1974–75 Montreal Canadiens | |
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Norris Division champions
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Division | 1st Norris |
Conference | 2nd Wales |
1974–75 record | 47–14–19 |
Goals for | 374 |
Goals against | 225 |
Team information | |
General Manager | Sam Pollock |
Coach | Scotty Bowman |
Captain | Henri Richard |
Alternate captains |
Yvan Cournoyer Pete Mahovlich |
Arena | Montreal Forum |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Guy Lafleur (53) |
Assists | Pete Mahovlich (82) |
Points | Guy Lafleur (117) |
Penalties in minutes | Doug Risebrough (198) |
Plus/minus | Serge Savard (+71) |
Wins | Ken Dryden (30) |
Goals against average | Ken Dryden (2.69) |
The 1974–75 Montreal Canadiens season was the 66th season in team history. The Montreal Canadiens were eliminated in the semi-finals against the Buffalo Sabres four games to two. Henri Richard would play his final season with the club.
Frank Mahovlich left the Canadiens, signing with the Toronto Toros of the World Hockey Association (WHA). Jacques Laperriere retired, he and Scotty Bowman unable to get along.Ken Dryden returned to the club after his law articling.
Henri Richard entered his 20th season with the Canadiens, but his health was failing. He played 16 games before fracturing his left ankle on November 13, 1974, in a game against Buffalo and did not play again until the spring.
Guy Lafleur had a break-out season, breaking the Canadiens' goal-scoring record of 50 goals held by Maurice Richard and Bernie Geoffrion. Lafleur finished with 53 goals and 119 points.
Note:
The Canadiens' first round opponent was the Vancouver Canucks and the Canadiens won the series in five games to advance to the semi-finals against the Buffalo Sabres. The Sabres defeated the Canadiens in six games to advance to the Stanley Cup final. The Sabres' checkers were able to shut down the Canadiens' top scorers, while the Canadiens' checkers were not able to contain the Sabres' French Connection line.
Following the 1975 playoffs, Henri Richard retired after 20 NHL seasons. Having been the Canadiens captain since 1971, he was succeeded in that post by Yvan Cournoyer.