1993–94 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season
NHL team season / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Mighty Ducks of Anaheim were founded in 1993 by The Walt Disney Company. The team's original name was chosen from the Disney movie The Mighty Ducks, based on a group of misfit kids who turn their losing youth hockey team into a winning team. Disney subsequently made an animated series called Mighty Ducks, featuring a fictional Mighty Ducks of Anaheim team that consisted of anthropomorphized ducks led by the Mighty Duck Wild Wing. The team was the first tenant of Arrowhead Pond, a brand-new arena in Anaheim located a short distance east of Disneyland and across the Orange Freeway from Angel Stadium. The arena was completed the same year the team was founded.
1993–94 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim | |
---|---|
Division | 4th Pacific |
Conference | 9th Western |
1993–94 record | 33–46–5 |
Home record | 14–26–2 |
Road record | 19–20–3 |
Goals for | 229 |
Goals against | 251 |
Team information | |
General manager | Jack Ferreira |
Coach | Ron Wilson |
Captain | Troy Loney |
Alternate captains | Todd Ewen Stu Grimson Randy Ladouceur |
Arena | Pond of Anaheim Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim |
Average attendance | 16,989 (98.9%) Total: 696,560 |
Minor league affiliate(s) | San Diego Gulls (IHL) Greensboro Monarchs (ECHL) |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Bob Corkum (23) |
Assists | Terry Yake (31) |
Points | Terry Yake (52) |
Penalty minutes | Todd Ewen (272) |
Plus/minus | Bobby Dollas (+20) |
Wins | Guy Hebert (20) |
Goals against average | Mikhail Shtalenkov (2.65) |
The Mighty Ducks hired Jack Ferreira as their first general manager, and Pierre Gauthier became his assistant. Gauthier had been a former goalie for Boston University and had considerable scouting experience with the New England Whalers, Calgary Flames and New York Rangers.[1]
While the Mighty Ducks did not qualify for the playoffs in their inaugural season, they were nevertheless reasonably competitive by the standards of the era for a first-year team. Notably, they still managed to finish ahead of their local rivals (and defending conference champions), the Los Angeles Kings.