Battle of New York (ice hockey)

New York Rangers–New York Islanders
History
1st Meeting October 21, 1972
1st Result NYR: 2-1
Location Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Last Meeting December 26, 2011
Last Result NYR: 3-0
Location Madison Square Garden
Next Meeting February 24, 2012
Location Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Number of Meetings 238
Regular Season Series NYR: 115-99-19-5 (.532)
Post Season History
Post Season Series NYI: 5-3 (.625)
Post Season Games NYI: 20-19 (.513)
Series
1975 NHLP

Islanders won, 2–1[1]
1979 NHLSF Rangers won, 4–2[2]
1981 NHLSF Islanders won, 4–0[3]
1982 PDF Islanders won, 4–2[4]
1983 PDF Islanders won, 4–2[5]
1984 PDSF Islanders won, 3–2[6]
1990 PDSF Rangers won, 4–1[7]
1994 ECQF Rangers won, 4–0[8]

The Islanders-Rangers rivalry, also unofficially known as the "Battle of New York", is unique among New York City's major league sports, as the Rangers and the Islanders are in the same conference and division, guaranteeing plenty of matchups. Major League Baseball's New York Yankees and New York Mets are in different leagues while the National Football League's New York Jets and New York Giants are in different conferences, so the only meeting opportunities are during inter-league or playoff games.

Contents

Background

This rivalry was established when the NHL awarded a second franchise in the New York metropolitan area. With the impending start of the World Hockey Association in the fall of 1972, the upstart league had plans to place a team, the Raiders, in the then-new Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Nassau County. The National Hockey League did not want competition in the nation's largest metro area, so despite having expanded two years before, the NHL awarded franchises to Atlanta and Long Island to preempt the WHA. The fledgling New York Islanders had an extra burden to pay in the form of a $4 million territorial fee to the nearby New York Rangers.

Meetings

Playoffs

In 1975, the Islanders made their first trip to the NHL playoffs, facing the heavily favored Rangers in a best-of-three first-round series. After splitting the first two games, the Islanders won Game 3, and the series, when J. P. Parise scored 11 seconds into overtime. The teams met again in the 1979 playoffs; this time the underdog Rangers were victorious, eliminating the heavily favoured Islanders in 6 games and earning a spot in the Stanley Cup Finals.[9] This was particularly memorable as it continued the Islanders' reputation for playoff "chokes" despite finishing first in the league during the regular season.[9]

The teams also met in the playoffs every year from 1981–84; the Islanders won each series by margins of 4-0, 4-2, 4-2 and 3-2 enroute to 5 finals and four Stanley Cups (in addition to their 1980 win to make it four championships and 5 finals in a row). In the 1990s, the teams met twice, with the Rangers winning 4-1 in 1990, and sweeping the Islanders 4-0 in 1994, en route to winning their first Stanley Cup since 1940. The 1994 playoff series is the most recent meeting between the two teams in the playoffs.

Regular season

The rivalry heated up in the regular season. Before the 1995–96 season the Islanders attempt to updating their look resulted in the unveiling of the fisherman logo, it proved to be such a disaster as Rangers fans mock the Islanders with chants of "we want fishsticks", which is a reference to the way the logo resembled the Gorton's fisherman. The Islanders soon reverted back to their original logo with an updated color scheme in late 1996.

Fan reaction

With both teams' fans visiting "enemy territory" for games, organized shouting matches and fights break out in the stands. Ranger fans often refer to the Nassau Coliseum as "Garden East" or the "Mausoleum", as Ranger fans often make up almost half of crowd when they visit. The Rangers' fanbase generally comes from the city's five boroughs, Westchester, Fairfield, Long Island and Rockland Counties, and from Northern and Central New Jersey, while the Islanders tend to draw fans from Nassau and Suffolk counties, and parts of eastern Queens. Fans will direct derisive chants at their rivals regardless of whether the teams are actually playing. At each home game, Ranger fans engage in perhaps their most popular chant: whistling the song "Let's Go Band" and punctuating it with "Potvin sucks". This is a reference to retired Islander Hall of Fame defenseman Denis Potvin, who angered Rangers fans by breaking Center Ulf Nilsson's ankle on a clean check. Rangers fans also occasionally bring out the chant "Beat your wife, Potvin, beat your wife", a reference to unconfirmed allegations that Potvin has committed domestic abuse. Lastly, Rangers Fans have taunted Islanders goaltender Rick DiPietro by chanting "DP Sucks!"

