Anaheim Ducks and Interstate 64 in West Virginia: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox road
{{current sport-related|image=Hockey current event.png|mini=1|2008–09 Anaheim Ducks season}}
|state=WV
{{NHL Team
|route=64
|team_name = Anaheim Ducks
|type=I
|bg_color = black
|map=
|text_color = #F47937
|alternate_name=
|logo_image = Anaheim Ducks logo.svg
|maint=
|conference = [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western]]
|length_mi=
|division = [[Pacific Division (NHL)|Pacific]]
|length_round=
|founded = [[1993–94 NHL season|1993]]
|length_ref=
|history = '''Mighty Ducks of Anaheim'''<br/>[[1993–94 NHL season|1993]] – [[2005–06 NHL season|2006]]<br/>'''Anaheim Ducks'''<br/>[[2006–07 NHL season|2006]] – Present
|length_notes=
|arena = [[Honda Center]]
|year_established=
|city = [[Anaheim, California]]
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|media_affiliates = [[FSN West/Prime Ticket|FSN Prime Ticket<br/>FSN West]]<br/>[[KDOC-TV|KDOC]]<br/>[[KLAA (AM)|KLAA]]
|terminus_a=
|broadcasters = [[John Ahlers]]<br/>[[Brian Hayward]]<br/>[[Steve Carroll]]<br/>[[Brent Severyn]]
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|team_colors = Black, Gold, Orange, White
|direction_b=
{{color box|black}} {{color box|#B9986B}} {{color box|#F47937}} {{color box|white}}
|terminus_b=
|owner = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Henry Samueli|Henry & Susan Samueli]]
|previous_type=
|general_manager = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Brian Burke (ice hockey)|Brian Burke]]
|previous_route=
|head_coach = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Randy Carlyle]]
|next_type=
|captain = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Chris Pronger]]
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|minor_league_affiliates = [[Iowa Chops]] ([[American Hockey League|AHL]])<br/>[[Bakersfield Condors]] ([[ECHL]])
|browse=
|stanley_cups = [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]]
|conf_titles = [[2002–03 NHL season|2002–03]], [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]]
|division_titles = [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]]
}}
}}


[[Interstate 64]] travels for 184 miles within the state of [[West Virginia]], passing by the major towns and cities of [[Huntington, West Virginia|Huntington]], [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]], [[Beckley, West Virginia|Beckley]], and [[Lewisburg, West Virginia|Lewisburg]]. It has only two major junctions within the state: [[Interstate 77]] in Charleston and in Beckley.
The '''Anaheim Ducks''' are a professional [[ice hockey]] team based in [[Anaheim, California]], [[United States|USA]]. They are members of the [[Pacific Division (NHL)|Pacific Division]] of the [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western Conference]] of the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL). Since their inception, the Ducks have played their home games at [[Honda Center]].


== History ==
The club was founded in 1993 by [[The Walt Disney Company]] as the '''Mighty Ducks of Anaheim''', a name based on the [[film]] ''[[The Mighty Ducks]]''. Disney sold the franchise in 2005 to [[Henry Samueli|Henry & Susan Samueli]], who changed the name of the team to ''Anaheim Ducks'' before the [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07 season]]. In their 15 year existence, the Ducks have made the playoffs six times, winning two Western Conference Championships (2003 and 2007) and one [[Stanley Cup]] championship ([[2007 Stanley Cup Playoffs|2007]]).
=== Early beginnings ===
The first interstate highway segment to be let to construction was in [[Cabell County, West Virginia|Cabell County]] in 1957. This segment, from [[US 60]] (milepost 15) to [[Ona, West Virginia|Ona]] (milepost 20) was completed in 1960 <ref name="RDR">Release Date Report. West Virginia Department of Transportation. August 2003.</ref>.


In 1962, a lengthy segment from Exit 28 at [[Milton, West Virginia|Milton]] to just west of Exit 44 was opened to traffic<ref name="RDR"/>. This included interchanges 34 and 39. One year later, Interstate 64 was completed to Exit 44, serving originally [[West Virginia Route 17|WV 17]], now [[US 35]] near [[St. Albans, West Virginia|St. Albans]].
==Franchise history==
[[Image:MightyDucksOfAnaheim.png|left|thumb|150px|Mighty Ducks primary [[logo]] (1993–2006). The logo was subsequently used in the Disney movie ''[[D2: The Mighty Ducks]]''. Disney design elements appear in this logo, such as team mascot [[Wildwing]]'s goalie mask.]]
===1993–2004: Disney Era===


In 1964, an 8-mile segment of interstate opened from Exit 20 at [[Ona, West Virginia|Ona]] to Exit 28 at [[Milton, West Virginia|Milton]]<ref name="RDR"/>.
The '''Mighty Ducks of Anaheim''' were founded in 1993 by [[Disney Company|The Walt Disney Company]]. The team's original name was chosen from the Disney movie ''The Mighty Ducks'', based on a group of misfit kids who turn their losing youth hockey team into a winning team. Disney subsequently made an [[list of animated television series|animated series]] called ''[[Mighty Ducks (TV series)|Mighty Ducks]]'', featuring a fictional Mighty Ducks of Anaheim team that consisted of [[anthropomorphized]] [[duck]]s led by the mighty duck Wildwing.


1965 saw the completion of a major part of Interstate 64. A lengthy segment opened from the [[Kentucky]] state line (milepost 0) to Exit 15 at [[Barboursville, West Virginia|Barboursville]]<ref name="RDR"/>. This consisted of four interchanges: [[Kenova, West Virginia|Kenova]] and [[Ceredo, West Virginia|Ceredo]] at milepost 1, the [[West Huntington Expressway]] ([[West Virginia Route 94|WV 94]], later [[US 52]]) at milepost six, [[US 52]] and downtown [[Huntington, West Virginia|Huntington]] (later [[West Virginia Route 152|WV 152]]/[[West Virginia Route 527|WV 527]]) at milepost eight, and Hal Greer Blvd. and [[West Virginia Route 10|WV 10]] at milepost 10. Two steel-girder bridges were completed over the [[Big Sandy River]] connecting [[Kentucky]] to [[West Virginia]]. That bridge was replaced in 2000 in a reconstruction effort that raised the bridge level and replaced deteriorating bridge girders.
The team was the first tenant of the Anaheim Arena (later the Arrowhead Pond and now the Honda Center), a brand-new arena in Anaheim located a short distance east of [[Disneyland]] and across the [[Orange Freeway]] from [[Angel Stadium of Anaheim|Angel Stadium]]. The arena was completed the same year the team was founded, with the naming rights originally being held by [[Arrowhead Water]] .


In 1966, the first [[Kanawha River]] crossing was completed with new interstate mainlines extending from Exit 44 near [[St. Albans, West Virginia|St. Albans]] to Exit 50 at [[Institute, West Virginia|Institute]] under four contracts<ref name="RDR"/>. This included three new interchanges: [[Nitro, West Virginia|Nitro]] at milepost 45, [[Cross Lanes, West Virginia|Cross Lanes]] at milepost 47 and [[Institute, West Virginia|Institute]] at milepost 50. One year later, Interstate 64 was extended eastward to [[Dunbar, West Virginia|Dunbar]] at milepost 52.40 with a new interchange constructed at that location. For six years, the interstate would end just outside of Charleston's borders.
With their first-ever draft pick, the Mighty Ducks selected [[Paul Kariya]] fourth overall in the [[1993 NHL Entry Draft]]. Kariya would quickly become a fan favorite and the cornerstone of the young Mighty Ducks franchise. As team captain, he would bring them within a game of [[Stanley Cup]] glory in [[2002–03 NHL season|2003]].


=== Charleston's routing troubles ===
During the [[1993-94 NHL season|1994 season]] they would finish fourth in the division with 71 points. Their record would be one of the best of a first year expansion team but their expansion brother the [[Florida Panthers]] would have a better one.
{{ImageStackRight|300|


[[Image:3downtown.jpg|right|280px|thumb|The [[Corridor G|U.S. Route 119 (Corridor G)]] Fort Hill interchange under construction in 1973 in [[Charleston, West Virginia]].]]
During the [[1994-95 NHL season|shortened lockout season]] Duck [[Oleg Tverdovsky]] made his NHL debut. The team would finish last in the Pacific Division with 37 points.
}}
Planning for the routing of Interstate 64, as well as for [[Interstate 77]] and [[Interstate 79]] through [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]], was embroiled in controversy since the 1950s. Several alignments were considered which included a northern arc around the [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] metro area, a downtown route and a southern arc south of [[South Charleston, West Virginia|South Charleston]].


The mayor at the time, John Shanklin, mayor for eight years from 1959 to 1967, was originally a strong opponent of any interstate highway going through the center of the city. Shanklin reversed his decision soon after, stated that [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] can adjust to the impact and that it will eventually become a "great thing."
On [[February 7]], [[1996]], the Mighty Ducks made a blockbuster deal with the [[Winnipeg Jets]]. The Ducks sent [[Chad Kilger]], Tverdovsky, and a third-round pick to the Jets in return for [[Marc Chouinard]], a fourth-round draft pick, and, most notably, star right winger [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]]. On a line with [[Steve Rucchin]] and Kariya, Selanne's chemistry with the latter made them one of the highest-scoring tandems in the league.


In 1971, the city and many residents were swimming in controversy over the routings of the interstate highways. The long planned interstates through [[West Virginia]] were either to run directly through the city center or skirt it.
====Taste of success====


The plan was to bring Interstate 64 through the Triangle District, just west of the downtown center, an urban blight where many of the city's black population lived. Home to the city's highest crime rates where shootings daily were common; it was referred to as the "Red Light District." Urban renewals in the past had failed. Residents living in the Triangle District formed committees and rebelled. They called the highway routing foolish because it wanted to make [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] just another exit on an endless ribbon of concrete and that it was racist because the black population would bear the brunt of the relocation.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}
After missing the playoffs in their first three seasons, the Mighty Ducks finished [[1996–97 NHL season|1996–97]] fourth in the [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western Conference]], earning home-ice advantage for a first-round playoff series with the [[Phoenix Coyotes]]. The Coyotes initially took a series 3–2 lead, but the Ducks won the last two including Game 7 at home to win their inaugural playoff series. However, Anaheim was swept by the eventual Stanley Cup champion [[Detroit Red Wings]] in the second round. Even though Detroit officially swept the Ducks, every game was close in the series. Three games went into overtime, including one that went into double overtime, and one that went into triple overtime. After a disappointing [[1997–98 NHL season|1998 season]], the [[1998–99 NHL season|next year]] saw the Ducks once again contending for the playoffs. Late in the season, the Ducks had the chance to face the Phoenix Coyotes, a team they played well against that season, in the first round due to Phoenix holding fourth seed and the Ducks holding fifth. But a late season cold streak dropped the Ducks to sixth seed and had face the third seed Red Wings, whom they did not play well against. Once again, the Ducks lost in four to the Red Wings, this time in a more convincing manner than in 1997 ending with a 3–0 loss on home ice, this time in the Western Quarterfinals.


Federal transportation secretary [[John Volpe]] stalled for months at the decision on the routing of Interstate 64 through [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]]. By late 1971, however, the final decision was made to route the interstate through the Triangle District. The Triangle Improvement Council fought the decision for the downtown routing and took its case all the way to the [[U.S. Supreme Court]]. They failed however, as they had no basis for their case.{{Fact|date=July 2007}} Construction began in September 1971, cutting away parts of 14 mountains and demolishing over 1,000 homes on the south banks of the [[Kanawha River]].{{Fact|date=July 2007}} [[West Virginia Route 14|WV 14]] and other roads were relocated. The Fort Hill project, named so because of the mountain that lies near the massive [[US 119]] interchange, became one of the largest earth-moving projects on the North American continent up to that point and one of the biggest changes that [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] has ever known.
After a three-year playoff hiatus, Anaheim qualified for the [[2003 Stanley Cup Playoffs]]. For the third straight post-season in which they participated, the Mighty Ducks met the defending Stanley Cup champion Red Wings. This time, however, Anaheim shocked the hockey world as they swept Detroit in the series with Rucchin's series-clincher on [[Curtis Joseph]] coming in overtime of Game 4. The Ducks would then defeat the #1-seeded [[Dallas Stars]] in six games in the Conference Semifinals, which was noted for Game 1 being the fourth longest game in NHL history, with the Ducks winning in the fifth overtime period thanks to Petr Sykora. In the Conference Finals, the Ducks would make quick work of the upstart [[Minnesota Wild]] (only allowing one goal the entire series) to earn their first-ever Western Conference championship and berth in the Stanley Cup Finals.


* 1971: (Uses [[Interstate 77]] mileage.) Construction began for the connection between the [[Interstate 77]]/64 interchange at Exit 101 (MP 101.64) to Exit 96 (MP 95.87)<ref name="RDR"/>.
The [[2003 Stanley Cup Finals]] against the [[New Jersey Devils]] was a battle between two elite goaltenders, [[Martin Brodeur]] for New Jersey and [[Jean-Sébastien Giguère|Jean-Sebastien Giguere]] for Anaheim. It was also noted for two brothers, [[Rob Niedermayer]] for the Ducks, and his older brother [[Scott Niedermayer]] for the Devils, competing for the same prize. Quite possibly the most remembered moment of the series, Game 6 saw Paul Kariya on the wrong side of a fierce body check from New Jersey captain [[Scott Stevens]]. Kariya was knocked out and sent to the dressing room. But eleven minutes later, Kariya returned from the dressing room and scored the game winning goal to help the Ducks tie the series at three games apiece. Anaheim could not complete their [[Cinderella (sports)|Cinderella]] run, though, as they lost a hard-fought Stanley Cup Final in seven games to the Devils. For his fine play during the post-season, Ducks goaltender Jean Sebastien Giguere won the [[Conn Smythe Trophy]] as [[Most Valuable Player]] of the playoffs. He became only the fifth player, and fourth goaltender, in NHL history to have won the trophy as a member of the losing team.


* 1974: Interstate 64 opened to traffic from milepost 52.40, two miles east of Exit 50 at [[Institute, West Virginia|Institute]] to Exit 55 (milepost 55.45). This included the construction of an interchange at milepost 54 for [[US 60]] and [[West Virginia Route 601|WV 601]] and a second [[Kanawha River]] span. When the river crossing was completed, it was one of the largest steel girder bridges in the United States at the time. Also, [[Interstate 77]]/64 opened from Exit 100 (MP 100.16) to Exit 99 (MP 99.12)<ref name="RDR"/>.
====Disappointment====
After losing Paul Kariya to the [[Colorado Avalanche]] (he joined Selanne, who also signed with Colorado after two seasons with the [[San Jose Sharks]]) via [[free agency]] shortly after the season ended, the Ducks signed star [[Sergei Fedorov]] from [[Detroit]] and [[Vaclav Prospal]] from [[Tampa Bay]]. Still, [[2003–04 NHL season|2004]] was a major disappointment for the Ducks as they missed the playoffs completely, and suffered low attendance figures despite their magical playoff run of the previous year.


* 1975: Interstate 64 was completed to [[Interstate 77]] which included the [[US 119]] Fort Hill interchange (Exit 58A) at milepost 57.48. This segment also involved the construction of the third [[Kanawha River]] span, Exits 58B and 58C and the [[Interstate 77]] junction at milepost 58.78. This three-level junction spans local streets and is the largest interchange in [[West Virginia]] with piers embedded in buildings, over water and over nearby streets. This also included the viaduct over the Triangle District<ref name="RDR"/>.
===2004-Present: The Samueli Era===
[[Image:Anaheim-alternate.PNG|thumb|right|150px|Mighty Ducks alternate logo (2004–06).]]
During the summer of 2004, as the NHL and the [[NHL Players Association]]'s labor dispute was headed towards a long [[2004–05 NHL lockout|lockout]], Disney tried to sell the team but received a low offer of $40-million US, less than the franchise's original price. In 2005, [[Broadcom]] co-founder [[Henry Samueli]] of [[Irvine, California]] and his wife, Susan, bought the Mighty Ducks from The Walt Disney Company for a reported $75 million (USD). The Samuelis have pledged to keep the team in Anaheim, much as [[Arturo Moreno]] did when he purchased the [[Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim|Anaheim Angels]] from Disney. [[Brian Burke (executive)|Brian Burke]], former [[Vancouver Canucks]] General Manager and President, was appointed GM and Executive Vice-President of the Mighty Ducks on [[June 20]], [[2005]].


