2014–15 New York Rangers season

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2014–15 New York Rangers
Metropolitan Division champions
Division1st Metropolitan
Conference1st Eastern
2014–15 record53–22–7
Home record25–11–5
Road record28–11–2
Goals for252
Goals against192
Team information
General managerGlen Sather
CoachAlain Vigneault
CaptainRyan McDonagh
Alternate captainsDan Girardi
Marc Staal
Derek Stepan
Martin St. Louis
ArenaMadison Square Garden
Average attendance18,006[1]
(37 games)
Minor league affiliate(s)Hartford Wolf Pack (AHL)
Greenville Road Warriors (ECHL)
Team leaders
GoalsRick Nash (42)
AssistsDerick Brassard (41)
PointsRick Nash (69)
Penalty minutesTanner Glass (98)
Plus/minus(+): Rick Nash (29)
(−): Tanner Glass (−12)
WinsHenrik Lundqvist (30)
Goals against averageMackenzie Skapski (0.50)

The 2014–15 New York Rangers season was the franchise's 88th season of play and their 89th season overall.

Off-season

The Rangers used their second compliance buyout on center Brad Richards on June 20, 2014.[2][3]

Training camp

On September 24, center Derek Stepan suffered a fractured fibula during on-ice fitness testing, meaning the Rangers would need to start the season without their number one center for four-to-six weeks.[4][5]

At the conclusion of training camp, Anthony Duclair was named the 2014 winner of the Lars-Erik Sjoberg Award for being the best Rangers rookie in training camp. Duclair, a third round draft pick in 2013, turned heads in camp by scoring in three-straight pre-season games. Duclair was also the only teenager to score five points or more during the pre-season.[6]

On October 6, defenseman Ryan McDonagh was named the 27th captain in New York Rangers history. Dan Girardi, Martin St. Louis, Marc Staal and Derek Stepan were named alternate captains.[7]

Regular season

On October 14, 2014, in a loss to the New York Islanders, Rick Nash established a franchise record by scoring a goal in each of the team's first four games of a season.[8]

On December 27, the Rangers beat the New Jersey Devils 3–1 to extend their winning streak to eight in a row, which was the longest win streak by the Rangers since the 1974–75 season.[9]

The Rangers became the first team to clinch a playoff spot on March 26 with a 5–1 win over the Ottawa Senators with 101 points.[10] It is the eighth time in franchise history the team has reached the 100-point mark.

On April 2, 2015, the Rangers clinched the Metropolitan Division title with a win over the Minnesota Wild, 3–2. This win also made it their 26th road win of the season, a franchise record.

On April 4, 2015, the Rangers defeated the New Jersey Devils 6–1 for their 50th win of the season. This was the fourth time in franchise history that the Rangers achieved a 50 win season.

On April 7, 2015, the Rangers defeated the New Jersey Devils 4–2 to clinch the Presidents' Trophy, the third in franchise history. This win also made it their 27th league-leading road win.

On April 11, 2015, the Rangers beat the Washington Capitals 4–2 to win their 53rd game with 113 points. This is the most wins and points ever by the team, breaking single-season franchise records.

Playoffs

In the first round of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, the Rangers played the Pittsburgh Penguins and won the series in five games.

In the second round of the Eastern Conference Semifinals, the Rangers played the Washington Capitals and won the series in seven games.

During the second round, the Rangers set an NHL record in which 14-straight playoff games were decided by one goal. They also became the first team in NHL history to battle back from a 3–1 deficit in back-to-back seasons.

Standings

Divisional standings

Metropolitan Division
Pos Team GP W L OTL ROW GF GA GD Pts
1 p – New York Rangers 82 53 22 7 49 252 192 +60 113
2 x – Washington Capitals 82 45 26 11 40 242 203 +39 101
3 x – New York Islanders 82 47 28 7 40 252 230 +22 101
4 x – Pittsburgh Penguins 82 43 27 12 39 221 210 +11 98
5 Columbus Blue Jackets 82 42 35 5 33 236 250 −14 89
6 Philadelphia Flyers 82 33 31 18 30 215 234 −19 84
7 New Jersey Devils 82 32 36 14 27 181 216 −35 78
8 Carolina Hurricanes 82 30 41 11 25 188 226 −38 71
Source: National Hockey League
p – Clinched Presidents' Trophy; x – Clinched playoff spot

Conference standings

Template:2014–15 NHL Eastern Conference standings

Schedule and results

Pre-season

Regular season

2014–15 Game Log

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

Playoffs

2015 Stanley Cup playoffs

Player statistics

Final Stats

Skaters
Goaltenders
Regular season[11]
Player GP GS TOI W L OT GA GAA SA SV% SO G A PIM
Henrik Lundqvist 46 46 2743 30 13 3 103 2.25 1329 .922 5 0 1 0
Cam Talbot 36 34 2095 21 9 4 77 2.21 1038 .926 5 0 0 0
Mackenzie Skapski 2 2 120 2 0 0 1 0.50 45 .978 1 0 0 0
Playoffs
Player GP GS TOI W L GA GAA SA SV% SO G A PIM
Henrik Lundqvist 19 19 1166 11 8 41 2.11 570 .928 0 0 0 0

Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Rangers. Stats reflect time with the Rangers only.
Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Rangers only.
Bold/italics denotes franchise record.

