<description>&lt;p&gt;Captain Dennis Potvin, left wing John Tonelli, and defenseman Ken Morrow join Neil and Vic to celebrate the 45th anniversary of the New York Islanders' first Stanley Cup championship. From a 12-win expansion disaster to hockey immortality, these three Hall of Famers share firsthand accounts of the 1980 playoff run that launched a dynasty. Hear stories about the Butch Goring trade, the brutal Boston series with Clark Gillies vs. Terry O'Reilly, dominating Philadelphia's power play, and Bobby Nystrom's legendary overtime goal that changed franchise history forever.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;IN THIS EPISODE:&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[00:00] - Bobby Nystrom's overtime goal against Philadelphia: the moment that launched the Islanders dynasty in 1980&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[02:00] - Welcome to three champions: Captain Dennis Potvin, John Tonelli, and Ken Morrow sharing memories 45 years later&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[04:00] - The Bowling Green connection: Ken Morrow's college days and the 1984 Falcons national championship vs. Western Michigan's 2025 title&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[05:00] - Do the stories get better with time? Dennis admits some details fade, but the important moments against LA and Philly remain vivid&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[06:00] - The 1980 team faced the NHL's best: why playing Philadelphia in the finals made the championship even more special&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[07:00] - The practice that won the Cup: Al Arbor's crisscross drill that produced Nystrom's famous goal, practiced daily for weeks&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[08:00] - John Tonelli's game-winner setup: the split-second decision to pass instead of shoot when Moose Dupont committed&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[09:00] - Ken Morrow's Olympic gold to Stanley Cup: joining the Islanders after Lake Placid and practicing against Bossy, Trottier, and Tonelli&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[10:00] - The welcome from veterans: team character from Bill Torrey and Al Arbor down through the entire locker room&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[11:00] - Building the foundation: 1975's Cinderella run beating Rangers and Pittsburgh, then heartbreak against Montreal (76, 77) and Toronto (78)&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[12:00] - The Butch Goring trade: filling the second-line center void after Brian Trottier, Goring's "Do you know how good you are?" speech&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[13:00] - Brent Sutter at 20 as second-line center before Goring: the depth issue that needed solving at the deadline&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[14:00] - Bill Torrey's masterpiece: Goring, Gordie Lane, Anders Kallur injecting speed, grit, and talent into the lineup&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[15:00] - Dave Langevin's addition: 6'4", 240-pound defenseman completing the puzzle alongside Morrow and Potvin&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[16:00] - Round 1 vs. LA Kings: Ken Morrow's overtime winner, a 48 mph shot along the ice that deflected off a skate&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[18:00] - Morrow's three playoff overtime goals: scoring the occasional goal while playing shutdown defense&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[19:00] - The Boston series: Clark Gillies vs. Terry O'Reilly defining moment, 16 fighting majors and 248 penalty minutes in game two&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[20:00] - Dennis Potvin's respect for O'Reilly: knowing him from junior hockey, watching Clarky beat him repeatedly but Terry never backing down&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[21:00] - John Tonelli on Clarky as Big Brother: sitting on the bench watching your protector take care of Terry O'Reilly and Stan Jonathan&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[22:00] - Bobby Nystrom's fight with Wayne Cashman: inspirational toughness from a finesse scorer showing he could go toe-to-toe&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[23:00] - Ken Morrow's "Welcome to the NHL": watching street fighting in the small Boston Garden, toes sore from tight corners&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[25:00] - The bite heard round the league: Ken watching Bob Nystrom's fist under Wayne Cashman's chin, seeing Cashman bite down&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[26:00] - Down to three defensemen: Potvin, Lewis, and Persson surviving overtime after injuries to Morrow, Lane, and Nystrom&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[27:00] - Dennis almost having to fight: Bobby Nystrom standing up and saying "I got Cashman" - the relief throughout the room&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[28:00] - Stan Jonathan's threat to Potvin: "You're mine" - expecting to fight from junior hockey history but it never happening&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;[29:00] -...</description>

NHL Wraparound Podcast

Neil Smith & Vic Morren

NY Islanders First Stanley Cup: 45th Anniversary Special Interview

DEC 20, 202559 MIN
NHL Wraparound Podcast

NY Islanders First Stanley Cup: 45th Anniversary Special Interview

DEC 20, 202559 MIN

Description

Captain Dennis Potvin, left wing John Tonelli, and defenseman Ken Morrow join Neil and Vic to celebrate the 45th anniversary of the New York Islanders' first Stanley Cup championship. From a 12-win expansion disaster to hockey immortality, these three Hall of Famers share firsthand accounts of the 1980 playoff run that launched a dynasty. Hear stories about the Butch Goring trade, the brutal Boston series with Clark Gillies vs. Terry O'Reilly, dominating Philadelphia's power play, and Bobby Nystrom's legendary overtime goal that changed franchise history forever.IN THIS EPISODE:[00:00] - Bobby Nystrom's overtime goal against Philadelphia: the moment that launched the Islanders dynasty in 1980[02:00] - Welcome to three champions: Captain Dennis Potvin, John Tonelli, and Ken Morrow sharing memories 45 years later[04:00] - The Bowling Green connection: Ken Morrow's college days and the 1984 Falcons national championship vs. Western Michigan's 2025 title[05:00] - Do the stories get better with time? Dennis admits some details fade, but the important moments against LA and Philly remain vivid[06:00] - The 1980 team faced the NHL's best: why playing Philadelphia in the finals made the championship even more special[07:00] - The practice that won the Cup: Al Arbor's crisscross drill that produced Nystrom's famous goal, practiced daily for weeks[08:00] - John Tonelli's game-winner setup: the split-second decision to pass instead of shoot when Moose Dupont committed[09:00] - Ken Morrow's Olympic gold to Stanley Cup: joining the Islanders after Lake Placid and practicing against Bossy, Trottier, and Tonelli[10:00] - The welcome from veterans: team character from Bill Torrey and Al Arbor down through the entire locker room[11:00] - Building the foundation: 1975's Cinderella run beating Rangers and Pittsburgh, then heartbreak against Montreal (76, 77) and Toronto (78)[12:00] - The Butch Goring trade: filling the second-line center void after Brian Trottier, Goring's "Do you know how good you are?" speech[13:00] - Brent Sutter at 20 as second-line center before Goring: the depth issue that needed solving at the deadline[14:00] - Bill Torrey's masterpiece: Goring, Gordie Lane, Anders Kallur injecting speed, grit, and talent into the lineup[15:00] - Dave Langevin's addition: 6'4", 240-pound defenseman completing the puzzle alongside Morrow and Potvin[16:00] - Round 1 vs. LA Kings: Ken Morrow's overtime winner, a 48 mph shot along the ice that deflected off a skate[18:00] - Morrow's three playoff overtime goals: scoring the occasional goal while playing shutdown defense[19:00] - The Boston series: Clark Gillies vs. Terry O'Reilly defining moment, 16 fighting majors and 248 penalty minutes in game two[20:00] - Dennis Potvin's respect for O'Reilly: knowing him from junior hockey, watching Clarky beat him repeatedly but Terry never backing down[21:00] - John Tonelli on Clarky as Big Brother: sitting on the bench watching your protector take care of Terry O'Reilly and Stan Jonathan[22:00] - Bobby Nystrom's fight with Wayne Cashman: inspirational toughness from a finesse scorer showing he could go toe-to-toe[23:00] - Ken Morrow's "Welcome to the NHL": watching street fighting in the small Boston Garden, toes sore from tight corners[25:00] - The bite heard round the league: Ken watching Bob Nystrom's fist under Wayne Cashman's chin, seeing Cashman bite down[26:00] - Down to three defensemen: Potvin, Lewis, and Persson surviving overtime after injuries to Morrow, Lane, and Nystrom[27:00] - Dennis almost having to fight: Bobby Nystrom standing up and saying "I got Cashman" - the relief throughout the