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1997–98 NHL season

National Hockey League season


National Hockey League season

FieldValue
title1997–98 NHL season
leagueNational Hockey League
sportIce hockey
durationOctober 1, 1997 – June 16, 1998
draftDraft
draft_link1997 NHL Entry Draft
top_pick_linkList of first overall NHL draft picks
top_pickJoe Thornton
picked_byBoston Bruins
seasonRegular season
season_champ_namePresidents' Trophy
season_champsDallas Stars
MVPDominik Hasek (Sabres)
MVP_linkHart Memorial Trophy
top_scorerJaromir Jagr (Penguins)
top_scorer_linkArt Ross Trophy
playoffsPlayoffs
playoffs_link1998 Stanley Cup playoffs
finalsStanley Cup
finals_link1998 Stanley Cup Finals
finals_champDetroit Red Wings
finals_runner-upWashington Capitals
playoffs_MVPSteve Yzerman (Red Wings)
playoffs_MVP_linkConn Smythe Trophy
nextseason_year[1998–99](1998-99-nhl-season)
prevseason_year[1996–97](1996-97-nhl-season)
seasonslistnamesNHL
no_of_games82
no_of_teams26
TVCBC, TSN, SRC (Canada)
ESPN, Fox (United States)

| finals_runner-up = Washington Capitals ESPN, Fox (United States) The 1997–98 NHL season was the 81st regular season of the National Hockey League (NHL). For the first time, there was a break in the regular season to allow NHL players join their respective national hockey teams competing at the Winter Olympics. The Hartford Whalers relocated to North Carolina, becoming the Carolina Hurricanes. The Stanley Cup champions were the Detroit Red Wings, who swept the Washington Capitals in four games.

League business

Approval of four expansion teams

On June 25, 1997, the National Hockey League approved of four expansion franchises for Nashville, Atlanta, Columbus, and Saint Paul expanding the league to 30 teams by 2000. These franchises became the Nashville Predators in 1998, the Atlanta Thrashers in 1999, and the Columbus Blue Jackets and Minnesota Wild in 2000.

To accommodate the incoming expansion teams, 1997–98 became the last season of the four-division quasi-geographic alignment inherited from the traditional Adams/Patrick/Norris/Smythe set. The league would change the following season to a six-division, more purely geographic alignment, with the Toronto Maple Leafs moving from the Western to Eastern Conference, among others.

Franchise relocation

The Hartford Whalers relocated to North Carolina, becoming the Carolina Hurricanes. They would remain in the Northeast Division until realignment the following season. It would be another 14 years before another NHL team would relocate.

Entry draft

The 1997 NHL entry draft was held at the Civic Arena in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on June 21. Joe Thornton was selected first overall by the Boston Bruins.

Rule changes

Due to the retirement of Craig MacTavish after the 1996–97 season, all NHL players were now required to wear helmets. MacTavish was the last helmetless player remaining in the league to be grandfathered in to 1979–80 rules requiring incoming players to wear helmets.

Arena changes

  • The relocated Carolina Hurricanes moved from Hartford Civic Center in Hartford, Connecticut to Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina, while their new arena in Raleigh, North Carolina was under construction.
  • The Washington Capitals moved from US Airways Arena in Landover, Maryland to the MCI Center in Washington, D.C. on December 5, 1997, with MCI acquiring the naming rights.

Regular season

First international regular season games

The Vancouver Canucks and Mighty Ducks of Anaheim opened the season with a two-game series at Yoyogi National Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan, on October 3 and 4, 1997, the first time the NHL played regular games outside of North America.

Olympics and new All-Star Game format

This was the first time that the NHL took a break during the regular season to allow NHL players join their respective national hockey teams competing at the Winter Olympics. The league's break lasted 17 days from February 8 to 24 while NHL players participated at the men's hockey event at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.

As a preview for the NHL's first Olympic participation, a new format was introduced at the 1998 All-Star Game at General Motors Place in Vancouver, the home to the Vancouver Canucks, on January 18. The league had the all-star teams consist of a team of North Americans playing against a team of players from the rest of the world.

