fbpx
Wikipedia

1974–75 Buffalo Sabres season

The 1974–75 Buffalo Sabres season was the Sabres' fifth season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The Sabres finished in a tie for the best record in the NHL in the 1974–75 regular season after a disappointing 1974 that saw the 1973–74 team fail to return to the NHL playoffs as they had the year before. Buffalo advanced to the Stanley Cup finals for the first time in team history to play against the rough Philadelphia Flyers (who had been recently nicknamed the "Broad Street Bullies"), a series which included the legendary Fog Game (game three of the series). The Sabres lost the series 4–2.

1974–75 Buffalo Sabres
Wales Conference champions
Adams Division champions
Division1st Adams
Conference1st Wales
1974–75 record49–16–15
Home record28–6–6
Road record21–10–9
Goals for354
Goals against240
Team information
General managerPunch Imlach
CoachFloyd Smith
CaptainJim Schoenfeld
ArenaBuffalo Memorial Auditorium
Average attendance15,668
Team leaders
GoalsRick Martin (52)
AssistsRene Robert (60)
PointsRene Robert (100)
Penalty minutesJerry Korab and Jim Schoenfeld (184)
WinsGary Bromley (26)
Goals against averageRoger Crozier (2.62)

The season marked the Sabres' second NHL playoffs appearance.[1] The season was the first under the tenure of Floyd Smith and the team's first in the newly created Adams Division in the NHL's Prince of Wales Conference.

Sabres players earned numerous accolades. Don Luce won the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy. Rick Martin, Rene Robert, Jerry Korab and Luce were all selected to the 1975 NHL All-Star Game. Martin was a first team NHL All-Star team selection at left wing, while Robert was a second team selection at right wing. The French Connection (Martin, Robert and Gilbert Perreault) were all among the league leaders in important scoring statistics.

Transactions edit

Goaltender Dave Dryden was lost to the World Hockey Association following the 1973–74 season.[2] During the 25-round May 1974 NHL amateur draft that was held by conference call, the team participated in the first twelve rounds of the draft. Although several of their selections eventually played in the NHL, the Sabres only drafted three players that played for the team that year.[3][4][5][6] The Sabres acquired defenseman Lee Fogolin (1st round, 11th overall), right winger Danny Gare (2nd round, 29th overall) and defenseman Paul McIntosh (4th round, 65th overall) in the 1974 NHL amateur draft.[3][4][5] They had acquired left winger Morris Titanic in the 1973 NHL Amateur Draft (1st round, 12th overall) and he was called up from the team's American Hockey League minor league affiliate, the Hershey Bears during the season.[7] In addition, the Sabres drafted Taro Tsujimoto with the 183rd overall pick.[8]

Round # Player Nationality College/Junior/Club team
1 11 Lee Fogolin (D)   United States Oshawa Generals (OHA)
2 29 Danny Gare (RW)   Canada Calgary Centennials (WCJHL)
3 47 Michel Deziel (LW)   Canada Sorel Eperviers (QMJHL)
4 65 Paul McIntosh (D)   Canada Peterborough Petes (OHA)
5 83 Garry Lariviere (D)   Canada St. Catharines Black Hawks (OMJHL)
6 101 Dave Given (RW)   United States Brown University (ECAC)
7 119 Bernard Noreau (RW)   Canada Laval National (QMJHL)
8 136 Charles Constantin (LW)   Canada Quebec Remparts (QMJHL)
9 153 Rick Jodzio (LW)   Canada Hamilton Fincups (OMJHL)
10 168 Derek Smith (LW)   Canada Ottawa 67's (OMJHL)
11 183 Taro Tsujimoto (C)   Japan Tokyo Katanas (JIHL)
12 196 Bob Geoffrion (LW)   Canada Cornwall Royals (QMJHL)

Prior to the season, the team had lost right winger Ron Busniuk to the Detroit Red Wings in the June 10, 1974 NHL Intra-League Draft.[9] Buffalo lost right winger Steve Atkinson and center Randy Wyrozub to the Washington Capitals in the June 12, 1974 NHL Expansion Draft.[10][11] The team also lost defenseman Paul Terbenche to the Kansas City Scouts in the same draft.[12]

On October 14, 1974, The Sabres acquired 1974 All-Star defenseman Jocelyn Guevremont and forward Bryan McSheffrey from the Vancouver Canucks in exchange for left winger Gerry Meehan and defenseman Mike Robitaille.[13] On January 27, 1975, Buffalo acquired left winger Fred Stanfield from the Minnesota North Stars for right winger Norm Gratton and Buffalo's 3rd round choice in 1976 NHL Amateur Draft. The veteran Stanfield had finished in the top ten in the league four times in assists before being acquired by the Sabres.[14] The Sabres acquired the NHL rights to goaltender Gerry Desjardins from the New York Islanders for defenseman Garry Lariviere on February 19, 1975.[15]

In May, after the season ended, left winger Rick Dudley, who later coached the Sabres for three seasons,[1] signed to play in the WHA.[16] After 11 seasons in the NHL, 1974–75 was the final one for right winger Larry Mickey before his retirement.[17]

Regular season edit

 
The Sabres played their home games in the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (dark rimmed building in front of the HSBC Arena, pictured in 2007).
October–December

The Sabres returned after a season of injury and tragedy in which their captain Tim Horton died in an automobile accident.[18] The team also seemed to have mended an apparent preseason feud between Perreault and Martin.[19] On October 10, 1974, in the season-opening game, Danny Gare set the tone for the new season by scoring a goal 18 seconds into the first game of his career.[20] Perreault added a hat trick and two assists in the 9–5 victory over the Boston Bruins.[21] After starting the season 3–3–1, the Sabres had an 18–1–3 hot streak between October 26 and December 8, 1974, to move to a 21–4–4 record.[22] By the time they reached 7–3–1 following a November 3 victory over the New York Rangers, they had taken over the Adams Division lead.[23] The streak included two unbeaten stretches of at least 10 games.[22] They went 9–0–1 on a streak that extended until November 14 with a win against the Minnesota North Stars.[24] The penultimate win of the streak was the Sabres' first ever win at the Montreal Forum on November 13.[25]

After a November 16, loss to the Bruins, they started a 9–0–2 streak on November 17 against the Atlanta Flames.[22] In the third game of this streak, which was also against the Flames, they made a comeback from two separate three-goal deficits to tie the game.[26] The other tie during the streak was also a comeback.[27] By the end of the two unbeaten streaks and before the 30-game mark, the Sabres had the best record in the NHL, the league's leading scorer in Perreault, three 20-goal scorers among the French Connection and the leading rookie scorer in the league in Gare.[28] Martin had the second four-goal game of his career in a December 3 5–3 victory against the Washington Capitals on the road.[29][30] Perreault had three goals and an assist in the December 5 9–2 victory against the Washington Capitals at home.[31] Then, Martin was lost with a recurring thumb injury.[32] Following Martin's injury, the Sabres eleven-game unbeaten streak came to an end, and the team had two different three-game stretches without a win that started in December.[22]

January–February

The team posted a season high six-game win streak between January 12, 1975 – January 25, 1975. The streak culminated in a second win against the Montreal Canadiens on the road.[22][33] After a February 1 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers, the Sabres went undefeated for the rest of the month. The team had a season-high 12-game unbeaten streak between February 2, 1975 – February 27, 1975. During that streak, the team went 7–0–5.[22] The 4–4 February 16 tie with the St. Louis Blues clinched a playoff spot for the Sabres.[34] The February 18 3–2 victory over the New York Islanders at the Nassau Coliseum was only the second loss of the season for the Islanders at home.[35] The February 20 6–6 tie against the Flyers, in which the Sabres lost several leads, extended the Flyers unbeaten streak against the Sabres to nine.[36] The final game of the streak was a 5–0 shutout victory over the Los Angeles Kings, who had handed the Sabres three of their eleven defeats prior to that point in the season.[37]

March–April

At the beginning of March, Desjardins quit the Baltimore Blades of the World Hockey Association to join the Sabres.[38] Desjardins was frustrated at not getting paid when attendance was sparse.[39] On March 16 against the Toronto Maple Leafs, Martin dislocated his thumb during a fight. This necessitated that he wear a cast.[40] Desjardins made his first appearance in a March 20 6–3 victory over the New York Rangers.[39] In their last win of the month, the Sabres clinched the division title on March 23 with a 9–4 victory over the California Golden Seals.[41] Rookie defenseman Hajt was injured with a broken bone in his foot during a 5–1 loss to the Chicago Blackhawks on March 26.[42] The Sabres would lose the next two games for the season's only three-game losing streak.[22] The Sabres ended the season by winning all three regular season games in April.[22] The Sabres did not clinch the Prince of Wales Conference until winning the final game of the season against the Maple Leafs.[43]

The season was the first of three full seasons coached by Floyd Smith, who had coached one game during the 1971–72 season.[44] Smith had played for the Sabres during their first two seasons.[45] The team played its home games at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium.[46] Two members of the team later coached the Sabres: Dudley and Jim Schoenfeld.[47][48]

