The Canadian | Thirty years without a Cup, “I find it long,” admits Carbonneau

Is there a team whose championship has been celebrated more often than the 1993 Canadiens?


No scientific measure exists, obviously, to know the answer. But the fact remains that each year that ends with 3 or 8 is an opportunity to celebrate what the team led by Jacques Demers accomplished in 1993.

This year, the celebration takes place this week, and we take the opportunity to mark the retirement of Dr David Mulder.


PHOTO JOSIE DESMARAIS, THE PRESS

The Dr David Mulder

Guy Carbonneau is well placed to talk about the celebrations. Captain in 1993, he also served as head coach of the Canadian. Apart from a two-year break in Dallas, he has remained in Montreal since he hung up his skates, and he now knows the media apparatus behind the CH, through his role at RDS.

Carbonneau remembers that in 1993, the players were reminded that the team had never gone “more than seven years without a Cup.” These people had obviously forgotten the famine of 1931 to 1944, but no matter: since the second election of Maurice Duplessis as Prime Minister, the team had never waited more than seven years.

“So in 2003, 10 years, it was already special. Then it went up: 15 years, 20 years, 25 years, and there, 30 years, said Carbonneau, in a press scrum at the Bell Center. At first, it felt like a breeze to be the last team to win, but I find that a long time.

“And not just in Montreal. In Canada, it’s even more difficult to understand. »

Éric Desjardins, who also lives in the greater Montreal region, added to this double drought: that of the Habs, but also that of the Canadian clubs. A shortage that is all the harder to understand given that the share of Canadian teams in the NHL, without being nearly a third as was the case in 1993, has nevertheless remained at 20% or more throughout this period. period. All things considered, Canadian teams should have won the Stanley Cup at least six times since Paul DiPietro, Ed Ronan and Gary Leeman did it.


PHOTO JOSIE DESMARAIS, THE PRESS

Eric Desjardins

Proportion of Canadian teams in the NHL

  • Since 2021: 21.9%
  • 2017-2021: 22.6%
  • 2011-2017: 23.3%
  • 2000-2011: 20%
  • 1999-2000: 21.4%
  • 1998-1999: 22.2%
  • 1996-1998: 23.1%
  • 1995-1996: 26.9%
  • 1993-1995: 30.8%

For us, it’s fantastic to see each other again. But for the fans, it’s not pleasant. I am now a fan. I’m a veteran, but I’m a fan, and I can’t wait to see the Cup again in Montreal, but also in Canada. I watch a lot of hockey and I hope that teams will be competitive to give us this experience.

Eric Desjardins

For Patrice Brisebois, the long period without a Cup only proves the “exceptional” side of the 1993 CH vintage. “The way we did it is exceptional. Ten victories in overtime, he says. Nobody saw us there. There was Quebec, Boston… Pittsburgh was the team to beat. »


PHOTO JOSIE DESMARAIS, THE PRESS

Patrice Brisebois

“As a young person, I found that the more the series progressed, the better we were. We reached overtime and I was confident, I knew we were going to win. It’s easy to say after the fact, but we had the best goalkeeper, Patrick got into the heads of the other teams. We never knew who was going to score, but we knew we would win. That’s what was beautiful about 1993.”

Family meeting

A large majority of the members of the edition were there. According to a list provided by the CH, only Jean-Jacques Daigneault, John LeClair, Kirk Muller and Kevin Haller were missing among those who played most of the playoff games. Jacques Demers, whose state of health now complicates such outings, was not there either.

The group met on Wednesday for dinner, and did it again on Thursday. “It doesn’t really change, the characters stay the same, we’re just whiter, older, we have children, grandchildren. The comics remain the comics, the more serious remain more serious,” describes Desjardins.

We guess, of course, that the fifty-year-olds that most of them have become will celebrate less vigorously than the young adults of yesteryear. Talk to Éric Desjardins, who, as a Quebecer AND hero of the match no 2 in the final, had many opportunities to celebrate.

A summer in Quebec, as a Stanley Cup winner with the Canadiens, what was it like? “It’s really tiring!” he replies, laughing. They talk about hangover of the Stanley Cup… I think we got that! »


source site-63