1983 Stanley Cup Finals

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1983 Stanley Cup Finals
1234Total
New York Islanders 26544
Edmonton Oilers 03120
Location(s) Edmonton: Northlands Coliseum (1, 2)
Uniondale: Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum (3, 4)
CoachesNew York: Al Arbour
Edmonton: Glen Sather
Captains New York: Denis Potvin
Edmonton: Lee Fogolin
DatesMay 10–17, 1983
MVP Billy Smith (Islanders)
Series-winning goal Mike Bossy (12:39, first, G4)
Hall of Famers Islanders:
Mike Bossy (1991)
Clark Gillies (2002)
Denis Potvin (1991)
Billy Smith (1993)
Bryan Trottier (1997)
Oilers:
Glenn Anderson (2008)
Paul Coffey (2004)
Grant Fuhr (2003)
Wayne Gretzky (1999)
Jari Kurri (2001)
Kevin Lowe (2020)
Mark Messier (2007)
Coaches:
Al Arbour (1996)
Glen Sather (2007)
NetworksCanada:
(English): CBC
(French): SRC
United States:
(National): USA Network
(New York City area): WOR (1–2), SportsChannel New York (3–4)
Announcers(CBC) Jim Robson and Gary Dornhoefer (1–2); Bob Cole and Mickey Redmond (3–4)
(SRC) Rene Lecavalier and Gilles Tremblay
(USA Network) Dan Kelly and Gary Green
(WOR/SCNY) Jiggs McDonald and Ed Westfall
  1982 Stanley Cup Finals 1984  

The 1983 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 1982–83 season, and the culmination of the 1983 Stanley Cup playoffs. It was contested by the Campbell Conference champion Edmonton Oilers in their first-ever Finals appearance and the defending Wales Conference and Cup champion New York Islanders, in their fourth consecutive and overall Finals appearance. The Islanders swept the Oilers to win their fourth consecutive and overall Stanley Cup championship. The Islanders became the second team in NHL history to win the Stanley Cup four straight times, joining the Montreal Canadiens.

Contents

This was the fourth straight Finals of post-1967 expansion teams. The Oilers, a former World Hockey Association (WHA) franchise, stunned NHL loyalists by reaching the Finals just four years after the NHL-WHA merger. The Oilers even had the better record of the two teams, although under the format in place since the previous Finals, Edmonton received home ice advantage on account of being the Campbell champion, which at the time received that advantage in odd numbered years.

This is also the most recent time that an NHL team has won the Cup four years in a row, and also the first (and, to date, only) time a North American professional sports team has won four consecutive titles in any league competition with more than twenty teams. Even if this standard is lowered to encompass league competitions of at least sixteen teams, the Islanders are still only the third and most recent franchise to accomplish such a dynasty after the New York Yankees in Major League Baseball (who have forged two such World Series dynasties - the first in the 1930s and the second in the 1950s) and the Montreal Canadiens (whose own such dynasty immediately preceded the Islanders' prior to the merger with the WHA).

Since 1983, no professional sports team on the continent has won four consecutive championships and no NHL team has won more than two consecutive championships (most recently the Florida Panthers in 2024 and 2025). This was the second of nine consecutive Finals contested by a team from Western Canada and was the first of eight consecutive Finals contested by a team from Alberta (of which the Oilers played in six and the Calgary Flames in two). Although it was not the first Stanley Cup Finals to be contested by an Albertan team (the 1923 and 1924 Finals had been contested by teams from Edmonton and Calgary respectively), 1983 saw the first Finals games played in Alberta.

The Oilers would credit the Islanders' subdued post-series locker room celebration—focused more on putting ice packs on their various injuries—as teaching them the level of sacrifice and dedication needed to be champions. The Oilers would go on to win four Stanley Cups in the next five seasons—and five overall by 1990.

The 1983 Finals was the only time between 1982 and 1988 that the Stanley Cup wasn't presented in Western Canada.

Paths to the Finals

Edmonton defeated the Winnipeg Jets 3–0, the Calgary Flames 4–1, and the Chicago Black Hawks 4–0 to advance to the Finals. In eliminating Winnipeg, Calgary, and Chicago, the Oilers had won 11 of 12 games and had outscored their opponents 74–33, averaging over six goals a game and setting 16 scoring records in these three rounds. The 1983 Finals marked sixty years since an Edmonton team had last contested the Stanley Cup. The 1923 Edmonton Eskimos WCHL team played the NHL's Ottawa Senators in the 1923 Stanley Cup Finals, held in Vancouver. Ottawa won the two-game, total-goals series.

New York defeated the Washington Capitals 3–1, the New York Rangers 4–2, and the Boston Bruins 4–2 to reach the Finals.

