2005–06 Edmonton Oilers season

The 2005–06 Edmonton Oilers season was the Oilers' 27th season in the NHL, and they were coming off a 36–29–12–5 record with 89 points and finishing 9th in the Western Conference in 2003–04 and missed the playoffs. In 2005–06, the Oilers qualified for the playoffs in eighth place, and put on a playoff run that brought them to the Stanley Cup Final finishing with a loss in Game 7 to the victorious Carolina Hurricanes by a score of 3–1. This was the first time an eighth seeded team reached the Stanley Cup finals (which was repeated in 2012 and 2017).

2005–06 Edmonton Oilers
Western Conference champions
Division3rd Northwest
Conference8th Western
2005–06 record41–28–13
Home record20–15–6
Road record21–13–7
Goals for256
Goals against251
Team information
General managerKevin Lowe
CoachCraig MacTavish
CaptainJason Smith
Alternate captainsEthan Moreau
Ryan Smyth
ArenaRexall Place
Average attendance16,832 (99.96%)
Minor league affiliate(s)Hamilton Bulldogs (AHL)
Iowa Stars (AHL)
Greenville Grrrowl (ECHL)
Team leaders
GoalsRyan Smyth (36)
AssistsAles Hemsky (58)
PointsAles Hemsky (77)
Penalty minutesEthan Moreau (87)
Plus/minusSteve Staios (+10)
WinsJussi Markkanen (15)
Goals against averageDwayne Roloson (2.43)

Offseason

Due to the 2004–05 NHL lockout, the 2004–05 NHL season was cancelled when the players and owners could not agree to a new CBA. The two sides would come to agreement, and there would be many changes for both the Oilers and the NHL as a whole.

The NHL introduced a salary cap of $39 million for the 2005–06, which meant the teams above that figure would cut salary to fit under the cap. The Oilers, who had a lot of cap room, took advantage of this, and the St. Louis Blues would trade former Hart- and Norris Trophy-winning Chris Pronger to the Oilers in exchange for Eric Brewer, Jeff Woywitka and Doug Lynch. Pronger would then sign a five-year, $31.25 million contract with Edmonton. The Oilers would then make another blockbuster trade, this time acquiring former Frank J. Selke Trophy winner Michael Peca from the New York Islanders for Mike York and a fourth-round draft pick.

The NHL also made a number of rule changes, such as adding a shootout to determine the winner of a game that was tied after five minutes of overtime to eliminate ties, goaltenders were not allowed to play the puck in the corners of the ice surface and the referees would crack down on obstruction.

Regular season

The Oilers would start off the season rather slowly, sitting with a 9–9–1 record after 19 games, but the club would get hot, going 21–9–7 in their next 37 games. As the trade deadline approached, the club did not have a clear number one goaltender, and they addressed this issue by trading their first-round draft pick in 2006 to the Minnesota Wild for Dwayne Roloson. Edmonton would also add former Calder Memorial Trophy winner Sergei Samsonov to the club, sending Marty Reasoner, Yan Stastny and a second-round draft pick (Milan Lucic) to the Boston Bruins to acquire him. The Oilers played mediocre hockey for the rest of the season, but nonetheless managed to finish in eighth place in the Western Conference and qualify for the playoffs for the first time since 2003.

Offensively, Ryan Smyth would lead the club with 36 goals, his highest total since scoring 39 goals in 1996–97, and 22-year-old Ales Hemsky would break-out, earning a club-high 58 assists and 77 points. Shawn Horcoff would also have a breakout season, scoring 22 goals and 73 points, as would Jarret Stoll, who scored 22 goals and earned 68 points. On defence, Chris Pronger would anchor the blueline, earning a defenceman-high 56 points, while Marc-Andre Bergeron would score 15 goals and 35 points from the blueline. Ethan Moreau had a club-high 87 penalty minutes.

In goal, Edmonton would use a trio of goaltenders until the arrival of Dwayne Roloson at the trade deadline. Mike Morrison would win ten games and have a 2.83 goals against average (GAA), but he would not last the season with the Oilers; he was claimed off waivers by the Ottawa Senators. Ty Conklin, the starter from 2003 to 2004, would appear in only 18 games, going 8–5–1 with a 2.80 GAA, before being sent to the minors. Jussi Markkanen won a club-high 15 games, and would serve as Dwayne Roloson's backup when the club acquired him. Roloson would post a team-best 2.43 GAA and have an 8–7–4 record with the team.

