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1974–75 NHL season
National Hockey League season
National Hockey League season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | 1974–75 NHL season |
| league | National Hockey League |
| sport | Ice hockey |
| duration | October 9, 1974 – May 27, 1975 |
| no_of_teams | 18 |
| no_of_games | 80 |
| TV | CBC, CTV, SRC (Canada) |
| NBC (United States) | |
| draft | Draft |
| draft_link | 1974 NHL Draft |
| top_pick_link | List of first overall NHL draft picks |
| top_pick | Greg Joly |
| picked_by | Washington Capitals |
| season | Regular season |
| season_champs | Philadelphia Flyers |
| MVP | Bobby Clarke (Flyers) |
| MVP_link | Hart Memorial Trophy |
| top_scorer | Bobby Orr (Bruins) |
| top_scorer_link | Art Ross Trophy |
| playoffs | Playoffs |
| playoffs_link | 1975 Stanley Cup playoffs |
| finals | Stanley Cup |
| finals_link | 1975 Stanley Cup Finals |
| finals_champ | Philadelphia Flyers |
| finals_runner-up | Buffalo Sabres |
| playoffs_MVP | Bernie Parent (Flyers) |
| playoffs_MVP_link | Conn Smythe Trophy |
| nextseason_year | [1975–76](1975-76-nhl-season) |
| prevseason_year | [1973–74](1973-74-nhl-season) |
| seasonslistnames | NHL |
NBC (United States) | finals_runner-up = Buffalo Sabres The 1974–75 NHL season was the 58th season of the National Hockey League. Two new teams, the Washington Capitals and Kansas City Scouts, were added, increasing the number of teams to 18. To accommodate the new teams, the NHL re-organized its divisional structure and playoff format. The regular season was expanded to 80 games per team (which would be the case until 1992–93). The Philadelphia Flyers won the Stanley Cup for the second consecutive year.
League business
Expansion and realignment
The Washington Capitals and Kansas City Scouts were added as expansion teams. The 1974 NHL expansion draft was held on June 12 to fill the rosters of the two new teams.
With the number of teams increased to 18, the NHL bumped up the number of regular season games from 78 to 80, and split the previously two-division league into two conferences with four divisions. Because the new conferences and divisions had little to do with North American geography, geographical references were removed until 1993–94. The East Division became the Prince of Wales Conference and consisted of the Adams Division and Norris Division. The West Division became the Clarence Campbell Conference and consisted of the Patrick Division and Smythe Division. The Capitals had the worst season ever recorded in the history of major professional hockey, and the third worst in the postwar era the following season, while the Scouts the following season will have the fifth worst record of the postwar era. The Clarence S. Campbell Bowl and Prince of Wales Trophy (previously awarded to the first-place finishers of the West Division and East Division respectively) now became awarded to the first-place finishers of the Campbell Conference and the Wales Conference, respectively.
Cancelled relocation
In early 1975, newspapers reported that the California Golden Seals and Pittsburgh Penguins were to be relocated to Denver and Seattle respectively, in an arrangement that would have seen the two teams sold to groups in those cities that had already been awarded "conditional" franchises for the 1976–77 season. After staunchly rejecting previous franchise relocation attempts, league president Clarence Campbell saw this as a method by which the NHL might extricate itself from two problem markets, while honoring the expansion commitments it had made. The Penguins ended up staying in Pittsburgh (and ultimately, over time, made Pittsburgh one of the NHL's stronger markets), while the Golden Seals moved to Cleveland in 1976 to become the Cleveland Barons before merging with the Minnesota North Stars in 1978. The Scouts gave up on Kansas City after two seasons and moved to Denver to become the Colorado Rockies in 1976 before moving east to East Rutherford, New Jersey, in 1982 and becoming the New Jersey Devils; Denver returned to the NHL in 1995 when the Quebec Nordiques moved there and became the Colorado Avalanche, where they remain to this day. Seattle was later awarded an expansion team, the Seattle Kraken, in 2018 that began play in 2021.
Amateur draft
The 1974 NHL amateur draft was held on May 28–30. For the first time, the draft was held at the NHL offices in Montreal, Quebec. Greg Joly was selected first overall by the Washington Capitals.
Arena changes
- The expansion Kansas City Scouts moved into Kemper Arena.
- The expansion Washington Capitals moved into the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland.
Regular season
For the first time ever in the National Hockey League, there was a three-way tie for first place overall. The respective divisional leaders of the Norris (Montreal Canadiens), Patrick (Philadelphia Flyers), and Adams (Buffalo Sabres) all had 113 points. By virtue of having the most wins, the Flyers were accorded the league's best record and held home-ice advantage in the playoffs, where they eventually met the Sabres in the Stanley Cup Finals.
The Vancouver Canucks, which had been playing in the original East Division since they debuted in the league, were moved over to the Campbell Conference and led the way in the Smythe Division with a meager 86 points.
Bobby Orr won the scoring title for the second time, the only defenceman in the history of the NHL to accomplish this feat.
The surprise team of the year were the Los Angeles Kings. The Kings, with their disciplined defensive style, and excellent goaltending tandem of Rogie Vachon and Gary Edwards, battled Montreal all year for first place. The Kings opened their season by beating the defending champion Philadelphia Flyers in Philadelphia and tying the Canadiens in Montreal. The Kings lost only twice in their first 26 games, and on Christmas, Montreal had only a two-point lead in the standings. When L.A. won in Montreal in mid-January, they were back in first place. The teams continued to battle, with the Canadiens finally clinching first place with three games to play.
Final standings
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against Note: Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold
Prince of Wales Conference
Clarence Campbell Conference
Playoffs
Playoff seeds
With the new conference and division structure, a new postseason format was also introduced. The top three teams in each division made the playoffs. All 12 clubs then were seeded 1–12 based on regular season points, regardless of conference or division.
Note: Only teams that qualified for the playoffs are listed here.
