Mirage of Destiny: The Story of the 1990-91 Minnesota North Stars
A deep dive into the remarkable season of the Minnesota North Stars — their playoff run, key moments, and legacy.
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A deep dive into the remarkable season of the Minnesota North Stars — their playoff run, key moments, and legacy.
Buy on Amazon
1. Which NHL team did Joe Mullen debut with?
2. Joe Mullen was one of the NHL’s greatest undrafted success stories. What league did he play in before reaching the NHL?
3. How many Stanley Cups did Joe Mullen win during his career?
4. Joe Mullen became the first American-born player to reach which major NHL milestone?
5. With which team did Joe Mullen win his first Stanley Cup?
1. Which NHL team did Charlie Hodge win multiple Vezina Trophies with?
2. How many career shutouts did Charlie Hodge finish with?
3. In which season did Charlie Hodge appear in 58 games for the Oakland Seals?
4. Before joining the Seals, Charlie Hodge primarily backed up which legendary Canadiens goalie?
5. How many Stanley Cups did Charlie Hodge win with the Montreal Canadiens?
1. With which NHL team did Danny Grant win the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year?
2. How many goals did Danny Grant score during his Calder-winning 1968-69 season?
3. Which team did Danny Grant score his first NHL hat trick against?
4. Danny Grant later became a 50-goal scorer with which NHL team?
5. Danny Grant was traded from Montreal to Minnesota in a deal involving which future first-round pick?
On March 4, 1968, the Minnesota North Stars hosted the Montreal Canadiens at the Metropolitan Sports Center for their final meeting of the season. The expansion North Stars had yet to defeat the storied Habs until a former Montreal prospect made sure that changed.
Wayne Connelly, who began his NHL journey in the Canadiens’ system, scored all three Minnesota goals in a thrilling 3-2 victory. In the opening period, Connelly struck twice on the power play, first while John Ferguson sat off for cross-checking, then again with Ted Harris serving a five-minute major.
He completed the hat trick late in the third period, notching his 30th of the season and what would stand as the game-winner. Montreal’s Dick Duff scored both Canadiens goals, the last coming with less than two minutes to play, but Cesare Maniago held strong in net for Minnesota with 33 saves on 35 shots.
Connelly fired nine of the North Stars’ 23 shots himself, an outstanding solo effort that powered the team to its first-ever win over Montreal. The three-goal night was his second career hat trick, and he went on to lead the club with 35 goals that season, the highest total among players from the NHL’s six new expansion teams. His 35 goals also tied him with Phil Esposito and Norm Ullman for fourth overall in the league.
Between 1960-61 and 1971-72, Wayne Connelly played 543 regular season and 24 playoff games in the National Hockey League with the Montreal Canadiens, Boston Bruins, Minnesota North Stars, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues and Vancouver Canucks. He surpassed the 20 goal plateau twice and had a career best 59 points with the Red Wings in 1969-70.
In the WHA, Connelly played an additional 366 regular season and 37 playoff games between 1972-73 and 1976-77 with the Minnesota Fighting Saints, Cleveland Crusaders, Calgary Cowboys and Edmonton Oilers. He had two 40+ goal seasons, topping out with 42 in 1973-74 with the Fighting Saints.
1. Al MacAdam was originally drafted by which NHL team in 1972?
2. MacAdam scored the only penalty shot goal in Cleveland Barons history during a 1976 game against which team?
3. Al MacAdam’s best NHL season came with the Minnesota North Stars in 1979-80. How many points did he record that year?
4. MacAdam won the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy in 1979-80. What does this award recognize?
5. Over his NHL career, Al MacAdam played for five different teams. Which of the following was not one of them?
The Minnesota North Stars and rookie goalie Gilles Gilbert were in tough on February 6, 1971, when the Chicago Blackhawks came to town. On this night, it wasn’t just one superstar causing havoc, it was two. Brothers Bobby and Dennis Hull teamed up for five of Chicago’s six goals in a convincing 6-2 win.
Minnesota actually held the lead early. Bill Goldsworthy opened the scoring in the first period, giving the Stars a 1-0 edge. But the game quickly turned in the second when, in a furious three-minute span, Bobby Hull netted his 31st of the season and Dennis followed with his 26th to flip the score in Chicago’s favor.
The third period sealed Minnesota’s fate. Stan Mikita scored the eventual game-winner on a power play just 2:29 in, with Dennis Hull earning an assist. From there, the Hull brothers went back to work. Dennis scored again, his 27th of the year, while Bobby completed his hat trick with goals 32 and 33 of the season.
By night’s end, each Hull had five shots on Gilbert, combining for 36% of Chicago’s total attempts. Mikita played the perfect complement, chipping in a goal and two assists to fuel the offensive surge.
The Hulls weren’t done making headlines. Just two weeks later, on February 21, 1971, the brothers overwhelmed the Los Angeles Kings with a combined four goals and seven points in a 7-5 win. Once again, Bobby Hull recorded a hat trick, this time adding two assists, while Dennis contributed a goal and an assist.
