1987–88 Quebec Nordiques season

The 1987–88 Quebec Nordiques season was the Nordiques ninth season in the National Hockey League.

1987–88 Quebec Nordiques
Division5th Adams
Conference11th Wales
1987–88 record32–43–5
Home record15–23–2
Road record17–20–3
Goals for271
Goals against306
Team information
General managerMaurice Filion
CoachAndre Savard
Ron Lapointe
CaptainPeter Stastny
ArenaColisée de Québec
Team leaders
GoalsMichel Goulet (48)
AssistsPeter Stastny (65)
PointsPeter Stastny (111)
Penalty minutesGord Donnelly (301)
Plus/minusGaetan Duchesne (+8)
WinsMario Gosselin (20)
Goals against averageMario Brunetta (3.72)

Offseason edit

Quebec made a huge trade during the 1987 NHL Entry Draft, as the Nordiques traded away Dale Hunter and Clint Malarchuk to the Washington Capitals for Gaetan Duchesne, Alan Haworth, and the Capitals first round draft pick in the 1987 NHL Entry Draft, in which the Nordiques selected Joe Sakic. Haworth had an injury plagued season in 1986–87, appearing in only 50 games, however, he scored 25 goals and 41 points. In 1985–86, Haworth had a career high 34 goals and 73 points for the Capitals. Duchesne had a career high 52 points with Washington in 1986–87, as he scored 17 goals and had 35 assists. Joe Sakic was the Nordiques second selection in the 1987 NHL Entry Draft, as he scored 60 goals and 133 points in 72 games with the Swift Current Broncos of the Western Hockey League (WHL), as Quebec selected Bryan Fogarty with their first pick. Fogarty had 70 points in 56 games with the Kingston Canadians of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL).

Head coach Michel Bergeron left the Nordiques to take the head coaching job with the New York Rangers. As compensation, the Nordiques received the New York Rangers first round pick in the 1988 NHL Entry Draft. Quebec hired former Nordiques player Andre Savard to replace Bergeron. Savard ended his twelve-year playing career by playing his last two seasons with Quebec from 1983 to 1985. He had been the head coach of the Fredericton Express of the AHL.

Late in the pre-season, the Nordiques made a trade with the New York Rangers, when Quebec sent David Shaw and John Ogrodnick to the Rangers for Terry Carkner and Jeff Jackson. Carkner had a solid rookie season with New York in 1986–87, scoring two goals and 15 points in 52 games with the Rangers, while Jackson split the season between the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Rangers, scoring 13 goals and 21 points in 64 games between the two teams.

Regular season edit

Quebec began the season with a three-game winning streak, and continued their early season success, as they had a 9–5–1 record through their first 15 games. The Nordiques then lost eight of their next nine games, to fall to 10–13–1--a slump which cost head coach Andre Savard his job. He was replaced by assistant coach Ron Lapointe on an interim basis for the remainder of the season. Under Lapointe, the Nordiques would go 6–3–1 in his first ten games to reach the .500 level with a 16–16–2 record, and found themselves in a fight with the Buffalo Sabres and Hartford Whalers for the final two playoff spots in the Adams Division. Quebec would remain in the hunt, as after 72 games, the team had a 32–36–4 record, good for 68 points, and a three-point lead on the Whalers for the final playoff spot. Quebec then went winless in their last eight games, going 0–7–1, as the Nordiques sank to last place in the Adams Division, missing the playoffs for the first time since their inaugural season in 1979–80. Their record was 32–43–5, earning 69 points, which was their worst record since 1979–80, when the Nordiques were 25–44–11, getting 61 points.

On offence, the club was led by Peter Stastny, who recorded 111 points, which was good for a tie for fifth place in the National Hockey League (NHL). Stastny scored 46 goals, his highest total since 1983–84, while adding 65 assists. Michel Goulet once again led the club in goals, as he scored 48 times, while he added 58 assists for 106 points. Anton Stastny was solid once again, getting 27 goals and 72 points, while newcomers Gaetan Duchesne and Alan Haworth each cracked the 20 goal plateau, scoring 24 and 23 goals respectively.

Jeff Brown led the Nordiques from the blueline, scoring 16 goals and 52 points, while Terry Carkner chipped in with 27 points in his first season in Quebec.

