On April 15 in NYR history: Losing the Final to Detroit and the Circus

Bill Gadsby upends Ted Lindsay of the Detroit Red Wings (Photo by Robert Riger/Getty Images)
Bill Gadsby upends Ted Lindsay of the Detroit Red Wings (Photo by Robert Riger/Getty Images) /
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Bill Gadsby upends Ted Lindsay of the Detroit Red Wings (Photo by Robert Riger/Getty Images)
Bill Gadsby upends Ted Lindsay of the Detroit Red Wings (Photo by Robert Riger/Getty Images) /

What happened on April 15 in the history of the New York Rangers

Losing the Final to Detroit and the circus

On this date in 1937, the Rangers lost the third game of the best-of-final Stanley Cup Final to the Detroit Red Wings.  The game was a 3-0 shutout by Red Wings rookie netminder Earl Robertson.  It was notable for the first Stanley Cup Final penalty shot in NHL history, awarded to Alex Shibecky, who missed.   It was also the first playoff penalty shot for the Rangers.

The Rangers had won the first game of the Final 5-1 at Madison Square Garden, but were then forced to play the next four games in Detroit because the circus had moved into the Garden. They could only score three goals in the next four games, winning Game Three with a 1-0 shutout.

The Red Wings repeated as champions, becoming the first U.S. based team to win consecutive Cups.  Earl Robertson was the first rookie netminder to get two consecutive shutouts in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Oddly enough, Robertson had taken over when the Wing regular goalie Norme Smith was injured in Game Three.   What was Robertson’s reward for posting two shutouts and winning the Stanley Cup?   He was sold to the New York Americans in the off-season.  That made his record with Detroit no regular seasons games and two playoff games, both shutouts.

A long time coming

On this date in 1971, the Rangers beat the Toronto Maple Leafs in the Stanley Cup Quarter-Finals in six games.  It was an overtime win, 2-1, at Maple Leaf Gardens.  What made it unusual?  It was the first playoff series win for the Rangers in 21 years.   They had lost nine consecutive series in that time.

The last series they had won was the 1950 Semi-Finals over the Montreal Canadiens. They then lost the Final to the Detroit Red Wings, a loss that started 21 years of futility.

Good-bye to Ron Low

On this date in 2002, Ron Low was fired as head coach of the New York Rangers. The former Oilers coach had been the first coach hired by new General Manager Glen Sather in 2000.  He lasted two full seasons, missing the playoffs both years, with a record of 69-81-9-5.

Sather made bad things worse by replacing Low with Bryan Trottier who has to go down as one of the worst coaches in franchise history.

Today’s birthdays

There have been 33 NHL players born on April 15.  Five have been former Rangers including one Hall of Famer and a Survivor competitor.

Kevin Lowe

Tom Laidlaw was a rugged defenseman born on this date in 1958 in Brampton, Ontario.  Drafted by the Rangers in 1978, he made it to New York in 1980 and was a regular on the blueline for seven years before he was traded with Bobby Carpenter to the Los Angeles Kings for Marcel Dionne.  He played three season with the Kings.  Laidlaw was last seen as a competitor on the reality show, Survivor. He got voted off the island.

Kevin Stevens was born on this date in 1965 in  Brockton, Massachusetts.  He was a big center who posted two 50 goal seasons for the Penguins in the early 1990s.  He was traded to the Rangers from Los Angeles for Luc Robitaille and played three seasons in New York.  His Ranger career came to a crashing halt in 2000 when he was caught in an East St.Louis motel after a game with the Blues with a prostitute and crack cocaine.  He never played another game in New York, entering the NHL’s substance abuse program.  He made a return tot the NHL briefly with the Penguins and Flyers.

Odie Lowe was a center who was born on April15, 1928 in Winnipeg, Manitoba.   He played three games with the 1949-50 Rangers, scoring one goal and two points. He never made it in the NHL, though he had a long career in he minor leagues.  His real name was Norman and he is not related to Kevin Lowe.

Daniel Paille was born on this date in 1984 in Welland,Ontario. A first round pick of the Buffalo Sabres,  He played 10 years with the Sabres and Bruins before coming to the Rangers in January 2016 as a free agent.  He was scoreless in 12 games.

The numbers

Regular season games ate a rarity in mid April.

Playoffs games: 10
Wins: 3
Losses: 6
Overtime wins: 1
Winning percentage: 40%

Regular season games: 4
Regulation wins: 1
Regulation losses: 2
Ties: 1
Points percentage: .375

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