The most iconic playoff series of all-time

  • PLEASE check any bookmark on all devices. IF you see a link pointing to mandatory.com DELETE it Please use this URL https://forums.hfboards.com/

daver

Registered User
Apr 4, 2003
26,387
6,147
Visit site
In terms of hype, great teams, and the series itself, hard not to choose the Bruins/Habs '79 series despite it not being for the Cup.

They had met in the SCF the previous two seasons, the Habs were going for four in a row, the Bruins were hoping not to lose four SCFs in a row, and it had one of most iconic Game 7's of all-time.

Wings/Habs in 1955 may have been the greatest heavyweight battle of all-time with GOAT talent up the ying yang. Game 7 was a bit of a disappointment.

I imagine Leafs/Habs in '67 was pretty hyped. The battle of the dynasties at the time, and of all-time, and in the two homes of hockey.

Pens/Wings in 2009 was probably the best since the lockout. Big names, a rematch between a dynastic Wings team and a fast rising Pens team, and a last second save by Fleury to seal Game 7.

Before that, Wings/Avalanche in 2002.

I like the Oilers/Flyers in 1987.

A Leafs/Habs SCF in 1993, the 75th anniversary of the league would have been amazing. Damn you, Frasier!!
 

buffalowing88

Registered User
Aug 11, 2008
4,481
1,931
Charlotte, NC
Just from my personal memory, so only going back to around 1992, I think that the Maple Leafs-Kings WCF in 1993 was one of the most memorable.

Detroit-Colorado in the late 90s or early 00s, take your pick.

Battle of Alberta in the 80s/91, again, take your pick.

Anaheim-Detroit in 07 was some of the best hockey I have ever seen.

But I would probably say the most "iconic" as a Millennial, was the 2011 Bruins-Canucks series. That was wild.
 

MadLuke

Registered User
Jan 18, 2011
10,448
5,983
Bruins-Habs of 1979 is one quick to come to mind, the game 7, Lafleur tying it on a too many men penalty, Don Cherry-Bowman, the last year before the WHA merger, it seem to be the one the most talked about over time.
 

BigBadBruins7708

Registered User
Dec 11, 2017
14,405
19,788
Las Vegas
Just from my personal memory, so only going back to around 1992, I think that the Maple Leafs-Kings WCF in 1993 was one of the most memorable.

Detroit-Colorado in the late 90s or early 00s, take your pick.

Battle of Alberta in the 80s/91, again, take your pick.

Anaheim-Detroit in 07 was some of the best hockey I have ever seen.

But I would probably say the most "iconic" as a Millennial, was the 2011 Bruins-Canucks series. That was wild.

was going to mention the 2011 series as well.

You couldn't ask for more out of a SCF. Crazy entertaining games, true hatred that grew through the series, non stop shot taking in the media and you got 7 games.
 
  • Like
Reactions: buffalowing88

buffalowing88

Registered User
Aug 11, 2008
4,481
1,931
Charlotte, NC
was going to mention the 2011 series as well.

You couldn't ask for more out of a SCF. Crazy entertaining games, true hatred that grew through the series, non stop shot taking in the media and you got 7 games.

The personalities in that series were just above and beyond what you normally get. Throw in two die-hard hockey markets and everything you mentioned and it's hard to beat. I didn't miss a minute of that series and I had zero rooting interest.
 

VanIslander

20 years of All-Time Drafts on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,998
6,755
South Korea
Battle of Alberta in the 80s/91, again, take your pick.
Game 7 in 1991. It was most intense and close. I was in uni in Alberta (from B.C.) and on a Greyhound, i the only person on the bus with a Walkman cassette player (with radio). I was giving the entire bus play by play, they asking about players and where the puck was, the driver asking as much as the passengers, everyone invested in it. After every goal (it was a two-hour bus ride) there were cheers and groans. It was a unique life experience one never forgets.

Tikkanen's hat trick cemented my appreciation for him.

This vid shows more from that game that i ever SAW from news clips afterwards:

 
  • Like
Reactions: buffalowing88

buffalowing88

Registered User
Aug 11, 2008
4,481
1,931
Charlotte, NC
Not the answer to your question but just want throw Flyers-Penguins in 2012 out there



I was at a bar in North Carolina with a bunch of college friends who had zero interest in hockey when that game came on the only TV at the bar. They didn't take their eyes off of Game 3 the rest of the night. It basically turned them into hockey fans. Incredibly fun series.

Canucks - Flames, 1994.



That's a great one. And the last two series for the Rangers that year were very entertaining and high-profile. They lived up to high expectations.
 

vadim sharifijanov

Registered User
Oct 10, 2007
29,534
17,627
As an Avalanche fan, I pick 1996. :D

Although 1999 was fun and weird.

i’d say in 1996 there wasn’t enough at stake yet. did we really care about sakic or yzerman that much yet? or forsberg, lidstrom, fedorov, etc...

detroit fans would probably say 1997 or 2002, which ticked those “do we care yet” boxes. the lemieux hit, the ensuing melée, vernon vs roy (as opposed to osgood in 96)/hasek vs roy, the defending champs vs the now-reloaded powerhouse they had history with, but still it wasn’t the finals either time.

for me, it would be 2001. you get the reloaded powerhouse vs the defending champs, ray bourque of course, roy vs brodeur, crème de la crème HHOF captains sakic and stevens, and a host of significant players and units: a new big three (with larry robinson behind the other bench), the A line, bobby holik at the peak of his hype, niedermayer, mogilny, and the pushes from below of rafalski, madden, gomez, and white on the devils and hejduk, tanguay, and drury on the avs. plus the rare two best teams in the regular season facing off in the finals... it just felt like destiny.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Bear of Bad News

Bear of Bad News

"The Worst Guy on the Site" - user feedback
Sep 27, 2005
13,943
28,834
i’d say in 1996 there wasn’t enough at stake yet. did we really care about sakic or yzerman that much yet? or forsberg, lidstrom, fedorov, etc...

detroit fans would probably say 1997 or 2002, which ticked those “do we care yet” boxes. the lemieux hit, the ensuing melée, vernon vs roy (as opposed to osgood in 96)/hasek vs roy, the defending champs vs the now-reloaded powerhouse they had history with, but still it wasn’t the finals either time.

for me, it would be 2001. you get the reloaded powerhouse vs the defending champs, ray bourque of course, roy vs brodeur, crème de la crème HHOF captains sakic and stevens, and a host of significant players and units: a new big three (with larry robinson behind the other bench), the A line, bobby holik at the peak of his hype, niedermayer, mogilny, and the pushes from below of rafalski, madden, gomez, and white on the devils and hejduk, tanguay, and drury on the avs. plus the rare two best teams in the regular season facing off in the finals... it just felt like destiny.

I wasn't counting 2001 since it wasn't Avs-Wings - noted Red Wing killer Adam Deadmarsh was cleverly traded to the Los Angeles Kings, and he defeated them for us. ;)

That Blues series kind of felt like cheating after a Kings series where Felix Potvin nearly stole it and Peter Forsberg left without a spleen. Devils series was legit, and I snuck into Game Seven. Then 9/11 happened over the offseason and it became much harder to sneak into shit.
 
  • Like
Reactions: vadim sharifijanov

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad