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2010–11 Chicago Blackhawks
Division 3rd Central
Conference 8th Western
2010–11 record 44–29–9
Home record 24–17–0
Road record 20–12–9
Goals for 258
Goals against 225
General Manager Stan Bowman
Coach Joel Quenneville
Captain Jonathan Toews
Alternate captains Duncan Keith
Patrick Sharp
Arena United Center
Average attendance 21,423 (108.6%)
Total: 878,356 [1]
Team leaders
Goals Patrick Sharp (34)
Assists Patrick Kane (46)
Points Jonathan Toews (76)
Penalties in minutes John Scott (72)
Wins Corey Crawford (33)
Goals against average Corey Crawford (2.30)

The 2010–11 Chicago Blackhawks season was the 85th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on September 25, 1926.[2] The team was nicknamed the "Hangover 'Hawks" for having to recover from winning the franchise's first Stanley Cup in 49 years while adapting to the loss of several players from that team due to salary cap restrictions.

The Blackhawks succumbed to the Presidents' Trophy-winning Vancouver Canucks in seven games in the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Off-season[]

Under pressure to fit the team's player salaries under the salary cap for the 2010–11 season, the team began making trades shortly after winning the Stanley Cup. On June 24, the club traded Dustin Byfuglien, Ben Eager, Brent Sopel and Akim Aliu to the Atlanta Thrashers for Marty Reasoner, Joey Crabb, Jeremy Morin, a first-round pick (#24 overall) in 2010 and a second-round pick (#54 overall) in 2010.[3] Later that same day, restricted free agent Colin Fraser was traded to the Edmonton Oilers for a sixth-round pick in 2010.[4] On June 30, the Toronto Maple Leafs traded for right winger Kris Versteeg from Chicago in a five-player trade. The Maple Leafs gave up forwards Viktor Stalberg, Chris DiDomenico and Philippe Paradis. Toronto also acquired the rights to 21-year-old left winger Bill Sweatt, who was a second-round pick in 2007.[5] On July 1, the Blackhawks traded Andrew Ladd to the Atlanta Thrashers for Ivan Vishnevskiy and a second-round draft pick in 2011.[6] On July 9, Niklas Hjalmarsson was signed to an offer sheet by the San Jose Sharks, though the Blackhawks matched the offer on July 12,[7] thereby retaining his services and forgoing compensation from the Sharks for signing a restricted free agent. This signing again put Chicago against the salary cap wall, and as a result forced the club to forego resigning goaltender Antti Niemi, who had filed for arbitration.

Regular season[]

Goaltender Marty Turco made his Blackhawks debut on October 7, a 4–3 overtime loss against the Colorado Avalanche. His first Blackhawks win came on October 15, a 5–2 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets. Defenseman Nick Leddy made his NHL debut on October 7, and he scored his first NHL goal on October 11. Evan Brophey made his NHL debut on October 23. Patrick Sharp had a record of 13 shots on goal, the highest shot total in a single game in Blackhawks history. Marian Hossa was named the NHL's Second Star of the Week for the week ending on October 18, and Duncan Keith was named Third Star of the Week for the week ending on November 1.

Division standings[]

Central Division[8]
GP W L OTL ROW GF GA Pts
1 Detroit Red Wings 82 47 25 10 43 261 241 104
2 Nashville Predators 82 44 27 11 38 219 194 99
3 Chicago Blackhawks 82 44 29 9 38 258 225 97
4 St. Louis Blues 82 38 33 11 34 240 234 87
5 Columbus Blue Jackets 82 34 35 13 29 215 258 81

Conference standings[]

Western Conference
R GP W L OTL ROW GF GA Pts
1 p – Vancouver Canucks 82 54 19 9 50 262 185 117
2 y – San Jose Sharks 82 48 25 9 43 248 213 105
3 y – Detroit Red Wings 82 47 25 10 43 261 241 104
4 Anaheim Ducks 82 47 30 5 43 239 235 99
5 Nashville Predators 82 44 27 11 38 219 194 99
6 Phoenix Coyotes 82 43 26 13 38 231 226 99
7 Los Angeles Kings 82 46 30 6 36 219 198 98
8 Chicago Blackhawks 82 44 29 9 38 258 225 97
8.5
9 Dallas Stars 82 42 29 11 37 227 233 95
10 Calgary Flames 82 41 29 12 32 250 237 94
11 St. Louis Blues 82 38 33 11 34 240 234 87
12 Minnesota Wild 82 39 35 8 36 206 233 86
13 Columbus Blue Jackets 82 34 35 13 29 215 258 81
14 Colorado Avalanche 82 30 44 8 24 227 288 68
15 Edmonton Oilers 82 25 45 12 23 193 269 62

y – Won division; p – Won President's Trophy (best record in NHL);


