NHL on Hughes
NHL on Hughes is the de facto name of a TV program that broadcast National Hockey League games on the defunct independent Hughes Television Network during the 1979–80 season.[1] The program aired under the title The NHL '80.[2] Hughes broadcast Thursday night games,[3] the All-Star Game,[4] some playoff games, and the first five games of the Stanley Cup Finals[5] (the final game, Game 6, was broadcast by CBS). Hughes technically, used CBC's Hockey Night in Canada feeds for the American coverage of the first five games of the Stanley Cup Finals. The first broadcast involved the Atlanta Flames against the Chicago Blackhawks on January 25.
Playoff coverage
Round | Teams | Games | Play-by-play | Color commentators |
First round | Pittsburgh-Boston | Game 2 | ||
New York Rangers-Atlanta | Game 4[6] | Jiggs McDonald | Pete Stemkowski | |
Quarterfinals | Montréal-Minnesota | Games 6–7 | Dan Kelly | Mickey Redmond |
Semifinals | Buffalo-New York Islanders | Games 3, 6 (CBC's feed)[7][8] |
Jim Robson (first half of Game 3) Dan Kelly (second half of Games 3 and 6) Bob Cole (first half of Game 6) |
Gerry Pinder (Game 3) Gary Dornhoefer (Game 6) |
Philadelphia-Minnesota | Games 1, 3–4 Game 4 used (CBC's feed)[9][10][11] |
Dan Kelly (Games 1, 3, and first half of Game 4) Jim Robson (second half of Game 4) |
Bill Clement (Game 1) Pete Stemkowski (Game 3) Gerry Pinder and Howie Meeker (Game 4) |
Stanley Cup Finals
Play-by-play | Color commentators |
Bob Cole (Games 1 and 2, first half) Jim Robson (Games 3–5, first half) Dan Kelly (second half of Games 1–5 plus overtime in Game 1) |
Gary Dornhoefer and Dick Irvin Jr. |
gollark: You can run any quantum computing stuff on a regular computer. It just might be unusably slow.
gollark: This is done by making it so that they require large amounts of memory (I think this is mostly an issue for FPGAs though?) or basically just general purpose computation (regular CPUs are best at this) or changing the algorithm constantly so ASICs aren't economically viable.
gollark: The ASICs do that very fast. Some currencies are designed so that ASICs are impractical.
gollark: .
gollark: Mining isn't guessing primes, mostly it's just bruteforcing a hash with a particular number of leading zeros
References
- "Sports BRIEFING". Chicago Tribune. October 10, 1979.
- 1980 Stanley Cup Finals Game 6: NY Islanders - Philadelphia Flyers on YouTube
- "Hughes Network to Show Number of Hockey Games". New York Times. October 11, 1979.
- "NHL, Hughes Network Agree on Prime-Time TV Coverage". Los Angeles Times. October 10, 1979. p. F6.
- Associated Press (May 13, 1980). "Games Will Be Televised". Reading Eagle. p. 22.
- Rangers vs Flames (Atlanta's Last NHL Game) - April 12,1980 on YouTube
- Game 3 1980 Stanley Cup Semifinal Sabres at Islanders (CBC) on YouTube
- Game 6 1980 Stanley Cup Semifinal Sabres at Islanders on YouTube
- 29.04.1980 G1 Minnesota North Stars - Philadelphia Flyers on YouTube
- Flyers vs North Stars (G # 4) 1980 Semi Finals on YouTube
- Flyers vs North Stars 1980 playoffs, Game 4 highlights on YouTube
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