In goal, Mario Gosselin appeared in 54 games, winning a team high 20 games, while posting a 3.78 GAA, and recording two shutouts for the team. Rookie Mario Brunetta was the backup, winning 10 games with a 3.72 GAA in 29 games. Another rookie, Ron Tugnutt, appeared in six games, earning two wins with a 3.38 GAA.

Final standings edit

Adams Division
GP W L T GF GA Pts
Montreal Canadiens 80 45 22 13 298 238 103
Boston Bruins 80 44 30 6 300 251 94
Buffalo Sabres 80 37 32 11 283 305 85
Hartford Whalers 80 35 38 7 249 267 77
Quebec Nordiques 80 32 43 5 271 306 69

[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.

Record vs. opponents edit

Adams Division record vs. opponents

Vs. Wales Conference edit

Vs. Campbell Conference edit


Schedule and results edit

No. R Date Score Opponent Record
1 W October 8, 1987 5–1 @ Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 1–0–0
2 W October 10, 1987 6–5 OT Boston Bruins (1987–88) 2–0–0
3 W October 12, 1987 5–2 @ Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 3–0–0
4 T October 16, 1987 2–2 OT @ Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 3–0–1
5 L October 17, 1987 3–6 Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 3–1–1
6 L October 22, 1987 3–5 Minnesota North Stars (1987–88) 3–2–1
7 L October 24, 1987 5–7 Calgary Flames (1987–88) 3–3–1
8 W October 27, 1987 5–0 Edmonton Oilers (1987–88) 4–3–1
9 W October 29, 1987 4–2 @ Boston Bruins (1987–88) 5–3–1
10 L October 31, 1987 4–5 OT Pittsburgh Penguins (1987–88) 5–4–1
11 L November 1, 1987 1–5 Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 5–5–1
12 W November 3, 1987 4–3 St. Louis Blues (1987–88) 6–5–1
13 W November 6, 1987 4–1 @ Washington Capitals (1987–88) 7–5–1
14 W November 7, 1987 5–3 @ Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 8–5–1
15 W November 9, 1987 6–4 Boston Bruins (1987–88) 9–5–1
16 L November 13, 1987 4–6 @ Vancouver Canucks (1987–88) 9–6–1
17 L November 14, 1987 7–8 @ Los Angeles Kings (1987–88) 9–7–1
18 L November 18, 1987 1–4 @ Edmonton Oilers (1987–88) 9–8–1
19 L November 19, 1987 1–9 @ Calgary Flames (1987–88) 9–9–1
20 W November 23, 1987 4–3 OT Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 10–9–1
21 L November 25, 1987 4–6 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1987–88) 10–10–1
22 L November 28, 1987 3–6 Philadelphia Flyers (1987–88) 10–11–1
23 L December 1, 1987 1–3 Vancouver Canucks (1987–88) 10–12–1
24 L December 3, 1987 3–6 @ Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 10–13–1
25 W December 5, 1987 3–2 New Jersey Devils (1987–88) 11–13–1
26 L December 8, 1987 4–5 Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 11–14–1
27 T December 11, 1987 3–3 OT @ Winnipeg Jets (1987–88) 11–14–2
28 W December 12, 1987 5–0 @ Minnesota North Stars (1987–88) 12–14–2
29 L December 16, 1987 4–5 @ Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 12–15–2
30 W December 20, 1987 4–2 Detroit Red Wings (1987–88) 13–15–2
31 L December 22, 1987 1–2 Washington Capitals (1987–88) 13–16–2
32 W December 26, 1987 4–2 @ Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 14–16–2
33 W December 27, 1987 5–3 Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 15–16–2
