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Edmonton Oilers
File:Edmonton Oilers.gif
ConferenceWestern
DivisionNorthwest
Founded1972
HistoryAlberta Oilers
1972-73
Edmonton Oilers
1973 - present
Home arenaRexall Place
CityEdmonton, Alberta
Team coloursMidnight Blue, Copper, Red, White, and Silver
MediaRogers Sportsnet West
CHED (630 AM)
Owner(s)Edmonton Investors Group Limited Partnership
General managerCanada Kevin Lowe
Head coachCanada Craig MacTavish
CaptainCanada Jason Smith
Minor league affiliatesGrand Rapids Griffins (AHL)
Hamilton Bulldogs (AHL)
Iowa Stars (AHL)
Milwaukee Admirals (AHL)
Wilkes-Barre Penguins (AHL)
Stockton Thunder (ECHL)
Stanley Cups1983-84, 1984-85, 1986-87, 1987-88, 1989-90
Conference championships1982-83, 1983-84, 1984-85, 1986-87, 1987-88, 1989-90, 2005-06
Division championships1981-82, 1982-83, 1983-84, 1984-85, 1986-87

The Edmonton Oilers are a professional ice hockey team based in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. They play in the National Hockey League (NHL). In 2005-06, the Oilers made it to the Stanley Cup Finals before being defeated by the Carolina Hurricanes in seven games.

Franchise history

The WHA years

File:Edmontonoilerslogo80s.gif
First primary logo used, from 1972-96, using blue and orange.

In 1972 the Alberta Oilers joined the World Hockey Association as a founding member. The team was originally owned by Bill Hunter. Hunter had previously owned the Edmonton Oil Kings and founded what would become the Western Hockey League, but his efforts to bring professional hockey to Edmonton had initially been rebuffed by the NHL. Actually, the team had been named the Alberta Oilers as it was planned to split their home games between Edmonton and Calgary after the Calgary Broncos folded. For various reasons, possibly financial or the possibility of allowing easier expansion of either the NHL or WHA to Calgary, the team played all of its games in Edmonton, and changed their name to reflect this the following year.

Despite mediocre results in the standings, the team proved popular with the fans, behind stars such as defenceman and team captain Al Hamilton, star goaltender Dave Dryden, and forwards Blair MacDonald and Bill Flett. The team's performance would change for the better in 1978, when new owner Peter Pocklington scored one of the greatest trades in hockey history, acquiring already-aspiring superstar Wayne Gretzky as an under-age player (consequentially, his first year of WHA experience didn't make him an official 1979-80 NHL rookie), as well as goaltender Eddie Mio and forward Peter Driscoll, from the recently-folded Indianapolis Racers for a token sum. [1] Gretzky's first and only WHA season, 1978-79, saw the Oilers shoot to the top of the WHA standings, posting a league-best 48-30-2 record. However, Edmonton’s regular season success did not translate into a championship, as they fell to the rival Winnipeg Jets in the Avco World Trophy Final. Young Oilers enforcer Dave Semenko scored the last goal in WHA history late in the third period of the final game.

The Oilers joined the National Hockey League for 1979-80, with fellow WHA teams Hartford Whalers, Quebec Nordiques, and the Jets. Of these four teams, only Edmonton has avoided relocation and renaming; the Nordiques became the Colorado Avalanche in 1995, the Jets became the Phoenix Coyotes in 1996, and the Whalers became the Carolina Hurricanes in 1997.

The Championship Years

File:Oilers Team Photo '88.jpg
The Oilers after their 1988 Stanley Cup victory.

The Oilers lost most of the players from the 1978-79 team when the NHL held a reclamation draft of players who had bolted to the upstart league. However, with an incredible core of young players, including Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier, Paul Coffey, Glenn Anderson, Jari Kurri, Grant Fuhr, and Kevin Lowe, the Edmonton Oilers became one of the greatest teams in hockey history with their domination of the NHL in the mid-to-late 1980s. Many experts consider the Oilers from that decade not only to be the best team ever in the long history of the National Hockey League, but also one of the best sports teams ever, as evidenced by a recent Sporting News poll in February 2006 when the 1987-88 Oilers were listed as one of the top-five teams from the last 120 years. [2]

The Oilers made a name for themselves very early, making the Stanley Cup Playoffs in their first NHL season (1979-80), but were defeated by the Philadelphia Flyers three-games-to-none.

Gretzky’s rookie disappointment hardly extended to the “merger” rule that disqualified him from Calder Memorial Trophy voting — the Los Angeles KingsMarcel Dionne defeated “The Great One” in the race for the Art Ross Trophy (point-scoring crown). At the season’s end, they had 137 total points each: Dionne had 53 goals and 84 assists vs. Gretzky’s 51 and 86, and as such, Gretzky lost the crown. “I was always taught that an assist is as good as a goal,”Gretzky claimed.[citation needed]

After a five-point improvement in the 1980-81 regular season, the Oilers stunned the hockey world by sweeping the heavily-favoured Montreal Canadiens in three games and pushing the defending Stanley Cup champion New York Islanders to six games.

In the 1981-82 season, the Oilers made a dramatic leap in the standings--jumping from 74 points (16th overall) in the previous season to 111 points (second overall, behind only the Islanders). Gretzky became the third NHL player to score 50 goals in 50 games, joining the Islanders’ Mike Bossy from the previous season and Canadiens legend Maurice Richard from 1944-45. But youthful lapses of discipline led to a first round defeat at the hands of the Kings, even as Gretzky beat Dionne for the Art Ross — in the 1980-81 to 1986-87 seasons, Gretzky beat Dionne for the award by a colossal average of 66 points. In 1983 they made it to their first Stanley Cup final, but were swept in four games by the three-time defending champion Islanders, who had already-greats like Bossy, Bryan Trottier, Clark Gillies and Denis Potvin.

However, Edmonton's young team would not forever be denied. In 1984, the Oilers roared through the regular season, earning a franchise-record 57 wins and 119 points. They earned a rematch with the Islanders in the Stanley Cup finals, and defeated the four-time defending champions four games to one to win their first Stanley Cup.

Wayne Gretzky statue outside of Rexall Place.

Edmonton repeated Cup success in 1985 against the Philadelphia Flyers and star netminder Pelle Lindbergh, who died later that year after a car crash. However, their bid for a third straight championship — “three-peat” — came to an end in game 7 of the 1985-86 Smythe Division Finals against the Calgary Flames. In the third period of a 2-2 tie, rookie defenceman Steve Smith banked his breakout pass off goaltender Grant Fuhr's left skate and into the Oilers' net. The goal stood as the game- and-series-winning goal. In 1987, Edmonton returned to the Stanley Cup Final and again defeated the Flyers in a tense seven-game series, overcoming a Conn Smythe Trophy winning performance by Philly rookie goalie Ron Hextall. But in the midst of the celebrations, fluid blueliner Coffey dropped a bombshell: Pocklington had bought out his contract and sold it to the Pittsburgh Penguins, a team in which Mario Lemieux was the main star.

Even without Coffey in 1988 the Oilers made their strongest run to the Cup, losing only two playoff games (the lowest loss total ever for the Cup winners under the "16 wins" playoff format), and sweeping the Boston Bruins to win their fourth Stanley Cup in five years. In doing so, the Oilers left their mark as one of the greatest teams of all time. A unique event in Final history occurred in Game Four on May 24. With the score tied 3-3 in the second period, a power outage struck the legendary Boston Garden, forcing cancellation of the whole game. Then-NHL President John Ziegler ordered the game to be re-scheduled, and, if necessary, played in Boston after the originally scheduled Game Seven in Edmonton. The Oilers would win the next game (originally scheduled as Game Five) back in Edmonton 6-3 to complete the series sweep. All player statistics accrued in the aborted Game Four in Boston are counted in the NHL record books. After the Cup-clinching game, Gretzky gathered his teammates, coaches, trainers, and others from the Oilers organization at centre ice for an impromptu team photo with the Stanley Cup, a tradition since continued by every subsequent Stanley Cup Champion.

That summer, however, left a bitter taste in the mouths of Oiler fans in the midst of the celebrations again. On August 9, 1988, Gretzky, along with fan favourites Marty McSorley and Mike Krushelnyski, was traded to Los Angeles for $15 million, two rising young players (Jimmy Carson and Martin Gelinas), and three first-round draft picks. Carson only played two seasons in Edmonton before being traded to the Detroit Red Wings. Gelinas played five years for Edmonton, never scoring more than twenty goals. The Oilers traded the 1989 pick (Jason Miller) to the New Jersey Devils for defenceman Corey Foster, then used the '91 and '93 picks to select Martin Rucinsky and Nick Stajduhar, respectively, neither of whom were major contributors during their time in Edmonton.

The 1989 season was a troubled one, and for the first time since 1982, the Oilers were out of the playoffs in the first round, losing a seven-game series to Gretzky's Kings; the Cup was ultimately claimed by their provincial rivals, the Flames. Gretzky and Kurri had been the dominant offensive pairing of the 1980s, and many said that Kurri without Gretzky would be ordinary — even worse, maybe nobody, or nothing. But in making the NHL Second All-Star Team in his first season without Gretzky, with 44 goals and 58 assists, Kurri proved his critics wrong.

