1984–85 Chicago Black Hawks season

The 1984–85 Chicago Black Hawks season was the 59th season of the Hawks' existence.

1984–85 Chicago Black Hawks
Division2nd Norris
1984–85 record38-35-7
Team information
General managerBob Pulford
CoachOrval Tessier
Bob Pulford
CaptainDarryl Sutter
Alternate captainsNone
Team leaders
GoalsSteve Larmer (46)
AssistsDenis Savard (67)
PointsDenis Savard (105)
Penalty minutesAl Secord (193)
WinsMurray Bannerman (27)
Goals against averageWarren Skorodenski (3.22)

Offseason

Long-time goalie Tony Esposito retired from the team after a 16-year career in the NHL. Esposito had been with the Black Hawks since 1969, appearing in 873 games, and earning a 418-302-147 record with a 2.93 GAA and 74 shutouts.

On June 9, the Black Hawks traded away goaltender Bob Janecyk, their first round, sixth overall pick, as well as their third and fourth round draft picks in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft to the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for the Kings first round, third overall draft pick and their fourth round pick in the draft. By moving up three spots in the draft, the Black Hawks drafted local prospect Ed Olczyk. Olczyk, born in Chicago, spent the 1983–84 season playing with the U.S. National Team, scoring 21 goals and 68 points in 62 games. At the 1984 Winter Olympics, Olczyk scored two goals and seven points in six games for the USA.

On June 19, the Hawks traded away defenceman Don Dietrich, forward Rich Preston and future considerations to the New Jersey Devils for forward Bob MacMillan and future considerations. MacMillan appeared in 71 games for the Devils in 1983-84, scoring 17 goals and 40 points. He was a former winner of the Lady Byng Trophy in 1979 while playing for the Atlanta Flames.

Regular season

The Black Hawks started the season off with a solid 9-6-2 record in their first 17 games, which had the team in first place in the Norris Division. The Hawks slumped to a 13-22-1 record over the next 36 games, dropping them to a 22-28-3 record overall, and into second place in the division. Following a 6–4 loss to the St. Louis Blues on February 3, the team fired head coach Orval Tessier, as he was replaced with general manager Bob Pulford. Under Pulford, the Black Hawks finished the season on a 16-7-4 run in last 27 games, finishing the season 38-35-7, earning 83 points and second place in the division. This was a 15-point improvement over the 1983-84 season, as the club qualified for the post-season for the sixteenth consecutive season.

Chicago was led offensively by Denis Savard, who scored 38 goals and a team high 105 points in 79 games. Steve Larmer led the club with 46 goals, and was second in points with 86 while appearing in all 80 games. Rookie Ed Olczyk had 20 goals and 50 points in 70 games. Al Secord led the Black Hawks in penalty minutes, getting 193 in only 51 games.

On defence, Doug Wilson scored 22 goals and 76 points in 78 games to lead the blueline in scoring. He also had a team high +23 rating. Bob Murray had five goals and 43 points in 80 games, while Behn Wilson scored 10 goals and 33 points in 76 games, as well as earning 185 penalty minutes.

In the net, Murray Bannerman appeared in a club high 60 games, earning a 27-25-4 record with a 3.83 GAA and a .884 save percentage. Warren Skorodenski backed him up, earning a record of 11-9-3 in 27 games, with a 3.22 GAA and a league leading save percentage of .903. He also earned two shutouts.

Final standings

Norris Division
GP W L T GF GA Pts
St. Louis Blues8037311229928886
Chicago Black Hawks803835730929983
Detroit Red Wings8027411231335766
Minnesota North Stars8025431226832162
Toronto Maple Leafs802052825335848

[1]Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Note: Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold.

