April 5, 1981 -- Dennis Maruk: Hats Off for Number 50
The first six years in which the Washington Capitals played hockey, success was a rare commodity. Not once in six seasons did the Caps have a winning season, not once had they made the playoffs, and not once did they record as many as 70 standings points. As they headed into their season finale of the 1980-1981 season against the Detroit Red Wings they did not have a chance to make it a winning season, but they did have a chance to reach the playoffs and hit 70 points for the first time.
For the Caps to reach the playoffs, they would have to win
this game. Losing it meant missing the
playoffs for the seventh consecutive season.
Even winning the game would require help, though, that coming in the form
of the Quebec Nordiques, who had to beat the Toronto Maple Leafs in the season
finale for the Caps to leapfrog the Leafs with a win over Detroit. It was the price to pay having gone 6-15-6
heading into Game 80.
The Caps had another record in sight in that final game, too,
an individual record. Dennis Maruk and
Mike Gartner had already become the first Capitals in team history to record 40
goals in a season, breaking the team record of 38 set by Guy Charron in
1977-1978. Both had an outside chance to
do what no Capital had done before, record 50 goals in a season. Both entered the game with 47 goals on the
season.
The late Robert Fachet, then the Washington Post beat writer
for the Washington Capitals, had a fine summary of the contest, a game marked by
odd theater at the start involving a broken goalie skate, then a flurry of
scoring in the first period than ended the competitive portion of the contest.
It was Maruk who contributed half of the goals in the 4-1
Capitals lead at the first intermission, drawing him to within a goal of the 50-goal
mark. The Red Wings got the only tally
of the second period, then Mike Gartner scored his 48th of the
season in the third period to inch closer to the 50-goal mark himself and put
some pressure on Maruk.
With the Caps comfortably in front by a 5-2 margin, Maruk took
a feed from Bob Kelly and converted it into the hat trick to become the first Capital to hit the 50-goal milestone.
Tim Tookey would score late for the Caps to complete the
scoring in the 7-2 win, and then it was time to wait to see what was unfolding
in Quebec. The Nordiques scored midway
through the second period of their contest against the Maple Leafs to draw to
within 3-2. The teams would play
scoreless hockey over the rest of the second period and 19 minutes of the third
period, only adding to the agony of Caps players and fans in Landover. Bill Derlago ended the suspense with a last
minute empty net goal for Toronto, sending the Maple Leafs into the postseason
and the Capitals home for the seventh consecutive season without a playoff
appearance.
The Caps did reach the 70-ponit mark for the season, the
first time they did so, and they finished one point out of a playoff spot, as
close as they ever came to that point of making the postseason. Two Capitals – Mike Gartner and Dennis Maruk –
went into the final game of the season with a chance to hit the 50 goal
mark. It was Maruk who would reach that
magic number, but in the aftermath of missing the playoffs he could only say, "It doesn't mean anything."
Perhaps in the moment, he was right. However, Maruk became the first of five
players in Capitals history to record 50 or more goals in a season. A year
later he would become the first player in Caps history and only the eighth in
the history of the NHL (third in the 1981-1982 season) to record 60 goals in a
season.
In a fraternity of Capitals with 50-goal seasons that
includes Mike Gartner, Bobby Carpenter, Peter Bondra, and Alex Ovechkin; Dennis
Maruk was the first to “50.” And that’s
not nothing. His hat trick goal in what
was to that point the most important game in the history of the franchise makes
Dennis Maruk’s 50th goal very memorable indeed.
Photo: Washington Capitals