1979-1980:
Tiger Williams makes his mark
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Dave "Tiger" Williams is
one of the best enforcers to ever play
the game.
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The Canucks made RW Rick Vaive their
first-round selection (sixth overall) at the
Entry Draft. Both he and 1978 first rounder Bill
Derlago were in the line-up when the season
started. For the most part, there were few
changes to begin the new season.
After splitting their first two games at
home, the Canucks traveled to Edmonton to meet
the expansion Oilers and their 18-year-old
Superkid, Wayne Gretzky. Goalless in his
first two games and through two periods of the
contest with Vancouver, the youngster's first of
many NHL goals tied the game 4-4 late in the
third period by coming out from behind the net
and backhanding the puck over a fallen Glen
Hanlon. The Canucks were 9-5-5 by November
18 before beginning to decline. The
departure of Ron Sedlbauer to Chicago on
December 21 took away some offence (LW Harold
Phillipoff and D Dave Logan came in return), but
that was made up for (and then some) by the
brilliant play of Stan Smyl and Thomas Gradin,
who recorded 78 and 75 points, respectively.
Smyl's total tied Andre Boudrias' five-year-old
club record. As well, he lead the team in
goals (31), assists (47) and penalty minutes
(204), becoming the first player in franchise
history to accomplish that feat. The
Canucks made two trades in February that would
have a lot to do with the direction that the
team would take in the coming seasons. On
February 8, they shocked many fans by dealing
the team's all-time leading scorer, Don Lever,
along with RW Brad Smith to Atlanta for C Darcy
Rota and C Ivan Boldirev.
Boldirev recorded 27 points in 27 games as a
Canuck. Ten days later, the Canucks traded
both Vaive (who was having a spectacular rookie
season) and Derlago to Toronto in exchange for
LW Dave "Tiger" Williams
and D Dave Butler. Though the deal was
questioned by many, nobody could deny the
contribution by Williams to the team for the
rest of the season. He started
contributing right away. Three days
after the trade, Pat Quinn's Flyers came to
town. There was still some bad blood from
the playoffs of the previous season, and what
occurred at the Pacific Coliseum on February 21
was an all-out bench-clearing brawl. When
the dust had settled, 344 penalty minutes were
racked up and Williams had a field day, taking
on all of Philadelphia's tough customers.
Goaltenders Glen Hanlon and Phil Myre even
entertained the fans by slugging it out.
Though the Canucks lost 7-3, they proved that
they were no longer pushovers. Butler
contributed as well, scoring a hat-trick in a
crucial 5-0 win against Edmonton in the
third-to-last game of the season. The
Canucks won their last four games to finish with
a record of 27-37-16 for 70 points, good for
15th place overall, setting up a first-round
match-up with second-place Buffalo.
This playoff match-up between 1970 expansion
cousins demonstrated the discrepancy in the
success that the two teams have had.
Buffalo went to the Stanley Cup Finals in 1975
and had remained in the upper echelon of the
league ever since. Two thirds of the famed
French Connection was still in tact. With
Gilbert Perreault (whom the Canucks barely
missed out on) centering Richard Martin and
Danny Gare (who had no trouble filling in for
the departed Rene Robert on the top line --
leading the NHL with 56 goals in 1979-80), the
Sabres were one of the most offensively
explosive teams in the league. The Sabres
took the first two games of the best-of-five
series at Memorial Auditorium by 2-1 (on Alan
Haworth's overtime goal) and 6-0 scores before
the series moved west. The Canucks played
a most spirited game on April 11, lead by the
hard-nosed "Tiger" Williams. He
managed to get under the skin of the entire
Buffalo team, getting involved at the Sabres
bench at one point. During the
altercation, it was alleged that his stick hit
Sabres' coach Scotty Bowman in the head. No
penalty was awarded on the play and Williams
continued in the game, leading the Canucks to a
5-4 victory. They seemed to be back in the
series, but an NHL supervisor in the press box
claimed to have clearly seen Williams strike
Bowman, and Williams was suspended for the
fourth game. Without him, the Canucks lost
3-1 and the season was over.
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