Season standings edit

Adams Division[49]
GP W L T GF GA DIFF Pts
1 Buffalo Sabres 80 49 16 15 354 240 +114 113
2 Boston Bruins 80 40 26 14 345 245 +100 94
3 Toronto Maple Leafs 80 31 33 16 280 309 −29 78
4 California Golden Seals 80 19 48 13 212 316 −104 51

Record vs. opponents edit

Adams Division record vs. opponents


Results edit

The following is a Sabres game log.[22]

No. R Date Score Opponent Record
1 W October 10, 1974 9–5 Boston Bruins (1974–75) 1–0–0
2 L October 12, 1974 1–6 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1974–75) 1–1–0
3 L October 13, 1974 1–4 Los Angeles Kings (1974–75) 1–2–0
4 W October 17, 1974 6–1 California Golden Seals (1974–75) 2–2–0
5 W October 18, 1974 2–1 @ Minnesota North Stars (1974–75) 3–2–0
6 T October 20, 1974 5–5 Toronto Maple Leafs (1974–75) 3–2–1
7 L October 24, 1974 2–7 @ Los Angeles Kings (1974–75) 3–3–1
8 W October 26, 1974 2–0 @ St. Louis Blues (1974–75) 4–3–1
9 W October 27, 1974 3–2 Montreal Canadiens (1974–75) 5–3–1
10 W November 2, 1974 6–3 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1974–75) 6–3–1
11 W November 3, 1974 4–3 @ New York Rangers (1974–75) 7–3–1
12 T November 5, 1974 2–2 @ Boston Bruins (1974–75) 7–3–2
13 W November 6, 1974 6–4 Chicago Black Hawks (1974–75) 8–3–2
14 W November 9, 1974 6–1 @ Kansas City Scouts (1974–75) 9–3–2
15 W November 10, 1974 8–3 Pittsburgh Penguins (1974–75) 10–3–2
16 W November 13, 1974 8–6 @ Montreal Canadiens (1974–75) 11–3–2
17 W November 14, 1974 5–3 Minnesota North Stars (1974–75) 12–3–2
18 L November 16, 1974 5–7 @ Boston Bruins (1974–75) 12–4–2
19 W November 17, 1974 4–0 Atlanta Flames (1974–75) 13–4–2
20 W November 20, 1974 7–3 Washington Capitals (1974–75) 14–4–2
21 T November 22, 1974 4–4 @ Atlanta Flames (1974–75) 14–4–3
22 W November 24, 1974 6–4 Montreal Canadiens (1974–75) 15–4–3
23 W November 27, 1974 3–1 @ Chicago Black Hawks (1974–75) 16–4–3
24 W November 28, 1974 5–2 Detroit Red Wings (1974–75) 17–4–3
25 T November 30, 1974 5–5 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1974–75) 17–4–4
26 W December 1, 1974 6–3 Pittsburgh Penguins (1974–75) 18–4–4
27 W December 3, 1974 5–3 @ Washington Capitals (1974–75) 19–4–4
28 W December 5, 1974 9–2 Washington Capitals (1974–75) 20–4–4
29 W December 8, 1974 5–0 Minnesota North Stars (1974–75) 21–4–4
30 L December 12, 1974 3–5 Vancouver Canucks (1974–75) 21–5–4
31 L December 14, 1974 2–4 @ Minnesota North Stars (1974–75) 21–6–4
32 T December 15, 1974 5–5 California Golden Seals (1974–75) 21–6–5
33 W December 18, 1974 3–2 New York Islanders (1974–75) 22–6–5
34 W December 22, 1974 4–0 @ Washington Capitals (1974–75) 23–6–5
35 W December 26, 1974 3–1 Chicago Black Hawks (1974–75) 24–6–5
36 L December 27, 1974 5–9 @ New York Rangers (1974–75) 24–7–5
37 L December 29, 1974 2–5 Philadelphia Flyers (1974–75) 24–8–5
38 T January 3, 1975 2–2 @ California Golden Seals (1974–75) 24–8–6
39 W January 5, 1975 4–2 St. Louis Blues (1974–75) 25–8–6
40 L January 9, 1975 2–5 Los Angeles Kings (1974–75) 25–9–6
41 T January 11, 1975 3–3 @ Detroit Red Wings (1974–75) 25–9–7
42 W January 12, 1975 5–1 Vancouver Canucks (1974–75) 26–9–7
43 W January 15, 1975 4–0 @ California Golden Seals (1974–75) 27–9–7
44 W January 17, 1975 4–2 @ Vancouver Canucks (1974–75) 28–9–7
45 W January 19, 1975 5–0 Kansas City Scouts (1974–75) 29–9–7
46 W January 23, 1975 5–1 Detroit Red Wings (1974–75) 30–9–7
47 W January 25, 1975 7–6 @ Montreal Canadiens (1974–75) 31–9–7
48 L January 26, 1975 3–4 Atlanta Flames (1974–75) 31–10–7
49 W January 30, 1975 6–3 New York Rangers (1974–75) 32–10–7
50 L February 1, 1975 0–6 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1974–75) 32–11–7
51 W February 2, 1975 8–1 Kansas City Scouts (1974–75) 33–11–7
52 W February 4, 1975 6–1 @ Detroit Red Wings (1974–75) 34–11–7
53 T February 6, 1975 2–2 @ New York Islanders (1974–75) 34–11–8
54 T February 9, 1975 4–4 Montreal Canadiens (1974–75) 34–11–9
55 T February 12, 1975 3–3 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1974–75) 34–11–10
56 W February 13, 1975 3–1 Boston Bruins (1974–75) 35–11–10
57 T February 16, 1975 4–4 St. Louis Blues (1974–75) 35–11–11
58 W February 18, 1975 3–2 @ New York Islanders (1974–75) 36–11–11
59 T February 20, 1975 6–6 Philadelphia Flyers (1974–75) 36–11–12
60 W February 21, 1975 9–4 @ Washington Capitals (1974–75) 37–11–12
61 W February 23, 1975 4–1 Toronto Maple Leafs (1974–75) 38–11–12
62 W February 27, 1975 5–0 Los Angeles Kings (1974–75) 39–11–12
63 L March 1, 1975 2–3 @ Detroit Red Wings (1974–75) 39–12–12
64 T March 2, 1975 3–3 New York Islanders (1974–75) 39–12–13
65 W March 5, 1975 6–3 @ New York Rangers (1974–75) 40–12–13
66 T March 8, 1975 3–3 @ St. Louis Blues (1974–75) 40–12–14
67 W March 9, 1975 8–4 Pittsburgh Penguins (1974–75) 41–12–14
68 T March 11, 1975 2–2 @ Los Angeles Kings (1974–75) 41–12–15
69 W March 12, 1975 7–2 @ California Golden Seals (1974–75) 42–12–15
70 L March 14, 1975 1–5 @ Vancouver Canucks (1974–75) 42–13–15
71 W March 16, 1975 11–3 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1974–75) 43–13–15
72 W March 20, 1975 6–3 New York Rangers (1974–75) 44–13–15
73 W March 22, 1975 4–2 @ Kansas City Scouts (1974–75) 45–13–15
74 W March 23, 1975 9–4 California Golden Seals (1974–75) 46–13–15
75 L March 26, 1975 1–5 @ Chicago Black Hawks (1974–75) 46–14–15
76 L March 28, 1975 2–3 @ Atlanta Flames (1974–75) 46–15–15
77 L March 30, 1975 4–5 Toronto Maple Leafs (1974–75) 46–16–15
78 W April 1, 1975 3–1 @ Boston Bruins (1974–75) 47–16–15
79 W April 3, 1975 4–2 Boston Bruins (1974–75) 48–16–15
80 W April 5, 1975 4–2 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1974–75) 49–16–15

Player statistics edit

The French Connection members led the Sabres in scoring by finishing 1–2–3 in both goals and points, although none of them played as many as 75 of the team's 80 games.[46] Perreault's eight game-winning goals was fifth highest in the NHL for the season,[51] although he only played 68 games, he finished ninth in the league in scoring with 96 points (39 goals and 57 assists).[52] Martin also only played 68 games and finished third in goals (52) and tenth in points (95).[53] Martin's 21 power play goals was second in the league.[51] Robert was seventh in points (100), tenth in goals (40) and tenth in assists (60) in 74 games.[54] Luce's 8 shorthanded goals was second and Craig Ramsay had 7, which was third.[51] Other statistical leaders included Luce who had a 61 plus/minus, which ranked fourth and Peter McNab who led the league in shooting percentage.[51]

Over the course of the season, the team scored a total of 354 goals, which ranked second in the 18 team league and its 49–16–15 record ranked it first in the league.[46] The team used several goaltenders. Although Gary Bromley led the team with 26 wins in the regular season, and Roger Crozier was second with 17 wins, the team was led in the post season by Desjardins who recorded 7 of the team's 10 post season victories.[46]

The following are the season statistics for the Sabres.[46]

Key edit

Skaters edit

# Player name Acquisition Birthdate Age Pos GP G A P PIM GP G A P PIM
Regular-season Playoffs
14 Rene Robert
December 31, 1948 25 RW 74 40 60 100 75 16 5 8 13 16
11 Gilbert Perreault
November 13, 1950 23 C 68 39 57 96 36 17 6 9 15 10
7 Rick Martin
July 26, 1951 23 LW 68 52 43 95 72 17 7 8 15 20
20 Don Luce
October 2, 1948 25 C 80 33 43 76 45 16 5 8 13 19
9 Rick Dudley
January 31, 1949 25 LW 78 31 39 70 116 10 3 1 4 26
8 Jim Lorentz
May 1, 1947 27 C 72 25 45 70 18 16 6 4 10 6
10 Craig Ramsay
March 17, 1951 23 LW 80 26 38 64 26 17 5 7 12 2
18 Danny Gare
May 14, 1954 20 RW 78 31 31 62 75 17 7 6 13 19
4 Jerry Korab
September 15, 1948 25 D 79 12 44 56 184 16 3 2 5 32
16 Peter McNab
May 8, 1952 22 C 53 22 21 43 8 17 2 6 8 4
21 Brian Spencer
September 3, 1949 24 LW 73 12 29 41 77 16 0 4 4 8
17 Fred Stanfield From Minnesota May 4, 1944 30 LW 32 12 21 33 4 17 2 4 6 0
22 Jocelyn Guevremont From Vancouver March 1, 1951 23 D 64 7 25 32 32 17 0 6 6 14
24 Bill Hajt
November 18, 1951 22 D 76 3 26 29 68 17 1 4 5 18
6 Jim Schoenfeld
September 4, 1952 21 D 68 1 19 20 184 17 1 4 5 38
23 Larry Carriere
January 30, 1952 22 D 80 1 11 12 111 17 0 2 2 32
Norm Gratton To Minnesota December 22, 1950 23 LW 25 3 6 9 2
5 Lee Fogolin
February 15, 1955 19 D 50 2 2 4 59 8 0 0 0 6
29 Gary Bromley
January 19, 1950 24 G 50 0 4 4 2
12 Larry Mickey
October 21, 1943 30 RW 23 2 0 2 2
1 Roger Crozier
March 16, 1942 32 G 23 0 2 2 8
Gerry Meehan To Vancouver September 3, 1946 27 C 3 0 1 1 2
Mike Robitaille To Vancouver February 12, 1948 26 D 3 0 1 1 0
3 Paul McIntosh
March 13, 1954 20 D 6 0 1 1 5 1 0 0 0 0
15 Michel Deziel
January 31, 1954 20 LW 1 0 0 0 0
Bryan McSheffrey
September 25, 1952 21 RW 3 0 0 0 0
Rocky Farr
April 7, 1947 27 G 7 0 0 0 0
30 Gerry Desjardins
July 22, 1944 30 G 9 0 0 0 0
19 Morris Titanic
January 7, 1953 21 LW 17 0 0 0 0
Bench Minor1
18 0

^ Note 1: A bench minor is when the team is penalized for a minor infraction that is not attributed to any individual player.

Goaltenders edit

Regular season edit

Player Name GP Min GA GAA W L T Svs Pct EN SO
Roger Crozier 23 1260 55 2.62 17 2 1 518 0.904 0 3
Gerry Desjardins 9 540 25 2.78 6 2 1 239 0.905 0 0
Gary Bromley 50 2787 144 3.10 26 11 11 989 0.873 2 4
Norm "Rocky" Farr 7 213 14 3.94 0 1 2 100 0.877 0 0

Playoffs edit

Player Name GP Min GA GAA W L SO
Roger Crozier 5 292 14 2.88 3 2 0
Gerry Desjardins 15 760 43 3.39 7 5 0

Playoffs edit

Schedule and results edit

The following was the team playoff schedule.[51]

Round Game Date Visitor Score Home Score OT
Preliminary round Bye
Quarter-finals Game 1 13-Apr-75 Chicago Black Hawks 1 Buffalo Sabres 4
Quarter-finals Game 2 15-Apr-75 Chicago Black Hawks 1 Buffalo Sabres 3
Quarter-finals Game 3 17-Apr-75 Buffalo Sabres 4 Chicago Black Hawks 5 (OT)
Quarter-finals Game 4 20-Apr-75 Buffalo Sabres 6 Chicago Black Hawks 2
Quarter-finals Game 5 22-Apr-75 Chicago Black Hawks 1 Buffalo Sabres 3
Semi-finals Game 1 27-Apr-75 Montreal Canadiens 5 Buffalo Sabres 6 (OT)
Semi-finals Game 2 29-Apr-75 Montreal Canadiens 2 Buffalo Sabres 4
Semi-finals Game 3 1-May-75 Buffalo Sabres 0 Montreal Canadiens 7
Semi-finals Game 4 3-May-75 Buffalo Sabres 2 Montreal Canadiens 8
Semi-finals Game 5 6-May-75 Montreal Canadiens 4 Buffalo Sabres 5 (OT)
Semi-finals Game 6 8-May-75 Buffalo Sabres 4 Montreal Canadiens 3
Stanley Cup finals Game 1 15-May-75 Buffalo Sabres 1 Philadelphia Flyers 4
Stanley Cup finals Game 2 18-May-75 Buffalo Sabres 1 Philadelphia Flyers 2
Stanley Cup finals Game 3 20-May-75 Philadelphia Flyers 4 Buffalo Sabres 5 (OT)
Stanley Cup finals Game 4 22-May-75 Philadelphia Flyers 2 Buffalo Sabres 4
Stanley Cup finals Game 5 25-May-75 Buffalo Sabres 1 Philadelphia Flyers 5
Stanley Cup finals Game 6 27-May-75 Philadelphia Flyers 2 Buffalo Sabres 0

Quarter-finals edit

The Sabres had a bye in the first round of the playoffs and then met the first round victor Chicago Black Hawks in the quarter-finals. In the first game of the series, the Sabres were the beneficiaries of an 18–2 penalty minutes differential and won 4–1.[55] Although the Black Hawks scored in the first minute of game two, the Dudley scored a pair of goals on the way to a 3–1 Sabres victory.[56] In game three, the Black Hawks took a one-goal lead four times and the Sabres tied the score each time, which led to sudden death overtime in which Chicago came out on top.[57] The Sabres scored five times in the third period to post a 6–2 victory in game 4.[58] The Sabres won the series 4–1, with Robert scoring the series clinching goal after getting into fisticuffs with Pit Martin and third man Phil Russell (who got ejected) earlier in the clinching game.[59]

Semi-finals edit

The Sabres won the first game with an overtime goal by Gare.[18] In game two, Robert was sidelined with the flu and Dudley was inactive due to a sprained knee, but the checking line of Luce, Ramsay and Gare each scored a goal as the Sabres took a 2–0 lead with a 4–2 victory.[60] In the game, Henri Richard surpassed his brother Maurice Richard with his 127th Stanley Cup playoff point.[61] Following their strong 7–0 game three performance, the Canadiens handily won game four at home by an 8–2 margin. The game was marked by a bench clearing incident when Doug Risebrough and Gare squared off. Bill Hajt got ejected as third man in and Larry Robinson who took on Hajt was also ejected.[62] The Sabres surrendered an early 3–1 lead, but won in overtime of game five on Robert goal.[63] The Sabres scored three goals in the first period of game six on their way to a series-clinching 4–3 victory. They led 3–1 after one period and added one in the second before withstanding a third period two-goal rally by Montreal.[64]

Stanley Cup finals edit

The Flyers came into the series with their own good luck pre- game singer in the form of Kate Smith who sang "God Bless America" before home games at The Spectrum.[65] The Flyers had a 43–3–1 record following her pregame performances in lieu of the traditional "Star Spangled Banner".[66] In addition, the Sabres had never won a game against the Flyers in Philadelphia in their short five-year franchise history, had never beaten Flyer starting goalie Bernie Parent, and entered the series on a 13-game streak against the Flyers without a win.[67]

Although the Sabres held the Flyers to two shots in the first period of game one, eight in the second, and were the beneficiaries of a 1:04 two-man advantage at one point, the game remained scoreless until the third period when the Flyers connected four times in a 4–1 victory.[68] In game two, the Sabres were held to 19 shots on goal with none coming after Bobby Clarke scored at the 6:43 mark of the third period.[67]

Due to unusual heat in Buffalo in May 1975, portions of game three, which is known as "The Fog Game", were played in heavy fog. The game was stopped 12 times due to the conditions.[69] Buffalo goalie Desjardins gave up three first period goals, and Crozier started the second period.[70] After having surrendered goals on his first two shots faced and three of his first six, Desjardins removed himself from the game.[69][71] The Sabres recovered from the three-goal deficit on two goals 17 seconds apart by Gare and Martin. After a goal by Luce netted the score, Reggie Leach gave the Flyers the lead again. Bill Hajt scored his first career playoff goal to tie the score. Robert scored the game winner in overtime with a goal that Flyer goalie Bernie Parent did not see until it was too late. The game was the longest NHL overtime game in over four years.[70] Players, officials, and the puck were invisible to many spectators. During a face-off and through the fog, Sabres center Jim Lorentz spotted a bat flying across the rink, raised his stick, and killed it. Many superstitious Buffalo fans considered this to be an "Evil Omen," pertaining to the result of the series. It was the only time that any player killed an animal during an NHL game. This was one of three playoff appearances for Crozier.[72] Desjardins surrendered a goal on the third Flyer shot in game four, but he stayed in the game for a 4–2 victory.[69][71] In game four, the unseasonable temperature only caused the play to be stopped twice (with 8:08 and 4:44 remaining) as five pairs of arena employees skated around the ice with bed sheets to clear the haze.[69]

By game five of the finals Dave Schultz had claimed both the single-season regular season penalty minutes record and the post-season record. However, he contributed his first two goals of the playoffs in a 5–2 win to help the Flyers take a 3–2 lead in the series. It was Schultz' first two-goal performance of the season and his first goal since March 9.[73] In the sixth game Conn Smythe Trophy MVP Bernie Parent shut out the Sabres 2–0 to clinch the series four games to two.[74] Crozier held the Flyers scoreless for the first two periods of the final game.[72]

Awards and records edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Buffalo Sabres". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on May 20, 2011. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  2. ^ "Dave Dryden". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on November 12, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  3. ^ a b "Lee Fogolin". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on January 18, 2010. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  4. ^ a b "Danny Gare". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on May 20, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  5. ^ a b "Paul McIntosh". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on January 27, 2012. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  6. ^ "1974 NHL amateur draft". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on August 16, 2011. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  7. ^ "Morris Titanic". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on September 20, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  8. ^ "1974 NHL amateur draft". hockeydraftcentral.com. from the original on September 23, 2010. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  9. ^ "Ron Busniuk". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on August 25, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  10. ^ "Steve Atkinson". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  11. ^ "Randy Wyrozub". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on August 20, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  12. ^ "Paul Terbenche". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on November 13, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  13. ^ "Jocelyn Guevremont". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on September 18, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  14. ^ "Fred Stanfield". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on September 8, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  15. ^ "Gerry Desjardins". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on November 13, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  16. ^ "Rick Dudley". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on May 19, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  17. ^ "Larry Mickey". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on November 12, 2011. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  18. ^ a b "Historical Moments". sportsecyclopedia.com. May 14, 2003. from the original on July 3, 2009. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  19. ^ "Harmony Makes Sabres Winners". Ottawa Citizen. October 11, 1974. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  20. ^ National Hockey League Official Guide and Record Book 2006, p.187, Dan Diamond & Associates, Toronto, Ontario, ISBN 0-920445-98-5
  21. ^ "Bruins Drop Opener". Daytona Beach Morning Journal. October 10, 1974. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i "1974–75 Buffalo Sabres Schedule and Results". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on August 16, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  23. ^ "B's Hope to Settle Score With Explosive Buffalo". The Telegraph. November 4, 1974. p. 17. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  24. ^ "Goalie In Awe Of Sabres". Sarasota Journal. November 15, 1974. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  25. ^ "Sabres Win First Time At Montreal". The New York Times. November 14, 1974. from the original on July 23, 2018. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  26. ^ "Islanders Rip Leafs; Sabres Knot Flames". Schenectady Gazette. November 23, 1974. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  27. ^ "Buffalo rally ties Penguins". Chicago Tribune. December 1, 1974. p. D2. from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  28. ^ "Streaking Sabres tops in points, scoring". Chicago Tribune. December 25, 1974. p. E3. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  29. ^ "Martin Scores 4 Goals as Sabres Roll to Win". Los Angeles Times. December 4, 1974. p. G4. from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  30. ^ "Buffalo Powers Past Caps". Beaver County Times. December 4, 1974. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  31. ^ "Sabres roll, 3 for Perreault". Chicago Tribune. December 6, 1974. p. C2. from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  32. ^ "Sabres lose Martin for two weeks". The Montreal Gazette. December 10, 1974.
  33. ^ "Sabres Hand Canadiens Third Home Loss in Row". Los Angeles Times. January 26, 1975. p. D4. from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  34. ^ "Flyers Topple Bruins". Rome News-Tribune. February 17, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  35. ^ Herman, Robin (February 19, 1975). "Islanders Lose To Sabres, 3–2; Islanders Beaten, 3–2, By Sabres". The New York Times. p. 58. from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  36. ^ "Flyers, Sabres Tie; Habs Beat Scouts". Schenectady Gazette. February 21, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  37. ^ "Sabres Beat LA, Feel Like Kings". The Pittsburgh Press. February 28, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  38. ^ "Desjardins quits Blades to join Sabres of NHL". The Baltimore Sun. March 4, 1975. p. C9. from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  39. ^ a b "Sabres Goalie Tough As Team Wins". The Milwaukee Journal. March 21, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  40. ^ "Cast On Thumb". Rome News-Tribune. March 18, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  41. ^ "Canadiens Beaten On Road". The Milwaukee Journal. March 24, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  42. ^ "Broken Bone Stops Rookie Defenseman". Gettysburg Times. March 28, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  43. ^ "Sabres Beat Leafs to Win Conference". Los Angeles Times. April 6, 1975. p. B4. from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2010.
  44. ^ "Floyd Smith". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on May 19, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  45. ^ "Floyd Smith". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on July 9, 2017. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  46. ^ a b c d e "1974–75 Buffalo Sabres Roster and Statistics". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on August 13, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  47. ^ "Jim Schoenfeld". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on May 19, 2011. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  48. ^ "Rick Dudley". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on May 19, 2011. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  49. ^ "1974-1975 Division Standings Standings - NHL.com - Standings". National Hockey League.
  50. ^ "All-Time NHL Results". NHL.com. Retrieved August 25, 2023.
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h i "1974–75 NHL Season Summary". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on August 15, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  52. ^ "Gilbert Perreault". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on August 16, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  53. ^ "Rick Martin". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on November 9, 2018. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  54. ^ "Rene Robert". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on July 9, 2017. Retrieved June 24, 2010.
  55. ^ Condon, David (April 14, 1975). "Hawks ruffled by officiating in loss". Chicago Tribune. p. C3.
  56. ^ . Daily Collegian. April 16, 1975. Archived from the original on April 3, 2012. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  57. ^ Condon, David (April 18, 1975). "Makita: Hawks getting bounces". Chicago Tribune. p. C3.
  58. ^ Condon, David (April 21, 1975). "Hawks' slim cup chances dangle at Tony O's feet". Chicago Tribune. p. C8.
  59. ^ "Sabres Oust Chicago". Montreal Gazette. April 23, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 2, 2010.
  60. ^ "Flyers, Sabres score wins despite problems". Daily News. April 30, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  61. ^ "Sabres Win Again". The Milwaukee Sentinel. April 30, 1975. p. 2, part 2. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  62. ^ Bacon, Dick (May 5, 1975). "Minor officials fumble fight rule". The Montreal Gazette. p. 33. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  63. ^ Pike, Marvin R. (May 6, 1975). "Sabres down on overtime jobs". The Southeast Missourian. p. 26. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  64. ^ "Sabres cinch Stanley semi at Montreal". The Spokesman-Review. May 9, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  65. ^ Eldridge, Larry (May 15, 1975). "Kate Smith, Flyers down Islanders; Sabres next". The Christian Science Monitor. from the original on November 2, 2012. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  66. ^ "Can Kate Smith's Singing Bless Flyers". The Pittsburgh Press. May 13, 1975. p. 12. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  67. ^ a b Brown, Frank (May 19, 1975). "Bobby Clarke is Hero as Flyers nip Sabres". The Day. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  68. ^ Brown, Frank (May 15, 1975). "Parent leads Flyers to win". Park City Daily News. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  69. ^ a b c d "Sabres square series". The Southeast Missourian. May 23, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  70. ^ a b "Sabres Survive Heat and Overtime". Spokane Daily Chronicle. May 21, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  71. ^ a b "Desjardins saves the day for Sabres". Tri City Herald. May 23, 1975. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  72. ^ a b . sabreslegends.com. Archived from the original on June 19, 2010. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  73. ^ "Schultz scores twice as Flyers take hockey lead". Ellensburg Daily Record. May 26, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 3, 2010.
  74. ^ "Sabres Absorb Shutout". Ocala Star-Banner. May 28, 1975. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved July 2, 2010.
  75. ^ a b c d "1975 NHL All-Star Game Rosters". Hockey-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. from the original on October 20, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2010.