Schedule and results[]

Legend:       Win (2 points)       Loss (0 points)       Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)

Pre-season[]

Regular season[]

2010–11 Season

Playoffs[]

The Blackhawks returned to the playoffs for the third straight season and were defending their championship of the Stanley Cup as the 8th seed. The Blackhawks played the Canucks for the third straight postseason. In the previous two rounds, the Blackhawks defeated the Canucks twice, four games to two. The Blackhawks were down three games to none, but managed to tie up the series facing elimination. The Blackhawks became just the seventh team in NHL history to come back to tie an 0–3 deficit in the playoffs. The Blackhawks lost in overtime in game seven to an Alex Burrows goal for a 2–1 loss.

See also: 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs
2011 Stanley Cup Playoffs

Legend:       Win       Loss

Player statistics[]

Skaters[]

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played in; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes; +/- = Plus/minus; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals 

Regular season
Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM
Jonathan Toews 80 32 44 76 25 26
Patrick Kane 73 27 46 73 7 28
Patrick Sharp 74 34 37 71 −1 38
Marian Hossa 65 25 32 57 9 32
Brent Seabrook 82 9 39 48 0 47
Duncan Keith 82 7 38 45 −1 22
Tomas Kopecky 81 15 27 42 −13 60
Dave Bolland 61 15 22 37 11 34
Bryan Bickell 78 17 20 37 6 40
Troy Brouwer 79 17 19 36 −2 38
Brian Campbell 65 5 22 27 28 6
Viktor Stalberg 77 12 12 24 2 43
Jake Dowell 79 6 15 21 5 63
Jack Skille 49 7 10 17 3 25
Fernando Pisani 60 7 9 16 0 10
Niklas Hjalmarsson 80 3 7 10 13 39
Michael Frolik 28 3 6 9 0 14
Jassen Cullimore 36 0 8 8 4 8
Nick Boynton 41 1 7 8 2 36
Nick Leddy 46 4 3 7 −3 4
Chris Campoli 19 1 6 7 3 2
Ryan Johnson 34 1 5 6 −2 8
Jeremy Morin 9 2 1 3 2 9
Jordan Hendry 37 1 0 1 −2 4
John Scott 40 0 1 1 0 72
Ben Smith 6 1 0 1 1 0
Jeff Taffe 1 0 0 0 0 0
Evan Brophey 1 0 0 0 0 0
Rob Klinkhammer 1 0 0 0 1 0
Brandon Pirri 1 0 0 0 −1 0
Marcus Kruger 7 0 0 0 −4 4
Ryan Potulny 3 0 0 0 −1 0

Playoffs
Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM
Marian Hossa 7 2 4 6 0 2
Duncan Keith 7 4 2 6 −3 6
Dave Bolland 4 2 4 6 6 4
Patrick Kane 7 1 5 6 −1 2
Patrick Sharp 7 3 2 5 1 2
Michael Frolik 7 2 3 5 3 2
Bryan Bickell 5 2 2 4 4 0
Jonathan Toews 7 1 3 4 −4 2
Brian Campbell 7 1 2 3 2 6
Ben Smith 7 3 0 3 −1 0
Niklas Hjalmarsson 7 0 2 2 4 2
Ryan Johnson 6 0 1 1 −1 2
Chris Campoli 7 0 1 1 3 2
Brent Seabrook 5 0 1 1 0 6
Viktor Stalberg 7 1 0 1 0 5
Marcus Kruger 5 0 1 1 2 0
Fernando Pisani 3 0 0 0 −1 0
Tomas Kopecky 1 0 0 0 0 0
Jake Dowell 2 0 0 0 0 0
Troy Brouwer 7 0 0 0 2 11
John Scott 4 0 0 0 1 22
Nick Leddy 7 0 0 0 −1 0

Goaltenders[]