- Philadelphia Flyers, Patrick Division champions, Clarence Campbell Conference regular season champions – 113 points (51 wins)
- Buffalo Sabres, Adams Division champions, Prince of Wales Conference regular season champions – 113 points (49 wins)
- Montreal Canadiens, Norris Division champions – 113 points (47 wins)
- Los Angeles Kings – 105 points
- Boston Bruins – 94 points
- Pittsburgh Penguins – 89 points
- New York Rangers – 88 points (37 wins)
- New York Islanders – 88 points (33 wins)
- Vancouver Canucks, Smythe Division champions – 86 points
- St. Louis Blues – 84 points
- Chicago Black Hawks – 82 points
- Toronto Maple Leafs – 78 points
Playoff bracket
Under the new postseason format, the NHL began using "re-seeding" instead of a fixed bracket playoff system: in each round, the highest remaining seed was matched against the lowest remaining seed, the second-highest remaining seed played the second-lowest remaining seed, and so forth.
Regardless of playoff seed, all four division winners received a bye to the Quarterfinals, including this season's 9th overall seeded Smythe Division champion Vancouver Canucks.
Each series in the Preliminary Round was played in a best-of-three format while each series in the other three rounds were played in a best-of-seven format (scores in the bracket indicate the number of games won in each series).
| RD1-seed03=1 | RD1-team03=Los Angeles | RD1-score03=1 | RD1-seed04=8 | RD1-team04=Toronto | RD1-score04=2 | RD1-seed05=3 | RD1-team05=Pittsburgh | RD1-score05=2 | RD1-seed06=6 | RD1-team06=St. Louis | RD1-score06=0 | RD1-seed07=4 | RD1-team07=NY Rangers | RD1-score07=1 | RD1-seed08=5 | RD1-team08=NY Islanders | RD1-score08=2 | RD1-seed11=2 | RD1-team11=Boston | RD1-score11=1 | RD1-seed12=7 | RD1-team12=Chicago | RD1-score12=2 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=Philadelphia | RD2-score01=4 | RD2-seed02=8 | RD2-team02=Toronto | RD2-score02=0 | RD2-seed03=4 | RD2-team03=Pittsburgh | RD2-score03=3 | RD2-seed04=5 | RD2-team04=NY Islanders | RD2-score04=4 | RD2-seed05=2 | RD2-team05=Buffalo | RD2-score05=4 | RD2-seed06=7 | RD2-team06=Chicago | RD2-score06=1 | RD2-seed07=3 | RD2-team07=Montreal | RD2-score07=4 | RD2-seed08=6 | RD2-team08=Vancouver | RD2-score08=1 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=Philadelphia | RD3-score01=4 | RD3-seed02=4 | RD3-team02=NY Islanders | RD3-score02=3 | RD3-seed03=2 | RD3-team03=Buffalo | RD3-score03=4 | RD3-seed04=3 | RD3-team04=Montreal | RD3-score04=2 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=Philadelphia | RD4-score01=4 | RD4-seed02=2 | RD4-team02=Buffalo | RD4-score02=2
Preliminary round
(1) Los Angeles Kings vs. (8) Toronto Maple Leafs
The Los Angeles Kings entered the preliminary round as the top seed (and fourth seed overall) earning 105 points during the regular season. The Toronto Maple Leafs earned 78 points during the regular season and entered the preliminary round as the eighth seed (and twelfth seed overall). This was the first playoff series between these two teams. Los Angeles won this year's season series earning 9 of 10 points during the regular season.
|1-1-1 =Blaine Stoughton (1) – 15:40 |1-1-2 =14:31 – Bob Berry (1) |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =16:25 – Gene Carr (1) |1-3-1 =Ron Ellis (1) – 18:30 |1-3-2 =No scoring |1-4-1 =No scoring |1-4-2 =08:53 – Mike Murphy (1) |goalie1-1 =Gord McRae |goalie1-2 =Rogie Vachon
|2-1-1 =10:25 – Darryl Sittler (1) |2-1-2 =No scoring |2-2-1 =No scoring |2-2-2 =Mike Murphy (2) – pp – 10:45 |2-3-1 =08:45 – Dave Dunn (1) |2-3-2 =Mike Murphy (3) – pp – 04:05 |2-4-1 =10:19 – Blaine Stoughton (2) |2-4-2 =No scoring |goalie2-1 =Gord McRae |goalie2-2 =Rogie Vachon
|3-1-1 =George Ferguson (1) – 04:55 |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =Inge Hammarstrom (1) – 14:34 |3-2-2 =No scoring |3-3-1 =No scoring |3-3-2 =13:09 – Don Kozak (1) |goalie3-1 =Gord McRae |goalie3-2 =Rogie Vachon
(2) Boston Bruins vs. (7) Chicago Black Hawks
The Boston Bruins entered the preliminary round as the second seed (and fifth seed overall) earning 94 points during the regular season. The Chicago Black Hawks earned 82 points during the regular season and entered the preliminary round as the seventh seed (and eleventh seed overall). This was the fifth playoff series between these two teams, with Boston winning all four previous meetings. Thus was a rematch of last year's Stanley Cup Semifinals where Boston won in six games. The teams split this year's regular season series.
