Coached by the legendary Scotty Bowman, the 1977-78 edition was as good as any of the four in the dynasty, winning 59 games, losing 10 and tying 11. (The Canadiens went 58-11-11 in 1975-76, 60-8-12 in 1976-77 and 52-17-11 in 1978-79.) Fifteen players dressed for all four teams; nine would be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame: goalie Ken Dryden, forwards Yvan Cournoyer, Bob Gainey, Guy Lafleur, Jacques Lemaire and Steve Shutt, and defensemen Guy Lapointe, Larry Robinson and Serge Savard, the "Big Three" of Montreal's blue line.
1977-78 Montreal Canadiens roster
Dryden, Lafleur, Gainey, Robinson and Savard combined to win 19 individual trophies during the span. In 1977-78, Dryden and backup Michel Larocque shared the Vezina Trophy, then given to the goaltenders on the team that allowed the fewest goals; Lafleur won the Hart Trophy as MVP, the Art Ross Trophy as the League's scoring leader and the Lester B. Pearson (now Ted Lindsay) Award as the most outstanding player as voted by the players; Gainey won the Selke Trophy as the best defensive forward in the NHL; and Robinson won the Conn Smythe Trophy as MVP of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
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No matter the stupendous talent on the 1977-78 Canadiens, Robinson remembers something even greater than the actual numbers.
"Our chemistry was more important than the skill," he said. "You spent more time together as a group with each other than you did with your own families. Going to the rink, practicing, travel … Back then we didn't travel on charters; we flew commercial. I remember one time coming home when we couldn't get out of Chicago so we spent eight hours in the airport. Can you imagine the stuff that went on?"
Robinson laughed as the memories of the mischief washed over him.
"Oh my God, it was great," he said.