1986 Stanley Cup Finals

1986 Stanley Cup Finals
12345 Total
Montreal Canadiens 23514 4
Calgary Flames 52303 1
* overtime periods
Location(s) Calgary, AB (Olympic Saddledome) (1,2,5)
Montreal, QC (Montreal Forum) (3,4)
Coaches Montreal: Jean Perron
Calgary: Bob Johnson
Captains Montreal: Bob Gainey
Calgary: Lanny McDonald,
Jim Peplinski and
Doug Risebrough
Dates May 16 – May 24
MVP Patrick Roy (Canadiens)
Series-winning goal Bobby Smith (10:30, third)
Networks CTV (Canada-English games 1 and 2)
CBC (Canada-English games 3,4, and 5)
SRC (Canada-French)
ESPN (United States)
Announcers Dan Kelly and Ron Reusch (CTV)
Bob Cole (games three and four), Don Wittman (game five), Dick Irvin, Jr. (games 3-5), Mickey Redmond (games 3-4), John Davidson (game five) (CBC)
Richard Garneau, Gilles Tremblay and Mario Tremblay (SRC)
Sam Rosen (games one and two), Ken Wilson (games 3-5), Mickey Redmond (games one, two and five), Bill Clement (games three and four) (ESPN)

The 1986 Stanley Cup Finals NHL championship series was contested by the Calgary Flames in their first Final appearance and the Montreal Canadiens in their 32nd. The Canadiens would win the best-of-seven series four games to one, to win their twenty-third Stanley Cup, and their seventeenth in their last eighteen Finals appearances dating back to 1956.

It was the first all-Canadian finals since Montreal lost to the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1967, the last year of the Original Six era. This would be the fourth of eight consecutive Finals contested by a team from Alberta (the Edmonton Oilers appeared in six, the Flames in two), and the third of five consecutive Finals to end with the Cup presentation on Alberta ice (the Oilers won four, the Canadiens one). This was the only time between 1980 and 1988 that neither the Oilers nor the New York Islanders won the Stanley Cup.

Although this was the first ever postseason meeting between the two teams, it was not the first Montreal-Calgary Final. The first Final between teams from Montreal and Calgary took place in 1924 when the Canadiens defeated the Western Canada Hockey League champion Calgary Tigers. The Canadiens and Flames would get a rematch in 1989, with Calgary winning in six games.

Paths to the Finals

Calgary defeated the Winnipeg Jets 3–0, the defending champion and in-province rival Edmonton Oilers 4–3, and the St. Louis Blues 4–3 to advance to the final.

Montreal defeated rival Boston Bruins 3–0, the Hartford Whalers 4–3, and the New York Rangers 4–1 to make it to the final.

Game summaries

Brian Skrudland's game-winning goal in game two ended the shortest overtime in NHL playoff history, at a mere nine seconds. Montreal rookie goaltender Patrick Roy was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playoff MVP.

Calgary Flames vs. Montreal Canadiens

Date Visitors Score Home Score Notes
Fri, May 16 Montreal 2Calgary 5
Sun, May 18 Montreal 3 Calgary 2 OT
Tue, May 20 Calgary 3 Montreal 5
Thu, May 22 Calgary 0 Montreal 1
Sat, May 24 Montreal 4 Calgary 3

Montreal wins the series 4–1.

Montreal Canadiens – 1986 Stanley Cup champions

Players

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders

* won the Calder Cup as American Hockey League (AHL) Championship in 1985 with Sherbrooke Canadiens.

Coaching and administrative staff:

Stanley Cup engraving

Riot

Some 5,000 jubilant Montreal fans celebrating the Canadiens' Stanley Cup win over the Calgary Flames rampaged through the city's downtown, causing over CA$one million worth of damage.[1]

Broadcasting

CBC only televised games one and two. CBC would go on to televise games three, four and five nationally. When CTV televised games one and two, both games were blacked out in Montreal and Calgary. Had the series gone to a seventh game, then both CBC and CTV would have televised it while using their own production facilities and crews. Like in the year prior, Dan Kelly and Ron Reusch called the games for CTV.

See also

References

Preceded by
Edmonton Oilers
1985
Montreal Canadiens
Stanley Cup Champions

1986
Succeeded by
Edmonton Oilers
1987

Notes

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