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =08:38 – Johnny Bucyk (1) 15:03 – Carol Vadnais (1) 15:12 – Andre Savard (1) |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =10:39 – Phil Esposito (1) 16:01 – Gregg Sheppard (1) 16:50 – Gregg Sheppard (2) |1-3-1 =Dick Redmond (1) – pp – 04:20 John Marks (1) – 19:59 |1-3-2 =01:29 – pp – Phil Esposito (2) 11:03 – Phil Esposito (3) |goalie1-1 =Tony Esposito, Michel Dumas |goalie1-2 =Gilles Gilbert
|2-1-1 =03:15 – Ivan Boldirev (1) 14:37 – pp – Stan Mikita (1) |2-1-2 =No scoring |2-2-1 =15:39 – Dale Tallon (1) |2-2-2 =Don Marcotte (1) – 04:35 Ken Hodge (1) – pp – 13:32 |2-3-1 =No scoring |2-3-2 =Bobby Orr (1) – sh – 01:31 |2-4-1 =07:33 – Ivan Boldirev (2) |2-4-2 =No scoring |goalie2-1 =Tony Esposito |goalie2-2 =Gilles Gilbert
|3-1-1 =Keith Magnuson (1) – 01:26 Cliff Koroll (1) – pp – 19:13 |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =J.P. Bordeleau (1) – 02:27 Cliff Koroll (2) – pp – 15:34 John Marks (2) – 18:24 |3-2-2 =07:16 – Bobby Schmautz (1) 09:32 – Hank Nowak (1) 18:58 – Gregg Sheppard (3) |3-3-1 =J.P. Bordeleau (2) – 11:27 |3-3-2 =15:55 – Phil Esposito (4) |goalie3-1 =Tony Esposito |goalie3-2 =Gilles Gilbert
(3) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (6) St. Louis Blues
The Pittsburgh Penguins entered the preliminary round as the third seed (and sixth seed overall) earning 89 points during the regular season. The St. Louis Blues earned 84 points during the regular season and entered the preliminary round as the sixth seed (and tenth seed overall). This was the second playoff series between these two teams, with St. Louis winning the only previous meeting in six games in the 1970 Stanley Cup Semifinals. The teams split this year's regular season series.
|1-1-1 =Claude Larose (1) – 12:21 Wayne Merrick (1) – pp – 17:19 |1-1-2 =No scoring |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =19:45 – Bob Kelly (1) |1-3-1 =Garry Unger (1) – 00:54 |1-3-2 =03:45 – Chuck Arnason (1) 09:57 – pp – Chuck Arnason (2) 17:29 – Pierre Larouche (1) |goalie1-1 =John Davidson |goalie1-2 =Gary Inness
|2-1-1 =03:12 – pp – Red Berenson (1) 09:57 – Bill Collins (1) |2-1-2 =Jean Pronovost (1) – 05:16 Ron Stackhouse (1) – pp – 17:56 |2-2-1 =11:26 – Larry Sacharuk (1) |2-2-2 =Syl Apps Jr. (1) – pp – 14:47 |2-3-1 =No scoring |2-3-2 =Colin Campbell (1) – sh – 04:33 Vic Hadfield (1) – 16:12 |goalie2-1 =Ed Johnston |goalie2-2 =Gary Inness
(4) New York Rangers vs. (5) New York Islanders
Both the New York Rangers and the New York Islanders entered the preliminary round with 88 points earned during the regular season. However, the Rangers entered as the fourth seed (and seventh seed overall) by winning the tie-breaker with the New York Islanders in wins (37 to 33) while the Islanders entered the preliminary round as the fifth seed (and eighth seed overall). This was the first playoff series between these two teams. The Rangers won this year's season series earning 7 of 12 points during the regular season. J.P Parise scored the game-winning goal just 11 seconds into overtime of game 3 as the Islanders won their first playoff series ever.
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =No scoring |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =08:11 – Brad Park (1) 19:25 – Pete Stemkowski (1) |1-3-1 =Billy Harris (1) – pp – 05:00 Jean Potvin (1) – 11:51 Clark Gillies (1) – 13:30 |1-3-2 =No scoring |goalie1-1 =Chico Resch |goalie1-2 =Ed Giacomin
|2-1-1 =08:29 – pp – J.P. Parise (1) |2-1-2 =Jean Ratelle (1) – pp – 03:29 Bill Fairbairn (1) – pp – 06:10 Bill Fairbairn (2) – sh – 07:01 Ron Harris (1) – 10:56 |2-2-1 =17:15 – Bert Marshall (1) |2-2-2 =Steve Vickers (1) – 02:20 Jerry Butler (1) – 09:58 Walt Tkaczuk (1) – 17:51 |2-3-1 =05:34 – Jean Potvin (2) |2-3-2 =Rod Gilbert (1) – 02:37 |goalie2-1 =Chico Resch, Billy Smith |goalie2-2 =Gilles Villemure
|3-1-1 =Clark Gillies (2) – 16:00 |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =Denis Potvin (1) – pp – 08:26 Denis Potvin (2) – sh – 12:51 |3-2-2 =No scoring |3-3-1 =No scoring |3-3-2 =04:44 – Bill Fairbairn (3) 13:27 – pp – Bill Fairbairn (4) 13:42 – Steve Vickers (2) |3-4-1 =J.P. Parise (2) – 00:11 |3-4-2 =No scoring |goalie3-1 =Billy Smith |goalie3-2 =Gilles Villemure, Ed Giacomin
Quarterfinals
(1) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (8) Toronto Maple Leafs
The Philadelphia Flyers entered the playoffs as the defending Stanley Cup champions, the Patrick Division champions, the Clarence Campbell Conference regular season champions, and the first seed overall earning 113 points during the regular season, winning the tie-breaker over both Buffalo and Montreal in total wins. The Toronto Maple Leafs were seeded eighth in the Quarterfinals as the lowest remaining seed in the playoffs and qualified for the Quarterfinals by defeating the Los Angeles Kings in the preliminary round. This was the first playoff series between these two teams. Philadelphia won this year's season series earning 7 of 8 points during the regular season.
