1999–2000 Philadelphia Flyers season

1999–2000 Philadelphia Flyers
Atlantic Division champions
Division 1st Atlantic
Conference 1st Eastern
1999–2000 record 45–25–12–3
Home record 25–9–7–3
Road record 20–16–5–0
Goals for 237
Goals against 179
Team information
President Bob Clarke
General Manager Bob Clarke
Coach Roger Neilson (medical leave)[lower-alpha 1]
Craig Ramsay (interim)[lower-alpha 1]
Captain Eric Lindros (Oct-Mar)[lower-alpha 2]
Eric Desjardins (Mar-May) [lower-alpha 2]
Alternate captains Rod Brind'Amour (Oct-Jan)[lower-alpha 3]
Eric Desjardins (Oct-Mar)[lower-alpha 2]
John LeClair (Jan-May)[lower-alpha 3]
Mark Recchi (Mar-May)[lower-alpha 2]
Arena First Union Center
Average attendance 19,634[1]
Minor league affiliate(s) Philadelphia Phantoms
Trenton Titans
Team leaders
Goals John LeClair (40)
Assists Mark Recchi (63)
Points Mark Recchi (91)
Penalties in minutes Craig Berube (162)
Plus/minus Eric Desjardins (+20)
Mark Recchi (+20)
Wins John Vanbiesbrouck (25)
Goals against average Brian Boucher (1.91)

The 1999–2000 Philadelphia Flyers season was the Philadelphia Flyers' 33rd season in the National Hockey League (NHL). One of the most tumultuous seasons in franchise history, the Flyers reached the Eastern Conference Finals, losing in seven games to the New Jersey Devils.

Off-season

After going unclaimed in the 1999 NHL Expansion Draft, longtime goaltender Ron Hextall was waived by the Flyers on July 1 for the purpose of buying out the final season of his contract.[2][3] Hextall cleared waivers[3] and announced his retirement on September 6, 1999.[4]

Longtime broadcaster Gene Hart, who was awarded the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award in 1997, died from a variety of illnesses on July 14.[5]

A little over a week later on July 23, defenseman Dmitri Tertyshny, coming off his rookie season, was fatally injured in a boating accident. Tertyshny was on a boating trip to Okanagan Lake in British Columbia with two players from the Flyers' minor-league affiliate Philadelphia Phantoms, Francis Belanger and Mikhail Chernov, when a freak accident caused him to suffer fatal injuries. The boat hit a wave and caused him to fall forward overboard. The boat ran over him and its propeller slashed his neck and his jugular vein.[6]

Regular season

Head coach Roger Neilson was diagnosed with bone cancer, forcing him to step aside in February 2000 to undergo treatment, so assistant coach Craig Ramsay took over as interim coach for the rest of the season; Neilson later recovered but was informed that he would not be returning.

In January, longtime Flyer and fan favorite Rod Brind'Amour was shipped to the Carolina Hurricanes for Keith Primeau, with the intention of acquiring a big center to complement Eric Lindros. Meanwhile, the strife between Flyers management (particularly GM Bob Clarke) and Lindros, continued to worsen. Less than a month after Ramsay took over, Lindros suffered his second concussion of the season. He played several games after the initial hit and afterwards criticized the team's training staff for failing to initially diagnose the concussion after it happened. It was after this that the Flyers' organization decided to strip Lindros of the captaincy on March 27 and name defenseman Eric Desjardins the team's captain.[7]

With Lindros out indefinitely, the Flyers rallied to overcome the distractions and a 15-point deficit in the standings to win the Atlantic Division and the No. 1 seed in the East on the last day of the regular season.

Season standings

Atlantic Division
No. CR GP W L T OTL GF GA PIM Pts
11Philadelphia Flyers8245221232371791233105
24New Jersey Devils824524852512031313103
37Pittsburgh Penguins82373186241236122188
411New York Rangers82293812321824691673
513New York Islanders82244891194275137658

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

Eastern Conference[8]
R Div GP W L T OTL GF GA Pts
1 Z – Philadelphia FlyersAT824522123237179105
2 Y – Washington CapitalsSE824424122227194102
3 Y – Toronto Maple LeafsNE82452773246222100
4 X – New Jersey DevilsAT82452485251203103
5 X – Florida PanthersSE8243276624420998
6 X – Ottawa SenatorsNE82412811224421095
7 X– Pittsburgh PenguinsAT8237318624123688
8 X – Buffalo SabresNE82353211421320485
8.5
9 Carolina HurricanesSE82373510021721684
10 Montreal CanadiensNE8235349419619483
11 New York RangersAT82292812321824673
12 Boston BruinsNE82243319621024873
13 New York IslandersAT8224489119427558
14 Tampa Bay LightningSE8219479720431054
15 Atlanta ThrashersSE8214577417031339

Divisions: AT – Atlantic, NE – Northeast, SE – Southeast

Z – Clinched Conference; Y – Clinched Division; X – Clinched Playoff spot

Playoffs

They easily defeated their first round opponent, the Buffalo Sabres, in five games. Primeau's goal in the fifth overtime of Game 4 against the team's second-round opponent, the Pittsburgh Penguins, turned that series in the Flyers' favor as they won in six games, coming back from a 2–0 series deficit. After dropping Game 1 to New Jersey in the Eastern Conference Finals, the Flyers peeled off three straight wins to take a 3–1 series lead. But New Jersey refused to give up. After New Jersey won Game 5, Lindros returned to the lineup for the first time since March for Game 6 in another losing effort. Early in Game 7, Lindros was on the receiving end of a hit by Scott Stevens, giving him another concussion and leaving the Philadelphia crowd deflated. Without Lindros, the Flyers lost the decisive game by a score of 2–1. To date, it is the only time (of 64 total series) a team in the Conference Finals or Semifinals round has held a 3-1 series lead and lost. It was the second time in franchise history the team lost a series after leading 3 games to 1. New Jersey went on to win the Stanley Cup.

Schedule and results

Regular season

1999–2000 regular season[9]

Legend:   Win (2 points)   Loss (0 points)   Tie/overtime loss (1 point)

Playoffs

2000 Stanley Cup playoffs

Legend:   Win   Loss

Player statistics

Skaters

  • Position abbreviations: C = Center; D = Defense; G = Goaltender; LW = Left Wing; RW = Right Wing
  • dagger = Joined team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, signing) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flyers only.
  • double-dagger = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flyers only.
Regular season Playoffs
No. Player Age Pos GP G A Pts +/- PIM GP G A Pts +/- PIM
8Mark Recchi31RW822863912050186121836
10John LeClair30LW8240377783618671336
88Eric Lindros26C552732591183210100
37Eric Desjardins30D811441552032182101212
18Daymond Langkow23C82183250156165510223
12Simon Gagne19LW80202848112217551002
26Valeri Zelepukin31LW77112132−35518123312
19Mikael Renbergdouble-dagger27RW6282129−130
20Keith Jones31RW579162588218336−114
3Dan McGillis27D6841418165518268−112
25Keith Primeaudagger28C237101710311821113−413
11Jody Hulldagger30RW67103138418011−40
6Chris Therien28D804913116618011−112
32Craig Berube34LW774812316218101−423
21Sandy McCarthydouble-dagger27RW586511−5111
17Rod Brind'Amourdouble-dagger29C12538−14
43Andy Delmore23D27257−1818527014
22Luke Richardson30D742571414018011−541
2Adam Burt31D67167−2451101144
92Rick Tocchetdagger35RW16336423185611−249
15Peter White30C211561616022−10
9Mark Greig30RW11325063000−10
14Mikael Anderssondouble-dagger33LW36235−20
29Gino Odjickdagger29LW13314210
28Marc Bureaudouble-dagger33C54224−110
55Ulf Samuelssondagger35D49123858
28Kent Mandervilledagger28C130332418011−322
44Mark Eaton22D27112187000−20
24Zarley Zalapskidagger31D1202206
15, 23Todd Whitedagger24C4101−10
34John Vanbiesbrouck36G50011N/A6
33Brian Boucher23G35011N/A418000N/A0
24Karl Dykhuisdouble-dagger27D5011−26
39Jeff Lank24D200002
14Mike Maneluk26RW100004
38Steve Washburndagger24C100004

Goaltenders

Regular season Playoffs
No. Player Age GP W L T SO GA SV% GAA MIN GP W L SO GA SV% GAA MIN
34John Vanbiesbrouck3650251593108.9062.202950
33Brian Boucher233520103465.9181.91203818117140.9182.031183

Awards and records

Awards

League awards and honors
Award or honor Recipient Notes Ref
NHL All-Rookie Team Brian Boucher (Goaltender) [10]
Simon Gagne (Forward)
NHL Player of the Week John Vanbiesbrouck (October 25) [11]
NHL Second All-Star Team Eric Desjardins (Defense) [12]
Selected to NHL All-Star Game Eric Desjardins Played for North American team [13][14]
John LeClair Played for North American team
Eric Lindros Played for North American team
Roger Neilson (Coach) Assistant coach of North American team
Mark Recchi Played for North American team
Team awards[15]
Award Recipient
Barry Ashbee Trophy Eric Desjardins
Bobby Clarke Trophy Mark Recchi
Pelle Lindbergh Memorial Trophy Luke Richardson
Yanick Dupre Memorial Class Guy Award Keith Jones

Records

  •  double-dagger  Tied for NHL record

Individual

Franchise player records set during the 1999–2000 season
Record Type Total Player Date(s) Opponent Ref
Powerplay goals scored by a defenseman Season 8[lower-alpha 4] Eric Desjardins [16]
Goals scored by a defenseman, playoffs Game 3double-dagger Andy Delmore 5/7/2000 Pittsburgh Penguins [17]
Assists, playoffs Game 4[lower-alpha 5] Mark Recchi 5/7/2000 Pittsburgh Penguins [18]
Goals scored by a defenseman, playoffs Season 5 Andy Delmore [19]

Team

Franchise team records set during the 1999–2000 season
Record Type Total Date(s) Opponent Refs
Fewest overtime losses Season 3[lower-alpha 6] [20]
Games won on road, playoffs Streak 5[lower-alpha 7] 5/2/2000 – 5/20/2000 [21]
Longest game in minutes Game 152:01 5/4/2000 Pittsburgh Penguins [22]

Transactions

The Flyers were involved in the following transactions from June 20, 1999, the day after the deciding game of the 1999 Stanley Cup Finals, through June 10, 2000, the day of the deciding game of the 2000 Stanley Cup Finals.[23]

Trades

Date Details Ref
September 27, 1999 To Philadelphia Flyers
Matt Henderson
To Nashville Predators
Paul Healey
[24]
October 15, 1999 To Philadelphia Flyers
Jody Hull
To Atlanta Thrashers
future considerations
[25]
October 20, 1999 To Philadelphia Flyers
future considerations
To Montreal Canadiens
Karl Dykhuis
[26]
November 16, 1999 To Philadelphia Flyers
Steve Washburn
To Nashville Predators
conditional 7th-round draft pick in 2001[lower-alpha 8]
[27]
November 30, 1999 To Philadelphia Flyers
Loan of Rastislav Pavlikovsky
To Ottawa Senators
(Pavlikovsky reassigned by Ottawa on January 27, 2000)
[28][29]
December 9, 1999 To Philadelphia Flyers
Eric Bertrand
To Atlanta Thrashers
Brian Wesenberg
[30]
January 23, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Keith Primeau
5th-round pick in 2000
To Carolina Hurricanes
Rod Brind'Amour
Jean-Marc Pelletier
2nd-round pick in 2000
[31]
January 26, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Todd White
To Chicago Blackhawks
conditional draft pick in 2001[lower-alpha 8]
[32]
February 14, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
future considerations
To Nashville Predators
Eric Bertrand
[33]
February 15, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Gino Odjick
To New York Islanders
Mikael Andersson
Carolina's 5th-round pick in 2000
[34]
March 6, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Travis Brigley
6th-round pick in 2001
To Calgary Flames
Marc Bureau
[35]
March 8, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Rick Tocchet
To Phoenix Coyotes
Mikael Renberg
[36]
March 14, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Kent Manderville
To Carolina Hurricanes
Sandy McCarthy
[37]
March 14, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Kirby Law
To Atlanta Thrashers
Vancouver's 6th-round pick in 2000
6th-round pick in 2001
[37]
May 31, 2000 To Philadelphia Flyers
Paul Ranheim
To Carolina Hurricanes
8th-round pick in 2002
[38]