34 W December 29, 1987 5–1 Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 16–16–2
35 L December 31, 1987 1–6 @ New York Rangers (1987–88) 16–17–2
36 L January 2, 1988 1–5 @ Boston Bruins (1987–88) 16–18–2
37 L January 3, 1988 1–2 @ Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 16–19–2
38 W January 6, 1988 6–1 @ Chicago Blackhawks (1987–88) 17–19–2
39 L January 9, 1988 2–3 Vancouver Canucks (1987–88) 17–20–2
40 W January 13, 1988 5–3 @ New Jersey Devils (1987–88) 18–20–2
41 L January 14, 1988 5–8 @ New York Islanders (1987–88) 18–21–2
42 W January 16, 1988 4–1 Chicago Blackhawks (1987–88) 19–21–2
43 T January 19, 1988 4–4 OT Edmonton Oilers (1987–88) 19–21–3
44 W January 21, 1988 5–4 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1987–88) 20–21–3
45 L January 23, 1988 3–5 St. Louis Blues (1987–88) 20–22–3
46 L January 24, 1988 3–5 Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 20–23–3
47 W January 26, 1988 5–3 Los Angeles Kings (1987–88) 21–23–3
48 L January 28, 1988 0–3 @ Boston Bruins (1987–88) 21–24–3
49 L January 30, 1988 2–5 @ St. Louis Blues (1987–88) 21–25–3
50 L February 2, 1988 3–6 Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 21–26–3
51 W February 4, 1988 3–2 New York Rangers (1987–88) 22–26–3
52 L February 6, 1988 2–3 Boston Bruins (1987–88) 22–27–3
53 T February 7, 1988 5–5 OT Chicago Blackhawks (1987–88) 22–27–4
54 L February 11, 1988 3–5 @ Los Angeles Kings (1987–88) 22–28–4
55 W February 13, 1988 7–3 @ Minnesota North Stars (1987–88) 23–28–4
56 L February 14, 1988 2–3 @ Winnipeg Jets (1987–88) 23–29–4
57 L February 16, 1988 3–7 Winnipeg Jets (1987–88) 23–30–4
58 L February 20, 1988 3–5 @ Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 23–31–4
59 W February 21, 1988 6–5 @ Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 24–31–4
60 L February 23, 1988 1–3 Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 24–32–4
61 W February 26, 1988 3–2 @ Detroit Red Wings (1987–88) 25–32–4
62 W February 27, 1988 5–4 Detroit Red Wings (1987–88) 26–32–4
63 L February 29, 1988 1–2 Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 26–33–4
64 W March 2, 1988 4–3 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1987–88) 27–33–4
65 L March 4, 1988 2–6 @ Washington Capitals (1987–88) 27–34–4
66 L March 6, 1988 0–2 New York Islanders (1987–88) 27–35–4
67 W March 8, 1988 6–4 Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 28–35–4
68 W March 10, 1988 4–3 @ New York Islanders (1987–88) 29–35–4
69 L March 12, 1988 3–4 Boston Bruins (1987–88) 29–36–4
70 W March 13, 1988 4–1 @ Hartford Whalers (1987–88) 30–36–4
71 W March 15, 1988 3–2 Toronto Maple Leafs (1987–88) 31–36–4
72 W March 17, 1988 4–3 @ New Jersey Devils (1987–88) 32–36–4
73 L March 19, 1988 4–5 OT Calgary Flames (1987–88) 32–37–4
74 L March 23, 1988 1–4 @ Montreal Canadiens (1987–88) 32–38–4
75 L March 26, 1988 2–6 @ Boston Bruins (1987–88) 32–39–4
76 L March 27, 1988 3–6 Pittsburgh Penguins (1987–88) 32–40–4
77 L March 29, 1988 1–3 Buffalo Sabres (1987–88) 32–41–4
78 T March 31, 1988 4–4 OT @ Philadelphia Flyers (1987–88) 32–41–5
79 L April 2, 1988 4–7 Philadelphia Flyers (1987–88) 32–42–5
80 L April 3, 1988 0–3 @ New York Rangers (1987–88) 32–43–5

