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* [[Rick Nash]], 2008–'12<ref name="Captain"/>
* [[Rick Nash]], 2008–'12<ref name="Captain"/>
* vacant, 2012-'15
* vacant, 2012-'15
* Captain for 2015-'16 season will be announced on 05/20/2015<ref>{[cite news|url=http://prohockeytalk.nbcsports.com/2015/05/15/columbus-to-announce-new-captain-on-wednesday/|Title=Columbus to announce new captain on Wednesday|publisher=NBC Sports|date=2015-05-15|accessdate=2015-05-15}}</ref>
* Captain for 2015-'16 season will be announced on 05/20/2015<ref>{{cite news|url=http://prohockeytalk.nbcsports.com/2015/05/15/columbus-to-announce-new-captain-on-wednesday/|Title=Columbus to announce new captain on Wednesday|publisher=NBC Sports|date=2015-05-15|accessdate=2015-05-15}}</ref>


=== First round draft picks ===
=== First round draft picks ===

Revision as of 19:21, 18 May 2015

Columbus Blue Jackets
2014–15 Columbus Blue Jackets season
File:Columbus BlueJackets.svg
ConferenceEastern
DivisionMetropolitan
FoundedJune 25, 1997
HistoryColumbus Blue Jackets
2000–present
Home arenaNationwide Arena
CityColumbus, Ohio
Team colorsNavy blue, red, silver, white
       
MediaFox Sports Ohio
CD1025 (102.5 FM)
The Fan (97.1 FM)
Owner(s)John P. McConnell[1]
General managerJarmo Kekalainen
Head coachTodd Richards
CaptainVacant
Minor league affiliatesLake Erie Monsters (AHL)
Kalamazoo Wings (ECHL)
Stanley Cups0
Conference championships0
Presidents' Trophy0
Division championships0
Official websitebluejackets.nhl.com

The Columbus Blue Jackets are a professional ice hockey team based in Columbus, Ohio, United States. They are members of the Metropolitan Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL).

Replacing the Columbus Chill of the ECHL, the Blue Jackets were founded as an expansion team in 2000.[2] The team qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in 2009.[3]

The Blue Jackets' name and logos were inspired by Ohio's Civil War history. Jack Johnson, Marian Gaborik, Sergei Bobrovsky, David Vyborny, Ray Whitney, Bryan Berard, Fredrik Modin, Steve Mason, Rick Nash and Sergei Fedorov are some of the more prominent NHL figures to have donned a Columbus jersey. The Blue Jackets play their home games at Nationwide Arena in downtown Columbus, which opened in 2000. They are affiliated with the Lake Erie Monsters[4] of the AHL and the Kalamazoo Wings[5] of the ECHL.

Franchise history

1997–2000: Building a new franchise

Prior to the establishment of the Blue Jackets, the last NHL team in the state of Ohio was the Cleveland Barons, who played from 1976–78. In Columbus, the Blue Jackets replaced the Columbus Chill of the ECHL, who played in the city from 1991–99. The Chill played at the Ohio Expo Center Coliseum where they had an 83-game sellout streak, which was a minor league hockey record at the time.[6] In November 1996, five investors formed a partnership called Columbus Hockey Limited, who then submitted an application and a $100,000 fee to the NHL office.[2] The voters of Columbus were considering a referendum to build a publicly financed arena, a major step toward approval of their NHL bid.[7] When League Commissioner Gary Bettman visited Columbus to meet with the community's leaders about the franchise proposal, there was concern that the voters might not pass the needed referendum. The civic leaders told Bettman that they would not be willing to foot the bill for the team if the referendum failed. However, just after the meeting adjourned, John H. McConnell (one of those who entered the bid) privately guaranteed Bettman that an arena would be built, referendum or not.[8]

Nationwide Arena, home of the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Columbus' hopes for the bid dimmed when the May referendum failed. However, Nationwide announced on May 31, 1997, that it would finance the $150-million arena. Subsequently, on June 25, 1997, the NHL announced that Columbus would receive a new franchise.[2] Afterwards a “Name the Team” contest was held with the help from Wendy's throughout central Ohio during the month of August 1997. Out of 14,000 submitted entries, the franchise with help from the NHL narrowed the 14,000 entries down to 10 names. Then with the information received from owner John H. McConnell regarding Columbus' history, the League and the franchise narrowed the list of potential names down to two – Blue Jackets and Justice. The former, which referenced Ohio's contributions to the American Civil War, was eventually announced as the team name in November.[9]

On June 23, 2000, the NHL's two newest teams, the Blue Jackets and the Minnesota Wild, took part in the 2000 NHL Expansion Draft in Calgary, Alberta. Under the draft's rules, 26 of the NHL's active 28 teams were allowed to protect one goaltender, five defensemen, and nine forwards, or two goaltenders, three defensemen, and seven forwards. The Atlanta Thrashers and Nashville Predators both had their full rosters protected because they were the two newest teams, only being in existence for one and two years, respectively. Both the Blue Jackets and Wild had to use their first 24 selections on three goaltenders, eight defensemen, and thirteen forwards. Their final two picks could be players of any position.[10]

With the first-overall choice, the Blue Jackets selected goaltender Rick Tabaracci from the Colorado Avalanche.[11] Over the course of the draft, Columbus picked up goalie Dwayne Roloson, defensemen Lyle Odelein and Mathieu Schneider, and forwards Geoff Sanderson, Turner Stevenson and Dallas Drake, among others.[12] Instead of joining Columbus, Roloson signed with the American Hockey League's Worcester IceCats,[13] Schneider left for the Los Angeles Kings,[14] and the St. Louis Blues signed Drake.[15] Columbus also traded Stevenson to the New Jersey Devils to complete an earlier transaction.[16]

The Blue Jackets and Wild were granted concessions by some franchises who could not protect their full rosters. The San Jose Sharks traded Jan Caloun, a ninth-round pick in the 2000 NHL Entry Draft, and a 2001 conditional pick to Columbus;[17] in return, the Blue Jackets agreed not to select the Sharks' unprotected goaltender Evgeni Nabokov.[18] On June 24, at the 2000 NHL Entry Draft, Columbus selected Rostislav Klesla fourth overall.[19]

2000–05: Early years

Logo 2000–07

The Blue Jackets played their first regular-season game on October 7, 2000, a 5–3 loss to the Chicago Blackhawks. Bruce Gardiner scored the franchise's first goal.[20] Columbus finished with a 28–39–9–6 record for 71 points, last in the Central Division, and failed to qualify for the playoffs.[21] Geoff Sanderson became the first player in team history to score 30 goals. Ron Tugnutt, who was signed in the summer of 2000, supplied solid goaltending with 22 wins, which tied the 74-year-old League record for wins by an expansion-team goalie (New York Rangers' Lorne Chabot also had 22 wins in 1926–27).[22]

The Blue Jackets finished next-to-last in the NHL in the following season, with only 57 points.[23] Ray Whitney, acquired from the Florida Panthers the previous season, led the team in scoring with 61 points, setting a franchise record.[24] Tragedy struck the Blue Jackets organization in March 2002 when 13-year-old Brittanie Cecil was killed after a deflected puck shot by Espen Knutsen struck her in the head while she was in the stands at Nationwide Arena. As a result of her death, large nylon mesh nets were installed behind the goals in all NHL arenas to shield spectators from pucks going over the glass.[25] The team also wore small red hearts with the initials "BNC" on their helmets.[26]

During the off-season, the Blue Jackets traded a second-round pick (32nd overall) and Ron Tugnutt to the Dallas Stars. In return, Columbus received Dallas' first-round pick (20th overall) in the 2002 Entry Draft.[27] On the morning of the draft, Columbus traded the third-overall pick and the option to flip draft spots in 2003 to the Florida Panthers; in return, Columbus received the first-overall pick, which they used to select Rick Nash.[28]

The 2002–03 season started with Columbus putting up a 7–5–1–1 record after the first 14 games.[29] However, as expectations from their fans grew higher, the team came back to mediocrity, finishing last in the Central Division for the third consecutive season and missing the playoffs once again.[30] Dave King, who had been the team's head coach since their debut in 2000, was fired mid-season and replaced by General Manager Doug MacLean.[31][32] Marc Denis was named starting goalie; he played a franchise-record 77 games that season and set a League record with 4,511 minutes played in 2002–03. He tied for second all-time for games played in a season by a goaltender, just two shy of the League record held by St. Louis Blues' Grant Fuhr in the 1995–96 season.[33][34]

File:Clb Alternate.png
Alternate logo used from the 2000–01 season until the 2002–03 season

