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The 2004–05 AHL season was the 69th season of the American Hockey League. Twenty-eight teams played 80 games each in the schedule. The Rochester Americans finished first overall in the regular season. The Philadelphia Phantoms won the Calder Cup, defeating the Chicago Wolves in the finals.

This season featured a wealth of talent in the AHL, as the National Hockey League was in the midst of a lockout. Many players who otherwise may have been called up to be members of NHL teams for the season spent the full season in the AHL instead. The lockout also provided opportunity for several NHL arenas — including those in Anaheim, Buffalo, Nashville, San Jose, and Tampa — to host AHL games during the season. The Edmonton Road Runners, meanwhile, played the entire season in Rexall Place, normally the home of the NHL's Edmonton Oilers.

In addition, the shootout (previously used in the 1986–87 season) was reintroduced to the league, to decide a winner in games which remained tied following the overtime period. The team winning a shootout was credited with a win, and the losing team with an overtime loss.

Team changes[]

Final standings[]

Note: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime losses; SL = Shootout losses; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points;

Eastern Conference[]

Atlantic Division GP W L OTL SL Pts GF GA
Manchester Monarchs (LA) 80 51 21 4 4 110 258 176
Hartford Wolf Pack (NYR) 80 50 24 3 3 106 206 160
Lowell Lock Monsters (CAR/CGY) 80 47 27 5 1 100 242 190
Providence Bruins (BOS) 80 40 30 7 3 90 211 202
Worcester IceCats (STL) 80 39 34 3 4 85 212 223
Portland Pirates (WAS) 80 34 34 6 6 80 175 242
Springfield Falcons (TB) 80 24 47 3 6 57 161 255
East Division GP W L OTL SL Pts GF GA
Binghamton Senators (OTT) 80 47 21 7 5 106 276 217
Philadelphia Phantoms (PHI) 80 48 25 4 3 103 235 185
Norfolk Admirals (CHI) 80 43 30 6 1 93 200 188
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (PIT) 80 39 27 7 7 92 227 219
Hershey Bears (COL) 80 39 37 2 2 82 207 226
Bridgeport Sound Tigers (NYI) 80 37 38 1 4 79 192 222
Albany River Rats (NJ) 80 29 38 6 7 71 198 248

Western Conference[]

North Division GP W L OTL SL Pts GF GA
Rochester Americans (BUF) 80 51 19 6 4 112 243 208
St. John's Maple Leafs (TOR) 80 46 28 5 1 98 244 232
Manitoba Moose (VAN) 80 44 26 7 3 98 243 210
Hamilton Bulldogs (MON/DAL) 80 38 29 6 7 89 225 210
Syracuse Crunch (CBJ) 80 36 33 4 7 83 215 230
Edmonton Road Runners (EDM) 80 32 33 11 4 79 201 223
Cleveland Barons (SJ) 80 35 37 6 2 78 200 226
West Division GP W L OTL SL Pts GF GA
Chicago Wolves (ATL) 80 49 24 2 5 105 245 211
Milwaukee Admirals (NAS) 80 47 24 5 4 103 247 207
Cincinnati Mighty Ducks (ANA) 80 44 31 4 1 93 206 191
Houston Aeros (MIN) 80 40 28 6 6 92 212 195
Grand Rapids Griffins (DET) 80 41 35 2 2 86 200 200
San Antonio Rampage (FLA) 80 27 45 5 3 62 156 232
Utah Grizzlies (PHX) 80 23 50 5 2 53 156 265

Scoring Leaders[]

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes

Player Team GP G A Pts PIM
Jason Spezza Binghamton Senators 80 32 85 117 50
Mike Cammalleri Manchester Monarchs 79 46 63 109 60
David Ling St. John's Maple Leafs 80 28 60 88 152
Kyle Wellwood St. John's Maple Leafs 80 38 49 87 20
Simon Gamache Milwaukee Admirals 80 29 57 86 93
Peter Sarno Manitoba Moose 80 16 66 82 53
Chris Taylor Rochester Americans 79 21 58 79 50
Andy Hilbert Providence Bruins 79 37 42 79 83
Denis Hamel Binghamton Senators 80 39 39 78 75
Eric Staal Lowell Lock Monsters 77 26 51 77 88


