@Devils du New Jersey

L’histoire des Devils du New Jersey



Ils étaient autrefois considérés comme une risée dans la LNH. Une équipe qui a traversé deux mouvements et qui aurait autrefois été en train de sortir de Jersey, les Devils ont plutôt remporté trois coupes Stanley et ont mis de gros joueurs nommés dans le Temple de la renommée.

19 Comments

  1. I liked Jason arnott because when ever I played with the Blackhawks in NHL the video game he always showed up on my team, but now that I know his history it's cool learning he played for 20 years

  2. Being from Sweden and only 25 years old, I can't say I was around for any of the Stanley cup wins, in fact I don't know when I started to cheer for the Devils but I haven't regreted it yet. Maybe I am affected by the team I cheer for but to me winning 1-0 is more impressing than winning 6-5.

  3. Being from Jersey and old enough to remember the first Stanley Cup. I think it was the fact most people here didn't watch hockey at all and winning the cup made us notice them. That's what got me into watching and playing hockey I guess looking back it does seem boring but at the time it still excited me to watch. I mean look at now we avg at least 30-35 a night and still don't score many goals. Still pissed about the Lemieux Draft we purposely didn't tank and the GM said we aren't Tanking and the Penguins did and they got him I think we were the one who deserved him.

  4. Cory Schneider is not even close to the talent level of Martin Brodeur, I know you're not a Devils fan but this is just untrue. The Devils were so effective because Martin Brodeur is the greatest goaltender of all time at playing the puck behind the net. Not only that but his hybrid style of goaltending allowed him to make athletic saves as well as being able to drop and play the butterfly. Marty's ability with the stick puts every other goaltender to shame, guys like Cory Schneider actually give up goals consistenly when trying to play the puck because they just are flat out bad at it.

    And wrong about the Devils always having a great defense while he played, Marty's best seasons were after Stevens retired and Niedermayer went to the Ducks to play with Rob.

  5. Teams great, but I will never go again. I'm sick of the Gestapo security tactics. They're always throwing in your face how the arena is "private property, get away from it". Then they threaten to have you arrested and banned for life if you put their workers in their place. plus you get harassed by hobos and church members are also threatening you with arrest, as is the Hotel Indigo. And don't even think of asking to speak to the owners, that's a "no no".

  6. I love the fact you're a fan of the devils. like hearing you talk them up when many count them out

  7. Just as an aside, it's been suggested this game may have altered NHL history in that, in an indirect way, it may have kept Mario Lemieux away from the Devils. Lemieux was the top junior player then, up for draft in 1984; there was no draft lottery then, the team with worst record in the league automatically got 1st pick, and the Devils and the Penguins were the 2 worst teams in the league. Most experts considered the Devils the worse of the 2 and favored them to land the first pick. But this game, and Gretzky's comments, embarrassed the Devils' organization so badly that they fired coach Billy McMillan after this game (the team was 2-18-0 under him) and replaced him with Tom McVie. McVie was nobody's idea of Scotty Bowman or Al Arbour but he was a better coach than McMillan and he drove the team hard, they went 15-38-7 for him the rest of the year, bad but a big boost from the pace they were setting under the previous coach. Basically, the Devils spent the rest of the year trying hard to show they weren't "Mickey Mouse." Meanwhile, Pittsburgh tanked with impunity, sticking with a one-year coach (Lou Angotti) who had lost the clubhouse, and dumping a few decent players late in the year when it was close (including Randy Carlyle, at one time the "face" of the Penguins). They narrowly "beat out" NJ for worst record and got Lemieux.

  8. I know this was posted years back, but fuckin glad to be alive to watch 95, 00, and 03 cups, showing up again game 7 to Avs, and the fall of the Devs in 2012 finals. I will say the 00-01 team was nasty and Avs just had our number. But what a fight.

  9. It was once suggested the Mickey Mouse game may have altered NHL history in that, in an indirect way, it may have kept Mario Lemieux away from the Devils. Lemieux was the top junior player then, up for draft in 1984; there was no draft lottery then, the team with worst record in the league automatically got 1st pick, and the Devils and the Penguins were the 2 worst teams in the league. Most experts considered the Devils the worse of the 2 and favored them to land the first pick. But that Mickey Mouse game, and Gretzky's comments, embarrassed the Devils' organization so badly that they fired coach Billy McMillan after that game (the team was 2-18-0 under him) and replaced him with Tom McVie. McVie was nobody's idea of Scotty Bowman or Al Arbour but he was a better coach than McMillan and he drove the team hard, they went 15-38-7 for him the rest of the year, bad but a big boost from the pace they were setting under the previous coach. Basically, the Devils spent the rest of the year trying hard to show they weren't "Mickey Mouse." Meanwhile, Pittsburgh tanked with impunity, sticking with that one-year coach (Lou Angotti) who had lost the clubhouse, and dumping a few decent players late in the year when it was close (including Randy Carlyle, at one time the "face" of the Penguins). They narrowly "beat out" NJ for worst record and got Lemieux.

    Just imagine if the NJ Devils were bad enough to win the 1984 draft lottery and land Mario Lemieux.

  10. NEW JERSEY DEVILS IN THE HOCKEY HALL OF FAME
     
    01. 1984: Jacques Lemaire
    02. 1995: Larry Robinson
    03. 1998: Peter Stastny
    04. 2001: Viacheslav Fetisov
    05. 2006: Herb Brooks
    06. 2007: Scott Stevens
    07. 2008: Igor Larionov
    08. 2009: Lou Lamoriello
    09. 2011: Joe Niewendyk
    10. 2011: Doug Gilmour
    11. 2013: Brendan Shanahan
    12. 2013: Scott Niedermayer
    13. 2014: Pat Burns
    14. 2015: Phil Housley
    15. 2017: Dave Andreychuk
    16. 2018: Martin Brodeur

  11. Lou Lamoriello should have let Martin Brodeur keep on playing until he got his 700th win! Screw the playoffs! Some things are more important! Brodeur retires with 691 wins! Robbed! Plus, the numerous lockouts also contributed to Brodeur not getting his 700th win! St. Louis should have let Brodeur keep on playing until he got his 700th win.

  12. I would put Marty Brodeur on par with Ken Dryden.
    When those teams had defensive breakdowns, both those guys came up clutch.
    It's all about making the key save at the right time of the game.
    Like pitching in baseball, you don't win multiple championships with SOLID goaltending.

  13. Blackwood and Wedgewood are Devils future goaltenders. Schneider is garbage and the reason Marty left 😡
    Schneider is a backup goalie not a starter!

  14. I find it utterly ridiculous that “critics” try to come up with any excuse under the sun to not give the Devils franchise the credit they are truly due. The objective is to win and for a period of over 10 years they did that pretty much better than anyone. Brodeur is by far the greatest goalie of all time. He literally changed the game and they imposed the trapezoid. Do not take that part of the game away from him in terms of a goaltending skill set. He was not the mental headcase like Roy and he was more consistent than Hasek. And he holds all the records so the haters can suck it. Stevens does not get enough credit for his prominence – I’d take him over Borque and Niedermayer is as good of a defenseman as has ever played the game. It’s just stupid to disparage the team because you don’t like their “style”. Meanwhile an awful lot of teams with better “style” lost an awful lot to the Devils in that era.

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