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1998–99 Dallas Stars season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sixth Dallas Stars season

1998–99Dallas Stars
Stanley Cup champions
Western Conference champions
Pacific Division champions
Division1stPacific
Conference1stWestern
1998–99 record51–19–12
Home record29–8–4
Road record22–11–8
Goals for236
Goals against168
Team information
General managerBob Gainey
CoachKen Hitchcock
CaptainDerian Hatcher
Alternate captainsCraig Ludwig
Mike Modano
Joe Nieuwendyk
Sergei Zubov
ArenaReunion Arena
Average attendance16,907[1]
Minor league affiliatesMichigan K-Wings
Dayton Bombers
Team leaders
GoalsMike Modano (34)
AssistsMike Modano (47)
PointsMike Modano (81)
Penalty minutesPat Verbeek (133)
Plus/minusMike Modano (+29)
Jere Lehtinen (+29)
WinsEd Belfour (35)
Goals against averageEd Belfour (1.99)

The1998–99Dallas Stars season was the Stars'sixthseason inDallas, Texas, and the thirty-second of the franchise. They would defeat the Buffalo Sabres in the Stanley Cup finals to win the firstStanley Cup for the Stars in franchise history.

Offseason

[edit]

Under a league-wide realignment from four to six divisions, the NHL moved the Stars from the Central to the Pacific Division. This resulted in the oddity of Dallas, a city near the longitudinal center of the contiguous United States and in theCentral Time Zone, having none of its major professional sports teams in a "Central Division" despite the fact that all of the then-established major leagues at this time had divisions with some form of that name. This would temporarily change when theDallas Burn of the then-newMajor League Soccer were placed in a newly-formed Central Division in 2000, but MLS reverted to an Eastern and Western Conference format without additional divisions after only two seasons. The Stars would eventually return to the Central Division after the NHL returned to a four division alignment in 2013.

Regular season

[edit]

The Stars finished the regular season with the NHL's best record and first overall in goals against, with just 168. They also tied theSt. Louis Blues andSan Jose Sharks for fewest short-handed goals allowed, with 4.[2]

Season standings

[edit]
Pacific Division
RCRGPWLTGFGAPts
11Dallas Stars82511912236168114
24Phoenix Coyotes8239311220519790
36Mighty Ducks of Anaheim8235341321520683
47San Jose Sharks8231331819619180
511Los Angeles Kings823245518922269

[3]

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[4]
RDivGPWLTGFGAPts
1p –Dallas StarsPAC82511912236168114
2y –Colorado AvalancheNW8244281023920598
3y –Detroit Red WingsCEN824332724520293
4Phoenix CoyotesPAC8239311220519790
5St. Louis BluesCEN8237321323720987
6Mighty Ducks of AnaheimPAC8235341321520683
7San Jose SharksPAC8231331819619180
8Edmonton OilersNW8233371223022678
9Calgary FlamesNW8230401221123472
10Chicago BlackhawksCEN8229411220224870
11Los Angeles KingsPAC823245518922269
12Nashville PredatorsCEN822847719026163
13Vancouver CanucksNW8223471219225858

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

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


Schedule and results

[edit]

