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词条 Michigan Stags
释义

  1. Michigan Stags

  2. Baltimore Blades

  3. Media coverage

  4. Season-by-season record

  5. External links

  6. References

{{redirect|Baltimore Blades|text=For the Eastern Amateur Hockey League team in 1944–45, see Baltimore Clippers (1945–49)}}{{Pro hockey team
| text_color = #000000
| bg_color = #E51837
| team = Michigan Stags
| logo = Michigan Stags Logo.svg
| logosize = 150px
| city = Detroit, Michigan
| league = World Hockey Association
| operated = 1974–75
| arena = Cobo Arena
| colors = Red, Black & Gold
| media = WXON-TV
WWJ
| name1 = Los Angeles Sharks
| dates1 = 1972–1974
| name2 = Michigan Stags
| dates2 = 1974–1975
| name3 = Baltimore Blades
| dates3 = 1975
}}

The Michigan Stags were a professional ice hockey team based in Detroit, Michigan that played a portion of the 1974–75 season in the World Hockey Association. On January 18, 1975, the franchise was moved to Baltimore, Maryland where it was known as the Baltimore Blades. The Stags originated as the Los Angeles Sharks, one of the WHA's original twelve teams. The Stags played at Cobo Arena, and the Blades at the Baltimore Civic Center.

Michigan Stags

Having made their fortunes in industrial chemicals, Detroiters Charles Nolton and Peter Shagena bought the Los Angeles Sharks from Dennis Murphy and relocated the club to Detroit as the Michigan Stags. Coached by former Red Wing player and coach Johnny Wilson, the Stags began play in the 1974–75 season. The owners believed the Stags could be an alternative to the NHL's Detroit Red Wings, who had not been a factor in the NHL for most of the decade.

Unfortunately, the Stags were even more of a disaster than the Red Wings. The team was composed of journeymen at best, with the exceptions of star left winger Marc Tardif, veteran Western Hockey League star Gary Veneruzzo and beleaguered ex-NHL goaltender Gerry Desjardins (who found his way back to the NHL in mid-season and helped lead the Buffalo Sabres to the Stanley Cup finals.) The Stags also had problems drawing crowds; despite playing over .500 (12-8-2) at Cobo Arena, attendance was not nearly enough to break even. Only 2,522 were at their first home game (it didn't help that Michigan had to play their first five games on the road, as the circus was in town), and subsequent gates weren't much better; the club would average an anemic 2,959 for its 22 home games. Additionally, the Stags were unable to secure a television deal (except for a one-off broadcast; see below), rendering them practically invisible. Bleeding money, Michigan was eventually forced to trade Tardif to Quebec for Pierre Guite, Michel Rouleau and famed minor league sniper Alain Caron.

The Stags hoped they could at least draw fans for the highly anticipated return of Gordie Howe to Detroit, but Howe's Houston Aeros weren't scheduled to play at Cobo until February 2. (The Aeros did play an exhibition game across the river in Windsor on October 8, but Howe and his sons were in Czechoslovakia at the time with Team Canada; only 701 fans attended the 5-1 Stags win.)[1] As it turned out, Howe and company would never meet the Stags in Detroit, as the club folded before then.

The WHA club were one of three new pro franchises that burst upon the Detroit sports scene in 1974, along with the Detroit Loves of World Team Tennis (who also played at Cobo) and the Detroit Wheels of the newly-minted World Football League (who played in distant Ypsilanti, Michigan). Within a three-month span, though, they were all gone: the hapless (1-13) Wheels folded October 10; the Loves (after drawing just 2,213 fans per match and losing $300,000) shifted to Indianapolis on November 18; and, just into 1975, the Stags would disappear as well. Their 5-4, overtime win over Winnipeg on January 9 in front of 3,125 fans at Cobo would turn out to be their last game in Detroit. Two weeks later on January 23, the WHA finally announced that the club was shifting to Baltimore.

Baltimore Blades

{{Pro hockey team
| text_color = #000000
| bg_color = #F4793E
| team = Baltimore Blades
| logo = Baltimore Blades Logo.svg
| logosize = 150px
| city = Baltimore, Maryland
| league = World Hockey Association
| operated = 1975
| arena = Baltimore Civic Center
| colors = Orange, Black & White
| owner =
| media = WMAR-TV
WCBM
| affiliates =
| name1 = Los Angeles Sharks
| dates1 = 1972–1974
| name2 = Michigan Stags
| dates2 = 1974–1975
| name3 = Baltimore Blades
| dates3 = 1975
}}

The Baltimore Blades were created out of the remains of the Stags (retaining coach Johnny Wilson, although he was unenthusiastic about the shift) and were operated by the league; the move caused the American Hockey League's Baltimore Clippers, already in financial trouble, to promptly close up shop. After playing seven straight road games (all losses), the Blades debuted at the Baltimore Civic Center on February 2 (ironically against the Howe-led club from Houston) in front of 9,023 fans. Attendance went flat soon thereafter, however, as the Blades averaged only 3,568 for 17 home dates (an improvement over Detroit, even though the Blades were an awful 3-13-1 in Baltimore.) At season's end, the league contemplated moving the franchise to Seattle (which would have marked the franchise's fourth home in less than a year), but instead the club was terminated. Players from the Michigan/Baltimore team, along with those of the defunct Chicago Cougars, were put into a dispersal draft to be claimed by other WHA teams.

The team's final record was 21-53-4, the second-worst in the WHA and far out of a playoff spot. Veneruzzo was the leading scorer for the team with a 33-27-60 mark, nearly twice as much as anyone else save for Jean-Paul LeBlanc. (The infamous enforcer Bill Goldthorpe also signed on for seven games, piling up 26 penalty minutes.) The last active Stags/Blades player in major professional hockey was Ed Johnstone, who last played in the 1986-87 NHL season.

Media coverage

The Stags' radio station was WWJ 950. Gary Morrel was play-by-play announcer while Norm Plummer handled color commentary. (At least one broadcast had only two sponsors mentioned: Nolwood Chemical, a company owned by the Stags' owners, and the Stags themselves.)

Michigan played just one game on local television: the season opener against the Indianapolis Racers, broadcast live from Indianapolis on WXON Channel 20. Detroit radio icon Vince Doyle called play-by-play and former Red Wing Marty Pavelich was the color commentator. The Stags won the game, 4-2, but few saw it; the Stags were up against game five of the 1974 World Series. Eight other games were scheduled to be televised but money became a problem by mid-November, especially after Michigan lost 11 of their next 12 following their season-opening win.

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 GP W L T Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs
1974–75 7821534462053411104 5th, Western Did not qualify

External links

  • Remembering the Woeful Michigan Stags hockey team

References

1. ^"No-Howe can Aeros win", The Windsor Star, October 9, 1974, p. 38
{{WHA}}

8 : Defunct ice hockey teams in the United States|World Hockey Association teams|Ice hockey clubs established in 1974|Ice hockey clubs disestablished in 1975|Professional ice hockey teams in Michigan|Ice hockey in Detroit|1974 establishments in Michigan|1975 disestablishments in Michigan

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