* 1976: [[Interstate 77]]/64 opened from Exit 96 (MP 95.87) to the northern terminus of the [[West Virginia Turnpike]] at milepost 99.12 (Exit 99). The interstate concurrency was opened to traffic from Exit 100 (MP 100.16) to Exit 101 (MP 101.64). This completed the last segment of interstate within [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] city limits<ref name="RDR"/>.
On [[August 1]], [[2005]], former [[Norris Trophy]]-winning defenceman [[Randy Carlyle]] was hired as the seventh coach in team history. Burke was familiar with Carlyle's coaching ability, as the latter had coached the [[Manitoba Moose]] from 1996–2001 ([[International Hockey League (1945–2001)|International Hockey League]]) and 2004–05 ([[American Hockey League]]); the Moose had been the Canucks' farm club since 2001. Carlyle replaced [[Mike Babcock]], who left the Ducks to coach the Red Wings. Also during that summer, the Mighty Ducks brought back former star and fan favorite Teemu Selanne, and made their first big free-agency splash under Burke when he signed defenceman [[Scott Niedermayer]], the 2004 [[Norris Trophy]] winner and older brother of Ducks forward [[Rob Niedermayer|Rob]], to a four-year contract, from New Jersey.


=== Charleston east to Virginia ===
The [[2005–06 NHL season|2005–06]] season saw the Ducks trade away big-name players with big contracts such as [[Petr Sykora]] and [[Sergei Fedorov]] in favor of younger players such as [[Ryan Getzlaf]], [[Corey Perry]], [[Chris Kunitz]], and [[Joffrey Lupul]]. The Ducks had a rough start to season, but the plan was ultimately successful; the Ducks became one of the best teams in the league down the stretch and ended up the sixth seed in the West. In an interesting playoff where the bottom 4 seeds knocked off the top 4 seeds, The Ducks beat the heavily favored [[Calgary Flames]] in seven games and [[Colorado Avalanche]] in a sweep on a run through the playoffs, only to be stopped in the conference finals by the [[Edmonton Oilers]] in five games, who had swept the Ducks in the regular season series. The team banked on its youth again, seeing Lupul, Getzlaf, Kunitz, and [[Ilya Bryzgalov]] turn in stellar performances. In fact, Bryzgalov took over the starting job from Giguere during game 5 of the Calgary series and broke Giguere's 2003 record shutout streak.
{{ImageStackRight|300|
[[Image:Interstate 64 Raleigh County.jpg|right|thumb|280px|Interstate 64 at Sandstone Mountain in Raleigh County.]]
[[Image:Interstate 64 West Virginia.jpg|right|thumb|280px|Interstate 64 at Sandstone Mountain in Raleigh County. This is a 7% grade.]]
}}


The alignment of Interstate 64 was to originally parallel [[US 60]] from [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] to the [[Virginia]] state line. This would go through environmentally sensitive areas such as [[Hawk's Nest]] and the [[New River Gorge]] area and might have disrupted the natural beauty and the isolation of the area.
On [[January 26]], [[2006]], the team announced, effective with the 2006–07 season, the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim would change their name to the Anaheim Ducks. This included logo and team color changes which were unveiled at a special ceremony five months later. Many Ducks fans successfully petitioned the Samuelis to keep [[Wildwing]] as the current mascot because of the team's recent success and as a link to the past. Along with the new name, their home ice (the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim) was renamed [[Honda Center]] as [[Arrowhead Water]]'s naming rights had expired.


In 1969, Governor [[Arch Moore]] announced a delay in the construction of Interstate 64 east of [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]]. He concluded that a study needed to be done on whether the highway should run parallel to [[US 60]] east of [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]]. On March 28, 1974, Governor Moore concluded that Interstate 64 would be routed from [[Sam Black Church, West Virginia|Sam Black Church]] almost due west to a junction with the [[West Virginia Turnpike]] (I-77) near [[Beckley, West Virginia|Beckley]], rather than following the U.S. 60 alignment as initially proposed. From that point, I-64 was concurrent with the northern portion of an upgraded West Virginia Turnpike to reach the Charleston area. This section of I-64 is the only portion in West Virginia which is a [[toll road]].
====2006–07: The Stanley Cup arrives in Anaheim====
{{wikinews|Portal:Hockey/2007 Stanley Cup|2007 Stanley Cup}}
On [[July 3]], [[2006]], the Ducks traded young sniper Lupul, defenceman prospect [[Ladislav Smid]], a 2007 first-round draft pick, a second-round choice in 2008, and a conditional first-round selection in 2008 to the [[Edmonton Oilers]] in exchange for star defenceman [[Chris Pronger]], who had publicly requested a trade from the Oilers ten days earlier citing personal reasons, with many speculating that his wife was unhappy living in Edmonton.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}


