1990–91 Hartford Whalers season – Wikipedia

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The 1990–91 Hartford Whalers season was the franchise’s 19th season, 12th in the NHL. The Whalers placed fourth in the Adams Division to qualify for the playoffs. The Whalers were eliminated in the first round by their New England rival Boston Bruins.

Offseason[edit]

At the 1990 NHL Supplemental Draft held on June 15, the Whalers selected Jim Crozier with the 19th selection. Crozier played the 1989-90 season with Cornell University. In 16 games with the Big Red, Crozier posted a 10-3-1 record with a 2.63 GAA.

On June 16, 1990, the Whalers participated at the 1990 NHL Entry Draft held at BC Place in Vancouver, British Columbia. With the 15th overall selection, the club selected Mark Greig from the Lethbridge Hurricanes of the Western Hockey League. In 65 games with the Hurricanes, Greig scored 55 goals and 135 points in 1989-90. In the second round of the draft, Hartford selected Geoff Sanderson from the Swift Current Broncos of the WHL with the 36th overall selection. Sanderson scored 32 goals and 94 points in 70 games with the Broncos during the 1989-90 season. Some other notable players selected by Hartford include Mike Lenarduzzi, Jergus Baca, and Espen Knutsen.

The Whalers and New York Rangers made a trade on July 7, as Hartford acquired Carey Wilson and a third round selection in the 1991 NHL Entry Draft in exchange for Jody Hull. In 41 games with the Rangers during the 1989-90 season, Wilson scored nine goals and 26 points. Wilson had previously played with the Whalers from 1987–89, where in 70 games, he scored 29 goals and 60 points.

On July 16, the Whalers signed free agent John Stevens to a contract. Stevens spent the 1989-90 season with the Hershey Bears of the American Hockey League, where he scored three goals, 13 points, and accumulated 193 penalty minutes in 79 games. Stevens had previous NHL experience, as he appeared in nine games with the Philadelphia Flyers from 1986-88.

On September 30, the club signed free agent Paul Cyr from the New York Rangers. Cyr missed the entire 1989-90 due to injuries, and played in only one game during the 1988-89 season. In his last healthy season in 1987-88, split between the Buffalo Sabres and the Rangers, Cyr scored five goals and 19 points in 60 games. Also on this day, the Whalers acquired a sixth round draft pick at the 1992 NHL Entry Draft from the Washington Capitals in exchange for Dave Tippett.

Four days later, on October 3, the Whalers made a second trade with the Washington Capitals, as Hartford acquired cash considerations from Washington in exchange for Joel Quenneville.

Regular season[edit]

The Whalers had the most power-play opportunities during the regular season, with 403.[2]

Final standings[edit]

[3]Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against
Note: Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold.

Divisions: PTK – Patrick, ADM – Adams

bold – Qualified for playoffs

Schedule and results[edit]

No. R Date Score Opponent Record
1 T October 4, 1990 3–3 OT Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 0–0–1
2 W October 6, 1990 5–4 New York Rangers (1990–91) 1–0–1
3 L October 8, 1990 3–5 @ Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 1–1–1
4 W October 10, 1990 4–3 Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 2–1–1
5 L October 12, 1990 2–4 @ Detroit Red Wings (1990–91) 2–2–1
6 W October 13, 1990 5–2 Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 3–2–1
7 T October 16, 1990 1–1 OT @ Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 3–2–2
8 W October 17, 1990 3–1 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1990–91) 4–2–2
9 L October 19, 1990 2–5 @ Los Angeles Kings (1990–91) 4–3–2
10 L October 24, 1990 0–3 @ Minnesota North Stars (1990–91) 4–4–2
11 L October 27, 1990 2–4 Vancouver Canucks (1990–91) 4–5–2
12 L October 28, 1990 0–5 @ Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 4–6–2
13 L October 31, 1990 2–4 Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 4–7–2
14 L November 3, 1990 1–4 St. Louis Blues (1990–91) 4–8–2
15 T November 6, 1990 1–1 OT Chicago Blackhawks (1990–91) 4–8–3
16 L November 9, 1990 4–5 @ Winnipeg Jets (1990–91) 4–9–3
17 W November 10, 1990 3–2 OT @ Minnesota North Stars (1990–91) 5–9–3
18 W November 14, 1990 3–1 Boston Bruins (1990–91) 6–9–3
19 W November 15, 1990 4–2 @ New Jersey Devils (1990–91) 7–9–3
20 W November 17, 1990 4–2 Washington Capitals (1990–91) 8–9–3
21 T November 21, 1990 4–4 OT Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 8–9–4
22 W November 23, 1990 4–3 @ Boston Bruins (1990–91) 9–9–4
23 L November 24, 1990 3–4 Boston Bruins (1990–91) 9–10–4
24 L November 28, 1990 3–4 Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 9–11–4
25 W November 29, 1990 6–4 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1990–91) 10–11–4
26 L December 1, 1990 2–4 Edmonton Oilers (1990–91) 10–12–4
27 W December 3, 1990 4–2 @ Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 11–12–4
28 L December 5, 1990 3–4 Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 11–13–4
29 W December 7, 1990 4–3 OT @ Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 12–13–4
30 W December 8, 1990 3–1 Pittsburgh Penguins (1990–91) 13–13–4
31 L December 12, 1990 1–5 Boston Bruins (1990–91) 13–14–4
32 L December 13, 1990 2–8 @ Boston Bruins (1990–91) 13–15–4
33 W December 15, 1990 3–2 @ Washington Capitals (1990–91) 14–15–4
34 L December 18, 1990 3–4 OT Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 14–16–4
35 L December 20, 1990 2–4 @ New York Islanders (1990–91) 14–17–4
36 W December 22, 1990 1–0 Philadelphia Flyers (1990–91) 15–17–4
37 L December 23, 1990 2–5 Minnesota North Stars (1990–91) 15–18–4
38 W December 26, 1990 4–1 @ Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 16–18–4
39 L December 29, 1990 2–8 @ Calgary Flames (1990–91) 16–19–4
40 L December 30, 1990 3–4 @ Edmonton Oilers (1990–91) 16–20–4
41 W January 2, 1991 5–2 Vancouver Canucks (1990–91) 17–20–4
42 W January 5, 1991 4–3 Winnipeg Jets (1990–91) 18–20–4
43 L January 8, 1991 3–4 OT @ Los Angeles Kings (1990–91) 18–21–4
44 W January 10, 1991 5–4 @ Vancouver Canucks (1990–91) 19–21–4
45 T January 12, 1991 2–2 OT @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1990–91) 19–21–5
46 L January 13, 1991 3–4 @ New York Rangers (1990–91) 19–22–5
47 W January 16, 1991 4–3 Los Angeles Kings (1990–91) 20–22–5
48 W January 23, 1991 5–4 Calgary Flames (1990–91) 21–22–5
49 L January 24, 1991 0–3 @ Boston Bruins (1990–91) 21–23–5
50 W January 26, 1991 5–3 Philadelphia Flyers (1990–91) 22–23–5
51 L January 29, 1991 1–8 New York Islanders (1990–91) 22–24–5
52 L January 31, 1991 3–4 OT @ St. Louis Blues (1990–91) 22–25–5
53 W February 2, 1991 2–0 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1990–91) 23–25–5
54 T February 3, 1991 1–1 OT @ New York Islanders (1990–91) 23–25–6
55 W February 6, 1991 5–1 Edmonton Oilers (1990–91) 24–25–6
56 L February 9, 1991 2–5 Calgary Flames (1990–91) 24–26–6
57 W February 10, 1991 3–1 Chicago Blackhawks (1990–91) 25–26–6
58 W February 13, 1991 6–2 Detroit Red Wings (1990–91) 26–26–6
59 L February 15, 1991 3–5 @ New York Rangers (1990–91) 26–27–6
60 W February 16, 1991 2–1 @ Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 27–27–6
61 W February 20, 1991 5–3 Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 28–27–6
62 L February 23, 1991 4–5 Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 28–28–6
63 T February 24, 1991 5–5 OT @ Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 28–28–7
64 L February 26, 1991 4–5 @ Winnipeg Jets (1990–91) 28–29–7
65 L February 28, 1991 3–6 @ Chicago Blackhawks (1990–91) 28–30–7
66 T March 2, 1991 3–3 OT @ Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 28–30–8
67 T March 3, 1991 4–4 OT Toronto Maple Leafs (1990–91) 28–30–9
68 L March 5, 1991 1–4 St. Louis Blues (1990–91) 28–31–9
69 L March 9, 1991 2–5 Pittsburgh Penguins (1990–91) 28–32–9
70 L March 10, 1991 1–2 Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 28–33–9
71 W March 12, 1991 3–2 @ Washington Capitals (1990–91) 29–33–9
72 W March 14, 1991 4–2 Detroit Red Wings (1990–91) 30–33–9
73 W March 16, 1991 6–2 New Jersey Devils (1990–91) 31–33–9
74 L March 17, 1991 1–6 @ Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 31–34–9
75 T March 19, 1991 1–1 OT Boston Bruins (1990–91) 31–34–10
76 L March 23, 1991 3–7 @ Quebec Nordiques (1990–91) 31–35–10
77 L March 25, 1991 2–3 OT @ Montreal Canadiens (1990–91) 31–36–10
78 L March 27, 1991 3–4 OT @ New Jersey Devils (1990–91) 31–37–10
79 T March 30, 1991 5–5 OT Buffalo Sabres (1990–91) 31–37–11
80 L March 31, 1991 3–7 @ Boston Bruins (1990–91) 31–38–11

