Cowboys Hockey

1988 - Cowboy Tuesday

It is difficult to write anything about Cowboy Tuesday because, as the saying goes, "if you remember it, you weren't there."

It was arguably the most celebrated victory in Cowboy history. It took place following an underdog play-off win by the Cowboys against the top seeded and much rivaled "Collectors" hockey team. It began in the dressing room following the game, carried on up stairs in the Seafair lounge, moved to Silhouette's Night Club (also owned by Seafair management) and continued well past closing hours.

The details of the party are best left to personal recounts as the specifics are sometimes distorted by fact and varied by recall and perspective. What is more important is the significance of this celebration.

The Collectors had dominated the league that year and when the Cowboys had to face them in the first round of the play-offs, few expected the result that followed. The Cowboys shut out the Collectors 1 - 0 in the third game of a best of three. It was as important a victory for the league as it was for the Cowboys. Upsetting the heavily favoured first place team suddenly helped balance the league, adding immediate parity to the play-offs that otherwise would have been a rout. It is perhaps why so many others celebrated with the Cowboys that night.

Unfortunately for the Cowboys, the celebration was premature and perhaps a lesson to be learned. The pinnacle win took them to a unsustainable level of performance and perhaps to a subconscious understanding that the celebration could not be topped. They failed to win the Play-offs, and more devastingly it tested the substainibilty of the team itself. Could this be as good as it gets for the Cowboys?

The coming few years would test that notion. The Cowboys staved off the top team that year, but as is the case in all senior men's hockey, the talent and competition would continue to grow stronger each year. Underdog would become a familiar role for the Cowboys, and Cowboy Tuesday is a constant reminder that in team sport, anything can happen and that team spirit is more important than the game itself.

Read more: A Historical Overview 1979-1997