Roster

Updated May 9, 2024[12][13]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
22 United States Jonny Brodzinski C R 30 2020 Ham Lake, Minnesota
72 Czech Republic Filip Chytil C L 24 2017 Kroměříž, Czech Republic
50 Canada Will Cuylle LW L 22 2020 Toronto, Ontario
70 Canada Louis Domingue G R 32 2022 Mont-Saint-Hilaire, Quebec
84 Sweden Adam Edstrom C L 23 2019 Karlstad, Sweden
23 United States Adam Fox (A) D R 26 2019 Jericho, New York
21 Canada Barclay Goodrow (A) C/RW L 31 2021 Toronto, Ontario
56 Sweden Erik Gustafsson D L 32 2023 Nynäshamn, Sweden
6 United States Zac Jones D L 23 2019 Glen Allen, Virginia
24 Finland Kaapo Kakko RW L 23 2019 Turku, Finland
20 United States Chris Kreider (A) LW L 33 2009 Boxford, Massachusetts
13 Canada Alexis Lafreniere LW L 22 2020 Saint-Eustache, Quebec
55 United States Ryan Lindgren D L 26 2018 Minneapolis, Minnesota
79 United States K'Andre Miller D L 24 2018 Saint Paul, Minnesota
10 Russia Artemi Panarin (A) LW R 32 2019 Korkino, Soviet Union
32 United States Jonathan Quick G L 38 2023 Milford, Connecticut
73 Canada Matt Rempe C R 21 2020 Calgary, Alberta
96 United States Jack Roslovic C R 27 2024 Columbus, Ohio
5 United States Chad Ruhwedel D R 34 2024 San Diego, California
4 Canada Braden Schneider D R 22 2020 Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
31 Russia Igor Shesterkin G L 28 2014 Moscow, Russia
16 United States Vincent Trocheck C R 30 2022 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
8 United States Jacob Trouba (C) D R 30 2019 Rochester, Michigan
26 United States Jimmy Vesey LW L 30 2022 Boston, Massachusetts
91 Sweden Alexander Wennberg C L 29 2024 Nacka, Sweden
17 United States Blake Wheeler Injured Reserve RW R 37 2023 Plymouth, Minnesota
93 Sweden Mika Zibanejad (A) C R 31 2016 Huddinge, Sweden


Injuries

Updated as of May 2, 2015

Player Injury Date Returned Games missed
Derek Stepan Lower-body-injury (broken leg) September 24, 2014[14] November 8, 2014 12 games
Dan Boyle Upper-body-injury (broken hand) October 9, 2014[15] November 13, 2014 14 games
Ryan McDonagh Upper-body-injury (shoulder) November 1, 2014 November 28, 2014 10 games
Kevin Klein Lower-body-injury (foot) November 1, 2014 November 5, 2014 1 game
Mats Zuccarello Undisclosed November 1, 2014 November 5, 2014 1 game
Henrik Lundqvist Vascular injury (neck) February 4, 2015 March 28, 2015 25 games
Jesper Fast Knee sprain February 8, 2015[16] March 2, 2015 11 games
Rick Nash Neck spasms February 24, 2015 February 26, 2015 1 game
Kevin Klein Upper-body-injury (arm) March 11, 2015[17] April 30, 2015 16 games
Martin St. Louis Lower-body-injury (leg) March 15, 2015[18] April 2, 2015 8 games
Total 74 games

Suspensions/fines

Player Explanation Length Salary Date issued
John Moore Illegal check to the head of Minnesota Wild forward Erik Haula during NHL Game No. 122 in New York on Monday, October 27, 2014, at 7:12 of the second period. 5 games $51,859.75 October 29, 2014[19]
Tanner Glass Butt-ending of Boston Bruins defenseman Adam McQuaid during NHL Game No. 1116 in Boston on Saturday, March 28, 2015, at 20:00 of the third period. $3,897.85 March 28, 2015[20]

Awards and records

Awards

Milestones

Transactions

The Rangers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2014–15 season: