The 1971 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 1970–71 season, and the culmination of the 1971 Stanley Cup playoffs. It was contested between the Chicago Black Hawks and the Montreal Canadiens. The Black Hawks made their first appearance in the finals since 1965, while the Canadiens had last played in and won the final in 1969. The Canadiens won the series, four games to three.
1971 Stanley Cup Finals | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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* indicates periods of overtime | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Location(s) | Chicago: Chicago Stadium (1, 2, 5, 7) Montreal: Montreal Forum (3, 4, 6) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Coaches | Montreal: Al MacNeil Chicago: Bill Reay | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Captains | Montreal: Jean Beliveau Chicago: Vacant | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dates | May 4–18, 1971 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
MVP | Ken Dryden (Canadiens) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Series-winning goal | Henri Richard (2:34, third, G7) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hall of Famers | Canadiens: Jean Beliveau (1972) Yvan Cournoyer (1982) Ken Dryden (1983) Jacques Laperriere (1987) Guy Lapointe (1993) Jacques Lemaire (1984) Frank Mahovlich (1981) Henri Richard (1979) Serge Savard (1986; did not play) Rogie Vachon (2016) Black Hawks: Tony Esposito (1988) Bobby Hull (1983) Stan Mikita (1983) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Networks | CBC (Canada) SRC (Canada, French) CBS (United States) (Games 3, 6, and 7) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Announcers | (CBC): Danny Gallivan and Dick Irvin Jr. (SRC): Rene Lecavalier and Gilles Tremblay (CBS): Dan Kelly, Jim Gordon, and Phil Esposito | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Paths to the Finals
editThe playoff system changed this year to allow cross-over between the divisions during the playoffs.
Chicago defeated the Philadelphia Flyers 4–0 and the New York Rangers 4–3 to advance to the final.
Montreal defeated the defending champion Boston Bruins 4–3 and the Minnesota North Stars 4–2. This set up the first "Original Six" Finals since the 1967 Stanley Cup Finals.
Game summaries
editBrothers Frank and Peter Mahovlich starred for the Canadiens, scoring nine goals in the seven-game final series. Ken Dryden debuted for the Canadiens, while this was Jean Beliveau's last Finals appearance. He ended his career with ten championships. This was only the second time that the road team won a game seven in Finals history. The only previous time it happened was when the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated the Detroit Red Wings 2–1 in game seven in the 1945 Stanley Cup Finals in Detroit. Montreal also won the series despite losing the first two games on the road; none happened again until 2009, when the Pittsburgh Penguins defeated the Red Wings in game seven by the same 2–1 score after losing the first two games to the Red Wings. The next seven-game Stanley Cup Finals did not occur until the 1987 Stanley Cup Finals with the Edmonton Oilers and the Philadelphia Flyers.
Date | Visitors | Score | Home | Score | Notes |
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May 4 | Montreal | 1 | Chicago | 2 | OT |
May 6 | Montreal | 3 | Chicago | 5 | |
May 9 | Chicago | 2 | Montreal | 4 | |
May 11 | Chicago | 2 | Montreal | 5 | |
May 13 | Montreal | 0 | Chicago | 2 | |
May 16 | Chicago | 3 | Montreal | 4 | |
May 18 | Montreal | 3 | Chicago | 2 |
Montreal wins the series 4–3.
Game one
editMay 4 | Montreal Canadiens | 1–2 OT (0–0, 1–0, 0–1, 0–1) | Chicago Black Hawks | Chicago Stadium Attendance: 16,666 |
Game reference | |||||||||||
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Ken Dryden | Goalies | Tony Esposito | |||||||||
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37 | Shots | 58 |
Game two
editMay 6 | Montreal Canadiens | 3–5 (2–1, 0–2, 1–2) | Chicago Black Hawks | Chicago Stadium Attendance: 16,666 |
Game reference | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Ken Dryden | Goalies | Tony Esposito | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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27 | Shots | 35 |
Game three
editMay 9 | Chicago Black Hawks | 2–4 (2–0, 0–2, 0–2) | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum Attendance: 17,441 |
Game reference | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Tony Esposito | Goalies | Ken Dryden | ||||||||||||||||||
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18 | Shots | 40 |
Game four
editMay 11 | Chicago Black Hawks | 2–5 (1–3, 1–2, 0–0) | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum Attendance: 17,678 |
Game reference | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Tony Esposito | Goalies | Ken Dryden | |||||||||||||||||||||
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32 | Shots | 32 |
Game five
editMay 13 | Montreal Canadiens | 0–2 (0–1, 0–1, 0–0) | Chicago Black Hawks | Chicago Stadium Attendance: 16,666 |
Game reference | ||||||||
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Ken Dryden | Goalies | Tony Esposito | ||||||
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31 | Shots | 22 |
Game six
editMay 16 | Chicago Black Hawks | 3–4 (1–1, 2–1, 0–2) | Montreal Canadiens | Montreal Forum Attendance: 17,817 |
Game reference | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Tony Esposito | Goalies | Ken Dryden | |||||||||||||||||||||
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30 | Shots | 16 |
Game seven
editMay 18 | Montreal Canadiens | 3–2 (0–1, 2–1, 1–0) | Chicago Black Hawks | Chicago Stadium Attendance: 21,000 |
Game reference | |||||||||||||||||
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Ken Dryden | Goalies | Tony Esposito | |||||||||||||||
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25 | Shots | 33 |
Coaching controversies
editBoth clubs would suffer public controversies regarding coaching performances, specifically accusations of mishandling star players during the series.