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =05:50 – pp – Rick MacLeish (1) 10:21 – Rick MacLeish (2) |1-2-1 =Tiger Williams (1) – pp – 11:40 Blaine Stoughton (3) – pp – 18:56 Darryl Sittler (2) – pp – 19:31 |1-2-2 =No scoring |1-3-1 =No scoring |1-3-2 =09:25 – Bill Barber (1) 11:46 – Reggie Leach (1) 12:02 – Jimmy Watson (1) 19:53 – Rick MacLeish (3) |goalie1-1 =Gord McRae |goalie1-2 =Bernie Parent
|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =No scoring |2-2-1 =No scoring |2-2-2 =03:35 – pp – Andre Dupont (1) 04:36 – Terry Crisp (1) |2-3-1 =No scoring |2-3-2 =05:12 – Terry Crisp (2) |goalie2-1 =Gord McRae |goalie2-2 =Bernie Parent
|3-1-1 =No scoring |3-1-2 =Gary Dornhoefer (1) – 03:08 |3-2-1 =No scoring |3-2-2 =Rick MacLeish (4) – 01:59 |3-3-1 =No scoring |3-3-2 =No scoring |goalie3-1 =Gord McRae |goalie3-2 =Bernie Parent
|4-1-1 =02:47 – Blaine Stoughton (4) 11:17 – pp – Ron Ellis (2) |4-1-2 =Reggie Leach (2) – 03:38 Reggie Leach (3) – pp – 15:48 |4-2-1 =No scoring |4-2-2 =Bill Barber (2) – 08:22 |4-3-1 =13:23 – Ron Ellis (3) |4-3-2 =No scoring |4-4-1 =No scoring |4-4-2 =Andre Dupont (2) – 01:45 |goalie4-1 =Gord McRae |goalie4-2 =Bernie Parent
(2) Buffalo Sabres vs. (7) Chicago Black Hawks
The Buffalo Sabres entered the playoffs as the Adams Division champions, the Prince of Wales Conference regular season champions, and the second seed overall earning 113 points during the regular season, losing the most wins tie-breaker to Philadelphia while winning the same tie-breaker over Montreal. The Chicago Black Hawks were seeded seventh in the Quarterfinals as the second lowest remaining seed in the playoffs and qualified for the Quarterfinals by defeating the Boston Bruins in the preliminary round. This was the first playoff series between these two teams. Buffalo won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =02:11 – Danny Gare (1) 14:35 – Gilbert Perrault (1) 17:25 – Fred Stanfield (1) |1-2-1 =Ivan Boldirev (3) – 14:22 |1-2-2 =No scoring |1-3-1 =No scoring |1-3-2 =18:30 – pp – Rick Martin (1) |goalie1-1 =Tony Esposito |goalie1-2 =Gerry Desjardins
|2-1-1 =Stan Mikita (2) – 00:51 |2-1-2 =01:35 – Danny Gare (2) 09:59 – Rick Dudley (1) 15:09 – pp – Rick Dudley (2) |2-2-1 =No scoring |2-2-2 =No scoring |2-3-1 =No scoring |2-3-2 =No scoring |goalie2-1 =Tony Esposito |goalie2-2 =Gerry Desjardins
|3-1-1 =01:26 – Grant Mulvey (1) 05:20 – pp – Ivan Boldirev (4) 14:43 – Dick Redmond (2) |3-1-2 =Rick Martin (2) – pp – 05:00 Gilbert Perreault (2) – pp – 11:57 |3-2-1 =15:38 – Cliff Koroll (3) |3-2-2 =Don Luce (1) – 08:37 |3-3-1 =No scoring |3-3-2 =Jim Schoenfeld (1) – pp – 08:23 |3-4-1 =02:31 – Stan Mikita (3) |3-4-2 =No scoring |goalie3-1 =Tony Esposito |goalie3-2 =Gerry Desjardins
|4-1-1 =14:17 – Grant Mulvey (2) |4-1-2 =No scoring |4-2-1 =No scoring |4-2-2 =Peter McNab (1) – 00:30 |4-3-1 =08:35 – Phil Russell (1) |4-3-2 =Jim Lorentz (1) – 00:17 Rick Martin (3) – pp – 01:47 Rene Robert (1) – 05:42 Danny Gare (3) – 10:51 Gilbert Perreault (3) – pp – 14:59 |goalie4-1 =Tony Esposito |goalie4-2 =Gerry Desjardins
|5-1-1 =Pit Martin (1) – 18:51 |5-1-2 =No scoring |5-2-1 =No scoring |5-2-2 =18:48 – Craig Ramsay (1) |5-3-1 =No scoring |5-3-2 =01:16 – Rene Robert (2) 15:54 – Jim Lorentz (2) |goalie5-1 =Tony Esposito |goalie5-2 =Gerry Desjardins
(3) Montreal Canadiens vs. (6) Vancouver Canucks
The Montreal Canadiens entered the playoffs as the Norris Division champions, and the third seed overall earning 113 points during the regular season, losing the tie-breaker to both Philadelphia and Buffalo in total wins. The Vancouver Canucks entered the playoffs as the Smythe Division champions and the sixth seed in the quarterfinals as the third lowest remaining seed in the playoffs, earning 86 points during the regular season. This was the first playoff series between these two teams. Montreal swept all four games in this year's regular season series. This series also marked the first appearance of a team representing Vancouver in the Stanley Cup playoffs in 51 years. The most recent team to represent Vancouver before this was the Vancouver Maroons who lost to the Montreal Canadiens in the 1924 Stanley Cup Semifinals.
