1984-1985: No
post-season for the first time in seven years
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Thomas Gradin hit 500 career points
during the '84-'85 season.
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Bill Laforge, who had coached the Kamloops
Oilers to a berth in the 1984 Memorial Cup, took
the job as Head Coach in Vancouver. Former
Canuck Jack McIlhargey came
aboard as his assistant. The Canucks
blueline was expected to be strengthened as
members of Canada's Olympic team, Michel Petit, Doug
Lidster, and first-round draft pick
Jean-Jacques Daigneault, would be playing their
first full seasons in Vancouver (Petit and
Lidster had joined the team after the Olympics
last season). As well, 1981 eighth-round
draft pick LW Petri Skriko, who
had played for Finland, would be joining the
club. The team would get rid of some fan
favorites over the summer though First, they
traded Harold Snepsts, the team's all-time
leader in games, to Minnesota on June 21 for RW
Al MacAdam. On August 8, Dave Williams,
the team's all-time leader in penalty minutes,
was traded to Detroit for C Rob McClanahan.
McClanahan retired before the start of the
season, and it would be an omen of things to
come.
In the second game of the season, in Los
Angeles, the Canucks overcame a 5-2 deficit to
edge the Kings 6-5 in overtime. It would
be the pinnacle of Laforge's NHL coaching
career. The Canucks promptly lost nine in
a row, tying a franchise record, and after 20
games Laforge would be fired with the team
4-14-2 and in last place in the NHL and replaced
by Harry Neale. Among those early-season
losses was the much-hyped "Lemieux
Debut" in Pittsburgh. Mario would
beat John Garrett for a first-period goal and
then get Garrett tossed from the game as he came
in to rescue teammate Gary Lupul, who was being
pummelled by Lemieux in a fight. The Pens
won 4-3. The team promptly lost seven more
games in a row after Neale took over, which
extended the team's losing streak to nine for
the second time in the young season and giving
the team a dismal 4-21-4 record. On
November 25, long time General Manager and team
executive Jake Milford (who had been inducted
into the Hockey Hall of Fame in September) would
succumb to a brain-tumor, prompting the team to
wear his initials "JCM" on their
uniforms for the remainder of the season.
On February 27, the Canucks lost 11-5 in
Detroit, but Stan Smyl managed his 187th goal as
a Canuck, breaking another one of Don Lever's
records. On March 8, Thomas Gradin reached
the 500-point plateau in a 4-3 win over Los
Angeles. During the season, in which the
Canucks would surrender a club-record 405 goals
against, a couple of statistical oddities would
occur. The Canucks, who only won 25 games
all season, won seven of those games in
overtime, tying an NHL record that has since
been tied again but not broken. As well,
the Canucks went 3-3-2 against the powerful
Edmonton Oilers, whom the Canucks would not beat
for another three years. On March 15, the
Canucks blew a 4-1 lead at home to Detroit and
lost 6-5, which mathematically eliminated them
from the playoffs for the first time in seven
years. They would finish the season with
59 points; a whopping 23 points behind
fourth-place Los Angeles.
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