Cowboys Hockey

1988-89 - The Year of the Outlaws

Ten years into the game, the Cowboys were starting to feel their age. They were getting older, and the league was getting younger. Requests to impose age restrictions were falling on deaf ears. Just prior to the start of the 88-89 season, team manager Hap May (who had taken over from Ron May some years earlier) had reached irreconcilable difference with the league, so he pulled the plug.

But a year without the Cowboys in competition was more than some could bear, so Doug Collins volunteered to take over the team. But with the season start only a week away, and the Cowboys officially resigned from the league, a new team had been put in their place. Nevertheless, despite their differences, the league preferred the Cowboys over a new team, so with some negotiation and politics the new team was ousted and the Cowboys were welcomed to return.

However, with some key players missing, they were hardly the Cowboys at all. Still, enough players were willing to return to make a go of it, so they donned no-name white jerseys and played the season under the name of the Outlaws. It was a difficult year. The team struggled to dress enough players each game and ended up missing the play-offs for the first time ever. Regardless, by the end of the season, all of the players had returned for at least a game or two, and by the next season the Cowboys were back.

It was a year of transition, a bit of rebuilding and a changing of the guard. From then on, for several years, aging bodies would have to struggle to compete, but one thing was sure; life without the Cowboys was something many could not accept.

 

 

 

 

Read more: A Historical Overview 1979-1997