The 2003–04 season was another losing season for the Blue Jackets despite key additions in the offseason. Checking center Todd Marchant was signed to a five-year contract in July from the Edmonton Oilers.[35] Defenseman Darryl Sydor, known to play strong offense as well, was acquired from the Dallas Stars for Mike Sillinger and a draft pick. MacLean stepped aside as head coach midway through the season, giving way to Gerard Gallant.[36] The Blue Jackets finished with just 62 points (the second-lowest total in their short history), but it was enough to help them break out of last place in the Central Division for the first time, finishing ahead of the Chicago Blackhawks. Nash was one of the few bright spots for the team; his 41 goals tied Jarome Iginla and Ilya Kovalchuk for the Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy (as League leader in goals scored).[37]

File:Columbus Blue Jackets Civil War cap shoulder patch.svg
Civil War cap shoulder patch 2003–04–present

In the 2004 off-season, the NHL Players' Association (NHLPA) and NHL administration failed to renew their collective bargaining agreement. September 14, 2004, marked the beginning of the lockout of the 2004–05 season. No games were played and the Stanley Cup was not awarded for the first time since the flu epidemic of 1919.[38] An agreement was made on July 13, 2005, and the lockout officially ended nine days later on July 22, 2005.

2005–13: Post-lockout: Rick Nash era and rebuilding

In the summer of 2005, rugged Colorado Avalanche defenseman Adam Foote agreed to a three-year deal with the team.[39] Heading into the 2005–06 season, it appeared the Blue Jackets would finally take the next step and make the playoffs. Instead, injuries to Rick Nash, Rostislav Klesla and Gilbert Brule, the team's 2005 first-round pick,[40] led to the team putting up a dismal 9–25–1 record through its first 35 games.[41] Superstar Sergei Fedorov was acquired from the Anaheim Mighty Ducks; Anaheim received Tyler Wright and Francois Beauchemin, and later claimed Todd Marchant off waivers.[42] While again failing to make the playoffs, Columbus did manage to improve. They had the best overtime record in the NHL (14–4) and finished the season with franchise records for wins (35) and points (74).[21] For the first time ever, they earned a third-place finish in the Central Division, behind Detroit and Nashville.[43]

The 2006–07 season saw several changes made to the team. In the off-season, Marc Denis was dealt to the Tampa Bay Lightning for forward Fredrik Modin and goaltending prospect Fredrik Norrena, making way for Pascal Leclaire to take the starting job.[44] The Blue Jackets also signed Anson Carter when it looked as if Nikolay Zherdev would be playing the season in Russia;[45] in late September, however, Zherdev and General Manager Doug MacLean were able to reach a compromise.[46] Partway through the season, on November 13, 2006, Gerard Gallant was relieved of his duties as head coach. The next day, Gary Agnew was named his interim replacement. On November 22, Ken Hitchcock, former coach of the Dallas Stars and Philadelphia Flyers, was named the new head coach, effective the following day.[47] Under Hitchcock's first year, two milestones were set: on December 10, 2006, the Blue Jackets scored a team-record five power-play goals in a 6–2 win over the Ottawa Senators,[48] and on April 3, 2007, the Blue Jackets broke the modern-day record for most times being shut-out in a season (16) with a 3–0 loss to the Detroit Red Wings.[49]

Former captain, Rick Nash

On April 18, 2007, Doug MacLean, the team's first general manager and president, was fired after nine years and six seasons at the helm without a playoff berth. Mike Priest, President of Blue Jackets parent company JMAC, Inc.,[50] was named President of the club, while Assistant General Manager Jim Clark served as General Manager until the Blue Jackets named Edmonton Oilers Assistant General Manager Scott Howson as the new general manager on June 15, 2007.[21][51]

On October 4, 2007, the Blue Jackets announced their affiliation with the Elmira Jackals, which replaced their former affiliation with the Dayton Bombers as the club's ECHL affiliate.[52]

The 2007–08 season, the club's first full season under Hitchcock, started off well as the Jackets got off to their best start in franchise history, starting with a 4–0 shutout of the defending Stanley Cup champion Anaheim Ducks. At the trade deadline on February 26, 2008, however, apparently unable to agree on a new contract and amid some controversy,[53] Blue Jackets captain Adam Foote requested a trade to the Colorado Avalanche, which was granted. The Blue Jackets received a pair of conditional picks in return. A few weeks later, on March 12, 2008, former Blue Jackets number-one draft pick Rick Nash was named the new team captain.[54] Despite this, Columbus managed its best season record to date, staying above a .500 game wins average until the very last game of the season and finishing fourth in the Central Division with 80 points.[55] After the season, Nash was announced as the cover player for the NHL 2K9 video game by Take-Two Interactive.[56]

At the 2008 NHL Entry Draft, the Blue Jackets selected Nikita Filatov with the sixth overall pick. They also traded away the 19th overall pick (acquired from the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for Adam Foote) for R. J. Umberger.

