On April 17, 1975, at Chicago Stadium, Stan Mikita delivered a clutch overtime performance that would unknowingly mark the end of an era for the Chicago Blackhawks. Facing the Buffalo Sabres in Game 3 of their quarter-final series, the Blackhawks were already down 2-0 and fighting to stay alive in the 1974-75 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Highlights
Stan Mikita scored the overtime winner in Game 3 on April 17, 1975
Chicago defeated Buffalo 5-4 for their only win of the series
Mikita had a 3-point game (1 goal, 2 assists)
The Blackhawks were already down 2-0 in the series at the time
Chicago lost the next two games and was eliminated
That victory became their last playoff win for nearly 5 years
The team went on to lose 16 straight playoff games (NHL record)
The streak finally ended on April 8, 1980, with an OT goal by Doug Lecuyer
Chicago controlled much of the game but couldn’t shake Buffalo. Holding a 4-3 lead after two periods, the Blackhawks saw their advantage disappear when Jim Schoenfeld tied the game midway through the third. With momentum hanging in the balance, the game headed into sudden-death overtime.
Just 2:31 into the extra frame, Mikita stepped up in vintage fashion. Scoring his third goal of the playoffs, he beat Gerry Desjardins with a perfectly timed finish, assisted by Cliff Koroll and Dick Redmond. Mikita’s overtime winner capped off a dominant three-point performance, as he also assisted on earlier goals by Redmond and Koroll.
What no one could have predicted at the time was the historical weight of that goal. Chicago would go on to lose the next two games and the series, and that victory would stand as their last playoff win for nearly five years. The Blackhawks then endured a staggering 16-game postseason losing streak, a record that still stands in NHL history.
Despite the drought, Chicago continued to qualify for the playoffs each year, only to fall short repeatedly. They were swept by the Montreal Canadiens in 1976, eliminated quickly by the New York Islanders in 1977, pushed but lost to Boston in 1978, and swept again by the Islanders in 1979.
The streak finally ended on April 8, 1980, when Doug Lecuyer scored an overtime winner against Mike Liut. Though Mikita had retired by then, Tony Esposito was a constant presence in both the 1975 victory and the 1980 breakthrough, a rare bridge between two vastly different moments in Blackhawks playoff history.
Forever a Blackhawk
A tribute to Stan Mikita — one of the greatest Chicago Blackhawks of all time and a Hall of Famer.
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