[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BlogPosting","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2012-13-anaheim-ducks-season-wikipedia\/#BlogPosting","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2012-13-anaheim-ducks-season-wikipedia\/","headline":"2012\u201313 Anaheim Ducks season – Wikipedia","name":"2012\u201313 Anaheim Ducks season – Wikipedia","description":"before-content-x4 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia after-content-x4 The 2012\u201313 Anaheim Ducks season was the 20th season for the National Hockey","datePublished":"2020-10-25","dateModified":"2020-10-25","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/1\/1c\/Wiki_letter_w_cropped.svg\/20px-Wiki_letter_w_cropped.svg.png","url":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/1\/1c\/Wiki_letter_w_cropped.svg\/20px-Wiki_letter_w_cropped.svg.png","height":"14","width":"20"},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2012-13-anaheim-ducks-season-wikipedia\/","wordCount":10722,"articleBody":" (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});before-content-x4From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4The 2012\u201313 Anaheim Ducks season was the 20th season for the National Hockey League (NHL) franchise. The season was partially cancelled due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout, which ended on January 6, 2013. The 2012\u201313 campaign for the Ducks commenced as a shortened, 48-game season, beginning January 19[1] away against the Vancouver Canucks. The shortened season featured only intra-conference games.[1] The Ducks compensated for a disappointing season in 2011\u201312 in which they struggled in the first half of the season and dug a hole that was too deep to climb out of despite a second-half resurgence. The previous season marked the second time in their last three seasons that the Ducks missed the Stanley Cup playoffs.Despite amassing a 30\u201312\u20136 regular season record, finishing second place in the Western Conference, and winning the Pacific Division for the second time in franchise history, the Ducks disappointed in the playoffs, falling to the Detroit Red Wings 4\u20133. The Ducks held a 3\u20132 series lead in the after Game 5, but lost Game 6 in overtime to Detroit before falling apart offensively in the decisive Game 7.[2] (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4Table of ContentsOffseason[edit]Regular season[edit]Notable games[edit]January[edit]February[edit]March[edit]April[edit]Schedule and results[edit]Regular season[edit]Post-season[edit]Standings[edit]Player statistics[edit]Skaters[edit]Goaltenders[edit]Transactions[edit]Free agents signed[edit]Free agents lost[edit]Claimed via waivers[edit]Lost via waivers[edit]Lost via retirement[edit]Players signings[edit]Draft picks[edit]See also[edit]Other Anaheim\u2013based teams in 2012\u201313[edit]References[edit]Offseason[edit]This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (January 2013)Regular season[edit]See the game log below for detailed game-by-game regular season information.Prior to the lockout, the original 2012\u201313 Anaheim Ducks regular season schedule was released in June 2012. Their home and season opener was scheduled to take place on Friday, October 12 against San Jose, and the Ducks were to have enjoyed a four-game homestand to start the season.On Thursday, October 4, the NHL cancelled all games scheduled through Wednesday, October 24, causing the Ducks to lose their first six games of the season.[3] On October 19, 2012, games through November 1 were cancelled, causing the Ducks to lose three more games. Only one week later, on October 26, all November games were cancelled, and a tentative start date of December 1 was set. On November 23, 2012, all games through December 14 were axed, impacting six games on the Ducks’ schedule. On December 11, 2012, all games through December 30 were eliminated. Nine days later, on December 20, 2012, further lack of negotiations during the lockout led to the cancellation of all games through January 14.On January 6, 2013, the lockout ended after a 16-hour negotiation session in an effort to save the season. A condensed season, of a length of 48 intra-conference games, will now be played. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4Under the new, lockout-shortened 48-game schedule, the Ducks opened the season by sweeping a two-game Canadian road trip, with a decisive 7\u20133 victory against the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday, January 19, at 7 p.m. PST, followed by a 5\u20134 decision against the Calgary Flames on Monday, January 21. Their home opener will now take place at Honda Center on Friday, January 25, also against the Canucks. The distinction of the Ducks’ longest homestand will be split between two five-game stretches from March 18 \u2013 25 and from April 3 to 10. Anaheim’s lengthiest road trip was a six-game haul from February 6 \u2013 16. Also, due to the shortened nature of the schedule and the objective of condensing travel, all games will be against the Ducks’ own Western Conference opponents, and no games will be played against Eastern Conference teams. This condensed schedule structure also leads to the development of anomalies absent from a normal 82-game schedule, such as playing back-to-back games against the same team in the same location. For example, the Ducks host the Dallas Stars at Honda Center on both April 3 and 5, and later play games on two consecutive nights at the Edmonton Oilers on April 21 and 22. The Ducks will end the regular season on Saturday, April 27, at home against the Phoenix Coyotes.Notable games[edit]January[edit]January 19: The Ducks open the season on the road with a 7\u20133 triumph over hosting Vancouver. The Ducks break a six-season streak of losing the first game of the regular season; this is the first time they have done so since 2006\u201307.January 25: The Ducks hold their home opener against Vancouver, in a rematch of the season opener six days earlier; however, in a reversal of fortunes, this time the Ducks lose by a score of 5\u20130.February[edit]February 9: Rookie goaltender Viktor Fasth improves to a perfect 5\u20130\u20130 record (making him the netminder for more than half of Anaheim’s eight victories) as the Ducks defeat the faltering Blues 6\u20135 in a shootout thriller in St. Louis. The Ducks rally from a 3\u20131 deficit at the end of the first period, scoring three goals in 1 minute, 41 seconds late in the second period.February 12: Fasth improves to 6\u20130\u20130 and the Ducks improve to 9\u20132\u20131 and to 3\u20131\u20130 on a road swing by way of defeating the first place Chicago Blackhawks 3\u20132 in a shootout. Andrew Cogliano scores a game-tying goal late in the third period to help the Ducks recover from a 2\u20131 deficit, and Anaheim kills off two Chicago power plays in overtime, paving the way for the eventual shootout triumph.February 15: Anaheim defeats the Detroit Red Wings 5\u20132 as the Ducks grab their first regular season victory in Joe Louis Arena in five years and five days, their last regular season triumph in the Motor City being a 3\u20132 win on Feb 10, 2008. Viktor Fasth remains undefeated between the pipes at a record of 7\u20130\u20130.March[edit]March 18: The Ducks set a franchise record with their 12th consecutive victory at home, a 5\u20133 triumph over San Jose. Midway through the second period, Anaheim scores twice in 34 seconds and thrice in 2 minutes 46 seconds as Long Beach native Emerson Etem scores his first NHL goal.March 20: In a matchup of the two top teams in the Western Conference and of two of the top teams in the NHL, the Ducks down the formidable Chicago Blackhawks 4\u20132 in front of the largest crowd ever for a Ducks home game at Honda Center, with a mark of 17,610. (This breaks the old record of 17,601, also set during a Ducks\u2013Blackhawks game, on February 26, 2012.) The Ducks score three unanswered goals in the third period and twice in 64 seconds to roar back from a 2\u20131 deficit for the 4\u20132 win. The triumph hands the Blackhawks only their third regulation loss of the season and follows a 3\u20132 overtime road win against Chicago on Feb. 12. Anaheim also extends their home winning streak to its 13th game.March 29: Having fallen into a four-game losing streak since the March 20 game, the Ducks face the Blackhawks again\u2014this time in Chicago\u2014and end their losing streak and sweep the season series with a 2\u20131 triumph. Defenseman Sheldon Souray uses his trademark slapshot to score the game-winning goal with 2:08 left in the third period; the Los Angeles Times had run an article on Souray’s benefits to the team that very morning.