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词条 2014–15 AHL season
释义

  1. Team and NHL affiliation changes

     Relocations  Affiliation changes  Rule changes 

  2. Standings

      Eastern Conference    Western Conference  

  3. Statistical leaders

      Leading skaters    Leading goaltenders  

  4. Calder Cup playoffs

  5. AHL awards

     All-Star Teams 

  6. Milestones

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2017}}{{Infobox sports season
| title = 2014–15 AHL season
| league = American Hockey League
| sport = Ice hockey
| duration = October 2014 - April 2015
| attendance =
| season = Regular season
| season_champ_name = Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy
| season_champs = Manchester Monarchs
| MVP = Brian O'Neill
| MVP_link = Les Cunningham Award
| top_scorer = Brian O'Neill
| top_scorer_link = John B. Sollenberger Trophy
| playoffs = Calder Cup playoffs
| playoffs_link = 2015 Calder Cup playoffs
| conf1 = Eastern Conference
| conf1_link =
| conf1_champ = Manchester Monarchs
| conf1_runner-up = Hartford Wolf Pack
| conf2 = Western Conference
| conf2_link =
| conf2_champ = Utica Comets
| conf2_runner-up = Grand Rapids Griffins
| finals = Calder Cup playoffs
| finals_link = 2015 Calder Cup playoffs
| finals_champ = Manchester Monarchs
| finals_runner-up = Utica Comets
| playoffs_MVP = Jordan Weal
| playoffs_MVP_link =
|nextseason_year = 2015–16
|prevseason_year = 2013–14
| seasonslistnames = AHL
}}

The 2014–15 AHL season was the 79th season of the American Hockey League. The regular season began in October 2014 and ended in April 2015. The 2015 Calder Cup playoffs followed the conclusion of the regular season.

Team and NHL affiliation changes

Relocations

  • The Adirondack Phantoms relocated to Allentown, Pennsylvania, to play as the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.[1]
  • The Abbotsford Heat relocated to Glens Falls, New York, after the City of Abbotsford terminated their lease agreement with the Calgary Flames.[2][3] The team became the Adirondack Flames and played out of the Glens Falls Civic Center.[4]

On July 9, 2014, the President of the AHL announced a realignment for the 2014–15 season. Eastern Conference changes include the Lehigh Valley Phantoms relocation and swapping to the East Division from the Northeast Division with the Syracuse Crunch. Western Conference changes include the Lake Erie Monsters moving from the North Division to the Midwest Division, and the Iowa Wild moving from the Midwest to the West Division due to the Adirondack Flames relocation in to the North Division [5]

Rule changes

  • Overtime was extended to seven minutes. Following the first whistle beyond the first three minutes, both teams are reduced further from four to three men on the ice.[6]
  • Shootouts switched to the NHL format of three skaters a side.[6]
  • If a goaltender deliberately knocks the goal out of place during a breakaway, the goaltender shall be ejected from the game, and the backup goaltender will be required to face a penalty shot against any player of the opposing team's choosing. This rule was imposed midseason after Bridgeport Sound Tigers goaltender David Leggio knocked his goal out of place during a 2-on-0 breakaway, determining (correctly) that the penalty shot he would face under then-current rules would have been easier to defend than the 2-on-0 breakaway he was facing.[7]

Standings

{{Color box|#97DEFF|y–|border=darkgray}} indicates team has clinched division and a playoff spot
{{Color box|#bbffbb|x–|border=darkgray}} indicates team has clinched a playoff spot
{{Color box|#ffcccc|e–|border=darkgray}} indicates team has been eliminated from playoff contention

