Showing posts with label Rivalry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rivalry. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

The Battle of Quebec: Canadiens vs. Nordiques

Last Friday night the Montreal Canadiens played the Colorado Avalanche in a preseason tilt in Quebec City. Habs fans, you may recall that the Colorado Avalanche were once the Quebec Nordiques until 1995. Citing lack of fans and a weak Canadian dollar, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman moved the team to Colorado following the lockout shortened 1994-95 season









History of the Quebec Nordiques

The Nordiques were initially part of the World Hockey Association commencing in 1972 and ending in 1979, when they joined the NHL. Interesting fact: the first head coach of the Quebec Nordiques was Canadiens legend Maurice "Rocket" Richard. Maurice only lasted two games before deciding that coaching wasn't for him.


The Nordiques had several great players from Burnaby Joe Sakic to Peter Stastny. However, the most controversial draft pick was Eric Lindros. Lindros was picked first overall in the 1991 NHL draft. Leading up to the big day, Lindros was very clear about not wanting Quebec to pick him. After the Nordiques chose him, Lindros refused to sign and eventually the team was forced to trade Lindros to the Philadelphia Flyers for several players, including Peter Forsberg. This will forever go down as the beginning of the end for the Nordiques. Lindros's refusal to sign surely didn't help the Nordiques with future signings. Thus, they had to ice an inferior line-up.

Quebec made the playoffs nine times in their 16 season existence. Their two best showings were in 1982 when they made it to the Wales Conference Finals before losing to the eventual Stanley Cup Champions, the New York Islanders. In 1985, they also lost in the Wales Conference finals, this time to the Philadelphia Flyers in six games. What will forever burn in Quebec Nordiques hockey fans craw is that Colorado won the Stanley Cup in their first year in the league. In fact, the Avalanche absolutely dominated the NHL that season.

Montreal vs. Quebec Memorable Moments

The playoffs is where rivalries are made. Montreal and Quebec met five times with your Montreal Canadiens prevailing in three of those series. There were some great battles to be had, both in the playoffs and in the regular season. I will highlight a few here.

Perhaps the most famous incident occurred during the second round of the 1984 NHL Playoffs. It was April 20, 1984, Good Friday and game 6 of the series. Montreal was leading the series 3 games to 2 and there was a faceoff just outside the Nordiques blueline with seven seconds left in the 2nd Period. The Canadiens won it and were pressuring Quebec late in the period. As the final horn sounded, Habs center Guy Carbonneau bumped Quebec goalie Dan Bouchard. Nordiques defenseman Dale Hunter took exception and tackled Carbonneau to the ice. Then both teams benches emptied and pretty well every player on the ice started fighting. The brawl continued when the two teams came back on the ice for the 3rd period. In total, ten players were ejected and evidently the brawl sparked the Habs as they went on to score five time in the final frame to eliminate Quebec from the playoffs.

Game 7 of the 1985 Adams Conference quarter-finals was another memorable game. Game sevens are generally a battle till you die competition. Oftentimes, the games can bring out the best in the two sides leading to an entertaining match that gives fans their money's worth. This one was no exception. Montreal and Quebec played an exciting game which was eventually won in overtime by Quebec. Habs fans, I highly recommend that you click on the link and check out this classic battle of Quebec.

Finally, April 26th, 1995 is the last time the Montreal Canadiens faced the Quebec Nordiques before they relocated to Colorado. This game might not have been an epic classic (the game ended in a 1-1 tie) but this date signifies the end of a solid hockey rivalry. Looking at the regular season, the Habs and Nordiques met 114 times with Montreal winning 62 times, Quebec winning 41 games and 12 games ending in a draw.

Should the NHL return to Quebec City?

Absolutely. Canada has a rich history with hockey and there is no question that Quebec can support a second NHL team. Winnipeg is proof of that. The Jets returned to the NHL after a 15-year hiatus. They were also relocated, to Phoenix, a year after the Nordiques moved to Colorado. I think having a second team in Quebec would increase the number of young French Canadians who take up hockey. Plus it would give Montreal a natural rivalry. I truly believe there are enough hockey fans to support two NHL teams in Quebec. Many of the Nordique fans became Habs fans and I am certain that if Quebec City were to get their team back so too would they get their original fans and more. There is much talk of expanding the league in the future. However, for Quebec City to be considered, there will be many hurdles to jump over. First and foremost, Quebec City needs to build a new arena that meets NHL standards (which they are doing right now). Second, the city will have to prove that it has the fan base to support an NHL franchise. Similar to what happened in Winnipeg, Quebec City would have to sell a certain number of tickets in a short time frame. I truly believe that one day hockey should and will return to Quebec City because the NHL needs Canada and Winnipeg is proof that a smaller market in Canada can absolutely support an NHL franchise.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Which Habs Players Have Success Against The Bruins?

Now that we know that the Montreal Canadiens will square off against the Boston Bruins in the second round of the Stanley Cup finals, why don't we have a look at which players of the current Habs edition have had success against the Big Bad Bruins during their career.

The 30-year-old Austrian, who had played his entire career for the Buffalo Sabres (another fierce rival of the Bruins) prior to being moved to the Islanders earlier in the season, was GM Marc Bergevin's biggest acquisition at the trade deadline. Without any surprise, we see that Vanek leads all players with more than on point per game against Boston during his career. Quiet during the first round against the Tampa Bay Lightning (1 g and 2 a for 3 pts), Vanek will need to continue his dominance of the Bruins if the Canadiens have any hope to advance to the Eastern Conference finals.

