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76-77ColRoc
1976–77 Colorado Rockies (NHL)
Division 5th Smythe
Conference 9th Clarence Campbell
1976–77 record 20–46–14
Goals for 226
Goals against 307
Team information
General manager Ray Miron
Coach Johnny Wilson
Captain Simon Nolet
Team leaders
Goals Wilf Paiement (40)
Assists Wilf Paiement (41)
Points Wilf Paiement (81)
Penalty minutes Steve Durbano
Wins Michel Plasse (12)
Goals against average Bill McKenzie (2.40)

The 1976–77 Colorado Rockies season was the Rockies' first season. The former Kansas City Scouts relocated in the off-season to Denver.[1] With the World Hockey Association's Denver Spurs leaving Denver in a midnight move to Ottawa, Ontario just about 10 months earlier, Denver would get a franchise and the team would be anointed the Colorado Rockies.[2] The team moved from Kansas City, which was a two-year NHL franchise that struggled from the beginning.[3]

Off-season[]

Draft Picks[]

• The draft was held while the franchise was in Kansas City.

Round # Player Nationality College/junior/club team
1 11 Paul Gardner (C) Flag of Canada Canada Oshawa Generals (OHA)

Regular Season[]

The team took to the ice for their first regular season against the Toronto Maple Leafs on October 6, 1976.[3] Rockies goalie Doug Favell played extremely well stopping 39 of the Toronto 41 shots on net. Wilf Paiement notching one goal, two assists and a fight. Rookie Larry Skinner scored the first NHL regular season goal for the franchise.[4] The final score was 4–2.

The team was competitive in the Smythe Division for a major portion of the season. Early in the season, the Rockies picked up wins by either the goon tactics of Steve Durbano, or through the heroic feats of their goalies, Doug Favell and Michel Plasse. Bill McKenzie was also a goalie for the Rockies but only got into five games.[4]

On some nights, the Rockies could come back from two and three goal deficits to get ties or the occasional win, but then the next night the team would be overmatched by one of the elite teams in the league.

Steve Durbano[]

Goonery was a big part of hockey in 1976 and the Rockies goon was Steve Durbano. After losing three in a row, Durbano tried to get the Rockies going with goon tactics. One particular incident included one game against the Blackhawks.

Durbano took out Blackhawk star Stan Mikita behind the Colorado net. Jim Harrison of the Blackhawks came off the bench to get after Durbano, who was already at the Rockies bench. A fight began, and Durbano began to drop the mitts. Harrison was kicked out of the game. Rockies coach Johnny Wilson was quick to point out that the Durbano fight inspired the team and a late-game fight between legendary Bobby Orr and Rockie Roger Lemelin helped secure the victory.[4]

The Rockies really gelled as a team after the scrap. Winger Colin Campbell beat Blackhawk goalie Tony Esposito less than one-and-one-half minutes later to cut the Blackhawk lead to 2–1. The next goal was off the stick of Wilf Paiement, his second of the season, to tie the game. Then Gary Croteau scored to stake the Rockies to a 3–2 lead at the end of the second period.[4]

Despite the goonery, Durbano did not last long with the franchise. One of Durbano's last games with the Rockies was against the St. Louis Blues. Again the Rockies were down 2–0 when Durbano tried to change the course of the game. Blues player Bob Plager was involved with interference. This drew an immediate response by Durbano, who retaliated by spearing Plager. Blues player Pierre Plante immediately went after Durbano. The two were eventually separated. As Durbano was being taken to the penalty box by linesman Malcolm Ashford he broke free, grabbed his helmet and fired it at Plager as he was in the penalty box.[4] Durbano was ejected from the game. Reacting to the incident, Paiement scored shorthanded on the resulting Blues power play to cut the Blues lead to 2–1. This would be the final score as the Rockies effort fell just short.

Goaltending[]

Teams were launching over 40 and 50 shots on net against Plasse and Favell. After a November game against the defending Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens, Plasse was noticeably hurt.[4] The Canadiens were blasting the puck towards Plasse all game. One shot off the stick of Canadiens player Murray Wilson put Plasse down in the second period with an arm injury, but the goalie was able to get up and finish the game. The Rockies' forwards were able to come back twice from two-goal deficits to finally tie the game at three a piece with just about nine minutes left in the third. However it was Plasse preserved the tie stand by stopping 47 of 50 shots, 20 in the third period.[4]

Ray Miron[]