Calder Cup Playoffs[]

  Division Semi-finals Division Finals Conference Finals Calder Cup Finals
                                     
A1  Manchester 2  
A4  Providence 4  
  A4  Providence 4  
  A3  Lowell 1  
A2  Hartford 2
A3  Lowell 4  
  A  Providence 2  
Eastern
  E  Philadelphia 4  
E1  Binghamton 2  
E4  WBS 4  
  E4  WBS 1
  E2  Philadelphia 4  
E2  Philadelphia 4
E3  Norfolk 2  
  E  Philadelphia 4
  W  Chicago 0
N1  Rochester 4  
N4  Hamilton 0  
  N1  Rochester 1
  N3  Manitoba 4  
N2  St. John's 1
N3  Manitoba 4  
  N  Manitoba 0
Western
  W  Chicago 4  
W1  Chicago 4  
W4  Houston 0  
  W1  Chicago 4
  W3  Cincinnati 1  
W2  Milwaukee 3
W3  Cincinnati 4  

All Star Classic[]

The 18th AHL All-Star Classic was played on February 14, 2005 at the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire. Team PlanetUSA defeated team Canada 5-4 in a shootout win. In the skills competition held the night before, team PlanetUSA defeated team Canada 17-13. [1]

Trophy and Award winners[]

Team awards[]

Calder Cup
Playoff champions:
Philadelphia Phantoms
Richard F. Canning Trophy
Eastern Conference playoff champions:
Philadelphia Phantoms
Robert W. Clarke Trophy
Western Conference playoff champions:
Chicago Wolves
Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy
Regular season champions, League:
Rochester Americans
Frank Mathers Trophy
Regular Season champions, Eastern Conference:
Manchester Monarchs
Norman R. "Bud" Poile Trophy
Regular Season champions, Western Conference:
Rochester Americans
Emile Francis Trophy
Regular Season champions, Atlantic Division:
Manchester Monarchs
F. G. "Teddy" Oke Trophy
Regular Season champions, East Division:
Binghamton Senators
Sam Pollock Trophy
Regular Season champions, North Division:
Rochester Americans
John D. Chick Trophy
Regular Season champions, West Division:
Chicago Wolves

Individual awards[]

Les Cunningham Award
Most valuable player:
Jason Spezza - Binghamton Senators
John B. Sollenberger Trophy
Top point scorer:
Jason Spezza - Binghamton Senators
Willie Marshall Award
Top goal scorer:
Mike Cammalleri - Manchester Monarchs
Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award
Rookie of the year:
Rene Bourque - Norfolk Admirals
Eddie Shore Award
Defenceman of the year:
Niklas Kronwall - Grand Rapids Griffins
Aldege "Baz" Bastien Memorial Award
Best Goaltender:
Ryan Miller - Rochester Americans
Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award
Lowest goals against average:
Jason LaBarbera - Hartford Wolf Pack
Steve Valiquette - Hartford Wolf Pack
Louis A.R. Pieri Memorial Award
Coach of the year:
Randy Cunneyworth - Rochester Americans
Fred T. Hunt Memorial Award
Sportsmanship / Perseverance:
Chris Taylor - Rochester Americans
Yanick Dupre Memorial Award
Community Service Award:
Duncan Milroy - Hamilton Bulldogs
Jack A. Butterfield Trophy
MVP of the playoffs:
Antero Niittymaki - Philadelphia Phantoms

Other awards[]

James C. Hendy Memorial Award
Most outstanding executive:
Mark Chipman, Manitoba Moose
Thomas Ebright Memorial Award
Career contributions:
Glenn Stanford
James H. Ellery Memorial Awards
Outstanding media coverage:
Jonathan Bombulie, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, (newspaper)
Derek Wills, Hamilton, (radio)
Brendan O'Reilly, Binghamton, (television)
Ken McKenzie Award
Outstanding marketing executive:
Brian Lewis, Hamilton Bulldogs
Michael Condon Memorial Award
Outstanding service, on-ice official:
Matt Dunne


Team Photos[]


See also[]

References[]

Preceded by
2003–04 AHL season
AHL seasons Succeeded by
2005–06 AHL season
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at 2004-05 AHL season. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


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