Note: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime losses; GA = Goals against; GAA= Goals against average; SA= Shots against; SV= Saves; Sv% = Save percentage; SO= Shutouts

Regular season
Player GP Min W L OT GA GAA SA Sv% SO G A PIM
Corey Crawford 57 3337 33 18 6 128 2.30 1545 .917 4 0 1 2
Marty Turco 29 1631 11 11 3 82 3.02 799 .897 1 0 0 6
Playoffs
Player GP Min W L GA GAA SA Sv% SO G A PIM
Corey Crawford 7 435 3 4 16 2.21 218 .927 1 0 2 0

Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Blackhawks. Stats reflect time with the Blackhawks only.
Traded or released mid-season
Bold/italics denotes franchise record

Detailed records[]

Western Conference
Opponent Home Away Total Pts. Goals scored Goals allowed
Central Division
Chicago Blackhawks - - - - - -
Columbus Blue Jackets 1–2–0 3–0–0 4–2–0 8 25 17
Detroit Red Wings 1–2–0 3–0–0 4–2–0 8 20 13
Nashville Predators 2–1–0 1–0–2 3–1–2 8 20 14
St. Louis Blues 3–0–0 1–2–0 4–2–0 8 22 20
7–5–0 8–2–2 15–7–2 32 87 64
Northwest Division
Calgary Flames 2–0–0 0–2–0 2–2–0 4 13 16
Colorado Avalanche 1–1–0 0–1–1 1–2–1 3 15 15
Edmonton Oilers 0–2–0 2–0–0 2–2–0 4 14 10
Minnesota Wild 1–1–0 2–0–0 3–1–0 6 12 8
Vancouver Canucks 1–1–0 1–1–0 2–2–0 4 12 9
5–5–0 5–4–1 10–9–1 21 66 58
Pacific Division
Anaheim Ducks 1–1–0 1–1–0 2–2–0 4 9 7
Dallas Stars 1–1–0 0–1–1 1–2–1 3 10 16
Los Angeles Kings 2–0–0 2–0–0 4–0–0 8 12 7
Phoenix Coyotes 1–1–0 1–0–1 2–1–1 5 9 9
San Jose Sharks 1–1–0 0–1–1 1–2–1 3 13 15
6–4–0 4–3–3 10–7–3 23 53 54

Eastern Conference
Opponent Home Away Total Pts. Goals scored Goals allowed
Atlantic Division
New Jersey Devils 0–1–0 0–0–0 0–1–0 0 3 5
New York Islanders 1–0–0 0–0–0 1–0–0 2 5 0
New York Rangers 0–0–0 0–1–0 0–1–0 0 2 3
Philadelphia Flyers 0–1–0 0–0–0 0–1–0 0 1 4
Pittsburgh Penguins 1–0–0 0–0–0 1–0–0 2 3 2
2–2–0 0–1–0 2–3–0 4 14 14
Northeast Division
Boston Bruins 0–0–0 0–1–0 0–1–0 0 0 3
Buffalo Sabres 1–0–0 1–0–0 2–0–0 4 8 6
Montreal Canadiens 0–0–0 0–0–1 0–0–1 1 1 2
Ottawa Senators 1–0–0 0–0–0 1–0–0 2 3 2
Toronto Maple Leafs 0–0–0 1–0–0 1–0–0 2 5 3
2–0–0 2–1–1 4–1–1 9 17 16
Southeast Division
Atlanta Thrashers 0–0–0 1–0–0 1–0–0 2 5 4
Carolina Hurricanes 1–0–0 0–0–0 1–0–0 2 5 2
Florida Panthers 1–0–0 0–1–0 1–1–0 2 6 3
Tampa Bay Lightning 0–1–0 0–0–1 0–1–1 1 3 6
Washington Capitals 0–0–0 0–0–1 0–0–1 1 3 4
2–1–0 1–1–2 3–2–2 8 22 19

Awards and records[]

Awards[]

Regular Season
Player Award Reached
Marian Hossa[9] NHL Second Star of the Week October 18, 2010
Duncan Keith[10] NHL Third Star of the Week November 1, 2010
Corey Crawford[11] NHL Second Star of the Week February 28, 2011
Jonathan Toews[12] NHL First Star of the Month February 2011

Milestones[]