Eastern Conference

{{abbr|#|RankingEastern Conference{{abbr|Div|Division{{abbr|GP|Games played{{abbr|W|Wins{{abbr|L|Losses{{abbr|OTL|Overtime losses{{abbr|SOL|Shootout losses{{abbr|Pts|Points{{abbr|GF|Goals for{{abbr|GA|Goals against
1 y– Manchester Monarchs (LA) AT 76 50 17 6 3 109 241 176
2 y– Hershey Bears (WSH) ET 76 46 22 5 3 100 218 181
3 y– Hartford Wolf Pack (NYR) NE 76 43 24 5 4 95 221 214
4 x– Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (PIT) ET 76 45 24 3 4 97 212 163
5 x– Syracuse Crunch (TB) NE 76 41 25 10 0 92 218 219
6 x– Providence Bruins (BOS) AT 76 41 26 7 2 91 209 185
7 x– Worcester Sharks (SJ) AT 76 41 29 4 2 88 224 198
8 x– Portland Pirates (ARZ) AT 76 39 28 7 2 87 203 190
9 e– Springfield Falcons (CBJ) NE 76 38 28 8 2 86 192 209
10 e– Albany Devils (NJ) NE 76 37 28 5 6 85 199 201
11 e– Binghamton Senators (OTT) ET 76 34 34 7 1 76 242 258
12 e– St. John's IceCaps (WPG) AT 76 32 33 9 2 75 183 235
13 e– Lehigh Valley Phantoms (PHI) ET 76 33 35 7 1 74 194 237
14 e– Norfolk Admirals (ANA) ET 76 27 39 6 4 64 168 219
15 e– Bridgeport Sound Tigers (NYI) NE 76 28 40 7 1 64 213 246

Western Conference

{{abbr|#|RankingWestern Conference{{abbr|Div|Division{{abbr|GP|Games played{{abbr|W|Wins{{abbr|L|Losses{{abbr|OTL|Overtime losses{{abbr|SOL|Shootout losses{{abbr|Pts|Points{{abbr|GF|Goals for{{abbr|GA|Goals against
1 y– Utica Comets (VAN) NO 76 47 20 7 2 103 219 182
2 y– Grand Rapids Griffins (DET) MW 76 46 22 6 2 100 249 185
3 y– San Antonio Rampage (FLA) WT 76 45 23 7 1 98 248 222
4 x– Rockford IceHogs (CHI) MW 76 46 23 5 2 99 222 180
5 x– Texas Stars (DAL) WT 76 40 22 13 1 94 242 216
6 x– Oklahoma City Barons (EDM) WT 76 41 27 5 3 90 224 212
7 x– Toronto Marlies (TOR) NO 76 40 27 9 0 89 207 203
8 x– Chicago Wolves (STL) MW 76 40 29 6 1 87 210 198
9 e– Lake Erie Monsters (COL) MW 76 35 29 8 4 82 211 240
10 e– Hamilton Bulldogs (MTL) NO 76 34 29 12 1 81 201 208
11 e– Milwaukee Admirals (NSH) MW 76 33 28 8 7 81 206 218
12 e– Adirondack Flames (CGY) NO 76 35 33 6 2 78 233 240
13 e– Charlotte Checkers (CAR) WT 76 31 38 6 1 69 172 231
14 e– Rochester Americans (BUF) NO 76 29 41 5 1 64 209 251
15 e– Iowa Wild (MIN) WT 76 23 49 2 2 50 172 245

Statistical leaders

Leading skaters

The following players are sorted by points, then goals. Updated as of April 18, 2015.[8]

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/– = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes
PlayerTeamGPGAPtsPIM
Brian O'NeillManchester Monarchs 71 22 58 80 55
Andy MieleGrand Rapids Griffins 71 26 44 70 42
Jordan WealManchester Monarchs 73 20 49 69 56
Jonathan MarchessaultSyracuse Crunch 68 24 43 67 38
Chris BourqueHartford Wolf Pack 73 29 37 66 66
Shane PrinceBinghamton Senators 72 28 37 65 31
Andrew AgozzinoLake Erie Monsters 74 30 34 64 55
Dustin JeffreyBridgeport Sound Tigers 69 25 39 64 22
Travis MorinTexas Stars 63 22 41 63 40
Teemu PulkkinenGrand Rapids Griffins 46 34 27 61 30

Leading goaltenders

The following goaltenders with a minimum 1500 minutes played lead the league in goals against average. Updated as of April 19, 2015.[9]

GP = Games played; TOI = Time on ice (in minutes); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average; SV% = Save percentage; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout loss
PlayerTeam GP TOI SA GA SO GAA SV% W L OT
Matt Murray Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 40 2320:49 1029 61 12 1.58 .941 25 10 3
Jacob Markstrom Utica Comets 32 1879:36 895 59 5 1.88 .934 22 7 2
Anton Forsberg Springfield Falcons 30 1763:51 808 59 3 2.01 .927 20 8 1
Jeremy Smith Providence Bruins 39 2277:53 1156 78 3 2.05 .933 22 11 5
Aaron Dell Worcester Sharks 26 1544:08 728 53 4 2.06 .927 15 8 2

Calder Cup playoffs

{{main|2015 Calder Cup playoffs}}{{NHLBracket-reseed
| RD1=Conference quarterfinals
| RD2=Conference semifinals
| RD3=Conference finals
| RD4=Calder Cup Final
| team-width=170
| score-width=25
| group1=Eastern Conference
| group2=Western Conference
| RD1-seed01=1
| RD1-team01=Manchester
| RD1-seed02=8
| RD1-team02=Portland
| RD1-score01=3
| RD1-score02=2
| RD1-seed03=2
| RD1-team03=Hershey
| RD1-seed04=7
| RD1-team04=Worcester
| RD1-score03=3
| RD1-score04=1
| RD1-seed05=3
| RD1-team05=Hartford
| RD1-seed06=6
| RD1-team06=Providence
| RD1-score05=3
| RD1-score06=2
| RD1-seed07=4
| RD1-team07=W-B/Scranton
| RD1-seed08=5
| RD1-team08=Syracuse
| RD1-score07=3
| RD1-score08=0
| RD1-seed09=1
| RD1-team09=Utica
| RD1-seed10=8
| RD1-team10=Chicago
| RD1-score09=3
| RD1-score10=2
| RD1-seed11=2
| RD1-team11=Grand Rapids
| RD1-seed12=7
| RD1-team12=Toronto
| RD1-score11=3
| RD1-score12=2
| RD1-seed13=3
| RD1-team13=San Antonio
| RD1-seed14=6
| RD1-team14=Oklahoma City
| RD1-score13=0
| RD1-score14=3
| RD1-seed15=4
| RD1-team15=Rockford
| RD1-seed16=5
| RD1-team16=Texas
| RD1-score15=3
| RD1-score16=0
| RD2-seed01=1
| RD2-team01=Manchester
| RD2-seed02=4
| RD2-team02=W-B/Scranton
| RD2-score01=4
| RD2-score02=1
| RD2-seed03=2
| RD2-team03=Hershey
| RD2-seed04=3
| RD2-team04=Hartford
| RD2-score03=2
| RD2-score04=4
| RD2-seed05=1
| RD2-team05=Utica
| RD2-seed06=6
| RD2-team06=Oklahoma City
| RD2-score05=4
| RD2-score06=3
| RD2-seed07=2
| RD2-team07=Grand Rapids
| RD2-seed08=4
| RD2-team08=Rockford
| RD2-score07=4
| RD2-score08=1
| RD3-seed01=1
| RD3-team01=Manchester
| RD3-score01=4
| RD3-seed02=3
| RD3-team02=Hartford
| RD3-score02=0
| RD3-seed03=1
| RD3-team03=Utica
| RD3-score03=4
| RD3-seed04=2
| RD3-team04=Grand Rapids
| RD3-score04=2
| RD4-seed01=E1
| RD4-team01=Manchester
| RD4-seed02=W1
| RD4-team02=Utica
| RD4-score01=4
| RD4-score02=1
}}

AHL awards

Calder Cup : Manchester Monarchs
Les Cunningham Award : Brian O'Neill, Manchester
John B. Sollenberger Trophy : Brian O'Neill, Manchester
Willie Marshall Award : Teemu Pulkkinen, Grand Rapids
Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award : Matt Murray, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Eddie Shore Award : Chris Wideman, Binghamton
Aldege "Baz" Bastien Memorial Award : Matt Murray, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award : Matt Murray & Jeff Zatkoff, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Louis A. R. Pieri Memorial Award : Mike Stothers, Manchester
Fred T. Hunt Memorial Award : Jeff Hoggan, Grand Rapids
Yanick Dupre Memorial Award : Kyle Hagel, Charlotte
Jack A. Butterfield Trophy : Jordan Weal, Manchester[10]
Richard F. Canning Trophy : Manchester Monarchs
Robert W. Clarke Trophy : Utica Comets
Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy: Manchester Monarchs
Frank Mathers Trophy: Hershey Bears
Norman R. "Bud" Poile Trophy: Grand Rapids Griffins
Emile Francis Trophy : Manchester Monarchs
F. G. "Teddy" Oke Trophy: Hartford Wolf Pack
Sam Pollock Trophy: Utica Comets
John D. Chick Trophy: San Antonio Rampage
James C. Hendy Memorial Award: Vance Lederman, Syracuse
Thomas Ebright Memorial Award: Michael Andlauer, Hamilton
James H. Ellery Memorial Awards: Brendan Burke, Utica
Ken McKenzie Award: Brian Coe, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Michael Condon Memorial Award: Mike Emanatian

