17,585 is the number Delaware North is looking at today

Fenian24

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Jun 14, 2010
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I hope somebody writes a book someday about this ownership group.

What an interesting story.

Jeremy takes a hardline stance in the 90s, and fights tooth and nail against the players association to get his salary cap.

By all accounts, costs the Bruins multiple Cups in the process.

They finally do right through post lockout when they bring in an outsider to assemble the roster and implement his vision.

However, in the grand scheme of things, the one Cup is an under achievement.

Always in the mix, rarely coming out on top.

That’s what the scoreboard says your legacy is.
Anton Levay wrote the story of JJ's time in Boston.
 

Fenian24

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When I first had my ST, the arena was never sold out. Many from the balcony would come sit in the loge. There were about 3000 STH.

They treated the STH much better.

Tickets were more than half cheaper than now. The team was not so good.

The coach was Robbie Ftorek. ..then Mike O'Connell, then Mike Sullivan ..then Dave Lewis...and Claude Julien (my favorite since I have had my ST)...You know the rest.

I hope they fix the problems.

#1 on my bucket list is to see the Bs win the cup on home ice with me there. I am almost 72....Seats are too expensive now and eventually driving to and from NH will be too much for an old lady.

I saw St Louis and Chicago skating on the Garden ice in front of me....
I got to see Edmonton skate around with the Cup (and somebody smack Craig Muni in the head with a shoe from the balcony), I would just like another Cup.
 

Fenian24

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Could they have won another Cup in the 70s, 80s, or early 90s had they extended?

90? 91/92?

A bit before my time, so going mostly based on what old timers like my dad have told me.

That and WHA taking a bite out of their core towards the end of the Orr years.
74 should have been a Cup, 1979 is still the one that hurts the most, can argue 92 as well. 2019 is unforgiveable.
 

Ludwig Fell Down

Registered User
Feb 19, 2005
3,947
3,071
South Shore, MA
The 88-94 core should've won at least one. 1991 was probably their best shot, and I think a lot of people could argue that if Ulf doesn't cheapshot Neely that they win that series and the cup. By extension, if Neely is healthy in 92, they probably are more competitive in that conference final too. I still have no idea how that 1993 team got themselves swept by Buffalo, because the rest of the division leaders all lost too and the field would've been wide open if they advanced. Just a weird playoff year overall.

Really, most of the 90s failure boils down to Cam's knee and thigh turning to bone. The two years that he missed the playoffs with lingering injuries, the team actually went surprisingly far without him (conference finals in 92, taking a 2-0 lead on the Devils in the second round in 94), to the point where if he were healthy, maybe they go farther.
1993 is still one of their biggest disappointments. An amazing regular season with the B's, Nords and Habs alternating over 100 points. B's won the division with the prize of playing a .500 Sabres team, and scored about 6 goals total in a 4-game sweep.
 

McGarnagle

Yes.
Aug 5, 2017
30,398
41,705
1993 is still one of their biggest disappointments. An amazing regular season with the B's, Nords and Habs alternating over 100 points. B's won the division with the prize of playing a .500 Sabres team, and scored about 6 goals total in a 4-game sweep.
The crazy thing is that they actually put up 12 goals in the four games (technically 12 in three and one shutout in game 2). Adam Oates had nine apples, Neely was 4G-1A, Juneau 2G-4A. And despite leading both sides with 9 points, Oates was an even +/-. Andy Moog just got lit up by Mogilny.

And that team wasn't a fraud that got out to a hot start and faded down the stretch, they won their last eight games of the season to win the division and Buffalo lost their last seven of the season to limp into the playoffs.

That was a little before my time as a fan so I didn't get to watch it as it unfolded, but just through stat sheets and such I still cannot make sense of that series for the life of me.
 

Fenway

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The OP is mysterious! But with Fenway posting, it's legit.

Someone fill in some of the mysterious implied blanks for me...
The reality is Papa is 84 and the family is bracing for life without him.


