1985 Stanley Cup Finals

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1985 Stanley Cup Final
Teams 1 2 3 4 5 Games
Edmonton Oilers  1 3 4 5 8 4
Philadelphia Flyers  4 1 3 3 3 1
Location: Edmonton (Northlands Coliseum) (3,4,5)
Philadelphia (The Spectrum) (1,2)
Format: Best-of-seven
Coaches: Edmonton: Glen Sather
Philadelphia: Mike Keenan
Captains: Edmonton: Wayne Gretzky
Philadelphia: Dave Poulin
Referees: Andy Van Hellemond, Kerry Fraser, Bryan Lewis
Dates: May 21 – May 30
MVP: Wayne Gretzky (Edmonton Oilers)
Series-winning
Goal:
Paul Coffey (17:57, 1st,G5)
Networks: CBC (Canada-English), CTV (Canada-English, Games 3, 4, 5), SRC (Canada-French), USA (United States), PRISM (Philadelphia area, Games 1, 2), WTAF (Philadelphia area, Games 3, 4, 5)
 < 1984 Stanley Cup Finals 1986 > 


The 1985 Stanley Cup Finals were played from May 21 to May 30, 1985 between the defending champion Edmonton Oilers in their third straight Finals appearance and the Philadelphia Flyers. The Oilers would win the best-of-seven series four games to one, to win their second Stanley Cup. It was also the sixth straight Finals of post 1967 expansion teams.

For more details on this topic, see 1985 Stanley Cup playoffs.
See also: 1984–85 Edmonton Oilers season and 1984–85 Philadelphia Flyers season

Edmonton defeated the Los Angeles Kings 3–0, the Winnipeg Jets 4–0 and the Chicago Black Hawks 4–2 to advance to the finals. Philadelphia defeated the New York Rangers 3–0, the New York Islanders 4–1, and the Quebec Nordiques 4–2 to make it to the finals.

The 1985 final series continued to use the format of alternating locations after game two and game five, instead of the previous format of alternating after game two, game four and every game thereafter. The NHL would revert back to the previous format for the 1986 final. Wayne Gretzky scored seven goals in the five games. Grant Fuhr stopped two penalty shots.

The Flyers posted a 4–1 victory to open the series.

Wayne Gretzky's first period goal gave Edmonton a lead they would protect fiercely throughout in a decidedly more defensive game on both sides. Willy Lindstrom's goal late in the second period snapped a 1–1 tie, and Dave Hunter added an insurance empty-netter and the Oilers drew even in the series with a 3–1 win.

Gretzky single-handedly won the game for his club. He scored twice within the first 90 seconds of the game, and finished off a hat trick by the end of the first period. Although the Oilers put six shots on net over the final 40 minutes, it was enough to escape with a 4–3 win and 2–1 series lead.

Unbowed, the Flyers roared out to a 3–1 lead midway through the first period thanks to goals at even strength, on the power play and shorthanded. However, the Oilers roared back with four unanswered goals including a pair from Gretzky, to win 5–3 and take a commanding series lead.

Against backup goaltender Bob Froese, the Oilers blitzed the Flyers with a four-goal first period and sailed to a convincing 8–3 win. Gretzky posted a goal and three assists, Paul Coffey scored twice as did Mark Messier. Edmonton won its second consecutive Stanley Cup while the Flyers, at the time the youngest team in professional sports, took the lessons from their loss into the clubs' next meeting in 1987.

Edmonton Oilers vs. Philadelphia Flyers

Date Visitors Score Home Score Notes
Tue, May 21 Edmonton 1 Philadelphia 4
Thu, May 23 Edmonton 3 Philadelphia 1
Sat, May 25 Philadelphia 3 Edmonton 4
Tue, May 28 Philadelphia 3 Edmonton 5
Thu, May 30 Philadelphia 3 Edmonton 8

Edmonton wins the series 4–1.

Wayne Gretzky won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP.

  Centers

(played Leftwing during the regular season)

  Wingers

(played Centre during the regular season)

  Defensemen
  Goaltenders


  Non-players



  • Garnet "Ace" Bailey, Ed Chadwick, Lorne Davis, Matti Valsanen (Scouts), Gordon Cameron (Team Physician) received rings with Edmonton in 1984. Their names however, were left off the Stanley Cup.

  • Total Stanley Cup. NHL. 2000. 
  • Podnieks, Andrew; Hockey Hall of Fame (2004). Lord Stanley's Cup. Triumph Books, 12, 50. ISBN 1–55168–261–3.
Preceded by
Edmonton Oilers
1984
Edmonton Oilers
Stanley Cup Champions

1985
Succeeded by
Montreal Canadiens
1986
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