Schedule and results

No. R Date Score Opponent Record
1WOctober 11, 19847–3Detroit Red Wings (1984–85)1–0–0
2LOctober 13, 19846–7 OT@ New York Islanders (1984–85)1–1–0
3LOctober 14, 19843–5Washington Capitals (1984–85)1–2–0
4WOctober 17, 19844–3St. Louis Blues (1984–85)2–2–0
5LOctober 20, 19844–7@ Detroit Red Wings (1984–85)2–3–0
6WOctober 21, 19845–2Los Angeles Kings (1984–85)3–3–0
7WOctober 24, 19849–3Vancouver Canucks (1984–85)4–3–0
8WOctober 27, 19845–4@ St. Louis Blues (1984–85)5–3–0
9LOctober 28, 19841–4Hartford Whalers (1984–85)5–4–0
10TOctober 30, 19845–5 OT@ Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)5–4–1
11LNovember 2, 19842–4@ Edmonton Oilers (1984–85)5–5–1
12LNovember 3, 19844–6@ Vancouver Canucks (1984–85)5–6–1
13WNovember 5, 19843–2@ Los Angeles Kings (1984–85)6–6–1
14WNovember 7, 19845–3@ Calgary Flames (1984–85)7–6–1
15TNovember 10, 19844–4 OT@ Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)7–6–2
16WNovember 14, 19846–4New York Rangers (1984–85)8–6–2
17WNovember 17, 19847–0@ Hartford Whalers (1984–85)9–6–2
18LNovember 18, 19843–5Quebec Nordiques (1984–85)9–7–2
19LNovember 20, 19842–3 OT@ Quebec Nordiques (1984–85)9–8–2
20LNovember 22, 19842–3@ Montreal Canadiens (1984–85)9–9–2
21WNovember 24, 19842–1@ Boston Bruins (1984–85)10–9–2
22LNovember 25, 19840–5@ Washington Capitals (1984–85)10–10–2
23LNovember 27, 19842–4@ Philadelphia Flyers (1984–85)10–11–2
24WNovember 29, 19846–3@ Pittsburgh Penguins (1984–85)11–11–2
25WDecember 1, 19845–3@ New Jersey Devils (1984–85)12–11–2
26TDecember 5, 19845–5 OTLos Angeles Kings (1984–85)12–11–3
27LDecember 7, 19844–5@ Detroit Red Wings (1984–85)12–12–3
28WDecember 9, 19847–2Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)13–12–3
29WDecember 12, 19845–1Detroit Red Wings (1984–85)14–12–3
30WDecember 15, 19845–3@ Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)15–12–3
31LDecember 16, 19843–5Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)15–13–3
32LDecember 19, 19843–6Buffalo Sabres (1984–85)15–14–3
33WDecember 21, 19844–3Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)16–14–3
34LDecember 23, 19842–3 OTQuebec Nordiques (1984–85)16–15–3
35LDecember 26, 19843–4@ St. Louis Blues (1984–85)16–16–3
36WDecember 29, 19845–4@ Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)17–16–3
37LDecember 30, 19842–5Calgary Flames (1984–85)17–17–3
38WJanuary 2, 19853–2Montreal Canadiens (1984–85)18–17–3
39LJanuary 5, 19853–4@ Hartford Whalers (1984–85)18–18–3
40LJanuary 6, 19852–3St. Louis Blues (1984–85)18–19–3
41WJanuary 9, 19854–3Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)19–19–3
42LJanuary 10, 19851–6@ Philadelphia Flyers (1984–85)19–20–3
43LJanuary 13, 19855–6New York Islanders (1984–85)19–21–3
44WJanuary 16, 19856–3Winnipeg Jets (1984–85)20–21–3
45LJanuary 18, 19853–4@ Buffalo Sabres (1984–85)20–22–3
46LJanuary 19, 19854–5@ Pittsburgh Penguins (1984–85)20–23–3
47WJanuary 21, 19857–2Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)21–23–3
48LJanuary 23, 19852–3Washington Capitals (1984–85)21–24–3
49WJanuary 26, 19855–2@ Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)22–24–3
50LJanuary 27, 19852–6Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)22–25–3
51LJanuary 30, 19853–6Winnipeg Jets (1984–85)22–26–3
52LFebruary 2, 19851–5@ St. Louis Blues (1984–85)22–27–3
53LFebruary 3, 19854–6St. Louis Blues (1984–85)22–28–3
54WFebruary 6, 19853–2Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)23–28–3
55WFebruary 9, 19856–5@ Boston Bruins (1984–85)24–28–3
56WFebruary 10, 19854–3Boston Bruins (1984–85)25–28–3
57WFebruary 14, 19855–4Pittsburgh Penguins (1984–85)26–28–3
58LFebruary 16, 19854–7@ Detroit Red Wings (1984–85)26–29–3
59TFebruary 17, 19854–4 OTDetroit Red Wings (1984–85)26–29–4
60WFebruary 20, 19853–2Montreal Canadiens (1984–85)27–29–4
61LFebruary 22, 19851–4@ Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)27–30–4
62WFebruary 24, 19853–2Detroit Red Wings (1984–85)28–30–4
63WFebruary 25, 19854–3 OT@ Toronto Maple Leafs (1984–85)29–30–4
64WFebruary 27, 19856–3New Jersey Devils (1984–85)30–30–4
65TMarch 2, 19854–4 OT@ St. Louis Blues (1984–85)30–30–5
66WMarch 3, 19855–2St. Louis Blues (1984–85)31–30–5
67WMarch 6, 19855–4@ Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)32–30–5
68LMarch 8, 19852–7@ Buffalo Sabres (1984–85)32–31–5
69LMarch 10, 19852–3Minnesota North Stars (1984–85)32–32–5
70WMarch 11, 19854–3 OT@ New York Rangers (1984–85)33–32–5
71LMarch 13, 19853–4New York Islanders (1984–85)33–33–5
72WMarch 17, 19856–4@ Vancouver Canucks (1984–85)34–33–5
73LMarch 20, 19854–6@ Edmonton Oilers (1984–85)34–34–5
74WMarch 22, 19853–1@ Calgary Flames (1984–85)35–34–5
75WMarch 27, 19855–2Philadelphia Flyers (1984–85)36–34–5
76TMarch 29, 19855–5 OT@ Winnipeg Jets (1984–85)36–34–6
77LMarch 31, 19853–7Edmonton Oilers (1984–85)36–35–6
78WApril 3, 19855–0New Jersey Devils (1984–85)37–35–6
79TApril 6, 19852–2 OT@ Detroit Red Wings (1984–85)37–35–7
80WApril 7, 19853–1New York Rangers (1984–85)38–35–7

