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1998–99 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season

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1998–99 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
Division3rd Pacific
Conference6th Western
1998–99 record35–34–13
Home record21–14–6
Road record14–20–7
Goals for215
Goals against206
Team information
General managerPierre Gauthier
CoachCraig Hartsburg
CaptainPaul Kariya
Alternate captainsKevin Haller
Teemu Selanne
ArenaArrowhead Pond of Anaheim
Average attendance15,804
Minor league affiliate(s)Cincinnati Mighty Ducks
Huntington Blizzard
Team leaders
GoalsTeemu Selanne (47)
AssistsPaul Kariya (62)
PointsTeemu Selanne (107)
Penalty minutesStu Grimson (158)
Plus/minusJamie Pushor (+20)
WinsGuy Hebert (31)
Goals against averageGuy Hebert (2.42)

The 1998–99 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season was the sixth season in franchise history.

Off-season

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The roster was shaken up a lot during the previous season and only a few changes took place in the summer. The Ducks traded Dave Karpa and a 2000 4th round pick to the Carolina Hurricanes for Kevin Haller and Stu Grimson on June 18. Two months later they acquired Jim Mckenzie for Jean-Francois Jomphe on August 11. They signed veteran Fredrik Olausson, who was with the Ducks before, to give the team scoring from the blue line, and Pascal Trepanier. Rookies Antti Aalto and Johan Davidsson made the roster while Mike Crowley who played very well last season would see more ice time with the parent team.

For the first time since the Ducks traded Ron Tugnutt to the Montreal Canadiens in 1994 the team saw just their second change in net, losing Mikhail Shtalenkov to the Nashville Predators in the 1998 NHL Expansion Draft. That left them with Prospects Patrick Lalime and Chris Mason for the back up position. Just before the season started the Ducks acquired Dominic Roussel from the Nashville Predators for Chris Mason and Marc Moro on October 5, 1998 which gave the team more experience in case Hebert would be sidelined like last season. Days later they sent Doug Houda to Detroit on October 9.

Regular season

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The season was much more consistent than the previous season. Anaheim started off slow, losing their first three games and scoring only one goal but was unbeaten the next six games. On October 27, 1998 they added Marty McInnis, a key player who gave them more scoring depth for the team's upcoming success and dominating Powerplay. On November 8 Tomas Sandstrom suffered a broken left wrist which kept him sidelined until late December thus relying more on their star players and hoping for others to fill the void. The team managed to comeback a few times after going winless some games and even put up an unbeaten streak like in early December (4-0-2) and a winning streak in early February (4–0–0). January turned out to be the very tough going 4–9–1 and winless (0-5-1) a second time since late November. Overall the Ducks were hovering around the .500 mark fighting to go to the post season.

In February the team pushed themselves into the playoffs as the Mighty Ducks went 13–3–1 from February 3 until March 10 including a team record seven-game winning streak. Anaheim stayed consistent after their streak, going 4–4–3, but registering a record of 1–5–1 in their last seven games, thus missing out on 5th place facing rather Phoenix than the Red Wings as they finished the season 6th in the west since the team was unable to maintain their amazing run in April. The Blues only lost one of their last nine games, whereas the Ducks only won one game out of their last seven, ironically against the Phoenix Coyotes,

During that seven-game winning streak the team only allowed 1 goal in each of those games, highlighting the great goaltending of Guy Hebert, who had a career year and his best season since 1996–97. Dominic Roussel also enjoyed a stellar comeback in the NHL as the team's backup. Both goalies provided excellent goaltending for the Mighty Ducks, each posting a save percentage above .920 as well as a superb GAA. Those great numbers were supported by their Defense as the team allowed 55 goals less than last year. Offensively the Ducks only scored 10 goals more than last season and relied very heavily on their first line (Kariya - Rucchin - Selanne) combining for 109 goals. Additional scoring was only provided by Marty McInnis (17 goals), defenceman Fredrik Olausson (16 goals) and Tomas Sandstrom (15 goals), who improved over last season but missed 24 games due to injury. Matt Cullen enjoyed a good second season, tallying 11 goals which was almost double than last year while Travis Green only scored 13 goals and 30 points which was below expectation. Rookies Anti Aaalto and Johan Davidson did not make an impact in the scoring department.