Regular season

[edit]
1998–99 regular season[5]
October: 6–1–2 (home: 6–0–1; road: 0–1–1)
GameDateScoreOpponentRecordRecap
1October 10, 19984–1Buffalo Sabres(1998–99)1–0–0W
2October 13, 19983–1Chicago Blackhawks(1998–99)2–0–0W
3October 15, 19982–2 OT@Carolina Hurricanes(1998–99)2–0–1T
4October 17, 19983–4@Chicago Blackhawks(1998–99)2–1–1L
5October 20, 19983–1Calgary Flames(1998–99)3–1–1W
6October 22, 19982–1Phoenix Coyotes(1998–99)4–1–1W
7October 24, 19982–1San Jose Sharks(1998–99)5–1–1W
8October 30, 19983–3 OTMighty Ducks of Anaheim(1998–99)5–1–2T
9October 31, 19983–2Detroit Red Wings(1998–99)6–1–2W
November: 6–3–1 (home: 3–2–0; road: 3–1–1)
GameDateScoreOpponentRecordRecap
10November 4, 19980–4@San Jose Sharks(1998–99)6–2–2L
11November 7, 19984–3@Los Angeles Kings(1998–99)7–2–2W
12November 11, 19980–2Phoenix Coyotes(1998–99)7–3–2L
13November 13, 19985–1@Detroit Red Wings(1998–99)8–3–2W
14November 14, 19983–1@Boston Bruins(1998–99)9–3–2W
15November 20, 19984–2New York Islanders(1998–99)10–3–2W
16November 21, 19983–3 OT@St. Louis Blues(1998–99)10–3–3T
17November 23, 19983–2San Jose Sharks(1998–99)11–3–3W
18November 25, 19982–5New Jersey Devils(1998–99)11–4–3L
19November 27, 19984–0Washington Capitals(1998–99)12–4–3W
December: 11–1–3 (home: 4–0–1; road: 7–1–2)
GameDateScoreOpponentRecordRecap
20December 2, 19983–0@San Jose Sharks(1998–99)13–4–3W
21December 4, 19981–4@Vancouver Canucks(1998–99)13–5–3L
22December 6, 19986–2@Edmonton Oilers(1998–99)14–5–3W
23December 7, 19983–2@Calgary Flames(1998–99)15–5–3W
24December 9, 19983–3 OTSan Jose Sharks(1998–99)15–5–4T
25December 11, 19983–2Montreal Canadiens(1998–99)16–5–4W
26December 13, 19982–2 OT@Chicago Blackhawks(1998–99)16–5–5T
27December 15, 19987–3St. Louis Blues(1998–99)17–5–5W
28December 18, 19983–1@Detroit Red Wings(1998–99)18–5–5W
29December 20, 19983–2@Ottawa Senators(1998–99)19–5–5W
30December 21, 19982–2 OT@Montreal Canadiens(1998–99)19–5–6T
31December 23, 19985–1@Toronto Maple Leafs(1998–99)20–5–6W
32December 26, 19984–2@Colorado Avalanche(1998–99)21–5–6W
33December 28, 19981–0Nashville Predators(1998–99)22–5–6W
34December 31, 19986–1Boston Bruins(1998–99)23–5–6W
January: 7–4–1 (home: 2–2–0; road: 5–2–1)
GameDateScoreOpponentRecordRecap
35January 1, 19992–1 OT@Phoenix Coyotes(1998–99)24–5–6W
36January 6, 19996–4Vancouver Canucks(1998–99)25–5–6W
37January 8, 19990–1@Calgary Flames(1998–99)25–6–6L
38January 10, 19990–2@Vancouver Canucks(1998–99)25–7–6L
39January 12, 19992–2 OT@Edmonton Oilers(1998–99)25–7–7T
40January 13, 19992–1@San Jose Sharks(1998–99)26–7–7W
41January 15, 19993–1@Mighty Ducks of Anaheim(1998–99)27–7–7W
42January 18, 19993–5Vancouver Canucks(1998–99)27–8–7L
43January 20, 19994–6Toronto Maple Leafs(1998–99)27–9–7L
44January 27, 19993–2Los Angeles Kings(1998–99)28–9–7W
45January 29, 19994–1@Tampa Bay Lightning(1998–99)29–9–7W
46January 30, 19995–2@Florida Panthers(1998–99)30–9–7W
February: 8–2–2 (home: 5–2–2; road: 3–0–0)
GameDateScoreOpponentRecordRecap
47February 1, 19992–2 OTCalgary Flames(1998–99)30–9–8T
48February 7, 19990–3Colorado Avalanche(1998–99)30–10–8L
49February 12, 19993–2@Mighty Ducks of Anaheim(1998–99)31–10–8W
50February 13, 19993–2@Los Angeles Kings(1998–99)32–10–8W
51February 15, 19994–1Edmonton Oilers(1998–99)33–10–8W
52February 17, 19992–1Florida Panthers(1998–99)34–10–8W
53February 19, 19995–1Chicago Blackhawks(1998–99)35–10–8W
54February 21, 19991–1 OTColorado Avalanche(1998–99)35–10–9T
55February 23, 19994–3@Nashville Predators(1998–99)36–10–9W
56February 24, 19991–2Nashville Predators(1998–99)36–11–9L
57February 26, 19996–4Pittsburgh Penguins(1998–99)37–11–9W
58February 28, 19991–0Los Angeles Kings(1998–99)38–11–9W
March: 9–4–3 (home: 5–1–0; road: 4–3–3)
GameDateScoreOpponentRecordRecap
59March 2, 19992–2 OT@New York Rangers(1998–99)38–11–10T
60March 4, 19993–2 OT@New York Islanders(1998–99)39–11–10W
61March 5, 19991–2@Buffalo Sabres(1998–99)39–12–10L
62March 7, 19994–3St. Louis Blues(1998–99)40–12–10W
63March 10, 19997–4Edmonton Oilers(1998–99)41–12–10W
64March 12, 19994–0Mighty Ducks of Anaheim(1998–99)42–12–10W
65March 14, 19991–1 OT@Philadelphia Flyers(1998–99)42–12–11T
66March 16, 19992–2 OT@Pittsburgh Penguins(1998–99)42–12–12T
67March 17, 19991–2 OT@Washington Capitals(1998–99)42–13–12L
68March 19, 19991–2Ottawa Senators(1998–99)42–14–12L
69March 21, 19993–2 OTCarolina Hurricanes(1998–99)43–14–12W
70March 23, 19993–2@Phoenix Coyotes(1998–99)44–14–12W
71March 25, 19992–1@Los Angeles Kings(1998–99)45–14–12W
72March 26, 19991–5@Mighty Ducks of Anaheim(1998–99)45–15–12L
73March 28, 19993–0@Nashville Predators(1998–99)46–15–12W
74March 31, 19996–4Tampa Bay Lightning(1998–99)47–15–12W
April: 4–4–0 (home: 4–1–0; road: 0–3–0)
GameDateScoreOpponentRecordRecap
75April 3, 19992–5@St. Louis Blues(1998–99)47–16–12L
76April 4, 19990–3Detroit Red Wings(1998–99)47–17–12L
77April 7, 19995–1Mighty Ducks of Anaheim(1998–99)48–17–12W
78April 9, 19993–1New York Rangers(1998–99)49–17–12W
79April 11, 19996–2Los Angeles Kings(1998–99)50–17–12W
80April 14, 19994–2Phoenix Coyotes(1998–99)51–17–12W
81April 17, 19990–2@Phoenix Coyotes(1998–99)51–18–12L
82April 18, 19991–2@Colorado Avalanche(1998–99)51–19–12L

