Monday, February 27, 2017
1988 Lewis Cup Finals
Saturday, February 25, 2017
1988 Playoffs
Thursday, February 23, 2017
1987-88 Regular Season
Like its predecessor, the 1987-88 season was about
milestones. Danny Stevenson and Stuart Holly both joined the 700-goal club,
while David Appleby spent most of the first half of the year chasing Gilbert
Giroux for fourth on the all-time points list. Appleby tied Giroux on November
8 just before going into an out-of-character four-game scoring drought. The
superstar forward admitted he was starting to feel the pressure. “I just need
to break this thing so I’ll stop thinking about it” said Appleby. “I know It’s
getting to me and that’s affecting my game, but it’s coming, I know its
coming.” It finally came on November 19 against the Denver Bulls when Appleby’s
pass to Niklas Ekberg found the back of the net, giving Appleby 1602 career
points, good enough for fourth place all-time. Appleby finished with 98 points
on the year, just four points shy of scoring champion Vladimir Gaganov as the
Spirits once again clinched first overall in the league. Saturday, February 18, 2017
Kansas City, Miami Approved as PHL Franchises
On September 1, 1987, PHL Commissioner Alan Garcia made the announcement everybody was waiting for. Kansas City and Miami would be accepted as expansion franchises for the 1989-90 season, bringing the league to 26 teams. Kansas City had been pursuing a franchise throughout the 1980s, while Miami had been a fairly recent bid, beating out another strong bid from Cleveland. "It's exciting to be able to welcome Kansas City and Miami to our league" said Garcia. "We had some difficult choices to make as there were some very good options out there but we're confident that we made the right decision."
The league assembled a committee to determine the top three expansion bids, before Garcia and the board of governors chose the two winning cities. Kansas City earned the most votes with 11, while Miami and Cleveland tied for second with 9 each. In the end, Miami was chosen over Cleveland in an effort to expand the PHL's footprint into the American southeast and to add a major emerging television market. "A lot of people have been questioning Miami as a hockey market" said deputy commissioner Darryl Byrd. "I say why not? Look at the success LA has had in a non-traditional market. It's obvious, given their success in baseball, that Mr Cruz and his people are committed to building a winning tradition and I don't believe the hockey team will be any different."
The announcement comes as a disappointment for Cleveland in particular. "It was a tough decision to exclude Cleveland again this time" said Garcia. "The city of Cleveland will be a high priority in the next round of expansion, as well as any possible franchise relocations in the coming seasons."
Ken Milliken said the Kansas City franchise was very close to deciding on a name and would likely have a logo and uniforms by the summer of 1988. Cruz said there is no timetable yet for Miami's identity, but the team hopes to at least have a name chosen by next summer.
Monday, February 13, 2017
1987 Off-Season
Saturday, February 11, 2017
PHL Logo Update
To go with the new logo, the league also updated it's all-star uniforms. The new logo is front and center on the jerseys with stars running up the sleeves and across the waist on both uniforms. The league will continue with the East vs West format it has used since the 1969 merger.
Thursday, February 9, 2017
1987 Lewis Cup Finals
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
1987 Playoffs
Saturday, February 4, 2017
1986-87 Regular Season
At the conclusion of the 1985-86 season, Stuart Holly stood
just 32 points away from catching former teammate Gilbert Giroux for third in
the all-time PHL scoring race. Holly’s production had declined dramatically in
recent years, especially since former linemate Ray Fowler suddenly announced his
retirement. However, as the 1986-87 season began, Holly seemed to find his game
again. The 36-year-old wasted no time passing Giroux, scoring the game-winner
at home against Seattle to reach 1602 career points, good enough for third
all-time. Later in the year, Holly also dethroned Giroux as the PHL’s assist
king with his 1006th career helper on the final day of the regular
season. Holly’s milestone-filled year, along with a big rookie season from
Viktor Skogg, and a breakout year from goaltender Ari Hannula propelled LA to
an unexpected playoff appearance as they finished second in the Pacific
Division. In Montreal, Vincent Ducharme’s incredible debut was enough to push
the Royale back into the playoffs. Ducharme set a new mark for goals by a
rookie with 78, finishing the year with 159 points. Montreal also benefited
from a full year of coaching from a healthy Don Shelburne, who guided the team
from the league basement to the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference in
less than four months.
In St. Louis, David Appleby enjoyed his most dominating
regular season yet, becoming the first player in PHL history to score 100 goals
in a single season. On March 26, 1987 in Milwaukee, Appleby joined the
exclusive 700-goal club and moved up to third on the all-time goal-scoring list
as he led the Spirits back to first overall in the league. Pittsburgh also
returned to first place in their Division, just barely edging out rival
Philadelphia by three points. Stingers head coach Bob King announced just prior
to the playoffs that he would retire at the conclusion of the post-season. With
an aging roster as well, there was an overwhelming feeling that Pittsburgh’s
window of opportunity to win another championship was closing.