External links edit

  • 1974–75 Sabres at Hockeydb.com
  • 1974–75 Sabres at Hockey-reference.com

1974, buffalo, sabres, season, sabres, fifth, season, national, hockey, league, sabres, finished, best, record, 1974, regular, season, after, disappointing, 1974, that, 1973, team, fail, return, playoffs, they, year, before, buffalo, advanced, stanley, finals,. The 1974 75 Buffalo Sabres season was the Sabres fifth season in the National Hockey League NHL The Sabres finished in a tie for the best record in the NHL in the 1974 75 regular season after a disappointing 1974 that saw the 1973 74 team fail to return to the NHL playoffs as they had the year before Buffalo advanced to the Stanley Cup finals for the first time in team history to play against the rough Philadelphia Flyers who had been recently nicknamed the Broad Street Bullies a series which included the legendary Fog Game game three of the series The Sabres lost the series 4 2 1974 75 Buffalo SabresWales Conference championsAdams Division championsDivision1st AdamsConference1st Wales1974 75 record49 16 15Home record28 6 6Road record21 10 9Goals for354Goals against240Team informationGeneral managerPunch ImlachCoachFloyd SmithCaptainJim SchoenfeldArenaBuffalo Memorial AuditoriumAverage attendance15 668Team leadersGoalsRick Martin 52 AssistsRene Robert 60 PointsRene Robert 100 Penalty minutesJerry Korab and Jim Schoenfeld 184 WinsGary Bromley 26 Goals against averageRoger Crozier 2 62 1973 741975 76 The season marked the Sabres second NHL playoffs appearance 1 The season was the first under the tenure of Floyd Smith and the team s first in the newly created Adams Division in the NHL s Prince of Wales Conference Sabres players earned numerous accolades Don Luce won the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy Rick Martin Rene Robert Jerry Korab and Luce were all selected to the 1975 NHL All Star Game Martin was a first team NHL All Star team selection at left wing while Robert was a second team selection at right wing The French Connection Martin Robert and Gilbert Perreault were all among the league leaders in important scoring statistics Contents 1 Transactions 2 Regular season 2 1 Season standings 2 2 Record vs opponents 2 3 Results 3 Player statistics 3 1 Key 3 2 Skaters 3 3 Goaltenders 3 3 1 Regular season 3 3 2 Playoffs 4 Playoffs 4 1 Schedule and results 4 2 Quarter finals 4 3 Semi finals 4 4 Stanley Cup finals 5 Awards and records 6 Notes 7 External linksTransactions editGoaltender Dave Dryden was lost to the World Hockey Association following the 1973 74 season 2 During the 25 round May 1974 NHL amateur draft that was held by conference call the team participated in the first twelve rounds of the draft Although several of their selections eventually played in the NHL the Sabres only drafted three players that played for the team that year 3 4 5 6 The Sabres acquired defenseman Lee Fogolin 1st round 11th overall right winger Danny Gare 2nd round 29th overall and defenseman Paul McIntosh 4th round 65th overall in the 1974 NHL amateur draft 3 4 5 They had acquired left winger Morris Titanic in the 1973 NHL Amateur Draft 1st round 12th overall and he was called up from the team s American Hockey League minor league affiliate the Hershey Bears during the season 7 In addition the Sabres drafted Taro Tsujimoto with the 183rd overall pick 8 Round Player Nationality College Junior Club team 1 11 Lee Fogolin D nbsp United States Oshawa Generals OHA 2 29 Danny Gare RW nbsp Canada Calgary Centennials WCJHL 3 47 Michel Deziel LW nbsp Canada Sorel Eperviers QMJHL 4 65 Paul McIntosh D nbsp Canada Peterborough Petes OHA 5 83 Garry Lariviere D nbsp Canada St Catharines Black Hawks OMJHL 6 101 Dave Given RW nbsp United States Brown University ECAC 7 119 Bernard Noreau RW nbsp Canada Laval National QMJHL 8 136 Charles Constantin LW nbsp Canada Quebec Remparts QMJHL 9 153 Rick Jodzio LW nbsp Canada Hamilton Fincups OMJHL 10 168 Derek Smith LW nbsp Canada Ottawa 67 s OMJHL 11 183 Taro Tsujimoto C nbsp Japan Tokyo Katanas JIHL 12 196 Bob Geoffrion LW nbsp Canada Cornwall Royals QMJHL Prior to the season the team had lost right winger Ron Busniuk to the Detroit Red Wings in the June 10 1974 NHL Intra League Draft 9 Buffalo lost right winger Steve Atkinson and center Randy Wyrozub to the Washington Capitals in the June 12 1974 NHL Expansion Draft 10 11 The team also lost defenseman Paul Terbenche to the Kansas City Scouts in the same draft 12 On October 14 1974 The Sabres acquired 1974 All Star defenseman Jocelyn Guevremont and forward Bryan McSheffrey from the Vancouver Canucks in exchange for left winger Gerry Meehan and defenseman Mike Robitaille 13 On January 27 1975 Buffalo acquired left winger Fred Stanfield from the Minnesota North Stars for right winger Norm Gratton and Buffalo s 3rd round choice in 1976 NHL Amateur Draft The veteran Stanfield had finished in the top ten in the league four times in assists before being acquired by the Sabres 14 The Sabres acquired the NHL rights to goaltender Gerry Desjardins from the New York Islanders for defenseman Garry Lariviere on February 19 1975 15 In May after the season ended left winger Rick Dudley who later coached the Sabres for three seasons 1 signed to play in the WHA 16 After 11 seasons in the NHL 1974 75 was the final one for right winger Larry Mickey before his retirement 17 Regular season edit nbsp The Sabres played their home games in the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium dark rimmed building in front of the HSBC Arena pictured in 2007 October December The Sabres returned after a season of injury and tragedy in which their captain Tim Horton died in an automobile accident 18 The team also seemed to have mended an apparent preseason feud between Perreault and Martin 19 On October 10 1974 in the season opening game Danny Gare set the tone for the new season by scoring a goal 18 seconds into the first game of his career 20 Perreault added a hat trick and two assists in the 9 5 victory over the Boston Bruins 21 After starting the season 3 3 1 the Sabres had an 18 1 3 hot streak between October 26 and December 8 1974 to move to a 21 4 4 record 22 By the time they reached 7 3 1 following a November 3 victory over the New York Rangers they had taken over the Adams Division lead 23 The streak included two unbeaten stretches of at least 10 games 22 They went 9 0 1 on a streak that extended until November 14 with a win against the Minnesota North Stars 24 The penultimate win of the streak was the Sabres first ever win at the Montreal Forum on November 13 25 After a November 16 loss to the Bruins they started a 9 0 2 streak on November 17 against the Atlanta Flames 22 In the third game of this streak which was also against the Flames they made a comeback from two separate three goal deficits to tie the game 26 The other tie during the streak was also a comeback 27 By the end of the two unbeaten streaks and before the 30 game mark the Sabres had the best record in the NHL the league s leading scorer in Perreault three 20 goal scorers among the French Connection and the leading rookie scorer in the league in Gare 28 Martin had the second four goal game of his career in a December 3 5 3 victory against the Washington Capitals on the road 29 30 Perreault had three goals and an assist in the December 5 9 2 victory against the Washington Capitals at home 31 Then Martin was lost with a recurring thumb injury 32 Following Martin s injury the Sabres eleven game unbeaten streak came to an end and the team had two different three game stretches without a win that started in December 22 January February The team posted a season high six game win streak between January 12 1975 January 25 1975 The streak culminated in a second win against the Montreal Canadiens on the road 22 33 After a February 1 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers the Sabres went undefeated for the rest of the month The team had a season high 12 game unbeaten streak between February 2 1975 February 27 1975 During that streak the team went 7 0 5 22 The 4 4 February 16 tie with the St Louis Blues clinched a playoff spot for the Sabres 34 The February 18 3 2 victory over the New York Islanders at the Nassau Coliseum was only the second loss of the season for the Islanders at home 35 The February 20 6 6 tie against the Flyers in which the Sabres lost several leads extended the Flyers unbeaten streak against the Sabres to nine 36 The final game of the streak was a 5 0 shutout victory over the Los Angeles Kings who had handed the Sabres three of their eleven defeats prior to that point in the season 37 March April At the beginning of March Desjardins quit the Baltimore Blades of the World Hockey Association to join the Sabres 38 Desjardins was frustrated at not getting paid when attendance was sparse 39 On March 16 against the Toronto Maple Leafs Martin dislocated his thumb during a fight This necessitated that he wear a cast 40 Desjardins made his first appearance in a March 20 6 3 victory over the New York Rangers 39 In