Waterloo Region Record

Four Gretzky clubs were all-time tops, fans say

- Stephen Whyno

The “Great One” calls the 198687 Edmonton Oilers the greatest team he played on, but there’s no shortage of debate over whether it was the best team of all-time.

Four of Wayne Gretzky’s 1980s Oilers teams are among the 20 greatest National Hockey League teams as voted by fans during the league’s 100th anniversar­y.

Also among the top 20 are three teams from the Montreal Canadiens’ 1970s run and three from the New York Islanders’ 1980s stretch when each dynasty captured four Stanley Cup titles in a row before passing the torch to Edmonton.

Six-time Stanley Cup-winning defenceman Kevin Lowe said he and Gretzky agreed the ’87 Oilers were the best of the bunch of teams that filled the rafters in Edmonton with blue, white and orange banners during one of the finest eras of hockey dominance, even though it took seven games to beat the Philadelph­ia Flyers in the final.

“When (Kent) Nilsson got here, I think we went 10-1 in the regular season,” Lowe said.

“There was just so much offence. I don’t know if that was statistica­lly our best Stanley Cup run as a team. It probably wasn’t because we went to seven with the Flyers. But Wayne and I both thought that that seemed like the best overall team.”

The 1983-84, ’84-85, ’86-87 and ’87-88 Oilers, the ’75-76, ’76-77 and ’77-78 Canadiens, the ’79-80, ’81-82 and ’82-83 Islanders, the ’90-91, ’91-92 and 2015-16 Pittsburgh Penguins, the ’97-98 and 2001-02 Detroit Red Wings, the 1969-70 Boston Bruins, the ’88-89 Calgary Flames, the ’93-94 New York Rangers, the 2000-01 Colorado Avalanche and the ’09-10 Chicago Blackhawks were voted the top 20 teams of all-time.

Some of that is thanks to Lowe. “I’ve played it lots out of curiosity and trying to run up the votes for us,” said Lowe, who won the Cup five times with the Oilers and again with the ’94 Rangers.

Some of the older teams from the Original Six era such as the 1952 Red Wings and ’67 Toronto Maple Leafs — that franchise’s most-recent Stanley Cup winner — fell victim to younger voters skewing toward more-recent teams. As hard as it is to compare eras, the 1976-77 Canadiens, ’86-87 Oilers and 2001-02 Red Wings could easily duke it out for the greatest in the league’s first 100 years.

“It’s hard to pick one or the other,” said the great Scotty Bowman, who coached the Canadiens’ ’70s dynasty, the ’91-92 Penguins and the Red Wings to give him a hand in seven of the top 20 top teams. “I guess you could make a (case) for hall-of-fame players, wins, losses, points, goal spread.”

Montreal’s ’76-77 team won 39 of its final 40 regular-season games, still holds the record for most points with 132, outscored opponents by 216 goals and went 12-2 in the playoffs on the way to the second of four consecutiv­e titles.

“I would stack our ’76 team up against anybody in any era,” hallof-fame defenceman Larry Robinson said.

“We had everything. If you wanted to play tough, we could play tough. “If you wanted to play fast, we could play fast. If you wanted to play tight, we were pretty good.”

Those Canadiens stack up in hall of famers against the ’01-02 Red Wings, who have nine with Pavel Datsyuk not yet eligible. The ’70s Canadiens and ’80s Oilers and Islanders teams were also starstudde­d with the goaltender­s to keep up in an era of high-scoring hockey.

“Grant Fuhr was unbelievab­le, Billy Smith was unbelievab­le, obviously Kenny Dryden unbelievab­le,” former Flyers forward Bob Kelley said.

“It starts in the pipes and you work your way out from there.”

That’s true in any era.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Wayne Gretzky says the 1986-87 Oilers team was the best of the four Stanley Cup winners he played on.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Wayne Gretzky says the 1986-87 Oilers team was the best of the four Stanley Cup winners he played on.

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