The Mighty Ducks finished the regular season with the most power-play goals, 83, and the best power-play percentage, 21.96% (83 for 378) in the NHL.[1]

Final standings

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Pacific Division
R CR GP W L T GF GA Pts
1 1 Dallas Stars 82 51 19 12 236 168 114
2 4 Phoenix Coyotes 82 39 31 12 205 197 90
3 6 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim 82 35 34 13 215 206 83
4 7 San Jose Sharks 82 31 33 18 196 191 80
5 11 Los Angeles Kings 82 32 45 5 189 222 69

[2]

Note: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points
         Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.

Western Conference[3]
R Div GP W L T GF GA Pts
1 p – Dallas Stars PAC 82 51 19 12 236 168 114
2 y – Colorado Avalanche NW 82 44 28 10 239 205 98
3 y – Detroit Red Wings CEN 82 43 32 7 245 202 93
4 Phoenix Coyotes PAC 82 39 31 12 205 197 90
5 St. Louis Blues CEN 82 37 32 13 237 209 87
6 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim PAC 82 35 34 13 215 206 83
7 San Jose Sharks PAC 82 31 33 18 196 191 80
8 Edmonton Oilers NW 82 33 37 12 230 226 78
9 Calgary Flames NW 82 30 40 12 211 234 72
10 Chicago Blackhawks CEN 82 29 41 12 202 248 70
11 Los Angeles Kings PAC 82 32 45 5 189 222 69
12 Nashville Predators CEN 82 28 47 7 190 261 63
13 Vancouver Canucks NW 82 23 47 12 192 258 58

Divisions: CEN – Central, PAC – Pacific, NW – Northwest

bold – Qualified for playoffs; p – Won Presidents' Trophy; y – Won division


Playoffs

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The Mighty Ducks met the Detroit Red Wings in the first round of the playoffs. The Wings swept the Mighty Ducks in four games.

Late in Game 3 Stu Grimson cross-checked Kris Draper in the face in front of the Red Wings bench which caused a brawl between both teams.

