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NHL 1989-90 Season

Summary

The Boston Bruins were the only NHL team to accumulate more than 100 points. The league and its adherents called it parity. Detractors called it mediocrity. Certainly it made for close divisional races.

The Bruins led the Adams Division by only 3 points over the Buffalo Sabres. The defending Stanley Cup champion Calgary Flames had 99 points to win the Smythe Division by 9 points over the Edmonton Oilers, while the New York Rangers won the Patrick Division with 2 points more than the New Jersey Devils and the Chicago Blackhawks led the St. Louis Blues by 5 points in the Norris Division.

Wayne Gretzky was the league's leading scorer for the eighth time, though his 142 points was his lowest total since his first season in the NHL. In the course of the season, Gretzky became the league's all-time scoring leader, surpassing Gordie Howe's previous career record of 1,850 points. Pittsburgh's Mario Lemieux, who had led the league the previous two seasons, missed 21 games because of injury and the Penguins dropped completely out of the playoffs.

Mark Messier, who had become the leader of the Edmonton Oilers after Gretzky was traded away, won the Hart Trophy as the NHL's regular-season MVP. Messier had 45 goals and 84 assists, while Brett Hull of St. Louis scored 72 goals, a record for right wingers.

Gretzky's Los Angeles Kings, who finished in fourth place, upset the Flames in the first round and were in turn eliminated by the Oilers in the division final. The Oilers then won the Campbell Conference championship in a six-game series with the Chicago Blackhawks.

It took the Bruins seven games to eliminate the Hartford Whalers in the first playoff round, but they then swept Montreal and Pittsburgh to reach the Stanley Cup finals.

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The Oilers won the first game of the final series at Boston when Petr Klima scored after 5 minutes of play in the third overtime. They took the second game easily and then won two in a row after allowing the Bruins to steal Game 3 at Edmonton. Bill Ranford, who was in goal for all 16 post-season wins and allowed Boston only seven goals in the five-game final series, won the Conn Smythe Trophy.

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Standings

Clarence Campbell Conference
Norris Division

TeamWLTGFGAPts
Chicago Blackhawks4133631629488
St. Louis Blues3734929527983
Toronto Maple Leafs3838433735880
Minnesota North Stars3640428429176
Detroit Red Wings28381428832370

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Clarence Campbell Conference
Smythe Division

TeamWLTGFGAPts
Calgary Flames42231534826599
Edmonton Oilers38281431528390
Winnipeg Jets37321129829085
Los Angeles Kings3439733833775
Vancouver Canucks25411424530664

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Prince of Wales Conference
Adams Division

TeamWLTGFGAPts
Boston Bruins46259289232101
Buffalo Sabres4527828624898
Montreal Canadiens41281128823493
Hartford Whalers3833927526885
Quebec Nordiques1261724040731

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Prince of Wales Conference
Patrick Division

TeamWLTGFGAPts
New York Rangers36311327926785
New Jersey Devils3734929528883
Washington Capitals3638628427578
New York Islanders31381128128873
Pittsburgh Penguins3240831835972
Philadelphia Flyers30391129029771

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League Leaders

Scoring

Wayne Gretzky, Los Angeles (40 goals, 102 assists, 142 points)

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Goals

Brett Hull, St. Louis, 72

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Assists

Wayne Gretzky, Los Angeles, 102

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Goals Against Average

Mike Liut, Hartford-Washington, 2.53

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Penalty Minutes

Basil McRae, Minnesota, 351

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Awards

All-NHL Team

First TeamPosSecond Team
Patrick Roy, MontrealGDaren Puppa, Buffalo
Ray Bourque, BostonDPaul Coffey, Pittsburgh
Al MacInnis, CalgaryDDoug Wilson, Chicago
Mark Messier, EdmontonCWayne Gretzky, Los Angeles
Brett Hull, St. LouisRWCam Neely, Boston
Luc Robitaille, Los AngelesLWBrian Bellows, Minnesota

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Hart Trophy (MVP)

Mark Messier, Edmonton Oilers

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Vezina Trophy

Patrick Roy, Montreal Canadiens

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Norris Trophy

Ray Bourque, Boston Bruins

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Calder Trophy (Rookie)

Sergei Makarov, Calgary Flames

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Lady Byng Trophy

Brett Hull, St. Louis Blues

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Masterton Trophy

Gord Kluzak, Boston Bruins

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Pearson Award

Mark Messier, Edmonton Oilers

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Selke Trophy

Rick Meagher, St. Louis Blues

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Jennings Trophy

Andy Moog/Rejean Lemelin, Boston Bruins

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Clancy Trophy

Kevin Lowe, Edmonton Oilers

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Adams Award (Coach)

Bob Murdoch, Winnipeg Jets

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Stanley Cup Playoffs

(Home team in CAPITALS)

Norris Division

Semifinals

Chicago 4, Minnesota 3

Minnesota 2, CHICAGO 1
CHICAGO 5, Minnesota 3
Chicago 2, MINNESOTA 1
MINNESOTA 4, Chicago 0
CHICAGO 5, Minnesota 1
MINNESOTA 5, Chicago 3
CHICAGO 5, Minnesota 2

