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词条 2002–03 Calgary Flames season
释义

  1. Regular season

  2. Schedule and results

  3. Playoffs

  4. Player statistics

     Skaters  Goaltenders 

  5. Transactions

     Trades  Free agents 

  6. Draft picks

  7. Farm teams

     Saint John Flames  Johnstown Chiefs 

  8. See also

  9. References

{{Infobox ice hockey team season
|League=NHL
|Season=2002–03
|year=2002
|Team=Calgary Flames
|Conference=Western
|ConferenceRank=12th
|Division=Northwest
|DivisionRank=5th
|Record=29–36–13–4
|HomeRecord=14–16–10–1
|RoadRecord=15–20–3–3
|GoalsFor=186 (27th)
|GoalsAgainst=228 (18th)
|GeneralManager=Craig Button
|Coach=Greg Gilbert
Darryl Sutter
|Captain=Craig Conroy
|AltCaptain=Bob Boughner
Jarome Iginla
|Arena=Pengrowth Saddledome
|Attendance=16,239
|GoalsLeader=Jarome Iginla (35)
|AssistsLeader=Craig Conroy (37)
|PointsLeader=Jarome Iginla (67)
|PIMLeader=Scott Nichol (149)
|WinsLeader=Roman Turek (27)
|GAALeader=Roman Turek (2.57)
}}

The 2002–03 Calgary Flames season was the 23rd National Hockey League season in Calgary. A relatively successful start to the season quickly gave way to disaster as the Flames lost 11 of 12 games in a November stretch dropping the Flames out of contention, ultimately failing to qualify for the playoffs for the seventh consecutive season.

The season began as the last had ended: with forward Marc Savard and head coach Greg Gilbert in bitter, public feud. After arguing in the media for nearly a year, the Flames finally granted the disgruntled players request, trading Savard to the Atlanta Thrashers.[1] Gilbert himself would not last much longer with the Flames, as he would be fired by the club barely two weeks after Savard was dealt.[2]

The Flames would quickly find a replacement for Gilbert, announcing they had hired Darryl Sutter shortly before the new year.[3] Sutter immediately began shaping the Flames to his own style, and the Flames finished 19–16–8–1 under their new bench boss.

Following the season, the Flames announced that they would not renew General Manager Craig Button's contract. Sutter took over as GM, carrying the dual roles until the end of the 2005–06 season.[4]

Flames mascot, Harvey the Hound, gained widespread publicity in January 2003 following an incident with Edmonton Oilers head coach, Craig MacTavish. With the Flames leading 4–0, Harvey was taunting the Oilers behind their bench. The frustrated coach reached up and ripped Harvey's signature red tongue out of his mouth, tossing it into the crowd. The incident would seem to spark the Oilers, who scored three goals shortly after. The Flames would hold on to win 4–3, however.[5] The incident made headlines throughout North America, and led to many jokes, including having many other NHL team mascots arrive at the 2003 All-Star Game with their tongues hanging out.[6]

{{TOClimit|limit=2}}

Regular season

The Flames struggled offensively and were shut out a league-high 10 times, tied with the Minnesota Wild, Nashville Predators and Pittsburgh Penguins.[7]

{{2002–03 NHL Northwest Division standings|team=CAL}}

Schedule and results

2002–03 Game Log

Playoffs

Calgary finished 12th in the Western Conference, 17 points behind the 8th place Edmonton Oilers. The Flames missed the playoffs for the seventh consecutive season.

Player statistics

Skaters

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes
  Regular season Playoffs
Player#GPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
Jarome Iginla 12 75 35 32 67 49 - - - - -
Craig Conroy 22 79 22 37 59 36 - - - - -
Chris Drury 18/37 80 23 30 53 33 - - - - -
Martin Gelinas 23 81 21 31 52 51 - - - - -
Toni Lydman 32 81 6 20 26 28 - - - - -
Stephane Yelle 11 82 10 15 25 50 - - - - -
Oleg Saprykin 19 52 8 15 23 46 - - - - -
Chris Clark 17 81 10 12 22 126 - - - - -
Dave Lowry 10 34 5 14 19 22 - - - - -
Bob Boughner 6 69 3 14 17 126 - - - - -
Jordan Leopold 4 58 4 10 14 12 - - - - -
Denis Gauthier 3 72 1 11 12 99 - - - - -
Robyn Regehr 28 76 0 12 12 87 - - - - -
Scott Nichol 40 68 5 5 10 149 - - - - -
Blake Sloan 24 67 2 8 10 28 - - - - -
Petr Buzek 8 44 3 5 8 14 - - - - -
Chuck Kobasew 7 23 4 2 6 8 - - - - -
Craig Berube 16/27 55 2 4 6 100 - - - - -
Steve Begin 26 50 3 1 4 51 - - - - -
Blair Betts 15 9 1 3 4 0 - - - - -
Andrew Ference 21 16 0 4 4 6 - - - - -
Shean Donovan 16 13 1 2 3 7 - - - - -
Steve Montador 5 50 1 1 2 114 - - - - -
Mike Commodore 2 6 0 1 1 19 - - - - -
Ladislav Kohn 43 3 0 1 1 2 - - - - -
Mike Mottau 36 4 0 0 0 0 - - - - -
Rick Mrozik 51 2 0 0 0 0 - - - - -
Robert Dome 38 1 0 0 0 0 - - - - -
All traded players -- 16 21 37 78 - - - - -

Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Calgary. Stats reflect time with the Flames only.