their last win of the month the Sabres clinched the division title on March 23 with a 9 4 victory over the California Golden Seals 41 Rookie defenseman Hajt was injured with a broken bone in his foot during a 5 1 loss to the Chicago Blackhawks on March 26 42 The Sabres would lose the next two games for the season s only three game losing streak 22 The Sabres ended the season by winning all three regular season games in April 22 The Sabres did not clinch the Prince of Wales Conference until winning the final game of the season against the Maple Leafs 43 The season was the first of three full seasons coached by Floyd Smith who had coached one game during the 1971 72 season 44 Smith had played for the Sabres during their first two seasons 45 The team played its home games at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium 46 Two members of the team later coached the Sabres Dudley and Jim Schoenfeld 47 48 Season standings edit Adams Division 49 vte GP W L T GF GA DIFF Pts 1 Buffalo Sabres 80 49 16 15 354 240 114 113 2 Boston Bruins 80 40 26 14 345 245 100 94 3 Toronto Maple Leafs 80 31 33 16 280 309 29 78 4 California Golden Seals 80 19 48 13 212 316 104 51 Record vs opponents edit Adams Division record vs opponents Vs Wales Conference Vs Campbell Conference Vs Adams Division 1974 75 NHL records 50 Team BOS BUF CAL TOR Total Boston 1 4 1 4 2 1 2 3 6 8 4 Buffalo 4 1 1 4 0 2 4 1 1 12 2 4 California 2 4 0 4 2 1 3 2 3 11 4 Toronto 2 1 3 1 4 1 3 1 2 6 6 6 Vs Norris Division 1974 75 NHL records Team DET LAK MTL PIT WSH Total Boston 4 1 2 3 0 3 2 2 1 2 4 0 1 12 8 5 Buffalo 3 1 1 1 3 1 4 0 1 3 0 2 5 0 16 4 5 California 2 2 1 1 2 2 0 5 0 4 1 3 2 6 15 4 Toronto 3 1 1 0 4 1 2 1 2 1 4 4 1 10 11 4 Vs Patrick Division 1974 75 NHL records Team ATL NYI NYR PHI Total Boston 4 0 1 2 2 3 1 2 1 1 11 4 2 Buffalo 1 2 1 2 0 2 4 1 0 3 1 7 6 4 California 2 2 1 2 1 0 2 2 2 3 5 9 3 Toronto 1 3 2 2 1 2 1 1 0 3 1 5 9 3 Vs Smythe Division 1974 75 NHL records Team CHI KCS MIN STL VAN Total Boston 2 2 2 1 1 3 0 1 1 2 1 3 1 11 6 3 Buffalo 3 1 4 0 3 1 2 0 2 2 2 14 4 2 California 1 3 1 2 1 1 3 2 1 1 0 4 5 13 2 Toronto 2 2 2 1 1 3 1 2 0 2 1 3 10 7 3 Results edit The following is a Sabres game log 22 No R Date Score Opponent Record 1 W October 10 1974 9 5 Boston Bruins 1974 75 1 0 0 2 L October 12 1974 1 6 Philadelphia Flyers 1974 75 1 1 0 3 L October 13 1974 1 4 Los Angeles Kings 1974 75 1 2 0 4 W October 17 1974 6 1 California Golden Seals 1974 75 2 2 0 5 W October 18 1974 2 1 Minnesota North Stars 1974 75 3 2 0 6 T October 20 1974 5 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 1974 75 3 2 1 7 L October 24 1974 2 7 Los Angeles Kings 1974 75 3 3 1 8 W October 26 1974 2 0 St Louis Blues 1974 75 4 3 1 9 W October 27 1974 3 2 Montreal Canadiens 1974 75 5 3 1 10 W November 2 1974 6 3 Toronto Maple Leafs 1974 75 6 3 1 11 W November 3 1974 4 3 New York Rangers 1974 75 7 3 1 12 T November 5 1974 2 2 Boston Bruins 1974 75 7 3 2 13 W November 6 1974 6 4 Chicago Black Hawks 1974 75 8 3 2 14 W November 9 1974 6 1 Kansas City Scouts 1974 75 9 3 2 15 W November 10 1974 8 3 Pittsburgh Penguins 1974 75 10 3 2 16 W November 13 1974 8 6 Montreal Canadiens 1974 75 11 3 2 17 W November 14 1974 5 3 Minnesota North Stars 1974 75 12 3 2 18 L November 16 1974 5 7 Boston Bruins 1974 75 12 4 2 19 W November 17 1974 4 0 Atlanta Flames 1974 75 13 4 2 20 W November 20 1974 7 3 Washington Capitals 1974 75 14 4 2 21 T November 22 1974 4 4 Atlanta Flames 1974 75 14 4 3 22 W November 24 1974 6 4 Montreal Canadiens 1974 75 15 4 3 23 W November 27 1974 3 1 Chicago Black Hawks 1974 75 16 4 3 24 W November 28 1974 5 2 Detroit Red Wings 1974 75 17 4 3 25 T November 30 1974 5 5 Pittsburgh Penguins 1974 75 17 4 4 26 W December 1 1974 6 3 Pittsburgh Penguins 1974 75 18 4 4 27 W December 3 1974 5 3 Washington Capitals 1974 75 19 4 4 28 W December 5 1974 9 2 Washington Capitals 1974 75 20 4 4 29 W December 8 1974 5 0 Minnesota North Stars 1974 75 21 4 4 30 L December 12 1974 3 5 Vancouver Canucks 1974 75 21 5 4 31 L December 14 1974 2 4 Minnesota North Stars 1974 75 21 6 4 32 T December 15 1974 5 5 California Golden Seals 1974 75 21 6 5 33 W December 18 1974 3 2 New York Islanders 1974 75 22 6 5 34 W December 22 1974 4 0 Washington Capitals 1974 75 23 6 5 35 W December 26 1974 3 1 Chicago Black Hawks 1974 75 24 6 5 36 L December 27 1974 5 9 New York Rangers 1974 75 24 7 5 37 L December 29 1974 2 5 Philadelphia Flyers 1974 75 24 8 5 38 T January 3 1975 2 2 California Golden Seals 1974 75 24 8 6 39 W January 5 1975 4 2 St Louis Blues 1974 75 25 8 6 40 L January 9 1975 2 5 Los Angeles Kings 1974 75 25 9 6 41 T January 11 1975 3 3 Detroit Red Wings 1974 75 25 9 7 42 W January 12 1975 5 1 Vancouver Canucks 1974 75 26 9 7 43 W January 15 1975 4 0 California Golden Seals 1974 75 27 9 7 44 W January 17 1975 4 2 Vancouver Canucks 1974 75 28 9 7 45 W January 19 1975 5 0 Kansas City Scouts 1974 75 29 9 7 46 W January 23 1975 5 1 Detroit Red Wings 1974 75 30 9 7 47 W January 25 1975 7 6 Montreal Canadiens 1974 75 31 9 7 48 L January 26 1975 3 4 Atlanta Flames 1974 75 31 10 7 49 W January 30 1975 6 3 New York Rangers 1974 75 32 10 7 50 L February 1 1975 0 6 Philadelphia Flyers 1974 75 32 11 7 51 W February 2 1975 8 1 Kansas City Scouts 1974 75 33 11 7 52 W February 4 1975 6 1 Detroit Red Wings 1974 75 34 11 7 53 T February 6 1975 2 2 New York Islanders 1974 75 34 11 8 54 T February 9 1975 4 4 Montreal Canadiens 1974 75 34 11 9 55 T February 12 1975 3 3 Pittsburgh Penguins 1974 75 34 11 10 56 W February 13 1975 3 1 Boston Bruins 1974 75 35 11 10 57 T February 16 1975 4 4 St Louis Blues 1974 75 35 11 11 58 W February 18 1975 3 2 New York Islanders 1974 75 36 11 11 59 T February 20 1975 6 6 Philadelphia Flyers 1974 75 36 11 12 60 W February 21 1975 9 4 Washington Capitals 1974 75 37 11 12 61 W February 23 1975 4 1 Toronto Maple Leafs 1974 75 38 11 12 62 W February 27 1975 5 0 Los Angeles Kings 1974 75 39 11 12 63 L March 1 1975 2 3 Detroit Red Wings 1974 75 39 12 12 64 T March 2 1975 3 3 New York Islanders 1974 75 39 12 13 65 W March 5 1975 6 3 New York Rangers 1974 75 40 12 13 66 T March 8 1975 3 3 St Louis Blues 1974 75 40 12 14 67 W March 9 1975 8 4 Pittsburgh Penguins 1974 75 41 12 14 68 T March 11 1975 2 2 Los Angeles Kings 1974 75 41 12 15 69 W March 12 1975 7 2 California Golden Seals 1974 75 42 12 15 70 L March 14 1975 1 5 Vancouver Canucks 1974 75 42 13 15 71 W March 16 1975 11 3 Toronto Maple Leafs 1974 75 43 13 15 72 W March 20 1975 6 3 New York Rangers 1974 75 44 13 15 73 W March 22 1975 4 2 Kansas City Scouts 1974 75 45 13 15 74 W March 23 1975 9 4 California Golden Seals 1974 75 46 13 15 75 L March 26 1975 1 5 Chicago Black Hawks 1974 75 46 14 15 76 L March 28 1975 2 3 Atlanta Flames 1974 75 46 15 15 77 L March 30 1975 4 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 1974 75 46 16 15 78 W April 1 1975 3 1 Boston Bruins 1974 75 47 16 15 79 W April 3 1975 4 2 Boston Bruins 1974 75 48 16 15 80 W April 5 1975 4 2 Toronto Maple Leafs 1974 75 49 16 15Player statistics editThe French Connection members led the Sabres in scoring by finishing 1 2 3 in both goals and points although none of them played as many as 75 of the team s 80 games 46 Perreault s eight game winning goals was fifth highest in the NHL for the season 51 although he only played 68 games he finished ninth in the league in scoring with 96 points 39 goals and 57 assists 52 Martin also only played 68 games and finished third in goals 52 and tenth in points 95 53 Martin s 21 power play goals was second in the league 51 Robert was seventh in points 100 tenth in goals 40 and tenth in assists 60 in 74 games 54 Luce s 8 shorthanded goals was second and Craig Ramsay had 7 which was third 51 Other statistical leaders included Luce who had a 61 plus minus which ranked fourth and Peter McNab who led the league in shooting percentage 51 Over the course of the season the team scored a total of 354 goals which ranked second in the 18 team league and its 49 16 15 record ranked it first in the league 46 The team used several goaltenders Although Gary Bromley led the team with 26 wins in the regular season and Roger Crozier was second with 17 wins the team was led in the post season by Desjardins who recorded 7 of the team s 10 post season victories 46 The following are the season statistics for the Sabres 46 Key edit Goaltenders GP Games played Min Minutes played GA Goals against GAA Goals against average W Wins L Losses T Ties Svs Saves Pct Save percentage EN Empty net goals against SO Shutouts G Goaltender Skaters Pos Position RW Right wing A Assists D Defenceman C Center P Points LW Left wing G Goals PIM Penalty minutes Skaters edit Player name Acquisition Birthdate Age Pos GP G A P PIM GP G A P PIM Regular season Playoffs 14 Rene Robert December 31 1948 25 RW 74 40 60 100 75 16 5 8 13 16 11 Gilbert Perreault November 13 1950 23 C 68 39 57 96 36 17 6 9 15 10 7 Rick Martin July 26 1951 23 LW 68 52 43 95 72 17 7 8 15 20 20 Don Luce October 2 1948 25 C 80 33 43 76 45 16 5 8 13 19 9 Rick Dudley January 31 1949 25 LW 78 31 39 70 116 10 3 