Signings

Free agency

The following players were signed by the Flyers via free agency. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).

Date Player Previous team (league) Contract details Notes Ref
July 13, 1999 Dean Melanson Buffalo Sabres 1 year* [39]
July 13, 1999 Jeff Tory Houston Aeros (IHL) 1 year* [39]
July 14, 1999 Chris Albert Michigan K-Wings (IHL) 1 year* [40]
August 2, 1999 Mike Maneluk New York Rangers 1 year* [41]
October 19, 1999 Ulf Samuelsson Atlanta Thrashers 2 years, $4.55 million [42]
February 13, 2000 Zarley Zalapski Utah Grizzlies (IHL) 1 year, $200,000 Club option for second year [43][44]

Re-signed

The following players were re-signed by the Flyers. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).

Date Player Contract details Notes Ref
June 30, 1999 Eric Lindros 1 year, $8.5 million [45]
July 13, 1999 Neil Little 1 year* [39]
July 19, 1999 Keith Jones 3 years, $5.2 million [46]
July 29, 1999 Sandy McCarthy 1 year, $800,000 [47]
July 29, 1999 Mikael Renberg 1 year, $1.8 million [47]
August 3, 1999 Sean O'Brien 1 year* [48]
August 5, 1999 Dan McGillis 2 years, $3.35 million [49]
August 18, 1999 Karl Dykhuis 3 years, $3 million [50]
September 3, 1999 Daymond Langkow 2 years, $1.6 million [51]
September 6, 1999 Craig Berube 1 year, $700,000 [52]
September 6, 1999 Valeri Zelepukin 1 year, $907,500 [52]
January 23, 2000 Keith Primeau 5 years, $22.75 million Acquired in January 23 trade [31]

Entry level contracts

The following players — Flyers draft picks, undrafted free agents, and the unsigned draft picks of other teams — were signed by the Flyers to entry level contracts.

Date Player Previous team (league) Draft Contract details Ref
August 3, 1999 Ruslan Fedotenko Sioux City Musketeers (USHL) Undrafted free agent [53]
August 20, 1999 Simon Gagne Quebec Remparts (QMJHL) 1998 1st-round pick 3 years, $2.925 million [54]
June 6, 2000 Petr Hubacek HC Vitkovice (CZE) 1998 9th-round pick [55]
June 6, 2000 Dan Peters Colorado College Tigers (WCHA) Undrafted free agent [55]
June 6, 2000 Vaclav Pletka HC Oceláři Třinec (QMJHL) 1999 7th-round pick [55]

NHL Expansion Draft

The 1999 NHL Expansion Draft was held on June 25, 1999.[56][57] It featured one expansion team, the Atlanta Thrashers, selecting players from the other NHL teams except the Nashville Predators.[56] Each NHL team was allowed to protect either 1 goaltender, 5 defensemen, and 9 forwards OR 2 goaltenders, 3 defensemen, and 7 forwards.[56] All first-year players were exempt.[56] The Thrashers were provided a list of players they could select.[56]