Game summaries

Billy Smith limited the Oilers to just six goals in the four games, and shut them out in seven out of twelve periods. Smith was also noted for his slashes and feigned injuries in that series, which made him unpopular with the Edmonton Journal , which named him "PUBLIC ENEMY NO. 1", "Mr. Obnoxious", "Samaurai [sic] Billy", "Jack the Ripper" and "a creep". [1] [2] After a slash on Glenn Anderson's knee prevented him from practicing the next day, Oilers manager and coach Glen Sather unsuccessfully complained to the NHL that Smith deserved an attempt-to-injure match penalty, and then took his case to the press, suggesting that the Oilers could take out Smith. Smith responded, "Let's face it. If Semenko runs at me and hurts me, anything could happen, and the victim could be Gretzky. If they want blood.…" Smith did, however, earn a five-minute penalty for slashing Wayne Gretzky.

In game four, Smith's dive resulted in referee Andy Van Hellemond giving Anderson a five-minute penalty. [3] [4]

In his first appearance in the Finals, Gretzky assisted on four of the Oilers' six goals but failed to score himself. While no Islander was assigned to mark Gretzky, the Oilers superstar found himself checked as soon as he got the puck. The Islanders' tactics were described as a "rope-a-dope", using their experience and patience to hang on in the face of the Oilers' furious attack. The Islanders permitted Edmonton to take long shots from poor angles, but cleared the rebounds and kept the front of the net open so Smith could see. [5] [6] The Sutter brothers, Duane and Brent, led with seven and five points, respectively in the first three games. Duane played a particularly important role in the absence of Bossy in game one. Bossy netted his second Stanley Cup-winning goal.

After game four, the Oilers players walked past the Islanders' dressing room and noticed many of the Islanders players exhausted and covered in ice packs rather than wildly celebrating, with Wayne Gretzky suggesting that this gave the Oilers inspiration that they needed in order to win next year. [7] [8]

Game Summary

May 10New York Islanders2–0Edmonton Oilers Northlands Coliseum Recap  
Duane Sutter (8) - 05:36First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Ken Morrow (3) - en - 19:48Third periodNo scoring
Billy Smith 35 saves / 35 shotsGoalie stats Andy Moog 22 saves / 23 shots
May 12New York Islanders6–3Edmonton Oilers Northlands Coliseum Recap  
Tomas Jonsson (2) - 14:21
Bobby Nystrom (7) - 17:55
Mike Bossy (16) - 19:17
First period08:39 - Dave Semenko (1)
Bob Bourne (7) - 08:03
Brent Sutter (8) - 08:41
Second period05:07 - Jari Kurri (6)
Brent Sutter (9) - 14:11Third period04:48 - Glenn Anderson (10)
Billy Smith 30 saves / 33 shotsGoalie stats Andy Moog 19 saves / 25 shots
May 14Edmonton Oilers1–5New York Islanders Nassau Coliseum Recap  
No scoringFirst period19:41 - Anders Kallur (3)
Jari Kurri (7) - pp - 01:05Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period05:11 - Bob Bourne (8)
06:21 - Ken Morrow (4)
16:43 - Duane Sutter (9)
19:02 - pp - Brent Sutter (10)
Andy Moog 23 saves / 28 shotsGoalie stats Billy Smith 33 saves / 34 shots
May 17Edmonton Oilers2–4New York Islanders Nassau Coliseum Recap  
No scoringFirst period11:02 - pp - Bryan Trottier (8)
11:45 - John Tonelli (7)
12:39 - Mike Bossy (17)
Jari Kurri (8) - 00:35
Mark Messier (15) - 19:39
Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period18:51 - en - Ken Morrow (5)
Andy Moog 22 saves / 25 shotsGoalie stats Billy Smith 24 saves / 26 shots
New York won series 4–0

Broadcasting

The series aired on CBC in Canada and on the USA Network in the United States. USA's national coverage was blacked out in the New York area due to the local rights to Islanders games in that TV market, with WOR televising games one and two, and SportsChannel New York airing games three and four.

Team rosters

Edmonton Oilers

# Nat PlayerPositionHandAgeAcquiredPlace of birthFinals appearance
9 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Glenn Anderson RWL 1979 Vancouver, British Columbia first
7 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Paul Coffey DL 1980 Weston, Ontario first
14 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Ray Cote CR 1981–82 Pincher Creek, Alberta first
2 Flag of the United States.svg Lee Fogolin C DR 1979–80 Chicago, Illinois first
31 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Grant Fuhr GR 1981 Spruce Grove, Alberta first
21 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Randy Gregg DL 1981–82 Edmonton, Alberta first
99 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Wayne Gretzky CL 1979–80 Brantford, Ontario first
22 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Charlie Huddy DL 1980–81 Oshawa, Ontario first
16 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Pat Hughes RWR 1980–81 Calgary, Alberta second ( 1979 )
12 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Dave Hunter LWL 1979–80 Petrolia, Ontario first
29 Flag of the United States.svg Don Jackson DL 1981–82 Minneapolis, Minnesota first
17 Flag of Finland.svg Jari Kurri RWR 1980 Helsinki, Finland first
6 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Garry Lariviere DR 1980–81 St. Catharines, Ontario first (did not play)
19 Flag of Sweden.svg Willy Lindstrom RWL 1982–83 Grums, Sweden first
13 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Ken Linseman CL 1982–83 Kingston, Ontario second (1980)
4 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Kevin Lowe DL 1979 Lachute, Quebec first
20 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Dave Lumley RWR 1979–80 Toronto, Ontario first
11 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Mark Messier CL 1979 Edmonton, Alberta first
35 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Andy Moog GL 1980 Penticton, British Columbia first
26 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Don Nachbaur CL 1982–83 Kitimat, British Columbia first (did not play)
10 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Jaroslav Pouzar LWL 1982 Cakov, Czechoslovakia first (did not play)
24 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Tom Roulston RWR 1979 Winnipeg, Manitoba first
27 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Dave Semenko LWL 1979–80 Winnipeg, Manitoba first