The Blue Jackets made many trades in the 2008 off-season. Gilbert Brule was traded to the Edmonton Oilers for Raffi Torres. Enigmatic forward Nikolay Zherdev and Dan Fritsche were traded to the New York Rangers in exchange for defensemen Fedor Tyutin and Christian Backman. The Blue Jackets also signed free agents Kristian Huselius and Mike Commodore to multi-year contracts.

On July 9, 2008, the Blue Jackets announced they signed Hitchcock to a three-year extension to remain as head coach.[57]

On August 22, 2008, the Johnstown Chiefs were announced as the new ECHL affiliate for the Blue Jackets, as well as their AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch.[58]

During the 2008–09 season, the Blue Jackets made two trades which greatly played to their benefit. Forward Jason Williams was acquired from the Atlanta Thrashers in exchange for defenseman Clay Wilson and a sixth-round draft pick. The Blue Jackets were also involved with the first major deal of the 2009 NHL trade deadline, by trading goaltender Pascal Leclaire and a second-round draft pick to the Ottawa Senators for skilled center Antoine Vermette. The changes in scenery benefited both players and the Jackets; Williams scored 28 points in his first 36 games as a Jacket, while Vermette scored 11 points in his first 14 games with the team.

On April 8, 2009, the Columbus Blue Jackets secured the first Stanley Cup playoff berth in the franchise's eight-year history with a 4–3 shootout win over the Chicago Blackhawks.[59]

With 21 games remaining and sitting four points out of eighth in the Western Conference, the Blue Jackets dealt long time defenseman Rostislav Klesla and Dane Byers to the Phoenix Coyotes in exchange for Scottie Upshall and Sami Lepisto at the trade deadline on February 28, 2011.

In the 2011 off-season, in an attempt to make a serious playoff run, the Blue Jackets traded Jakub Voracek, their 2011 first round pick (Sean Couturier) and a third round pick (Nick Cousins) to the Philadelphia Flyers for All-Star center Jeff Carter. They also signed several free agents: James Wisniewski, Vaclav Prospal and Radek Martinek. However, after a disastrous start to the 2011–12 season that saw the firing of head coach Scott Arniel, Carter was traded to the Los Angeles Kings for Jack Johnson and a conditional first round pick after playing just 39 games with the Blue Jackets. The Blue Jackets also traded veteran centers Antoine Vermette and Samuel Pahlsson for goaltender Curtis McElhinney and several draft picks at the trade deadline. There was also heavy speculation that captain Rick Nash would be traded at the deadline. Although Nash wasn't traded, General Manager Scott Howson publicly announced that he had privately requested a trade, a move that has stirred up much controversy.[60][61]

Nash was eventually traded to the New York Rangers on July 23, 2012, for Brandon Dubinsky, Artem Anisimov, prospect Tim Erixon and a 2013 first-round draft pick.[62] At the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, the Blue Jackets traded their second and fourth round picks to the Philadelphia Flyers for the eventual winner of the 2013 Vezina Trophy, goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky.

The 2012–13 lockout and season saw changes to the executive and front office of the organization. John Davidson was named as president of hockey operations for the Blue Jackets on October 24.[63] On February 12, Scott Howson was relieved of his duties as general manager.[64][65] Jarmo Kekalainen, who had previously worked with Davidson in St. Louis, was hired away from Jokerit of the Finnish SM-liiga to be the new general manager becoming the first European born General Manager in the NHL.[66] The Blue Jackets then traded for All-Star forward Marian Gaborik. The Blue Jackets just missed the playoffs via a tiebreaker against the Minnesota Wild, who had more regulation and overtime wins (ROW).