Goaltenders

Note: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average
  Regular season Playoffs
Player#GPMinWLTGASOSv%GAAGPMinWLGASOSV%GAA
Roman Turek 1 65 3822 27 29 9 164 4 .902 2.57 - - - - - - - -
Jamie McLennan 33 22 1165 2 11 4 58 0 .892 2.99 - - - - - - - -

Transactions

The Flames were involved in the following transactions during the 2002–03 season:[8][9]

Trades

OffseasonTo Calgary Flames
Jamie McLennan
To Minnesota Wild
2002 9th round pick
October 1, 2002To Calgary Flames
Chris Drury
Stephane Yelle
To Colorado Avalanche
Derek Morris
Jeff Shantz
Dean McAmmond
November 15, 2002To Calgary Flames
Ruslan Zainullin
To Atlanta Thrashers
Marc Savard
February 10, 2003To Calgary Flames
Andrew Ference
To Pittsburgh Penguins
Conditional draft pick
March 11, 2003To Calgary Flames
Shean Donovan
To Pittsburgh Penguins
Mattias Johansson
Micki DuPont

Free agents

Player signed Former team
Martin Gelinas Carolina Hurricanes
Robert Dome Pittsburgh Penguins
Player lost New team
Clarke Wilm Nashville Predators
Jason Botterill Buffalo Sabres
Dallas Eakins Atlanta Thrashers
Alan Letang New York Islanders
{{Expand list|date=August 2008}}

Draft picks

{{main|List of Calgary Flames draft picks}}

Calgary's picks at the 2002 NHL Entry Draft in Toronto, Ontario.[10] The Flames had the 9th overall pick, however opted to drop down one spot to 10th via a trade with the Florida Panthers.

RndPickPlayerNationalityPositionTeam (league)NHL statistics
GPGAPtsPIM
110Eric Nystrom{{USA}}LWUniversity of Michigan (CCHA)5476848116381
239Brian McConnell{{USA}}FBoston University (HE)
390Matthew Lombardi{{CAN}}CVictoriaville Tigres (QMJHL)536101161262293
4112Yuri Artyomenkov{{RUS}}RWKrylja
5141Jiri Cetkovsky{{CZE}}RWZlin (Czech Jr.)
5142 Emanuel Peter{{SUI}}CKloten (Swiss Jr.)
5146Viktor Bobrov{{RUS}}FHC CSKA (RSL)
5159Kristofer Persson{{SWE}}RWModo Jr.
6176Curtis McElhinney{{CAN}}GColorado College (WCHA)12941–51–7, 2.95GAA
7202David Van der Gulik{{CAN}}RWChilliwack Chiefs (BCHL)492111310
7203Pierre Johnsson{{SWE}}RWFarjestad Jr.
8238Jyri Marttinen{{FIN}}DJyvaskyla

Statistics are updated to the end of the 2014–15 NHL season. denotes player was on an NHL roster in 2014–15.

Farm teams

Saint John Flames

The 2002–03 season would be the tenth, and last, season in New Brunswick, as the Flames bought out the local ownership's share of the team following the season and suspended operations. The "Baby Flames" finished 32–41–6–1, last in the Canadian Division, and out of the playoffs. Robert Dome led the team with 27 goals and 56 points. Dany Sabourin and Levente Szuper split goaltending duties for the Flames.

Johnstown Chiefs

The Chiefs finished the 2002–03 season with a record of 28–33–11, finishing fifth in the Northwest Division, failing to qualify for the playoffs.

Following the season, the Flames announced they were switching affiliations to a new expansion team, the Las Vegas Wranglers.

See also

  • 2002–03 NHL season

References

{{refbegin}}
  • Player stats: 2006–07 Calgary Flames Media Guide - 2002–03 stats, pg. 109.
  • Game log: 2002–03 Calgary Flames game log on espn.com
  • Team standings: 2002–03 NHL standings at hockeydb.com
{{refend}}
1. ^Flames ship Savard to Thrashers, cbc sports, November 15, 2002, accessed December 7, 2006.
2. ^Flames face Avs minus Gilbert, cbc sports, December 3, 2002, accessed December 7, 2006.
3. ^Flames find their man, cbc sports, December 29, 2002, accessed December 7, 2006.
4. ^Calgary Flames Executive, calgaryflames.com, accessed December 7, 2006.
5. ^Pyette, Ryan, MacTavish leaves Harvey the Hound speechless {{webarchive|url=https://archive.is/20071104070334/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam030123/col_pyette-sun.html |date=2007-11-04 }}, London Free Press, January 23, 2003.
6. ^Francis, Eric, The uncivil war{{dead link|date=June 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, Calgary Sun, September 21, 2003.
7. ^https://www.hockey-reference.com/leagues/NHL_2003_games.html
8. ^Off-season trades and signings, cbc sports, July 17, 2002, accessed December 6, 2006.
9. ^2002–03 Calgary Flames preview, Sports Illustrated, Accessed January 10, 2007.
10. ^2002 NHL Entry Draft results, nhl.com, accessed December 6, 2006.
{{Calgary Flames seasons}}{{Calgary Flames}}{{2002–03 NHL season by team}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2002-03 Calgary Flames Season}}

3 : Calgary Flames seasons|2002–03 NHL season by team|2002–03 in Canadian ice hockey by team

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