On December 20, 1970, the Boston Garden crowd was treated to a classic Johnny McKenzie performance. Known for his grit and scoring touch, McKenzie delivered a Gordie Howe Hat Trick Plus in a 7-2 Boston Bruins win over the Minnesota North Stars.
The night before in St. Louis, McKenzie had two goals and an assist in a 7-1 victory over the Blues. He carried that momentum home, scoring his 12th, 13th, and 14th goals of the 1970-71 season against Minnesota. He also set up a goal by Phil Esposito, capping a four-point night.
True to form, McKenzie also dropped the gloves, scrapping with ex-Bruin Barry Gibbs just 25 seconds into the second period. Gilles Gilbert, who later went on to play for Boston, faced 47 shots and stopped 40, including four off McKenzie’s stick. Bobby Orr and Phil Esposito led the barrage with eight shots each.
The 1970-71 campaign proved to be McKenzie’s best NHL season, as he finished with 31 goals and 77 points. The hat trick against Minnesota was the third of his career and the only one not scored against the Detroit Red Wings.
John McKenzie played 691 regular season and 69 playoff games in the National Hockey League between 1958-59 and 1971-72 with the Chicago Blackhawks, Detroit Red Wings, New York Rangers and Boston Bruins. He won two Stanley Cup championships with the Bruins.
In the WHA, McKenzie played an additional 477 regular season and 33 playoff games between 1972-73 and 1978-79 with the Philadelphia Blazers, Vancouver Blazers, Minnesota Fighting Saints, Cincinnati Stingers and New England Whalers.
1. In which NHL season did Johnny McKenzie score his career-high 31 goals?
2. Which team did Johnny McKenzie score his famous hat trick and fight performance against on December 20, 1970?
3. How many career NHL hat tricks did Johnny McKenzie record?
4. Johnny McKenzie was part of the Boston Bruins’ Stanley Cup–winning team in which year?
5. Before joining the Bruins, McKenzie played for which NHL team?
When the Minnesota North Stars reached game 59 of the 1969-70 season, Bill Collins had just 13 goals to his name. That all changed on March 1, 1970, when the Toronto Maple Leafs came to town.
At the Met, Collins exploded for a hat trick, his 14th, 15th, and 16th of the season, all against Leafs netminder Bruce Gamble. Minnesota dominated the night with an 8-0 blowout, outshooting Toronto 40-41. Cesare Maniago was rock-solid, turning away all 41 shots for the shutout. Bill Goldsworthy and J.P. Parise chipped in with two goals and two assists each, but Collins set the tone with his relentless play and seven shots on goal.
Less than a week later, the two teams met again at Maple Leaf Gardens. And once more, Collins found his magic. This time he struck for another three goals, numbers 18, 19, and 20 on the year, with the first two coming shorthanded. Remarkably, he scored on all three of his shots, again at the expense of Bruce Gamble, who was pulled in favor of Marv Edwards after the second period. Minnesota rolled to an 8-3 win as Gump Worsley turned aside 44 of 47 shots.
Though Collins didn’t pick up a single assist in either game, that reflected his style during the 1969-70 campaign: pure goal-scoring. He finished the season with a career-best 29 goals, paired with just nine assists. It was the first of three seasons where he crossed the 20-goal mark, later tallying 21 with the Detroit Red Wings in 1972-73 and 22 with the St. Louis Blues in 1974-75.
After several years in the minors, Bill Collins got his NHL start after the Minnesota North Stars drafted him from the New York Rangers organization in the 1967 NHL Expansion Draft. Originally a prospect of the Toronto Maple Leafs, he was traded to the Rangers on February 22, 1964, along with Arnie Brown, Dick Duff, Bob Nevin and Rod Seiling for Andy Bathgate and Don McKenney.
Collins played 768 regular season and 18 playoff games in the National Hockey League between 1967-68 and 1977-78 with the North Stars, Montreal Canadiens, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers and Washington Capitals.
Boudreau had proven his scoring touch in junior with the Toronto Marlboros (68 goals) and in the AHL with the St. Catharines Saints (50 goals). In the NHL, his best season came in 1977-78 when he tallied 11. Three of those came on one memorable night in Minnesota.
The Leafs were flying high early that season while the North Stars were struggling badly. Toronto rolled to an 8-5 win, and Boudreau was the star.
His first goal came at 12:00 of the second period, assisted by Börje Salming and Tiger Williams, putting Toronto ahead 3-1.
Just minutes later, Ron Ellis and Salming set up his second to make it 4-2.
Early in the third, with Minnesota’s Tom Younghans in the box for hooking, Boudreau buried his hat trick goal on the power play for what proved to be the game-winner.
Salming finished with five assists, three of them on Boudreau’s goals, while Toronto peppered Pete LoPresti with 37 shots.
Boudreau would go on to play 141 regular season and nine playoff games in the NHL with Toronto and Chicago. His legacy, however, would be built as a coach, where he won championships in the ECHL and AHL and became one of the most colorful personalities behind an NHL bench, even if a Stanley Cup title still eludes him.
That man was Bill Masterton, who would sadly play only 38 NHL games before a tragic on-ice injury took his life on January 13, 1968. But on this night, Masterton made a lasting mark in the league’s record books.