|1-1-1 =Paulin Bordeleau (1) – 15:40 Gerry O'Flaherty (1) – 17:24 |1-1-2 =09:02 – Guy Lapointe (1) 12:17 – pp – Guy Lapointe (2) |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =09:29 – Guy Lafleur (1) 13:34 – pp – Yvan Cournoyer (1) |1-3-1 =No scoring |1-3-2 =11:04 – Guy Lafleur (2) 17:21 – Steve Shutt (1) |goalie1-1 =Ken Lockett |goalie1-2 =Ken Dryden
|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =No scoring |2-2-1 =Gerry O'Flaherty (2) – 15:08 |2-2-2 =12:39 – Doug Risebrough (1) |2-3-1 =Garry Monahan (1) – 13:46 |2-3-2 =No scoring |goalie2-1 =Gary Smith |goalie2-2 =Ken Dryden
|3-1-1 =03:15 – John Gould (1) |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =No scoring |3-2-2 =Jimmy Roberts (1) – 03:56 Bob Gainey (1) – 15:06 Jacques Lemaire (1) – 19:28 |3-3-1 =No scoring |3-3-2 =Guy Lafleur (3) – pp – 06:34 |goalie3-1 =Gary Smith |goalie3-2 =Ken Dryden
|4-1-1 =No scoring |4-1-2 =No scoring |4-2-1 =No scoring |4-2-2 =Guy Lafleur (4) – 04:06 Yvan Cournoyer (2) – 16:38 |4-3-1 =No scoring |4-3-2 =Peter Mahovlich (1) – 07:35 Serge Savard (1) – 14:17 |goalie4-1 =Gary Smith |goalie4-2 =Ken Dryden
|5-1-1 =John Gould (2) – pp – 05:32 |5-1-2 =No scoring |5-2-1 =Paulin Bordeleau (2) – pp – 05:45 Andre Boudrias (1) – 10:38 |5-2-2 =01:40 – Peter Mahovlich (2) 04:21 – Yvan Cournoyer (3) |5-3-1 =Bob Dailey (1) – 05:36 |5-3-2 =08:09 – Peter Mahovlich (3) 10:54 – Guy Lapointe (3) |5-4-1 =No scoring |5-4-2 =17:06 – Guy Lafleur (5) |goalie5-1 =Gary Smith |goalie5-2 =Ken Dryden
(4) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (5) New York Islanders
The Pittsburgh Penguins entered the Quarterfinals as the fourth seed and they qualified for this round by defeating the St. Louis Blues in the preliminary round. The New York Islanders were seeded fifth in the Quarterfinals and qualified for this round by defeating the New York Rangers in the preliminary round. This was the first playoff series between these two teams. The teams split this year's regular season series. After trailing the series 3–0, the Islanders rallied to win four straight games and take the series. They became the second North American professional sports team (after the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs) to accomplish such a feat. Ed Westfall scored the game-winning goal with 5:18 left in the third period of game seven to complete the comeback.
|1-1-1 =Andre St. Laurent (1) – 16:05 |1-1-2 =02:05 – sh – Vic Hadfield (2) 10:59 – Ron Stackhouse (2) 14:52 – Pete Laframboise (1) |1-2-1 =Bob Bourne (1) – pp – 12:10 |1-2-2 =No scoring |1-3-1 =J.P. Parise (3) – pp – 06:52 J.P. Parise (4) – 17:47 |1-3-2 =00:36 – Bob Kelly (2) 04:44 – Dave Burrows (1) |goalie1-1 =Billy Smith |goalie1-2 =Gary Inness
|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =No scoring |2-2-1 =No scoring |2-2-2 =00:24 – Jean Pronovost (2) 09:30 – Lowell MacDonald (1) |2-3-1 =Clark Gillies (3) – 15:34 |2-3-2 =14:51 – Lowell MacDonald (2) |goalie2-1 =Billy Smith |goalie2-2 =Gary Inness
|3-1-1 =No scoring |3-1-2 =Jean Pronovost (3) – 04:12 Bob Kelly (3) – 07:26 |3-2-1 =07:26 – sh – Ed Westfall (1) |3-2-2 =Bob Kelly (4) – 03:25 |3-3-1 =01:17 – Jude Drouin (1) 17:41 – Bert Marshall (2) 19:08 – Jude Drouin (2) |3-3-2 =Vic Hadfield (3) – 10:31 Syl Apps Jr. (2) – 18:15 Lowell MacDonald (3) – 19:48 |goalie3-1 =Billy Smith |goalie3-2 =Gary Inness
|4-1-1 =03:48 – pp – Andre St. Laurent (2) |4-1-2 =No scoring |4-2-1 =No scoring |4-2-2 =Bob Kelly (5) – pp – 08:18 |4-3-1 =06:16 – Clark Gillies (4) 06:55 – J.P. Parise (5) |4-3-2 =No scoring |goalie4-1 =Chico Resch |goalie4-2 =Gary Inness
|5-1-1 =Billy Harris (2) – pp – 02:11 Ralph Stewart (1) – 05:24 |5-1-2 =No scoring |5-2-1 =Ed Westfall (2) – pp – 11:47 |5-2-2 =08:14 – Vic Hadfield (4) |5-3-1 =Jude Drouin (3) – 19:30 |5-3-2 =17:06 – Lowell MacDonald (4) |goalie5-1 =Chico Resch |goalie5-2 =Gary Inness
|6-1-1 =No scoring |6-1-2 =No scoring |6-2-1 =04:07 – Ralph Stewart (2) 15:16 – Garry Howatt (1) |6-2-2 =Pierre Larouche (2) – 04:56 |6-3-1 =19:34 – Ed Westfall (3) 19:59 – Garry Howatt (2) |6-3-2 =No scoring |goalie6-1 =Chico Resch |goalie6-2 =Gary Inness
|7-1-1 =No scoring |7-1-2 =No scoring |7-2-1 =No scoring |7-2-2 =No scoring |7-3-1 =Ed Westfall (4) – 14:42 |7-3-2 =No scoring |goalie7-1 =Chico Resch |goalie7-2 =Gary Inness
Semifinals
(1) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (4) New York Islanders
This was the first playoff series between these two teams. The Flyers won this year's season series earning eight of twelve points during the regular season. After becoming the second North American professional sports team to win a best-of-seven series after trailing 3–0 in the previous round against the Penguins, the Islanders almost accomplished the same feat in this round. However, the Flyers firmly defeated them in game seven to preserve the series win. In doing so, the Islanders set a record for most consecutive playoff wins (8) when facing elimination. This would mark the last time an NHL team forced a seventh game of a best-of-seven series after trailing 3–0 until the Flyers themselves did so against Boston in the 2010 Eastern Conference Semifinals.
