Forty years ago today, the Minnesota North Stars started the greatest brawl in NHL history.
On Feb. 26, 1981, they headed into Boston Garden to face the Bruins in an arena where they were winless in 34 straight games. It took seven seconds to realize that no matter the outcome, the North Stars were done being run over.
After the dust settled, the Minneapolis Tribune ran the story of the melee on the front page of the Feb. 27 edition and staff writer John Gilbert summed things up thusly:
"It happened at 0:07 of the first period. Bobby Smith and Steve Payne, the two North Stars most determined to play artistic hockey, fought back, against Steve Kasper and Keith Crowder.
"It happened over and over, the Bruins shoved, the North Stars reacted. Fights, lots of them. The first period took an hour and 31 minutes. The game took 3 hours and 22 minutes.
"And the North Stars, the meek, mild, easily intimidated North Stars, now lead the NHL in the following categories: most penalties one team, one game — 42; most penalty-minutes, one team, one game — 211; and, most penalties, one team, one period — 34.
"The North Stars share the league record with the Bruins for the game's 81 penalties and the game's 406 penalty-minutes, and for the 80 total penalties in the first period."
And while the North Stars lost the game 5-1, moving their winless streak at Boston Garden to 0-28-7 over 35 games — covering 14 years — several coaches and players said that the brawl was about defining the heart of the team going forward in a league that viewed them as weak.