It was the beginning of the end for Edmonton's brilliance. 1990 seemed set to continue the turmoil for the former juggernaut. All-Star and future Hockey Hall of Fame starting goaltender Grant Fuhr, was charged with possession, use, and abuse of cocaine. He would be traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1991 after publicly acknowledging his problem. But the team rallied behind backup Bill Ranford, and despite finishing third in their division, behind Calgary and Los Angeles, the Oilers, and Adam Graves, Gélinas and Joe Murphy, their "Kid Line" (not to be confused with the 1931-32 Leafs' Harvey "Busher" Jackson, "Gentleman Joe" Primeau, and "Big Bomber Charlie" Conacher) won their fifth and, to date, final Stanley Cup by again defeating the Bruins, this time in five games. Ranford won the Conn Smythe Trophy as Playoff Most Valuable Player for his brilliant goaltending. Kurri claimed, “Just a great load off the backs of us Oilers — we’re not a one-man show, and everybody knows it now, after we won without Wayne”.[citation needed]

The Rebuilding Years

However, the Oilers weren't doing something very easy by now — because they simply had no choice. After the 1990 Stanley Cup, they were like squid trying to stay alive in a regular freshwater puddle. The Gretzky trade had opened up a new reality of rapidly climbing salaries in the NHL, and small-market teams like Edmonton simply couldn't compete with salaries offered in large cities, mainly in the USA. This rash of escalating salaries hit the Canadian teams particularly hard; only Toronto and Montreal had the resources to compete in this new environment. In addition, Pocklington's business empire sank under the weight of recession, scandal and corruption.

Messier, Kurri, Fuhr, Anderson, and later Craig MacTavish all left the team in rapid succession, leaving behind an underdeveloped base of young players and unproven prospects, exposing the Oilers' poor drafting through the dynasty years. Despite appearances in the Conference Final in 1991 and 1992, the Oilers were nowhere near the powerhouse that had dominated the previous half-decade. In 1993 the Oilers missed the playoffs for the first time ever, since they entered the league. They would not return for four years, despite the emergence of young centremen Doug Weight and Jason Arnott.

Trouble followed the team off the ice as well. For most of the 1990s, the Oilers were desperately trying to stay alive. In 1998, the team was nearly sold to Houston interests who sought to move the team, but before the sale was finalized, and with just hours left on the deadline, the Edmonton Investors Group, a consortium of 37 Edmonton-based owners, raised the funds to purchase the team, vowing to keep the Oilers in Edmonton. The Oilers received support in this endeavour from the NHL, which had already seen two Canadian teams (the Nordiques and Jets) move to the United States earlier in the decade.

File:Oilers Rigger.gif
Oilers "rigger" shoulder patch logo, 1996—present.

In 1997, the Oilers made the playoffs for the first time in five years, and in the first round, they upset the Dallas Stars, who had compiled the league's second best record, in an exciting seven-game series. Riding on the hot goaltending of Curtis Joseph, admittedly no "Fury" though he was, the Oilers completed the upset on a breakaway by Todd Marchant in overtime. Another highlight of that playoff series was on April 20. Down 3-0 with just under four minutes to go in Game Three, the Oilers rallied for three goals in the final three minutes of the third period to tie the game and eventually win 4-3 in overtime on Kelly Buchberger's game-winning goal.

Though Edmonton would lose to the defending Cup Champs, Patrick Roy and the Colorado Avalanche, in the next round, fans were ecstatic about the Oilers' return to the playoffs. In 1998, Joseph led the Oilers to another first-round upset. After spotting the Avalanche 3-1 lead, the Oilers held the powerful Avalanche scoreless for eight straight periods en route to winning the series in seven games. Dallas and Edmonton met again in the second round, but this time, the Stars were the victors. This was the start of one of the most unusual rivalries in hockey: between 1997 and 2003 the Oilers and Stars played each other in the playoffs six times, five of them first-round matchups. The only year in which they did not meet was 2002, when neither team made the playoffs. This streak was not formally ended until 2006, when the 2nd-seeded Stars (in the Western Conference) were eliminated in the first round by the Avalanche, while, for the first time in 16 years, the 8th-seeded Oilers went to the Stanley Cup Final.

On November 22, 2003, the Oilers hosted the Heritage Classic, the first outdoor hockey game in the NHL's history. The Oilers were defeated by the Montreal Canadiens 4-3 in front of more than fifty-five thousand fans, an NHL attendance record, at Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton.

