Blackhawks–Red Wings rivalry

Blackhawks–Red Wings rivalry
First meeting November 24, 1926
Latest meeting March 6, 2016
Next meeting January 10, 2017
Statistics
Meetings total 812
All-time series 404–309–15–84 (DET)
Regular season series 366–268–13–84 (DET)
Postseason results 43–38 (CHI)
Current win streak W2, CHI
Postseason history

The Blackhawks–Red Wings rivalry is a historic rivalry in the National Hockey League (NHL) between the Chicago Blackhawks and Detroit Red Wings. Prior to the 2013–14 league-wide divisional realignment, it was the most intense rivalry in the Central Division during the post-lockout era. The clubs began playing each other in 1926–27, during the inaugural season for both franchises, and have faced each other in more regular season games than any other two clubs in NHL history; only the Bruins–Canadiens rivalry exceeds them in total games played when Stanley Cup playoff games are included.[1]

History

The series began on November 24, 1926, when the NHL's two fledgling Midwest teams met for the first time. In the matchup, the Detroit Cougars (the club was eventually renamed Red Wings in 1932) earned a 1–0 victory against the Chicago Black Hawks (the team name was compounded to Blackhawks in 1986) at the Chicago Coliseum. In that game, Frank Frederickson of the Cougars scored the only goal with five minutes remaining in the third period, assisted by defenseman Hobie Kitchen, and goaltender Hap Holmes recorded the first shutout of his rookie season. It was the first win in Detroit franchise history, and the first loss in Chicago franchise history. Chicago's first Stanley Cup was later won against the Red Wings in 1934, when winger Mush March scored a goal in a double-overtime game, the first-ever Stanley Cup-winning overtime goal in the history of the NHL.[1]

During the 26-year period where the NHL had only the Original Six, both teams were controlled by the Norris family. Patriarch James Norris owned both franchises, until his death in 1953 split the rivals between his sons – the elder son, James was a co-owner of the Black Hawks along with Arthur Wirtz, while his brother Bruce inherited ownership of the Red Wings. In 1961, the Black Hawks led by Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita broke 23 years without a title by defeating Gordie Howe's Wings.[2] On a visit to Olympia Stadium in Detroit in the 1960s, Hull was heckled by three Red Wings fans who eventually climbed the glass and dangled their arms over it before he hit them with his stick.[3]

Starting in 1970–71, the Blackhawks realigned to the West Division while the Red Wings remained in the East. In 1981–82, they were reunited in the reconfigured Norris Division, which was renamed the Central Division in 1993 after the NHL revamped its alignment naming protocol.[1] 7 of the 10 largest hockey crowds in Chicago's United Center were for Blackhawks–Red Wings games.[4]

Blackhawks–Red Wings games are among the ones most notable for fighting. Bob Probert and Stu Grimson played for both teams and fought each other frequently. Bill Gadsby also played for both teams. Fans have much animosity for each other, with Blackhawks fans chanting "Detroit sucks!" in every game.[4] Chicago native Chris Chelios was booed upon his return to the United Center as a Detroit player in 1999,[4] and former Red Wing Marian Hossa earned the same response in 2009 at the Joe Louis Arena as a Blackhawk.[5]

In the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs, the teams faced off against each other in the playoffs for the 16th time, and have played over 800 games against each other.[6] The Blackhawks won the series 4–3 after trailing 3–1.

As a result of the realignment before the 2013–14 NHL season, the Red Wings moved to the Eastern Conference's Atlantic Division, alongside fellow Original Six teams Boston Bruins, Montreal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs as well as the New York Rangers in the East. Both the Red Wings and Blackhawks will only meet twice every season by virtue of being inter-conference rivals, and now can only meet in the postseason if both advance to the Stanley Cup Finals.

See also

References



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