Playoffs

Chicago Black Hawks 3, Detroit Red Wings 0

The Black Hawks opened the 1985 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Detroit Red Wings. Detroit finished the regular season with a 27-41-12 record, earning 66 points, which was 17 fewer points than Chicago, and third place in the Norris Division.

The series opened on April 10 at Chicago Stadium, and Doug Wilson opened the scoring for the Black Hawks 4:26 into the game on the power play. Curt Fraser then scored 21 seconds later, giving Chicago a very early 2–0 lead. Denis Savard and Ken Yaremchuk scored two more goals, giving Chicago a 4–0 lead in the first period, before the Red Wings Bob Manno scored with 29 seconds remaining in the period, cutting the Hawks lead to 4–1. In the second period, Jack O'Callahan scored for the Hawks 17 seconds into the period, restoring the Hawks four-goal lead, however, the Wings Reed Larson scored three minutes later, making the score 5–2. The Black Hawks then erupted for three goals, as Behn Wilson, Ed Olczyk and Steve Larmer scored, making it 8-2 for Chicago. John Ogrodnick answered for Detroit in the final minute of the period, making the score 8-3 for the Hawks after two periods. In the third period, Ed Olczyk scored his second goal of the game, making it 9-3 for Chicago, however, the Wings scored twice before the game ended, making the final score a 9-5 Black Hawks victory.

In the second game at home, the Hawks got off to another quick start, scoring three goals in the first period, as Darryl Sutter, Ken Yaremchuk and Al Secord scored to make it 3-0 for Chicago after the first period. After a scoreless second period, Curt Fraser scored early in the third period, making it 4–0, before the Wings Joey Kocur responded with a goal of his own, cutting the lead to 4–1. The Hawks Keith Brown and Doug Wilson scored to cap off a 6–1 victory, and gave Chicago a 2–0 series lead.