Regular season
Player Milestone Reached
Nick Leddy 1st Career NHL Game October 7, 2010 [13]
Brandon Pirri 1st Career NHL Game October 9, 2010 [14]
Nick Leddy 1st Career NHL Goal
1st Career NHL Point
October 11, 2010 [13]
Brent Seabrook 400th Career NHL Game October 20, 2010
Duncan Keith 200th Career NHL Point October 22, 2010
Evan Brophey 1st Career NHL Game October 23, 2010 [15]
Ben Smith 1st Career NHL Game October 29, 2010 [16]
Jonathan Toews 200th Career NHL Point October 29, 2010
Jordan Hendry 100th Career NHL Game November 1, 2010
Jeremy Morin 1st Career NHL Game November 6, 2010 [17]
Jeremy Morin 1st Career NHL Assist
1st Career NHL Point
November 30, 2010 [18]
Jassen Cullimore 800th Career NHL Game December 8, 2010
Rob Klinkhammer 1st Career NHL Game December 8, 2010
Jeremy Morin 1st Career NHL Goal December 8, 2010 [19]
John Scott 100th Career NHL Game December 28, 2010
Troy Brouwer 200th Career NHL Game January 3, 2011
Brian Campbell 300th Career NHL Point January 9, 2011
Tomas Kopecky 300th Career NHL Game January 9, 2011
Dave Bolland 200th Career NHL Game
100th Career NHL Point
January 16, 2011
Jonathan Toews 100th Career NHL Goal January 16, 2011
Brian Campbell 600th Career NHL Game February 4, 2011
Marian Hossa 800th Career NHL Point February 12, 2011
Troy Brouwer 100th Career NHL Point February 16, 2011
Patrick Sharp 300th Career NHL Point February 24, 2011
Viktor Stalberg 100th Career NHL Game March 2, 2011
Patrick Kane 300th Career NHL Game March 4, 2011
Patrick Kane 100th Career NHL Goal March 14, 2011
Nick Leddy 1st Career NHL Assist March 20, 2011
Marcus Kruger 1st Career NHL Game March 23, 2011
Chris Campoli 100th Career NHL Assist March 28, 2011
Patrick Kane 300th Career NHL Point April 5, 2011
Jake Dowell 100th Career NHL Game April 6, 2011
Jonathan Toews 300th Career NHL Game April 6, 2011
Bryan Bickell 100th Career NHL Game April 8, 2011
Ryan Johnson 700th Career NHL Game April 8, 2011
Ben Smith 1st Career NHL Goal
1st Career NHL Point
April 8, 2011
Patrick Kane 200th Career NHL Assist April 10, 2011
Playoffs
Player Milestone Reached
Jake Dowell 1st Career NHL Playoff Game April 13, 2011
Michael Frolik 1st Career NHL Playoff Game April 13, 2011
Nick Leddy 1st Career NHL Playoff Game April 13, 2011
Ben Smith 1st Career NHL Playoff Game April 13, 2011
Viktor Stalberg 1st Career NHL Playoff Game April 13, 2011
Michael Frolik 1st Career NHL Playoff Assist
1st Career NHL Playoff Point
April 15, 2011
Marcus Kruger 1st Career NHL Playoff Game April 15, 2011
Ben Smith 1st Career NHL Playoff Goal
1st Career NHL Playoff Point
April 15, 2011
Viktor Stalberg 1st Career NHL Playoff Goal
1st Career NHL Playoff Point
April 15, 2011
John Scott 1st Career NHL Playoff Game April 17, 2011
Bryan Bickell 1st Career NHL Playoff Goal April 19, 2011
Corey Crawford 1st Career NHL Playoff Win April 19, 2011
Michael Frolik 1st Career NHL Playoff Goal April 19, 2011
Corey Crawford 1st Career NHL Playoff Shutout April 21, 2011
Marcus Kruger 1st Career NHL Playoff Assist
1st Career NHL Playoff Goal
April 21, 2011

Transactions[]

The Blackhawks have been involved in the following transactions during the 2010–11 season.

