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2007 National Hockey League All-Star Game

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55th NHL All-Star Game
File:NHL AllStar 2007.png
123 Total
East 333 9
West 363 12
DateJanuary 24, 2007
ArenaAmerican Airlines Center
CityDallas, Texas
MVPDaniel Briere (Buffalo)
Attendance18,532
← 2004 2008 →

The 55th National Hockey League All-Star Game was held in Dallas, Texas, on January 24, 2007. The Western Conference was victorious, defeating the Eastern Conference 12–9. Calgary's Dion Phaneuf scored the longest empty-net goal in All-Star history when from behind his own net, he used the boards to bank the puck, which rolled into the East's vacated net.

On January 23, 2006, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman announced that the event to be held during the 2006–07 season would take place at American Airlines Center, home of the Dallas Stars.[1] The Stars were hosting an All-Star Game for the first time since 1972, when they were known as the Minnesota North Stars. The starting lines for both conferences were announced on January 9, 2007, and the full rosters were announced January 13, 2007.

Pre-game warm-up

This was the first NHL All-Star game since 2004. The 2004–05 NHL lockout forced the cancellation of that year's game and the 2005–06 season did not include an All-Star game due to the 2006 Winter Olympics.

This event was broadcast by Versus, CBC and RDS.

Rory Fitzpatrick voting campaign

The fan voting process had been revised so as to allow fans to vote for their favorite players as many times as they wished. This had created a humorous fan voting campaign around Vancouver Canucks defenceman Rory Fitzpatrick, urging many to vote him into the game as a write-in candidate, designed to show that the revised system would lead to ballot box stuffing, in an effort to get the league to change the system. Despite having no points in 18 games and one point in 22 games, Fitzpatrick had surprisingly accumulated 428,832 votes, good for second-place (and a starting spot) among the defencemen when preliminary results were released.[2] Reaction to the campaign was mixed—supporters of the campaign saw an opportunity to consider sending a hardworking but otherwise unspectacular player onto the all-star teams as recognition for their hard work, while opponents claim that it would take spots on the team away from players who generate interest in the league.

Among notable opponents of the campaign were Phoenix Coyotes head coach Wayne Gretzky[3] as well as Hockey Night in Canada commentator Don Cherry.[4] Ultimately, the campaign was unsuccessful, as Fitzpatrick finished third among Western Conference defencemen and was not named as an All-Star reserve. Slate suggested that Fitzpatrick had the requisite number of votes and that the NHL altered the results in reaction to ballot stuffing by an automatic script.[5]

New league-wide uniforms (Rbk EDGE)

Finally, the league chose to unveil the new Rbk EDGE uniform designs, which would be employed by all 30 teams in the following season. The new uniforms are designed to retain less water, potentially leading to less fatigue and improved performance. Similar designs have been employed in recent international hockey competitions. Critics of the new uniform design claim that the uniforms are more form-fitting than ever before, and that the new sweaters would not allow horizontal striping at the bottom of the sweater, a design that is a part of many current jerseys, including those of all six Original Six teams. However, some players have embraced the new uniforms, claiming that the new jerseys made them feel faster on the ice.

Rosters

Eastern Conference Western Conference
Coach Canada Lindy Ruff (Buffalo Sabres) Canada Randy Carlyle (Anaheim Ducks)
Assistant Coach Canada Bob Hartley (Atlanta Thrashers) Canada Barry Trotz (Nashville Predators)
Lineup Starters:

Reserves:

Starters:

Reserves:

Notes

Summary

Eastern Conference Western Conference
Final score 9 12
Scoring
  • Briere (Heatley, Hossa) 3:38 first
  • St. Louis (Lecavalier, Rafalski) 13:07 first
  • Staal (Williams, Bouwmeester) 13:43 first
  • Williams (Blake) 5:19 second
  • Chara (Briere, Rafalski) 6:29 second
  • Ovechkin (Briere, Souray) 13:32 second
  • Heatley (Briere, Hossa) 2:01 third
  • Chara (Hossa, Briere) 10:37 third
  • Souray (Hossa) 19:25 third
  • Perreault (Rolston, Guerin) 5:08 first
  • Selanne 6:17 first
  • Visnovsky (Sakic, Nash) 18:55 first
  • Marleau (Cheechoo, Lidstrom) 2:41 second
  • Rolston 8:30 second
  • Nash (Sakic, Phaneuf) 10:40 second
  • Havlat (Sakic, Nash) 11:34 second
  • Perreault (Guerin, Rolston) 12:47 second
  • Rolston (Javanovski) 18:58 second
  • Nash (Sakic, Havlat) 7:12 third
  • Havlat (Smyth, Jovanovski) 18:58 third
  • Phaneuf (Visnovsky) 19:48 (EN) third
Penalties none none
Shots on goal 12–11–15–38 12–16–11–39
Win/loss L - Cristobal Huet W - Marty Turco

See also

References

  1. ^ "Dallas Stars to Host 2007 NHL All-Star Game" (Press release). Dallas Stars. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ "NHL All-Star Vote Results". NHL web site. December 20, 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-20. [dead link]
  3. ^ Vest, David (December 22, 2006). "'Vote for Rory' All-Star push irks Gretzky". The Arizona Republic. Retrieved 2006-12-30. [dead link]
  4. ^ Botchford, Jason (December 24, 2006). "Cherry blasts fans for voting Fitzpatrick to all-star game". Victoria Times-Colonist. Retrieved 2006-12-30.
  5. ^ Engber, Daniel (January 18, 2007). "Rorygate - The NHL's All-Star Voting Disaster: A Slate Investigation". Slate. Archived from the original on 21 January 2007. Retrieved 2007-01-18. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)

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