The third game shifted to Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, and the Black Hawks opened the scoring once again, as Steve Ludzik scored the lone first period goal in the game, giving Chicago a 1–0 lead. The Hawks extended their lead to 4–0, after goals by Steve Larmer, Darryl Sutter and Denis Savard in a 2:56 span midway through the second period. Ron Duguay responded for the Red Wings, cutting the Hawks lead to 4-1 after two periods. In the third period, the Hawks extended their lead to 7-1 after goals by Ed Olczyk, Denis Savard and Behn Wilson. Steve Yzerman scored late in the third period, making it 7-2 for Chicago, however, Rick Paterson restored the six-goal lead for the Hawks, who won the game by a score of 8–2, and swept the Red Wings in embarrassing fashion, outscoring them 23–8 in three games.

#DateVisitorScoreHomeRecord
1April 10Detroit Red Wings5–9Chicago Black Hawks1-0
2April 11Detroit Red Wings1–6Chicago Black Hawks2-0
3April 13Chicago Black Hawks8–2Detroit Red Wings3-0

Chicago Black Hawks 4, Minnesota North Stars 2

The Black Hawks met the Minnesota North Stars in the Norris Division finals. The North Stars struggled in the regular season, finishing with a 25-43-12 record, earning 62 points, which placed them fourth in the division. In the first round of the playoffs, the North Stars upset the first place St. Louis Blues, sweeping them out of the playoffs. In the 1984 Stanley Cup playoffs, the North Stars defeated Chicago in the first round.

The series opened at Chicago Stadium, and the Black Hawks took a 3–0 lead just 5:43 into the game after goals by Ed Olczyk, Doug Wilson and Tom Lysiak. The North Stars responded with two goals of their own, cutting the Hawks lead to 3-2 after the first period. In the second period, Minnesota scored four goals, taking a 6–3 lead. In the third period, Jack O'Callahan scored for the Hawks, cutting the lead to 6–4, however, Steve Payne restored the three-goal lead for the North Stars. The Hawks Behn Wilson scored with just under five minutes remaining in the third period, however, Tony McKegney scored an empty net goal with five seconds remaining, as the North Stars won the opening game 8–5.

In the second game, the teams played a scoreless first period. The goals came quick in the second period though, as Keith Brown and Ken Yaremchuk scored 15 seconds apart, giving Chicago a 2–0 lead. The North Stars Dino Ciccarelli and Tony McKegney scored two goals just a minute apart, tying the game 2-2, however, the Hawks Curt Fraser scored 11 seconds after McKegney's game tying goal, restoring the Hawks lead to 3–2. Fraser added another goal later in the period, as did Al Secord, as the Hawks took a 5–2 lead. In the third period, Troy Murray scored the lone goal, capping off a 6-2 Black Hawks victory. After struggling in the first game of the series, Murray Bannerman made 25 saves for the victory.

The series moved to the Met Center in Bloomington, Minnesota for the next two games. In game three, Minnesota got off to a quick start, scoring two goals in the first 9:53 of the game to take a 2–0 lead. Bob Murray responded for Chicago, cutting the North Stars lead to 2–1, then Tom Lysiak tied the game late in the period. In the second period, Al Secord scored two goals 2:08 apart late in the period, giving the Black Hawks a 4–2 lead. Craig Hartsburg scored early in the third for the North Stars, cutting the Hawks lead to 4–3, however, Murray Bannerman made a number of good saves, and a late empty goal by Darryl Sutter finished off the 5–3 victory for Chicago, and the Hawks took a 2–1 series lead.

In the fourth game, the Hawks Steve Larmer scored 1:11 into the game, however, Minnesota tied it up on a goal by Ron Wilson. Chicago retook the lead on a goal by Denis Savard, but the North Stars tied it up again only 16 seconds later on a goal by Randy Velischek. Ed Olczyk gave Chicago the lead for the third time in the period, as the Hawks held on to a 3–2 lead after the first. In the second period, Tom Lysiak extended the Hawks lead to 4–2, however, the North Stars Craig Hartsburg and Randy Velischek scored two late period goals, tying the game at 4-4. Minnesota took their first lead of the game early in the third period on a goal by Gordie Roberts, however, Bill Gardner tied it up for the Black Hawks midway through the period. The North Stars retook the lead on a goal by Tony McKegney just over two minutes later, but Denis Savard tied it up at 6-6 as he scored 47 seconds later, sending the game to overtime. In the first overtime, the teams were held off the score sheet, with the Hawks outshooting Minnesota 8–7 in a very evenly played period. Early in the second overtime, Darryl Sutter scored the game-winning goal for the Black Hawks, as they won the game 7–6, and took a 3–1 series lead.

