On October 26, 1974, Rick Dudley signaled the start of what would
become a career-best NHL season with a dominant performance at the
St. Louis Arena. While the Blues focused their defensive attention on
Buffalo’s famed French Connection line, it was the trio of Dudley,
Peter McNab, and Brian Spencer that delivered all the offense in a
2-0 Sabres victory.
Dudley opened the scoring just over nine minutes into the first
period, firing home a power-play goal against St. Louis goaltender
John Davidson. McNab and Spencer picked up the assists on the play,
which came with Bob Stumpf serving a penalty for elbowing. The goal
proved to be the game-winner.
Early in the second period, Dudley struck again. At the 3:13 mark,
he buried his second goal of the night, once more set up by McNab and
Spencer, to cap the scoring. Those two shots were the only ones to
beat Davidson, who turned aside 36 of 38 attempts in a strong but
losing effort.
At the other end, Gary Bromley made 21 saves to secure the shutout
for Buffalo, marking the first shutout of his NHL career. Dudley’s
two-goal night was a snapshot of the offensive impact he would
provide all season long.
During the 1974-75 campaign, Dudley posted career highs with 31
goals and 39 assists for 70 points. His standout play earned him Hart
Trophy consideration, finishing tied for ninth in voting alongside
Bob Nevin of the Los Angeles Kings. Following Buffalo’s run to the
Stanley Cup Final that spring, Dudley made the jump to the WHA, where
he spent four seasons with the Cincinnati Stingers.
About Rick Dudley
Undrafted, Rick Dudley played 309 regular season and 25 playoff
games in the National Hockey League between 1972-73 to 1980-81 with
the Buffalo Sabres and Winnipeg Jets. Dudley also played 270 regular
season and four playoff games in the WHA between 1975-76 and 1978-79,
all with the Cincinnati Stingers.
In 1972-73 with the Cincinnati Swords in the AHL, Rick led the
team with 22 points in the playoffs with the team capturing the
Calder Trophy championship. His 40 regular season goals tied him for
fifth, 12 behind leader Yvon Lambert.
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NHL Hockey Trivia: Rick Dudley