Schedule and results

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Regular season

[edit]
1998–99 regular season[4]
October: 3–3–3 (home: 2–0–1; road: 1–3–2)
Game Result Date Score Opponent Record Recap
1 L October 10, 1998 0–1 @ Washington Capitals (1998–99) 0–1–0 Recap
2 L October 11, 1998 1–4 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1998–99) 0–2–0 Recap
3 L October 13, 1998 0–1 @ Montreal Canadiens (1998–99) 0–3–0 Recap
4 W October 15, 1998 5–3 @ Chicago Blackhawks (1998–99) 1–3–0 Recap
5 W October 21, 1998 3–0 Boston Bruins (1998–99) 2–3–0 Recap
6 T October 25, 1998 2–2 OT Phoenix Coyotes (1998–99) 2–3–1 Recap
7 W October 28, 1998 5–3 Tampa Bay Lightning (1998–99) 3–3–1 Recap
8 T October 30, 1998 3–3 OT @ Dallas Stars (1998–99) 3–3–2 Recap
9 T October 31, 1998 2–2 OT @ St. Louis Blues (1998–99) 3–3–3 Recap
November: 5–7–1 (home: 4–3–1; road: 1–4–0)
Game Result Date Score Opponent Record Recap
10 L November 4, 1998 1–3 St. Louis Blues (1998–99) 3–4–3 Recap
11 T November 6, 1998 2–2 OT San Jose Sharks (1998–99) 3–4–4 Recap
12 L November 8, 1998 2–3 Detroit Red Wings (1998–99) 3–5–4 Recap
13 W November 11, 1998 5–4 OT Carolina Hurricanes (1998–99) 4–5–4 Recap
14 L November 13, 1998 2–5 @ Vancouver Canucks (1998–99) 4–6–4 Recap
15 W November 14, 1998 1–0 @ Calgary Flames (1998–99) 5–6–4 Recap
16 W November 16, 1998 3–1 Los Angeles Kings (1998–99) 6–6–4 Recap
17 W November 18, 1998 3–1 New York Rangers (1998–99) 7–6–4 Recap
18 L November 20, 1998 2–3 OT Edmonton Oilers (1998–99) 7–7–4 Recap
19 W November 22, 1998 4–1 Chicago Blackhawks (1998–99) 8–7–4 Recap
20 L November 25, 1998 2–5 @ Detroit Red Wings (1998–99) 8–8–4 Recap
21 L November 27, 1998 1–3 @ Nashville Predators (1998–99) 8–9–4 Recap
22 L November 29, 1998 1–3 @ Carolina Hurricanes (1998–99) 8–10–4 Recap
December: 5–3–4 (home: 3–1–2; road: 2–2–2)
Game Result Date Score Opponent Record Recap
23 T December 1, 1998 4–4 OT @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1998–99) 8–10–5 Recap
24 L December 3, 1998 1–4 @ Chicago Blackhawks (1998–99) 8–11–5 Recap
25 W December 6, 1998 2–1 @ San Jose Sharks (1998–99) 9–11–5 Recap
26 T December 9, 1998 4–4 OT Vancouver Canucks (1998–99) 9–11–6 Recap
27 W December 11, 1998 1–0 Washington Capitals (1998–99) 10–11–6 Recap
28 W December 13, 1998 3–0 Los Angeles Kings (1998–99) 11–11–6 Recap
29 W December 16, 1998 6–1 Nashville Predators (1998–99) 12–11–6 Recap
30 T December 18, 1998 2–2 OT New York Islanders (1998–99) 12–11–7 Recap
31 L December 21, 1998 2–4 Colorado Avalanche (1998–99) 12–12–7 Recap
32 W December 22, 1998 1–0 @ Colorado Avalanche (1998–99) 13–12–7 Recap
33 T December 28, 1998 2–2 OT @ Ottawa Senators (1998–99) 13–12–8 Recap
34 L December 30, 1998 1–4 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1998–99) 13–13–8 Recap
January: 4–9–1 (home: 3–5–0; road: 1–4–1)
Game Result Date Score Opponent Record Recap
35 W January 1, 1999 7–2 @ Buffalo Sabres (1998–99) 14–13–8 Recap
36 L January 2, 1999 1–2 @ Boston Bruins (1998–99) 14–14–8 Recap
37 L January 4, 1999 1–2 @ Nashville Predators (1998–99) 14–15–8 Recap
38 L January 6, 1999 2–3 OT Buffalo Sabres (1998–99) 14–16–8 Recap
39 W January 8, 1999 4–1 Phoenix Coyotes (1998–99) 15–16–8 Recap
