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Curtis Joseph—Cujo
Although Curtis Joseph enjoyed a
distinguished career in Edmonton, only Petr Klima—who
scored the famous triple overtime winner in the 1990
Stanley Cup finals at the old Boston Garden—will be more
remembered for one single feat as an Oiler.
For Joseph, the magical moment came
in the Game 7 of the team’s first-round playoff series
against the Dallas Stars. During the 1997 playoffs, the underdog Oilers had forced a
winner-take-all game at Dallas’ Reunion Arena based on two thrilling overtime wins in the series.
Expectations pointed to a game 7 overtime as well.
The final looked lost when Joe Nieuwendyk, one of Dallas’ top snipers,
found the puck out of a goalmouth scramble. Nieuwendyk had three-quarters of the net to deposit
the winner, and Dallas fans rose in anticipation of a
sure goal.
As Nieuwendyk shot the puck, Joseph
dove across the crease, miraculously catching the puck
in mid-air. The scene was electric, as Hockey Night in Canada
voice Bob Cole bellowed, "Oh, my good-nessssss!"
and Nieuwendyk had the expression of a man robbed at gunpoint. Joseph kept the puck out; a
split-second reaction forever remembered by Edmonton
fans as "The Save".
"It was totally a reactionary thing,"
said Joseph. "The puck just came into the crease and I
knew I had to get to it. I tried to get myself as much
in the way as possible, and just see what happens."
Soon afterward, Todd Marchant scored
one of the most fondly remembered overtime winners in
Edmonton hockey history.
For Joseph, it was the crowning
moment in a solid Oilers’ career. Born on April 29, 1967,
in Keswick, Ontario, Joseph was pretty well an unknown
commodity in the hockey world until 1988-89, when he
enjoyed a standout season with the University of
Wisconsin Badgers, and was named a conference
All-Star that season. The performance did not impress
NHL scouts, and he went undrafted.
Later, the St. Louis Blues decided to tryout Joseph and,
based on his strong play, signed him as a free agent. Joseph
split his rookie year between the American Hockey
League’s Peoria Rivermen and the Blues, but when he was
called up, he played well enough to win the number-one
job.
From 1989 to 1995, Joseph won 137 games
for the Blues. At the end of the 1995 season, Joseph and Blues
management could not reach a new contract, and Joseph
started the next season with Las Vegas of the
International Hockey League instead of reporting to the
Blues. Although the Oilers already
had number-one goaltender Bill Ranford, general manager and president Glen Sather
believed Joseph would be a good fit and brought the
goaltender to Edmonton.
Nicknamed "Cujo" as a shortened
version of his name and for the famous wild dog from the
Stephen King novel of the same name,
Joseph quickly
became a fan favourite in Edmonton. He won 76 games in
three seasons, set a new franchise record with 14
shutouts (later broken by Tommy Salo) and lived up to
his reputation of making big saves
in key games. Including the Stars series in 1997, Joseph
led the Oilers to a playoff victory against the Colorado
Avalanche in 1998. Down three games to one, Joseph
played spectacularly for the rest of the series, and the
Oilers rallied for a 4-3 series victory against the
Avalanche. Joseph won the Molson Cup in 1997 and
1998 for having the most three-stars selections.
Soon, Joseph’s reputation grew to the
point where the Oilers could no longer afford him, and in
1998, he signed a deal worth approximately $6-million per season with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Over
four seasons with the Maple Leafs, Joseph won 133 games
and led the team to two appearances in the Eastern
Conference finals. Joseph left the Leafs in 2002
for the Detroit Red Wings.
While Cujo has played for a series of
franchises, those Oiler memories still offer him plenty
of comfort.
"If I said what the greatest moments
I had in an Oilers uniform were, I’d have to say it was
my first-ever game as an Oiler against Buffalo, and
winning the series against Dallas and the next year
against Colorado," Joseph said. "There was just such
unbelievable excitement surrounding the team and it was
such an accomplishment to beat teams who were favoured
to beat us. That was bigger than any one play."
But that one play was sweet
indeed—ask any Oiler fan about "The Save" and they’ll be
able to describe it in great detail. Funny, considering
most of them had looked away in horror when Nieuwendyk
found the puck in the slot.
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