New York Islanders

# Nat PlayerPositionHandAgeAcquiredPlace of birthFinals appearance
22 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Mike Bossy RWR 1977 Montreal, Quebec fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
14 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Bob Bourne LWL 1974–75 Kindersley, Saskatchewan fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
4 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Paul Boutilier DL 1981 Sydney, Nova Scotia first (did not play)
25 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Billy Carroll CL 1979 Toronto, Ontario third ( 1981 , 1982 )
17 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Greg Gilbert LWL 1980 Mississauga, Ontario second ( 1982 )
9 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Clark Gillies LWL 1974 Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
91 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Butch Goring CL 1979–80 Winnipeg, Manitoba fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
20 Flag of Sweden.svg Mats Hallin LWL 1981–82 Akers styckebruk, Sweden first (did not play)
3 Flag of Sweden.svg Tomas Jonsson DR 1979 Falun, Sweden second ( 1982 )
28 Flag of Sweden.svg Anders Kallur RWL 1979–80 Ludvika, Sweden fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
24 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Gord Lane DL 1979–80 Brandon, Manitoba fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
26 Flag of the United States.svg Dave Langevin DL 1974 Saint Paul, Minnesota fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
2 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Mike McEwen DL 1980–81 Hornepayne, Ontario fourth (1979, 1981 , 1982 , did not play)
1 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Roland Melanson GL 1979 Shediac, New Brunswick third ( 1981 , 1982 )
11 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Wayne Merrick CL 1977–78 Sarnia, Ontario fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
6 Flag of the United States.svg Ken Morrow DR 1976 Flint, Michigan fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
23 Flag of Sweden.svg Bob Nystrom RWR 1972 Stockholm, Sweden fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
7 Flag of Sweden.svg Stefan Persson DL 1974 Bjurholm, Sweden fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
5 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Denis Potvin C DL 1973 Vanier, Ontario fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
31 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Billy Smith GL 1972–73 Perth, Ontario fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
21 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Brent Sutter CR 1980 Viking, Alberta second ( 1982 )
12 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Duane Sutter RWR 1979 Viking, Alberta fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
27 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg John Tonelli LWL 1977 Hamilton, Ontario fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )
19 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Bryan Trottier CL 1974 Val Marie, Saskatchewan fourth ( 1980 , 1981 , 1982 )

Stanley Cup engraving

The 1983 Stanley Cup was presented to Islanders captain Denis Potvin by NHL President John Ziegler following the Islanders 4–2 win over the Oilers in game four.

The following Islanders players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup

1982–83 New York Islanders

Players

   Centres
   Wingers
   Defencemen
   Goaltenders

* Played both centre and wing.

Coaching and administrative staff

Members of New York Islanders 1980 to 1983 Dynasty

These players and personnel (22 in all) won four Stanley Cups as members of the Islanders, and would also be a part of the Islanders in the 1984 Stanley Cup Finals. The Islanders amassed an NHL record of 19 straight playoff series wins and again reach the Stanley Cup Finals, but lost the 1984 Finals to the Edmonton Oilers in a rematch of the 1983 series.

Henning was a player on the 1980 team, a player-assistant coach on the 1981 team, and an assistant coach on the 1982 and 1983 teams. Henning assisted on 1980 Stanley Cup winning goal in overtime.

See also

References

  1. Swift, E. M. (May 23, 1983). "The Islanders Go Four It All". Sports Illustrated Vault | Si.com. Archived from the original on August 4, 2021. Retrieved August 4, 2021.
  2. Swift, E.M. (May 23, 1983). "The Islanders Go Four It All". Sports Illustrated . Retrieved September 22, 2024.
  3. Falla, Jack (May 28, 1984). "The Oilers Were The Spoilers". Sports Illustrated.
  4. Mifflin, Laurie (May 18, 1983). "SMITH GETS THE LAST WORD". New York Times . Retrieved September 22, 2024.
  5. Falla, Jack (October 10, 1983). "The Drive For Five". Sports Illustrated.
  6. "Hockey". Sports Illustrated. February 16, 1983.
  7. Swift, E.M. (May 23, 1983). "The Islanders Go Four It All". Sports Illustrated.
  8. Rosen, Dan (May 28, 2009). "Messier relates to Penguins in their Cup rematch". NHL.com.
Preceded by New York Islanders
Stanley Cup champions

1983
Succeeded by