Chicago head coach Billy Reay would be attacked in the media by Hawks star forward Bobby Hull for his excessive employment of two little used forwards, Lou Angotti and Eric Nesterenko, as well as the injured defenceman Keith Magnuson in game seven. With a 2–0 Black Hawks lead, both Hull and Hawks star centre Stan Mikita were left on the bench for extended periods in favor of Angotti and Nesterenko, including two four-on-four situations. The wide open matchup should have favoured the frustrated Hull, who had been successfully shadowed in the series by Canadiens rookie Rejean Houle. The first two Canadien goals were tallied with the two backliners on the ice and the hobbled Magnuson was beaten one on one by speedy Montreal centre Henri Richard for the ultimate game winner.
The Canadiens suffered their own coaching controversy earlier in the series when head coach Al MacNeil benched alternate captain Henri Richard in game five. Following the 2-0 loss, Richard ripped MacNeil in the media calling him incompetent and "the worst coach I ever played for." Accusation of favoring English-speaking players plagued MacNeil and turned the public against him. Following death threats, MacNeil and his family were assigned body guards for the final home game in Montreal. Even the eventual series victory wouldn't be enough to save MacNeil's job. He was replaced as head coach by Scotty Bowman soon after the finals.
Stanley Cup engraving
editThe 1971 Stanley Cup was presented to Canadiens captain Jean Beliveau by NHL President Clarence Campbell following the Canadiens 3–2 win over the Black Hawks in game seven.
The following Canadiens players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup
1970–71 Montreal Canadiens
Players
- 4 Jean Beliveau (Captain)
- 16 Henri Richard (A)
- 20 Peter Mahovlich
- 24 Bobby Sheehan
- 25 Jacques Lemaire
- 11 Marc Tardif
- 14 Rejean Houle
- 12 Yvan Cournoyer
- 15 Claude Larose
- 17 Phil Roberto
- 21 Leon Rochefort
- 22 John Ferguson Sr. (A)
- 24 Chuck Lefley
- 27 Frank Mahovlich (A)
- 2 Jacques Laperriere
- 3 Jean-Claude J. C. Tremblay
- 5 Guy Lapointe
- 18 Serge Savard†
- 19 Terry Harper (A)
- 23 Bob Murdoch
- 26 Pierre Bouchard
- 29 Ken Dryden
- 1 Rogatien Vachon
- 30 Phil Myre†
- †Serge Savard played 37 regular season games, but missed the rest of season injured. †Phil Myre played 30 games, dressed for 70 games, but was not dressed in the playoffs. Both players were included in the team picture. They were not engraved on the Stanley Cup, because they did not play in the playoffs.
- #8 Larry Pleau was included on the team, but did not qualify. He played only 19 regular season games played, and did not dress in the playoffs. so his name was not included on the Stanley Cup. He would get his name on the Stanley Cup as an Asst. Manager with New York Rangers in 1994.
Coaching and administrative staff
- J. David Molson (President/Owner), William Molson (Vice President/Owner)
- Peter Molson (Vice Presidents/Owners), Sam Pollock (Vice President/General Manager)
- Ron Caron (Asst. General Manager), Al MacNeil (Head Coach)
- Yvon Belanger (Trainer)
- Phil Langlois (Asst. Trainer), Eddy Palchak (Asst Trainer)
Stanley Cup engraving
- Al MacNeil (coach) was engraved on the Stanley Cup as .COACH. MAC NEIL missing his first name "Al". MacNeil was spelled AL MACNEIL COACH on the Replica Cup. MacNeil became the first rookie coach to win the Stanley Cup as a mid-season replacement. MacNeil replaced Claude Ruel after 23 games. MacNeil was also the 11th NHL Rookie Coach to win the Stanley Cup. MacNeil only coached the last 55 regular season games for Montreal.
- Phil Roberto was misspelled P ROBRTO missing an "E". Roberto's name was corrected to P. ROBERTO on the Replica Cup created during the 1992–93 season.
See also
editNotes
editReferences
edit- Diamond, Dan, ed. (2000). Total Stanley Cup. NHL.
- Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Triumph Books. ISBN 978-1-55168-261-7.