On July 23, 2004, the team announced that its American Hockey League affiliate, the Toronto Roadrunners, would play the 2004-05 AHL season at the Oilers' home arena of Rexall Place. The decision, an unusual one for a North American professional sports organization, was likely influenced by the expectation that the 2004-05 NHL lockout would wipe out the 2004-05 NHL season. After an unsuccessful year, the Edmonton Road Runners were suspended, and as of 2006, have not yet been revived in any form. Those plans have all but been terminated as the Oilers' long-planned push to own an expansion Western Hockey League major-junior franchise were granted on June 27, 2006. That team will begin play in the 2007-08 season.

Post-lockout

File:Edmonton-alternate.gif
Edmonton's alternate logo: a raining drop of oil surrounded by half of a sprocket and metal; designed by Spawn creator and Oilers co-owner Todd McFarlane.

The Oilers struggled with their small-market status for years as big-market teams scooped up high-priced help, but after the wiped-out 2004-05 season, the Oilers looked poised to compete again. 2004-05 NHL lockout negotiations led to a collective bargaining agreement between the NHL owners and players that included a league-wide salary cap, forcing all teams to essentially conform to a budget, as many small-market teams had been doing for years.

Although Edmonton was one of the last teams to make a big splash in the free-agent market, they were able to acquire the rights to and sign former Hart- and Norris Trophy-winner Chris Pronger from the St. Louis Blues, as well as trade for New York Islanders forward Michael Peca, two-time winner of the Frank J. Selke Trophy for best defensive forward. Although the club had to give up Mike York and Eric Brewer to the Islanders and Blues, respectively, fans now hoped the team could at least return to the playoffs, if not to the glory the franchise enjoyed during its late 1980s dynasty era.

However, the team suffered again from inconsistency during the first few months of the regular season, especially in goal and on offence. Goaltender Ty Conklin was injured during training camp, and when he returned, was unreliable in net. Nominal backup Jussi Markkanen showed flashes of brilliance, but still was not quite ready for regular NHL goaltending duty. Edmonton even tried third-string goalie Mike Morrison, called up from the East Coast Hockey League, but after a strong start, he too faded. A streaky goal-scoring production led by left-wingers Ryan Smyth and Raffi Torres had trouble putting pucks in the net at times, but Torres did produce back to back two goal games on his 24th birthday, October 8, 2005 against the Vancouver Canucks and on October 10, 2005 against the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. Chris Pronger also struggled early on with the rule changes restricting the amount of obstruction and front-of-the-net abuse — Pronger's previous specialty — that could be performed without a penalty, while Peca simply had trouble adapting to the Oilers' system and expectations, desperately underachieving. Many called for head coach Craig MacTavish to be fired; others wanted a big trade, some miracle. Nothing major materialized, but by the end of December, the Oilers led the Northwest Division with a 22-18-4 record for 48 points.

However, the Oilers remained inconsistent. By the end of January, the Oilers traded for scoring defencemen Jaroslav Spacek from the Chicago Blackhawks and Dick Tarnstrom from the Pittsburgh Penguins, and both defencemen, Spacek in particular, secured their shaky blue line. However, their goaltending was still in doubt, and the Oilers struggled after the Winter Olympic break. But right before Trading Deadline 2006, the Oilers added 2004 All-Star goaltender Dwayne Roloson from the Minnesota Wild, and speedy forward Sergei Samsonov, a former rookie of the year, from the Boston Bruins. The Oilers gave up a pair of picks for Roloson, and checking centre Marty Reasoner and prospect Yan Stastny (previously acquired from the Bruins) for Samsonov. Reasoner returned to Edmonton after the 2006 playoffs ended.

The new acquisitions paid off, and Edmonton finished the regular season with 95 points, clinching the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference over Vancouver. Oiler youngsters Ales Hemsky, Shawn Horcoff, and Jarret Stoll led the way in scoring, with break-out seasons of 77, 73, and 68 points, respectively. Smyth finished with 36 goals and 66 points, the second-best seasons of his career in both respects. Smyth led the team in goal-scoring, with Raffi Torres next on the list at 27.

2006 Playoff Run

Edmonton Oilers fans, unable to enter the jam-packed Rexall Place, compromise by celebrating equally loudly as those who did manage to get into West Edmonton Mall, or celebrate on Edmonton's Whyte Avenue during the 2006 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

In the first round of the playoffs, the Oilers played the Presidents' Trophy-winning Detroit Red Wings. Though not given much of a chance by experts around the league, the Oilers pulled off a six-game upset, neutralizing Wings' offensive weapons Brendan Shanahan, Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel Datsyuk, in a "lure" that MacTavish designed. It was the team's first playoff series win since 1998. Edmonton would meet the San Jose Sharks in the Conference Semifinal. The Oil weren't expected to win here either, after point champion Joe Thornton (also acquired from the Bruins to go to San Jose) and goal champ Jonathan Cheechoo had shut down Nashville Predators netminder Chris Mason. After trailing the series two-games-to-none, the Oilers won the next four, vaulting them into Conference Final. In Game Six, Roloson had a 2-0 shutout — his first ever — and Michael Peca netted the game- and series-winning goal. In doing so, the Oilers became the first eighth-seeded team to reach a Conference Final since the NHL changed the playoff format in 1994. There the Oilers would beat the sixth-seeded Mighty Ducks of Anaheim in five games, claiming the Clarence S. Campbell Bowl for a record seventh time.

Edmonton faced the Carolina Hurricanes in the Stanley Cup Finals (marking the first time two former World Hockey Association teams met in Stanley Cup play). Down 4-3 in the first game, Oilers starting goalie Dwayne Roloson was hurt and put out of action for the rest of the playoffs after a collision when Oil blue-liner Marc-Andre Bergeron knocked 'Canes centre Andrew Ladd into him in Game One. Edmonton tied the game, but Rod Brind'Amour scored the game winner on a mix up by Ty Conklin and Jason Smith with only thirty seconds left. After trailing the series 2-0 and 3-1, the Oilers forced a seventh game while riding backup Jussi Markkanen. They could not complete the comeback, however, as the Hurricanes won the final game 3-1.

2006 off-season

Two days after their heartbreaking loss to the Hurricanes, Chris Pronger surprised Oiler fans when he issued a trade request on June 21, citing unspecified personal reasons. On July 3, he was traded to the Anaheim Ducks in exchange for sniper Joffrey Lupul, top defensive prospect Ladislav Smid, Anaheim's first round draft pick in 2007, Anaheim's second in 2008, and a conditional first. In addition, many of the Oilers' 2005-06 acquisitions signed for contracts elsewhere: Jaroslav Spacek went to the Buffalo Sabres on July 5, Sergei Samsonov signed with the Montreal Canadiens on July 12, and Michael Peca with his hometown Toronto Maple Leafs on July 18. In addition, enforcer and fan favourite Georges Laraque, despite offering the Oilers a substantial pay cut in exchange for a no-trade clause, wound up signing with the Phoenix Coyotes, and goaltender Ty Conklin, seeking to rebuild his reputation, signed a two-way contract with the Columbus Blue Jackets the following day. The Oilers also lost 2002-03 New York Rangers acquisition Radek Dvorak to unrestricted free agency as the St. Louis Blues signed him on September 14.

Despite these losses, many of the Oilers' core players were re-signed. Playoff heroes Fernando Pisani and Dwayne Roloson signed as unrestricted free agents (UFAs) on the first day of eligibility, July 1. Jarret Stoll, Shawn Horcoff and Ales Hemsky filed for arbitration as restricted free agents, but all settled for multi-year deals before their hearings came up; Hemsky, in particular, signed for six years and $24.6 million. The Oilers also brought back centre Marty Reasoner, whom they had traded for Samsonov in March, prospect Tom Gilbert from the University of Wisconsin, defenceman Daniel Tjarnqvist from the Minnesota Wild, and defenceman Jan Hejda from Mytishchi Khimik of the Russian Super League, whose rights were acquired from the Sabres for a seventh-round pick. On August 11, Rangers UFA forward Petr Sykora and the Oilers agreed on a one-year contract. Just over a month later, on September 12, Joffrey Lupul and the Oilers agreed to a three-year contract worth $6.935 million. [3]

On January 2, 2007 the Oilers recorded their 1000th franchise NHL win against the Florida Panthers. They are the 3rd fastest team to reach 1000 wins after the Montreal Canadiens and the Philadelphia Flyers.

Jerseys

File:Oilers 1975 Away Alt.gif
Alternate logo from away jersey (1975-79).

The original 1972 design featured the traditional colours of blue and orange, but reversed from their more familiar appearance in later seasons, orange being the dominant colour and blue used for the trimming. For the first few games of the 1972 season, player names weren't displayed on the uniform; rather the word "ALBERTA" was written in that space. Once it became clear, however, that the team would play exclusively in Edmonton, the player names made their appearance. These jerseys also featured the player numbers high on the shoulders, rather than on the upper sleeve.

In the 1975-76 WHA season the jersey was changed to the more familiar blue base with orange trim, but with some minor differences. The logo that appeared on programs and promotional material remained the same, however the logo that appeared on the home jersey had a white oil drop, on a dark orange field, with the team name written in deep blue. The away jersey featured the orange-printed logo that many mistakenly attribute to the entire history of the WHA Oilers. In every other facet, though, the jerseys were identical to the dynasty-era form that is known throughout the hockey world.

File:Oilers Home 1975 Alternate.gif
Alternate logo from home jersey (1975-79)

When the team jumped to the NHL in 1979, the alternate logos were discarded and the jersey took its most famous form, though the logo did appear slightly different on a few vintages of the jersey (1979, 1986, 1990). The essential design remained untouched until 1996, when the blue and orange were replaced by midnight blue and copper. Other changes made to the jersey at that point were the removal of the orange shoulder bar and cuffs from the away jersey, and the addition of the "Rigger" alternate logo to the end of the shoulder bar on the home jersey, and the equivalent position on the road jersey. A year later, the shoulder bars were removed from the home jersey as well, giving the Oilers' sweater its modern look.

In 2001, the introduction of the third jersey featuring a logo designed by Spawn creator and Oilers co-owner, Todd McFarlane, and Brent Ashe, was a controversial move, given the negative reactions to many other teams' designs. While there remains some disdain towards both the "Rigger" logo and McFarlane's "Blades" logo — meant to symbolize elements of the Oilers' past — the navy, silver, and white design is generally considered a success, though there are no plans for it to become the basis for the team's primary jerseys, as has been done previously by the Dallas Stars and San Jose Sharks. The jersey became a a big hit with the fans and became the best-selling third jersey in NHL History. McFarlane spoke about the jersey to the Edmonton Journal on the day it was unveiled, saying, "We wanted it to be a hockey jersey but also a good wear if you were just walking down the street." The logo was designed to represent what the Oilers were all about. "Sharp, blade-like shapes signify the blades of a hockey skate ... the five rivets around the oil drop represent the five Stanley Cups won by the Oilers ... inner and outer gear shapes signify force and reinforce the concept of teamwork and industriousness." McFarlane also mentioned, "The oil drop is derived from the original logo. It's turned on its side to suggest speed in the new logo and it has been given a highlight to emphasize the difference from the original."

In accordance with the NHL announcement of new jerseys to be used for all 30 NHL teams, the Oilers will unveil their new jersey during the latter part of the 06-07 season.[1]

Season-by-season record

Alberta/Edmonton Oilers (WHA, 1972-79)

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

Records as of September 12, 2006. [4] [5]

Season GP W L T Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs
1972-73 78 37 35 6 80 259 250 843 4th, West Did not qualify
1973-74 78 44 32 2 90 332 275 1273 3rd, West Lost Preliminary Round
1974-75 78 36 38 4 76 279 279 896 5th, Canadian Did not qualify
1975-76 81 27 49 5 59 268 345 991 4th, Canadian Lost Quarterfinal
1976-77 81 34 43 4 72 243 304 1319 4th, West Lost Quarterfinal
1977-78 80 38 39 3 79 309 307 1296 5th, WHA Lost Preliminary Round
1978-79 80 48 30 2 98 340 266 1220 1st, WHA Lost Avco World Trophy Final
Totals 556 264 266 26 554 2030 2026 7838

Edmonton Oilers (NHL, 1979-present)

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

Records as of January 5, 2006. [6]

