"Despite the high hopes we had at the end of that first season, the second time around was no bargain. Year Two was an unmitigated disaster. We were all shocked at how poorly we started the season. And, in all fairness, I have to admit that I was as much a part of the problem as anyone on the team.
"The bad news came right at the start. We opened against the Rangers at The Garden and they got revenge from the previous season by clobbering us, 6-2. Then, two nights later we played them at home and they got more revenge only this time it was a 3-1 defeat for us. It seemed that the hope and confidence just got sucked out of us right at the start. Imagine; at The Garden, the Rangers scored three shorthanded goals against us and at home, we had nine power plays and scored a grand total of no goals!
"Hard as it was to believe but after thirteen games we had only one win and a dozen losses. I finally got to feel a little better about myself early in November when we beat Chicago 6-3. I out-goaled the great Tony Esposito in that one by making 43 saves on 46 shots.
"Then the roof really fell in with five straight losses and fifteen defeats out of the last sixteen games. A little more than halfway through November we went into Edmonton with a dismal record of 2-17-0; or a total of four points in nineteen games.
"Little could we have imagined that things would get even worse; both on the ice and behind the bench. We were up against a mighty Oilers team that was led by Wayne Gretzky and Mark Messier, not to mention a darn good supporting cast.
"Coach MacMillan decided to start Ron Low in goal rather than Yours Truly. Frankly, it seemed like a good move. After all, Low had spent four years as Edmonton goalie and knew their shooters darn well. Low was a good goalie and a great guy. Every one of the Oilers loved him; that is until the game began. Then you can say that they really loved him because -- as they say -- Ronnie became like a duck in a shooting gallery.
"After two periods they had beaten him eight times. Billy Mac figured that he had to spare Low any more humiliation, so he put me in to start the third period. Granted, I held the fort for half a period, and then everything went bonkers against me and my team.
"The Oilers beat me five times in the last half of the period. And when the final buzzer relieved me of my misery the score was 13-4 for Edmonton. Or to put the embarrassment another way; the largest score had been run up against the franchise.
"That would have been bad enough; me and Ron sharing the defeat. Ironically, even the winners were upset by their win. Gretzky and his buddies felt sorry for their old pal, Low. And when the media crowded The Great One, he not only ripped our team but the entire organization right up to our owner, Dr. John McMullen.
"I won't repeat Wayne's whole speech but, suffice to say, the most damaging words were: 'They had better stop running a Mickey Mouse organization.' To his credit, Gretzky later admitted that he shouldn't have said what he had said, but the damage was done. And, unfortunately, the immediate follow-up proved fatal for my pal Billy MacMillan.
"The next morning our team met at the Edmonton airport and Billy came up to me and said, 'I've just been fired.' Then he added, 'Well, not technically, but soon after we land in New Jersey it will happen.'
"Naively, I guess, I said, 'Why?' Then, he showed me the headlines in the Edmonton papers. Splashed in big letters was Wayne's dumping on us. They even appeared in our New York Post when we got home: 'GRETZKY; DEVILS ARE MICKEY MOUSE TEAM.'
"Unfortunately, my good friend Billy officially was fired when we got back. As a result, I've always felt sad that I had played quite poorly in a game that decided Billy's future. I remember it to this day. And that's why that 'Mickey Mouse' game in Edmonton is one I'll never forget!"