[4]April[edit]April 12: While Anaheim was idle, the Ducks clinched a berth to the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs by virtue of a Detroit loss. This is Anaheim’s ninth berth to the Stanley Cup playoffs and fifth in the past seven seasons since the 2004\u201305 lockout.April 21: The Ducks snapped a four-game losing streak in Edmonton at Rexall Place. This was Anaheim’s tenth straight victory in Edmonton and the victory also mathematically eliminated the Oilers from playoff contention. The win also clinched home ice in the first round.April 22: With a 3\u20130 win over Edmonton at Rexall Place, the Ducks clinched their second ever Pacific Division title and the second seed in the Western Conference for the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs. The win also extended Anaheim’s winning streak in Edmonton to 11 games.Schedule and results[edit]Regular season[edit]Below is the new, truncated 2012\u201313 schedule for the Ducks.2012\u201313 Game Log: 30\u201312\u20136January: 3\u20131\u20131 (Home: 1\u20131\u20130; Road: 2\u20130\u20131)February: 11\u20132\u20130 (Home: 6\u20130\u20130; Road: 5\u20132\u20130)#DateOpponentScoreOTWinLossAttendanceRecordArenaBoxPoints6February 1Wild3\u20131Fasth (2\u20130\u20130)Backstrom (3\u20132\u20131)13,0074\u20131\u20131Honda CenterW197February 2Kings7\u20134Hiller (3\u20131\u20131)Bernier (0\u20131\u20130)17,4365\u20131\u20131Honda CenterW2118February 4Sharks2\u20131Fasth (3\u20130\u20130)Greiss (1\u20131\u20130)14,3246\u20131\u20131Honda CenterW3139February 6@ Avalanche3\u20130Fasth (4\u20130\u20130)Varlamov (3\u20136\u20130)13,7767\u20131\u20131Pepsi CenterW41510February 8@ Stars3\u20131Lehtonen (6\u20132\u20131)Hiller (3\u20132\u20131)18,1127\u20132\u20131American Airlines CenterL11511February 9@ Blues6\u20135SOFasth (5\u20130\u20130)Elliott (3\u20134\u20131)18,8358\u20132\u20131Scottrade CenterW11712February 12@ Blackhawks3\u20132SOFasth (6\u20130\u20130)Crawford (7\u20130\u20133)21,1889\u20132\u20131United CenterW21913February 15@ Red Wings5\u20132Fasth (7\u20130\u20130)Howard (6\u20135\u20132)20,06610\u20132\u20131Joe Louis ArenaW32114February 16@ Predators3\u20132SOFasth (8\u20130\u20130)Rinne (6\u20133\u20134)17,32211\u20132\u20131Bridgestone ArenaW42315February 18Blue Jackets3\u20132Hiller (4\u20132\u20131)Bobrovsky (2\u20135\u20132)14,71312\u20132\u20131Honda CenterW52516February 24Avalanche4\u20133OTHiller (5\u20132\u20131)Giguere (2\u20130\u20131)17,17413\u20132\u20131Honda CenterW62717February 25@ Kings5\u20132Quick (6\u20135\u20132)Fasth (8\u20131\u20130)18,11813\u20133\u20131Staples CenterL12718February 27Predators5\u20131Fasth (9\u20131\u20130)Rinne (8\u20136\u20134)13,63014\u20133\u20131Honda CenterW129March: 9\u20134\u20134 (Home: 6\u20133\u20130; Road: 3\u20131\u20134)#DateOpponentScoreOTWinLossAttendanceRecordArenaBoxPoints19March 1Wild3\u20132Hiller (6\u20132\u20131)Kuemper (1\u20132\u20130)15,26415\u20133\u20131Honda CenterW23120March 2@ Coyotes5\u20134SOSmith (8\u20136\u20132)Fasth (9\u20131\u20131)15,22715\u20133\u20132Jobing.com ArenaO13221March 4@ Coyotes5\u20134SOSmith (9\u20136\u20132)Hiller (6\u20132\u20132)11,02415\u20133\u20133Jobing.com ArenaO23322March 6Coyotes2\u20130Hiller (7\u20132\u20132)LaBarbera (1\u20133\u20130)13,45616\u20133\u20133Honda CenterW13523March 8Flames4\u20130Fasth (10\u20131\u20131)Kiprusoff (3\u20134\u20132)15,83917\u20133\u20133Honda CenterW23724March 10Blues4\u20132Hiller (8\u20132\u20132)Hal\u00e1k (5\u20133\u20131)17,17418\u20133\u20133Honda CenterW33925March 12@ Wild2\u20131Hiller (9\u20132\u20132)Backstrom (11\u20137\u20132)18,80819\u20133\u20133Xcel Energy CenterW44126March 14@ Stars2\u20131SOHiller (10\u20132\u20132)Lehtonen (9\u20135\u20132)15,77520\u20133\u20133American Airlines CenterW54327March 16@ Blues2\u20131OTAllen (8\u20131\u20130)Hiller (10\u20132\u20133)19,59320\u20133\u20134Scottrade CenterO14428March 18Sharks5\u20133Fasth (11\u20131\u20131)Niemi (11\u20137\u20135)14,44121\u20133\u20134Honda CenterW14629March 20Blackhawks4\u20132Hiller (11\u20132\u20133)Crawford (13\u20133\u20133)17,61022\u20133\u20134Honda CenterW24830March 22Red Wings5\u20131Howard (13\u20138\u20134)Fasth (11\u20132\u20131)17,17422\u20134\u20134Honda