
Dynasty, Grit, and the Blue and Orange Heart!
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A countdown clock. Two sticks of gum. A VCR that needed a nudge. That’s where our journey starts—with the small rituals that reveal the big truth about the New York Islanders: this franchise was built on trust, care, and a room that acted like a family. We sit down with legendary equipment manager Joe McMahon to relive the moments that made the crest matter, from the end of the dynasty to the electricity of the 1992–93 run.
Joe takes us behind the scenes with Al Arbour and Bill Torrey—the sauna talks where decisions were made, the early embrace of video when “rewind” meant a cassette, and the way the head coach checked on a stick boy’s pregame meal. He gives us a street-level view of the room: Bossy’s grace, Billy Smith’s game-day bubble, and the respect that made everyone feel essential. Then the stories deepen. We revisit Dale Hunter’s hit on Pierre Turgeon and the raw emotion in the Coliseum tunnels. Mick Vukota surprises us with a call, confirms the plan with Rich Pilon, and reminds us how that team protected its own.
The night in Pittsburgh comes alive—league hats delivered early, a frantic scramble to hide them at 3–3, and Ray Ferraro’s calm before David Volek’s OT winner at 5:16. We rewind further to the Easter Epic in Landover: soaked gloves, borrowed oxygen, hair dryers buzzing, and the relief of a puck that finally found daylight. Through it all, Joe keeps returning to culture—how alumni weekends bridge eras, how young players learn what the badge means, and why Long Island’s identity is inseparable from its team.
There’s heartache too. Joe shares Aiden’s story and how the hockey community rallied, leading to the Leon Ann McMahon Foundation’s mission—raising funds for biliary atresia research and local hospice. And there’s long-awaited healing: Pat LaFontaine’s induction into the Islanders Hall of Fame on December 13, a moment Joe celebrates as a fan, a friend, and a witness to Patty’s enduring class and community work.
If you love Islanders history, team culture, and the people who make the game feel human, this one hits home. Listen, share with a fellow Isles fan, and tell us: what’s your favorite Islanders moment that didn’t end with the Cup? And if this meant something to you, subscribe, leave a review, and help more fans find the show.