2013–present: Return to playoff contention

The Blue Jackets moved into the Metropolitan Division of the Eastern Conference in the 2013–14 season after spending its first 13 seasons in the Central Division of the Western Conference. The other teams in the Metropolitan Division consist of the Carolina Hurricanes, New Jersey Devils, New York Islanders, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins and Washington Capitals, the latter six of which once comprised the old Patrick Division.[67][68] On April 9, 2014, the Blue Jackets clinched their second playoff spot in franchise history by winning a 3–1 game against the Dallas Stars. This game was also noted for being a game resumed after being postponed on March 10, 2014, due to Rich Peverley's cardiac event in which the Blue Jackets led 1–0. The NHL decided to keep the goal scored by Nathan Horton and resume the game with a full 60 minutes. Nathan Horton will also make history by being credited for scoring a goal while not suiting up for the game.[69]

The Blue Jackets faced the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round (Eastern Conference Quarter-finals) of the 2014 Stanley Cup playoffs. This series had a trend that was noted for making 3–1 leads, end up as 4–3 loss. Game 1 and 2 were at the Consol Energy Center in downtown Pittsburgh. The Blue Jackets made a large jump in history when Jack Johnson scored the first goal of the game. This was the first time in franchise history that Columbus ever lead a post-season game. The Jackets lead the game 3–1 at one point from goals by Mark Letestu and Derek MacKenzie. However the Penguins rallied to win it 4–3. Game 2 was the opposite. Pittsburgh lead 3–1 at one point, but Columbus rallied to win Game 2 4–3 by an overtime goal from Matt Calvert. This was the first playoff victory in frachise history. Pittsburgh won Game 3 by a score of 4–3. Game 4 was a memorable night at Nationwide Arena. Columbus was down 3–0, and 3–1 by the end of the first period. Boone Jenner and Ryan Johansen scored to make it 3–2 by the end of the second period. Brandon Dubinsky scored the game tying goal with 22.5 seconds left in regulation, after a miss-play with the puck by Marc-Andre Fleury. Nick Foligno went on to score the game-winning goal in overtime. In the locker room during intermission, he supposedly told the team that he will score the game winner. Pittsburgh, however, went on to win the next two games and took the best-of-seven series in six games.

Team information

Team name

The name "Blue Jackets" was chosen to celebrate "patriotism, pride, and the rich Civil War history in the state of Ohio and city of Columbus."[70] When President Abraham Lincoln requested that Ohio raise ten regiments at the outbreak of the Civil War, the state responded by raising a total of 23 volunteer infantry regiments for three months of service. Ohio also produced a number of great Civil War figures, including William Tecumseh Sherman, Ulysses S. Grant, Philip Sheridan and George Custer. Columbus itself was host to large military bases, Camp Chase and Camp Thomas, which saw hundreds of thousands of Union soldiers and thousands of Confederate prisoners during the Civil War.

Logos and jerseys

The team logo is a stylized version of the flag of Ohio, which is a burgee (i.e. swallowtail pennant), in the form of a "C" wrapped around a star, representing both patriotism and Columbus' status as state capital.[9][71] Previously used as an alternate logo starting in 2003,[9] it became the primary logo as part of a Reebok-sponsored redesign for the 2007–08 season.[72] The original logo had a red ribbon with 13 stars representing the 13 Colonies, unfurled in the shape of the team’s initials, CBJ, with an electric gold hockey stick cutting through the center to represent the “J.” An additional star atop the stick represented Columbus' status as state capital.[9] The team's jerseys feature an alternate logo, a Civil War cap with crossed hockey sticks, on the shoulders.

The Blue Jackets unveiled a new third jersey in the 2010–11 season, using a vintage hockey jersey design. In the spirit of its Civil War theme, it sports a union blue base with white stripes on the sleeves and on the shoulder padding. The crest features the team's Civil War-era cannon. It honors the team's founder, John H. McConnell, with his initials on the neckline, as well as its slogan "We fight, we march!" on the inside of the collar.

"The Cannon"

The cannon at Nationwide Arena.

Prior to the start of the 2007–08 season, the Blue Jackets organization brought a hand-made replica 1857 Napoleon cannon into Nationwide Arena. The cannon is "fired" at home games whenever:

  • the Blue Jackets take the ice at the start of the game
  • the Blue Jackets score a goal
  • the Blue Jackets win the game

It was fired 164 times in its inaugural season (41 home games, 20 home victories, 103 goals scored at home). The title line of "For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)" by AC/DC is played when the cannon is fired followed by the chorus of "The Whip" by Locksley.

Broadcasters

On Fox Sports Ohio, Jeff Rimer serves as the television play-by-play announcer alongside former Columbus Blue Jackets radio analyst Bill Davidge, who joined Rimer in 2009–10 replacing previous analyst Danny Gare.