CenterL14831March 24Red Wings2\u20131Howard (14\u20138\u20134)Hiller (11\u20133\u20133)17,42722\u20135\u20134Honda CenterL24832March 25Sharks5\u20133Niemi (13\u20138\u20135)Fasth (11\u20133\u20131)16,08322\u20136\u20134Honda CenterL34833March 27@ Sharks4\u20130Niemi (14\u20138\u20135)Hiller (11\u20134\u20133)17,56222\u20137\u20134HP PavilionL44834March 29@ Blackhawks2\u20131Hiller (12\u20134\u20133)Emery (16\u201312\u20131)22,10523\u20137\u20134United CenterW15035March 31@ Blue Jackets2\u20131OTBobrovsky (12\u20138\u20136)Hiller (12\u20134\u20134)13,18523\u20137\u20135Nationwide ArenaO151April: 7\u20135\u20131 (Home: 3\u20133\u20131; Road: 4\u20132\u20130)#DateOpponentScoreOTWinLossAttendanceRecordArenaBoxPoints36April 1@ Stars4\u20130Fasth (12\u20133\u20131)Lehtonen (12\u201310\u20132)13,74824\u20137\u20135American Airlines CenterW25337April 3Stars5\u20132Fasth (13\u20133\u20131)Lehtonen (12\u201311\u20132)15,16525\u20137\u20135Honda CenterW35538April 5Stars3\u20131Lehtonen (13\u201311\u20132)Fasth (13\u20134\u20131)16,88425\u20138\u20135Honda CenterL15539April 7Kings4\u20133SOFasth (14\u20134\u20131)Bernier (9\u20132\u20131)17,49426\u20138\u20135Honda CenterW15740April 8Oilers2\u20131Hiller (13\u20134\u20134)Dubnyk (12\u201312\u20136)15,14827\u20138\u20135Honda CenterW25941April 10Avalanche4\u20131Giguere (3\u20134\u20132)Hiller (13\u20135\u20134)14,64627\u20139\u20135Honda CenterL15942April 13*@ Kings2\u20131Quick (15\u201312\u20133)Fasth (14\u20135\u20131)18,47327\u201310\u20135Staples CenterL25943April 17Blue Jackets3\u20132OTBobrovsky (17\u201310\u20136)Fasth (14\u20135\u20132)15,07427\u201310\u20136Honda CenterO16044April 19@ Flames3\u20131Kiprusoff (8\u201313\u20132)Hiller (13\u20136\u20134)19,28927\u201311\u20136Scotiabank SaddledomeL16045April 21@ Oilers3\u20131Hiller (14\u20136\u20134)Dubnyk (13\u201315\u20136)16,83928\u201311\u20136Rexall PlaceW16246April 22@ Oilers3\u20130Fasth (15\u20135\u20132)Khabibulin (3\u20136\u20131)16,83929\u201311\u20136Rexall PlaceW26447April 25@ Canucks3\u20131Hiller (15\u20136\u20134)Luongo (9\u20135\u20133)18,91030\u201311\u20136Rogers ArenaW36648April 27Coyotes5\u20133LaBarbera (4\u20136\u20132)Fasth (15\u20136\u20132)17,44230\u201312\u20136Honda CenterL166* Anaheim clinched a playoff berth on April 12, 2013 by virtue of a Detroit loss. Final games legendDucks Win (2 pts.)Ducks Loss (0 pts.)OT Loss (1 pt.)Clinched PlayoffsClinched Division“Points” legend1st (Pacific Division)Not in Playoff PositionIn Playoff PositionPost-season[edit]2013 Postseason Game LogWestern Conference Quarterfinals vs. (7) Detroit Red Wings: Detroit won series 4\u20133LegendDucks WinDucks LossFuture Games LegendHome GameAway GameStandings[edit]Source: National Hockey Leaguep \u2013 Clinched Presidents’ Trophy; x \u2013 Clinched playoff spot; y \u2013 Clinched divisionPlayer statistics[edit]Skaters[edit]Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +\/\u2212 = Plus\/minus; PIM = Penalty minutesGoaltenders[edit]Note: GP = Games played; GS = Games Started; TOI = Time on ice (minutes); W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime losses; GA = Goals against; GAA= Goals against average; SA= Shots against; SV= Saves; Sv% = Save percentage; SO= ShutoutsRegular seasonPlayerGPGSTOIWLOTGAGAASASv%SOGAPIMJonas Hiller26251498:191564592.36675.9131012Viktor Fasth25231428:181562522.18661.9214000PlayoffsPlayerGPGSTOIWLGAGAASASv%SOGAPIMJonas Hiller77438:4034182.46218.9171010\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Ducks. Stats reflect time with Ducks only.\u2021Traded mid-season.Bold\/italics denotes franchise recordTransactions[edit]The Ducks have been involved in the following transactions during the 2012\u201313 season.Free agents signed[edit]PlayerFormer teamContract termsSheldon Souray[13]Dallas Stars3 years, $11 millionJordan Hendry[14]HC Lugano1 year, $600,000Brad Staubitz[15]Montreal Canadiens2 years, $1.275 millionBryan Allen[16]Carolina Hurricanes3 years, $10.5 millionCorey Elkins[17]HC Pardubice1 year, $700,000Daniel Winnik[18]San Jose Sharks2 years, $3.6 millionPierre-Luc Letourneau-Leblond[19]Calgary Flames1 year, $550,000Ryan Parent[20]Chicago Wolves1 year, $600,000Jay Rosehill[20]Toronto Maple Leafs1 year, $550,000Charlie Sarault[21]Sarnia Sting3 years, $2.42 million entry-level contractKevin Gagne[22]Saint