Trades[]

Date
Details
June 24, 2010[20] To Atlanta Thrashers
Dustin Byfuglien
Ben Eager
Brent Sopel
Akim Aliu
To Chicago Blackhawks
Marty Reasoner
Joey Crabb
Jeremy Morin
1st-round pick in 2010 – Kevin Hayes
2nd-round pick in 2010 – Justin Holl
June 24, 2010[21] To Edmonton Oilers
Colin Fraser
To Chicago Blackhawks
6th-round pick in 2010 – Mirko Hofflin
June 25, 2010[22] To New York Islanders
1st-round pick in 2010Brock Nelson
To Chicago Blackhawks
2nd-round pick in 2010 – Ludvig Rensfeldt
2nd-round pick in 2010 – Kent Simpson
June 26, 2010
[23]
To Toronto Maple Leafs
2nd-round pick in 2010 – Bradley Ross
To Chicago Blackhawks
Jimmy Hayes
June 26, 2010
[24]
To Boston Bruins
7th-round pick in 2010Zach Trotman
To Chicago Blackhawks
7th-round pick in 2011Johan Mattsson
June 30, 2010
[25]
To Toronto Maple Leafs
Kris Versteeg
Bill Sweatt
To Chicago Blackhawks
Viktor Stalberg
Chris DiDomenico
Philippe Paradis
July 1, 2010
[26]
To Atlanta Thrashers
Andrew Ladd
To Chicago Blackhawks
Ivan Vishnevskiy
2nd-round pick in 2011 – Adam Clendening
July 22, 2010
[27]
To Florida Panthers
Marty Reasoner
To Chicago Blackhawks
Jeff Taffe
February 9, 2011
[28]
To Florida Panthers
Jack Skille
Hugh Jessiman
David Pacan
To Chicago Blackhawks
Michael Frolik
Alexander Salak
February 28, 2011
[29]
To Ottawa Senators
Ryan Potulny
Conditional 2nd-round pick in 2011[lower-alpha 1] – Xavier Ouellet
To Chicago Blackhawks
Chris Campoli
Conditional 7th-round pick in 2012[lower-alpha 2]

Notes[]

  1. NHL Attendance - 2011. ESPN.com (2010-11-09).
  2. National Hockey League (2010). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book/2011. Triumph Books, 39. ISBN 978-1-60078-422-4. 
  3. Chicago Blackhawks (June 24, 2010). Blackhawks acquire two 2010 draft picks, Jeremy Morin, Marty Reasoner and Joey Crabb from Atlanta Thrashers. Press release.
  4. Oilers acquire Fraser from Blackhawks. nhl.com (June 24, 2010).
  5. "Kris Versteeg Trade: Blackhawks Deal Versteeg To Toronto In Salary-Cap Move", Huffington Post, July 1, 2010. 
  6. http://sports.insidepulse.com/2010/07/02/nhl-news-chicago-blackhawks-trade-andrew-ladd-to-atlanta-thrashers/
  7. Blackhawks to match Hjalmarsson offer sheet.
  8. 2010–11 Standings by Division. National Hockey League.
  9. Vokoun, Hossa and Getzlaf named NHL 'Three Stars' of the week.
  10. Thomas, Thornton and Keith named 'Three Stars'.
  11. Kessel leads NHL's 'Three Stars of the Week'.
  12. Toews tops February's 'Three Stars'.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Blackhawks assign Nick Leddy to Rockford. Blackhawks.com (2010-10-24).
  14. Brandon Pirri Makes NHL Debut with Blackhawks. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Athletics.com (2010-10-09).
  15. Blackhawks assign Evan Brophey to Rockford. Blackhawks.com (2010-10-24).
  16. Blackhawks assign Ben Smith, Ryan Potulny to Rockford. Blackhawks.com (2010-11-02).
  17. Blackhawks assign Jeremy Morin to Rockford. Blackhawks.NHL.com (2010-11-08).
  18. Rogers, Jesse (2010-11-30). Morin could be in Chicago to stay. ESPN.com.
  19. Morin scores first NHL goal. Auburn Citizen (2010-12-09).
  20. Blackhawks acquire two 2010 draft picks, Jeremy Morin, Marty Reasoner and Joey Crabb from Atlanta Thrashers.
  21. Blackhawks acquire sixth-round selection in 2010 NHL Entry Draft from Edmonton.
  22. Blackhawks acquire two 2010 draft picks from New York Islanders.
  23. Blackhawks acquire Jimmy Hayes from Toronto Maple Leafs.
  24. Day 2 provides more wheeling and dealing.
  25. Blackhawks acquire trio of forwards from Toronto.
  26. Blackhawks acquire Vishnevskiy and second round draft pick from Atlanta.
  27. Blackhawks acquire Jeff Taffe from Florida.
  28. Blackhawks acquire Frolik and Salak from Florida.
  29. Blackhawks acquire Chris Campoli from Ottawa.