The series shifted back to Chicago for the fifth game, and in the first period, it was all Black Hawks, as Denis Savard and Darryl Sutter scored to take a 2–0 lead after the first 20 minutes. In the second period, Chicago extended their lead to 4-0 after goals by Al Secord and Steve Larmer. Minnesota responded with two goals of their own, as Tony McKegney and Brian Bellows cut the Hawks lead to 4–2. In the third period, Dino Ciccarelli scored midway through the period for Minnesota, cutting the lead to 4–3, then with just over three minutes remaining in the period, Tony McKegney tied the game for Minnesota. In overtime, the North Stars completed the comeback on a goal by Dennis Maruk, winning the game 5–4, and cutting the Hawks series lead to 3–2.

In game six back in Minnesota, Tony McKegney gave the North Stars an early 1–0 lead, however, Steve Larmer tied the game 45 seconds later. Craig Hartsburg restored the North Stars lead, but Darryl Sutter tied the game once again with a late period goal, making it 2-2 after the first period. The North Stars took the lead again on a goal by Dennis Maruk, however, the Hawks tied it up again three minutes later after a goal by Tom Lysiak. In the third period, Minnesota took a 4–3 lead on a goal by Dave Richter, only to have Chicago tie it up nearly two minutes later on a Curt Fraser goal. Minnesota took the lead for the fifth time in the game midway through the third period on a goal by Keith Acton, but Chicago tied the game again after a Troy Murray goal with under five minutes left, sending the game into overtime for the third consecutive game. In the extra period, Darryl Sutter scored with just under five minutes remaining, winning the game for the Black Hawks 6–5, and the series 4 games to 2.

#DateVisitorScoreHomeRecord
1April 18Minnesota North Stars8–5Chicago Black Hawks0-1
2April 21Minnesota North Stars2–6Chicago Black Hawks1-1
3April 23Chicago Black Hawks5–3Minnesota North Stars2-1
4April 25Chicago Black Hawks7–6Minnesota North Stars3-1
5April 28Minnesota North Stars5–4Chicago Black Hawks3-2
6April 30Chicago Black Hawks6–5Minnesota North Stars4-2

Edmonton Oilers 4, Chicago Black Hawks 2

The Black Hawks advanced to the Campbell Conference finals for the second time in three years. In the 1983 Stanley Cup playoffs, the Black Hawks faced the Edmonton Oilers in the conference finals, and were swept by Edmonton in four games. Edmonton, who won the Stanley Cup in 1984, finished the 1984-85 season with a 49-20-11 record, earning 109 points, which was 26 more than the Black Hawks. In the post-season, the Oilers swept the Los Angeles Kings in the first round, then swept the Winnipeg Jets in the Smythe Division final.

The series opened up at Northlands Coliseum in Edmonton, Alberta, and the Oilers took a 2–0 lead midway through the first period after goals by Glenn Anderson and Charlie Huddy. The Hawks Ken Yaremchuk cut the Oilers lead to 2–1 with a goal, however, Paul Coffey scored for Edmonton, as they took a 3–1 lead after the first period. In the second period, the Oilers scored four goals on only nine shots, as they took a 7–1 lead, as Jari Kurri scored twice, Charlie Huddy scored his second goal of the game, and Mark Napier also scored. In the third period, the Oilers continue to pummel the Black Hawks, as they took a lead of 11-1 after goals by Willy Lindstrom, Wayne Gretzky, Pat Hughes, and Glenn Anderson. Troy Murray scored a late goal for Chicago, making the final score 11-2 for the Oilers, who took a 1–0 series lead.