1 4 26 8 Jim Lorentz May 1 1947 27 C 72 25 45 70 18 16 6 4 10 6 10 Craig Ramsay March 17 1951 23 LW 80 26 38 64 26 17 5 7 12 2 18 Danny Gare May 14 1954 20 RW 78 31 31 62 75 17 7 6 13 19 4 Jerry Korab September 15 1948 25 D 79 12 44 56 184 16 3 2 5 32 16 Peter McNab May 8 1952 22 C 53 22 21 43 8 17 2 6 8 4 21 Brian Spencer September 3 1949 24 LW 73 12 29 41 77 16 0 4 4 8 17 Fred Stanfield From Minnesota May 4 1944 30 LW 32 12 21 33 4 17 2 4 6 0 22 Jocelyn Guevremont From Vancouver March 1 1951 23 D 64 7 25 32 32 17 0 6 6 14 24 Bill Hajt November 18 1951 22 D 76 3 26 29 68 17 1 4 5 18 6 Jim Schoenfeld September 4 1952 21 D 68 1 19 20 184 17 1 4 5 38 23 Larry Carriere January 30 1952 22 D 80 1 11 12 111 17 0 2 2 32 Norm Gratton To Minnesota December 22 1950 23 LW 25 3 6 9 2 5 Lee Fogolin February 15 1955 19 D 50 2 2 4 59 8 0 0 0 6 29 Gary Bromley January 19 1950 24 G 50 0 4 4 2 12 Larry Mickey October 21 1943 30 RW 23 2 0 2 2 1 Roger Crozier March 16 1942 32 G 23 0 2 2 8 Gerry Meehan To Vancouver September 3 1946 27 C 3 0 1 1 2 Mike Robitaille To Vancouver February 12 1948 26 D 3 0 1 1 0 3 Paul McIntosh March 13 1954 20 D 6 0 1 1 5 1 0 0 0 0 15 Michel Deziel January 31 1954 20 LW 1 0 0 0 0 Bryan McSheffrey September 25 1952 21 RW 3 0 0 0 0 Rocky Farr April 7 1947 27 G 7 0 0 0 0 30 Gerry Desjardins July 22 1944 30 G 9 0 0 0 0 19 Morris Titanic January 7 1953 21 LW 17 0 0 0 0 Bench Minor1 18 0 Note 1 A bench minor is when the team is penalized for a minor infraction that is not attributed to any individual player Goaltenders edit Regular season edit Player Name GP Min GA GAA W L T Svs Pct EN SO Roger Crozier 23 1260 55 2 62 17 2 1 518 0 904 0 3 Gerry Desjardins 9 540 25 2 78 6 2 1 239 0 905 0 0 Gary Bromley 50 2787 144 3 10 26 11 11 989 0 873 2 4 Norm Rocky Farr 7 213 14 3 94 0 1 2 100 0 877 0 0 Playoffs edit Player Name GP Min GA GAA W L SO Roger Crozier 5 292 14 2 88 3 2 0 Gerry Desjardins 15 760 43 3 39 7 5 0Playoffs editSchedule and results edit The following was the team playoff schedule 51 Round Game Date Visitor Score Home Score OT Preliminary round Bye Quarter finals Game 1 13 Apr 75 Chicago Black Hawks 1 Buffalo Sabres 4 Quarter finals Game 2 15 Apr 75 Chicago Black Hawks 1 Buffalo Sabres 3 Quarter finals Game 3 17 Apr 75 Buffalo Sabres 4 Chicago Black Hawks 5 OT Quarter finals Game 4 20 Apr 75 Buffalo Sabres 6 Chicago Black Hawks 2 Quarter finals Game 5 22 Apr 75 Chicago Black Hawks 1 Buffalo Sabres 3 Semi finals Game 1 27 Apr 75 Montreal Canadiens 5 Buffalo Sabres 6 OT Semi finals Game 2 29 Apr 75 Montreal Canadiens 2 Buffalo Sabres 4 Semi finals Game 3 1 May 75 Buffalo Sabres 0 Montreal Canadiens 7 Semi finals Game 4 3 May 75 Buffalo Sabres 2 Montreal Canadiens 8 Semi finals Game 5 6 May 75 Montreal Canadiens 4 Buffalo Sabres 5 OT Semi finals Game 6 8 May 75 Buffalo Sabres 4 Montreal Canadiens 3 Stanley Cup finals Game 1 15 May 75 Buffalo Sabres 1 Philadelphia Flyers 4 Stanley Cup finals Game 2 18 May 75 Buffalo Sabres 1 Philadelphia Flyers 2 Stanley Cup finals Game 3 20 May 75 Philadelphia Flyers 4 Buffalo Sabres 5 OT Stanley Cup finals Game 4 22 May 75 Philadelphia Flyers 2 Buffalo Sabres 4 Stanley Cup finals Game 5 25 May 75 Buffalo Sabres 1 Philadelphia Flyers 5 Stanley Cup finals Game 6 27 May 75 Philadelphia Flyers 2 Buffalo Sabres 0 Quarter finals edit The Sabres had a bye in the first round of the playoffs and then met the first round victor Chicago Black Hawks in the quarter finals In the first game of the series the Sabres were the beneficiaries of an 18 2 penalty minutes differential and won 4 1 55 Although the Black Hawks scored in the first minute of game two the Dudley scored a pair of goals on the way to a 3 1 Sabres victory 56 In game three the Black Hawks took a one goal lead four times and the Sabres tied the score each time which led to sudden death overtime in which Chicago came out on top 57 The Sabres scored five times in the third period to post a 6 2 victory in game 4 58 The Sabres won the series 4 1 with Robert scoring the series clinching goal after getting into fisticuffs with Pit Martin and third man Phil Russell who got ejected earlier in the clinching game 59 Semi finals edit The Sabres won the first game with an overtime goal by Gare 18 In game two Robert was sidelined with the flu and Dudley was inactive due to a sprained knee but the checking line of Luce Ramsay and Gare each scored a goal as the Sabres took a 2 0 lead with a 4 2 victory 60 In the game Henri Richard surpassed his brother Maurice Richard with his 127th Stanley Cup playoff point 61 Following their strong 7 0 game three performance the Canadiens handily won game four at home by an 8 2 margin The game was marked by a bench clearing incident when Doug Risebrough and Gare squared off Bill Hajt got ejected as third man in and Larry Robinson who took on Hajt was also ejected 62 The Sabres surrendered an early 3 1 lead but won in overtime of game five on Robert goal 63 The Sabres scored three goals in the first period of game six on their way to a series clinching 4 3 victory They led 3 1 after one period and added one in the second before withstanding a third period two goal rally by Montreal 64 Stanley Cup finals edit Main article 1975 Stanley Cup Finals The Flyers came into the series with their own good luck pre game singer in the form of Kate Smith who sang God Bless America before home games at The Spectrum 65 The Flyers had a 43 3 1 record following her pregame performances in lieu of the traditional Star Spangled Banner 66 In addition the Sabres had never won a game against the Flyers in Philadelphia in their short five year franchise history had never beaten Flyer starting goalie Bernie Parent and entered the series on a 13 game streak against the Flyers without a win 67 Although the Sabres held the Flyers to two shots in the first period of game one eight in the second and were the beneficiaries of a 1 04 two man advantage at one point the game remained scoreless until the third period when the Flyers connected four times in a 4 1 victory 68 In game two the Sabres were held to 19 shots on goal with none coming after Bobby Clarke scored at the 6 43 mark of the third period 67 Due to unusual heat in Buffalo in May 1975 portions of game three which is known as The Fog Game were played in heavy fog The game was stopped 12 times due to the conditions 69 Buffalo goalie Desjardins gave up three first period goals and Crozier started the second period 70 After having surrendered goals on his first two shots faced and three of his first six Desjardins removed himself from the game 69 71 The Sabres recovered from the three goal deficit on two goals 17 seconds apart by Gare and Martin After a goal by Luce netted the score Reggie Leach gave the Flyers the lead again Bill Hajt scored his first career playoff goal to tie the score Robert scored the game winner in overtime with a goal that Flyer goalie Bernie Parent did not see until it was too late The game was the longest NHL overtime game in over four years 70 Players officials and the puck were invisible to many spectators During a face off and through the fog Sabres center Jim Lorentz spotted a bat flying across the rink raised his stick and killed it Many superstitious Buffalo fans considered this to be an Evil Omen pertaining to the result of the series It was the only time that any player killed an animal during an NHL game This was one of three playoff appearances for Crozier 72 Desjardins surrendered a goal on the third Flyer shot in game four but he stayed in the game for a 4 2 victory 69 71 In game four the unseasonable temperature only caused the play to be stopped twice with 8 08 and 4 44 remaining as five pairs of arena employees skated around the ice with bed sheets to clear the haze 69 By game five of the finals Dave Schultz had claimed both the single season regular season penalty minutes record and the post season record However he contributed his first two goals of the playoffs in a 5 2 win to help the Flyers take a 3 2 lead in the series It was Schultz first two goal performance of the season and his first goal since March 9 73 In the sixth game Conn Smythe Trophy MVP Bernie Parent shut out the Sabres 2 0 to clinch the series four games to two 74 Crozier held the Flyers scoreless for the first two periods of the final game 72 Awards and records editPrince of Wales Trophy Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy Don Luce 51 Rick Martin 1975 NHL All Star Game 75 NHL All Star team 51 Left wing 1st team Rene Robert 1975 NHL All Star Game 75 NHL All Star team 51 Right Wing 2nd team Don Luce 1975 NHL All Star Game 75 Jerry Korab 1975 NHL All Star Game 75 Peter McNab NHL shooting percentage leader 24 4 51 Club Record Most Goals For 354 Notes edit a b Buffalo Sabres Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on May 20 2011 Retrieved June 25 2010 Dave Dryden Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on November 12 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 a b Lee Fogolin Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on