A November 2–1 loss to the Cleveland Barons raised the ire of General Manager Ray Miron. During the second intermission, Miron burst into the locker room and said that if the Rockies didn't pull the game out, he was going to call up three minor leaguers and send down three Rockies. Miron kept his word after the 2–1 Rockies loss and called up Mike Kitchen, Paul Gardner and Jim McElmury. Gardner made a quick impact, tallying five goals in his first four NHL games. Kitchen helped shore up the defense. Despite a 5–3 loss to the Bruins, Bruin coach Don Cherry raved that he was "impressed" with the Rockies.[4]

Playoff Contention[]

The Rockies would be successful in upending divisional rivals the Minnesota North Stars. It took three goals in the third period, including two in the final two minutes, to win the game 4-2. After the game, coach Johnny Wilson was raving for his team. The Rockies had taken over sole possession of third place in the Smythe Division with the win.[4] By February 1, the Rockies had a two-point third-place lead over Minnesota and Vancouver. The Rockies would face the New York Rangers on February 1, and the goaltender Plasse would stop 48 of 50 Ranger shots. His performance would help the Rockies to a 5-2 win. The win extended their third place lead to four points.[4] A February 6 game against the Pittsburgh Penguins saw the Rockies score four unanswered third period goals to win the game 5-2. The Rockies had a former member of the WHA’s Denver Spurs on the club. Ron Delorme, the former Spur, would score the game winner in his first stint with the team. He had been playing with Baltimore in the Southern Hockey League.[4] The Rockies continued to be successful. The club enjoyed an 8-6 win against Minnesota, as it extended their third place margin to five points ahead of them. The Rockies were only five points behind second-place Chicago. On February 16, the Rockies won their fourth game of the season against the Detroit Red Wings. A February 20 triumph against the North Stars would be the last highlight of the season for the club.[4] By March 27, the Rockies were officially out of the playoff hunt. This was attributed to an 18-game winless streak that began on February 22. The goaltending of Doug Favell and Plasse kept the team in contention during many games. A typical night saw the goaltenders facing 50 shots. When the Rockies were based in Kansas City, the Scouts had finished their tenure in Kansas City by only winning one game in their final 44. The winless streak finally stopped in a 6-3 win against the Vancouver Canucks. This was the second-to-the-last game of the season. The Rockies season ended with a loss to the LA Kings.[4]

Final Standings[]

Smythe Division
GP W L T GF GA PTS
St. Louis Blues 80 32 39 9 239 276 73
Minnesota North Stars 80 23 39 18 240 310 64
Chicago Black Hawks 80 26 43 11 240 298 63
Vancouver Canucks 80 25 42 13 235 294 63
Colorado Rockies 80 20 46 14 226 307 54

Note: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against, Pts = Points
Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold.


Game Log[]