In the second game, the Oilers took an early 1–0 lead after a Glenn Anderson goal, however, Chicago tied it up with a Bob Murray goal. Edmonton retook the lead when Jari Kurri scored, taking a 2–1 lead after the first period. The Black Hawks tied it up just over five minutes into the second period on a goal by Darryl Sutter, however, Edmonton responded with a goal of their own by Larry Melnyk, making it 3-2 for the Oilers after two periods. In the third, Jari Kurri scored midway through the period, followed by a Paul Coffey goal with just under five minutes left, giving Edmonton a 5–2 lead. The Hawks Behn Wilson scored with 38 seconds remaining, making it 5-3 for the Oilers. Then, Edmonton scored two empty net goals, one by Jari Kurri to complete the hat trick, and another by Glenn Anderson, as they won the game 7-3 and took a 2–0 series lead.

With the series shifting to Chicago for the third game, the Black Hawks took a 2–0 lead after the first period on goals by Jack O'Callahan and Steve Larmer. The Oilers cut the Hawks lead to 2-1 after a goal by Jaroslav Pouzar, but Darryl Sutter scored just over three minutes later, giving Chicago a 3–1 lead. Mark Messier scored for the Oilers early in the third period, cutting the Hawks lead to 3–2, however, Denis Savard scored four minutes later, followed by an empty net goal by Troy Murray, as the Black Hawks defeated the Oilers 5–2, cutting Edmonton's series lead to 2–1.

There was a lot of scoring to open the fourth game of the series, as Wayne Gretzky scored 2:52 into the game, giving the Oilers a 1–0 lead. The Hawks Darryl Sutter and Ed Olczyk scored twice, giving Chicago a 2–1 lead, however, Mark Messier tied the game midway through the period. Denis Savard regained the lead for Chicago on a goal with just under three minutes left in the period, however, Jaroslav Pouzar tied it up for Edmonton just 15 seconds later. Only 57 seconds later, Curt Fraser scored for the Hawks, as they took a 4–3 lead, then Al Secord scored with 25 seconds left in the first period, making it 5-3 Chicago. In the second period, Willy Lindstrom got the Oilers within one, making it 5–4, however, just under three minutes after his goal, Steve Larmer scored for Chicago, giving them a 6–4 lead after two periods. The Hawks extended their lead to 8-4 early in the third after goals by Steve Larmer and Bob Murray, however, the Oilers made the game interesting with goals by Glenn Anderson and Mark Messier late in the third period. The Black Hawks hung on for the 8–6 victory, and tied the series at 2-2.

Back in Edmonton for the fifth game, Mike Krushelnyski scored for Edmonton just 1:11 into the game, giving them a 1–0 lead. Troy Murray tied it up just over three minutes later, but Edmonton took the lead again on a Jari Kurri goal. The Black Hawks tied it up again just over a minute later on a goal by Darryl Sutter, then Chicago took their first lead of the game on a Steve Larmer goal to make it 3-2 Chicago. Jari Kurri scored his second goal of the game just over two minutes later, tying the score at 3-3 after the first period. In the second, Denis Savard made it 4-3 for the Hawks 4:30 into the period, however, Mark Messier tied the game 21 seconds later. Wayne Gretzky gave the Oilers the lead three and a half minutes later, then before the end of the period, Gretzky scored again, and Jari Kurri earned his second hat trick in as many games, as Edmonton took a 7–4 lead. The Oilers continue to dominate in the third period, as they took a 10–4 lead after goals by Paul Coffey, Dave Hunter, and Lee Fogolin. Darryl Sutter scored late in the game for the Black Hawks, as the Oilers won the game 10–5, and took a 3–2 series lead.

In the sixth game back in Chicago, the Oilers took a 2–0 lead into the first intermission after goals by Jari Kurri and Mark Messier. Edmonton continued their dominance in the second period, as Jari Kurri scored twice, earning his third hat trick in as many games, as well as goals by Mark Messier and Lee Fogolin gave the Oilers a 6–0 lead after two periods. In the third, Al Secord and Ken Yaremchuk scored for Chicago, cutting the Oilers lead to 6–2, however, Glenn Anderson and Jari Kurri, who scored his fourth goal of the game, capped off an 8-2 Oilers victory, eliminating the Black Hawks from the playoffs.

