Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1998 National Hockey League All-Star Game

Professional ice hockey exhibition game


Professional ice hockey exhibition game

FieldValue
game_name1998 NHL All-Star Game
image1998 All-Star Game.gif
image_size225
visitorWorld
home**North America**
visitor_total7
home_total8
visitor_per13
visitor_per22
visitor_per32
home_per13
home_per23
home_per32
dateJanuary 18, 1998
arenaGeneral Motors Place
cityVancouver
MVPTeemu Selanne (Anaheim)
attendance18,422
previous[1997](1997-national-hockey-league-all-star-game)
next[1999](1999-national-hockey-league-all-star-game)

The 1998 National Hockey League All-Star Game took place at General Motors Place in Vancouver, home to the Vancouver Canucks, on January 18, 1998.

The International Showdown

The 48th game was held in the very same year as the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, providing the NHL to show its players from all over the world. To this extent, the NHL had the all-star teams consist of a team of North Americans playing against a team of stars from the rest of the world. These provisions only applied to the players – coaches were still selected based on which teams were the best from each conference at the time of the break. This was the last All-Star Game to feature Honorary Captains and Commissioner's Selections system that began in the 1985 and 1991 games respectively.

The Canadian Hockey Association took the all-star weekend as a way of assembling their team as a tuneup for the Olympics by inviting all 23 of its players and immersing them in what they would see at the Olympics. As the 1998 Olympics also featured the first-ever Olympic women's hockey tournament, an exhibition game between the Canadian national women's hockey team and the American national women's hockey team was also scheduled as part of the all-star festivities. 14,000 people watched the game, making it the highest attended women's hockey game in the sport's history to that time.

As the NHL was being outclassed in terms of revenue by other major sports, some such as Bob Gainey also proposed to change the rules so that a game consisted of four 15-minute quarters rather than three 20-minute periods, an idea that proved unpopular.

Super Skills Competition

The World All-Stars won the first Super Skills Competition in the new International All-Star format. In the individual events Ray Bourque, Peter Forsberg and Brendan Shanahan would share the victory in the Accuracy Shooting event. Al MacInnis won his second-straight and fourth all-time Hardest Shot event, while Dominik Hasek won his second Goaltenders Competition.

Individual event winners

  • Puck Control Relay – Teemu Selanne (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim)
  • Fastest Skater – Scott Niedermayer (New Jersey Devils) – 13.560 seconds
  • Accuracy Shooting – Ray Bourque (Boston Bruins)/Peter Forsberg (Colorado Avalanche)/Brendan Shanahan (Detroit Red Wings) – 4 hits, 6 shots
  • Hardest Shot – Al MacInnis (St. Louis Blues) – 100.4 mph
  • Goaltenders Competition - Dominik Hasek (Buffalo Sabres) - 3 GA, 16 shots

Uniforms

Prior to the start of the 1997–98 season, the NHL changed its conference logos, replacing the teal and purple previously used by the Eastern and Western Conferences with burgundy and dark blue. Although the All-Star Game would not use a conference format, the uniform colors reflected the updated conference colors - which were similar to the changes in colors made by the host Canucks. The North American team wore burgundy uniforms with white and silver trim, while the World team wore white uniforms with blue and silver trim. Both jerseys featured diagonal striping on the body and sleeves, resembling a stylized spotlight design. The NHL shield featured on the front of the jerseys was rendered in black with silver accents instead of the usual orange, the beginning of a trend that would culminate in the redesign of the shield in 2005.

Following from the previous uniform design, players wore the All-Star Game patch on their right shoulder, and their team logo on their left shoulder. In addition, to mark the new international format of the game, players wore the flag of their country of origin on their right upper chest. The uniform design would be used again in the next All-Star Game in Tampa.

The game

The North America All-Stars overcame a 3–0 deficit to the World All-Stars, setting the stage for the largest comeback victory in All-Star Game history in the first International showdown. Prior to the 1998 Game, no team had come back from a three-goal deficit to win. Mighty Ducks of Anaheim right winger Teemu Selanne recorded a hat-trick to become the first European player to be named All-Star MVP. Selanne also became the first player from a losing squad to receive the honour since Grant Fuhr accomplished that feat at the 1986 NHL All-Star Game.

Boxscore

North AmericaWorldFinal score87Head coachCAN Jacques Lemaire (New Jersey Devils)CAN Ken Hitchcock (Dallas Stars)Honorary captainYvan CournoyerKen DrydenAssistant coachLineupScoring summaryPenaltiesShots on goalWin/loss**W** – Martin Brodeur**L** – Nikolai Khabibulin
**Starting Lineup**:**Starting Lineup**:
13–17–13–437–11–11–29
  • Referee: Paul Stewart
  • Linesmen: Mike Cvik, Shane Heyer
  • Television: Fox, CBC, SRC

References

References

  1. Podnieks, Andrew. (2000). "The NHL All-Star Game: Fifty Years of the Great Tradition". HarperCollins.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1998 National Hockey League All-Star Game — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report