In 1971, Interstate 64 was completed from [[West Virginia Route 12|WV 12]] (MP 161.46) to the [[Virginia]] state line at MP 184.02. This included six interchanges Exit 161 for [[West Virginia Route 12|WV 12]], Exit 169 for [[US 219]] and [[Lewisburg, West Virginia|Lewisburg]], Exit 175 for [[US 60]] for [[White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia|White Sulphur Springs]], Exit 181 for [[US 60]] (WB only), and for [[West Virginia Route 311|WV 311]] (EB only) at Exit 183. It was extended westward to Exit 156 (MP 155.98) at [[Sam Black Church, West Virginia|Sam Black Church]] in 1973<ref name="RDR"/>.
Picked by some publications as a favorite to win the Cup<ref>{{Citation|newspaper=The Hockey News|date=[[October 2]], [[2006]]}}</ref>, the Ducks started the [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07 season]] on fire. On [[November 9]], [[2006]], the Ducks defeated the [[Vancouver Canucks]] 6–0 at [[General Motors Place]] in [[Vancouver]], [[British Columbia]] to improve their season record to 12–0–4. The win set an [[National Hockey League|NHL]] open era record by remaining undefeated in regulation for the first 16 games of the season, eclipsing the previous mark set by the [[1983–84 NHL season|1983–84]] Edmonton Oilers. They were subsequently shut out by the Flames the following game, 3–0, ending their streak. On [[December 12]], the Ducks defeated the [[Florida Panthers]] on the road 5–4. They broke a franchise record for their sixth road win in a row. They also improved their record that night to 24–3–6 and 54 points. No team having played 33 games had reached 54 points since the 1979 Philadelphia Flyers. The next night, the Ducks beat the [[Atlanta Thrashers]] to improve their road record to 12–1–2. The 26 points set the NHL mark for the most points on the road through 15 games. The previous record-holders, 1951–52 [[Detroit Red Wings]] had 25 points (10–0–5).


The final segment of Interstate 64 to be completed was between [[Sam Black Church, West Virginia|Sam Black Church]] and the [[West Virginia Turnpike]] near [[Beckley, West Virginia|Beckley]]<ref name="RDR"/>. This revised interstate alignment traverses through an entirely rural area with extremely rugged terrain. Opened in 1988, this final portion is 38-miles long and cost approximately $300 million to construct, making it one of the most expensive segments of interstate highway in the United States at $7.8 million per mile. It has some extremely rugged terrain, with one segment boasting a 7% [[Grade (slope)|grade]] downhill eastbound for seven miles at Sandstone Mountain. Anticipating loss of braking situations, two [[emergency truck escape ramp]]s were built to be used by runaway trucks. These emergency ramps were used with such frequency that, in addition to large warning signs alerting truckers to the steep grade, a special truck speed advisory system was installed to automatically weigh each truck and indicate the speed at which it should begin the downhill section.
On [[January 16]], [[2007]] the Ducks played in their franchise's 1000th regular season game [http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?service=page&page=Recap&seas=20062007&gtype=2&gnum=695], and on [[March 11]], the Ducks recorded their franchise's 1000th point with a 4–2 win over the [[Vancouver Canucks]], which improved their franchise all-time record to 423–444–155, 1001 points [http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?service=page&page=Recap&gameNumber=1034&season=20062007&gameType=2]. On [[April 7]], the Ducks won their first Pacific Division title in franchise history, when the Vancouver Canucks defeated the second-place [[San Jose Sharks]] at [[HP Pavilion (sports arena)|HP Pavilion]] in the Sharks' final game of the season. Anaheim also played their last game of the [[2006–07 NHL season]] that day against the [[Columbus Blue Jackets]]. Anaheim won the game 4–3, finishing off the season with a total of 110 points—the first 100-point season in franchise history. This was good enough for the fourth-best record in the league (behind [[Buffalo Sabres|Buffalo]], Detroit and [[Nashville Predators|Nashville]]). Although they had three fewer wins than the Predators, the Ducks were seeded second in the Western Conference playoffs by virtue of their division title.