Philadelphia Flyers protection lists at the 1999 NHL Expansion Draft
Status Players
Protected[56] Rod Brind'Amour (F), Adam Burt (D), Eric Desjardins (D), Karl Dykhuis (D), Keith Jones (F), Daymond Langkow (F), John LeClair (F), Eric Lindros (F), Sandy McCarthy (F), Dan McGillis (D), Mark Recchi (F), Mikael Renberg (F), Chris Therien (D), John Vanbiesbrouck (G), Valeri Zelepukin (F)
Unprotected[56] Artem Anisimov (D, unsigned draft pick), Mikael Andersson (F), Craig Berube ((F, unrestricted free agent), Dennis Bonvie (F, unrestricted free agent), Marc Bureau (F), Steve Duchesne (D, unrestricted free agent), Mark Greig (F), Paul Healey (F), Ron Hextall (G), Jody Hull (F), Chris Joseph (D, restricted free agent), Patrik Juhlin (F), Dan Kordic (F, restricted free agent), Jeff Lank (D), Neil Little (G, unrestricted free agent), David MacIsaac (D, unrestricted free agent), Shawn McCosh (F), Steve McLaren (F), Jim Montgomery (F), Richard Park (F, restricted free agent), Luke Richardson (D), Ruslan Shafikov (F, unsigned draft pick), Radovan Somik (F, unsigned draft pick), Martin Streit (F, unsigned draft pick), Roman Vopat (F), Peter White (F), Jason Zent (F)
Selection[58] Atlanta Thrashers selected Jody Hull

NHL Waiver Draft

The 1999 NHL Waiver Draft was held on September 27, 1999.[59] Each NHL team placed 18 skaters and 2 goaltenders on a protected list from which the other teams could not select.[59] First-year professional players were exempt.[59] The Flyers were not involved in any selections during the draft.[59]

The Flyers protected the following players:[60] goaltenders Brian Boucher and John Vanbiesbrouck, defensemen Adam Burt, Eric Desjardins, Karl Dykhuis, Dan McGillis, Luke Richardson, and Chris Therien, forwards Mikael Andersson, Craig Berube, Rod Brind'Amour, Marc Bureau, Keith Jones, Daymond Langkow, John LeClair, Eric Lindros, Sandy McCarthy, Mark Recchi, Mikael Renberg, and Valeri Zelepukin.

The Flyers left the following players unprotected:[60] goaltender Neil Little and defensemen Jeff Lank and Dean Melanson, and forwards Mark Greig, Paul Healey, Mike Maneluk, Steve McLaren, Jim Montgomery, Sean O'Brien, Roman Vopat, Peter White, and Jason Zent.

Departures

The following players left the team via free agency, release, or retirement. Players who were under contract and left the team during the season are marked with an asterisk (*).

Date Player New team (league) Via Notes Ref
August 18, 1999 Chris Joseph Ottawa Senators Free agency [61]
August 26, 1999 David MacIsaac Los Angeles Kings Free agency [62]
September 3, 1999 Steve Duchesne Detroit Red Wings Free agency [63]
September 6, 1999 Ron Hextall Retirement Final year of contract was bought out [4]
September 20, 1999 Dennis Bonvie Pittsburgh Penguins Free agency [64]
September 22, 1999 Richard Park Utah Grizzlies (IHL) Free agency [65]
N/A Dan Kordic Retirement No official announcement [66]
December 4, 1999 Martin Cerven* Charlotte Checkers (ECHL) Buyout Played remainder of season with Charlotte [67][68]
December 4, 1999 Roman Vopat* Essen Mosquitoes (DEL) Buyout Signed with Essen on December 19 [67][69]
December 4, 1999 Jason Zent* Buyout Retired, no official announcement [67][70]

