1994–95 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season
NHL team season / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 1994–95 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season was the second season in franchise history. The Ducks missed the playoffs for the second year in a row. Despite a Conference-worst 5–18–1 road record, the team played well at home with an 11–9–4 record. On April 4, the team traded enforcer Stu Grimson, Mark Ferner and the team's sixth-round choice in the 1996 NHL Entry Draft to the Detroit Red Wings in exchange for Mike Sillinger and Jason York. Twenty-year-old rookie Paul Kariya was a candidate for the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL's top rookie, scoring 18 goals and 39 points in 47 games (the award ultimately went to the Quebec Nordiques' Peter Forsberg).
1994–95 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim | |
---|---|
Division | 6th Pacific |
Conference | 12th Western |
1994–95 record | 16–27–5 |
Home record | 11–9–4 |
Road record | 5–18–1 |
Goals for | 125 |
Goals against | 164 |
Team information | |
General manager | Jack Ferreira |
Coach | Ron Wilson |
Captain | Randy Ladouceur |
Alternate captains | Bob Corkum Todd Ewen |
Arena | Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim |
Average attendance | 17,174 (100%) Total: 412,176 |
Minor league affiliate(s) | San Diego Gulls (IHL) Greensboro Monarchs (ECHL) |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Paul Kariya (18) |
Assists | Paul Kariya, Shaun Van Allen (21) |
Points | Paul Kariya (39) |
Penalty minutes | Stu Grimson (110) |
Plus/minus | Steve Rucchin (+7) |
Wins | Guy Hebert (12) |
Goals against average | Guy Hebert (3.13) |