Colorado Rockies

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Colorado Rockies
Founded 1974
History Kansas City Scouts
1974 - 1976
Colorado Rockies
1976 - 1982
New Jersey Devils
1982 - present
Home Arena McNichols Sports Arena
City Denver, Colorado
Colors Blue, red, white and yellow
McNichols Sports Arena
Franchise history

Denver and Seattle were to have been awarded franchises in an aborted 1976 NHL expansion. Denver was considered a good market for hockey, and the troubled California Golden Seals were reported on several occasions to be considering relocating there before moving to Cleveland as the Barons.

However, it was the financially troubled Kansas City Scouts that moved to Denver for the 1976-77 NHL season, changing their name to the Rockies. The Scouts sold only 2,000 season tickets for their second season and were nearly $1 million in debt.

Unfortunately, the situation did not improve significantly. They made the playoffs only once, in the 1977-78 NHL season. Even then, they finished with the fourth-worst record in the league, 21 games under .500. They went down rather meekly in the playoffs, losing to the Philadelphia Flyers in a two-game sweep.

Under Don Cherry

One of the few bright spots in the franchise's history was during the 1979-80 NHL season when flamboyant Don Cherry served as head coach, a former Jack Adams Award winner who was recently been fired by the Boston Bruins. Under Cherry, the Rockies adopted the motto "Come to the fights and watch a Rockies game break out!" This could be seen on billboards all over Denver in the 1979-80 season; this immediately rejuvenated the ailing club and some suggested that Cherry would have enabled the team to stay. However, as he later admitted, his outspokenness and feuding with Rockies general manager Ray Miron did not endear Cherry to management. While Cherry did much to motivate the players, goaltending was still the team's weakness as Miron refused to replace Hardy Åström, whom Cherry dubbed the "The Swedish Sieve". Cherry recalled one game where his players had got ten shots on goal without scoring, but Åström then conceded a goal from the opponent's first shot and so was yanked from net. The Rockies finished with 51-points but it was already apparent that management would scapegoat Cherry for not making the playoffs. As a silver lining, in their final game which was held at home, Cherry's team defeated the Pittsburgh Penguins 5-0. As it was already known that Cherry would not be back next season, he wore a cowboy hat and cowboy boots for what would be his last NHL game coached and after the final buzzer sounded, his players formed two lines for him to walk between while he acknowledged the cheers of the crowd.

Outstanding players

The Rockies did have some outstanding players for a short time. Barry Beck set a record in his rookie year for goals by a rookie defenseman, and Lanny McDonald was traded to the Rockies by Toronto. But the team always had a lack of depth and traded such quality for quantity.

Transforming into the New Jersey Devils

Although attendance in Denver was not bad, the team's financial situation was very unstable. Ownership changed hands twice in four years. Finally, in 1982, New Jersey shipping tycoon John McMullen bought the team. He announced that he had "big plans" for the franchise--but they involved playing in the then-new Brendan Byrne Arena in the New Jersey Meadowlands. The Rockies had actually petitioned to move to New Jersey in 1978, but the NHL vetoed the move because the Byrne Arena was still under construction, and there was no suitable temporary facility in New Jersey at the time. The team was relocated for the 1982-83 NHL season and renamed the New Jersey Devils.

Lasting contributions

The last active NHL player who had played for the Rockies was Joe Cirella, who left the NHL in 1996, the year that the new NHL team in Colorado (the Colorado Avalanche) won their first Stanley Cup Championship, after playing 23 seasons as the Quebec Nordiques. Two other former Rockies, Paul Gagne and Rick Chernomaz, played until 1999 in the Swiss and German leagues, respectively.

The Colorado Avalanche and the New Jersey Devils met each other in the 2001 Stanley Cup Finals, with the Avalanche winning the series and the championship in seven games; the deciding game was in Denver.

Perhaps the Rockies' most lasting contribution to the sports world is the use of "Rock and Roll, Pt. 2" (AKA "the Hey Song") as a sports celebration. It was first played in a sport setting at Rockies games in the late 1970s, and was later played in most North American sports venues to celebrate home team scores for the better part of 25 years.

 