With just under five minutes remaining in the second period, and his team on the power play, Masterton scored the first goal in Minnesota North Stars history, an unassisted tally at the 15:20 mark. It was one of four shots he would take on St. Louis netminder Seth Martin, who, like Masterton, was making his NHL debut. Martin would go on to play only 32 NHL games, all in that single 1967-68 season.
The third period brought more milestones. Larry Keenan etched his name into the St. Louis Blues' history by scoring their first ever goal, assisted by Bob Plager and Fred Hucul. The game would end in a 2-2 tie, with DaveBalon and Wayne Rivers trading goals for Minnesota and St. Louis, respectively.
Additional firsts included:
Bob Plager receiving the first penalty in Blues franchise history.
Murray Hall taking the North Stars' first penalty.
The first recorded fight between the two teams: Roger Picard (Blues) vs. Ted Taylor (North Stars).
Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Bill Masterton played three years of NCAA hockey with the University of Denver Pioneers from 1958-59 to 1960-61 before turning pro. In 1961-62, he helped the Hull-Ottawa Canadiens to an EPHL title. That club featured future NHLers Keith McCreary, Jim Roberts, BarclayPlager, Terry Harper and Cesare Maniago.
Moving up the AHL for 1962-63, Masterton finished seventh in overall scoring with 82 points playing for the Cleveland Barons. He left for the USHL after that and would play for the U.S. National Team in 1966-67, prior to joining the North Stars.
Goal number 49 came just 8:18 into the opening period, with Craig Hartsburg and Neal Broten collecting assists. That goal made it 3-0 early, setting the tone for the night. At 12:04 of the second period, Ciccarelli struck again, this time off a setup from Tom McCarthy and Broten, clinching the milestone 50th goal that had eluded North Stars players since the team’s inception in 1967.
To top it off, Ciccarelli added an assist on Hartsburg’s third-period goal, capping a three-point night and a blowout win. St. Louis goaltender Mike Liut allowed both of Dino’s goals before being relieved by Rick Heinz for the final frame.
Ciccarelli finished the 1981-82 season with 55 goals, a total that still stands as a Minnesota North Stars/Dallas Stars franchise record, tied only by Brian Bellows in 1989-90. Ciccarelli reached the 50-goal mark twice with Minnesota, while Bellows and Mike Modano remain the only other players in team history to do so.
Dino Ciccarelli played 1,232 regular season and 141 playoff games in the National Hockey League between 1980-81 and 1998-99 with the Minnesota North Stars, Washington Capitals, Detroit Red Wings, Tampa Bay Lightning and Florida Panthers. Over that time, he scored 608 goals, placing him 20th all-time just two behind Bobby Hull.
Undrafted to the NHL, Ciccarelli came to the North Stars after a stellar junior career with the London Knights that was marred by broken leg. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2010.
Alex Delvecchio delivered a five-point performance, opening the scoring at 10:27 of the first period with his 15th goal of the season. The goal came off a setup from Gordie Howe and Kent Douglas, and it was just the beginning. Delvecchio assisted on all three of Mahovlich’s goals, as well as one of Howe’s, making his impact felt throughout the night.
Gordie Howe, also known as "Mr. Hockey," added a goal and three assists to his season totals. His lone goal was the only score of the second period, marking his 17th of the season, and came with assists from Delvecchio and defenseman Bob Baun.
Frank Mahovlich completed the offensive trifecta with a hat trick, scoring his 17th, 18th, and 19th goals of the season. His second goal of the game, at 6:14 of the third period, proved to be the game-winner as Detroit pulled away from Minnesota.
The North Stars managed three goals from Bill Collins, Bill Goldsworthy, and Danny O’Shea, but couldn’t keep pace with Detroit’s relentless offense. Goaltender Roy Edwards secured the win for the Red Wings, turning aside 22 of 25 shots.
The game saw minimal penalty activity, with the only infraction being a two-minute tripping call against Danny Lawson of Detroit at 12:12 of the first period.
This New Year’s Eve matchup was a memorable one for Red Wings fans, as three of the team's most iconic players showcased their elite talent. The victory not only added two points to Detroit’s standings but also highlighted the chemistry and scoring power of Delvecchio, Howe, and Mahovlich.
This game on December 31, 1968 was the fourth of six regular season meetings between the Detroit Red Wings and Minnesota North Stars. In all, the Wings won four of the six, including all three at Detroit Olympia and one at the Met Center.
The second game was played on November 9, 1968 in Minnesota and was the highest scoring. Ten total goals were scored with the North Stars winning 6-4. The stars were powered by a hat trick from Danny Grant and a five point night (1G, 4A) from Ray Cullen.
In the end, neither the Red Wings or North Stars would qualify for the post season in 1968-69. Detroit finished fifth in the six team Eastern Division, seven points behind Toronto for the final playoff spot. Minnesota managed just 51 points and tied for last overall with the Pittsburgh Penguins. Because of the misalignment of the league post 1967 Expansion, depsite how dismal those two teams were, they were just seven points behind the Los Angeles Kings for the final spot in the West.