December 4 2020: This day in New York Rangers history

Mark Messier of the New York Rangers. (Photo by Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images Studios/Getty Images)
Mark Messier of the New York Rangers. (Photo by Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images Studios/Getty Images) /
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A Messier milestone and a New York Rangers goal explosion

What happened on December 4 in the history of the New York Rangers

December 4, 1995 was a big night for a New York Rangers legend.  Mark Messier registered the 1,400th point of his career, becoming only the seventh player in NHL history to hit that milestone.  Today, 20 players have achieved that feat, when Messier did it he joined hockey immortals like Gordie Howe, Stan Mikita and Phil Esposito.

It was an easy win at Madison Square Garden as the Blueshirts beat the Might Ducks of Anaheim, 5-1.   Messier scored a third period power play goal and added two assists to reach that milepost.

Messier would go to add an additional 487 points to finish with 1,887 points, third all time behind fellow Rangers Wayne Gretzky and Jaromir Jagr.

A goal explosion

On December 4, 1976 the Ranger traveled to Minnesota and blew out the North Stars by an 11-4 score.  It was only the ninth time that the Rangers had scored in double figures in franchise history.

What made this night unusual was the fact that on October 12 the Blueshirts had beaten the North Stars by a 10-4 score.   That meant that they had scored 21 goals in two consecutive road games against the same team, a franchise record that may never be duplicated.

Nine different Rangers scored in the game, led by Rod Gilbert and Don Murdoch who each scored twice.  For Murdoch, he had scored five times in the first game in Minnesota, giving him seven goals in two consecutive road games in Minnesota, another team record.

Gilbert added three assists for five points and 15 different Rangers made the scoresheet. The only players who didn’t were defensemen Dave Farrish and Dave Maloney.

The Rangers have hit double figures twice in a season only two times, the first with this game and once again in 1992.

When is Detroit not Detroit?

On this date in 1926 the Rangers played their first game on the road against the Detroit Cougars.   The only fact was that they didn’t play the game in Detroit as the Olympia was still under construction.  So, the game was played just across the border in the Border Cities Arena in Windsor, Ontario.  They dropped a 1-0 decision.

Exactly one year later, on December 4, 1927 the Rangers had their real Detroit debut, playing at the Olympia and winning 3-1.

The team remained the Cougars until 1930 when for two years they were known as the Detroit Falcons.  They became the Detroit Red Wings in the 1932-33 season.

Guy Lafleur #10 of the New York Rangers (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)
Guy Lafleur #10 of the New York Rangers (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) /

Two notable achievements

On December 4, 1988 the Rangers played the Edmonton Oilers at the Northlands Coliseum and were losers by a 10-6 score.   Goalie Bob Froese was pulled after allowing nine goals in the first two periods.  

For the Rangers, it was a special night for Guy Lafleur who tied his career high with four assists.  But it was a bigger night for Jimmy Carson of Edmonton who notched a hat trick.  In doing it, be became only the third NHL player to have six hat tricks before he turned 21.   Carson finished his career with ten hat tricks in nine seasons.

The Numbers

All-time on December 4, the Rangers have had a losing record and the second worst points percentage of any day in the month of December.  It’s one of only three days in December when they have never had a game go to overtime.

Regulation wins:  14
Regulation losses:  18
Ties:  4
Points percentage:   .444

Looking back

On each day, we look back at what the Rangers did one, five and ten years ago. December 4 is another one of those pretty quiet anniversaries as the Rangers were off in each of those years.

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