1976/77 - 1981/82
1976/77 - 1981/82

Home

1
1976 - 1982

Away

1
1976 - 1982
Regular Season Playoffs
# Player Name
Birthdate Age Pos. GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM
  Brent Ashton   1960-05-18 21 C 80 24 36 60 26 -- -- -- -- --
  Steve Tambellini   1958-05-14 23 C 79 29 30 59 14 -- -- -- -- --
  Don Lever From Calgary 1952-11-14 28 F 59 22 28 50 20 -- -- -- -- --
  Bob MacMillan From Calgary 1952-09-03 28 C 57 18 32 50 27 -- -- -- -- --
  Rob Ramage   1959-01-11 22 D 80 13 29 42 201 -- -- -- -- --
  Merlin Malinowski   1958-09-25 22 F 69 13 28 41 32 -- -- -- -- --
  Aaron Broten   1960-11-14 20 F 58 15 24 39 6 -- -- -- -- --
  Dwight Foster   1957-04-02 24 F 70 12 19 31 41 -- -- -- -- --
  Bob Miller   1956-09-28 24 W 56 11 20 31 27 -- -- -- -- --
  Dave Cameron   1958-07-29 23 C 66 11 12 23 103 -- -- -- -- --
  Paul Gagne   1962-02-06 19 F 59 10 12 22 17 -- -- -- -- --
  Tapio Levo   1955-09-24 25 D 34 9 13 22 14 -- -- -- -- --
  Bob Lorimer   1953-08-25 28 D 79 5 15 20 68 -- -- -- -- --
  Joe Cirella   1963-05-09 18 D 65 7 12 19 52 -- -- -- -- --
  Lanny McDonald To Calgary 1953-02-16 28 F 16 6 9 15 20 -- -- -- -- --
  Joel Quenneville   1958-09-15 22 D 64 5 10 15 55 -- -- -- -- --
  Veli-Pekka Ketola   1948-03-28 33 C 44 9 5 14 4 -- -- -- -- --
  Kevin Maxwell To Minnesota 1960-03-30 21 F 34 5 5 10 44 -- -- -- -- --
  Graeme Nicolson   1958-01-13 23 D 41 2 7 9 51 -- -- -- -- --
  Mike Kitchen   1956-02-01 25 D 63 1 8 9 60 -- -- -- -- --
  John Wensink   1953-04-01 28 L 57 5 3 8 152 -- -- -- -- --
  Joe Micheletti From St. Louis 1954-10-24 26 D 21 2 6 8 4 -- -- -- -- --
  Jukka Porvari   1954-01-19 27 F 31 2 6 8 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Stan Weir From Edmonton 1952-03-17 29 C 10 2 3 5 10 -- -- -- -- --
  Yvon Vautour   1956-09-10 24 F 14 1 2 3 18 -- -- -- -- --
  Paul Miller   1959-08-21 22 C 3 0 3 3 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Bill Baker To St. Louis 1956-11-29 24 D 14 0 3 3 17 -- -- -- -- --
  Jeff Larmer   1962-10-10 18 L 8 1 1 2 8 -- -- -- -- --
  Phil Myre   1948-11-01 32 G 24 0 2 2 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Glenn "Chico" Resch   1948-07-10 33 G 61 0 2 2 8 -- -- -- -- --
  Ed Cooper   1960-08-28 21 L 2 1 0 1 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Rick LaFerriere       G 1 0 0 0 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Peter Gustavsson   1958-03-30 23 L 2 0 0 0 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Rich Chernomaz   1963-09-01 18 R 2 0 0 0 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Steve Janaszak   1957-01-07 24 G 2 0 0 0 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Jim Dobson From Minnesota 1960-02-29 21 R 3 0 0 0 2 -- -- -- -- --
  Randy Pierce   1957-11-23 23 R 5 0 0 0 4 -- -- -- -- --
  Christer Kellgren         5 0 0 0 0 -- -- -- -- --
  Jack Hughes   1957-07-20 24 D 8 0 0 0 13 -- -- -- -- --
  Bench         80 0 0 0 20 -- -- -- -- --
Totals
241 385 626 1138

Goalies
Player NameGPMinGAGAAWLTSvsPctENSO
Rick LaFerriere12013.00   180.94700
Glenn "Chico" Resch6134242304.0316311116660.879230
Phil Myre2412561125.3521725570.83300
Steve Janaszak2100137.80010780.85700
Colorado Rockies Franchise scoring leaders

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes

Season GP W L T Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs
1976-77 80 20 46 14 54 226 307 978 5th in Smythe Division Out of playoffs
1977-78 80 19 40 21 59 257 305 818 2nd in Smythe Division Lost in Preliminary Round (PHI)
1978-79 80 15 53 12 42 210 331 838 4th in Smythe Division Out of playoffs
1979-80 80 19 48 13 51 234 308 1020 6th in Smythe Division Out of playoffs
1980-81 80 22 45 13 57 258 344 1418 4th in Smythe Division Out of playoffs
1981-82 80 18 49 13 49 241 362 1138 5th in Smythe Division Out of playoffs
Totals 480 113 281 86 312 1426 1957 6210

Colorado Rockies individual records

Most Goals in a season: Wilf Paiement, 41 (1976-77)
Most Assists in a season: Wilf Paiement, 56 (1977-78)
Most Points in a season: Wilf Paiement, 87 (1977-78)
Most Penalty Minutes in a season: Rob Ramage, 201 (1981-82)
Most Points in a season, defenseman: Barry Beck, 60 (1977-78)
Most Points in a season, rookie: Barry Beck, 60 (1977-78)
Most Wins in a season: Glenn Resch, 16 (1981-82)

 

Masterton Trophy (Dedication): (1)
1982 Chico Resch G
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