Even with careful adherence to reduced speeds for truckers, the journey from [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] to [[Lewisburg, West Virginia|Lewisburg]] is far quicker and far safer on I-64 than the older routing via U.S. 60, much of which winds through the mountains as the [[Midland Trail (West Virginia)|Midland Trail]], a two-lane scenic byway, passing through hamlets such as [[Rainelle, West Virginia|Rainelle]] and [[Ansted, West Virginia|Ansted]].
In the Western Conference quarter finals, the Ducks once again met the [[Minnesota Wild]] and defeated them 4 games to 1. Next up was the [[Vancouver Canucks]], the Northwest Division champions, whom they also defeated 4 games to 1. They faced the Red Wings in the Western Conference Finals, winning 4 games to 2. A 4–3 win on May 22 at [[Honda Center]] gave the Ducks their second Western Conference title, and placed them in the Stanley Cup Finals for the second time. This time, they faced off against the [[Ottawa Senators]], and on June 6, the Ducks defeated the Senators 6–2 at Honda Center to claim their first [[Stanley Cup]] in franchise history. The Ducks became the first California team, and the first west coast team since the 1925 [[Victoria Cougars]] to win the [[Stanley Cup]], the only national championship trophy that had eluded the [[Greater Los Angeles]] area.


The [[New River (Kanawha River)|New River]] crossing is at milepost 137 atop the [[Robert C. Byrd]] Bridge; Byrd, as a U.S. Senator from [[West Virginia]], pushed for the substantial funds required to complete Interstate 64. The highway also traverses through a wildlife refuge and marsh near milepost 154.
The playoffs came with much controversy, though. The Ducks had players suspended in three of the four rounds, starting with [[Brad May]]'s suspension for three games in the series against the [[Minnesota Wild]] when he punched the Wild's [[Kim Johnsson]]. [[Chris Pronger]] was suspended for one game twice; once against the [[Detroit Red Wings]] for checking [[Tomas Holmstrom]] high, and then once more for elbowing [[Dean McAmmond]] of the [[Ottawa Senators]] in the [[2007 Stanley Cup Final|Finals]].


=== Huntington's inaccessibility ===
[[Image:Stanley Cup Ducks and Bush.jpg|right|thumb|The champion Ducks present U.S. President [[George W. Bush]] with a jersey]]
The difficulty of reaching downtown [[Huntington, West Virginia|Huntington]] from Interstate 64 was quite evident since the highway's opening in the early-1960s. When the highway was first proposed in the late-1950s, Interstate 64 was originally to be led into the city of [[Huntington, West Virginia|Huntington]] and cross much of the city on a viaduct similar to [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]]'s. When the interstate was completed on the outskirts of the city instead, other means of shuttling people to and from the interstate and downtown were needed. A plan was devised that would radically reshape the city's major roadways. Two new underpasses would be constructed to carry traffic under the CSX railroad tracks that bisect the city -- one at 15th Street and the other at 5th Street. The original intent was to pair a new and widened 15th Street with Hal Greer Blvd. ([[West Virginia Route 10|WV 10]] (they parallel each other) and its existing underpass, and make each a flow in one direction. The plan also goes on to state that the curves on 5th Street Road would be straightened out and a wider bridge to be constructed at Four Pole Creek at Ritter Park. 5th Street from the bridge to the future underpass would be widened as well.
After winning the Stanley Cup, two star players, defenceman [[Scott Niedermayer]] and right winger [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]] stated that they were unsure whether or not the would return to the team for the 07/08 season as they both felt the need to contemplate retirement. Neidermayer returned in December 07. As a result of this indecision Burke was active in the Free Agent market signing two veteran players in high scoring defenceman [[Mathieu Schneider]] and gritty forward [[Todd Bertuzzi]] to 2 year contracts to replace Niedermayer and Selanne if they were to retire. Later on, Oilers GM [[Kevin Lowe]] signed Dustin Penner to an offer sheet that would pay him 4.25 million a year over the next five. Burke called out Lowe, saying 'it was a classless move made by a desperate GM trying to save his job.'{{Fact|date=September 2007}} He did not match the offer. In return, the Ducks received the Oiler's 1st, 2nd and 3rd round draft picks. Later that summer he signed backup defenceman [[Joe DiPenta]] to a one year contract along with re-signing the gritty team leader [[Brad May]].