No. R Date Score Opponent Record
1 W October 5 4–2 Toronto Maple Leafs (1976–77) 1–0–0
2 L October 8 3–5 New York Rangers (1976–77) 1–1–0
3 L October 9 1–4 @ Minnesota North Stars (1976–77) 1–2–0
4 L October 13 2–3 St. Louis Blues (1976–77) 1–3–0
5 W October 15 5–3 Chicago Black Hawks (1976–77) 2–3–0
6 L October 17 3–4 @ New York Rangers (1976–77) 2–4–0
7 L October 20 1–2 Boston Bruins (1976–77) 2–5–0
8 T October 22 3–3 Minnesota North Stars (1976–77) 2–5–1
9 L October 24 3–5 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1976–77) 2–6–1
10 W October 27 4–2 Atlanta Flames (1976–77) 3–6–1
11 L October 29 1–2 Washington Capitals (1976–77) 3–7–1
12 L October 30 1–3 @ St. Louis Blues (1976–77) 3–8–1
13 L November 2 1–5 New York Islanders (1976–77) 3–9–1
14 L November 5 1–4 Pittsburgh Penguins (1976–77) 3–10–1
15 W November 7 3–2 @ Chicago Black Hawks (1976–77) 4–10–1
16 L November 10 1–2 Cleveland Barons (1976–77) 4–11–1
17 T November 13 3–3 @ Montreal Canadiens (1976–77) 4–11–2
18 L November 14 3–5 @ Boston Bruins (1976–77) 4–12–2
19 L November 17 3–6 @ Atlanta Flames (1976–77) 4–13–2
20 W November 20 5–2 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1976–77) 5–13–2
21 L November 21 1–3 @ Washington Capitals (1976–77) 5–14–2
22 L November 26 2–4 Philadelphia Flyers (1976–77) 5–15–2
23 T November 28 6–6 Los Angeles Kings (1976–77) 5–15–3
24 W November 30 5–3 @ St. Louis Blues (1976–77) 6–15–3
25 W December 1 5–3 Cleveland Barons (1976–77) 7–15–3
26 W December 3 3–2 Vancouver Canucks (1976–77) 8–15–3
27 L December 5 3–5 @ Buffalo Sabres (1976–77) 8–16–3
28 T December 8 3–3 @ Los Angeles Kings (1976–77) 8–16–4
29 T December 11 4–4 @ Vancouver Canucks (1976–77) 8–16–5
30 L December 15 2–8 Montreal Canadiens (1976–77) 8–17–5
31 L December 18 2–4 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1976–77) 8–18–5
32 L December 19 3–4 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1976–77) 8–19–5
33 L December 22 1–2 St. Louis Blues (1976–77) 8–20–5
34 L December 26 3–5 @ Chicago Black Hawks (1976–77) 8–21–5
35 L December 27 2–6 @ Atlanta Flames (1976–77) 8–22–5
36 W December 29 3–1 Washington Capitals (1976–77) 9–22–5
37 T December 31 2–2 Chicago Black Hawks (1976–77) 9–22–6
38 W January 2 6–4 @ Detroit Red Wings (1976–77) 10–22–6
39 L January 5 4–6 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1976–77) 10–23–6
40 T January 7 4–4 New York Rangers (1976–77) 10–23–7
41 L January 11 0–6 Montreal Canadiens (1976–77) 10–24–7
42 W January 13 4–2 Detroit Red Wings (1976–77) 11–24–7
43 L January 15 2–5 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1976–77) 11–25–7
44 L January 16 0–3 @ Buffalo Sabres (1976–77) 11–26–7
45 T January 18 7–7 Chicago Black Hawks (1976–77) 11–26–8
46 W January 20 3–1 @ Detroit Red Wings (1976–77) 12–26–8
47 L January 22 1–2 @ St. Louis Blues (1976–77) 12–27–8
48 L January 23 1–7 New York Islanders (1976–77) 12–28–8
49 W January 27 6–4 @ Boston Bruins (1976–77) 13–28–8
50 T January 28 3–3 @ Atlanta Flames (1976–77) 13–28–9
51 W January 30 4–2 Minnesota North Stars (1976–77) 14–28–9
52 W February 1 5–2 New York Rangers (1976–77) 15–28–9
53 L February 3 4–6 Buffalo Sabres (1976–77) 15–29–9
54 W February 6 5–2 Pittsburgh Penguins (1976–77) 16–29–9
55 W February 9 8–6 @ Minnesota North Stars (1976–77) 17–29–9
56 L February 11 0–3 @ Cleveland Barons (1976–77) 17–30–9
57 L February 12 2–4 @ Chicago Black Hawks (1976–77) 17–31–9
58 W February 15 6–2 Detroit Red Wings (1976–77) 18–31–9
59 T February 18 3–3 @ Cleveland Barons (1976–77) 18–31–10
60 W February 20 3–2 Minnesota North Stars (1976–77) 19–31–10
61 L February 22 1–2 @ New York Islanders (1976–77) 19–32–10
62 L February 25 2–5 Boston Bruins (1976–77) 19–33–10
63 L February 27 3–4 Philadelphia Flyers (1976–77) 19–34–10
64 T March 2 2–2 St. Louis Blues (1976–77) 19–34–11
65 L March 5 3–6 @ Minnesota North Stars (1976–77) 19–35–11
66 L March 6 0–5 New York Islanders (1976–77) 19–36–11
67 L March 9 0–3 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1976–77) 19–37–11
68 L March 10 1–7 @ Montreal Canadiens (1976–77) 19–38–11
69 T March 12 2–2 @ Vancouver Canucks (1976–77) 19–38–12
70 L March 13 2–6 Vancouver Canucks (1976–77) 19–39–12
71 T March 16 4–4 Toronto Maple Leafs (1976–77) 19–39–13
72 L March 18 0–5 @ Washington Capitals (1976–77) 19–40–13
73 L March 20 1–4 Vancouver Canucks (1976–77) 19–41–13
74 L March 22 2–9 @ New York Islanders (1976–77) 19–42–13
75 L March 23 3–5 @ New York Rangers (1976–77) 19–43–13
76 T March 25 2–2 Buffalo Sabres (1976–77) 19–43–14
77 L March 26 1–2 Atlanta Flames (1976–77) 19–44–14
78 L March 31 5–7 @ Los Angeles Kings (1976–77) 19–45–14
79 W April 1 6–3 @ Vancouver Canucks (1976–77) 20–45–14
80 L April 3 4–6 Los Angeles Kings (1976–77) 20–46–14

Playoffs[]

  • The Rockies did not qualify for the post season.

