1976-1977:
Blight lone bright spot in bad season
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Cesare Maniago took over the starting
goaltending duties in '76-'77.
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The Canucks made a complete change in the
goal department for the coming season. On
August 23, Gary Smith was traded to Minnesota
for veteran G Cesare Maniago. And in
September, Ken Lockett signed as a free-agent
with San Diego of the WHA. The back-up job
was inherited by Curt Ridley, who had appeared
in nine games for the Canucks in 1975-76 after
being acquired for Atlanta in exchange for the
Canucks first pick in the 1976 draft (David
Shand). Both goalies would see plenty of
rubber. The retirement of Andre Boudrias
meant that the captaincy was available and Chris
Oddleifson filled the vacancy.
Sophomore RW Rick Blight scored four goals in
a 9-5 loss in Pittsburgh on opening night and
continued to lead the team in scoring throughout
the season, finishing with 68 points. The
loss was a sign of things to come, as the
Canucks won only five of their first 24 games.
After a 5-4 home loss to Montreal on December
20, Phil Maloney decided that he needed more
time to concentrate on his General Manager
duties and called up ex-Canuck captain Orland
Kurtenbach from Tulsa of the CHL to coach the
remainder of the season. He started off with a
3-2 win in Los Angeles before winning only one
of his next eight. In the middle of that
streak was a game that did not count but
garnered considerable attention. The
Canucks hosted the Soviet club Moscow Spartak on
December 28 at the Pacific Coliseum. Rick
Blight scored twice and Curt Ridley picked up a
shutout as the Canucks won 2-0 before a jubilant
full house. On January 25 there was
another special event at the Coliseum -- the NHL
All-Star Game. Harold Snepsts represented
the Canucks in a 4-3 defeat to the Wales
Conference. But the team stumbled along
until March, and then finished up strong.
The Canucks went 8-3-6 in its last 17 games,
including a 10-game unbeaten streak. The
finish gave the Canucks 63 points, causing them
to miss the final playoff spot to Chicago on a
tiebreaker (26-25 in wins). Besides
Blight's fine season, Dennis Kearns upped his
franchise record for defensemen to 55 assists
and set a new record with 60 points. But
Kearns was also often the victim of the Coliseum
boo-birds for his apparent lack of physical play
and a tendency to make bad gambles. In any
event, it was apparent that the modest success
of the previous couple of season had gone for
naught and that it was once again back to the
drawing board.
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