The Oilers allowed the fewest shorthanded goals in the NHL, with just five.[1]

Season standings

Northwest Division
No. CR GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
13Calgary Flames82462511218200103
27Colorado Avalanche824330928325795
38Edmonton Oilers8241281325625195
49Vancouver Canucks824232825625592
511Minnesota Wild823836823121584

[2] Note: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points
         Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.

Western Conference[3]
R Div GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
1 P- Detroit Red WingsCE8258168305209124
2 Y- Dallas StarsPA8253236265218112
3 Y- Calgary FlamesNW82462511218200103
4 X- Nashville PredatorsCE8249258259227106
5 X- San Jose SharksPA8244271126624299
6 X- Mighty Ducks of AnaheimPA8243271225422998
7 X- Colorado AvalancheNW824330928325795
8 X- Edmonton OilersNW8241281325625195
8.5
9 Vancouver CanucksNW824232825625592
8 Los Angeles KingsPA824235524927089
11 Minnesota WildNW823836823121584
12 Phoenix CoyotesPA823839524627181
13 Columbus Blue JacketsCE823543422327974
14 Chicago BlackhawksCE8226431321128565
15 St. Louis BluesCE8221461519729257

Divisions: CE – Central, PA – Pacific, NW – Northwest

P – Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y – Clinched Division; X – Clinched Playoff spot

Schedule and results

2005–06 Game Log

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

Playoffs

Edmonton would open up the playoffs against the Presidents' Trophy winners, the Detroit Red Wings, who finished with 124 points during the season. Hockey experts almost unanimously predicted a Detroit victory; however, the Oilers had played the season in a tougher division than the Red Wings, who played 24 of their 82 games against the Columbus Blue Jackets, Chicago Blackhawks and St. Louis Blues, who had finished 25th, 28th and 30th, respectively, in the standings. In Game 1 at Joe Louis Arena, the Oilers played a tight defensive style and took the Wings to double overtime before losing 3–2, despite being outshot 57–25 in the game. The Oilers tied the series with a solid 4–2 win in Game 2 to return home with a split. Game 3 at Rexall Place saw the Oilers squander a late two-goal lead as the Wings forced the game to double overtime, where the Oilers won on a goal by Jarret Stoll. Game 4 saw the Red Wings score three powerplay goals and tie the series with a 4–2 win, and the teams returned to Detroit for Game 5. With the series tied 2–2, the Oilers jumped out to an early 3–0 lead and hung on for a 3–2 win, behind the strong two-way play of defenceman Chris Pronger. The Oilers returned home looking to complete the upset in Game 6, but fell behind the Red Wings 2–0 by the second intermission. Then the Oilers caught fire in the third period, tying the game on two goals from Fernando Pisani. After the Red Wings scored to re-take the lead, the Oilers again tied the game on a crease-crashing goal from Ales Hemsky. In the final minute of play, Hemsky roofed a pass from Sergei Samsonov behind Detroit goaltender Manny Legace, and the Edmonton crowd exploded in jubilation.[86] The Oilers hung on to win the game 4–3, eliminating the heavily-favoured Red Wings in six games. It was the Oilers' first playoff series win since eliminating the Colorado Avalanche in 1998.

The opening round of the 2006 NHL playoffs had an unprecedented development in the Western Conference: in each of the four series played, the team with the lower points total had emerged as the victor. As a result, in the Conference Semifinals, the eighth-place Oilers would face the fifth-place San Jose Sharks, who finished the season with only four more points than Edmonton, at 99. Still, the Sharks were considered a tough opponent, having NHL MVP and scoring leader Joe Thornton, along with League goals leader Jonathan Cheechoo among their stars.