January 18 2010 Retrieved June 24 2010 a b Danny Gare Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on May 20 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 a b Paul McIntosh Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on January 27 2012 Retrieved June 24 2010 1974 NHL amateur draft Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on August 16 2011 Retrieved June 25 2010 Morris Titanic Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on September 20 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 1974 NHL amateur draft hockeydraftcentral com Archived from the original on September 23 2010 Retrieved October 12 2010 Ron Busniuk Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on August 25 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Steve Atkinson Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Randy Wyrozub Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on August 20 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Paul Terbenche Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on November 13 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Jocelyn Guevremont Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on September 18 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Fred Stanfield Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on September 8 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Gerry Desjardins Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on November 13 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Rick Dudley Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on May 19 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Larry Mickey Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on November 12 2011 Retrieved June 25 2010 a b Historical Moments sportsecyclopedia com May 14 2003 Archived from the original on July 3 2009 Retrieved July 3 2010 Harmony Makes Sabres Winners Ottawa Citizen October 11 1974 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 National Hockey League Official Guide and Record Book 2006 p 187 Dan Diamond amp Associates Toronto Ontario ISBN 0 920445 98 5 Bruins Drop Opener Daytona Beach Morning Journal October 10 1974 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 a b c d e f g h i 1974 75 Buffalo Sabres Schedule and Results Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on August 16 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 B s Hope to Settle Score With Explosive Buffalo The Telegraph November 4 1974 p 17 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Goalie In Awe Of Sabres Sarasota Journal November 15 1974 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Sabres Win First Time At Montreal The New York Times November 14 1974 Archived from the original on July 23 2018 Retrieved October 12 2010 Islanders Rip Leafs Sabres Knot Flames Schenectady Gazette November 23 1974 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Buffalo rally ties Penguins Chicago Tribune December 1 1974 p D2 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 12 2010 Streaking Sabres tops in points scoring Chicago Tribune December 25 1974 p E3 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Martin Scores 4 Goals as Sabres Roll to Win Los Angeles Times December 4 1974 p G4 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 12 2010 Buffalo Powers Past Caps Beaver County Times December 4 1974 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Sabres roll 3 for Perreault Chicago Tribune December 6 1974 p C2 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 12 2010 Sabres lose Martin for two weeks The Montreal Gazette December 10 1974 Sabres Hand Canadiens Third Home Loss in Row Los Angeles Times January 26 1975 p D4 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 12 2010 Flyers Topple Bruins Rome News Tribune February 17 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Herman Robin February 19 1975 Islanders Lose To Sabres 3 2 Islanders Beaten 3 2 By Sabres The New York Times p 58 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 12 2010 Flyers Sabres Tie Habs Beat Scouts Schenectady Gazette February 21 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Sabres Beat LA Feel Like Kings The Pittsburgh Press February 28 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Desjardins quits Blades to join Sabres of NHL The Baltimore Sun March 4 1975 p C9 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 12 2010 a b Sabres Goalie Tough As Team Wins The Milwaukee Journal March 21 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Cast On Thumb Rome News Tribune March 18 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Canadiens Beaten On Road The Milwaukee Journal March 24 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Broken Bone Stops Rookie Defenseman Gettysburg Times March 28 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved October 12 2010 Sabres Beat Leafs to Win Conference Los Angeles Times April 6 1975 p B4 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 12 2010 Floyd Smith Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on May 19 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Floyd Smith Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on July 9 2017 Retrieved June 25 2010 a b c d e 1974 75 Buffalo Sabres Roster and Statistics Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on August 13 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Jim Schoenfeld Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on May 19 2011 Retrieved June 25 2010 Rick Dudley Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on May 19 2011 Retrieved June 25 2010 1974 1975 Division Standings Standings NHL com Standings National Hockey League All Time NHL Results NHL com Retrieved August 25 2023 a b c d e f g h i 1974 75 NHL Season Summary Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on August 15 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Gilbert Perreault Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on August 16 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 Rick Martin Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on November 9 2018 Retrieved June 24 2010 Rene Robert Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on July 9 2017 Retrieved June 24 2010 Condon David April 14 1975 Hawks ruffled by officiating in loss Chicago Tribune p C3 Sabres Score Daily Collegian April 16 1975 Archived from the original on April 3 2012 Retrieved July 3 2010 Condon David April 18 1975 Makita Hawks getting bounces Chicago Tribune p C3 Condon David April 21 1975 Hawks slim cup chances dangle at Tony O s feet Chicago Tribune p C8 Sabres Oust Chicago Montreal Gazette April 23 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 2 2010 Flyers Sabres score wins despite problems Daily News April 30 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Sabres Win Again The Milwaukee Sentinel April 30 1975 p 2 part 2 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Bacon Dick May 5 1975 Minor officials fumble fight rule The Montreal Gazette p 33 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Pike Marvin R May 6 1975 Sabres down on overtime jobs The Southeast Missourian p 26 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Sabres cinch Stanley semi at Montreal The Spokesman Review May 9 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Eldridge Larry May 15 1975 Kate Smith Flyers down Islanders Sabres next The Christian Science Monitor Archived from the original on November 2 2012 Retrieved July 3 2010 Can Kate Smith s Singing Bless Flyers The Pittsburgh Press May 13 1975 p 12 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 a b Brown Frank May 19 1975 Bobby Clarke is Hero as Flyers nip Sabres The Day Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Brown Frank May 15 1975 Parent leads Flyers to win Park City Daily News Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 a b c d Sabres square series The Southeast Missourian May 23 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 a b Sabres Survive Heat and Overtime Spokane Daily Chronicle May 21 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 a b Desjardins saves the day for Sabres Tri City Herald May 23 1975 Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Retrieved July 3 2010 a b Roger Crozier sabreslegends com Archived from the original on June 19 2010 Retrieved July 3 2010 Schultz scores twice as Flyers take hockey lead Ellensburg Daily Record May 26 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 3 2010 Sabres Absorb Shutout Ocala Star Banner May 28 1975 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved July 2 2010 a b c d 1975 NHL All Star Game Rosters Hockey Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on October 20 2011 Retrieved June 24 2010 External links edit1974 75 Sabres at Hockeydb com 1974 75 Sabres at Hockey reference com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1974 75 Buffalo Sabres season amp oldid 1213779995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.