1974–75 Kansas City Scouts season
NHL hockey team season (inaugural season) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 1974–75 Kansas City Scouts season was the first season for the franchise. The NHL completed its first 8-year expansion cycle by adding franchises in Washington and Kansas City.[1] Kansas City was awarded an NHL franchise on June 8, 1972. The city had a hockey history but had been a home to minor league hockey teams only. Initially, the franchise chose MO-hawks as their nickname to reflect a Missouri-Kansas union, an attempt to appeal to both Kansas and Missouri residents (the Kansas City metropolitan area spills across both states) and incorporating Missouri's postal abbreviation with the Kansas Jayhawker nickname, but the name was vetoed by the Chicago Black Hawks.[1] Therefore, the franchise selected its 2nd choice, Scouts. This was named after the famous statue overlooking the city.[1]
1974–75 Kansas City Scouts | |
---|---|
Division | 5th Smythe |
Conference | 9th Campbell |
1974–75 record | 15–54–11 |
Goals for | 184 |
Goals against | 328 |
Team information | |
General manager | Sid Abel |
Coach | Bep Guidolin |
Captain | Simon Nolet |
Arena | Kemper Arena |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Simon Nolet and Wilf Paiement (26) |
Assists | Simon Nolet (32) |
Points | Simon Nolet (58) |
Penalty minutes | Wilf Paiement (101) |
Wins | Peter McDuffe (7) |
Goals against average | Denis Herron (3.75) |
The arrival of the Scouts and Capitals led the NHL into creating 4 divisions, the Adams, Norris, Patrick and Smythe Divisions. The Scouts would be placed in the Smythe Division while their expansion cousins, the Capitals, would be in the Norris Division. The Scouts played for the first time on October 9 in Toronto. With construction of Kemper Arena (the Scouts home arena) starting late, then delayed by union work stoppages, the Scouts were forced to play their first 8 games on the road losing 7 and tying 1. On November 2, the Scouts made their home debut losing 4–3 to the Black Hawks.[1] The following day they would get their first win beating the Capitals in Washington 5–4. The highlight of the seasons would come on January 23 when the Scouts upset the Bruins 3–2 in Boston. Despite being led in scoring by team captain Simon Nolet, the Scouts finished in last place with a 15–54–11 record.
Kansas City's games aired on radio station WDAF-AM with Dick Carlson the play-by-play broadcaster. A limited number of road contests were televised by KBMA Channel 41. Gene Osborn handled play-by-play with Bill Grigsby serving as analyst.