Legend:W Win (2 points)L Loss (0 points)T Tie (1 point)

Playoffs

[edit]
1999 Stanley Cup playoffs[5]
Western Conference Quarterfinals vs. (8) Edmonton Oilers: Stars win 4–0
GameDateScoreOpponentSeriesRecap
1April 21, 19992–1Edmonton OilersStars lead 1–0W
2April 23, 19993–2Edmonton OilersStars lead 2–0W
3April 25, 19993–2@ Edmonton OilersStars lead 3–0W
4April 27, 19993–2 3OT@ Edmonton OilersStars win 4–0W
Western Conference Semifinals vs. (5) St. Louis Blues: Stars win 4–2
GameDateScoreOpponentSeriesRecap
1May 6, 19993–0St. Louis BluesStars lead 1–0W
2May 8, 19995–4 OTSt. Louis BluesStars lead 2–0W
3May 10, 19992–3 OT@ St. Louis BluesStars lead 2–1L
4May 12, 19992–3 OT@ St. Louis BluesSeries tied 2–2L
5May 15, 19993–1St. Louis BluesStars lead 3–2W
6May 17, 19992–1 OT@ St. Louis BluesStars win 4–2W
Western Conference Finals vs. (2) Colorado Avalanche – Stars win 4–3
GameDateScoreOpponentSeriesRecap
1May 22, 19991–2Colorado AvalancheAvalanche lead 1–0L
2May 24, 19994–2Colorado AvalancheSeries tied 1–1W
3May 26, 19993–0@ Colorado AvalancheStars lead 2–1W
4May 28, 19992–3 OT@ Colorado AvalancheSeries tied 2–2L
5May 30, 19995–7Colorado AvalancheAvalanche lead 3–2L
6June 1, 19994–1@ Colorado AvalancheSeries tied 3–3W
7June 4, 19994–1Colorado AvalancheStars win 4–3W
Stanley Cup Finals vs. (E7) Buffalo Sabres – Stars win 4–2
GameDateScoreOpponentSeriesRecap
1June 8, 19992–3 OTBuffalo SabresSabres lead 1–0L
2June 10, 19994–2Buffalo SabresSeries tied 1–1W
3June 12, 19992–1@ Buffalo SabresStars lead 2–1W
4June 15, 19991–2@ Buffalo SabresSeries tied 2–2L
5June 17, 19992–0Buffalo SabresStars lead 3–2W
6June 19, 19992–1 3OT@ Buffalo SabresStars win 4–2W

