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2003–04 Calgary Flames season

NHL team season

2003–04 Calgary Flames season

NHL team season

FieldValue
LeagueNHL
Season2003–04
year2003
TeamCalgary Flames
ConferenceWestern
ConferenceRank6th
DivisionNorthwest
DivisionRank3rd
Record42–30–7–3
HomeRecord21–14–5–1
RoadRecord21–16–2–2
GoalsFor200
GoalsAgainst176
GeneralManagerDarryl Sutter
CoachDarryl Sutter
CaptainJarome Iginla
AltCaptainCraig Conroy
Robyn Regehr
ArenaPengrowth Saddledome
Attendance16,580
MinorLeagueLowell Lock Monsters
Las Vegas Wranglers
GoalsLeaderJarome Iginla (41)
AssistsLeaderCraig Conroy (39)
PointsLeaderJarome Iginla (73)
PIMLeaderKrzysztof Oliwa (247)
PlusMinusLeaderJarome Iginla (+21)
WinsLeaderMiikka Kiprusoff (24)
GAALeaderMiikka Kiprusoff (1.69)
ConferenceWinYes

Robyn Regehr Las Vegas Wranglers

The 2003–04 Calgary Flames season was the 24th National Hockey League (NHL) season in Calgary, and the 32nd for the franchise in the NHL. The Flames ended a seven-year playoff drought, qualifying for the post-season for the first time since 1996. The Flames defeated three division winners en route to an appearance in the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals. The Flames were defeated in the finals by the Tampa Bay Lightning in seven games. The run to the finals captured the imagination of the city, while the Red Mile celebrations gained international attention for the "Mardi Gras-like" atmosphere as up to 80,000 people celebrated in the streets after each playoff game.

Head coach Darryl Sutter succeeded Craig Button as the Flames' general manager. Sutter made numerous changes to the roster as he worked to remake the Flames into a fast, physical club. Chris Drury was dealt to the Buffalo Sabres for Rhett Warrener and Steve Reinprecht before the season began. A knee injury to starting goaltender Roman Turek led Sutter to trade for Miikka Kiprusoff, a player he knew from his days with the San Jose Sharks. Kiprusoff responded to the deal by posting an NHL record low goals against average of 1.69.

The Flames were led offensively by Jarome Iginla, who tied Ilya Kovalchuk and Rick Nash for the league lead with 41 goals as the trio shared the Rocket Richard Trophy. Iginla represented the Flames at the 54th National Hockey League All-Star Game in Minnesota, and was named a second team all-star for his performance during the season. Iginla's charity work and leadership both on and off the ice led to his also being awarded the King Clancy Memorial Trophy and NHL Foundation Player Award.

Regular season

After struggling with an injury to starting goaltender Roman Turek in the first game of the season, an early November trade for San Jose Sharks third stringer Miikka Kiprusoff sparked the Flames, as Kiprusoff led Calgary into the playoffs for the first time in eight years.

The Calgary Flames' green hard hat on display at the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Defenceman Mike Commodore became a cult hero for his unruly red mop of hair during the playoffs, leading many fans to wear red afro wigs to playoff games. Craig Conroy brought a team building idea from his days with the St. Louis Blues, having the team award a green hard hat to the hardest working player each time the Flames won. As the exercise gained popularity, fans also began wearing green hard hats to the arena themselves.

The Flames allowed the fewest short-handed goals during the regular season, with just 2.

Season standings

Playoffs

Opening faceoff during game three against Vancouver.

Calgary's defeat of the Vancouver Canucks in the first round was the first playoff series victory for the Flames since they won the Cup in 1989. Jarome Iginla scored two goals and assisted on Martin Gelinas' overtime winner in game seven, sending fans in Calgary into the streets to celebrate the victory. The Flames pulled off an even bigger upset in round two, knocking off the Presidents' Trophy winning Detroit Red Wings in six, including back-to-back 1–0 shutouts in the final two games. Once again, Gelinas scored the overtime winner on a rebound on a play set up by Iginla. In doing so, Gelinas became the first player in NHL history to record three career OT winners to end a series.