In your estimation, do you think Sweeney going all in on the 2023 deadline was a directive from above like they wanted to be aggressive to try to win one while the boss was still around to see it?

No doubt in my mind that is why they went all in
 

Fenway

HF Bookie and Bruins Historian
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Sep 26, 2007
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Here’s the thing about those boos. They’re heard loud ‘n’ clear 450 miles west in Buffalo, where team owner Jeremy Jacobs knows the perils of not keeping the customer satisfied. The boos can convert overnight to empty seats, a devalued product.

A quick look on line Monday afternoon had Loge 8 tickets for the CBJ game being offered up at $20 a pop–upward of a 90 percent discount from what season ticket holders pay when investing in their full-season package. It’s also about what Jacobs charges for a draft beer at Garden concessions. Painful Jacobsnomics.

The Bruins, the Garden, and surrounding real estate development, including the $65 charge to park at Bruins-Celts game, have become a Jacobs/Delaware North diamond mine through the decades. Bruins hockey has been the gemstone at the center of it all. In the scheme of things, tossing the coach overboard to help preserve that core is a mere bottle cap removed from another pricey tallboy at the concession stands.

 

TP70BruinsCup

Let’s Go Bruins👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Nov 16, 2019
5,277
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On the subject of missed Cups, I often think of 1982-83. They were #1 overall. They looked poised to be the one's to pass the Islanders and the new champs. Two things though: O'Reilly hurt his knee and that was massive for the leadership of that team (..........funny, almost 40 years later and we are talking about a team that is missing in the leadership department. Go figure!). Also Pete Peters couldn't beat that Islanders. He was an MVP finalist that season but in that semi final year he just flaked out vs them. Too bad as that would have given Brad Park a Cup that year, given Cashman another one too and Cheevers one as coach. That would have been cool! That team that year had it all................for the most part.
 

Johnny Upton

Registered User
Jul 5, 2003
336
316
Boston
The crazy thing is that they actually put up 12 goals in the four games (technically 12 in three and one shutout in game 2). Adam Oates had nine apples, Neely was 4G-1A, Juneau 2G-4A. And despite leading both sides with 9 points, Oates was an even +/-. Andy Moog just got lit up by Mogilny.

And that team wasn't a fraud that got out to a hot start and faded down the stretch, they won their last eight games of the season to win the division and Buffalo lost their last seven of the season to limp into the playoffs.

That was a little before my time as a fan so I didn't get to watch it as it unfolded, but just through stat sheets and such I still cannot make sense of that series for the life of me.
I did get to watch at it unfolded and it was a total kick in the jimmies. The worst part was they were up 5-3 in Game 4 headed into the 3rd period so I thought, at least it won’t be a sweep! Yeah, not so much.
 

Gordoff

Formerly: Strafer
Jan 18, 2003
26,473
28,180
The Hub
On the subject of missed Cups, I often think of 1982-83. They were #1 overall. They looked poised to be the one's to pass the Islanders and the new champs. Two things though: O'Reilly hurt his knee and that was massive for the leadership of that team (..........funny, almost 40 years later and we are talking about a team that is missing in the leadership department. Go figure!). Also Pete Peters couldn't beat that Islanders. He was an MVP finalist that season but in that semi final year he just flaked out vs them. Too bad as that would have given Brad Park a Cup that year, given Cashman another one too and Cheevers one as coach. That would have been cool! That team that year had it all................for the most part.
Brad Park never sipping Champagne from the Cup is almost criminal.
I still get a lump in my throat thinking about that and the fact that the B's
passed on him for some lump in the 1970 amateur draft only to finally get him in the blockbuster trade of '75 when Orr was skating on essentially one leg.
Did the Bruins management of '70 think that they had Orr and didn't need another uber talented blue-liner?
Imagine (for those of you who also lived in that most incredible time in Bruins history) Orr and Park on defense, on the PK, and especially the PP
for the Bruins for multiple years. Also, if Orr wasn't rushed back from surgeries from day one as a Bruin he maybe could've had several more season patrolling the Bruins blueline and racking up Cups. I've gotta go roll up in a ball and cry now.:(
 