Player POS Games Goals Assists Points PPG Plus/Minus
Thomas Vanek LW/RW 55 30 32 62 1.13 22
Daniel Briere C 50 14 28 42 0.84 -6
Brendan Gallagher RW 8 1 5 6 0.75 4
David Desharnais C 19 5 9 14 0.74 6
Max Pacioretty LW  22 8 7 15 0.68 11
Tomas Plekanec C 56 11 26 37 0.66 -1
Andrei Markov D 59 9 27 36 0.61 -2
PK Subban  D 20 4 8 12 0.60 -1
Brian Gionta RW 46 13 12 25 0.54 0
Alex Galchenyuk LW/C 7 1 1 2 0.29 -2
Alexei Emelin D 11 2 1 3 0.27 -2
Lars Eller C 18 3 1 4 0.22 -7
Josh Gorges D 32 0 6 6 0.19 2
Travis Moen LW 28 0 5 5 0.18 -2
Brandon Prust LW/C/RW 16 0 2 2 0.13 1
Ryan White C/RW 8 0 1 1 0.13 -4
Francis Bouillon D 44 1 4 5 0.11 -3
Mike Weaver D 21 0 2 2 0.10 -6
Rene Bourque LW 8 0 0 0 0.00 -4
Michael Bournival C 3 0 0 0 0.00 0
Dale Weiss RW 3 0 0 0 0.00 -1
Douglas Murray D 11 0 0 0 0.00 1
Total 545 102 177 279 0.51 6

Another veteran who has had tremendous success against the Bruins during his career is playoff performer Daniel Briere. The veteran who struggled mightily during the regular season was pivotal during the first round's sweep of the Lightning, feeding Dale Weiss in overtime for the game-winning tally in Game 1 and scoring a big goal in Game 4 to give the Habs the lead. The 36-year-old centre, who now has 111 points in 112 career playoff game will be instrumental against Montreal's arch-enemy.

Other players such as Rene Bourque and Lars Eller are struggling against Boston and will need to raise their level of play to chip in offensively if the big guns are not producing.

Who do you think will be the Habs' offensive heroes against the mighty Bruins?

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Fred is a professional freelance translator/writer;  Lead Editor at  & Lead Editor and Senior Columnist at 

Monday, March 4, 2013

Is there a better rivalry than Habs vs Bruins?



Photo: Linked from habstalkradio.com
Greetings Habs Addicts!

Last night I watched another classic match-up between the Boston Bruins and our beloved Montreal Canadiens.  The game had it all: Scoring, fighting, hitting, lead changes and edge of your seat dramatics down to the very end.  Habs prevailed 4-3.  That evens the season series at one win apiece and goals are 5-5 over the two games.   With Boston coach Claude Julien crying foul after the game about Montreal players diving around and drawing penalties, I expect the intensity level will be through the roof on March 27 when they renew acquaintances.  It will be another closely contested game in what I deem is the greatest hockey rivalry.

Sure, the Toronto Maple Leafs are rivals.  Ontario vs Quebec. English Canada vs French Canada. Toronto vs Montreal. Without a shadow of a doubt its Canada’s biggest rivalry. Two original six franchises; the faces of hockey in Canada prior to the days of expansion. It was either or back then.  You were pro-Leafs or pro-Canadiens.  Post-expansion however, it has been a different story. It’s always an entertaining series, but very rarely meaningful in the standings.  Up until the 1998-99 season, the Leafs were in the Western Conference with the Habs in the east. Twice a year they matched up.  This rivalry picked up once they became division rivals. And being a born and bred Montrealer now living in Toronto (the self proclaimed hockey capital of the world), it’s my surely favorite rivalry to be a part of.  Great as it is, though. Its not Montreal vs Boston.

It seems these two clubs are always jockeying for position in the standings against one another. If its not a direct battle for conference supremacy like last nights game was, it always has some playoff implications for at least one of the teams involved.  In the last 25 years, these two teams have met in the playoffs 11 times.  Montreal was victorious in only 4 of those series.  Five times they’ve played the full seven games.  That’s just in the last 25 years.  Seven of those years we did not even make the playoffs.  So kids, if it feels like you constantly say 'Montreal always faces Boston in the playoffs!!' you're basically correct. 11 times in 18 playoff seasons we’ve faced Boston in a round. 

History lesson aside, let’s get back to the intangibles.  How many other teams do you as Habs fans loathe? I mean seriously despise?

  • Ottawa Senators? You haven’t been around long enough. Well you have. Just you weren’t very good.
  • Buffalo Sabres? Meh. You’ve always been the little brother of the division.
  • New York Rangers?  Detroit Red Wings? Chicago Blackhawks? Maybe back in the early days of the NHL.
  • Toronto Maple Leafs? Touched on them already.
  • Boston Bruins? *#*&$% the *#*$@&* Bruins!!!


Some highlights of this classic rivalry include:


Too much has happened over the years for this rivalry not to be considered hockey’s best. Sorry Chicago-Detroit, Ottawa-Toronto, New York-New Jersey, Pittsburgh-Philadelphia or Calgary-Edmonton.  You just don’t have the history behind you.  Montreal and Boston have met 33 times for 170 games in the NHL playoffs.  That’s 10 more times and 53 more games than the next closest NHL playoff rivalry (Detroit-Toronto). Eight times they’ve played a series-deciding game seven. And my favorite stat, which I saw on the telecast last night: Montreal is 7-0 vs Boston in Stanley Cup Finals.  Suck on that, Bruins fans.

What’s your favorite Habs-Bruins memory?