The third round series pitted the Flames against head coach Darryl Sutter and goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff's old team – the San Jose Sharks. After jumping out to a 2–0 series lead on the road, the Sharks returned the favour, defeating Calgary twice at home. After blanking the Sharks in San Jose in game five, the Flames returned home with a chance to go to the Stanley Cup Finals. Led once again by Iginla and Gelinas, the Flames cruised to a 3–1 victory. Gelinas once again scored the series-clinching goal, this time in the second period, to return the Flames to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since winning it in ; this was the first Finals appearance by a Canadian team since the Vancouver Canucks lost to the New York Rangers. In addition, the Flames became the first team to defeat the 1st, 2nd and 3rd seeded teams in their conference en route to the Stanley Cup Finals (which was only repeated in 2012 by the Los Angeles Kings).

the "C of Red" became a defining characteristic of Flames playoff games.

The Final versus Tampa Bay became known for controversy. First, referee Kerry Fraser was pulled from his game six assignment in Calgary after drawing the ire of Flames fans following several calls in game four that upset the local fans. Fraser would instead officiate game seven in Tampa. The officiating in game four prompted a rant by Sutter, in which he alleged that the NHL did not want Calgary to win.

Late in game six, with the score tied, a shot that deflected off of Gelinas' skate was stopped by Tampa Bay goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin on the goal line. Later replays indicated that the puck may have crossed the line, however the play was not reviewed at the time, and the NHL would later rule the video was inconclusive, since the puck was in the air, not on the ice. Instead, the Lightning would win in double overtime, and go on to win game seven by a 2–1 score.

Despite the game seven loss, the playoff run lifted the city to a new high. Over 30,000 fans celebrated the Flames run at a rally at Olympic Plaza shortly after the Final had ended. In the playoffs, the sixth seeded Flames stunned the hockey world by upsetting all three Western Conference division winners - the Vancouver Canucks, Detroit Red Wings and San Jose Sharks on their way to the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals. The Flames became the first Canadian team since the 1994 Canucks to reach the finals, prompting the media, and even Prime Minister Paul Martin to dub the Flames "Canada's team". 17th Avenue in Calgary became the focal point for celebrations amongst fans. Dubbed the Red Mile, thousands of fans crowded the streets, win or lose, in celebrations that gained international attention for both their peaceful nature, and for the flouting of social norms that occurred.

The ride would come to an end, however, at the hands of the Tampa Bay Lightning, who defeated the Flames in seven hard fought games to win the Stanley Cup.--

Schedule and results

Regular season

|- | 1 || October 9 || Calgary || 1–4 || Vancouver || || Turek || 18,630 || 0–1–0–0 || 0 || |- | 2 || October 11 || San Jose || 2–3 || Calgary || || McLennan || 17,039 || 1–1–0–0 || 2 || |- | 3 || October 14 || Edmonton || 0–1 || Calgary || || McLennan || 16,009 || 2–1–0–0|| 4 || |- | 4 || October 18 || Buffalo || 2–0 || Calgary || || Turek || 14,139 || 2–2–0–0 || 4 || |- | 5 || October 21 || Calgary || 3–2 || Minnesota || || McLennan || 18,064 || 3–2–0–0 || 6 || |- | 6 || October 24 || St. Louis || 2–1 || Calgary || || McLennan || 15,454 || 3–3–0–0 || 6 || |- | 7 || October 25 || Calgary || 4–2 || Edmonton || || McLennan || 16,839 || 4–3–0–0 || 8 || |- | 8 || October 28 || Calgary || 2–4 || Colorado || || McLennan || 18,007 || 4–4–0–0 || 8 || |- | 9 || October 29 || Calgary || 3–4 || Dallas || OT || Sabourin || 18,209 || 4–4–0–1 || 9 ||

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| Legend:

Playoffs

|- | 1 || April 7 || Calgary || 3–5 || Vancouver || || Kiprusoff || 18,630 || Vancouver leads 1–0 || |- | 2 || April 9 || Calgary || 2–1 || Vancouver || || Kiprusoff || 18,630 || Series tied 1–1 || |- | 3 || April 11 || Vancouver || 2–1 || Calgary || || Kiprusoff || 19,289 || Vancouver leads 2–1 || |- | 4 || April 13 || Vancouver || 0–4 || Calgary || || Kiprusoff || 19,289 || Series tied 2–2 || |- | 5 || April 15 || Calgary || 2–1 || Vancouver || || Kiprusoff || 18,630 || Calgary leads 3–2 || |- | 6 || April 17 || Vancouver || 5–4 || Calgary || 3OT || Kiprusoff || 19,289 || Series tied 3–3 || |- | 7 || April 19 || Calgary || 3–2 || Vancouver || OT || Kiprusoff || 18,630 || Calgary wins 4–3 ||

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Player statistics

Jarome Iginla's 41 goals placed him in a tie for the league lead, earning him his second Rocket Richard Trophy. Iginla shared the award with Atlanta's Ilya Kovalchuk and Columbus' Rick Nash, both of whom also scored 41 goals. Iginla also led the league in playoff goals, as his total of 13 was one better than Tampa's Brad Richards and Ruslan Fedotenko. Iginla led the team in scoring for the fourth consecutive season,

Miikka Kiprusoff, acquired from the San Jose Sharks early in the season, set a modern NHL record low goals against average of 1.69 in 39 games played. He recorded five shutouts in the playoffs, a franchise record. Kiprusoff's performance with the Flames led to his being named the starting goaltender for team Finland at the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, where he led the Finns to the championship final.

Scoring

  • Position abbreviations: C = Centre; D = Defence; G = Goaltender; LW = Left wing; RW = Right wing
    • = Joined team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, signing) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flames only.*
    • = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flames only.*
  • Bold text denotes league leader.
No.PlayerPosRegular seasonPlayoffsGPGAPts+/-PIMGPGAPts+/-PIM
12RW81**41**3273218426**13**9221345
22C6383947134426611171212
16RW821824421472245510023
23LW7617183510702687151035
4D8292433824260101056
37LW64171330918
18C791613294321315614
19LW6912172914126336114
27C447222914
17RW82101525−310626336030
32D6741620630601112
28D8241418147426279720
7RW7061117−125126011024
11C534131712423336−116
44D77314178972401116
21D724121655326033525
3D80115164113601124
24RW1935861824448055
33LW65325−824720202−16
15LW13325125165270**74**
26LW36246−324
26LW14055314264711012
15C20123−110
5D26123−1502012346
10LW18112−61110000−16
20LW12022−22
46LW1302212
34G3801115260110
29G260114
50G40110
1G18011010000
2D12000−42520022119
25LW5000−22
43D200000

Goaltending

    • = Joined team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, signing) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flames only.*
    • = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flames only.*
  • Bold text denotes league record. Italics denotes franchise record.
No.PlayerRegular seasonPlayoffsGPWLTSAGAGAASV%SOTOIGPWLSAGAGAASV%SOTOI
34Miikka Kiprusoff382410496665***1.69***.93341655*26*1511710511.85.92852301
29Jamie McLennan261293587532.20.91041446
1Roman Turek186110463402.33.91431031100300.001.000019
50Dany Sabourin403066103.55.8480169