St. Louis 4, Toronto 1

ST. LOUIS 4, Toronto 2
ST. LOUIS 4, Toronto 2
St. Louis 6, TORONTO 5 (OT)
TORONTO 4, St. Louis 2
ST. LOUIS 4, Toronto 3

Final

Chicago 4, St. Louis 3

St. Louis 4, CHICAGO 3
CHICAGO 5, St. Louis 3
ST. LOUIS 5, Chicago 4
Chicago 3, ST. LOUIS 2
CHICAGO 3, St. Louis 2
ST. LOUIS 4, Chicago 2
CHICAGO 8, St. Louis 2

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Smythe Division

Semifinals

Los Angeles 4, Calgary 2

Los Angeles 5, CALGARY 3
CALGARY 8, Los Angeles 5
LOS ANGELES 2, Calgary 1 (OT)
LOS ANGELES 12, Calgary 4
CALGARY 5, Los Angeles 1
LOS ANGELES 4, Calgary 3 (2 OT)

Edmonton 4, Winnipeg 3

Winnipeg 7, EDMONTON 5
EDMONTON 3, Winnipeg 2 (OT)
WINNIPEG 2, Edmonton 1
WINNIPEG 4, Edmonton 3 (2 OT)
Winnipeg 4, EDMONTON 3
Edmonton 4, WINNIPEG 3
WINNIPEG 4, Edmonton 1

Final

Edmonton 4, Los Angeles 0

EDMONTON 7, Los Angeles 0
EDMONTON 6, Los Angeles 1
Edmonton 5, LOS ANGELES 4
Edmonton 6, LOS ANGELES 5 (OT)

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Adams Division

Semifinals

Montreal 4, Buffalo 2

BUFFALO 4, Montreal 1
Montreal 3, BUFFALO 0
MONTREAL 2, Buffalo 1 (OT)
Buffalo 4, MONTREAL 2
Montreal 4, BUFFALO 2
MONTREAL 5, Buffalo 2

Boston 4, Hartford 3

Hartford 4, BOSTON 3
BOSTON 3, Hartford 1
HARTFORD 5, Boston 3
Boston 6, HARTFORD 5
BOSTON 3, Hartford 2
HARTFORD 3, Boston 2 (OT)
BOSTON 3, Hartford 1

Final

Boston 4, Montreal 1

BOSTON 1, Montreal 0
BOSTON 5, Montreal 4 (OT)
Boston 6, MONTREAL 3
MONTREAL 4, Boston 1
BOSTON 3, Montreal 1

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Patrick Division

Semifinals

NY Rangers 4, NY Islanders 1

RANGERS 2, Islanders 1
RANGERS 5, Islanders 2
ISLANDERS 4, Rangers 3 (OT)
Rangers 6, ISLANDERS 1
RANGERS 6, Islanders 5

Washington 4, New Jersey 2

Washington 5, NEW JERSEY 4 (OT)
NEW JERSEY 6, Washington 5
New Jersey 2, WASHINGTON 1
WASHINGTON 3, New Jersey 1
Washington 4, NEW JERSEY 3
WASHINGTON 3, New Jersey 2

Final

Washington 4, NY Rangers 1

NY RANGERS 7, Washington 3
Washington 6, NY RANGERS 3
WASHINGTON 7, NY Rangers 1
WASHINGTON 4, NY Rangers 3 (OT)
Washington 2, NY RANGERS 1 (OT)

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Campbell Conference Final

Edmonton 4, Chicago 2

EDMONTON 5, Chicago 2
Chicago 4, EDMONTON 3
CHICAGO 5, Edmonton 1
Edmonton 4, CHICAGO 2
EDMONTON 4, Chicago 3
Edmonton 8, CHICAGO 4

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Wales Conference Final

Boston 4, Washington 0

BOSTON 5, Washington 3
BOSTON 3, Washington 0
Boston 4, WASHINGTON 1
Boston 3, WASHINGTON 2

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Stanley Cup Final

Edmonton Oilers 4, Boston Bruins 1
Coach: John Muckler
Captain: Mark Messier
May 15: Edmonton 3, BOSTON 2 (3 OT-Klima)
May 18: Edmonton 7, BOSTON 2
May 20: Boston 2, EDMONTON 1
May 22: EDMONTON 5, Boston 1
May 24: Edmonton 4, BOSTON 1
Series-winning goal:
Craig Simpson, Edmonton, 9:31, 2nd

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Smythe Trophy Winner

Bill Ranford, Edmonton Oilers

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Leading Playoff Scorer

Craig Simpson, Edmonton (22 games, 16 goals, 15 assists, 31 points)
Mark Messier, Edmonton (22 games, 9 goals, 22 assists, 31 points)

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Other Resources

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1988-89 NHL season

1990-91 NHL season

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This page last updated Thursday, 17-Apr-2008 18:02:18 PDT
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