Free agents acquired[]

Player Former team Contract terms
Mathis Olimb[1] Frölunda HC 1 year, $600,000 entry-level contract
John Scott[2] Minnesota Wild 2 years, $1.025 million
Marty Turco[3] Dallas Stars 1 year, $1.3 million
Hugh Jessiman[4] Milwaukee Admirals 1 year, $500,000
Fernando Pisani[5] Edmonton Oilers 1 year, $500,000
Ryan Potulny[6] Edmonton Oilers 1 year, $500,000
Garnet Exelby[7] Toronto Maple Leafs 1 year, $500,000
Ryan Johnson[8] Vancouver Canucks 1 year, $500,000

Free agents lost[]

Player New team Contract terms
Joey Crabb[9] Toronto Maple Leafs 1 year, $525,000
Richard Petiot[10] Edmonton Oilers 1 year, $550,000
Adam Burish[11] Dallas Stars 2 years, $2.3 million
Kyle Greentree[12] Washington Capitals 2 years, $1.025 million
Danny Richmond[13] Toronto Maple Leafs 1 year, $550,000
John Madden[14] Minnesota Wild 1 year, $1 million
Antti Niemi[15] San Jose Sharks 1 year, $2 million

Claimed via waivers[]

Lost via waivers[]

Player New team Date claimed off waivers
Nick Boynton[16] Philadelphia Flyers February 26, 2011

Player signings[]

Player Contract terms
Marcus Kruger[17] 3 years, $2.205 million entry-level contract
Niklas Hjalmarsson[18] 4 years, $14 million
Bryan Bickell[19] 3 years, $1.625 million
Jack Skille[19] 1 year, $600,000
Nick Leddy[20] 3 years, $4.2 million entry-level contract
Igor Makarov[21] 2 years, $1.105 million entry-level contract
Evan Brophey[4] 1 year, $500,000
Nathan Davis[4] 1 year, $500,000
Jassen Cullimore[4] 1 year, $500,000
Hannu Toivonen[4] 1 year, $550,000
Jordan Hendry[22] 1 year, $600,000
Nick Boynton[23] 1 year, $500,000
Brandon Pirri[24] 3 years, $1.945 million entry-level contract
Dylan Olsen[25] 3 year entry-level contract
Brent Seabrook[26] 5 years, $29 million contract extension
Jimmy Hayes[27] 3 years, $1.9625 million entry-level contract
Joe Lavin[28] 2 years, $1.18 million entry-level contract

Draft picks[]

The 2010 NHL Entry Draft was at Staples Center in Los Angeles, California, on June 25 and 26, 2010. The Blackhawks picked 30th in each round. The Blackhawks were active in trading, moving up from 30th in the draft to 24th to select Kevin Hayes. Through other trades, the Blackhawks picked up three selections in the second round, and had ten selections overall in the draft.

Round # Player Position Nationality College/Junior/Club Team (League)
1 24 (from Atlanta via New Jersey) Kevin Hayes RW Flag of the United States United States Noble and Greenough School (USHS-MA)
2 35 (from NY Islanders) Ludvig Rensfeldt C Flag of Sweden Sweden Brynäs IF (J20 SuperElit)
2 54 (from New Jersey via Atlanta) Justin Holl D Flag of the United States United States Omaha Lancers (USHL)
2 58 (from San Jose via Ottawa via NY Islanders) Kent Simpson G Flag of Canada Canada Everett Silvertips (WHL)
2 60 Stephen Johns D Flag of the United States United States U.S. National Team Development Program (USHL)
3 90 Joakim Nordstrom C Flag of Sweden Sweden AIK IF (Elitserien Jr.)
4 120 Rob Flick C Flag of Canada Canada Mississauga St. Michael's Majors (OHL)
6 151 (from Edmonton) Mirko Hofflin C Flag of Germany Germany Adler Mannheim Jr. (Germany Jr.)
6 180 Nick Mattson D Flag of the United States United States Indiana Ice (USHL)
7 191 (from Dallas) Macmillan Carruth G Flag of the United States United States Portland Winterhawks (WHL)

See also[]

References[]

External links[]

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