Awards and records

Awards

TypeAward/honorRecipientRefLeague
(annual)League
(in-season)Team
King Clancy Memorial TrophyJarome Iginla
Maurice "Rocket" Richard TrophyJarome Iginla
NHL second All-Star teamJarome Iginla (Right wing)
[NHL All-Star Game](2004-national-hockey-league-all-star-game) selectionJarome Iginla
NHL Defensive Player of the MonthMiikka Kiprusoff (December)
NHL Defensive Player of the WeekMiikka Kiprusoff (December 8)title=Dynamic duo sweep NHL Player of the Week Awardsurl=http://www.calgaryflames.com/cgi-bin/news/comments_print.cgi?type=newsroom&file_num=0000000046website=Calgary Flamesaccess-date=August 11, 2022archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040206040540/http://www.calgaryflames.com/cgi-bin/news/comments_print.cgi?type=newsroom&file_num=0000000046archive-date=February 6, 2004date=December 8, 2003}}
Miikka Kiprusoff (February 16)
NHL Offensive Player of the WeekShean Donovan (December 8)
Jarome Iginla (January 12)
NHL YoungStars Game selectionMatthew Lombardi
Molson CupJarome Iginla
Ralph T. Scurfield Humanitarian AwardMartin Gelinas

Milestones

MilestonePlayerDateRefFirst game1,000th game played25th shutout750th game coached
Matthew LombardiOctober 9, 2003
Dany SabourinOctober 29, 2003
Brennan EvansApril 27, 2004
Martin GelinasDecember 9, 2003
Roman TurekJanuary 22, 2004
Darryl SutterFebruary 5, 2004

Transactions

Prior to the season, the Flames sent restricted free agent Chris Drury to the Buffalo Sabres for defenceman Rhett Warrener and forward Steve Reinprecht, whom the Sabres had acquired from the Colorado Avalanche, then included in the Drury trade. Warrener especially was seen as being a key player for the Flames as they attempted to qualify for the playoffs.

The acquisition of Miikka Kiprusoff proved to be a significant turning point for the Flames' season. Darryl Sutter dealt for Kiprusoff after starting goaltender Roman Turek suffered a knee injury that left him unable to play for several months. Kiprusoff stabilized the Flames' goaltending situation, producing a league record low goals against average.

Trades

DateDetailsRef
To Calgary FlamesTo [San Jose Sharks](2003-04-san-jose-sharks-season)
To Calgary FlamesTo [Buffalo Sabres](2003-04-buffalo-sabres-season)
To Calgary FlamesTo [Carolina Hurricanes](2003-04-carolina-hurricanes-season)title=FLAMES SIGN FORWARD STEVE REINPRECHTurl=http://www.calgaryflames.com/cgi-bin/news/comments.cgi?type=press_rel&file_num=0000000865website=Calgary Flamesaccess-date=May 12, 2022archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030814083124/http://www.calgaryflames.com/cgi-bin/news/comments.cgi?type=press_rel&file_num=0000000865archive-date=August 14, 2003date=July 16, 2003}}
To Calgary FlamesTo San Jose Sharks
To Calgary FlamesTo San Jose Sharks
To Calgary FlamesTo [Chicago Blackhawks](2003-04-chicago-blackhawks-season)
To Calgary FlamesTo [New York Rangers](2003-04-new-york-rangers-season)title=Flames nab bulky Chris Simon from Rangersurl=http://www.calgaryflames.com/cgi-bin/news/comments_print.cgi?type=newsroom&file_num=0000000124website=Calgary Flamesaccess-date=May 12, 2022archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040419233451/http://www.calgaryflames.com/cgi-bin/news/comments_print.cgi?type=newsroom&file_num=0000000124archive-date=April 19, 2004date=March 6, 2004}}
To Calgary FlamesTo [Florida Panthers](2003-04-florida-panthers-season)

Players acquired

DatePlayerFormer teamTermViaRef
Matt Davidson
Josh Green
Krzysztof Oliwa
Jesse Wallin
Brennan Evans
Jason Morgan

Players lost

DatePlayerNew teamViaRef
Ladislav Kohn
Mike Martin
Dave Huntzicker
Scott Nichol
Jean-Francois Damphousse
Mike Mottau
Rick Mrozik
Darcy Verot
Levente Szuper
Shaun Sutter
Ryan Christie
Jan Vodrazka
Craig Berube
Blake Sloan
Jason Morgan
Josh Green
Matt Davidson

Signings

DatePlayerTermContract typeRef
Blair Betts
Andrew Ference
Steve Montador
Dany Sabourin
Oleg Saprykin
Stephane Yelle
Steven Reinprecht
Rail Rozakov
Toni Lydman
Mike Commodore
Dave Lowry
Rhett Warrener

Draft picks

Main article: List of Calgary Flames draft picks

Dion Phaneuf was the Flames' first round selection, ninth overall.

The 2003 NHL entry draft was held in Nashville, Tennessee on June 21–22, 2003. The Flames selected nine players in the draft. Calgary selected offensive minded defenceman Dion Phaneuf with their first pick, ninth overall. Phaneuf's coach with the Red Deer Rebels described him as being a physical player on draft day. "This kid doesn't hit to hit. He hits to hurt. It's a mind-set that's rare in the game. At any level. You can't teach it, you can't fake it. You're either born with it, or you're not." Phaneuf quickly made an impact in the NHL, scoring 20 goals as a rookie in 2005–06, earning a nomination for the Calder Memorial Trophy as top rookie. Phaneuf was nominated for the Norris Trophy as top defenceman in 2007–08, just his third year in the NHL.

RndPickPlayerNationalityPositionTeam (league)NHL statisticsGPGAPtsPIM
19Dion PhaneufCanadaDRed Deer Rebels (WHL)10481373574941345
239Tim RamholtDCape Breton Screaming Eagles (QMJHL)10000
397Ryan DonallyCanadaLWWindsor Spitfires (OHL)
4112Jamie TardifCanadaRWPeterborough Petes (OHL)20000
5143Greg MooreUnited StatesRWUniversity of Maine (Hockey East)100000
6173Tyler JohnsonCanadaCMoose Jaw Warriors (WHL)
7206Thomas BellemareCanadaDDrummondville Voltigeurs (QMJHL)
8240Cam CunningCanadaLWKamloops Blazers (WHL)
9270Kevin HarveyCanadaLWGeorgetown Raiders (OPJHL)

Farm teams

Lowell Lockmonsters

After shutting down the Saint John Flames, the Flames entered into an agreement to share an affiliation with the Lowell Lockmonsters with the Carolina Hurricanes. The Lockmonsters posted a 32–36–6–6 record, out of the playoffs with a 6th-place finish in the Atlantic Division.

Las Vegas Wranglers

The Las Vegas Wranglers entered the ECHL as an expansion team, immediately entering an affiliation agreement with the Flames. The team was immediately competitive, finishing second in the Pacific Division with a 43–22–7 record. This did not translate into the playoffs however, as the Wranglers lost in the divisional semifinals.

Notes

References

  • Player stats: 2006–07 Calgary Flames Media Guide – 2003–04 stats, pg. 108.

References

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  2. (April 6, 2004). "Iginla, Flames hungry for cup run". [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]].
  3. Roarke, Shawn P.. (May 18, 2006). "When things get hairy, Canes call for Commodore". National Hockey League.
  4. "Where's the Calgary Flames golden hard hat?". Calgary Flames Hockey Club.
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  6. (May 4, 2004). "Flames 1, Red Wings 0". Yahoo! Sports.
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  8. link. (September 29, 2007 , tsn.ca, June 3, 2004. Retrieved November 30, 2006.)
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  13. {{usurped
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  20. "2003–04 Rocket Richard Trophy winners". Hockey Hall of Fame.
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  22. Burnside, Scott. (September 12, 2004). "Goalie forces foes to take Finns seriously". ESPN.
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  43. (June 21, 2003). "Donally a big, strapping winger and could get bigger".
  44. (July 3, 2003). "FLAMES ACQUIRE FORWARD STEVE REINPRECHT AND DEFENCEMAN RHETT WARRENER".
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  50. (March 6, 2004). "Flames nab bulky Chris Simon from Rangers".
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  57. (July 11, 2008). "Ducks Sign Brennan Evans to 2-Year Deal".
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