Game 1 at the HP Pavilion ended in a 2–1 San Jose victory as the Sharks executed a physical forechecking gameplan and outshot the Oilers 30–16. In Game 2, the Sharks entered the ice to a cheer that eclipsed 109 decibels, and they rode their fans' emotion to another slim 2–1 victory. The Sharks had taken a two-game lead in the series, but were now missing Milan Michalek, one of their best offensive forwards. Michalek had been blasted in open ice by Oilers' forward Raffi Torres in Game 2.[87] When the teams returned to Rexall Place for Game 3, the Edmonton crowd exploded; the noise in the building eclipsed 114 decibels as the Oilers came onto the ice. The Oilers parlayed the noise into inspired play, running roughshod all over the ice and outshooting the Sharks 15–2 by the end of the first period. Sharks goaltender Vesa Toskala held tough, however, and the Oilers only took a 1–0 lead into the first intermission. By the third period, the Sharks had taken a 2–1 lead, and it stood until Torres tied the game with a wrist-shot as he came down the wing. The game went into overtime, and the Sharks nearly ended it on a 2-on-1 rush, as Thornton passed to Cheechoo for the shot, but Dwayne Roloson dove across the crease and sniped the puck out of mid-air. The game finally ended in the third overtime, as the Oilers' top line of Horcoff, Hemsky and Smyth worked a passing play into the San Jose crease, where Horcoff jammed the puck in the San Jose goal for the Edmonton win. In Game 4 in Edmonton, the Oilers were trailing 3–2 in the second period when Sergei Samsonov's penalty expired and he was sent in alone on Toskala. To everyone's shock, Toskala came charging out of the net to get the puck before Samsonov. Toskala lost the puck and Samsonov slid a backhand into the open net to tie the game. The Edmonton crowd exploded in delight, and the Oilers never looked back, cruising to a 6–3 win. Game 5 in San Jose was the site of an unfortunate incident: the American feed of the Game 4 broadcast in Edmonton had picked up background noise during the playing of the American National Anthem. San Jose fans had thought it was booing, and in Game 5, a majority of San Jose fans booed the entire Canadian National Anthem. The game itself saw the Oilers carry over the momentum they gained from Game 4, and they struck for three powerplay goals and one shorthanded goal en route to another 6–3 win. In Game 6 in Edmonton, the Edmonton crowd loudly cheered the singing of the American anthem, and then joined anthem singer Paul Lorieau in a throaty and passionate rendition of "O Canada." The Oilers picked up where they had left off in the previous game – they stymied the Sharks' high-scoring forwards and Dwayne Roloson made 24 saves for his first career playoff shutout as the Oilers eliminated the Sharks in six games. The Oilers had earned a trip to the Western Conference Finals for the first time since 1991–92.

In the Conference Finals, the Oilers faced the sixth-seeded Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, with the series to open at the Arrowhead Pond. In Game 1, Michael Peca extended his playoff goal-scoring streak to three games, and Roloson stopped 31 of 32 shots as the Oilers stunned the Anaheim crowd into silence with a 3–1 victory. Peca would extend his goal streak in Game 2, scoring an empty-netter as the Oilers again iced the Ducks in their home rink, 3–1. Raffi Torres and Marc-Andre Bergeron missed the game, as a bad flu had hit the Oilers' dressing room. The Oilers returned home with a 2–0 series lead, and the Edmonton fans stole the show in Game 3. The crowd was in bedlam by the time the Oilers hit the ice, prompting TV analyst Don Cherry to scream, "This is unbelievable! I don't know how they can lose with this crowd!" Then during the national anthem, after the opening verse, anthem singer Paul Lorieau spontaneously turned the microphone over to the crowd, who finished the song.[88] It was hailed as one of the most touching moments of the entire year in sports. When the game started, the Mighty Ducks attempted to literally fight their way back into the series, as skirmishes ensued after nearly every whistle. By the end of the first period, the Oilers held a slim 1–0 lead, which held until the third period when the Oilers got goals from Peca, Steve Staios and Chris Pronger. By now, the effects of the flu were noticeable on the Oilers, and late in the game the Ducks fought back to make it close, but the Oilers prevailed with a 5–4 win despite being outshot 38–22. In Game 4, the Mighty Ducks started Jean-Sebastien Giguere for the first time in the playoffs and avoided the series sweep by outskating the Oilers, winning the game 6–3 off the strength of two goals by Dustin Penner. The Ducks again outshot the Oilers 45–23 in the tilt. In Game 5 in Anaheim, the Ducks jumped out to an early 1–0 lead, but second period goals by Torres and Ethan Moreau put the Oilers in front. The Oilers would never relinquish their lead as the Ducks pressed furiously for the equalizer. Edmonton would win the Clarence Campbell Trophy for the seventh time in team history and claim the series in five games. The win earned the Oilers their first trip to the Stanley Cup Finals since their last Cup win in 1990.

Edmonton would face the Eastern Conference champion Carolina Hurricanes in the Finals. In the opening game, goaltender Dwayne Roloson would go down to injury midway through the third period with the score tied 4–4, and Ty Conklin came in to replace Roloson. Conklin, however, would allow the winning goal as Carolina won the game 5–4. With Jussi Markkanen starting in Game 2, the Hurricanes dominated the Oilers, winning the game 5–0. Edmonton would rebound in Game 3, playing their first home game in the Stanley Cup Finals since May 22, 1990, with a 2–1 victory, but the Hurricanes would take Game 4 2–1 to take a commanding 3–1 series lead. The Oilers, facing elimination, would take Game 5 to overtime, and eventually win 4–3 score to stay alive in the series. The series then returned to Edmonton for Game 6, and the Oilers shutout Carolina 4–0, setting up the Stanley Cup-deciding Game 7. The Hurricanes, led by goaltender Cam Ward, played a solid defensive game and held the Oilers to just a single goal (scored by Fernando Pisani, his 14th of the playoffs), while the Hurricanes managed to put two behind Jussi Markkanen, as well as score an empty-netter, to seal the game and their first Stanley Cup victory in team history.

