1985-86 was the year the National Hockey League changed
rules to try and keep the Edmonton Oilers from obliterating the league’s
scoring records. From 1985 to 1993, the NHL allowed teams to play five on five
instead of four on four when coincidental minors were handed out. Unofficially,
the rule was changed because the Oilers were unstoppable in a four-on-four
situation.
1985-86 was also a year when the Edmonton Oilers should have
cruised to a Stanley Cup victory. Instead, they allowed the Calgary Flames to
oust them from the playoffs in the second round. The series went the full seven
games with neither team winning consecutive games and Calgary outscoring
Edmonton by a slight margin at 25-24 on the series. Both Edmonton and Calgary
had easily swept in their opening round. The Oilers took out the Canucks in
three and the Flames took out the Jets in three. Calgary reached the Stanley
Cup final before bowing out to the Montreal Canadiens in five games.
That season, the Oilers won 56 games while losing only 17
and tying 7 for 119 points. The point total was thirty more than the Flames,
who were second in the Clarence Campbell Conference. They Oilers were nine
points better than the Philadelphia Flyers who were first in the Prince of
Wales Conference. Coincidentally, the Flyers were knocked out in the first
round by the New York Rangers who finished the season with just 78 points and
were two games below .500.
Edmonton players set National Hockey League individual
records that season and several still stand today. Of them, Wayne Gretzky’s 215
points and 163 assists are the records that likely will remain for an eternity.
Gretzky also tied the NHL mark for most assists in a single game with seven.
Paul Coffey scored 48 goals which stands as the most goals scored by a
defenseman in one season. Paul eclipsed the previous mark of 46 set by Bobby
Orr of the Boston Bruins in 1974-75. Coffey also set the record for the longest
point streak for defenseman at 28 games.
Edmonton players dominated the NHL’s top ten in the race for
the Art Ross Trophy. Wayne Gretzky was 74 points ahead of the number two man in
the league, Mario Lemieux of the Pittsburgh Penguins, who totalled 141 points.
Paul Coffey came in third with 138 points, one less than Bobby Orr’s record for
defenseman set in 1970-71. Jari Kurri finished fourth in the NHL with 131
points and led the league with 68 goals. Unfortunately for Kurri, the Rocket
Richard Trophy didn’t come into existence for another decade and a half.
The Oilers took home the hardware at the NHL awards ceremony
in 1985-86. Gretzky was awarded the Art Ross Trophy as the league’s leading
scorer and the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s MVP. The Oilers won the President’s
Trophy for the highest point total during the National Hockey League regular
season. Glen Sather won the Jack Adams Award as the top coach despite having a
team full of ringers and experiencing such a playoff disappointment. Of course,
Paul Coffey won the Norris Trophy as the league’s top defenseman.
Wayne Gretzky and Paul Coffey were selected to the NHL’s
First Team All-Star team and Jari Kurri made Second Team. Nine Edmonton Oilers
players appeared in the NHL’s All-Star Game in 1985-86. Other than Gretzky,
Coffey and Kurri, Glenn Anderson, Lee Fogolin, Grant Fuhr, Kevin Lowe, Mark
Messier and Andy Moog appeared. Ironically, with such an offensively laden
team, their Campbell Conference team lost a low-scoring affair to the Wales
Conference squad.
The Oilers learned from their playoff disaster. The
following season, Gretzky scored 32 less points, the team scored 54 less goals,
had seven less wins and 13 less points. Edmonton still won the President’s
Trophy but with only 106 points. Most importantly, they won the Stanley Cup in
seven games over the Philadelphia Flyers. As for the Calgary Flames, they lost
in the opening round in 1986-87 to the Winnipeg Jets in six games.