Highlights

The all-time record for most shutouts in a season, set at 127 just a year earlier, was broken again as 160 shutouts were recorded, 13 of which were earned by Dominik Hasek, who set a League record with 11 teams shut-out. He zeroed the New York Rangers three times, and Los Angeles, Anaheim, Tampa Bay, Boston, Calgary, Washington, Montreal, Ottawa, Pittsburgh and Edmonton once each. Only two teams, the St. Louis Blues and the Detroit Red Wings, averaged more than three goals scored per game. In addition, only one player, Jaromir Jagr, reached the 100-point plateau during the regular season.

Jari Kurri reached 600 goals in his career, finishing with 601.

For the first time since 1968–69 season, the Chicago Blackhawks missed the playoffs.

Final standings

;Eastern Conference

;Western Conference

Playoffs

Main article: 1998 Stanley Cup playoffs

Bracket

The top eight teams in each conference made the playoffs, with the two division winners seeded 1–2 based on regular season records, and the six remaining teams seeded 3–8. In each round, teams competed in a best-of-seven series (scores in the bracket indicate the number of games won in each best-of-seven series). The NHL used "re-seeding" instead of a fixed bracket playoff system. During the first three rounds, the highest remaining seed in each conference was matched against the lowest remaining seed, the second-highest remaining seed played the second-lowest remaining seed, and so forth. The higher-seeded team was awarded home-ice advantage. The two conference winners then advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals.

Awards

The NHL Awards took place in Toronto, Ontario

William M. Jennings Trophy:Martin Brodeur, New Jersey Devils

All-Star teams

First TeamPositionSecond Team
Dominik Hasek, Buffalo SabresGMartin Brodeur, New Jersey Devils
Nicklas Lidstrom, Detroit Red WingsDChris Pronger, St. Louis Blues
Rob Blake, Los Angeles KingsDScott Niedermayer, New Jersey Devils
Peter Forsberg, Colorado AvalancheCWayne Gretzky, New York Rangers
Jaromir Jagr, Pittsburgh PenguinsRWTeemu Selanne, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
John LeClair, Philadelphia FlyersLWKeith Tkachuk, Phoenix Coyotes

Player statistics

Scoring leaders

PlayerTeamGPGAPTS
Jaromir JagrPittsburgh773567102
Peter ForsbergColorado72256691
Pavel BureVancouver82513990
Wayne GretzkyNY Rangers82236790
John LeClairPhiladelphia82513687
Zigmund PalffyNY Islanders82454287
Ron FrancisPittsburgh81256287
Teemu SelanneAnaheim73523486
Jason AllisonBoston81335083
Jozef StumpelLos Angeles77215879

Source: NHL. |

PlayerTeamGPGAPts
Steve YzermanDetroit2261824
Sergei FedorovDetroit22101020
Tomas HolmstromDetroit2271219
Nicklas LidstromDetroit2261319
Joe JuneauWashington2171017
Adam OatesWashington2161117
Martin LapointeDetroit219615
Larry MurphyDetroit2231215
Vyacheslav KozlovDetroit226814
Mike ModanoDallas1741014

|} Note: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points

Leading goaltenders

Regular season

PlayerTeamGPMINGASOGAASV%
Ed BelfourDallas6535811129**1.88**.916
Martin BrodeurNew Jersey70412813010**1.89**.917
Tom BarrassoPittsburgh6335421227**2.07**.922
Dominik HasekBuffalo72422014713**2.09**.932
Ron HextallPhiladelphia462688974**2.17**.911
Trevor KiddCarolina472685973**2.17**.922
Jamie McLennanSt. Louis301658602**2.17**.903
Jeff HackettChicago5834411268**2.20**.917
Olaf KolzigWashington6437881395**2.20**.920
Chris OsgoodDetroit6438071406**2.21**.913

Coaches

Eastern Conference

  • Boston Bruins: Pat Burns
  • Buffalo Sabres: Lindy Ruff
  • Carolina Hurricanes: Paul Maurice
  • Florida Panthers: Doug MacLean and Bryan Murray
  • Montreal Canadiens: Alain Vigneault
  • New Jersey Devils: Jacques Lemaire
  • New York Islanders: Rick Bowness and Mike Milbury
  • New York Rangers: Colin Campbell and John Muckler
  • Ottawa Senators: Jacques Martin
  • Philadelphia Flyers: Wayne Cashman and Roger Neilson
  • Pittsburgh Penguins: Kevin Constantine
  • Tampa Bay Lightning: Terry Crisp, Rick Paterson and Jacques Demers
  • Washington Capitals: Ron Wilson

Western Conference

  • Mighty Ducks of Anaheim: Pierre Page
  • Calgary Flames: Brian Sutter
  • Chicago Blackhawks: Craig Hartsburg
  • Colorado Avalanche: Marc Crawford
  • Dallas Stars: Ken Hitchcock
  • Detroit Red Wings: Scotty Bowman
  • Edmonton Oilers: Ron Low
  • Los Angeles Kings: Larry Robinson
  • Phoenix Coyotes: Jim Schoenfeld
  • San Jose Sharks: Darryl Sutter
  • St. Louis Blues: Joel Quenneville
  • Toronto Maple Leafs: Mike Murphy
  • Vancouver Canucks: Tom Renney and Mike Keenan

Milestones

Debuts

The following is a list of players of note who played their first NHL game in 1997–98 (listed with their first team, asterisk(*) marks debut in playoffs):

  • Matt Cullen, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
  • Joe Thornton, Boston Bruins
  • Sergei Samsonov, Boston Bruins
  • Derek Morris, Calgary Flames
  • Olli Jokinen, Los Angeles Kings
  • Sheldon Souray, New Jersey Devils
  • Zdeno Chara, New York Islanders
  • Marc Savard, New York Rangers
  • Chris Phillips, Ottawa Senators
  • Marian Hossa, Ottawa Senators
  • Daniel Briere, Phoenix Coyotes
  • Patrick Marleau, San Jose Sharks
  • Mattias Ohlund, Vancouver Canucks

Last games

The following is a list of players of note who played their last game in the NHL in 1997–98 (listed with their last team):

  • Brent Sutter, Chicago Blackhawks
  • Jari Kurri, Colorado Avalanche
  • Slava Fetisov, Detroit Red Wings
  • Kevin Lowe, Edmonton Oilers
  • Andy Moog, Montreal Canadiens
  • Pat LaFontaine, New York Rangers
  • Joel Otto, Philadelphia Flyers
  • Mike Gartner, Phoenix Coyotes
  • Al Iafrate, San Jose Sharks
  • Kelly Hrudey, San Jose Sharks
  • Jeff Brown, Washington Capitals
  • Brian Bradley, Tampa Bay Lightning
  • Norm Maciver, Phoenix Coyotes

Broadcasting

Canada

This was the tenth and final season that the league's Canadian national broadcast rights were split between TSN and Hockey Night in Canada on CBC. During the regular season, Saturday night games aired on CBC, while TSN primarily had Monday and Thursday night games. Coverage of the Stanley Cup playoffs was primarily on CBC, with TSN airing first round all-U.S. series.

The league then signed a new deal with the fledgling CTV Sportsnet, replacing TSN as the national cable television partner.

United States

This was the fourth season of the league's five-year U.S. national broadcast rights deals with Fox and ESPN. Both ESPN and ESPN2 aired weeknight games throughout the regular season. Fox had the All-Star Game, and the network's weekly regional telecasts then expanded from six to 11 weekend afternoons between January and April. During the first two rounds of the playoffs, ESPN and ESPN2 aired selected games, while Fox had Sunday regional telecasts. Each U.S. team's regional broadcaster produced local coverage of first and second round games (except for those games on Fox). Fox's Sunday telecasts continued into the Conference Finals, while ESPN had the rest of the third round games. The Stanley Cup Finals were also split between Fox and ESPN.

The controversial "FoxTrax" puck system was last used this season. In August 1998, the NHL signed a five-year, $600 million rights agreement with ABC Sports/ESPN, and thus Fox elected not to use the system in the subsequent "lame duck" season.

References

  • {{cite book |last1=Fischler |first1=Stan |last2=Fischler |first2=Shirley ;Notes

References

  1. "1996-97 NHL Goalie Statistics".
  2. "1997-98 NHL Goalie Statistics".
  3. "1997-98 NHL Summary".
  4. "1997-98 NHL Leaders".
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