All-Star Teams

First All-Star Team
  • Matt Murray (G)
  • Brad Hunt (D)
  • Chris Wideman (D)
  • Chris Bourque (LW)
  • Andy Miele (C)
  • Teemu Pulkkinen (RW)

Second All-Star Team
  • Jacob Markstrom (G)
  • Colin Miller (D)
  • Bobby Sanguinetti (D)
  • Shane Prince (LW)
  • Jordan Weal (C)
  • Brian O'Neill (RW)

All-Rookie Team
  • Matt Murray (G)
  • Ville Pokka (D)
  • Ryan Pulock (D)
  • Viktor Arvidsson (F)
  • Connor Brown (F)
  • Charles Hudon (F)

Milestones

{{Empty section|date=June 2013}}

See also

  • List of AHL seasons
  • 2014 in ice hockey
  • 2015 in ice hockey

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://articles.mcall.com/2012-11-14/news/mc-allentown-lehigh-valley-phantoms-20121114_1_neighborhood-improvement-zone-rob-brooks-finance-arena-construction|title=Allentown's hockey team will be Lehigh Valley Phantoms|author=|date=|website=mcall.com|accessdate=April 7, 2018}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/04/15/after-losing-7-3m-hosting-the-calgary-flames-ahl-team-abbotsford-pays-5-5m-to-get-them-to-leave/|title=After losing $7.3M hosting the Calgary Flames' AHL team, Abbotsford pays $5.5M to get them to leave|author=|date=April 15, 2014|website=nationalpost.com|accessdate=April 7, 2018}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://theahl.com/flames-ahl-franchise-heading-to-glens-falls-p192047|title=Flames' AHL franchise heading to Glens Falls|author=|date=|website=theahl.com|accessdate=April 7, 2018}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.saratogian.com/sports/20140505/its-official-glens-falls-keeping-ahl-hockey-league-approves-team-move-to-adirondack|title=It's official: Glens Falls keeping AHL hockey League approves team move to Adirondack|author=|date=|website=saratogian.com|accessdate=April 7, 2018}}
5. ^http://theahl.com/ahl-announces-alignment-for-2014-15-p192750
6. ^OT in AHL now 7 minutes. Rochester Democrat & Chronicle. Retrieved July 10, 2014.
7. ^Dhiren Mahiban (November 6, 2014). Report: AHL changes rule following Leggio incident. ProHockeyTalk.com. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
8. ^{{cite web|title=Top Scorers - 2014-15 Regular Season - All Players |url=http://theahl.com/stats/statdisplay.php?type=top_scorers |publisher=AHL}}
9. ^{{cite web |title=Top Goalies - 2014-15 Regular Season - Goals Against Average |url=http://theahl.com/stats/statdisplay.php?type=top_goalies&subType=0&season_id=48&league_id=4&division_id=-1&confId=0 |publisher=AHL}}
10. ^{{Cite web |url=http://ahlhalloffame.com/jack-a-butterfield-trophy-p139056 |title=Archived copy |access-date=June 26, 2015 |archive-url=https://archive.is/20160605182836/http://ahlhalloffame.com/jack-a-butterfield-trophy-p139056 |archive-date=June 5, 2016 |dead-url=yes |df=mdy-all }}

External links

  • AHL official site
{{s-start}}{{succession box
|before = 2013–14
|after = 2015–16
|title = AHL seasons
|years =
}}{{s-end}}{{AHL}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2014-15 AHL season}}

4 : American Hockey League seasons|2014–15 in American ice hockey by league|2014–15 in Canadian ice hockey by league|2014–15 AHL season

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