reckoning
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- Jan 4, 2005
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I'm currently reading Mike Keenan's autobiography, and he talks about this tournament. It's something I've heard bits about over the years, and wanted to take a closer look at it.
There is an in-depth recap of the tournament on this blog that I highly recommend The Memorial Cup: A history . . . 1980 , but I'll give a brief summary.
The three teams in the Memorial Cup that year were:
Regina Pats, coached by Bryan Murray, top player was Doug Wickenheiser
Peterborough Petes, coached by Mike Keenan, top player was Larry Murphy
Cornwall Royals, coached by Doug Carpenter, top player was rookie Dale Hawerchuk.
Most observers felt that it would come down to Regina and Peterborough. The Pats were the host team and an offensive powerhouse. The Petes were the defending champs who had rolled through the OHL playoffs. The QMJHL champs Cornwall were considered an afterthought.
The format was a round-robin where each team played each other twice. The two teams with best records would then play in the Championship. Peterborough won their first three games, two against Regina and one against Cornwall. Cornwall beat Regina in their first game, but the Pats pounded them 11-2 in their next meeting.
The two Regina-Peterborough games were hard fought affairs, and Bryan Murray was very critical of Mike Keenans tactics, specifically refusing to send his players out for the faceoff until the officials examined Wickenheiser's gloves. Murray felt that Keenan was making a mockery of the game trying to get cheap power-plays from stick measurements or other equipment issues. Keenans response was "the rules are the rules". This was the start of a bad feeling between the two coaches that would extend well into their NHL careers.
The final game of the round-robin was Peterborough (3-0) vs Cornwall (1-2). The Petes had already clinched a spot in the Final. If they won the game they would play Regina, if they lost they would play Cornwall. Peterborough led 4-2 after the second period, but Cornwall scored 3 goals in the third to win. Angry Regina fans littered the ice with debris, and the Petes needed the police to help them leave the arena.
Afterwards, Bryan Murray accused the Petes of losing on purpose to avoid playing Regina in the Final. He called it a disgrace and said Keenan should be kicked out of junior hockey. Keenan refused to comment.
The Championship game was a fiasco. Security was non-existent, and many fans brought eggs to the arena that were hurled at Keenan and the Petes. One fan actually threw a live chicken at the Petes bench. As for the game itself, the supposedly weaker Cornwall team won in OT to take the Championship.
Keenan categorically states in his book that he did not throw the game, and I'm inclined to believe him. Why would they stoop to throwing a game to avoid playing a Regina team they'd already beaten twice? Why would they have a 4-2 lead after the second? And if Regina was such a better team than Cornwall, why did they lose to them in their first game?
The one point Keenan concedes is that it was a nothing game for the Petes, their first in a long time, and there would obviously be a let-down, especially against a Cornwall team facing elimination.
I would compare it to how sometimes on the last weekend of the NFL season, you'll see a team who has already clinched a playoff spot lose to a weaker team. They're more concerned with keeping their star players rested and healthy for the playoffs, but they're not trying to lose.
Does anyone here have any memories of that tournament? There's nothing on YT except for Cornwall's winning goal.
There is an in-depth recap of the tournament on this blog that I highly recommend The Memorial Cup: A history . . . 1980 , but I'll give a brief summary.
The three teams in the Memorial Cup that year were:
Regina Pats, coached by Bryan Murray, top player was Doug Wickenheiser
Peterborough Petes, coached by Mike Keenan, top player was Larry Murphy
Cornwall Royals, coached by Doug Carpenter, top player was rookie Dale Hawerchuk.
Most observers felt that it would come down to Regina and Peterborough. The Pats were the host team and an offensive powerhouse. The Petes were the defending champs who had rolled through the OHL playoffs. The QMJHL champs Cornwall were considered an afterthought.
The format was a round-robin where each team played each other twice. The two teams with best records would then play in the Championship. Peterborough won their first three games, two against Regina and one against Cornwall. Cornwall beat Regina in their first game, but the Pats pounded them 11-2 in their next meeting.
The two Regina-Peterborough games were hard fought affairs, and Bryan Murray was very critical of Mike Keenans tactics, specifically refusing to send his players out for the faceoff until the officials examined Wickenheiser's gloves. Murray felt that Keenan was making a mockery of the game trying to get cheap power-plays from stick measurements or other equipment issues. Keenans response was "the rules are the rules". This was the start of a bad feeling between the two coaches that would extend well into their NHL careers.
The final game of the round-robin was Peterborough (3-0) vs Cornwall (1-2). The Petes had already clinched a spot in the Final. If they won the game they would play Regina, if they lost they would play Cornwall. Peterborough led 4-2 after the second period, but Cornwall scored 3 goals in the third to win. Angry Regina fans littered the ice with debris, and the Petes needed the police to help them leave the arena.
Afterwards, Bryan Murray accused the Petes of losing on purpose to avoid playing Regina in the Final. He called it a disgrace and said Keenan should be kicked out of junior hockey. Keenan refused to comment.
The Championship game was a fiasco. Security was non-existent, and many fans brought eggs to the arena that were hurled at Keenan and the Petes. One fan actually threw a live chicken at the Petes bench. As for the game itself, the supposedly weaker Cornwall team won in OT to take the Championship.
Keenan categorically states in his book that he did not throw the game, and I'm inclined to believe him. Why would they stoop to throwing a game to avoid playing a Regina team they'd already beaten twice? Why would they have a 4-2 lead after the second? And if Regina was such a better team than Cornwall, why did they lose to them in their first game?
The one point Keenan concedes is that it was a nothing game for the Petes, their first in a long time, and there would obviously be a let-down, especially against a Cornwall team facing elimination.
I would compare it to how sometimes on the last weekend of the NFL season, you'll see a team who has already clinched a playoff spot lose to a weaker team. They're more concerned with keeping their star players rested and healthy for the playoffs, but they're not trying to lose.
Does anyone here have any memories of that tournament? There's nothing on YT except for Cornwall's winning goal.