#DateVisitorScoreHomeRecord
1May 4Chicago Black Hawks2–11Edmonton Oilers0-1
2May 7Chicago Black Hawks3–7Edmonton Oilers0-2
3May 9Edmonton Oilers2–5Chicago Black Hawks1-2
4May 12Edmonton Oilers6–8Chicago Black Hawks2-2
5May 14Chicago Black Hawks5–10Edmonton Oilers2-3
6May 16Edmonton Oilers8–2Chicago Black Hawks2-4

Player stats

Regular season

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Denis SavardC7938671055616701
Steve LarmerRW8046408616171406
Doug WilsonD782254764423702
Troy MurrayC802640668216645
Bill GardnerC74173451127511
Curt FraserLW732525501093405
Ed OlczykC702030506711112
Tom LysiakC7416304613-16204
Bob MurrayD80538435613401
Darryl SutterLW49201838128202
Behn WilsonD761023331855201
Steve LudzikC79112031865011
Al SecordLW511511261930602
Ken YaremchukC6310162616-6200
Keith BrownD5612223552000
Rick PatersonC7971219256031
Jack O'CallahanD6668141056001
Jerome DupontD55310131055001
Bob MacMillanRW36571212-16001
Dan FrawleyRW3043764-2001
Marc BergevinD6006654-9000
Dave FeamsterD16134145000
Tom McMurchyRW1512313-1000
Murray BannermanG6001180000
Wayne PresleyRW301101000
Randy BoydD300060000
Chris CliffordG100000000
Jeff LarmerLW700001000
Darren PangG100000000
Warren SkorodenskiG2700020000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T GA GAA SO
Murray Bannerman337160272542153.830
Warren Skorodenski1396271193753.222
Chris Clifford20100000.000
Darren Pang60101044.000
Team:484780383572943.642

Playoffs

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Denis SavardC1592029204300
Steve LarmerRW1591322142501
Darryl SutterLW1512719127204
Troy MurrayC155141924-5100
Al SecordLW15791642-2101
Doug WilsonD1231013122200
Tom LysiakC154812105000
Ed OlczykC15651111-4110
Ken YaremchukC155510376001
Curt FraserLW1563936-5001
Behn WilsonD15459608101
Bob MurrayD1536920-9100
Keith BrownD112793113100
Jack O'CallahanD1535825-1000
Rick PatersonC1515615-5000
Bill GardnerC121342-4000
Marc BergevinD60332-4000
Steve LudzikC1511216-1000
Murray BannermanG1502240000
Jerome DupontD1502241-7000
Randy BoydD301170000
Dan FrawleyRW100000000
Warren SkorodenskiG200000000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO
Murray Bannerman9061596724.770
Warren Skorodenski33200610.910
Team:9391596784.980

[2]

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals
      MIN = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts;

Draft picks

Chicago's draft picks at the 1984 NHL Entry Draft held at the Montreal Forum in Montreal, Quebec.

Round # Player Nationality College/Junior/Club Team (League)
13Eddie Olczyk United StatesUS National Development Team (NAHL)
345Trent Yawney CanadaSaskatoon Blades (WHL)
466Tommy Eriksson SwedenModo Hockey (Sweden)
590Timo Lehkonen FinlandJokerit (Finland)
5101Darin Sceviour CanadaLethbridge Broncos (WHL)
6111Chris Clifford CanadaKingston Canadians (OHL)
7132Mike Stapleton CanadaCornwall Royals (OHL)
8153Glenn Greenough CanadaSudbury Wolves (OHL)
9174Ralph DiFiore CanadaShawinigan Cataractes (QMJHL)
10194Joakim Pehrson SwedenBrynas IF (Sweden)
11215Bill Brown CanadaSimley High School (USHS-MN)
11224David Mackey CanadaVictoria Cougars (WHL)
12235Dan Williams United StatesOak Park High School (USHS-IL)

References

  1. Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2011). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2012. Dan Diamond & Associates. p. 152. ISBN 9781894801225.
  2. "1984-85 Chicago Black Hawks Statistics - Hockey-Reference.com". hockey-reference.com. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
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