On February 25 in NYR history: #19 raised to the rafters

Jean Ratelle of the New York Rangers(Photo by Melchior DiGiacomo/Getty Images)
Jean Ratelle of the New York Rangers(Photo by Melchior DiGiacomo/Getty Images) /
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What happened on February 25 in New York Rangers history

February 25th was one of the busiest days in New York Rangers history.  No less than nine events in team history could be the top story of the day, but we will begin with honoring a Ranger legend.

#19 honored

On this date in 2018, the Rangers paid a long overdue tribute to Jean Ratelle, retiring his #19.   He joined teammates Rod Gilbert and Ed Giacomin who were also honored,  but decades earlier.  Although he was traded to Boston, he was still one of the greatest players in Rangers history and his 1971-72 season, though cut short by a broken ankle, is still one of the greatest ever in franchise history.

Former New York Rangers Jean Ratelle and his familey watches as the banner with his name and number are lifted into the rafters (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
Former New York Rangers Jean Ratelle and his familey watches as the banner with his name and number are lifted into the rafters (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) /

Ratelle played 16 seasons in New York and was the first Ranger to score 100 points in a season with 109 points in only 63 games.  He would have been the first in franchise history to 50 goals (he finished with 46) and he won the Pearson Award, judged to be the MVP in the NHL by his fellow players.

Above all, he epitomized class and it’s a shame that he never was able to raise the Stanley Cup in New York or Boston.

A first on television

On this date in 1940  the Rangers played Montreal at Madison Square Garden, beating the Habs 6-2.   What made it an historic event was that this was the first NHL game televised in the United States.   The channel was W2XBS and all of 300 television sets in New York City were equipped to get the signal.

W2XBS later became WNBC and is the longest continuously operating television station in the country.  They televised the first baseball and football games in 1939 and hockey was the third sport that they tried.  Available on  channel 1, the game was shot with only one camera

After this experiment, hockey didn’t find  permanent home on U.S. television until 1956 when CBS carried NHL games for four years.

The Rangers also made history with that win as it was their 14th straight home win, a new franchise record.

Stopping Montreal

On this date in 1978, Swedish goalie Hardy Åström made his NHL debut in net for the Rangers when they beat Montreal 6-3 at the Forum.  The Rangers’ win ended a 28 game undefeated streak for the Habs,  the longest in NHL history. The Canadiens had smashed the NHL record of 23 games set by the 1940-41 Bruins and equaled by the Philadelphia Flyers in 1975-76.

Montreal had 23 wins and five ties in the streak, but they only held the record for two years as the Flyers set a new record with a 35 game unbeaten streak in 1979=80.

Individual records

On February 25, 1948, Don “Bones” Raleigh became the first player in franchise history to score four goals in a game at Madison Square Garden. Unfortunately, his four goals were the only goals scored by New York in a 7-4 loss to the Chicago Black Hawks.

On this date in 2012, Henrik Lundqvist became the first NHL goalie to get 30 wins in his first seven seasons.  He did it in a 3-2 overtime win over the Buffalo Sabres at Madison Square Garden.   The streak came to an end the next season shortened by a lockout.

A coaching change

In 2004 on this date, Tom Renney was named interim coach of the Rangers, succeeding Glen Sather for the last 20 games of the season.   He had been serving as the Director of Player Personnel.  After the 2004-05 lockout he was given the job permanently  and he led the team to three straight playoff appearances.  Despite a 31-23-7 record in 2008-09, he was let go and replaced by John Tortorella.

The purge begins

This was the day before the trade deadline in 2018 and just weeks after sending out  “The Letter,” the Rangers began their rebuild in earnest.  They had already traded Nick Holden and Michael Grabner, but on this date they traded Rick Nash to the Boston Bruins.

In exchange for Nash, the Rangers got Ryan Lindgren, Ryan Spooner, Matt Beleskey and  first and seventh round draft picks. The Rangers used the first round pick to trade up and draft K’Andre Miller.  After flipping Spooner for Ryan Strome and with Lindgren and Miller becoming fixtures on the blueline, this could end up being one of the best deals in Rangers history.

Today’s birthdays

37 NHL players were born on February 25.  Six were New York Rangers and there was one longtime Rangers front office executive who was also born on this date.

Former Rangers Public Relations Director and VP of Communications, John Halligan was born on February 25 , 1941.  A native New Yorker, Halligan spent 40 years working either for the Rangers or the NHL.  An author of numerous books about the Rangers, in 2007 he received the prestigious Lester Patrick Award for contributions to hockey.  It was an award that Halligan helped to create in 1966.

Anders Hedberg

In their first season they helped take the Rangers to the Stanley Cup Finals. Hedberg played seven years with the Rangers, scoring 172 goals and 397 points in 465 games as one of the first Swedish stars in the NHL.

Troy MalletteGary DoakConnor BrickleyTed TaylorClare Martin

The numbers

The Rangers best day in February is this date as they boast a .695 points percentage, with only eight regulation losses in 41 games.

Games: 41
Regulation wins: 21
Regulation losses: 8
Ties: 7
Overtime wins: 3
Overtime losses: 1
Shootout losses: 1
Points percentage:

Last year

Rangers 4, Islanders 3 (Overtime)

In their first game after the trade deadline, the Rangers won their eighth straight road game to set a team record as they beat the Islanders in overtime 4-3.    The Rangers had blown a 3-1 lead, allowing the Islanders to tie the score with just 18 seconds left in the game.

In the overtime, Artemi Panarin stole the puck, took it deep into the Islander zone, drawing all three Islanders to him and then he made a brilliant pass to Zibanejad who one-timed the shot past Semyon Varlamov just 29 seconds in.

Alexandar Georgiev made 37 saves in their firt game without Igor Shesterkin who had been injured in a car accident two days earlier.

More. A 4-3 loss despite a Kreider hat trick. light