room[28:00] - Stan Jonathan's threat to Potvin: "You're mine" - expecting to fight from junior hockey history but it never happening[29:00] - Buffalo series: Nystrom's double-OT winner against Bob Sauve, then blowing 2-0 lead in game six before rallying[30:00] - Clark Gillies' white shoes prank: teammates signing his brand new white shoes, Clarky's silent fury, new shoes next day[33:00] - Dennis Potvin's first-ever playoff power play overtime goal: the perfect pass from Tonelli in the Finals opener[34:00] - Fear as motivation: Philadelphia's intimidation factor with Bobby Clarke talking trash and the physical presence throughout the lineup[35:00] - Al Arbor's consistency: keeping the team together after brutal 1978 and 1979 playoff losses instead of firing the coach[36:00] - Power play dominance: 15 goals in the Finals, 40 Philadelphia penalties, Bossy-Trottier-Persson execution under pressure[38:00] - The power play weapons: Stefan Persson's elite passing, Potvin's shot, Bossy's sniper ability, Trottier's two-way game, Gillies in front[40:00] - Mel Bridgeman's famous photo moment: looking at the ref hoping Nystrom's goal wouldn't count[41:00] - Ben Wilson's threat to Wayne Merrick: "Cross my blue line and I'll break your arm" - Wayne's deep laugh at the absurdity[42:00] - Mel Bridgeman to Ken Morrow: "I'm gonna break your face" - the intimidation tactics that failed against battle-tested Islanders[43:00] - The toughest opponents: Paul Holmgren and Terry O'Reilly combining skating ability with punishing physicality[44:00] - Holmgren's anticipation: catching Potvin coming around the net, the scariest guys were the ones who could pursue you[46:00] - The interference era: holding, grabbing, giving defensemen extra seconds to make plays that would be penalties today[48:00] - The art of taking a hit: staying close to boards to soften impact, John Tonelli's elbows-up corner technique[49:00] - Jay Wells and Nick Fotiu rattling bones: the hits that made you feel it in your skeleton[50:00] - Gordy Lane's skinny frame and piston right hand: "The King of the Spear" getting away with the dirty work[53:00] - Game 5 in Philly: 6-3 loss bringing series back to Nassau, the Spectrum's intimidation factor intact[54:00] - Dennis Potvin's "high stick" goal: chest level contact on power play, refusing video replay that would've confirmed it[55:00] - The famous offsides non-call: Dwayne Sutter's goal from Clark Gillies' drop pass a foot outside the blue line[56:00] - Leon Stickle's missed call: watching Sutter instead of the puck, allowing Gillies to bring it back inside quickly[57:00] - The makeup call theory: Bobby Clarke locking Potvin's stick under his arm on 5-on-3, leading to Philly's first goal[58:00] - Second intermission overconfidence: high-fiving after 4-2 lead, losing focus for a split second[59:00] - Bob Dailey and John Paddock tie it 4-4: the terrifying reality of possibly going back to Philly for game seven[59:00] - Bobby Nystrom's promise: "I'm gonna get it!" - rallying the troops before overtime, refusing to return to PhiladelphiaX: https://twitter.com/NHLWraparoundNeil Smith: https://twitter.com/NYCNeilVic Morren: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vic-morren-7038737/NHL Wraparound Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nhlwraparound/#NHLWraparound #NYIslanders #NewYorkIslanders #DennisPotvin #JohnTonelli #KenMorrow #BobbyNystrom #StanleyCup #1980StanleyCup #ClarkGillies #BrianTrottier #MikeBossy #ButchGoring #AlArbor #BillTorrey #PhiladelphiaFlyers #BostonBruins #BuffaloSabres #LAKings #TerryOReilly #BobbyClark #PaulHolmgren #MelBridgeman #BenWilson #StanJonathan #WayneCashman #StefanPersson #GordieLane #AndersKallur #DaveLangevin #BrentSutter #BobDailey #MooseDupont #PetePeeters #JohnPaddock #ReggieLeach #LeonStickle #NassauColiseum #IslandersDynasty #HockeyLegends #1980Olympics #MiracleOnIce #NHLHistory