Vancouver Blazers
Vancouver Blazers | |
---|---|
City | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Home arena | Pacific Coliseum |
Colours | Yellow, burnt orange |
Franchise history | |
1972 (did not play) | Miami Screaming Eagles |
1972–1973 | Philadelphia Blazers |
1973–1975 | Vancouver Blazers |
1975–1976 | Calgary Cowboys |
The Vancouver Blazers were a professional
History
The Blazers were one of the founding members of the
Vancouver Blazers
After the 1972–73 WHA season ended, the Philadelphia Blazers' owners sold the team to Jim Pattison who moved the team north of the border to Vancouver, British Columbia where it was named Vancouver Blazers.
Pattison knew that in order to compete with the Vancouver Canucks of the NHL, who shared the same arena, he needed to attract a major star to the team, as Andre Lacroix, who had led the league in scoring the previous year, left to join the New York Golden Blades, while the team's (and league's) highest-paid player, Derek Sanderson, had been forced out at the end of the season in a major embarrassment to the team and league. Pattison tried to sign Boston star Phil Esposito, offering him $2.5 million over five years. Esposito decided to stay with the Bruins for less money.
The team performed poorly in their first year, finishing with a record of 27-50-1; despite this, Vancouver was such a strong hockey town that the Blazers actually led the WHA in attendance, drawing 9,356 a night, more than 50% above the average of the other eleven clubs in the league. The next season, 1974–75, the club improved to only two games below .500, only to see attendance slip to 8,014 a game, sixth in the 14-team WHA.
The Blazers' (and WHA's) efforts to attract fans were certainly not helped by the machinations of the NHL, which was aggressively expanding to try and keep its rival out of premium arenas and markets. Prior to the WHA's arrival, the Canucks had consistently finished well out of playoff contention. However, after the Blazers' first season in the Pacific Coliseum, the NHL not only expanded again but also dissolved the Canucks' tough East Division and placed the team in the much weaker Smythe Division.
The Canucks won the new Smythe Division, and consistently played to at or near capacity at Pacific Coliseum while the Blazers struggled to fill the building to half capacity. Under such circumstances, it was evident that Vancouver was not large enough to support both the NHL and WHA; thus after only two seasons on the west coast the team made its third franchise shift in three years, this time to
The last active Vancouver Blazers player was
Season-by-season record
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes
Season | Team Name | GP | W | L | T | PTS | GF | GA | PIM | Finish | Playoffs |
1973–74 | Vancouver Blazers | 78 | 27 | 50 | 1 | 55 | 278 | 345 | 1047 | 5th, Western | Did not qualify |
1974–75 | Vancouver Blazers | 78 | 37 | 39 | 2 | 76 | 256 | 270 | 1075 | 4th, Canadian | Did not qualify |
Franchise totals | 395 | 174 | 207 | 14 | 362 | 1381 | 1498 | 5278 |
See also
References
- Alberta Oilers were then mooted as a "regional" franchise that would play in both Edmonton and Calgary, but that first season the Oilers played only one game in Calgary: a one-game playoff against Minnesota, which they lost. The franchise was renamed the Edmonton Oilersin 1973, which has been their identity ever since.