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Impact
Impact!
NHL.com's Online Magazine
February/2004, Vol. 2, Issue 6
  • Dynasties, goals, Gretzky, rivalries fueled the 1980s

  • Edmonton, New York dynasties define a decade of excellence

  • On one special night, Gretzky shatters a record

  • Wigge: Gretzky at decade's epicenter

  • 1980 victory ended 'national malaise'

  • 6 trades that rocked a decade

  • These 10 players were draft makers in 80s

  • Photo of the month

  • Back issues of Impact

  • Hard Check Trivia


  •  
    Mark Messier and Wayne Gretzky hold the Stanley Cup
    After winning 5 Stanley Cups in 7 years, the Oilers turned Edmonton into the "City of Champions" and rewrote most of the scoring records in the League's record book.

    Oil and Isles mix
    Edmonton, New York define a decade of excellence
    By Shawn P. Roarke | Impact! Magazine



    While the 1980s may well be remembered for the wacky fashion statements and larger-than-life personalities who dominated NHL hockey during one of its most free-spirited eras, two teams stand head and shoulders above all the rest.

    The young and brash New York Islanders opened the decade with a run of four-straight Stanley Cup championships, establishing the recent expansion team's legitimacy and creating a legacy for the franchise that lasts to this day.

    Those Islanders were followed by the even younger and even more brash Edmonton Oilers, refugees from the defunct World Hockey Association. The Oilers, riding the almost surreal talent of prodigy Wayne Gretzky, took five of the remaining seven Stanley Cup championships in the decade.

    Along the way, the Oilers turned their home into the "City of Champions" and rewrote most of the scoring records in the League's record book.

    "In '78, when we were in the WHA and we were headed to the NHL, I don't think anybody would have said that 25 years later two guys from the Edmonton Oilers were going to be 1-2 in scoring,” Gretzky said of he and Messier.

    Not surprisingly, the question remains to this day about which of these two dynasties was the team of that decade. Each franchise has its adherents and there may well be no clear-cut answer.

    From the 1979-80 season to the close of the decade, Edmonton was the slightly more successful team, winning one more Stanley Cup than the Islanders and compiling 77 more regular-season points. But Edmonton did register six consecutive 100-point seasons, which vastly outdistances the Islanders' three 100-point seasons in a four-year span of the 1980s.

    Yet, the Islanders also have their accomplishments to present into evidence. Mainly, the team was the most consistent franchise at the height of its powers.

    Only one other team in the long and glorious history of the game -- League standard-bearer Montreal -- has ever strung together four-straight Stanley Cup championships. The Canadiens, who have a League-best 23 titles, won five-straight titles from 1956 to 1960. They added a four-year run from 1976 to 1979.

    New York Islanders win their second Stanley Cup
    During New York's four-year run of sustained excellence, the Islanders amassed 19 consecutive playoff series wins, a testament to their big-game ability.

    During New York's four-year run of sustained excellence, the Islanders amassed 19 consecutive playoff series wins, a testament to their big-game ability. Ironically, the run ended in the 20th series, a four-games-to-one ouster at the hands of Edmonton in the 1984 Stanley Cup Finals. The Oilers' Game 1 victory in that series also ended the Islanders 10-game winning streak in Stanley Cup Finals play.

    And, unlike the Oilers, who can only boast seven players that played on all four of its championships, the Islanders had 16 players who shared in each of the team's titles – a consistency and unity in team-building that is all but extinct 20 years later.

    Ah, the players. As with all debates, it is most important to look at the crux of the issue. In this case, that focal point should be the young men that brought glory to their teams during this era.

    Perhaps those legends that wore the franchise's sweater during each team's heyday could be the delineating factor between the two dynasties. After all, each team possessed some of the greatest individual players to ever don skates. And, those mercurial talents played at a time when individual skill -- not the team systems of today -- ruled the rink.

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