Islander fans taunted Rangers fans for many years with the chant "1940!" referring to the Rangers having the all-time longest drought without winning the Stanley Cup, until the Blueshirts finally won in 1994.[10] For a period in the late '90s and early 2000s, Islanders fans would punctuate the "Chicken Dance" with chants of "the Rangers suck." The Islanders had stopped playing the song at games for a length of time but as of the 2007–08 season the song is played solely at Islanders-Rangers games. Rangers winger Theoren Fleury used the chant as an excuse for flapping his arms to taunt Islanders enforcer Eric Cairns. In addition a popular chant was "Crackhead Theo!" referring to Fleury's erratic behavior and history of substance abuse at the time. Islanders fans also sing a song to the tune of "If You're Happy and You Know It", replacing the standard lyrics with "If you know the Rangers suck, clap your hands." In the early 1990s a group of boisterous fans at Nassau Coliseum would sit in section 329 and mock Rangers announcer Sam Rosen's tag line "It's a power play goal" by announcing in unison "it's a power play goal, screw you Sam Rosen" after each Islander Power Play Goal.

Incidents

One well-known incident at an Islanders/Philadelphia Flyers game in 2003 turned an innocent holiday promotion at Nassau Coliseum into a on-ice shoving match between Rangers and Islanders fans in Santa suits.

One incident that has been rumored was a brawl between fans of the two teams at a New York Mets game at Shea Stadium in the late 1970s or early 1980s.

As of 2008, the Rangers and Islanders are tied in the all-time series with 100 wins, 100 losses (including overtime and shootout losses), and 19 ties. In the playoffs, however, the Islanders hold the lead with a 20-19 record, and have won five of the eight playoff series' between the two teams.

Miscellaneous

Since 2001, the Pat LaFontaine Trophy has been awarded to the winner of the Rangers-Islanders regular season series. The winning team receives a trophy to parade around for their fans and bragging rights for another year, while the losing team must make a $50,000 contribution to the charity of Pat LaFontaine's choice. LaFontaine played for both teams in his career-- the Islanders at the beginning, and the Rangers at the end (he played for the Buffalo Sabres in between, making him one of the few players to have played for all three teams based in the state of New York).

Greg Gilbert won the Stanley Cup with both teams and is the only player to do so with both New York City hockey teams, winning with the Islanders in 1982 and 1983 and with the Rangers in 1994. In addition, Neil Smith served as general manager of both teams.

During the 2009–10 season, there was a moment of peace in the rivalry with both head coaches, Rangers' John Tortorella and Islanders' Scott Gordon winning silver medals as assistant coaches for the U.S. men's ice hockey team during the Vancouver Olympics, under Toronto Maple Leafs Coach Ron Wilson, the head coach.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ "1975 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1975.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  2. ^ "1979 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1979.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  3. ^ "1981 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1981.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  4. ^ "1982 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1982.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  5. ^ "1983 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1983.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  6. ^ "1984 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1984.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  7. ^ "1990 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1990.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  8. ^ "1994 NHL Playoff Summary". Hockey-Reference. Sports Reference LLC. http://www.hockey-reference.com/playoffs/NHL_1994.html. Retrieved March 27, 2011. 
  9. ^ a b Keese, Parton (May 9, 1979). "Rangers Beat Islanders, 2-1, and Gain Stanley Cup Final". New York Times: p. A1. 
  10. ^ Murphy, Austin (June 13, 1994). "Closing In". Sports Illustrated. http://cnnsi.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?expire=&title=The+New+York+Rangers+drew+nearer+to+their+goal+of+winning+-+06.13.94+-+SI+Vault&urlID=448486257&action=cpt&partnerID=289881&fb=Y&url=http%3A%2F%2Fsportsillustrated.cnn.com%2Fvault%2Farticle%2Fmagazine%2FMAG1005283%2F. 
  11. ^ Associated Press (June 29, 2009). "Tortorella, Gordon named assistants". ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/print?id=4294731&type=story. Retrieved 2009-07-22.