Legend:W WinL Loss

Player statistics

[edit]

Scoring

[edit]
  • 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 Stars only.
  • ‡ = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Stars only.
No.PlayerPosRegular seasonPlayoffs
GPGAPts+/-PIMGPGAPts+/-PIM
9Mike ModanoC7734478129442351823616
22Brett HullRW60322658193022871534
25Joe NieuwendykC67282755113423111021719
26Jere LehtinenRW742032522918231031382
56Sergei ZubovD811041519202311213134
5Darryl SydorD74143448−150233912816
15Jamie LangenbrunnerRW7512334510622310717716
16Pat VerbeekRW781717341113318347414
29Grant MarshallRW8213183118514033120
2Derian HatcherD80921302110218167424
12Mike KeaneRW8162329−26223527−16
41Tony HrkacC69131427226502234
14Dave ReidLW7361117016232810414
21Guy CarbonneauC7441216−3311724606
24Richard MatvichukD643912235122156420
27Shawn ChambersD61291161817022−118
3Craig LudwigD8026858723145220
10Brian SkrudlandC4041523319022016
18Derek PlanteC1023514610104
4Sergei GusevD2214556
33Benoit HogueC121342414022−116
37Brad LukowichD14123319801134
17Brent SeverynLW30123−250
49Jon SimLW71011124000−10
6Dan KeczmerD22011−222
20Ed BelfourG6100026230004
28Jason BotterillLW17000−223
34Petr BuzekD200002
39Kelly FairchildC100000
30Manny FernandezG10000
23Aaron GaveyC7000−110
6[a]Doug LidsterD17000010400002
11Blake SloanRW14000−11019022−18
1Roman TurekG260000
46Jamie WrightLW11000−30

Goaltending

[edit]
No.PlayerRegular seasonPlayoffs
GPWLTSAGAGAASV%SOTOIGPWLSAGAGAASV%SOTOI
20Ed Belfour613515913731171.99.9155353623167617431.67.93031544
1Roman Turek261633562482.08.91511382
30Manny Fernandez10102922.00.931060

Awards and records

[edit]

Awards

[edit]
TypeAward/honorRecipientRef
League
(annual)
Conn Smythe TrophyJoe Nieuwendyk[6]
Frank J. Selke TrophyJere Lehtinen[7]
William M. Jennings TrophyEd Belfour[8]
Roman Turek
League
(in-season)
NHL All-Star Game selectionEd Belfour[9]
Ken Hitchcock(coach)
Mike Modano
Darryl Sydor
Sergei Zubov
NHL Player of the WeekMike Modano(December 28)[10]
TeamStar of the Game AwardMike Modano[11]

Milestones

[edit]
MilestonePlayerDateRef
400th goal scoredJoe NieuwendykOctober 30, 1998[12]
500th game playedEd BelfourNovember 13, 1998[13]
1,000th pointBrett HullNovember 14, 1998[14]
First gameBlake SloanMarch 12, 1999[15]
Jon SimMarch 28, 1999

Transactions

[edit]
  • February 26, 1999 – Doug Lidster was signed as a free agent with theDallas Stars.

Dallas Stars - 1999 Stanley Cup champions

[edit]

Players

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders

Coaching and administrative staff

  • Thomas O. Hicks (Chairman/Owner/Governor),Jim Lites (President),Bob Gainey (Vice President/General Manager)
  • Doug Armstrong (Ass't General Manager),Craig Button (Director of Player Personnel),Ken Hitchcock (Head Coach)
  • Doug Jarvis,Rick Wilson (Ass't Coaches), Rick McLaughlin, Jeff Cogen (Vice Presidents)
  • Bill Strong (Vice President), Tim Bernhardt (Director-Amateur Scouting), Doug Overton (Director-Pro Scouting)
  • Bob Gernader (Chief Scout), Stu McGregor (Western Scout), Dave Suprenant (Medical Trainer), Dave Smith (Equipment Manager),
  • Rick Matthews (Ass't Equipment Manager), Jean-Jacque McQueen (Strength-Conditioning Coach),
  • Rick St. Croix (Goaltending Consultant), Dan Stuchal (Director of Team Services), Larry Kelly (Director of Public Relations),
  • Leon Friedrich† (Video Coordinator), Craig Lowery† (Trainer Ass't), Dave Warner† (Equipment Ass't).

