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The Canadiens won their 20th Stanley Cup in 1976–77, taking the NHL championship. Montreal set new records for most wins (60) and points (132) in a season. [1] Those records were not broken until the re-introduction of regular season overtime [a] and the extension of the schedule to 82 games. The 1976–77 Canadiens continue to hold the all ...
March 3, 1920 Most goals against: 11: 6 times Biggest comeback: 5: vs New York Rangers (February 19, 2008; after trailing 0–5 halfway into the game, the Canadiens scored five goals in regulation time, and won 6–5 in a shootout after overtime.) [3]
Montreal Canadiens NHA regular season and postseason statistics and results, 1910–1917 NHA season Canadiens season Regular season [5] [6] Postseason [7] Finish GP W L T PTS GF GA GP W L T GF GA Result 1910: 1909–10: 7th 12 2 10 0 4 59 100 — — — — — — Did not qualify 1910–11: 1910–11: 2nd 16 8 8 0 16 66 62 — — — — — —
The 1976–77 NHL season was the 60th season of the ... 0–3: Montreal Canadiens: Montreal Forum ... The Canadiens swept the series in four games to win their second ...
In the 1976–77 season, the Canadiens set three still-standing team records – fewest losses (8) in an 80-game season, [28] the longest home unbeaten streak (34), [29] and best goal differential (+216) [30] – and one record that lasted until the 2022–23 Boston Bruins beat it, for the most points (132) in an 80-game season.
The 1977 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 1976–77 season, and the culmination of the 1977 Stanley Cup playoffs.It was contested between the Boston Bruins and the defending champion Montreal Canadiens.
Dylan Larkin had a power-play goal and an assist in his 700th career NHL game and the Detroit Red Wings snapped a three-game losing streak with a 4-2 victory over the Montreal Canadiens on ...
The 1911–12 season saw the elimination of the rover position, reducing number of skaters per side to six, and changing the game to three 20-minute periods from two 30-minute periods. The 1916–17 season saw the introduction of the split schedule, an innovation attributed to Toronto NHA owner Eddie Livingstone .