2006 Stanley Cup Playoffs

Player statistics

Regular season
Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Ales HemskyRW8119587764-5714
Shawn HorcoffC79225173850335
Jarret StollC822246687441114
Ryan SmythLW7536306658-51923
Chris ProngerD801244567421003
Raffi TorresLW82271441504603
Fernando PisaniRW80181937425412
Marc-Andre BergeronD75152035383801
Radek DvorakRW648202826-2202
Steve StaiosD82820288410101
Ethan MoreauLW74111627876244
Marty ReasonerC589172620-12501
Michael PecaC719142356-4221
Jaroslav SpacekD3151419243300
Jason SmithD7641317841000
Sergei SamsonovLW195111660400
Georges LaraqueRW722101273-5000
Igor UlanovD3736929-11100
Todd HarveyRW/C6352732-7000
Cory CrossD3423538-5010
Dick TarnstromD2213424-5000
Jani RitaLW2130360000
Rem MurrayC/LW911221000
Alexei SemenovD1111217-3000
Matt GreeneD2702243-6000
Marc-Antoine PouliotC810101000
Jussi MarkkanenG3701100000
Dwayne RolosonG1901120000
Brad WinchesterC/LW1901121-2000
Kyle BrodziakC100004-4000
Ty ConklinG1800020000
Jean-Francois JacquesLW70000-3000
Krys KolanosC60002-1000
Mike MorrisonG2100020000
Mathieu RoyD10000-1000
Dan SmithD700071000
Yan StastnyC30000-2000
Danny SyvretD100006-1000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T/OT GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Jussi Markkanen201637151261053.120873768.880
Mike Morrison892211042422.830361319.884
Ty Conklin92218851432.801359316.880
Dwayne Roloson116319874472.421497450.905
Team:4993824128132372.85220901853.887
Playoffs
Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Chris ProngerD24516212610300
Shawn HorcoffC2471219124112
Fernando PisaniRW2414418104315
Ales HemskyRW246111714-3402
Ryan SmythLW24791622-2401
Sergei SamsonovLW2441115142100
Jaroslav SpacekD243111424-3200
Michael PecaC246511205011
Raffi TorresLW224711162101
Jarret StollC24461024-4201
Steve StaiosD24156280100
Jason SmithD24145165001
Rem MurrayC/LW2404420000
Marc-Andre BergeronD18213140200
Ethan MoreauLW21213190000
Brad WinchesterC/LW101234-2001
Todd HarveyRW/C1011240000
Georges LaraqueRW15112442000
Radek DvorakRW160224-1000
Dwayne RolosonG18022140000
Dick TarnstromD12022101000
Toby PetersenC210101000
Matt GreeneD18011341000
Ty ConklinG100000000
Jussi MarkkanenG600000000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Dwayne Roloson116018125452.331618573.927
Jussi Markkanen360633132.171137124.905
Ty Conklin6101110.00032.667
Team:152624159592.322758699.922

[113]

Note:
Pos = Position; GPI = Games played in; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes; +/- = Plus/minus; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals
Min, TOI = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T,T/OT = Ties; OTL = Overtime losses; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;