40 W January 10, 1999 6–4 Edmonton Oilers (1998–99) 16–16–8 Recap
41 L January 13, 1999 1–2 Calgary Flames (1998–99) 16–17–8 Recap
42 L January 15, 1999 1–3 Dallas Stars (1998–99) 16–18–8 Recap
43 W January 18, 1999 5–3 Pittsburgh Penguins (1998–99) 17–18–8 Recap
44 L January 20, 1999 3–4 New Jersey Devils (1998–99) 17–19–8 Recap
45 T January 21, 1999 3–3 OT @ Phoenix Coyotes (1998–99) 17–19–9 Recap
46 L January 27, 1999 3–4 Colorado Avalanche (1998–99) 17–20–9 Recap
47 L January 28, 1999 2–6 @ Colorado Avalanche (1998–99) 17–21–9 Recap
48 L January 30, 1999 0–1 @ Edmonton Oilers (1998–99) 17–22–9 Recap
February: 10–3–0 (home: 3–2–0; road: 7–1–0)
Game Result Date Score Opponent Record Recap
49 W February 3, 1999 3–0 Chicago Blackhawks (1998–99) 18–22–9 Recap
50 W February 5, 1999 5–3 @ Tampa Bay Lightning (1998–99) 19–22–9 Recap
51 W February 6, 1999 4–3 @ St. Louis Blues (1998–99) 20–22–9 Recap
52 W February 10, 1999 5–4 Philadelphia Flyers (1998–99) 21–22–9 Recap
53 L February 12, 1999 2–3 Dallas Stars (1998–99) 21–23–9 Recap
54 W February 14, 1999 5–1 @ Phoenix Coyotes (1998–99) 22–23–9 Recap
55 W February 15, 1999 3–1 @ Los Angeles Kings (1998–99) 23–23–9 Recap
56 L February 17, 1999 2–6 Edmonton Oilers (1998–99) 23–24–9 Recap
57 L February 19, 1999 3–6 @ Calgary Flames (1998–99) 23–25–9 Recap
58 W February 20, 1999 5–1 @ Vancouver Canucks (1998–99) 24–25–9 Recap
59 W February 24, 1999 2–1 @ Edmonton Oilers (1998–99) 25–25–9 Recap
60 W February 26, 1999 3–1 San Jose Sharks (1998–99) 26–25–9 Recap
61 W February 27, 1999 4–1 @ San Jose Sharks (1998–99) 27–25–9 Recap
March: 6–4–2 (home: 5–1–2; road: 1–3–0)
Game Result Date Score Opponent Record Recap
62 W March 3, 1999 2–1 Los Angeles Kings (1998–99) 28–25–9 Recap
63 W March 5, 1999 3–2 Nashville Predators (1998–99) 29–25–9 Recap
64 W March 7, 1999 3–1 Detroit Red Wings (1998–99) 30–25–9 Recap
65 T March 10, 1999 4–4 OT Vancouver Canucks (1998–99) 30–25–10 Recap
66 L March 12, 1999 0–4 @ Dallas Stars (1998–99) 30–26–10 Recap
67 L March 13, 1999 0–1 @ Phoenix Coyotes (1998–99) 30–27–10 Recap
68 T March 17, 1999 2–2 OT Ottawa Senators (1998–99) 30–27–11 Recap
69 W March 18, 1999 4–2 @ Los Angeles Kings (1998–99) 31–27–11 Recap
70 L March 21, 1999 2–5 Florida Panthers (1998–99) 31–28–11 Recap
71 W March 26, 1999 5–1 Dallas Stars (1998–99) 32–28–11 Recap
72 W March 28, 1999 5–1 Calgary Flames (1998–99) 33–28–11 Recap
73 L March 31, 1999 1–7 @ New Jersey Devils (1998–99) 33–29–11 Recap
April: 2–5–2 (home: 1–2–0; road: 1–3–2)
Game Result Date Score Opponent Record Recap
74 W April 2, 1999 4–1 @ New York Rangers (1998–99) 34–29–11 Recap
75 T April 3, 1999 2–2 OT @ New York Islanders (1998–99) 34–29–12 Recap
76 L April 5, 1999 2–3 @ Detroit Red Wings (1998–99) 34–30–12 Recap
77 L April 7, 1999 1–5 @ Dallas Stars (1998–99) 34–31–12 Recap
78 L April 9, 1999 1–4 San Jose Sharks (1998–99) 34–32–12 Recap
79 W April 11, 1999 3–0 Phoenix Coyotes (1998–99) 35–32–12 Recap
80 L April 14, 1999 1–3 St. Louis Blues (1998–99) 35–33–12 Recap
81 L April 15, 1999 3–4 OT @ Los Angeles Kings (1998–99) 35–34–12 Recap
82 T April 17, 1999 3–3 OT @ San Jose Sharks (1998–99) 35–34–13 Recap
Legend:

  Win (2 points)   Loss (0 points)   Tie (1 point)

Playoffs

[edit]
1999 Stanley Cup playoffs[4]
Western Conference Quarterfinals: vs. (3) Detroit Red Wings — Red Wings win 4–0
Game Result Date Score Opponent Series Recap
1 L April 21, 1999 3–5 @ Detroit Red Wings Red Wings lead 1–0 Recap
2 L April 23, 1999 1–5 @ Detroit Red Wings Red Wings lead 2–0 Recap
3 L April 25, 1999 2–4 Detroit Red Wings Red Wings lead 3–0 Recap
4 L April 27, 1999 0–3 Detroit Red Wings Red Wings win 4–0 Recap
Legend:

  Win   Loss

Player statistics

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Scoring

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  • Position abbreviations: C = Center; D = Defense; 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 Mighty Ducks only.
  • ‡ = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Mighty Ducks only.
No. Player Pos Regular season Playoffs
GP G A Pts +/- PIM GP G A Pts +/- PIM
8 Teemu Selanne RW 75 47 60 107 18 30 4 2 2 4 −1 2
9 Paul Kariya LW 82 39 62 101 17 40 3 1 3 4 0 0
20 Steve Rucchin C 69 23 39 62 11 22 4 0 3 3 0 0
2 Fredrik Olausson D 74 16 40 56 17 30 4 0 2 2 −4 4
16 Marty McInnis C 75 18 34 52 −14 36 4 2 0 2 −1 2
17 Tomas Sandstrom RW 58 15 17 32 −5 42 4 0 0 0 −2 4
39 Travis Green C 79 13 17 30 −7 81 4 0 1 1 −4 4
11 Matt Cullen C 75 11 14 25 −12 47 4 0 0 0 −2 0
24 Ruslan Salei D 74 2 14 16 1 65 3 0 0 0 −4 4
18 Ted Drury C 75 5 6 11 2 83 4 0 0 0 −6 0
33 Jim McKenzie LW 73 5 4 9 −18 99 4 0 0 0 −2 4
19 Jeff Nielsen RW 80 5 4 9 −12 34 4 0 0 0 −6 2
14 Antti Aalto C 73 3 5 8 −12 24 4 0 0 0 0 2
22 Johan Davidsson C 64 3 5 8 −9 14 1 0 0 0 0 0
23 Jason Marshall D 72 1 7 8 −5 142 4 1 0 1 −1 10
5 Kevin Haller D 82 1 6 7 −1 122 4 0 0 0 −1 2
27 Pascal Trepanier D 45 2 4 6 0 48
25 Mike Crowley D 20 2 3 5 −10 16
7 Pavel Trnka D 63 0 4 4 −6 60 4 0 1 1 −3 2
32 Stu Grimson LW 73 3 0 3 0 158 3 0 0 0 0 30
4 Jamie Pushor D 70 1 2 3 −20 112 4 0 0 0 −3 6
21 Scott Ferguson D 2 0 1 1 0 0
31 Guy Hebert G 69 0 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 0
10 Josef Marha C 10 0 1 1 −4 0
12 Mike Leclerc LW 7 0 0 0 −2 4 1 0 0 0 0 0
30 Dominic Roussel G 18 0 0 0 0
34 Dan Trebil D 6 0 0 0 −2 0 1 0 0 0 0 2
35 Tom Askey G 1 0 0 0 0

Goaltending

[edit]
No. Player Regular season Playoffs
GP W L T SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI GP W L SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI
31 Guy Hebert 69 31 29 9 2114 165 2.46 .922 6 4083 4 0 3 124 15 4.33 .879 0 208
30 Dominic Roussel 18 4 5 4 478 37 2.51 .923 1 884
35 Tom Askey 1 0 1 11 2 3.99 .818 0 30

