
Chicago, 4 games to 2.
Finals: (1) Montreal vs. (3) Chicago
Game 1: At the Forum, the Canadiens quickly outclass Chicago,
scoring on four of their first six shots to bench DeJordy
after 10 minutes and building a 5-0 first-period lead by scoring on all three
power plays. Final score: 8-0. Beliveau has two goals
and four assists, while Rousseau adds a pair of goals and three helpers. Worsley effortlessly handles the six Goalie Ratings the
Hawks fire at him, most in the final period after the outcome is decided.
Game 2: Beliveau
and Rousseau score in another fast start, as Montreal
built a 3-0 lead in the first 10 minutes. Esposito and Wharram’s
second-period goals draw Chicago to
within 3-2, but it is fiction that the Hawks are really in this game. Beliveau and Cournoyer score
third-period power-play goals and the Canadiens win
6-2 while keeping DeJordy under siege
all game: 19 Goalie Ratings and one straight-out Goal. In feeble response, the
Hawks challenge Worsley with just four Goalie Ratings.
This series looks like a mismatch.
Game 3: Somehow the Hawks regroup on
home ice. Esposito and Mikita tally goals in the
first period and Chicago keeps the Montreal
offense under check all game (just five Goalie Ratings), giving the Hawks a 4-0
win.
Game 4: DeJordy
comes up big again, turning aside seven of eight Goalie Rating challenges, but Chicago
manages only half that offense and Montreal
clings to a 2-1 lead late in the third period. Then Nesterenko
scores at 17:27 to force overtime.
At 7:17 of the extra period, Mikita takes a pretty pass from Pat Stapleton and rips a
shot over Worsley’s shoulder for the sudden-death
game-winner that gives the Blackhawks sudden life. Can
an overtime win turn this series around for Chicago
as it had against Toronto?
Game 5: Hull,
held without a goal through the first four games, assists on Bill Hay’s game-opening
goal, then scores the next two. His eight shots on
goal help Chicago keep the pressure on all game at the Forum, emerging with a
shocking 5-0 victory. DeJordy faces a mere four
Goalie Rating challenges, while the Hawks pepper Worsley
with 12 and one straight-out Goal. Suddenly,
it’s Montreal that must win two
straight, including the next one on hostile ice.
Game 6: Montreal
knows it must weather an early surge, but it can’t do it. Pilote
sets up Mohns’ game-opening goal at 8:22 of the first period, then
sets up Mikita for a power-play goal at 11:47. The Canadiens
are in big trouble, until their big captain, Beliveau,
takes over the game.
His tally at 15:50 cuts the Chicago
lead to 2-1. His second goal at 1:41
of the second period ties it and five minutes later he sets up Rousseau for Montreal’s
first lead. Dick Duff adds a Montreal
goal for a 4-2 lead at the end of two periods and the Canadiens
skate to a 6-3 victory. Back to Montreal for the
finale.
Game 7: A furious finish between heavyweights includes 21 Goalie
Rating challenges and a very unlikely hero.
An eye-opener: Chicago,
not Montreal, comes out blazing at
the Forum, out-shooting the Canadiens in the first
period, 18-4. Hull is playing like
a man possessed, but Worsley stymies two of his
Goalie Rating challenges and two more from other Hawks. Thanks to Worsley’s performance it’s Montreal
that scores first, a goal by Provost at 9:31
of the first period. But exactly one minute later, Hull
ties it on a power-play goal. Finally, at 18:35, J.C. Tremblay connects on a
Montreal power play – the Canadiens’ second goal on
only three shots and it gives the Habs a 2-1 lead at
the end of one period. Worsley has stopped six Goalie
Rating challenges – four by Hull.
Then another shocker: Montreal fourth-liner
Jimmy Roberts starts buzzing the Blackhawks, firing
shot after shot, six in all. Most of these are harmless on a card reflecting
Roberts’ five goals for all of 1966-67, but he’s keeping the puck away from Chicago’s
dangerous shooters. Then, with the help of a Rousseau setup, Roberts finds a
Goal 1-11 on a dice roll 2 that eludes DeJordy at
2:41 of the second period to give the Canadiens a
threatening two-goal lead, 3-1.
This could have been a demoralizer,
but Hay converts a Hull pass to
make it 3-2. Montreal counters when
Beliveau sets up Rousseau for another two-goal Canadiens lead, but Wharram answers
by burying a breakaway to cut the lead to 4-3. Chicago
will not relent.
Still in the second period, DeJordy has to thwart a startling Goalie Rating challenge
from Roberts, but 30 seconds later at 17:30,
Roberts takes a pass from Beliveau and again finds
the one Goalie Rating on his Inside Shot column (dice roll 9). This one surprises
DeJordy for a 5-3 Montreal
lead that carries over into the third period.
With the Canadiens
protecting a two-goal lead at home, the Hawks never get close to another goal.
Gilles Tremblay’s empty-net goal ends the desperation, and the series, 6-3.
The Conn Smythe winner is the Big Bell, Beliveau,
the leader with 10 goals and 22 points in 12 games. But who is the second man
to escort the Stanley Cup around the Forum rink? The first
star of the deciding Game 7 – Little Jimmy Roberts.