Season GP W L T OTL/SOL Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs
1979-80 80 28 39 13 69 301 322 1528 4th, Smythe Lost in Preliminary Round, 0-3 (Flyers)
1980-81 80 29 35 16 74 328 327 1544 4th, Smythe Won in Preliminary Round, 3-0 (Canadiens)
Lost in Quarterfinals, 2-4 (Islanders)
1981-82 80 48 17 15 111 417 295 1473 1st, Smythe Lost in Division Semifinals, 2-3 (Kings)
1982-83 80 47 21 12 106 424 315 1771 1st, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 3-0 (Jets)
Won in Division Finals, 4-1 (Flames)
Won in Conference Finals, 4-0 (Black Hawks)
Lost in Finals, 0-4 (Islanders)
1983-84 80 57 18 5 119 446 314 1577 1st, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 3-0 (Jets)
Won in Division Finals, 4-3 (Flames)
Won in Conference Finals, 4-0 (North Stars)
Stanley Cup Champions, 4-1 (Islanders)
1984-85 80 49 20 11 109 401 298 1567 1st, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 3-0 (Kings)
Won in Division Finals, 4-0 (Jets)
Won in Conference Finals, 4-2 (Black Hawks)
Stanley Cup Champions, 4-1 (Flyers)
1985-86 80 56 17 7 119 426 310 1928 1st, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 3-0 (Canucks)
Lost in Division Finals, 3-4 (Flames)
1986-87 80 50 24 6 106 372 284 1721 1st, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 4-1 (Kings)
Won in Division Finals, 4-0 (Jets)
Won in Conference Finals, 4-1 (Red Wings)
Stanley Cup Champions, 4-3 (Flyers)
1987-88 80 44 25 11 99 363 288 2173 2nd, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 4-1 (Jets)
Won in Division Finals, 4-0 (Flames)
Won in Conference Finals, 4-1 (Red Wings)
Stanley Cup Champions, 4-0 (Bruins)
1988-89 80 38 34 8 84 325 306 1931 3rd, Smythe Lost in Division Semifinals, 3-4 (Kings)
1989-90 80 38 28 14 90 315 283 2046 3rd, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 4-3 (Jets)
Won in Division Finals, 4-0 (Kings)
Won in Conference Finals, 4-2 (Blackhawks)
Stanley Cup Champions, 4-1 (Bruins)
1990-91 80 37 37 6 80 272 272 1823 3rd, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 4-3 (Flames)
Won in Division Finals, 4-2 (Kings)
Lost in Conference Finals, 1-4 (North Stars)
1991-92 80 36 34 10 82 295 297 1907 3rd, Smythe Won in Division Semifinals, 4-2 (Kings)
Won in Division Finals, 4-2 (Canucks)
Lost in Conference Finals, 0-4 (Blackhawks)
1992-93 84 26 50 8 60 242 337 2027 5th, Smythe Did not qualify
1993-94 84 25 45 14 64 261 305 1858 6th, Pacific Did not qualify
1994-951 48 17 27 4 38 136 183 1183 5th, Pacific Did not qualify
1995-96 82 30 44 8 68 240 304 1709 5th, Pacific Did not qualify
1996-97 82 36 37 9 81 252 247 1368 3rd, Pacific Won in Conference Quarterfinals, 4-3 (Stars)
Lost in Conference Semifinals, 1-4 (Avalanche)
1997-98 82 35 37 10 80 215 224 1690 3rd, Pacific Won in Conference Quarterfinals, 4-3 (Avalanche)
Lost in Conference Semifinals, 1-4 (Stars)
1998-99 82 33 37 12 78 230 226 1373 2nd, Northwest Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 0-4 (Stars)
1999-00 82 32 26 16 8 88 226 212 1344 2nd, Northwest Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 1-4 (Stars)
2000-01 82 39 28 12 3 93 243 222 1287 2nd, Northwest Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2-4 (Stars)
2001-02 82 38 28 12 4 92 205 182 1267 3rd, Northwest Did not qualify
2002-03 82 36 26 11 9 92 231 230 1203 4th, Northwest Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2-4 (Stars)
2003-04 82 36 29 12 5 89 221 208 1220 4th, Northwest Did not qualify
2004-052
2005-063 82 41 28 13 95 256 251 1178 3rd, Northwest Won in Conference Quarterfinals, 4-2 (Red Wings)
Won in Conference Semifinals, 4-2 (Sharks)
Won in Conference Finals, 4-1 (Mighty Ducks)
Lost in Finals, 3-4 (Hurricanes)
2006-07 41 19 18 4 42 117 122 607 5th, Northwest Current Season
Totals 2111 999 806 262 44 2304 7741 7077 41178
1 Season was shortened due to the 1994-95 NHL lockout.
2 Season was cancelled due to the 2004-05 NHL lockout.
3 As of the 2005-06 NHL season, all games tied after a 5 minute overtime will be decided in a shootout; SOL (Shootout losses) will be recorded as OTL in the standings.

Notable players

Current roster

As of January 2, 2007. [2]