Player Stats[]

Regular Season[]

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Paiement, WilfWilf Paiement RW 78 41 40 81 101 -13 9 5 2
Gardner, PaulPaul Gardner C 60 30 29 59 25 -28 11 0 0
Croteau, GaryGary Croteau LW 78 24 27 51 14 -18 5 0 2
Pyatt, NelsonNelson Pyatt C 77 23 22 45 20 -17 2 0 4
Dean, BarryBarry Dean LW 79 14 25 39 92 -26 2 0 0
Hudson, DaveDave Hudson C 73 15 21 36 14 -3 1 0 2
Edur, TomTom Edur D 80 7 25 32 39 14 3 0 1
Nolet, SimonSimon Nolet RW 52 12 19 31 10 0 1 1 2
McElmury, JimJim McElmury D 55 7 23 30 16 -15 1 0 1
Arnason, ChuckChuck Arnason RW 61 13 10 23 10 -23 3 0 1
Andruff, RonRon Andruff C 66 4 18 22 21 -18 0 0 0
Gruen, DannyDanny Gruen LW 29 8 10 18 12 -6 2 0 1
Dupere, DenisDenis Dupere LW 57 7 11 18 4 3 1 3 2
Van Boxmeer, JohnJohn Van Boxmeer D 41 2 11 13 32 -20 0 0 0
Campbell, ColinColin Campbell D 54 3 8 11 67 -22 0 0 0
Pratt, TracyTracy Pratt D 66 1 10 11 110 -27 0 0 0
Delorme, RonRon Delorme C 29 6 4 10 23 -11 0 0 2
Skinner, LarryLarry Skinner C 19 4 5 9 6 -13 3 0 0
Delparte, GuyGuy Delparte LW 48 1 8 9 18 -10 0 0 0
Kitchen, MikeMike Kitchen D 60 1 8 9 36 -2 0 0 0
Roberto, PhilPhil Roberto RW 22 1 5 6 23 -11 0 0 0
Lefley, BryanBryan Lefley D/LW 58 0 6 6 27 -15 0 0 0
Shanahan, SeanSean Shanahan C/RW 30 1 3 4 40 -11 0 0 0
Johnston, LarryLarry Johnston D 25 0 3 3 35 -25 0 0 0
Lemelin, RogerRoger Lemelin D 14 1 1 2 21 -6 0 0 0
Boucha, HenryHenry Boucha C 9 0 2 2 4 0 0 0 0
Durbano, SteveSteve Durbano D 19 0 2 2 129 -6 0 0 0
Cairns, DonDon Cairns LW 2 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0
Plasse, MichelMichel Plasse G 54 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Rota, RandyRandy Rota C/LW 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
McKenzie, BillBill McKenzie G 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Favell, DougDoug Favell G 30 0 0 0 15 0 0 0 0
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T GA GAA SO
Plasse, MichelMichel Plasse 2986 54 12 29 10 190 3.82 0
Favell, DougDoug Favell 1614 30 8 15 3 105 3.90 0
McKenzie, BillBill McKenzie 200 5 0 2 1 8 2.40 0
Team: 4800 80 20 46 14 303 3.79 0

[5]

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes; PPG=Power-play goals; SHG=Short-handed goals; GWG=Game-winning goals

MIN=Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; SO = Shutouts

Awards and Records[]

  • The Rockies did not win any awards this season.

Transactions[]

Roster[]

Colorado Rockies
Goaltenders

Defensemen

  • {{{no}}} Colin Campbell 
  • {{{no}}} Guy Delparte 
  • {{{no}}} Steve Durbano 
  • {{{no}}} Tom Edur 
  • {{{no}}} Larry Johnston 
  • {{{no}}} Mike Kitchen 
  • {{{no}}} Roger Lemelin 
  • {{{no}}} Bryan Lefley 
  • {{{no}}} Jim McElmury 
  • {{{no}}} John Van Boxmeer 

Wingers

Centers


  • GM: Ray Miron
  • Coach: John Wilson

Farm Teams[]

In 1976–77, the Rockies had affiliations with three different teams, including: the Flint Generals, the Greensboro Generals, and the Rhode Island Reds.[6]

References[]

Relocated and Defunct NHL Teams
Relocated Atlanta Flames · Atlanta Thrashers · Colorado Rockies · Hartford Whalers · Kansas City Scouts · Minnesota North Stars · Quebec Nordiques · Winnipeg Jets
Defunct Oakland / California (Golden) Seals · Cleveland Barons · Hamilton Tigers · Montreal Maroons · Montreal Wanderers · New York/Brooklyn Americans · Ottawa Senators (original) · Philadelphia Quakers · Pittsburgh Pirates · Quebec Bulldogs · St. Louis Eagles
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