Playoffs[edit]

Adams Division Semi-finals

Player statistics[edit]

Regular season[edit]

Scoring
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Peter Sidorkiewicz 2953 52 21 22 7 164 3.33 1 1284 1120 .872
Daryl Reaugh 1010 20 7 7 1 53 3.15 1 479 426 .889
Kay Whitmore 850 18 3 9 3 52 3.67 0 379 327 .863
Ross McKay 35 1 0 0 0 3 5.14 0 15 12 .800
Team: 4848 80 31 38 11 272 3.37 2 2157 1885 .874

Playoffs[edit]

Scoring
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Peter Sidorkiewicz 359 6 2 4 24 4.01 0 174 150 .862
Team: 359 6 2 4 24 4.01 0 174 150 .862

[5]

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus-minus PIM = Penalty minutes; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals;

      MIN = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA=Shots against; SV=Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;

Awards and records[edit]

Transactions[edit]

The Whalers were involved in the following transactions during the 1990–91 season.

Trades[edit]

July 7, 1990 To New York Rangers


Jody Hull
To Hartford Whalers


Carey Wilson
3rd round pick in 1991 – Michael Nylander
September 30, 1990 To Washington Capitals


Dave Tippett
To Hartford Whalers


6th round pick in 1992 – Jarrett Reid
October 3, 1990 To Washington Capitals


Joel Quenneville
To Hartford Whalers


Cash
October 11, 1990 To Montreal Canadiens


Cash
To Hartford Whalers


Todd Richards
October 30, 1990 To New York Islanders


5th round pick in 1992 – Ryan Duthie
To Hartford Whalers


Marc Bergevin
November 13, 1990 To New York Islanders


Ray Ferraro
To Hartford Whalers


Doug Crossman
December 21, 1990 To Pittsburgh Penguins


Scott Young
To Hartford Whalers


Rob Brown
February 20, 1991 To Detroit Red Wings


Doug Crossman
To Hartford Whalers


Doug Houda
March 4, 1991 To Pittsburgh Penguins


Ron Francis
Ulf Samuelsson
Grant Jennings
To Hartford Whalers


John Cullen
Zarley Zalapski
Jeff Parker
March 5, 1991 To Calgary Flames


Carey Wilson
To Hartford Whalers


Mark Hunter

Free agents[edit]

Draft picks[edit]

Hartford’s draft picks at the 1990 NHL Entry Draft held at the BC Place in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Farm teams[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]