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =06:04 – Don Saleski (1) |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =02:39 – Bill Barber (3) 18:19 – sh – Bobby Clarke (1) |1-3-1 =No scoring |1-3-2 =01:34 – pp – Rick MacLeish (5) |goalie1-1 =Chico Resch |goalie1-2 =Wayne Stephenson
|2-1-1 =Denis Potvin (3) – pp – 05:34 |2-1-2 =03:13 – Gary Dornhoefer (2) 07:38 – Reggie Leach (4) 09:50 – pp – Tom Bladon (1) |2-2-1 =J.P. Parise (6) – pp – 12:22 |2-2-2 =00:58 – Bill Barber (4) |2-3-1 =J.P. Parise (7) – 13:46 Denis Potvin (4) – 14:00 |2-3-2 =No scoring |2-4-1 =No scoring |2-4-2 =02:56 – Bobby Clarke (2) |goalie2-1 =Billy Smith |goalie2-2 =Wayne Stephenson
|3-1-1 =No scoring |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =No scoring |3-2-2 =No scoring |3-3-1 =No scoring |3-3-2 =Reggie Leach (5) – 00:30 |goalie3-1 =Chico Resch |goalie3-2 =Bernie Parent
|4-1-1 =04:58 – pp – Ed Westfall (5) |4-1-2 =No scoring |4-2-1 =05:29 – Gerry Hart (1) 12:49 – pp – Ralph Stewart (3) |4-2-2 =Ross Lonsberry (1) – 17:24 Rick MacLeish (6) – 19:21 |4-3-1 =No scoring |4-3-2 =Rick MacLeish (7) – 04:48 |4-4-1 =01:53 – Jude Drouin (4) |4-4-2 =No scoring |goalie4-1 =Chico Resch |goalie4-2 =Bernie Parent
|5-1-1 =J.P. Parise (8) – pp – 14:19 |5-1-2 =No scoring |5-2-1 =Billy Harris (3) – 14:23 Jude Drouin (5) – 17:35 |5-2-2 =No scoring |5-3-1 =Bobby Nystrom (1) – 10:51 Garry Howatt (3) – 18:23 |5-3-2 =15:10 – Bob Kelly (1) |goalie5-1 =Chico Resch |goalie5-2 =Bernie Parent
|6-1-1 =No scoring |6-1-2 =Ross Lonsberry (2) – 01:42 |6-2-1 =16:15 – pp – Denis Potvin (5) |6-2-2 =No scoring |6-3-1 =03:42 – Gerry Hart (2) |6-3-2 =No scoring |goalie6-1 =Chico Resch |goalie6-2 =Bernie Parent
|7-1-1 =Jude Drouin (6) – pp – 05:02 |7-1-2 =00:19 – Gary Dornhoefer (3) 02:27 – pp – Rick MacLeish (8) 07:11 – pp – Rick MacLeish (9) |7-2-1 =No scoring |7-2-2 =No scoring |7-3-1 =No scoring |7-3-2 =18:52 – Rick MacLeish (10) |goalie7-1 =Chico Resch |goalie7-2 =Bernie Parent
(2) Buffalo Sabres vs. (3) Montreal Canadiens
This was the second playoff series between these two teams, with Montreal winning the only previous meeting in six games in the 1973 Stanley Cup Quarterfinals. Buffalo won this year's season series earning nine of ten points during the regular season.
|1-1-1 =Guy Lapointe (4) – pp – 00:32 Guy Lafleur (6) – 18:29 |1-1-2 =05:12 – pp – Rick Martin (4) 11:22 – Rene Robert (3) 18:07 – Rick Dudley (3) |1-2-1 =Guy Lapointe (5) – sh – 06:44 Yvan Cournoyer (4) – pp – 10:57 |1-2-2 =18:15 – Gilbert Perreault (4) |1-3-1 =Jacques Lemaire (2) – 19:36 |1-3-2 =04:20 – Jim Lorentz (3) |1-4-1 =No scoring |1-4-2 =04:42 – Danny Gare (4) |goalie1-1 =Ken Dryden |goalie1-2 =Gerry Desjardins, Roger Crozier
|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =17:20 – Don Luce (2) |2-2-1 =Yvon Lambert (1) – pp – 11:22 |2-2-2 =09:53 – Jim Lorentz (4) |2-3-1 =Henri Richard (1) – 09:00 |2-3-2 =01:27 – Craig Ramsay (2) 19:50 – Danny Gare (5) |goalie2-1 =Ken Dryden |goalie2-2 =Roger Crozier
|3-1-1 =01:38 – pp – Peter Mahovlich (4) 18:56 – Guy Lafleur (7) |3-1-2 =No scoring |3-2-1 =17:33 – Jacques Lemaire (3) |3-2-2 =No scoring |3-3-1 =01:24 – Yvon Lambert (2) 08:51 – Doug Risebrough (2) 14:55 – pp – Guy Lafleur (8) 15:22 – Guy Lafleur (9) |3-3-2 =No scoring |goalie3-1 =Ken Dryden |goalie3-2 =Gerry Desjardins, Roger Crozier
|4-1-1 =07:59 – Bob Gainey (2) 19:21 – pp – Jacques Lemaire (4) |4-1-2 =Don Luce (3) – sh – 06:42 |4-2-1 =12:51 – pp – Guy Lafleur (10) 15:30 – Yvon Lambert (3) |4-2-2 =No scoring |4-3-1 =03:08 – pp – Guy Lafleur (11) 06:34 – pp – Yvon Lambert (4) 08:48 – pp – Guy Lapointe (6) 17:52 – Glen Sather (1) |4-3-2 =Jerry Korab (1) – 10:28 |goalie4-1 =Ken Dryden |goalie4-2 =Gerry Desjardins
|5-1-1 =Jacques Lemaire (5) – 02:51 Yvan Cournoyer (5) – 19:53 |5-1-2 =02:18 – Craig Ramsay (3) 08:37 – Fred Stanfield (2) 17:03 – pp – Gilbert Perreault (5) |5-2-1 =Doug Risebrough (3) – 08:40 |5-2-2 =No scoring |5-3-1 =Jimmy Roberts (2) – 03:10 |5-3-2 =14:35 – pp – Craig Ramsay (4) |5-4-1 =No scoring |5-4-2 =05:56 – Rene Robert (4) |goalie5-1 =Ken Dryden |goalie5-2 =Gerry Desjardins
|6-1-1 =09:48 – Peter Mahovlich (5) |6-1-2 =Craig Ramsay (5) – sh – 02:05 Rick Martin (5) – 08:51 Peter McNab (2) – 12:48 |6-2-1 =No scoring |6-2-2 =Jim Lorentz (5) – 09:33 |6-3-1 =08:05 – Guy Lafleur (12) 18:55 – Peter Mahovlich (6) |6-3-2 =No scoring |goalie6-1 =Ken Dryden |goalie6-2 =Gerry Desjardins
Stanley Cup Finals
Main article: 1975 Stanley Cup Finals
The defending Stanley Cup champion Philadelphia Flyers' appeared in their second consecutive Stanley Cup Finals and second overall. In the previous year's Stanley Cup Finals, the Flyers defeated the Boston Bruins in six games. This was the Buffalo Sabres' first Stanley Cup Finals appearance in their fifth season. This was the first playoff series (and only Finals) meeting between these two teams. The Philadelphia Flyers won this year's regular season series earning seven of eight points.
