It was a year of expansion, as the
New Jersey Rockets[1] were added and the schedule was lengthened by almost two months. The 44-game regular-season schedule was an increase of four games, and the playoff schedule was expanded to two best-of-three rounds and one best-of-five championship series.[2] This was done to, as a league spokesman put it, force players to decide on either the indoor or outdoor game [3]
With the
Hartford Hellions moving to Memphis[4] and the
San Francisco Fog moving to Kansas City,[5] the league went back to a two-division setup. The top four finishers in each division would advance to the MISL playoffs.[6] The
Pittsburgh Spirit returned,[7] and had the second-best record in the league.
While the Arrows had the best record in the league and
Steve Zungul won the scoring title again,[8] New York was pushed hard in the playoffs. In their first round matchup with the
Buffalo Stallions, the Stallions won the first game of the series in New York and held a 4-2 lead with 1:20 remaining in Game 2. Zungul and Omar Gomez scored 36 seconds apart to tie the match, and Dragan Simic scored in overtime to even the series.[9] New York won Game 3 to advance.
New York and St. Louis would eventually meet in a five-game championship series that would see every game decided by two goals or less, including two in overtime.[10][11][12][13][14]
The 1981–82 regular season schedule ran from November 13, 1981, to April 25, 1982. The 44 games per team was an increase of four over the
1980–81 schedule of 40 games.[18]
It was a year of expansion, as the
New Jersey Rockets[1] were added and the schedule was lengthened by almost two months. The 44-game regular-season schedule was an increase of four games, and the playoff schedule was expanded to two best-of-three rounds and one best-of-five championship series.[2] This was done to, as a league spokesman put it, force players to decide on either the indoor or outdoor game [3]
With the
Hartford Hellions moving to Memphis[4] and the
San Francisco Fog moving to Kansas City,[5] the league went back to a two-division setup. The top four finishers in each division would advance to the MISL playoffs.[6] The
Pittsburgh Spirit returned,[7] and had the second-best record in the league.
While the Arrows had the best record in the league and
Steve Zungul won the scoring title again,[8] New York was pushed hard in the playoffs. In their first round matchup with the
Buffalo Stallions, the Stallions won the first game of the series in New York and held a 4-2 lead with 1:20 remaining in Game 2. Zungul and Omar Gomez scored 36 seconds apart to tie the match, and Dragan Simic scored in overtime to even the series.[9] New York won Game 3 to advance.
New York and St. Louis would eventually meet in a five-game championship series that would see every game decided by two goals or less, including two in overtime.[10][11][12][13][14]
The 1981–82 regular season schedule ran from November 13, 1981, to April 25, 1982. The 44 games per team was an increase of four over the
1980–81 schedule of 40 games.[18]