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1991–92 Edmonton Oilers season

NHL team season


NHL team season

FieldValue
LeagueNHL
Season1991–92
year1991
TeamEdmonton Oilers
ConferenceCampbell
ConferenceRank6th
DivisionSmythe
DivisionRank3rd
Record36–34–10
HomeRecord22–13–5
RoadRecord14–21–7
GoalsFor295
GoalsAgainst297
GeneralManagerGlen Sather
CoachTed Green
CaptainKevin Lowe
AltCaptainCraig MacTavish
Esa Tikkanen
ArenaNorthlands Coliseum
Attendance16,179 (92.4%)
MinorLeagueCape Breton Oilers (AHL)
Winston-Salem Thunderbirds (ECHL)
GoalsLeaderVincent Damphousse (38)
AssistsLeaderVincent Damphousse (51)
PointsLeaderVincent Damphousse (89)
PlusMinusLeaderNorm Maciver (+20)
PIMLeaderDave Manson (220)
WinsLeaderBill Ranford (27)
GAALeaderBill Ranford (3.58)

Esa Tikkanen Winston-Salem Thunderbirds (ECHL)

The 1991–92 Edmonton Oilers season was the Oilers' 13th season in the National Hockey League (NHL), and they were coming off a third-round playoff appearance in 1990–91, losing to the Minnesota North Stars in the Campbell Conference finals.

Prior to the season, the Oilers were involved in a couple of blockbuster deals, the first one occurring on September 19, as Edmonton traded Grant Fuhr, Glenn Anderson, and Craig Berube to the Toronto Maple Leafs in exchange for Vincent Damphousse, Peter Ing, Scott Thornton, and Luke Richardson. A little over two weeks later, the Oilers then dealt Mark Messier to the New York Rangers for Bernie Nicholls, Steven Rice, and Louie DeBrusk. Edmonton also named Ted Green as head coach as John Muckler left the Oilers for a job with the Buffalo Sabres.

Vincent Damphousse was the Oilers leader offensively, scoring a team high 38 goals and 51 assists for 89 points. Joe Murphy had a solid season, earning 82 points. Bernie Nicholls missed 31 games due to injury but recorded 49 points in the 49 games he played in. Defensively, Dave Manson anchored the blueline, leading all defensemen with 15 goals and 47 points and led the club in penalty minutes with 220. Fellow blueliner Norm MacIver earned 40 points in 59 games.

In goal, Bill Ranford appeared in 67 of the Oilers 80 games, winning 27 of them, and he posted a GAA of 3.58, and he earned a shutout along the way.

In the playoffs, the Oilers faced against Wayne Gretzky and the Los Angeles Kings, who finished two points ahead of Edmonton in the standings. The teams split the first four games, before Edmonton took control of the series, winning Game 5 in LA and taking the series with a solid 3–0 win in Game 6. The Oilers faced the regular season division champion Vancouver Canucks in the second round, and after splitting the opening two games in Vancouver, the Oilers won the next two games at home to take a 3–1 series lead. The Oilers lost Game 5 in Vancouver but won the series at home in the sixth game, setting up a matchup against the Chicago Blackhawks for the Campbell Conference championship. Chicago proved too much for the Oilers to handle, as Chicago swept the series, outscoring Edmonton 21–8.

This was the Oilers' eighth conference final appearance in 10 years, and their third in a row. However, the Oilers did not advance this far in the playoffs again until 2006.