In the first Stanley Cup Finals matchup between two expansion teams, the Philadelphia Flyers beat the Buffalo Sabres four games to two for their second consecutive Stanley Cup.
|1-1-1 =No scoring |1-1-2 =No scoring |1-2-1 =No scoring |1-2-2 =No scoring |1-3-1 =Rick Martin (6) – pp – 11:07 |1-3-2 =03:42 – Bill Barber (5) 07:29 – pp – Ross Lonsberry (3) 11:41 – pp – Bobby Clarke (3) 19:02 – Bill Barber (6) |goalie1-1 =Gerry Desjardins |goalie1-2 =Bernie Parent
|2-1-1 =No scoring |2-1-2 =No scoring |2-2-1 =No scoring |2-2-2 =08:24 – Reggie Leach (6) |2-3-1 =Jerry Korab (2) – 02:18 |2-3-2 =06:43 – pp – Bobby Clarke (4) |goalie2-1 =Gerry Desjardins |goalie2-2 =Bernie Parent
|3-1-1 =11:46 – Danny Gare (6) 12:03 – Rick Martin (7) |3-1-2 =Gary Dornhoefer (4) – 00:39 Don Saleski (2) – 03:09 Rick MacLeish (11) – 14:13 |3-2-1 =00:29 – Don Luce (4) |3-2-2 =Reggie Leach (7) – 14:30 |3-3-1 =09:56 – Bill Hajt (1) |3-3-2 =No scoring |3-4-1 =18:29 – Rene Robert (5) |3-4-2 =No scoring |goalie3-1 =Gerry Desjardins, Roger Crozier |goalie3-2 =Bernie Parent
|4-1-1 =No scoring |4-1-2 =Andre Dupont (3) – 11:28 |4-2-1 =03:46 – pp – Jerry Korab (3) 10:07 – pp – Gilbert Perreault (6) 15:07 – Jim Lorentz (6) |4-2-2 =Ross Lonsberry (4) – 04:20 |4-3-1 =19:28 – Danny Gare (7) |4-3-2 =No scoring |goalie4-1 =Gerry Desjardins |goalie4-2 =Bernie Parent
|5-1-1 =No scoring |5-1-2 =03:12 – Dave Schultz (1) 12:31 – Gary Dornhoefer (5) 12:50 – Bob Kelly (2) |5-2-1 =No scoring |5-2-2 =01:55 – pp – Reggie Leach (8) 09:56 – Dave Schultz (2) |5-3-1 =Don Luce (5) – 14:02 |5-3-2 =No scoring |goalie5-1 =Gerry Desjardins |goalie5-2 =Bernie Parent
|6-1-1 =No scoring |6-1-2 =No scoring |6-2-1 =No scoring |6-2-2 =No scoring |6-3-1 =No scoring |6-3-2 =Bob Kelly (3) – 00:11 Bill Clement (1) – 17:13 |goalie6-1 =Roger Crozier |goalie6-2 =Bernie Parent
Awards
| 1975 NHL awards |
|---|
| Prince of Wales Trophy: |
| (Wales Conference regular season champion) |
| Clarence S. Campbell Bowl: |
| (Campbell Conference regular season champion) |
| Art Ross Trophy: |
| (Top scorer, regular season) |
| Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy: |
| (Perseverance, sportsmanship, and dedication) |
| Calder Memorial Trophy: |
| (Top first-year player) |
| Conn Smythe Trophy: |
| (Most valuable player, playoffs) |
| Hart Memorial Trophy: |
| (Most valuable player, regular season) |
| Jack Adams Award: |
| (Best coach) |
| James Norris Memorial Trophy: |
| (Best defenceman) |
| Lady Byng Memorial Trophy: |
| (Excellence and sportsmanship) |
| Lester B. Pearson Award: |
| (Outstanding player, regular season) |
| Vezina Trophy: |
| (Goaltender(s) of team(s) with best goaltending record) |
All-Star teams
| First Team | Position | Second Team |
|---|---|---|
| Bernie Parent, Philadelphia Flyers | G | Rogie Vachon, Los Angeles Kings |
| Bobby Orr, Boston Bruins | D | Guy Lapointe, Montreal Canadiens |
| Denis Potvin, New York Islanders | D | Borje Salming, Toronto Maple Leafs |
| Bobby Clarke, Philadelphia Flyers | C | Phil Esposito, Boston Bruins |
| Guy Lafleur, Montreal Canadiens | RW | Rene Robert, Buffalo Sabres |
| Rick Martin, Buffalo Sabres | LW | Steve Vickers, New York Rangers |
Player statistics
Scoring leaders
Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points
| Player | Team | GP | G | A | Pts | PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bobby Orr | Boston Bruins | 80 | 46 | 89 | 135 | 101 |
| Phil Esposito | Boston Bruins | 79 | 61 | 66 | 127 | 62 |
| Marcel Dionne | Detroit Red Wings | 80 | 47 | 74 | 121 | 14 |
| Guy Lafleur | Montreal Canadiens | 70 | 53 | 66 | 119 | 37 |
| Peter Mahovlich | Montreal Canadiens | 80 | 35 | 82 | 117 | 64 |
| Bobby Clarke | Philadelphia Flyers | 80 | 27 | 89 | 116 | 125 |
| Rene Robert | Buffalo Sabres | 74 | 40 | 60 | 100 | 75 |
| Rod Gilbert | New York Rangers | 76 | 36 | 61 | 97 | 22 |
| Gilbert Perreault | Buffalo Sabres | 68 | 39 | 57 | 96 | 36 |
| Rick Martin | Buffalo Sabres | 68 | 52 | 43 | 95 | 72 |
Source: NHL.