Awards and records

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Awards

[edit]
Type Award/honor Recipient Ref
League
(annual)
Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy Teemu Selanne [5]
NHL First All-Star Team Paul Kariya (Left Wing) [6]
NHL Second All-Star Team Teemu Selanne (Right Wing) [6]
League
(in-season)
NHL All-Star Game selection Paul Kariya[a] [8]
Teemu Selanne[a]
NHL Player of the Month Teemu Selanne (February) [9]
NHL Player of the Week Paul Kariya (November 23) [10]
Teemu Selanne (March 1) [9]

Milestones

[edit]
Milestone Player Date Ref
First game Johan Davidsson October 10, 1998 [11]

Transactions

[edit]

Acquired Marty McInnis from the Chicago Blackhawks ( previously acquired from the Calgary Flames ) for a 4th round draft pick on October 27, 1998

Traded Drew Bannister to the Tampa Bay Lightning for a 2000 5th round pick on December 10, 1998

Traded Josef Marha to the Chicago Blackhawks for future considerations (became a 1999 4th round draft) on January 28, 1999

Draft picks

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Anaheim's draft picks at the 1998 NHL Entry Draft held at the Marine Midland Arena in Buffalo, New York.[12]

Round # Player Nationality College/Junior/Club team (League)
1 5 Vitaly Vishnevskiy  Russia Torpedo Yaroslavl (Russia)
2 32 Stephen Peat  Canada Red Deer Rebels (WHL)
4 112 Viktor Wallin  Sweden HV71 (Sweden)
6 150 Trent Hunter  Canada Prince George Cougars (WHL)
7 178 Jesse Fibiger  Canada University of Minnesota Duluth (WCHA)
8 205 David Bernier  Canada Quebec Remparts (QMJHL)
9 233 Pelle Prestberg  Sweden Farjestad BK (Sweden)
9 245 Andreas Andersson  Sweden HV71 (Sweden)

Farm teams

[edit]

Cincinnati Mighty Ducks

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Kariya and Selanne were voted to the starting lineup.[7]

References

[edit]
  • "Anaheim Mighty Ducks 1998-99 roster and scoring statistics at hockeydb.com". www.hockeydb.com. Retrieved June 23, 2023.
  • "1998-99 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim Roster, Stats, Injuries, Scores, Results, Shootouts". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved June 23, 2023.
  • Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2011). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2012. Toronto: Dan Diamond & Associates. ISBN 978-1-894801-22-5.
  1. ^ "1998-99 NHL Summary".
  2. ^ Dinger 2011, p. 155.
  3. ^ "1998-1999 Conference Standings Standings - NHL.com - Standings". NHL.
  4. ^ a b "1998-99 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim Schedule". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved June 23, 2023.
  5. ^ "Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy". records.nhl.com. Retrieved June 28, 2023.
  6. ^ a b "Postseason All-Star Teams". records.nhl.com. Retrieved June 27, 2023.
  7. ^ "NHL All-Star Game Starting Lineups by Year (since 1986)". NHL.com. Archived from the original on March 22, 2023. Retrieved August 29, 2024.
  8. ^ "1999 NHL All-Star Game Rosters". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved August 29, 2024.
  9. ^ a b "Selanne Named as Player of the Week and Month". NHL.com. March 1, 1999. Archived from the original on October 10, 1999. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
  10. ^ "Kariya Named Player of the Week". NHL.com. November 23, 1998. Archived from the original on November 11, 1999. Retrieved July 26, 2024.
  11. ^ "1998-99 NHL Debuts". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved October 9, 2024.
  12. ^ "1998 NHL Entry Draft Picks at hockeydb.com". www.hockeydb.com. Retrieved June 28, 2023.