RED DEER, Alberta (AP) â The old Crown and Anchor bar in Red Deer was famous for its line drawn down the middle when hosting fans during the Battle of Alberta playoff games of the late 1980s.
Calgary Flames fans on one side. Edmonton Oilers fans on the other.
NHL allegiances, after all, are split in the community of just over 100,000 people that sits just about halfway between the two cities on Highway 2, about 95 miles (152.9 kilometers) from each. The Flames host the Oilers in Game 1 to kick off the second round of the NHL playoffs on Wednesday night in a Battle of Alberta with stakes not seen in decades.
âTo see both fan bases totally engaged in playoffs is something that has just never happened in a lot of peopleâs lifetimes who are under the age of 40,â said Merrick Sutter, senior vice president of the Red Deer Rebels and nephew of Flames coach Darryl Sutter. âWe see it every day in Red Deer, just the sheer nature of being exactly in the middle.â
The Oilers and Flames have met five times in the postseason, but not in 31 years. Three of the series went seven games and the Oilers won four of them.
Red Deer wins no matter which team emerges victorious, Mayor Ken Johnston said.
âReally, every city from Fort McMurray in the north to Lethbridge in the south is going to benefit from the series, the bars, the restaurants, the hospitality industry, the ability for people to come together and socialize ⦠and it couldnât come at a better time from that perspective,â he told The Canadian Press. âPeople are just so eager to get out and be in person.â
[NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs 2022 schedule, TV info]
The mayor, by the way, is pulling for the Flames; he has a Calgary jersey and a hat signed by Flames legend Lanny McDonald.
âBeing a good mayor, I also have a little Oilers fanfare to wear from time to time,â he added with a laugh.
Sutter said allegiances in the Battle of Alberta have generational roots. His, of course, were forged in his familyâs long history with the Flames. His dad Brent, now owner, president and GM of the Rebels, coached the Flames for three seasons. Uncle Darrylâs first coaching stint in Calgary was in 2003.
âNot many can understand, but thereâs not very many circumstances where you have two franchises with such a longstanding rivalry,â he said. âThis goes back to grandparents and parents, back in the â80s and whatnot. Itâs embedded. Now, to be able to reignite it is special, but to me itâs really about the younger people who have never seen that rivalry.â
Troy Gillard, who does play-by-play of Rebels games, said Red Deer has unique connections to both teams. He believes the Oilers won some new fans when the club drafted Rebels center Ryan Nugent-Hopkins first overall in 2011.
âEven here at the Rebels, weâre split pretty much 50/50. Itâs gonna be a lot of fun around here the next couple weeks,â Gillard said.
The 2022 playoffs are the first held in full arenas in Canada since the pandemic began. Red Deer was slammed by the omicron variant this past winter, prompting the cancellaton of the world junior championships after just four days.
Now, Red Deer bars are buzzing with anticipation after a couple of years of hard times.
âWeâre all very very excited, itâs been a long time to have this kind of thing happen,â said Brennen Wowk, an Oilers fan and owner of Boâs Bar & Stage. âStaff will be in jerseys of their choice, weâll be pouring lots of beer and have the volume on as loud as it can go.â
Dallas Gaume, the GM of the Red Deer Minor Hockey Association, hopes the clash will help hockey registration numbers in Red Deer return to pre-pandemic numbers. There was no season in 2020-21 due to COVID-19, and the number of returning players dropped by 7.5% this past winter.
âA lot of eyes are going to be on the province in the next two weeks, and I really think weâre going to get some growth out of this,â he said.
The city councils in Calgary and Edmonton have a friendly wager (losers wear face paint and jerseys of the winning team) and two elite Canadian soccer players also made a bet: Sam Adekugbe, who grew up in Calgary and plays in Turkey for Hatayspor, reached out to Alphonso Davies, a Bayern Munich star who grew up in Edmonton.
The loser has to donate $2,000 to the winning teamâs charity foundation and take a photo in their jersey.
Game 2 is Friday in Calgary before the series heads north to Edmonton for Games 3 and 4. The series winner meets either St. Louis or Colorado in the Western Conference Final.
âOne of the Alberta teams is going to be playing for a spot in the Stanley Cup Final,â Gillard said. âItâs going to be heartbreaking for whichever team loses in Round 2, but for whichever team moves on, how exciting is that?â
CALGARY FLAMES v. EDMONTON OILERS
Game 1 â May 18: Oilers at Flames, 9:30 p.m. ET (Sportsnet, CBC, TVA Sports, ESPN)
Game 2 â May 20: Oilers at Flames, 10:30 p.m. ET (Sportsnet, CBC, TVA Sports, ESPN)
Game 3 â May 22: Flames at Oilers, 8 p.m. ET (Sportsnet, CBC, TVA Sports, ESPN2)
Game 4 â May 24: Flames at Oilers, 9:30 p.m. ET (Sportsnet, CBC, TVA Sports, ESPN)
*Game 5 â May 26: Oilers at Flames, TBD
*Game 6 â May 28: Flames at Oilers, TBD
*Game 7 â May 30: Oilers at Flames, TBD
* if necessary
TBD â To Be Determined
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Battle of Alberta allegiances split NHL fans across province originally appeared on NBCSports.com