But first a bit of background on what led to the near-disaster at For Neverlose.
With a league-leading 118 points (54-16-10), the Islanders would launch their Cup crusade against a Pittsburgh club that couldn't even reach the .500 mark.
The Penguins went 31-36-13 over the regular season; good for 75 points. That placed them in the National Hockey League's subterranean depths; 43 points behind the Nassaumen.
When the Preliminary Round series began on April 7, 1982 at the Coliseum. virtually all hands predicted a swift sweep for New York thereby catapulting the Isles on to the Quarter-Final Round.
As expected, Al (Radar) Arbour's skaters not only held serve, they shredded the Visitors, 8-1 and 7-2; or 15-3, if you will over the first pair of games.,
If the underdogs were daunted, it wasn't evident back in Steel City. Pitt rebounded 2-1 in overtime and then undercut the Isles, 5-2, behind the enormous goaltending of Michel Dion.
So, it all came down to Game Five and a vexing question tossed to reporters by the peripatetic Dion: "Who has the edge -- the team that won the first two or the one that won the last two?"
For two periods-plus, Dion ensured that his club had the advantage. Although they were being outshot by a two-to-one margin, the Penguins led 3-1 while Magnificent Michel seemed impregnable.
"By all rights, we should have been up by five goals," said General Manager Bill Torrey. "But we hung in there. We never panicked, never lost our composure."
Really? Bow Tie Bill's words were hard to diges with only six minutes remaining and Dion still nursing the two-goal lead.