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Fenway

HF Bookie and Bruins Historian
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Sep 26, 2007
70,327
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Cambridge, MA
Brad Park never sipping Champagne from the Cup is almost criminal.
I still get a lump in my throat thinking about that and the fact that the B's
passed on him for some lump in the 1970 amateur draft only to finally get him in the blockbuster trade of '75 when Orr was skating on essentially one leg.
Did the Bruins management of '70 think that they had Orr and didn't need another uber talented blue-liner?
Imagine (for those of you who also lived in that most incredible time in Bruins history) Orr and Park on defense, on the PK, and especially the PP
for the Bruins for multiple years. Also, if Orr wasn't rushed back from surgeries from day one as a Bruin he maybe could've had several more season patrolling the Bruins blueline and racking up Cups. I've gotta go roll up in a ball and cry now.:(
It's sad Park never got his number retired here or in New York.
 

quietbruinfan

Salt and light
Feb 2, 2022
6,544
5,462
Land of Nod in the East of Eden
On the subject of missed Cups, I often think of 1982-83. They were #1 overall. They looked poised to be the one's to pass the Islanders and the new champs. Two things though: O'Reilly hurt his knee and that was massive for the leadership of that team (..........funny, almost 40 years later and we are talking about a team that is missing in the leadership department. Go figure!). Also Pete Peters couldn't beat that Islanders. He was an MVP finalist that season but in that semi final year he just flaked out vs them. Too bad as that would have given Brad Park a Cup that year, given Cashman another one too and Cheevers one as coach. That would have been cool! That team that year had it all................for the most part.
They needed more scoring. Ironically if Levielle does not go down,i think they have a chance. I doubt they finish first, but they have a chance.
 

Clode

Mark Kastelic Enjoyer
Aug 2, 2012
4,040
4,932
Derry, NH
When I first had my ST, the arena was never sold out. Many from the balcony would come sit in the loge. There were about 3000 STH.

They treated the STH much better.

Tickets were more than half cheaper than now. The team was not so good.

The coach was Robbie Ftorek. ..then Mike O'Connell, then Mike Sullivan ..then Dave Lewis...and Claude Julien (my favorite since I have had my ST)...You know the rest.

I hope they fix the problems.

#1 on my bucket list is to see the Bs win the cup on home ice with me there. I am almost 72....Seats are too expensive now and eventually driving to and from NH will be too much for an old lady.

I saw St Louis and Chicago skating on the Garden ice in front of me....
I remember back in 09 when I was 14 my dad snagged 4 balcony tickets to a Saturday night game against Florida for like 30 bucks a piece. They won 6-1 and the crowd was chanting for Byron Bitz in the finals minutes because he had 2 goals that night. Those were the days....
 

TheRealChrisKelly

Registered User
Feb 3, 2012
46
45
The 88-94 core should've won at least one. 1991 was probably their best shot, and I think a lot of people could argue that if Ulf doesn't cheapshot Neely that they win that series and the cup. By extension, if Neely is healthy in 92, they probably are more competitive in that conference final too. I still have no idea how that 1993 team got themselves swept by Buffalo, because the rest of the division leaders all lost too and the field would've been wide open if they advanced. Just a weird playoff year overall.

Really, most of the 90s failure boils down to Cam's knee and thigh turning to bone. The two years that he missed the playoffs with lingering injuries, the team actually went surprisingly far without him (conference finals in 92, taking a 2-0 lead on the Devils in the second round in 94), to the point where if he were healthy, maybe they go farther.
Great post.
Adam Oates stat line from the Buffalo series is the craziest thing. They scored 12 goals in the 4 games. Oates assisted on 9 of them!
 

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