Ray Shero told the backstory to Placey: Flyers owner Ed Snider and executive vice president Keith Allen hired Shero before the 1971-72 season, giving the highly successful minor-league coach a chance at the NHL level he was not getting from his then-parent club, the New York Rangers. In Fred Shero's first season, Philly missed playoffs by one standings point-on a goal scored with four seconds left in the team's final regular season game.
Snider was not pleased. The following day Shero met with the owner and Allen. Snider aired out his frustration, then asked if Shero "had anything to say?"
"Yes," said Shero, "I would like to hire an assistant coach."
"What?!" said Snider.
"I need help," said Shero, matter-of-factly. When the coach left, Snider turned to Allen to say, "Do we fire him now or tomorrow? What is this? How stupid can [Shero] be?"
As it turned out, Allen smoothed over the request. Shero got his wish. For the 1972-73 season, the Flyers hired Mike Nykoluk as the NHL's first full-time assistant coach. Media members interpreted it as a lack of confidence in Shero's coaching acumen, but the Hall of Fame coach knew what he was doing. With Nykoluk (a long-time minor-league player) by his side, Shero guided the Flyers to their first-ever winning season. The following season, Philadelphia won the 1974 Stanley Cup and repeated the feat in 1975. The Flyers were the first Cup-winning team from the 1967-68 group of six expansion teams (doubling the NHL from the "Original Six" to 12 teams total with the "Next Six" joining.