That clunk wound up making history. A few minutes later, the Red Wings had a series-tying 1-0 victory at Met Center in Bloomington, Minnesota, in the first Stanley Cup Playoff game to be decided by a video review in overtime.
The 1991-92 season was the first when the NHL used video review for goal/nongoal calls. But the procedure was nothing like the current Situation Room setup with each team able to access video and coaches able to challenge. Back then, Shick said, he was the one who made the call to review.
Of his experience with video review during the regular season, Shick said: "Not a whole lot. We were still in the one-referee system, so basically it was the video goal judge who sat up in the replay booth. But that game happened to be in the playoffs, and Wally Harris was the series manager. He was the guy who was with me on the headset when I called upstairs. "I skated over to the penalty box and picked up the phone and I called Wally and I said, 'Wally, did you get a look at that?' He said, 'Get a look at what?' I said, 'On that breakaway, why don't you rewind the tape and have a look?' He goes, 'Just a minute.' And they rewound the tape … and sure enough, it was in."
The tape showed the puck had hit a metal bar inside the net and quickly rebounded back onto the ice; it was unquestionably a goal. Shick knew the game was over. Now he had to tell the Red Wings, the North Stars -- and the Minnesota fans.