Awards and records

Milestones

Regular season
PlayerMilestoneReached
Chris Pronger1,100th NHL PIMOctober 10, 2005
Brad Winchester1st NHL Game
Matt Greene1st NHL GameOctober 11, 2005
Kyle Brodziak1st NHL GameOctober 15, 2005
Marty Reasoner100th NHL PointOctober 18, 2005
Jason Smith100th NHL AssistOctober 20, 2005
Alexei Semenov100th NHL PIMOctober 21, 2005
Matt Greene1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
October 27, 2005
Ethan Moreau200th NHL PointOctober 28, 2005
Jason Smith800th NHL PIM
Ryan Smyth200th NHL Goal
Georges Laraque100th NHL PointNovember 1, 2005
Alexei Semenov100th NHL GameNovember 3, 2005
Danny Syvret1st NHL GameNovember 4, 2005
Mike Morrison1st NHL GameNovember 7, 2005
Radek Dvorak700th NHL GameNovember 11, 2005
Steve Staios800th NHL PIMNovember 13, 2005
Mike Morrison1st NHL WinNovember 14, 2005
Jarret Stoll100th NHL GameDecember 3, 2005
Raffi Torres100th NHL PIMDecember 15, 2005
Ethan Moreau100th NHL AssistDecember 17, 2005
Shawn Horcoff300th NHL GameDecember 19, 2005
Shawn Horcoff200th NHL PIMDecember 23, 2005
Ales Hemsky100th NHL PointDecember 28, 2005
Shawn Horcoff1st NHL Hat-trickJanuary 10, 2006
Marc-Andre Bergeron100th NHL GameJanuary 12, 2006
Marc-Andre Bergeron1st NHL Hat-trickJanuary 14, 2006
Shawn Horcoff100th NHL Assist
Jussi Markkanen100th NHL GameJanuary 16, 2006
Michael Peca600th NHL PIM
Radek Dvorak400th NHL PointJanuary 19, 2006
Chris Pronger100th NHL GoalJanuary 25, 2006
Jean-Francois Jacques1st NHL GameFebruary 2, 2006
Steve Staios100th NHL AssistFebruary 6, 2006
Georges Laraque800th NHL PIMFebruary 10, 2006
Mathieu Roy1st NHL GameFebruary 12, 2006
Yan Stastny1st NHL GameMarch 1, 2006
Steve Staios600th NHL GameMarch 9, 2006
Ryan Smyth700th NHL GameMarch 11, 2006
Jarret Stoll100th NHL PIM
Ales Hemsky200th NHL GameMarch 23, 2006
Marc Pouliot1st NHL GameMarch 30, 2006
Jaroslav Spacek200th NHL Point
Ales Hemsky100th NHL AssistApril 1, 2006
Marc Pouliot1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
April 3, 2006
Brad Winchester1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
Dick Tarnstrom200th NHL PIMApril 7, 2006
Chris Pronger800th NHL GameApril 9, 2006
Playoffs
PlayerMilestoneReached
Ales Hemsky1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
April 21, 2006
Jaroslav Spacek
Jarret Stoll1st NHL Game
Raffi Torres
Fernando Pisani1st NHL AssistApril 23, 2006
Steve Staios1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
Jarret Stoll1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
Brad Winchester1st NHL Game
1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
Jaroslav Spacek1st NHL GoalApril 25, 2006
Raffi Torres1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
Matt Greene1st NHL GameApril 27, 2006
Raffi Torres1st NHL Assist
Jarret Stoll1st NHL AssistApril 29, 2006
Ales Hemsky1st NHL GoalMay 1, 2006
Ryan Smyth50th NHL Game
Marc-Andre Bergeron1st NHL GoalMay 10, 2006
Jason Smith1st NHL GoalMay 12, 2006
Chris Pronger50th NHL AssistMay 14, 2006
Rem Murray50th NHL GameMay 17, 2006
Dwayne Roloson1st NHL Shutout
Todd Harvey50th NHL PIMMay 19, 2006
Dwayne Roloson1st NHL Assist
Toby Petersen1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
May 23, 2006
Chris Pronger100th NHL Game
Sergei Samsonov50th NHL Game
Steve Staios1st NHL Goal
Jason Smith50th NHL PIMMay 25, 2006
Ty Conklin1st NHL GameJune 5, 2006
Matt Greene1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
Georges Laraque50th NHL PIMJune 7, 2006
Ethan Moreau
Jussi Markkanen1st NHL WinJune 10, 2006
Dick Tarnstrom1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
June 14, 2006
Jussi Markkanen1st NHL ShutoutJune 17, 2006
Jason Smith50th NHL Game

Transactions

Draft picks

Edmonton's draft picks at the 2005 NHL Entry Draft

Round # Player Nationality NHL team College/Junior/Club Team (League)
125Andrew Cogliano CanadaEdmonton OilersSt. Michael's Buzzers (OPJHL)
236Taylor Chorney United StatesEdmonton OilersShattuck-Saint Mary's School (Midget Major AAA)
381Danny Syvret CanadaEdmonton Oilers (from Philadelphia Flyers)London Knights (OHL)
386Robby Dee United StatesEdmonton OilersBreck School (USHS)
497Chris VandeVelde United StatesEdmonton OilersLincoln Stars (USHL)
4120Vyacheslav Trukhno RussiaEdmonton OilersPrince Edward Island Rocket (QMJHL)
5157Fredrik Pettersson SwedenEdmonton OilersFrolunda HC (Sweden)
7220Matthew Glasser CanadaEdmonton OilersFort McMurray Oil Barons (AJHL)

Roster

2005–06 Edmonton Oilers
Goaltenders

Defensemen

Wingers

Centres

See also

References

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