Goaltenders
# Player Catches Acquired Place of Birth
30 Finland Jussi Markkanen L 2004 Imatra, Finland
35 Canada Dwayne Roloson L 2006 Simcoe, Ontario
Defencemen
# Player Shoots Acquired Place of Birth
2 United States Matt Greene R 2002 Grand Ledge, Michigan
5 Czech Republic Ladislav Smid (IR) L 2006 Frýdlant v Čechách, Czechoslovakia
21 Canada Jason Smith - C R 1999 Calgary, Alberta
24 Canada Steve Staios - A R 2001 Hamilton, Ontario
25 Czech Republic Jan Hejda L 2006 Prague, Czechoslovakia
29 Sweden Daniel Tjarnqvist L 2006 Umea, Sweden
36 Canada Mathieu Roy R 2003 St-Georges, Quebec
47 Canada Marc-Andre Bergeron L 2001 Saint-Louis-de-France, Quebec
Forwards
# Player Position Shoots Acquired Place of Birth
10 Canada Shawn Horcoff - A C L 1998 Trail, British Columbia
14 Canada Raffi Torres LW L 2003 Toronto, Ontario
15 Canada Joffrey Lupul RW R 2006 Edmonton, Alberta
16 Canada Jarret Stoll C R 2002 Melville, Saskatchewan
18 Canada Ethan Moreau - A (IR) LW L 1999 Huntsville, Ontario
19 United States Marty Reasoner C L 2006 Honeoye Falls, New York
20 United States Toby Petersen C L 2004 Minneapolis, Minnesota
26 United States Brad Winchester LW L 2000 Madison, Wisconsin
28 Norway Patrick Thoresen LW L 2006 Oslo, Norway
34 Canada Fernando Pisani RW L 1996 Edmonton, Alberta
71 Czech Republic Petr Sykora C L 2006 Plzen, Czechoslovakia
83 Czech Republic Ales Hemsky RW R 2001 Pardubice, Czechoslovakia
93 Canada Petr Nedved C L 2007 Liberec, Czechoslovakia
94 Canada Ryan Smyth - A LW L 1994 Banff, Alberta

Team captains

Note: This list includes Oiler captains from both the NHL and WHA.


Players
Builders
Broadcasters

Retired numbers

  • 3 Al Hamilton, D, 1972-80, number retired in 1980 (jersey ceremony April 4, 2001)
  • 7 Paul Coffey, D, 1980-87, number retired October 18, 2005
  • 11 Mark Messier, C, 1979-91, number to be retired February 27, 2007
  • 17 Jari Kurri, RW, 1980-90, number retired October 6, 2001
  • 31 Grant Fuhr, G, 1981-91, number retired October 9, 2003
  • 99 Wayne Gretzky, C, 1978-88, number retired October 1, 1999

First-round draft picks

Note: This list does not include selections from the WHA.


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 Oilers player

Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G
Wayne Gretzky C 696 583 1086 1669 2.40
Jari Kurri RW 754 474 569 1043 1.38
Mark Messier C/LW 851 392 642 1034 1.22
Glenn Anderson RW 845 417 489 906 1.07
Paul Coffey D 532 209 460 669 1.26
Doug Weight C 588 157 420 577 .98
Ryan Smyth* LW 742 250 268 518 .69
Esa Tikkanen LW 490 178 258 436 .89
Kevin Lowe D 1037 74 309 383 .37
Charlie Huddy D 694 61 287 368 .53

NHL awards and trophies


Franchise individual records

WHA (1972-79)
NHL (1979-present)

Miscellaneous

Other notable figures

  • Peter Pocklington, owner of the owners from the late 1970s to the mid 1990s. Pocklington had a number of business deals that went sour and was responsible for the trade of Wayne Gretzky to the Los Angeles Kings in 1988.
  • Joey Moss, official Dressing Room Attendant for the Oilers. Moss, who was born with Down Syndrome, is the brother of singer Vicki Moss, whom Gretzky began dating in 1979. Gretzky asked Joey to come work for the Oilers in the early 1980s, and Moss has remained with the team ever since. Every year an intra-squad game called the "Joey Moss Cup" is held in early September. In 2003, Moss was honoured by the NHL Alumni Association with its “Seventh Man Award”, honouring those for their dedication and service behind the scenes[7]
  • Todd McFarlane, artist and creator of the comic book Spawn, is a part-owner of the franchise. In late 2001, McFarlane revealed a new logo for the Edmonton Oilers. This logo is featured on the team's Third Jersey. His company McFarlane Toys also makes action figures for the NHL.
  • Nelson Skalbania, who owned the Edmonton Oilers WHA franchise in the mid 1970s before selling the team to Peter Pocklington. Ironically, it was Skalbania who, as owner of the Indianapolis Racers, would eventually sell the contracts of three players to Pocklington in 1978 for $700,000. One of these players was Wayne Gretzky.
  • Rod Phillips, the Oilers' play-by-play broadcaster for all games on 630 CHED. Alongside Morley Scott, Phillips has only missed one Oiler game in 30 years of broadcasting. In 2003, he was the recipient of the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award for his great play-by-play work. Oiler fans consider Phillips to be as good as the great hockey broadcasters like Bob Cole and Chris Cuthbert.[citation needed]

References

See also