On radio stations WBNS-FM (flagship), WBNS and WWCD, and 26 other affiliates in Ohio, George Matthews provides play-by-play coverage, with analysis provided by former Syracuse Crunch radio broadcaster Bob McElligott. Matthews has been calling Blue Jackets games since the team's inception in 2000, while Rimer started calling games on television in 2005.

Fox Sports Ohio, which broadcasts 79 games per season, airs pre-game and post-game shows ("Blue Jackets Live") for each game. Pre-game and post-game shows were hosted by Ray Crawford and Bill Davidge (Ray Crawford moved to Chicago at the end of the 2011–12 season and has since been replaced by former Atlanta Thrashers radio play-by-play announcer Dan Kamal[73]). In-game reporting is provided by Natalie Taylor, previously a reporter for the Atlanta Thrashers. The host of the radio pre- and post-game shows is Mark Wyant and Bob McElligott. Fans can interact by e-mail and phone with the radio personalities during and after the game.[74][75]

Stinger is the official Mascot of the Blue Jackets. Stinger is a 6-foot 9 inch bright green bug that walks amongst the crowd during the games and skates on the ice between periods while wearing a Blue Jackets' jersey.[76] The image of Stinger was on the original Blue Jackets' jerseys, eventually being removed in 2005. The team also had another mascot, an anthropomorphic cannon named Boomer, for half of the 2010–11 season.[77][78]

Season-by-season record

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Blue Jackets. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Columbus Blue Jackets seasons

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Records as of April 28, 2014

Season GP W L OTL PTS GF GA Finish Playoffs
2010–11 82 34 35 13 81 215 258 5th, Central Did not qualify
2011–12 82 29 46 7 65 202 262 5th, Central Did not qualify
2012–13 48 24 17 7 55 120 119 4th, Central Did not qualify
2013–14 82 43 32 7 93 231 216 4th, Metropolitan Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Penguins)
2014–15 82 42 35 5 89 236 250 5th, Metropolitan Did not qualify

Players

Current roster

Updated July 28, 2024[79][80]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
45 United States Gavin Brindley RW R 19 2023 Estero, Florida
59 Russia Yegor Chinakhov RW L 23 2020 Omsk, Russia
17 Canada Justin Danforth RW R 31 2021 Oshawa, Ontario
19 Canada Adam Fantilli Injured Reserve C L 19 2023 Nobleton, Ontario
United States Dylan Gambrell C R 27 2024 Bonney Lake, Washington
13 United States Johnny Gaudreau LW L 30 2022 Salem, New Jersey
44 Canada Erik Gudbranson (A) D R 32 2022 Ottawa, Ontario
38 Canada Boone Jenner (C) C L 31 2011 London, Ontario
3 United States Jack Johnson D L 37 2024 Indianapolis, Indiana
91 Canada Kent Johnson Injured Reserve C L 21 2021 Port Moody, British Columbia
7 United States Sean Kuraly (A) C L 31 2021 Dublin, Ohio
29 Finland Patrik Laine RW R 26 2021 Tampere, Finland
86 Russia Kirill Marchenko RW R 24 2018 Barnaul, Russia
90 Latvia Elvis Merzlikins G L 30 2014 Riga, Latvia
23 Canada Sean Monahan C L 29 2024 Brampton, Ontario
24 Canada Mathieu Olivier RW R 27 2022 Biloxi, Mississippi
9 Russia Ivan Provorov D L 27 2023 Yaroslavl, Russia
78 Canada Damon Severson D R 29 2023 Brandon, Manitoba
4 Canada Cole Sillinger (RFA) C L 21 2021 Columbus, Ohio
40 Russia Daniil Tarasov G L 25 2017 Novokuznetsk, Russia
10 Russia Dmitri Voronkov C L 23 2019 Angarsk, Russia
8 United States Zach Werenski (A) D L 27 2015 Grosse Pointe, Michigan

