1974-1975:
Smith leads Canucks to post season
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Gary "The Suitcase" Smith
provided solid goaltending for the
Canucks in '74-'75.
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His financial empire crumbling, Tom Scallen
sold the Canucks in the off-season for $9
million to Western Broadcasting Co., a
communications conglomerate owned by Frank
A. Griffiths. The upper
management of the team was reshuffled, and Hal
Laycoe found himself out of the organization
while Phil Maloney was promoted to General
Manager, while continuing to coach the club.
Suddenly, there was a new attitude around the
team.
Everyone seemed to improve, but it was the
goaltending of Gary Smith above everything else.
A sign of what was to come came on October 20,
when Smith made 44 saves in a 1-0 shutout win at
Madison Square Garden over the Rangers. Ranger
forward Pete Stemkowski, who had been stimied
several times by Smith on the night, commented
that they could have kept playing until three in
the morning without beating Smith. When
Smith heard Stemkowski's comment, he quipped,
"He should have seen me at three in the
morning." The team roared out to a
22-10-5 record by the end of December. On
New Year's Day, the Canucks hosted the
Philadelphia Flyers in a showdown between the
top two teams in the Campbell Conference.
The game was also a showdown between the two
hottest goalies in the league -- Gary Smith and
Bernie Parent. The Vancouver fans, who
eagerly anticipated the contest, were given more
fuel when Flyers coach Fred Shero remarked that
the Canucks were a one-man team (referring to
Smith). Parent and the Flyers won the
battle, shutting out the Canucks 2-0. The
Canucks then headed out on an eastern road trip
and lost all six games before returning home to
lose two more. The nine game losing streak
would not be equalled for 10 years and suddenly
brought the Canucks back to the middle of the
pack. They would accumulate 32 points over
the next 32 games. On Feb 11, Gary Smith
recorded his sixth shutout of the season in a
4-0 win over Kansas City, and some started
wondering if he would not only make the First
All-Star Team, but also possibly contend for the
Hart Trophy as league MVP. Smith appeared
in 72 of the first 77 games, racking up a
32-24-9 record and a sparking 3.09 goals-against
average. On April 1, the Canucks hosted
California to begin a home-and-home series.
Backup goalie Ken "Spider" Lockett
started and shut out the Seals, 7-0. The
next night, in Oakland, Lockett was again given
the start and he shut out the Seals again, this
time 4-0. Ken Lockett became the first Canuck
goalie to post back-to-back shutouts and along
with Smith's six, added up to a team record of
eight in a season. Lockett was given a
third-straight start on April 4 against
Minnesota, but had his shutout string snapped in
the first period. Still, the Canucks won
4-1 to finish the season on a three-game winning
streak, giving the team a final record of
38-32-10. The 86 points gave the Canucks
first place in the Smythe Division, and a bye
through the Preliminary Round to the
Quarter-Finals. It wasn't only masterful
goaltending that achieved this, though.
Andre Boudrias won yet another team scoring
crown, once again breaking his own club records
for assists (62) and points (78) in a season.
Don Lever's 38 goals tied Bobby Schmautz's team
record, and with 34 goals, RW John Gould became
the fourth member of the Canucks 30-goal club.
The two men finished with 68 and 65 points,
respectively.
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Goalie Gary Smith between the pipes.
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They were in the playoffs for the first time
in their young history, but unfortunately the
second round seeds were determined by the
overall standings, not division standings.
The sixth-seeded Canucks had the misfortune of
drawing the mighty Montreal Canadiens, who were
seeded third, as Quarter-Final opponents.
The Canucks had not beaten the Canadiens once in
26 career meetings (0-23-3). The series
began at the Montreal Forum on April 13 and the
Canadiens continued their domination of the
Canucks, winning easily 6-2. Two nights
later, the Canucks came much more prepared to
play the defensive system needed to win in the
playoffs. The Habs held the edge in play
but Smith was spectacular in goal, keeping the
score tied 1-1 into the late going. With
under six minutes to play, LW Gary Monahan sent
a low shot from the high slot through traffic
that eluded Ken Dryden to give the Canucks a 2-1
lead. The Habs threw everything they had
at Smith in the final few minutes, but he was
equal to the task. The series was even. On
April 15, the Pacific Coliseum played host to
its first ever Stanley Cup playoff game.
According to play-by-play man Jim Robson,
the two games of this series played in Vancouver
were the loudest hockey crowds this city had
ever seen prior to 1982. The two teams
were once again tied through two periods, this
time with the Canucks, pumped by their fans,
putting the Canadiens back on their heels and
forcing Dryden to make several spectacular
saves. The big guns of the bleu-blanc et rouge
-- especially the line of Pete Mahovlich, Guy
Lafleur, and Steve Shutt -- woke up in the third
period, though, peppering Smith from every angle
and scoring twice on him and adding an
empty-netter to win 4-1. Two nights later,
Dryden again held his team in until his scorers
woke up. This time the final was 4-0.
Few gave the Canucks a chance to bring the
series back to Vancouver, but this was a scrappy
bunch. In Game Five, the Canadiens would
gain the lead, but the Canucks kept coming back.
The game was tied 4-4 through regulation time
and despite several scary moments in overtime,
Smith was equal to the challenge. With
less than three minutes to play in the first
overtime period, Lafleur attempted a centering
pass from the corner. Dennis Kearns
managed to get his stick on the pass, but
inadvertently directed the puck past Smith into
the net to win the series for Montreal. It
was Lafleur's third game-winning goal of the
series, and probably his easiest. Though
they had fallen in five games, the Canucks had
nothing to be ashamed of. They had battled
the perennial powerhouse hard, and had fans
across British Columbia on the edges of their
seats throughout.
The successful season was also enough to
drive out the Blazers. After the season,
Jimmy Pattison moved his WHA team to Calgary and
renamed them the Cowboys. Canucks fans
felt slighted by the eastern voting when Gary
Smith made neither post-season All-Star Team --
losing out to Parent and Los Angeles' Rogie
Vachon -- despite finishing in fifth place in
Hart Trophy balloting. But the thrills of
the season and the anticipation of the season to
come were more than enough consolation.
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