John Sea Dogs3 years, $2.3025 million entry-level contractRadek Dvorak[23]Dallas Stars1 year, $675,000Steven Whitney[24]Boston College2 years, $1.435 million entry-level contractJohn Kurtz[25]Norfolk Admirals1 year, $570,000Antoine Laganiere[26]Yale University2 years, $1.775 million entry-level contractFree agents lost[edit]Claimed via waivers[edit]PlayerFormer teamDate claimed off waiversLost via waivers[edit]PlayerNew teamDate claimed off waiversLost via retirement[edit]Players signings[edit]PlayerDateContract termsMax Friberg[31]June 15, 20123 years, $2.33 million entry-level contractRickard Rakell[32]July 2, 20123 years, $2.775 million entry-level contractMatt Smaby[33]July 2, 20121 year, $650,000Frederik Andersen[34]July 11, 20122 years, $1.85 million entry-level contractTeemu Selanne[35]July 12, 20121 year, $4.5 millionNick Bonino[36]July 13, 20122 years, $1.4 millionHampus Lindholm[37]July 13, 20123 years, $2.775 million entry-level contractMarco Cousineau[38]July 16, 20121 year, $660,000Cam Fowler[39]September 17, 20125 years, $20 million contract extensionTroy Bodie[20]January 17, 20131 year, $550,000Viktor Fasth[40]February 20, 20132 years, $5.8 million contract extensionJoseph Cramarossa[41]March 2, 20133 years, $2.2575 million entry-level contractRyan Getzlaf[42]March 8, 20138 years, $66 million contract extensionCorey Perry[43]March 18, 20138 years, $69 million contract extensionPatrick Maroon[44]March 21, 20132 years, $1.15 million contract extensionAndrew O’Brien[45]April 5, 20133 years, $1.855 million entry-level contractWilliam Karlsson[46]May 20, 20133 years, $2.4925 million entry-level contractBen Lovejoy[47]June 27, 20133 years, $3.3 million contract extensionDraft picks[edit]Anaheim Ducks’ picks at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on June 22 and 23, 2012.Draft notesThe Ducks’ third-round pick went to the St. Louis Blues as the result of a February 28, 2011, trade that sent Brad Winchester to the Ducks in exchange for this pick.a The Vancouver Canucks’ third-round pick went to the Anaheim Ducks as a result of a February 28, 2011, trade that sent Maxim Lapierre and MacGregor Sharp to the Canucks in exchange for Joel Perrault and this pick.b The Ducks’ fifth-round pick went to the Montreal Canadiens as the result of a December 31, 2010 trade that sent Maxim Lapierre to the Ducks in exchange for Brett Festerling and this pick. The Montreal Canadiens’ fifth-round pick went to the Anaheim Ducks as a result of a February 17, 2011, trade that sent Paul Mara to the Canadiens in exchange for this pick.The Ducks’ sixth-round pick went to the Toronto Maple Leafs as the result of a June 25, 2011, trade that sent 2011 sixth-round pick to the Ducks in exchange for this pick.c The New Jersey Devils’ seventh-round pick went to the Anaheim Ducks as a result of a December 12, 2011, trade that sent Kurtis Foster and Timo Pielmeier to the Devils in exchange for Rod Pelley, Mark Fraser and this pick.See also[edit]Other Anaheim\u2013based teams in 2012\u201313[edit]References[edit]^ a b Greg Wyshynski (January 6, 2013). “NHL lockout is over; players, owners reach tentative CBA deal after 16-hour talks”. Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved August 30, 2016.^ Ducks to Meet Detroit in Conference Quarterfinals. Retrieved April 27, 2013.^ Ira Podell (October 4, 2012). “NHL lockout forces cancelled games through Oct. 24”. Associated Press. Retrieved October 4, 2012.^ Lance Pugmire (March 28, 2013). “Ducks get a lift from Sheldon Souray”. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 18, 2015.^ “Ducks Acquire 2013 2nd Round Pick for Visnovsky”. Retrieved June 22, 2012.^ “Ducks Acquire Lovejoy from Pittsburgh in Exchange for 2014 Draft Pick”. Retrieved February 7, 2013.^ “Ducks Acquire Center Wilson from Tampa Bay in Exchange for Sexton”. Retrieved March 12, 2013.^ “Ducks Acquire Steckel from Toronto in Exchange for Lasch and a Seventh-Round Pick in 2014”. Retrieved March 15, 2013.^ “Ducks Acquire Zolnierczyk From Philadelphia”. Retrieved April 1, 2013.^ “Ducks Trade Goalie Deslauriers to Minnesota for Future Considerations”. Retrieved April 4, 2013.^ “Ducks Acquire Lombardi from Phoenix for McMillan”. Retrieved April 4, 2013.^ “Ducks Acquire Defenseman Grant From Pittsburgh In Exchange For Left Wing Zolnierczyk”. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015. Retrieved June 24, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Souray to Three-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 2, 2012^ Hendry Agrees to One-Year Deal with Ducks. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 2, 2012^ Ducks Ink Staubitz to Two-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 2, 2012^ Ducks Agree to Terms with Allen on Three-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 2, 2012^ Ducks Sign Center Elkins to One-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved July 10, 2012^ Ducks Sign Winnik to Two-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved July 21, 2012^ Ducks Sign Left Wing Pierre-Luc Letourneau-Leblond to One-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved January 16, 2013^ a b c Ducks Sign Bodie, Parent and Rosehill to One-Year Contracts. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved January 17, 2013^ Ducks Sign Sarault To Three-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on March 6, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Gagne to Three-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on March 8, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Right Wing Radek Dvorak to One-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on March 25, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Collegiate Standout Whitney to Two-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on April 5, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Kurtz To One-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on April 10, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Former Yale Center Antoine Laganiere to Two-Year Entry Level Deal. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on April 17, 2013.^ Panthers Agree To Two-Year Contract With RW George Parros^ Blackhawks agree to terms with defenseman Brookbank^ Panthers Agree to Terms with LW Jean-Francois Jacques^ Canes Agree to Terms with Goaltender Dan Ellis^ Ducks Sign Friberg to Three-Year, Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved June 15, 2012.^ Ducks Sign 2011 First Round Pick Rakell to Three-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 2, 2012.^ Ducks Sign Defenseman Smaby to One-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 2, 2012.^ Ducks Sign Andersen to Two-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved July 11, 2012.^ Selanne Signs One-Year Contract with Ducks. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 12, 2012.^ Ducks Sign Bonino to Two-Year Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 13, 2012.^ Ducks Sign Lindholm to Three-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 13, 2012.^ Cousineau Agrees to One-Year Deal with Ducks. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on July 17, 2012.^ Ducks Sign Fowler to Contract Extension. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on September 17, 2012.^ Ducks Sign Fasth to Two-Year Contract Extension. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on February 20, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Cramarossa to Three-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on March 5, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Getzlaf to Eight-Year Contract Extension. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on March 8, 2013.^ Ducks Agree to Terms with Corey Perry on Eight-Year Contract Extension. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on March 18, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Maroon to Two-Year Contract Extension. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on March 22, 2013.^ Ducks Sign O\u2019Brien To Three-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on April 8, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Karlsson to Three-Year Entry-Level Contract. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on May 21, 2013.^ Ducks Sign Defenseman Lovejoy to Three-Year Contract Extension. Ducks.nhl.com. Retrieved on June 27, 2013. Archived 2013-07-15. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4"},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/2012-13-anaheim-ducks-season-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"2012\u201313 Anaheim Ducks season – Wikipedia"}}]}]