In September, the Montreal Canadiens marked the 30th anniversary of their one and only trip across
the Atlantic Ocean to the Soviet Union. They brought their reputable franchise to unfriendly territory just
as massive political upheaval was sweeping the region, to face off against their storied rival for the first
time on their soil. This is the story of that tour
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Montreal Canadiens’ Eurotrip: Part 4—Easy prey in Moscow
1. MontrealCanadiens’Eurotrip:Part4— Easy
preyinMoscow
Emotions begin to boil over as the Canadiens’ competition gets serious.
By Andrew Zadarnowski @AZadarski Dec 27, 2020, 12:00pm EST
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2. Photo by Denis Brodeur/NHLI via Getty Images
In September, the Montreal Canadiens marked the 30th anniversary of their one and only trip across
the Atlantic Ocean to the Soviet Union. They brought their reputable franchise to unfriendly territory just
as massive political upheaval was sweeping the region, to face off against their storied rival for the first
time on their soil. This is the story of that tour.
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Part 3: Culture Shock
Halfway through their Soviet tour, the Canadiens players were not just getting mentally tired, but also
physically tired after all the frequent travel and short sleeps. After an early morning flight following the
previous night’s gala, from Riga to Moscow, Pat Burns cancelled practice and gave the players a
necessary day off, satisfied with the progress they had made in overcoming the challenges thus far on
the trip, and hoping that it would recharge batteries.
“We won two good games, but the hardest is yet to come,” said Pat Burns (Sep. 14, 1990, La Presse).
“The Red Army (CSKA) and Dynamo (Moscow) finished first and second last year. And they will be
ready.”
With their Leningrad experience fresh in their minds, the Canadiens arrived in Moscow to similar
circumstances of poverty and disrepair. The hotel was in a bad state, and you couldn’t leave it without
being swarmed by young kids who supplicated for any loose change you might have. Réjean Tremblay
of La Presse noted that Moscow was unrecognizable from the time he visited in 1980 for the Olympic
Games.
The mighty Soviet empire that sculpted itself on dignity and national pride had abandoned its people to
despair and survival. In one of his daily entries, Tremblay quoted his media colleague from CBC, John
Hancock: “This is too sad. I can’t handle any more of this country.” (Sep. 16, 1990, La Presse)
Emotions were running high in Moscow as a crowd of approximately 200,000 people took to the streets
earlier in the day demanding the resignation of Mikhail Gorbachev and his prime minister as the Soviet
regime engaged, peacefully for now, in a battle of wills with the people of Moscow. Surely out of an
overabundance of caution, the media contingent following the Canadiens found themselves at the
Canadian embassy in Moscow writing their daily reports, under the pretense of better telephone access
to their home bases, but also an invitation that was rather hard to refuse under the societal
circumstances.
3. On the ice, Burns had a good top line in Richer, Savard, and Corson, but the other lines were slow to
show any real promise. The “Kid Line” of Mark Pederson, Stephan Lebeau, and Tom Chorske was doing
fine, mainly thanks to the play of Lebeau, and obviously Guy Carbonneau was his usual great self
regardless of who he played with, especially as general of the team’s much-used penalty-kill unit. But
others were failing to really stand out.
As the Canadiens got ready for the first part of the toughest section of their tour against Dynamo
Moscow, Burns decided to scratch several veterans, most notably Petr Svoboda, Carbonneau, and
Patrick Roy, in order to allow some other lesser-used players to play. Mike McPhee would also be
making his first start, testing out his recovery from an abdominal injury. An exhibition game would of
course permit the leniency of scratching several veterans, but in retrospect that was probably a bad
decision.
Nine thousand people packed the arena to watch the Canadiens falter out of the gates, not prepared
mentally or physically for the game. Dynamo took advantage of that and came out hard.
4. The games on this tour, so far, had been rather easy for Montreal. Suddenly they were faced with a foe
that was charged emotionally and prepared physically. The Soviets came out banging, and the
Canadiens lost their cool and forwent discipline for cheap hits and stupid penalties all game long. Todd
5. Ewen, unable to keep up with the pace imposed by the Soviets, got frustrated and launched into a fight,
getting ejected from the game early in the first period. Carbonneau, a planned scratch, came into the
game in the second period to replace Ewen.
The Canadiens lost the game 4-1, with the first three Dynamo goals being scored on the power play as
the Canadiens could absolutely not stay out of the penalty box, yet again. Overall they took eight
penalties. Burns reportedly exploded on his players during the first intermission, but it did little to
persuade the team to pull it together. Mathieu Schneider spent the game head-hunting, taking several
cross-checking penalties. Shayne Corson, Stéphane Richer, and Russ Courtnall also lacked the
necessary discipline to compete with a team of Dynamo’s stature.
The Canadiens scored their only goal in the final minute of the third period, when Pederson scored off of
a brilliant pass from Andrew Cassels across the crease. It was too little too late. The game was never
close, and although there was the slightest glimmer of a comeback in the third period for the Canadiens,
Richer took a double-minor to end any momentum swing in the Habs’ favour.
After the game, Burns said that the Canadiens were just handed a lesson on the art of puck-possession,
and he praised Dynamo for their skill, saying that they would surely rank among the top 10 best teams
in the NHL. The Dynamo lineup included some notable players, including future NHLers Alex Kovalev,
Igor Korolev, Alexander Semak, Alex Karpovtsev, and Alexei Zhamnov, as well as Alexander
Galchenyuk, the father of the future Canadiens first-rounder, and was coached by Zinetula
Bilyaletdinov, Alexander Romanov’s grandfather.
Brian Hayward was named the player of the game for the Canadiens, as he did what he could to keep
the team in the match. André Racicot replaced him halfway through the game with the score just 1-0
Dynamo, despite the lopsided game play.
“We were frustrated to see them pass the puck to each other so easily,” said Hayward (Sep. 18, 1990,
Le Soleil). “We were also tired. This long trip is beginning to show its effects. If we hope to beat the Red
Army, we will need to be at the highest level of concentration and discipline.”
“If we play like this against the Red Army, they will pummel us 10-0,” said captain Carbonneau, who was
kept busy by his teammates’ lack of self-control.
“We were never in control of the game,” summarized Brian Skrudland (Sep. 18, 1990, La Presse). “We
lacked discipline against Riga as well, but Dynamo is not Riga, and they made us pay.”
“For the last game we will have everyone.” said Serge Savard, unhappy with his team’s performance,
but extending an olive branch to his players. “Tonight we didn’t ice the best lineup.”
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“The last game against the Red Army is the big one, and they will be ready. We will be as well,” Burns
promised. (Sep. 17, 1990, La Presse)
But if this loss was going to serve as a wakeup call to clear heads and present a united front for their
final and greatest challenge, it swung the other way entirely. During practice the next day, several fights
almost broke out between the Canadiens players.