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Anaheim Ducks
File:Anaheim Ducks logo.svg
ConferenceWestern
DivisionPacific
Founded1993
HistoryMighty Ducks of Anaheim
19932006
Anaheim Ducks
2006 – Present
Home arenaHonda Center
CityAnaheim, California
Team colorsBlack, metallic gold, orange, white        
MediaFSN Prime Ticket
FSN West

KDOC
KLAA
Owner(s)United States Henry & Susan Samueli
General managerCanada Bob Murray
Head coachCanada Randy Carlyle
CaptainCanada Scott Niedermayer
Minor league affiliatesIowa Chops (AHL)
Bakersfield Condors (ECHL)
Stanley Cups2006–07
Conference championships2002–03, 2006–07
Division championships2006–07

The Anaheim Ducks are a professional ice hockey team based in Anaheim, California, USA. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). Since their inception, the Ducks have played their home games at Honda Center.

The club was founded in 1993 by The Walt Disney Company as the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, a name based on the film The Mighty Ducks. Disney sold the franchise in 2005 to Henry & Susan Samueli, who changed the name of the team to the Anaheim Ducks before the 2006–07 season. In their 15 year existence, the Ducks have made the playoffs six times, winning two Western Conference Championships (2003 and 2007) and one Stanley Cup championship (2007).

Franchise history

File:MightyDucksOfAnaheim.png
Mighty Ducks primary logo (1993–2006). The logo was subsequently used in the Disney movie D2: The Mighty Ducks. Disney design elements appear in this logo, such as team mascot Wildwing's goalie mask.

1993–2004: Disney Era

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 Wildwing.

The team was the first tenant of the Anaheim Arena (later the Arrowhead Pond and now the Honda Center), 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, with the naming rights originally being held by Arrowhead Water .

With their first-ever draft pick, the Mighty Ducks selected Paul Kariya fourth overall in the 1993 NHL Entry Draft. Kariya would quickly become a fan favorite and the cornerstone of the young Mighty Ducks franchise. As team captain, he would bring them within a game of Stanley Cup glory in 2003.

During the 1994 season they would finish fourth in the division with 71 points. Their record would be one of the best of a first year expansion team but their expansion brother the Florida Panthers would have a better one.

During the shortened lockout season Duck Oleg Tverdovsky made his NHL debut. The team would finish last in the Pacific Division with 37 points.

On February 7, 1996, the Mighty Ducks made a blockbuster deal with the Winnipeg Jets. The Ducks sent Chad Kilger, Tverdovsky, and a third-round pick to the Jets in return for Marc Chouinard, a fourth-round draft pick, and, most notably, star right winger Teemu Selanne. On a line with Steve Rucchin and Paul Kariya, Selanne's chemistry with the latter made them one of the highest-scoring tandems in the league.

Taste of success

After missing the playoffs in their first three seasons, the Mighty Ducks finished 1996–97 fourth in the Western Conference, earning home-ice advantage for a first-round playoff series with the Phoenix Coyotes. The Coyotes initially took a series 3–2 lead, but the Ducks won the last two including Game 7 at home to win their inaugural playoff series. However, Anaheim was swept by the eventual Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings in the second round. Even though Detroit officially swept the Ducks, every game was close in the series. Three games went into overtime, including one that went into double overtime, and one that went into triple overtime. After a disappointing 1998 season, the next year saw the Ducks once again contending for the playoffs. Late in the season, the Ducks had the chance to face the Phoenix Coyotes, a team they played well against that season, in the first round due to Phoenix holding fourth seed and the Ducks holding fifth. But a late season cold streak dropped the Ducks to sixth seed and had face the third seed Red Wings, whom they did not play well against. Once again, the Ducks lost in four to the Red Wings, this time in a more convincing manner than in 1997 ending with a 3–0 loss on home ice, this time in the Western Quarterfinals.

After a three-year playoff hiatus, Anaheim qualified for the 2003 Stanley Cup playoffs. For the third straight post-season in which they participated, the Mighty Ducks met the defending Stanley Cup champion Red Wings. This time, however, Anaheim shocked the hockey world as they swept Detroit in the series with Rucchin's series-clincher on Curtis Joseph coming in overtime of Game 4. The Ducks would then defeat the #1-seeded Dallas Stars in six games in the Conference Semifinals, which was noted for Game 1 being the fourth longest game in NHL history, with the Ducks winning in the fifth overtime period thanks to Petr Sykora. In the Conference Finals, the Ducks would make quick work of the upstart Minnesota Wild (only allowing one goal the entire series) to earn their first-ever Western Conference championship and berth in the Stanley Cup Finals.

The 2003 Stanley Cup Finals against the New Jersey Devils was a battle between two elite goaltenders, Martin Brodeur for New Jersey and Jean-Sebastien Giguere for Anaheim. It was also noted for two brothers, Rob Niedermayer for the Ducks, and his older brother Scott Niedermayer for the Devils, competing for the same prize. Quite possibly the most remembered moment of the series, Game 6 saw Paul Kariya on the wrong side of a fierce body check from New Jersey captain Scott Stevens. Kariya was knocked out and sent to the dressing room. But eleven minutes later, Kariya returned from the dressing room and scored the game winning goal to help the Ducks tie the series at three games apiece. Anaheim could not complete their Cinderella run, though, as they lost a hard-fought Stanley Cup Final in seven games to the Devils; all the games in the finals were won by the home team. For his fine play during the post-season, Ducks goaltender Jean Sebastien Giguere won the Conn Smythe Trophy as Most Valuable Player of the playoffs. He became only the fifth player, and fourth goaltender, in NHL history to have won the trophy as a member of the losing team.

This was the third coast-to-coast Final, following 1982 and 1994; both times, the Vancouver Canucks had Cinderella runs halted; in 1982 by the New York Islanders and in 1994 by the New York Rangers. However, this was the first coast-to-coast Final played entirely in the United States.

Disappointment

After losing Paul Kariya to the Colorado Avalanche (he joined Selanne, who also signed with Colorado after two seasons with the San Jose Sharks) via free agency shortly after the season ended, the Ducks signed star Sergei Fedorov from Detroit and Vaclav Prospal from Tampa Bay. Still, 2004 was a major disappointment for the Ducks as they missed the playoffs completely, and suffered low attendance figures despite their magical playoff run of the previous year.

2004-Present: The Samueli Era

Mighty Ducks alternate logo (2004–06).

During the summer of 2004, as the NHL and the NHL Players Association's labor dispute was headed towards a long lockout, Disney tried to sell the team but received a low offer of $40-million US, less than the franchise's original price. In 2005, Broadcom co-founder Henry Samueli of Irvine, California and his wife, Susan, bought the Mighty Ducks from The Walt Disney Company for a reported $75 million (USD). The Samuelis have pledged to keep the team in Anaheim, much as Arturo Moreno did when he purchased the Anaheim Angels from Disney. Brian Burke, former Vancouver Canucks General Manager and President, was appointed GM and Executive Vice-President of the Mighty Ducks on June 20, 2005.

On August 1, 2005, former Norris Trophy-winning defenceman Randy Carlyle was hired as the seventh coach in team history. Burke was familiar with Carlyle's coaching ability, as the latter had coached the Manitoba Moose from 1996–2001 (International Hockey League) and 2004–05 (American Hockey League); the Moose had been the Canucks' farm club since 2001. Carlyle replaced Mike Babcock, who left the Ducks to coach the Red Wings. Also during that summer, the Mighty Ducks brought back former star and fan favorite Teemu Selanne, and made their first big free-agency splash under Burke when he signed defenceman Scott Niedermayer, the 2004 Norris Trophy winner and older brother of Ducks forward Rob, to a four-year contract, from New Jersey.

The 2005–06 season saw the Ducks trade away big-name players with big contracts such as Petr Sykora and Sergei Fedorov in favor of younger players such as Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, Chris Kunitz, and Joffrey Lupul. The Ducks had a rough start to season, but the plan was ultimately successful; the Ducks became one of the best teams in the league down the stretch and ended up the sixth seed in the West. In an interesting playoff where the bottom 4 seeds knocked off the top 4 seeds, The Ducks beat the heavily favored Calgary Flames in seven games and Colorado Avalanche in a sweep on a run through the playoffs, only to be stopped in the conference finals by the Edmonton Oilers in five games, who had swept the Ducks in the regular season series. The team banked on its youth again, seeing Lupul, Getzlaf, Kunitz, and Ilya Bryzgalov turn in stellar performances. In fact, Bryzgalov took over the starting job from Giguere during game 5 of the Calgary series and broke Giguere's 2003 record shutout streak.

On January 26, 2006, the team announced, effective with the 2006–07 season, the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim would change their name to the Anaheim Ducks. This included logo and team color changes which were unveiled at a special ceremony five months later. Many Ducks fans successfully petitioned the Samuelis to keep Wildwing as the current mascot because of the team's recent success and as a link to the past. Along with the new name, their home ice (the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim) was renamed Honda Center as Arrowhead Water's naming rights had expired.

2006–07: The Stanley Cup arrives in Anaheim

On July 3, 2006, the Ducks traded young sniper Lupul, defenceman prospect Ladislav Smid, a 2007 first-round draft pick, a second-round choice in 2008, and a conditional first-round selection in 2008 to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for star defenceman Chris Pronger, who had publicly requested a trade from the Oilers ten days earlier citing personal reasons, with many speculating that his wife was unhappy living in Edmonton. [1]

Picked by some publications as a favorite to win the Cup[1], the Ducks started the 2006–07 season on fire. On November 9, 2006, the Ducks defeated the Vancouver Canucks 6–0 at General Motors Place in Vancouver, British Columbia to improve their season record to 12–0–4. The win set an NHL open era record by remaining undefeated in regulation for the first 16 games of the season, eclipsing the previous mark set by the 1983–84 Edmonton Oilers. They were subsequently shut out by the Flames the following game, 3–0, ending their streak. On December 12, the Ducks defeated the Florida Panthers on the road 5–4. They broke a franchise record for their sixth road win in a row. They also improved their record that night to 24–3–6 and 54 points. No team having played 33 games had reached 54 points since the 1979 Philadelphia Flyers. The next night, the Ducks beat the Atlanta Thrashers to improve their road record to 12–1–2. The 26 points set the NHL mark for the most points on the road through 15 games. The previous record-holders, 1951–52 Detroit Red Wings had 25 points (10–0–5).

On January 16, 2007 the Ducks played in their franchise's 1000th regular season game [2], and on March 11, the Ducks recorded their franchise's 1000th point with a 4–2 win over the Vancouver Canucks, which improved their franchise all-time record to 423–444–155, 1001 points [3]. On April 7, the Ducks won their first Pacific Division title in franchise history, when the Vancouver Canucks defeated the second-place San Jose Sharks at HP Pavilion in the Sharks' final game of the season. Anaheim also played their last game of the 2006–07 NHL season that day against the Columbus Blue Jackets. Anaheim won the game 4–3, finishing off the season with a total of 110 points—the first 100-point season in franchise history. This was good enough for the fourth-best record in the league (behind Buffalo, Detroit and Nashville). Although they had three fewer wins than the Predators, the Ducks were seeded second in the Western Conference playoffs by virtue of their division title.

In the Western Conference quarter finals, the Ducks once again met the Minnesota Wild and defeated them 4 games to 1. Next up was the Vancouver Canucks, the Northwest Division champions, whom they also defeated 4 games to 1. They faced the Red Wings in the Western Conference Finals, winning 4 games to 2. A 4–3 win on May 22 at Honda Center gave the Ducks their second Western Conference title, and placed them in the Stanley Cup Finals for the second time. This time, they faced off against the Ottawa Senators, and on June 6, the Ducks defeated the Senators 6–2 at Honda Center to claim their first Stanley Cup in franchise history. The Ducks became the first California team, and the first west coast team since the 1925 Victoria Cougars to win the Stanley Cup, the only national championship trophy that had eluded the Greater Los Angeles area.

The playoffs came with much controversy, though. The Ducks had players suspended in three of the four rounds, starting with Brad May's suspension for three games in the series against the Minnesota Wild when he punched the Wild's Kim Johnsson. Chris Pronger was suspended for one game twice; once against the Detroit Red Wings for checking Tomas Holmstrom high, and then once more for elbowing Dean McAmmond of the Ottawa Senators in the Finals.

The champion Ducks with former U.S. President George W. Bush with a jersey

After winning the Stanley Cup, two star players, defenceman Scott Niedermayer and right winger Teemu Selanne stated that they were unsure whether or not the would return to the team for the 07/08 season as they both felt the need to contemplate retirement. Neidermayer returned in December 07. As a result of this indecision Burke was active in the Free Agent market signing two veteran players in high scoring defenceman Mathieu Schneider and gritty forward Todd Bertuzzi to 2 year contracts to replace Niedermayer and Selanne if they were to retire. Later on, Oilers GM Kevin Lowe signed Dustin Penner to an offer sheet that would pay him 4.25 million a year over the next five. Burke called out Lowe, saying 'it was a classless move made by a desperate GM trying to save his job.'[citation needed] He did not match the offer. In return, the Ducks received the Oiler's first, second and third round draft picks. Later that summer he signed backup defenceman Joe DiPenta to a one year contract along with re-signing the gritty team leader Brad May.

2007–08 season: Defending the Cup

The Ducks began their Cup defense against the Kings for a two game set in London, England, without Scott Niedermayer and Teemu Selanne, who were pondering over decision to continue playing hockey at the time, and injured Samuel Pahlsson and J. S. Giguere, splitting the series. On October 10, against the Boston Bruins, the Ducks raised their Pacific Division, Western Conference and Stanley Cup Champion banners. It was a rough start overall for the Ducks as they made minor trades to try and tread water. The Ducks let backup goalie Ilya Bryzgalov go on waivers, where he was picked up by the Phoenix Coyotes.

The drama surrounding Niedermayer finally brought positive news for the Ducks, as GM Brian Burke declared he would return on December 5. December 14, 2007, marked an important event in Ducks history, as Brian Burke dealt center Andy McDonald to the St. Louis Blues in exchange for Doug Weight, Michal Birner, and the Blues seventh round draft pick in order to clear salary cap issues. On December 16, 2007 Niedermayer made his return to Anaheim, playing his first game back with the team. The team immediately improved and got back into the playoff and Pacific Division pictures. For the All-Star game, Ryan Getzlaf and Chris Pronger were selected to participate. Later Corey Perry and Scott Niedermayer were listed as injury replacements. It was a club record for players in an All-Star game.

The Ducks would receive more good news on January 28, 2008, as Teemu Selanne signed a one year contract with the Ducks and would finish out the 2007–08 season with them. The Ducks would win nine out of their first ten games with Selanne in the line-up. At the trade deadline the Ducks acquired defenseman Marc-Andre Bergeron from the New York Islanders and J.S. Aubin from the Kings. With nine games to go in the regular season Chris Pronger would be suspended for eight of them for stomping on the leg of Ryan Kesler of the Vancouver Canucks. The Ducks finished fourth in the Western Conference and began their defense of the Cup against division rival Dallas. On April 20, 2008, the Dallas Stars won Game 6 of the series 4–1, thus ending the Ducks' chance of a repeat Cup.

2008-2009 Season

With the Ducks having a longer off-season than of the recent two seasons, they often found themselves in the middle of media headlines.

Off the ice, the feud between Brian Burke and former Edmonton Oilers GM Kevin Lowe heated, as once again words were thrown between both in the media. League commissioner Gary Bettman ordered the feud "cease and desist". Owner Henry Samueli was imprisoned for lying to the Securities and Exchange Commission judge about a fraudulent business operation. [4] Bettman gave interim ownership of the team to Anaheim Ducks CEO Michael Schulman, as the Samuelis were banned from any contact with the Ducks whatsoever.

The Ducks placed veteran forward Todd Bertuzzi on waivers, where he was eventually not claimed and became a free agent. He eventually was signed by the Calgary Flames on July 7, 2008. As the Ducks were looking to fill a void left on the second-line center position, they signed Vancouver Canucks center Brendan Morrison to a one-year deal. More good news would abound as Scott Niedermayer announced he would return for another season. The Ducks also signed Corey Perry to a six-year deal. Despite all the offseason moves however, the Ducks were still in a logjam cap-wise, and in turn dealt defenseman Mathieu Schneider to the Atlanta Thrashers in exchange for Ken Klee, Brad Larsen, and minor-leaguer Chad Painchaud. Moving Schneider to Atlanta freed up enough cap room to sign fan favorite Teemu Selanne, who was previously signed to a pro tryout contract in the preseason to ensure no team would send a counter offer his way. Veteran defenseman Sean O'Donnell was dealt a few days into the preseason, in what GM Brian Burke called a cap-related move. Sean was dealt to the rival Los Angeles Kings for a conditional third-round pick. Rumors later surfaced that the O'Donnell trade was meant to send a message after a rocky start to the preseason, and the move was seen as very controversial by Ducks fans.

After a long offseason and an impressive preseason with a franchise record 6-1-1, the Ducks opened the regular season in San Jose, taking on the Sharks in what would end up a 4-1 loss for the Ducks. Days later the Ducks held their home opener on October 12, 2008, as they hosted a young and refreshed Phoenix Coyotes team. The Ducks dropped the game 4-2 in front of a sold-out home crowd.

The Ducks struggled at 1-5-0 to start the season, but reversed the sluggish start with a sweep of a four-game road trip, winning games in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, and Columbus. The Ducks would win 8 of 9 games from there, before adversity struck. Defenseman Francois Beauchemin suffered a torn ACL after taking a slapshot off the ankle in a game against Nashville. Days later, GM Brian Burke resigned his position as Ducks GM, handing over GM duties to right-hand man Bob Murray, as Burke would in turn leave for Toronto some days later. Highly-rated rookie Bobby Ryan was called up to the team with defenseman Brett Festerling from the Iowa Chops. The Ducks continued to play well, but the Ducks went 9-13-2 heading to the All-Star break. Three Anaheim Ducks players, Ryan Getzlaf, Jean-Sebastien Giguere, and Scott Niedermayer were all named starters for the game. That was the first time since the 1992 Los Angeles Kings players, Wayne Gretzky, Marcel Dionne, and Marty McSorley to reach that plateau. The Ducks fortunes didn't change much after the break as the team lost 4 out of their first 6 games.

As the trade deadline approached the Ducks were considered one of the more interesting teams because they were right on the cusp of being a seller. Several high profile players were said to be on the block including defensemen Pronger and Scott Niedermayer. Neither player was ultimately dealt but the Ducks did make one move before the deadline. On February 27th, the Ducks traded forward Chris Kunitz as well as prospect Eric Tangradi to Pittsburgh for defenseman Ryan Whitney. GM Murray explained the team needed to, "re-tool the defense with a good puck moving defenseman." On trade deadline day the Ducks proved to be quite busy. The team placed Morrison on waivers where he would be claimed by Dallas, they acquired forward Erik Christensen from Atlanta for prospect Eric O'Dell and they traded center Sami Pahlsson to Chicago for defenseman James Wisniewski and prospect Petri Kontiola. They also traded forward Travis Moen and defenseman Kent Huskins to San Jose for Boston University forward prospect Nick Bonino and goaltending prospect Timo Pielmeier and they traded defenseman Steve Montador to Boston for forward Petteri Nokelainen.

With the core of the team still intact, a re-vamped defense and whole new bottom six forward lines the Ducks got to work trying to make the playoffs for the fourth straight year.

Team colors and mascot

Logos

The Ducks' logo features a webbed foot forming a "D" followed by the other letters in the word "Ducks" in upper-case letters. The text itself is gold (which sometimes may appear as bronze as well) with orange and black accents (forming a three dimensional appearance). The entire logo is in turn outlined by white. The city of Anaheim's name appears in smaller upper-case print, above the team name. The Ducks are one of three NHL teams to feature their team name spelled out in a scripted form on the front of their jersey rather than a logo. The New York Rangers and the Washington Capitals are the other two. This does not include alternate jerseys or throwback jerseys worn by other teams.

The old logo of the Ducks prior to the name change featured an old-style goaltender mask, shaped to form the appearance of a duck bill. Behind the mask are two intersecting hockey sticks, a black circle and a triangle (the color of the triangle is either green or gray, depending on how the logo is used).

Jerseys

The Ducks have officially worn two unique regular jerseys and three unique third jerseys in their franchise history:

Original Mighty Ducks Jerseys

File:MightyDucksJerseys.png
Mighty Ducks of Anaheim jerseys: 1993-2006.

The original jerseys of the Ducks (then the Mighty Ducks) used jade, aubergine (eggplant), white and gray as primary colors for both the home and away jerseys. The team's dark jerseys were dominantly eggplant in color with diagonal gray and white stripes; the jersey is jade below the stripes, which appear on the arms and waist. The white jerseys were similar, except that the eggplant is replaced mainly with white. On the shoulders of both jerseys are patches featuring a forward-facing version of the main logo's "duck mask," surrounded by a circle reading "Mighty Ducks of Anaheim."

Ducks jerseys after 2006

File:Anaheimducksjerseys.png
Anaheim Ducks jerseys: 2006-2007.

About a year after the team was purchased from the Walt Disney Company by the Samuelis, Brian Burke initiated a name change dropping the "Mighty", after consultation with the fans showed that the typical fan had a willingness to update the "Mighty Ducks" name and jersey and also a desire to keep part of the traditions of the franchise. Burke sought inspiration for the jersey from the United States Military Academy[citation needed], ending up with diagonal gold, white, black and orange stripes down the arms and waist with the word "Ducks" on the front. The jersey is similar to the team's most recent third jersey prior to the name change. The orange pays tribute to Orange County[2], where Anaheim is located.

The Ducks are not the first team from Southern California to win a title in the same year as a major uniform change. The Anaheim Angels won the 2002 World Series the same year that they changed to their current red-and-white uniforms.

File:Anaheim-ducks-07-jerseys.jpg
2007-08 jerseys

2007–08 jerseys

For the 2007–08 NHL season, the Ducks, like all NHL teams, changed over to new Rbk Edge jerseys. The new team jersey shows only minor modifications from 2006–07, including a small NHL crest just below the neck. There are no third jerseys for this season.

Third jerseys

The third jerseys of the Mighty Ducks were created in 1995, 1997, and 2003. The 1995 jersey was jade with eggplant and white stripes on the collar and on the end of the sleeves. The logo was of team mascot Wildwing wearing a Mighty Ducks jersey while breaking through a sheet of ice. The jersey was short-lived; because of much criticism, it was retired at the end of the year.

Third Jersey
1995–96
Third Jerseys
1997–2000, dark
1997–2001, white
Third Jersey
2003–2006
File:MightyDucksThirdJersey1.png File:MightyDucksThirdJerseys2.png File:MightyDucksThirdJersey3.png

The 1997 third jersey came with a rare fourth jersey partner. The third was a jade-colored jersey with silver and eggplant stripes at the shoulders outlined in thin yellow, and a silver stripe at the bottom. It had the Mighty Ducks logo in the center of the chest. The fourth jersey was much like it. It was white with jade, eggplant, and silver stripes at the shoulders of the jersey, but no bottom stripe. These jerseys saw action until the end of 1999–2000, when they stopped playing with their third jerseys, and used only the fourth. At the end of 2000–01, the fourth was also retired.

The 2003 third jersey was black with purple and gray stripes at the waist and on the sleeves. It had the alternate script logo of the present Mighty Ducks and old-style laces at the neck, as well as a shoulder patch displaying an interlocking "MD" (for "Mighty Ducks"). The popularity of this jersey amongst fans was so great it replaced the eggplant and jade jersey, serving as the home jersey for the last half of the 2005–06 season and playoffs. It was dropped following the season as the team went to a modified name, new uniforms, and color scheme; however, this popular jersey influenced the design of the new jerseys for 2006-07. It was the only time in the modern NHL days when a mainly black jersey was not worn with black pants, they were purple.

Mascot

The official mascot for the Anaheim Ducks is an anthropomorphized duck by the name of Wild Wing. He has been the team's mascot since its inaugural season, and his name was chosen through fan voting. He wears a Ducks jersey with the number 93 on the back, referring to the year the Ducks became an NHL team.

He regularly descends from the rafters of the arena when making his in-game entrances.[3] In one such descent the rigging that lowered Wild Wing from the rafters malfunctioned leaving the mascot trapped fifty feet above the ice for several minutes. Another well known blunder occurred in October 1995 when Wild Wing, attempting to jump through a "wall of fire", accidentally tripped causing the mascot to land on the fire and set his costume ablaze.[4]

His physical appearance is similar to the duck mask in the original Mighty Ducks logo. A bronze statue of Wild Wing is also located outside the team's arena (Located at the West side of the South Doors), Honda Center.[5]

The mascot's name was also used for the leader of the Ducks, Wildwing Flashblade, in Disney's Mighty Ducks cartoon series.

During the same time in which the team announced a name change as well as change in jersey designs, there was an attempt by the team's owners to change or replace the mascot, Wild Wing, but was halted after a highly successful petition by fans.[citation needed]

Season-by-season record

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

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

Season GP W L T OTL Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs
2003–04 82 29 35 10 8 76 184 213 1131 4th, Pacific Did not qualify
2004–05 Season cancelled due to 2004–05 NHL lockout
2005–06 1 82 43 27 12 98 254 229 1462 3rd, Pacific Lost in Conference Finals, 1–4 (Oilers)
2006–07 82 48 20 14 110 258 208 1263 1st, Pacific Stanley Cup Champions, 4–1 (Senators)
2007–08 82 47 27 8 102 205 191 1465 2nd, Pacific Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 (Stars)
1 As of the 2005–06 NHL season, all games will have a winner; the OTL column includes SOL (Shootout losses).

Current roster

Updated July 15, 2024[6][7]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
32 Russia Vyacheslav Buteyets G L 22 2022 Chelyabinsk, Russia
91 Sweden Leo Carlsson C L 19 2023 Karlstad, Sweden
75 United States Judd Caulfield RW R 23 2023 Grand Forks, North Dakota
31 Sweden Calle Clang G L 22 2022 Olofström, Sweden
68 Italy Damian Clara G L 19 2023 Brunico, Italy
64 United States Sam Colangelo RW R 22 2020 Stoneham, Massachusetts
76 Switzerland Rodwin Dionicio D L 20 2023 Newark, New Jersey
1 Czech Republic Lukas Dostal G L 24 2018 Brno, Czech Republic
6 United States Brian Dumoulin D L 32 2024 Biddeford, Maine
14 Canada Robby Fabbri C L 28 2024 Mississauga, Ontario
4 United States Cam Fowler (A) D L 32 2010 Windsor, Ontario
41 Canada Nathan Gaucher C R 20 2022 Chambly, Quebec
61 United States Cutter Gauthier LW L 20 2024 Skellefteå, Sweden
36 United States John Gibson G L 31 2011 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
7 Czech Republic Radko Gudas D R 34 2023 Prague, Czechoslovakia
Canada Jansen Harkins C L 27 2024 Cleveland, Ohio
43 United States Drew Helleson D R 23 2022 Farmington, Minnesota
Canada Tyson Hinds D L 21 2021 Gatineau, Quebec
44 Canada Ross Johnston LW L 30 2023 Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
17 Canada Alex Killorn (A) LW L 34 2023 Halifax, Nova Scotia
60 United States Jackson LaCombe D L 23 2019 Eden Prairie, Minnesota
20 Canada Brett Leason RW R 25 2022 Calgary, Alberta
85 United States Josh Lopina C R 23 2021 Minooka, Illinois
21 Sweden Isac Lundestrom C L 24 2018 Gällivare, Sweden
67 Canada Tristan Luneau Injured Reserve D R 20 2022 Victoriaville, Quebec
26 Canada Brock McGinn Injured Reserve LW L 30 2023 Fergus, Ontario
23 Canada Mason McTavish C L 21 2021 Zürich, Switzerland
72 United States Carson Meyer RW R 26 2024 Powell, Ohio
34 Russia Pavel Mintyukov D L 20 2022 Moscow, Russia
48 Canada Nico Myatovic LW L 19 2023 Prince George, British Columbia
73 Czech Republic Jan Mysak C L 22 2024 Litvinov, Czech Republic
62 United States Nikita Nesterenko C L 22 2023 Brooklyn, New York
59 United States Sasha Pastujov RW L 21 2021 Bradenton, Florida
55 Canada Coulson Pitre RW R 19 2023 Newmarket, Ontario
40 Slovakia Pavol Regenda LW L 25 2022 Michalovce, Slovakia
38 Canada Beckett Sennecke RW R 18 2024 Toronto, Ontario
57 Belarus Yegor Sidorov RW L 20 2023 Vitebsk, Belarus
50 Norway Stian Solberg D L 18 2024 Oslo, Norway
16 Canada Ryan Strome C R 31 2022 Mississauga, Ontario
78 Czech Republic Tomas Suchanek G L 21 2024 Přerov, Czech Republic
19 United States Troy Terry RW R 26 2015 Denver, Colorado
5 Finland Urho Vaakanainen D L 25 2022 Joensuu, Finland
77 United States Frank Vatrano RW L 30 2022 East Longmeadow, Massachusetts
47 Canada Noah Warren D R 20 2022 Montreal, Quebec
83 Canada Jaxsen Wiebe RW L 22 2023 Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan
11 United States Trevor Zegras C L 23 2019 Bedford, New York
51 Canada Olen Zellweger D L 20 2021 Calgary, Alberta


Team and player honors

Jean-Sebastien Giguere, winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy in 2003.

NHL awards and trophies


Honored members

Hall of Famers:

  • Jari Kurri played for the Ducks during the 1996–97 season, and was inducted in 2001.

Retired Numbers:

Leaders

Scott Niedermayer, winner of the 2007 Conn Smythe Trophy.

Team captains

Coaches

First-round draft picks

Franchise scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game; * = current Ducks player

Points Goals Assists
Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G
Teemu Selanne* RW 631 345 384 729 1.18
Paul Kariya LW 606 300 369 669 1.10
Steve Rucchin C 616 153 279 432 .70
Andy McDonald C 358 88 155 243 .68
Matt Cullen C 427 65 135 200 .47
Ryan Getzlaf* C 216 63 116 179 .83
Oleg Tverdovsky D 324 45 125 170 .52
Scott Niedermayer* D 209 36 121 157 .75
Chris Kunitz LW 251 65 92 157 .63
Corey Perry RW 228 65 81 146 .64
Player Pos G
Teemu Selanne* RW 345
Paul Kariya LW 300
Steve Rucchin C 153
Andy McDonald C 92
Matt Cullen C 65
Chris Kunitz LW 65
Petr Sykora RW 64
Ryan Getzlaf* C 63
Joe Sacco LW 62
Corey Perry* RW 59
Player Pos A
Teemu Selanne* LW 384
Paul Kariya RW 369
Steve Rucchin C 279
Andy McDonald C 167
Matt Cullen C 135
Oleg Tverdovsky D 125
Scott Niedermayer* D 121
Ryan Getzlaf* C 116
Chris Kunitz LW 102
Fredrik Olausson D 90

Franchise individual records

Broadcasters

References

  1. ^ The Hockey News, October 2, 2006 {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ Anaheim Ducks. Anaheim Ducks 2006–2007 Media Guide. Anaheim, California: Ben Franklin Press, 2006. Page 41.
  3. ^ http://www.anaheimducks.com/fanzone/wing.php
  4. ^ SI.com - More Sports - A history of bizarre mascot incidents - Saturday July 12, 2003 01:48 PM
  5. ^ News: Mallard nests at The Pond - OCRegister.com
  6. ^ "Anaheim Ducks Roster". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 15, 2024.
  7. ^ "Anaheim Ducks Hockey Transactions". The Sports Network. Retrieved July 15, 2024.

See also