Player statistics edit

Regular season
Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Peter Stastny C 76 46 65 111 69 2 20 0 2
Michel Goulet LW 80 48 58 106 56 -31 29 1 4
Anton Stastny LW 69 27 45 72 14 -9 15 0 4
Alan Haworth C 72 23 34 57 112 -5 6 0 2
Jeff Brown D 78 16 36 52 64 -25 9 0 4
Gaetan Duchesne LW 80 24 23 47 83 8 4 1 2
Lane Lambert RW 61 13 28 41 98 0 0 0 2
Jason Lafreniere C 40 10 19 29 4 -1 5 0 1
Jeff Jackson LW 68 9 18 27 103 5 0 2 3
Terry Carkner D 63 3 24 27 159 -8 2 0 1
Tommy Albelin D 60 3 23 26 47 -7 0 0 0
Randy Moller D 66 3 22 25 169 -11 0 0 2
Alain Cote LW 76 4 18 22 26 3 0 0 0
Mike Eagles C/LW 76 10 10 20 74 -18 1 2 2
Paul Gillis C 80 7 10 17 164 -29 1 0 0
Robert Picard D 65 3 13 16 103 -1 0 1 1
Marc Fortier C 27 4 10 14 12 -17 3 0 1
Normand Rochefort D 46 3 10 13 49 -2 0 1 0
Steven Finn D 75 3 7 10 198 -4 1 0 0
Gord Donnelly D 63 4 3 7 301 -16 1 0 0
Mike Hough LW 17 3 2 5 2 -8 0 0 1
Ken Quinney RW 15 2 2 4 5 -3 1 0 0
Jean-Marc Richard D 4 2 1 3 2 -3 1 0 0
Stu Kulak RW 14 1 1 2 28 -5 0 0 0
Trevor Stienburg RW 8 0 1 1 24 -1 0 0 0
Ron Tugnutt G 6 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Mario Brunetta G 29 0 0 0 16 0 0 0 0
Bobby Dollas D 9 0 0 0 2 -4 0 0 0
Mario Gosselin G 54 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0
Stephane Guerard D 30 0 0 0 34 -7 0 0 0
David Latta LW 10 0 0 0 0 -4 0 0 0
Ken McRae C 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Max Middendorf RW 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Natyshak RW 4 0 0 0 0 -1 0 0 0
Daniel Poudrier D 6 0 0 0 0 -1 0 0 0
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Mario Gosselin 3002 54 20 28 4 189 3.78 2 1422 1233 .867
Mario Brunetta 1550 29 10 12 1 96 3.72 0 778 682 .877
Ron Tugnutt 284 6 2 3 0 16 3.38 0 123 107 .870
Team: 4836 80 32 43 5 301 3.73 2 2323 2022 .870

[3]

Note:
Pos = Position; GPI = Games played in; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes; +/- = Plus/minus; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals
Min, TOI = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T,T/OT = Ties; OTL = Overtime losses; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;

Awards edit

Transactions edit

The Nordiques were involved in the following transactions during the 1987–88 season.

Trades edit

September 30, 1987 To New York Rangers
John Ogrodnick
David Shaw
To Quebec Nordiques
Terry Carkner
Jeff Jackson
December 17, 1987 To Winnipeg Jets
Stu Kulak
To Quebec Nordiques
Bobby Dollas
May 18, 1988 To New York Rangers
Head Coach Michel Bergeron
To Quebec Nordiques
1st round pick in 1988Daniel Dore

Waivers edit

October 5, 1987 To Minnesota North Stars
Richard Zemlak
October 5, 1987 To New Jersey Devils
Risto Siltanen
October 5, 1987 From New York Rangers
Stu Kulak

Free agents edit

Player New Team
Jimmy Mann Pittsburgh Penguins
Basil McRae Minnesota North Stars

Draft picks edit

Quebec's draft picks from the 1987 NHL Entry Draft which was held at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan.

Round # Player Nationality College/junior/club team (league)
1 9 Bryan Fogarty   Canada Kingston Canadians (OHL)
1 15 Joe Sakic   Canada Swift Current Broncos (WHL)
3 51 Jim Sprott   Canada London Knights (OHL)
4 72 Kip Miller   United States Michigan State Spartans (NCAA)
5 93 Rob Mendel   United States Wisconsin Badgers (NCAA)
6 114 Garth Snow   United States Mount St. Charles Academy (USHS)
7 135 Tim Hanus   United States Minnetonka High School (USHS)
8 156 Jake Enebak   United States Northfield High School (USHS)
9 177 Jaroslav Sevcik   Czechoslovakia ZKL Brno (Czech.)
9 183 Ladislav Tresl   Czechoslovakia ZKL Brno (Czech.)
10 198 Darren Nauss   Canada North Battleford North Stars (SJHL)
11 219 Mike Williams   United States Ferris State Bulldogs (NCAA)
S2 11 Mike Hiltner   United States University of Alaska Anchorage (WCHA)

Farm teams edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2011). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2012. Dan Diamond & Associates. p. 153. ISBN 9781894801225.
  2. ^ "All-Time NHL Results". NHL.com. Retrieved August 25, 2023.
  3. ^ "1987-88 Quebec Nordiques Statistics — Hockey-Reference.com". hockey-reference.com. Retrieved July 27, 2009.

External links edit