1986–87 Calgary Flames | |
---|---|
Division | 2nd Smythe |
1986–87 record | 46–31–3 |
Home record | 25–13–2 |
Road record | 21–18–1 |
Goals for | 318 (T-2nd) |
Goals against | 289 (11th) |
Team information | |
General Manager | Cliff Fletcher |
Coach | Bob Johnson |
Captain |
Lanny McDonald Jim Peplinski and Doug Risebrough |
Alternate captains | None |
Arena | Olympic Saddledome |
Average attendance | 16,798 |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Joe Mullen (47) |
Assists | Al MacInnis (56) |
Points | Joe Mullen (87) |
Penalties in minutes | Tim Hunter (361) |
Wins | Mike Vernon (30) |
Goals against average | Rejean Lemelin (3.25) |
The 1986–87 Calgary Flames season was the seventh National Hockey League season in Calgary and 15th for the Flames franchise. The Flames posted their best record in franchise history to that time, as Calgary's 95 points was the third best total in the league. The Flames' defence of their 1986 Campbell Conference championship was quickly snuffed out by the Winnipeg Jets, as the Flames were upset in the first round of the playoffs in six games by their Manitoba rivals.
Joe Mullen captured his first Lady Byng Memorial Trophy for gentlemanly conduct, while Al MacInnis was named a Second Team All-star. The Flames had no player representatives at Rendez-vous '87, which replaced the All-Star Game for this season, though head coach Bob Johnson served as an assistant coach for the NHL all-stars.
Tragedy struck the Flames in the summer of 1986, as their first round draft pick, George Pelawa, died in an automobile crash over the Labour Day weekend. Pelawa's death is commonly rumoured to be an inspiration for the 1988 Tom Cochrane song Big League, but has never been confirmed as true.
Following the season, the Flames released a music video to benefit charity. The "Red Hot" video featured many players, including Lanny McDonald, Gary Roberts, Mike Vernon, Al MacInnis and Joel Otto, among others, lipsynching and pretending to play instruments. It was released on VHS and on vinyl. It enjoyed popularity then but was forgotten until the video surfaced on the internet in 2005.