Draft picks

Philadelphia's picks at the 1999 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the FleetCenter in Boston on June 26, 1999.[71] The Flyers traded their second-round pick, 58th overall, the New York Islanders' 2000 sixth-round pick, and Dainius Zubrus to the Montreal Canadiens for Mark Recchi on March 10, 1999.[72] They also traded their fifth-round pick, 148th overall, and Colin Forbes to the Tampa Bay Lightning for Mikael Andersson and Sandy McCarthy on March 20, 1999, their eighth-round pick, 237th overall, to the Carolina Hurricanes for the rights to Francis Lessard on May 25, 1999, and their ninth-round pick, 265th overall, to the Dallas Stars for the Stars' 1998 ninth-round pick on June 27, 1998.[72] The St. Louis Blues received the Flyers' sixth-round pick, 180th overall, as compensation for the Flyers hiring Roger Neilson as their head coach.[72]

Players drafted by the Philadelphia Flyers in 1999 and their NHL career regular season statistics
Round Pick Player Position Nationality Team (league) GP G A Pts PIM W L T OT GAA Notes
1 22 Maxime Ouellet Goaltender  Canada Quebec Remparts (QMJHL) 12 0 1 1 2 2 6 1 1 3.08
4 119 Jeff Feniak Defense  Canada Calgary Hitmen (WHL) &
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
6 160 Konstantin Rudenko Forward  Russia Severstal Cherepovets (RUS) &
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
[lower-alpha 9]
7 200 Pavel Kasparik Center  Czech Republic IHC Pisek (CZE) &
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
[lower-alpha 10]
7 208 Vaclav Pletka Left Wing  Czech Republic HC Oceláři Třinec (CZE) 1 0 0 0 0 &
&
&
&
&
8 224 David Nystrom Right Wing  Sweden Frölunda HC (Elitserien) &
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
&
[lower-alpha 11]

Farm teams

The Flyers were affiliated with the Philadelphia Phantoms of the AHL[73][74] and the Trenton Titans of the ECHL.[75]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Neilson went on medical leave on February 20 and Ramsay served as interim head coach for the remainder of the season.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Lindros was stripped of the captaincy on March 27 and replaced by Desjardins. Recchi replaced Desjardins as an alternate captain.
  3. 1 2 Brind'Amour was traded to the Carolina Hurricanes on January 23. LeClair replaced him as an alternate captain.
  4. Tied mark set by Mark Howe during the 1987–88 season and subsequently tied by Shayne Gostisbehere during the 2015–16 season.
  5. Tied five times by five different players. See List of Philadelphia Flyers records.
  6. Tied during the 2000–01 and 2001–02 seasons.
  7. Tied mark set during the 1994–95 and 1996–97 seasons.
  8. 1 2 Condition not met.
  9. The Flyers traded Pat Kavanagh to the Vancouver Canucks for the Canucks' sixth-round pick, 160th overall, on June 1, 1999.[72]
  10. The Flyers traded Johan Hedberg to the San Jose Sharks for the Sharks' seventh-round pick, 200th overall, on August 6, 1998.[72]
  11. The Flyers traded their third-round pick, 90th overall, to the Calgary Flames for the rights to Ryan Bast and the Flames' eighth-round pick, 224th overall, on October 13, 1998.[72]

References

General
Specific
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  4. 1 2 Panaccio, Tim (September 7, 1999). "So Long, Ron". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
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  6. Panaccio, Tim (July 25, 1999). "Tertyshny Is Killed In Boating Accident". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  7. Panaccio, Tim (March 28, 2000). "Outspokenness Costs Lindros His Captain's 'C'". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved December 20, 2014.
  8. "1999–2000 Standings by Conference". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 16, 2012.
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  10. 2014–15 NHL Official Guide & Record Book, p. 233
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  44. Panaccio, Tim (February 15, 2000). "Flyers Get Chance To Cut Into Devils' Lead". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved November 25, 2014.
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  46. Panaccio, Tim (July 20, 1999). "Flyers, Jones Agree On 3-year Contract". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved November 25, 2014.
  47. 1 2 Bowen, Les (July 30, 1999). "Renberg, Mccarthy Signed". Philadelphia Daily News. Retrieved November 25, 2014.
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