Rendez-vous '87


























Game 1 of Rendez-vous '87
QuebecRendezvous1987.png






















1 2 3 Total
U.S.S.R. 0 1 2 3
NHL All-Stars 1 1 2 4
Date February 11, 1987
Arena Le Colisée
City Quebec City, Quebec
Attendance 15,398






















Game 2 of Rendez-vous '87






















1 2 3 Total
U.S.S.R. 0 3 2 5
NHL All-Stars 1 0 2 3
Date February 13, 1987
Arena Le Colisée
City Quebec City, Canada
Attendance 15,395

Rendez-vous '87 was an international ice hockey series of games between the Soviet Union national ice hockey team and a team of All-Stars from the National Hockey League, held in Quebec City. It replaced the NHL's All-Star festivities for the 1986–87 NHL season. The Soviet team was paid $80,000 for their appearance in Rendez-vous '87, while the NHLers raised $350,000 for the players' pension fund.


Rendez-vous '87 was designed as a follow-up to the Challenge Cup series in 1979, hoping that the team of NHL All-Stars could beat the Soviet team, unlike before. To this end, the series was a two-game affair instead of a three-game affair in 1979. The two-game series took place during five days of festivities starting on February 9, 1987 and finishing on February 13. The series was very successful, with some, including Wayne Gretzky, calling for more international hockey, especially between Canada and the Soviet Union, the two top powers of hockey at the time. The teams split the games, with the NHLers winning the first game, 4–3, followed by a Soviet 5–3 victory two nights later, giving them victory on aggregate score 8-7.


Though they outscored the NHL 8-7 over the two games, Soviet coach Viktor Tikhonov made no claim to victory. "The NHL didn't win and neither did we, the person that won was hockey itself. Both games were like holidays, like festivals, two of the greatest hockey games you'll ever see."[1]




Contents






  • 1 Television coverage


  • 2 Uniforms


  • 3 Lineups


  • 4 Game One – February 11, 1987


  • 5 Game Two – February 13, 1987


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





Television coverage


While the telecasts in Canada were on CBC as usual, they were not Hockey Night in Canada productions. The games were done as a CBC Sports production because Molson, who owned Hockey Night in Canada's rights at the time, was not allowed access to Le Colisée in Quebec City. Carling O'Keefe Breweries assumed advertising rights for the telecasts and the normal host(s) for Hockey Night in Canada in 1987, rookie Ron MacLean and Dave Hodge (before his late season firing) were replaced by Brian Williams. Even the ice blue blazers normally worn by Hockey Night in Canada commentators were replaced by the orange CBC sportcoats. Don Wittman and John Davidson called the action for CBC. The games were shown in the United States on ESPN, with Ken Wilson and Bill Clement in the booth.



Uniforms


The NHL introduced unique All-Star uniforms to be worn for this series only. The overall design of the white jersey took its cues from the New Jersey Devils' red uniforms, with white replacing the Devils' red, orange replacing green, and black replacing white. The NHL shield was featured on the front, with two black stars to the left and right above the shield, and three additional black stars on each shoulder. The Rendez-vous '87 patch was worn on the right sleeve in lieu of the player number.


The Soviet team wore their standard red national team uniforms with white trim, with the Cyrillic СССР on the front, and team captain Viacheslav Fetisov wearing a "К" for his captain's letter. The players' names on the back, however, were romanized.



Lineups























NHL All-Stars U.S.S.R.
Head Coach
Canada Jean Perron (Montreal Canadiens)

Viktor Tikhonov (CSKA Moscow)
Assistant Coach(es)
Canada Michel Bergeron (Quebec Nordiques)
United States Bob Johnson (Calgary Flames)

Igor Dmitriev (Soviet Wings)
Lineup



  • Canada 1 – G Clint Malarchuk (Quebec Nordiques)


  • United States 2 – D Mark Howe (Philadelphia Flyers, injured / did not play)


  • United States 3 – D Mike Ramsey (Buffalo Sabres)


  • United States 4 – D Rod Langway (Washington Capitals, Alternate)


  • Canada 5 – D Rick Green (Montreal Canadiens)


  • Canada 6 – D Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins, Alternate)


  • Canada 7 – D Paul Coffey (Edmonton Oilers, injured / did not play)


  • Sweden 8 – D Ulf Samuelsson (Hartford Whalers)


  • Canada 9 – LW Glenn Anderson (Edmonton Oilers)


  • Canada 10 – C Dale Hawerchuk (Winnipeg Jets)


  • Canada 11 – C Mark Messier (Edmonton Oilers)


  • Canada 14 – RW Kevin Dineen (Hartford Whalers)


  • Finland 15 – RW Esa Tikkanen (Edmonton Oilers)


  • Canada 16 – RW Michel Goulet (Quebec Nordiques)


  • Finland 17 – RW Jari Kurri (Edmonton Oilers)


  • Canada 19 – LW Kirk Muller (New Jersey Devils)


  • Canada 20 – C Dave Poulin (Philadelphia Flyers)


  • Canada 21 – D Normand Rochefort (Quebec Nordiques, game two only)


  • Canada 24 – D Doug Wilson (Chicago Blackhawks)


  • United States 25 – D Chris Chelios (Montreal Canadiens)


  • Sweden 28 – RW Tomas Sandström (New York Rangers, game one only)


  • Canada 31 – G Grant Fuhr (Edmonton Oilers)


  • Canada 32 – RW Claude Lemieux (Montreal Canadiens)


  • Canada 66 – C Mario Lemieux (Pittsburgh Penguins)


  • Canada 99 – C Wayne Gretzky (Edmonton Oilers, Captain)




  • 1 – G Sergei Mylnikov (Traktor Chelyabinsk)

  • 2 – D Viacheslav Fetisov (CSKA Moscow, Captain)

  • 4 – D Igor Stelnov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 5 – D Vasily Pervukhin (Dynamo Moscow)

  • 6 – D Mikhail Tatarinov (Dynamo Moscow)

  • 7 – D Alexei Kasatonov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 8 – D Alexei Gusarov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 9 – RW Vladimir Krutov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 10 – F Viacheslav Lavrov, (SKA Leningrad, game two only)

  • 11 – C Igor Larionov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 12 – D Sergei Starikov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 13 – F Valeri Kamensky (CSKA Moscow)

  • 14 – D Zinetula Bilyaletdinov (Dynamo Moscow)

  • 15 – LW Andrei Khomutov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 16 – RW Sergei Svetlov (Dynamo Moscow)

  • 18 – C Alexander Semak (Dynamo Moscow)

  • 19 – RW Mikhail Varnakov (Torpedo Gorky, game one only)

  • 20 – G Evgeny Belosheikin (CSKA Moscow)

  • 21 – C Sergei Nemchinov, (Soviet Wings, game two only)

  • 22 – LW Sergei Priakhin (Soviet Wings)

  • 24 – LW Sergei Makarov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 27 – C Viacheslav Bykov (CSKA Moscow)

  • 29 – LW Yuri Khmylev (Soviet Wings)

  • 30 – C Anatoli Semenov (Dynamo Moscow, game one only)




Game One – February 11, 1987


NHL All-Stars won the game 4–3, thanks in part to the line of Wayne Gretzky, Jari Kurri and Esa Tikkanen. Dave Poulin scored the winning goal on a deflection from Mario Lemieux, but Lemieux was initially credited with the goal. On the bench, Lemieux could be seen pointing toward Poulin as the goal was announced.

































NHL All-Stars U.S.S.R.
Final Score 4 3
Scoring Summary


  • Kurri (Gretzky, Tikkanen) 5:23 first

  • Anderson (M. Lemieux) 17:00 second

  • Dineen (Poulin, Hawerchuk) 7:03 third

  • Poulin (M. Lemieux, Wilson) 18:45 third (GWG)




  • Kasatonov (Makarov) 18:42 second

  • Bykov (Khomutov, Starikov) 2:03 third

  • Semenov (Tatarinov, Varnakov) 8:04 third


Penalties


  • C. Lemieux 10:30 first

  • Bourque 15:34 first

  • Hawerchuk 12:28 second

  • Tikkanen 8:18 third



  • bench (served by Kamensky) 14:37 second

Shots on Goal
11–9–7–27
5–9–10–24
Win/Loss
W – Grant Fuhr

L – Evgeny Belosheikin



  • Referee: Sergei Morozov


  • Linesmen: Ron Finn, Ray Scapinello



Game Two – February 13, 1987


The Soviets won the contest 5–3. This game featured the emergence of the young Soviet forward line consisting of Valeri Kamensky, Viacheslav Bykov, and Andrei Khomutov. After the game, the players on each team exchanged hockey sweaters as part of the hockey tradition.

































NHL All-Stars U.S.S.R.
Final Score 3 5
Scoring Summary


  • Messier (Kurri, Gretzky) 3:32 first (PPG)

  • Wilson (Gretzky, Goulet) 7:33 third (PPG)

  • Bourque (Lemieux, Gretzky) 19:23 third




  • Kamensky (Khomutov, Bykov) 3:13 second

  • Krutov (Fetisov, Larionov) 5:41 second

  • Kamensky (unassisted) 19:41 second

  • Krutov (Larionov) 9:19 third (GWG)

  • Khomutov (Kamensky) 12:59 third


Penalties


  • Anderson 9:50 first

  • C. Lemieux 11:33 first




  • Nemchinov 3:22 first

  • Krutov 9:50 first

  • Fetisov 17:04 first

  • Nemchinov 6:05 third

  • Kasatonov 11:46 third

  • Priakhin (minor and misconduct) 17:20 third


Shots on Goal
6–13–12–31
7–9–13–29
Win/Loss
L – Grant Fuhr

W – Evgeny Belosheikin


  • Referee : Dave Newell

  • Linesmen : Ron Finn, Ray Scapinello

  • Tournament MVP's, NHL All-Stars Wayne Gretzky; Team USSR Valeri Kamensky



References





  1. ^ http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1065730/index.htm




External links




  • Canada Versus the Soviet Union The heyday of the battle for world hockey supremacy (1972–1987)


  • http://www.greatesthockeylegends.com/search/label/Rendez%20Vous%20'87 Rendez Vous '87










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