It was a comeback that no one could have anticipated, perhaps even by some within the Kings' organization. With many thinking the Oilers were going to eliminate the Kings in Los Angeles, the team had supposedly made no travel arrangements should the series need a fifth and deciding game.
The Oilers, on the other hand, would need to return to Edmonton regardless, either to return home to prepare for their next round opponent or to host the Kings for the final matchup.
So, when the fourth game went in Oilers' favor, knotting the series at two games apiece, the Kings were woefully unprepared to get to Edmonton. Unable to charter their own plane or book a commercial flight, the Kings ended up sharing an aircraft with the Oilers.
"I don't think there was a lot of preparation, both teams didn't think we'd be going back to Edmonton for game five. I think it was a little last minute preparation," suggested Evans. "That might have been the quietest flight I've ever been on," he added.
When Jay Wells hopped on the plane, he was disgruntled to see the Oilers had already boarded. "I remember one thing, they got on the plane first, they took the back seats so I was really mad about that," Wells divulged.
Meanwhile, Bernie Nicholls saw the humor in the bizarre situation. "That was hilarious. They never dreamed we'd be going back. They never got a plane for us," Nicholls said.
"If you can imagine, you just battled in the playoffs and the winner of the next game goes on and there's both teams sitting together on a plane. Never dreamed that would ever happen," he laughed. Nicholls remembers thinking that he thought the Oilers might pull some strings to keep the Kings mired at customs all night, but that never happened.
Wells remembers that the coaches were sitting between the two teams. "The coaches were sort of the blockers. I think that was probably harder on the coaches because they sat all together in two or three rows. I'm sure there were some brain-picking conversations going on, trying to get an edge," he recollected.
Despite it being a hard-fought series and both teams flying together to the final showdown, it was an uneventful flight. "Everybody behaved," Murphy assured.
For Nicholls, the silent journey spoke volumes. "No one had any bragging rights. We were tied. It's not like one team [had an overwhelming lead] or that the Oilers were going to win. I think they had some doubt in their minds," he explained. "That's the great thing about sports. Any team can beat anybody at a given time."
Whether the seeds of doubt had been planted in the minds of the Oilers is unclear, but the results from Game 5 speak for themselves. By the first intermission, the Kings were leading 3-2. They took over the contest in the second period, scoring three more goals to put the game out of reach.
After the Kings' Dan Bonar scored his second of the night early into the final frame, Edmonton scored two more goals, but the damage had already been done. The Oilers lost 7-4 and were eliminated from the post-season. No one could have predicted that the lowly Kings would vanquish the Clarence Campbell champions.