Now, as the chances for a second straight Cup seemed likely, the Koch edict remained in effect. Meanwhile, the rampaging Rangers were dead-set against allowing another Cup celebration on Hempstead Turnpike.
The Broadway Blueshirts already had good practice. During the regular 1980-81 season they split a "hard-fought, competitive, four-game regular season set with the Islanders," according to Rivalry co-author Zachary Weinstock.
"It became so catty that referee Bryan Lewis handed out 148 penalty minutes one night in The Garden in February, including nine misconducts."
No sir, the Rangers were not kidding around. They were aiming for a repeat of the 1979 tourney when they upset the favored team from Uniondale.
MAVEN'S MEMORIES
WRITTEN COVERAGE
Road to 1981 Cup, Round 2
First Steps Towards 1981 Cup
From Viking to Uniondale, the Sutter Bros
Bob Bourne's End to End Rush
Mikko Makela: The Flying Finn
Stan's 17 Birthday Memories
Jason Blake Played Big
Shirley Fischler Breaks Gender Barriers
Jim Devellano, The Other Architect
The 2003-04 Season
Mike Bossy's Road to the Islanders
The 2002-03 Homestretch
Maven's Haven
What's more, they entered the 1981 playoff cavalcade as hot as a Coney Island knish. (Potato, not plain.)
For starters, the Rangers had knocked off the Los Angeles Kings who had surpassed the Blueshirts by 25 points during the regular season. Next up was the St. Louis Blues who were 33 points better than New York.
The two straight Rangers playoff wins leading up to Round Three were not flukes.
"What we had done during the regular season didn't matter anymore," said Rangers goalie Steve Baker. "We looked at the playoffs as a new chance for us. We wanted The Cup as much as the Islanders did."
Two-out-of-two Cinderella Series wins was not bad for the underdogs. But beating the defending Champs was another tale that the Islanders were determined not to be told.
It was more than mere Met Area bragging rights that were at stake. Although the Nassaumen had won hockey's world title, the Rangers still were getting the goodies.
The Seventh Avenue skaters even had won a lucrative Sasson Jeans commercial that would have brought home a pretty penny for the likes of Denis Potvin, Mike Bossy and Bryan Trottier had the Isles been chosen.
"We were thinking another upset," said Ron Duguay, one of several Rangers headlined in the Sasson video. "It happened in 1979 -- Rangers in six -- and it could happen again."
Game One at Nassau Veterans' Memorial Coliseum opened on a Tuesday night, April 28, 1981, and the upset that Duguay was talking about looked to have a dose of reality.
Anders Hedberg, an Islanders-killer in '79, lifted the Manhattan six to the lead and teammate Ed Hospodar illuminated another red light. Early in the second period the Rangers bench was chirping about the 2-1 advantage.
"Enough already!" seemed to be the collective retort from the Islanders pew. Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang! Just like that, the Islanders fired back with four goals. They won 5-2 prompting a Bob Bourne squelch: "This isn't '79!"
Mike Bossy: "We had something to avenge. I hadn't forgotten 1979 either."
Then, again, it was only one game.
Game Two -- also at The Coliseum -- on Thursday, April 30, 1981, had a Rangers look to it for the first 20 minutes. The Challengers scored three while the Champs had only one, but that would change as fast as a finger-snap.
In a very short time, the roof fell in on Rangers goalie Steve Baker. His migraines began with Butch Goring's shorthander, followed by Bossy's power play that quickly tied the count.