Leading goaltenders
Note: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts
| Player | Team | GP | MIN | GA | GAA | W | L | T | SO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bernie Parent | Philadelphia Flyers | 68 | 4041 | 137 | 2.03 | 44 | 14 | 10 | 12 |
| Rogatien Vachon | L.A. Kings | 54 | 3239 | 121 | 2.24 | 27 | 14 | 13 | 6 |
| Gary Edwards | L.A. Kings | 27 | 1561 | 61 | 2.34 | 15 | 3 | 8 | 3 |
| Chico Resch | N.Y. Islanders | 25 | 1432 | 59 | 2.47 | 12 | 7 | 5 | 3 |
| Roger Crozier | Buffalo Sabres | 23 | 1260 | 55 | 2.62 | 17 | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| Ken Dryden | Montreal Canadiens | 56 | 3320 | 149 | 2.69 | 30 | 9 | 16 | 4 |
| Tony Esposito | Chicago Black Hawks | 71 | 4219 | 193 | 2.74 | 34 | 30 | 7 | 6 |
| Billy Smith | N.Y. Islanders | 58 | 3368 | 156 | 2.78 | 21 | 18 | 17 | 3 |
| Dan Bouchard | Atlanta Flames | 40 | 2400 | 111 | 2.78 | 20 | 15 | 5 | 3 |
| Phil Myre | Atlanta Flames | 40 | 2400 | 114 | 2.85 | 14 | 16 | 10 | 5 |
Other statistics
- Plus-minus: Bobby Orr, Boston Bruins
- All Time NHL record for most Penalty Minutes in a season: 472, Dave Schultz, Philadelphia Flyers
Coaches
Patrick Division
- Atlanta Flames: Bernie Geoffrion
- New York Islanders: Al Arbour
- New York Rangers: Emile Francis
- Philadelphia Flyers: Fred Shero
Adams Division
- Boston Bruins: Don Cherry
- Buffalo Sabres: Floyd Smith
- California Golden Seals: Marshall Johnston and Bill McCreary Sr.
- Toronto Maple Leafs: Red Kelly
Norris Division
- Detroit Red Wings: Alex Delvecchio
- Los Angeles Kings: Bob Pulford
- Montreal Canadiens: Scotty Bowman
- Pittsburgh Penguins: Marc Boileau
- Washington Capitals: Jim Anderson and Milt Schmidt
Smythe Division
- Chicago Black Hawks: Billy Reay
- Kansas City Scouts: Bep Guidolin
- Minnesota North Stars: Jack Gordon and Charlie Burns
- St. Louis Blues: Lou Angotti, Lynn Patrick and Garry Young
- Vancouver Canucks: Phil Maloney
Debuts
The following is a list of players of note who played their first NHL game in 1974–75 (listed with their first team):
- Guy Chouinard, Atlanta Flames
- Danny Gare, Buffalo Sabres
- Charlie Simmer, California Golden Seals
- Wilf Paiement, Kansas City Scouts
- Dave Hutchison, Los Angeles Kings
- Clark Gillies, New York Islanders
- Bob Bourne, New York Islanders
- Rick Middleton, New York Rangers
- Ron Greschner, New York Rangers
- Bob MacMillan, New York Rangers
- Pierre Larouche, Pittsburgh Penguins
- Mario Tremblay, Montreal Canadiens
- Tiger Williams, Toronto Maple Leafs
- Harold Snepsts, Vancouver Canucks
Last games
The following is a list of players of note that played their last game in the NHL in 1974–75 (listed with their last team):
- Murray Oliver, Minnesota North Stars
- Henri Richard, Montreal Canadiens
- Bobby Rousseau, New York Rangers
- Ted Harris, Philadelphia Flyers
- Eddie Shack, Toronto Maple Leafs
- Norm Ullman, Toronto Maple Leafs
- Doug Mohns, Washington Capitals
NOTE: Ullman would finish his major professional career in the World Hockey Association.
Broadcasting
Hockey Night in Canada on CBC Television televised Saturday night regular season games and Stanley Cup playoff games. HNIC also produced Wednesday night regular season game telecasts for CTV.
This was the third and final season under the U.S. rights agreement with NBC, airing weekend afternoon regular season games and playoff games. This would be the last season until the 1990s that NHL games would air on American network television. Unable to sign a U.S. national television contract for the 1975–76 season, the league put together a broadcast syndication package called the NHL Network to have games aired on various independent stations.
References
- {{cite book |last1=Fischler |first1=Stan |last2=Fischler |first2=Shirley
;Notes
References
- Anderson, Shelly. (2007-11-07). "Penguins Notebook: In this case, No. 20 ranking is huge". [[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]].
- Collier, Gene. (2008-05-25). "This is Hockeytown?". [[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]].
- (2011). "The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2012". Dan Diamond & Associates.
- (2011). "The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2012". Dan Diamond & Associates.
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