1977-1978: A
painful season for Canucks fans
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Mike Walton was the only bright spot
during the '77-'78 season.
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On May 31, 1977, the organization was once
again shuffled. Out was Phil Maloney and
in to replace him was Jake Milford,
a veteran NHL executive who had been involved in
hockey at every conceivable level for over four
decades. Orland Kurtenbach remained Head
Coach.
Don Lever, who had not yet missed a game
since being drafted by the Canucks in 1972 (a
streak of 403 games, counting playoffs)
succeeded Chris Oddleifson as captain. The
streak lasted 41 games into the 1977-78 season,
before suffering a broken cheekbone in a 3-3 tie
with Colorado on January 14 and being sidelined
for five games.
Aside from a seven-game losing streak in late
October/early November, the start of the season
was not bad. The Canucks recorded a
10-12-7 record through December 17 before
falling on hard times. On six different
occasions during the season, the team suffered a
losing streak of four games or longer and a
0-7-1 stretch in March eliminated them from
playoff contention. A pleasant surprise
was Mike Walton, who despite being limited to 65
games registered 66 points including 14
power-play goals, a club record. However,
the 57 point total marked the third straight
decline in points and the team's worst record
since year three. The patience of the fans
was beginning to wear thin.
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