Stanley Cup engraving

  • ††Brent Severyn played only 30 games, missing 22 regular season games due to injuries, and was a healthy scratch for the playoffs. Dallas included him on the Stanley Cup because he spent the whole season with Dallas. Derek Plante played 41 regular season games for Buffalo and 10 for Dallas. He also played 6 playoff games. His name was included on the cup because he spent the whole season in the NHL.
  • † Members were included on the 1999 Stanley Cup Picture but were not engraved on the cup.
  • In February, Dallas added Doug Lidster from the Canadian National Team and Brad Lukowich from the minor league Kalamazoo Wings. Lidster played 17 regular season and 4 playoff games. Lukowich played 14 regular season and 8 playoff games (2 games in the conference finals). They were left off the cup even though they played in the playoffs.

Draft picks

[edit]

The Stars' picks at the1998 NHL entry draft inBuffalo,New York.[16]

Round#PlayerPositionNationalityCollege/Junior/Club team (League)
239John Erskine(D) CanadaLondon Knights (OHL)
257Tyler Bouck(RW) CanadaPrince George Cougars (WHL)
386Gabriel Karlsson(C) SwedenHV71 (J20 SuperElit)
6153Pavel Patera(RW) Czech RepublicAIK IF (J20 SuperElit)
6173Niko Kapanen(C) FinlandHPK (SM-liiga)
7200Scott Perry(C) United StatesBoston University (Hockey East)

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Lidster wore number 33 in his first six games.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"1998-99 NHL Attendance – National Hockey League – ESPN". ESPN.
  2. ^"1998-99 NHL Summary".Hockey-Reference.com.
  3. ^Dinger 2011, p. 155.
  4. ^"1998-1999 Conference Standings Standings - NHL.com - Standings". NHL.
  5. ^ab"1998-99 Dallas Stars Schedule".Hockey-Reference.com. RetrievedJune 24, 2023.
  6. ^"Conn Smythe Trophy".records.nhl.com. RetrievedJune 28, 2023.
  7. ^"Frank J. Selke Trophy".records.nhl.com. RetrievedJune 28, 2023.
  8. ^"William M. Jennings Trophy".records.nhl.com. RetrievedJune 28, 2023.
  9. ^"1999 NHL All-Star Game Rosters".Hockey-Reference.com. RetrievedAugust 29, 2024.
  10. ^"Stars' Modano is Player of the Week".NHL.com. December 28, 1998. Archived fromthe original on October 4, 1999. RetrievedJuly 26, 2024.
  11. ^Dallas Stars 2014–15 Organizational Compendium, p.269
  12. ^"Ducks Rally To Tie Up Dallas - CBS News".www.cbsnews.com. October 31, 1998. RetrievedJune 28, 2023.Nieuwendyk became the 51st player in NHL history with at least 400 goals when he scored his third in the second game he's played this season.
  13. ^"Lot Detail - Ed Belfour's 1998-99 Dallas Stars "500th Game" Tag Heuer 18K Gold Presentational Watch with His Signed LOA".www.classicauctions.net. RetrievedJune 28, 2023.Honoured by the Dallas Stars for playing in his 500th NHL game, Ed Belfour was presented with this stunning Tag Heuer watch by the club, with the milestone reached on Nov 13, 1998.
  14. ^"Hull Joins His Father in Elite 1,000-Point Club".Los Angeles Times. November 15, 1998. RetrievedJune 28, 2023.
  15. ^"1998-99 NHL Debuts".Hockey-Reference.com. RetrievedOctober 9, 2024.
  16. ^"1998 NHL Entry Draft Picks at hockeydb.com".www.hockeydb.com. RetrievedJune 28, 2023.
Atlantic
Northeast
Southeast
Central
Northwest
Pacific
See also
Franchise
History
Personnel
Owner(s)
DSE Hockey Club, L.P. (Tom Gaglardi, governor)
General manager
Jim Nill
Head coach
Glen Gulutzan
Team captain
Jamie Benn
Current roster
Arenas
Affiliates
Media
Culture and lore
Pre-1993
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
Highlighted seasons indicateStanley Cup championship
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