Season standings

Schedule and results

|- | 1 || October 4 || Edmonton Oilers || 2–9 || Calgary Flames || 0–1–0 || 0 |- | 2 || October 6 || Los Angeles Kings || 2–2 || Edmonton Oilers || 0–1–1 || 1 |- | 3 || October 8 || Edmonton Oilers || 3–6 || Los Angeles Kings || 0–2–1 || 1 |- | 4 || October 10 || Edmonton Oilers || 2–3 || St. Louis Blues || 0–3–1 || 1 |- | 5 || October 12 || Calgary Flames || 1–3 || Edmonton Oilers || 1–3–1 || 3 |- | 6 || October 15 || Edmonton Oilers || 1–3 || Detroit Red Wings || 1–4–1 || 3 |- | 7 || October 17 || Edmonton Oilers || 2–4 || Chicago Blackhawks || 1–5–1 || 3 |- | 8 || October 19 || Edmonton Oilers || 4–2 || New York Islanders || 2–5–1 || 5 |- | 9 || October 20 || Edmonton Oilers || 4–3 || New York Rangers || 3–5–1 || 7 |- |10 || October 23 || Washington Capitals || 6–5 || Edmonton Oilers || 3–6–1 || 7 |- |11 || October 26 || Vancouver Canucks || 4–5 || Edmonton Oilers || 4–6–1 || 9 |- |12 || October 27 || Edmonton Oilers || 6–3 || Vancouver Canucks || 5–6–1 || 11 |- |13 || October 30 || St. Louis Blues || 2–2 || Edmonton Oilers || 5–6–2 || 12

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| Legend:

Playoffs

|- | 1 || April 18 || Edmonton Oilers || 3–1 || Los Angeles Kings || 1–0 |- | 2 || April 20 || Edmonton Oilers || 5–8 || Los Angeles Kings || 1–1 |- | 3 || April 22 || Los Angeles Kings || 3–4 || Edmonton Oilers || 2–1 |- | 4 || April 24 || Los Angeles Kings || 4–3 || Edmonton Oilers || 2–2 |- | 5 || April 26 || Edmonton Oilers || 5–2 || Los Angeles Kings || 3–2 |- | 6 || April 28 || Los Angeles Kings || 0–3 || Edmonton Oilers || 4–2

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| Legend:

Season stats

Scoring leaders

PlayerGPGAPtsPIM
Vincent Damphousse8038518953
Joe Murphy8035478252
Craig Simpson7924376180
Scott Mellanby80232750197
Bernie Nicholls4920294960

Goaltending

Ron Tugnutt3124110100.8634.84

Playoff stats

Scoring leaders

PlayerGPGAPtsPIM
Joe Murphy168162412
Bernie Nicholls168111925
Vincent Damphousse1668148
Dave Manson16391244
Esa Tikkanen165388

Goaltending

Bill Ranford1690988512.8953.37

Awards and records

Awards

Records

  • 1,081: A new Oilers record for most penalty minutes in a career by defenceman by Kevin Lowe on October 8, 1991.

Transactions

Trades

March 10, 1992To Quebec NordiquesMartin RucinskyTo Edmonton OilersRon Tugnutt
Brad Zavisha

Free agents

F Dean AntosNorthern Michigan Wildcats (NCAA)
F Adam GravesNew York Rangers

|}

Draft picks

Edmonton's draft picks at the 1991 NHL entry draft, the Oilers had two picks in the first round as part of the Wayne Gretzky trade.

Round#PlayerNationalityCollege/Junior/Club team (League)
112Tyler WrightSwift Current Broncos (WHL)
120Martin RucinskyChemopetrol Litvínov (Czechoslovakia)
234Andrew VernerPeterborough Petes (OHL)
356George BreenCushing Academy (USHS-MA)
478Mario NobiliVerdun Collège Français (QMJHL)
593Ryan HaggertyWestminster High School (USHS-CT)
7144David OliverUniversity of Michigan (NCAA)
8166Gary KitchingThunder Bay Flyers (USHL)
10210Vegar BarlieVålerenga (Norway)
11232Evgeny BelosheikinCSKA Moscow (Russia)
12254Juha RiihijärviOulun Kärpät (Finland)
[S](1991-nhl-supplemental-draft)18Tom HoldemanMiami University (CCHA)

References

  • National Hockey League Guide & Record Book 2007

References

  1. "1991-92 Edmonton Oilers Schedule".
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