Team member accomplishment

Team Captains

First round draft picks

Year Pick Player Position Country Previous team (League) Notes
2000 4 Rostislav Klesla Defense  Czech Republic Brampton Battalion (OHL)
2001 8 Pascal Leclaire Goaltender  Canada Halifax Mooseheads (QMJHL)
2002 1* Rick Nash Left Wing  Canada London Knights (OHL) [a]
2003 4 Nikolay Zherdev Right Wing  Russia CSKA Moscow (RSL)
2004 8 Alexandre Picard Left Wing  Canada Lewiston Maineiacs (QMJHL) [b]
2005 6 Gilbert Brule Center  Canada Vancouver Giants (WHL)
2006 6 Derick Brassard Center  Canada Drummondville Voltigeurs (QMJHL)
2007 7 Jakub Voracek Right Wing  Czech Republic Halifax Mooseheads (QMJHL)
2008 6 Nikita Filatov Left Wing  Russia CSKA Moscow (RSL)
2009 21 John Moore Defense  United States Chicago Steel (USHL)
2010 4 Ryan Johansen Center  Canada Portland Winterhawks (WHL)
2011 No pick[c]
2012 2 Ryan Murray Defense  Canada Everett Silvertips (WHL)
2013 14 Alexander Wennberg Center  Sweden Frolunda HC (SEL)
2013 19 Kerby Rychel Left Wing  Canada Windsor Spitfires (OHL)
2013 27 Marko Dano Right Wing  Slovakia HC Slovan Bratislava (KHL)
2014 16 Sonny Milano Left Wing  United States USANTDP U-18 (USHL)
Selected to the Hockey Hall of Fame
* Selected number one overall
0 NHL games played

Notes

Honored members

John H. McConnell

Hall of Famers

The Blue Jackets have not had any members of the Hockey Hall of Fame associated with their organization.

Franchise scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history.[86]

Player Seasons Pos GP G A Pts +/− PIM
Rick Nash 2002–12 LW 674 289 258 547 −71 568
David Vyborny 2000–08 RW 543 113 204 317 −48 228
R. J. Umberger 2008–14 LW 445 120 130 250 −33 200
Fedor Tyutin 2008–present D 492 38 144 182 −16 323
Nikolay Zherdev 2003–08 RW 283 76 105 181 −52 164
Derick Brassard 2007–13 C 309 58 111 169 −42 184
Geoff Sanderson 2000–06 LW 261 88 80 168 −25 126
Ryan Johansen 2011–present C 271 73 94 167 −12 119
Antoine Vermette 2008–12 C 241 61 91 152 −10 112
Manny Malhotra 2003–09 C 344 53 92 145 −6 203

  = current Blue Jackets player

NHL awards and trophies

Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy

Calder Memorial Trophy

NHL Foundation Player Award

Vezina Trophy

NHL First All-Star Team

Single-season records

See also: Template:PDFlink

See also

References

  1. ^ http://bluejackets.nhl.com/club/page.htm?bcid=tea_off_bio.php~id=9
  2. ^ a b c "Blue Jackets History". Columbus Blue Jackets. Retrieved 2008-07-24.
  3. ^ http://espn.go.com/nhl/recap?gameId=290408004
  4. ^ "Blue Jackets, Cleveland's Lake Erie Monsters announce multi-year AHL affiliation agreement". Columbus Blue Jackets Official Website. Columbus Blue Jackets. Retrieved 17 April 2015. {{cite web}}: Text "CBJ" ignored (help); Text "home" ignored (help)
  5. ^ "Kalamazoo renews affiliation with Vancouver and signs new agreement with Columbus". Kalamazoo Wings. Retrieved 2014-08-21.
  6. ^ http://bluejackets.nhl.com/club/page.htm?id=48240
  7. ^ Minium, Harry (1997-01-14). "With Arena Deal In Hand, Underdog Shinn May Have An Advantage". The Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved 2008-05-20. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  8. ^ Miller, Rusty (2008-05-07). "Public memorial honors Blue Jackets owner McConnell". Associated Press. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
  9. ^ a b c d Naming a Team: The Story Behind the Blue Jackets Name
  10. ^ "The ins and outs of the Expansion Draft". ESPN. 2000-06-13. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
  11. ^ "Blue Jackets fill roster in expansion draft". ESPN. 2000-06-23. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
  12. ^ "Blue Jackets, Wild stock rosters, deal". Associated Press. 2000-06-24. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
  13. ^ "Roloson's friends in Ontario are following his playoff exploits closely". Canadian Press. 2006-06-03. Retrieved 2008-06-19. [dead link]
  14. ^ Shactman, Brian A. (2000-08-18). "A Closer Look: Los Angeles Kings". ESPN. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
  15. ^ "Blues place Drake on waivers". Associated Press. 2007-06-26. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
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