This never happened in full terms as money was in short supply. It would have been expensive to construct all segments of the plan. [[NIMBY]]ism was also prevalent, as many residents complained it would destroy the quiet, residential neighborhood appeal.
====2007–08 season: Defending the Cup====
The Ducks began their Cup defense against the Kings for a two game set in London, England, without [[Scott Niedermayer]] and [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]], who were pondering over decision to continue playing hockey at the time, and injured [[Samuel Påhlsson|Samuel Pahlsson]] and [[Jean-Sébastien Giguère|J. S. Giguere]], splitting the series. On October 10, against the [[Boston Bruins]], the Ducks raised their Pacific Division, Western Conference and Stanley Cup Champion banners. It was a rough start overall for the Ducks as they made minor trades to try and tread water. The Ducks let backup goalie [[Ilya Bryzgalov]] go on waivers, where he was picked up by the [[Phoenix Coyotes]].


Part of the plan was completed, however, in the early-1960s along Hal Greer Blvd. ([[West Virginia Route 10|WV 10]]). Proceeding southbound, Hal Greer Blvd. would use two 90-degree turns and use part of 15th Street as a four-lane one-way road. This would have been the southern end of the new 15th Street that was never fully constructed. Work began on March 19, 2003 to remove the dogleg as it appears the plan to add new underpasses and truly widen 15th Street will never be completed.
The drama surrounding Niedermayer finally brought positive news for the Ducks, as GM Brian Burke declared he would return on December 5th. December 14, 2007, marked an important event in Ducks history, as Brian Burke dealt center [[Andy McDonald]] to the St. Louis Blues in exchange for [[Doug Weight]], [[Michal Birner]], and the Blues 7th round draft pick in order to clear salary cap issues. On December 16, 2007 Niedermayer made his return to Anaheim, playing his first game back with the team. The team immediately improved and got back into the playoff and Pacific Division pictures. For the All-Star game, [[Ryan Getzlaf]] and [[Chris Pronger]] were selected to participate. Later [[Corey Perry]] and [[Scott Niedermayer]] were listed as injury replacements. It was a club record for players in an All-Star game.


=== Continuing improvements ===
The Ducks would receive more good news on January 28, 2008, as [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]] signed a one year contract with the Ducks and would finish out the 2007–08 season with them. The Ducks would win nine out of their first ten games with Selanne in the line-up. At the trade deadline the Ducks acquired defenseman Marc-Andre Bergeron from the New York Islanders and J.S. Aubin from the Kings. With nine games to go in the regular season Chris Pronger would be suspended for eight of them for stomping on the leg of Ryan Kesler of the Vancouver Canucks. The Ducks finished fourth in the Western Conference and began their defense of the Cup against division rival Dallas. On April 20, 2008, the [[Dallas Stars]] won Game 6 of the series 4–1, thus ending the Ducks' chance of a repeat Cup.
Continuing improvements and new interchanges were discussed throughout the 1990s and 2000s.


* In 2001, a new interchange opened for the [[West Virginia Route 193|Merritts Creek Connector]] at [[Barboursville, West Virginia|Barboursville]]. Exit 18 serves a new four-lane highway that links [[US 60]] and [[West Virginia Route 2|WV 2]] together.
==Team colors and mascot==
===Logos===
The Ducks' logo features a webbed foot forming a "D" followed by the other letters in the word "Ducks" in upper-case letters. The text itself is gold (which sometimes may appear as bronze as well) with orange and black accents (forming a [[Three-dimensional space|three dimensional]] appearance). The entire logo is in turn outlined by white. The city of Anaheim's name appears in smaller upper-case print, above the team name. The Ducks are one of three NHL teams to feature their team name spelled out in a scripted form on the front of their jersey rather than a logo. The [[New York Rangers]] and the [[Washington Capitals]] are the other two. This does not include alternate jerseys or throwback jerseys worn by other teams.


* In 2002, cable median barriers were installed from milepost 6 to milepost 15 as a stopgap measure. These new barriers, installed for $2 million, required the regradeing of the median and upgrades to the drainage system. These new protective devices have proved to be worthwhile, preventing many crossover accidents which have plagued the highway since the 1990s, mostly attributed to an increase in traffic on the overburdened interstate highway. This cable barrier system was extended to Exit 28 at [[Milton, West Virginia|Milton]] in 2005 and future measures will ensure that the rest of the interstate highway system in [[West Virginia]], where a depressed grassy median of similar width exists, will receive one.
The old logo of the Ducks prior to the name change featured an old-style goaltender mask, shaped to form the appearance of a duck bill. Behind the mask are two intersecting hockey sticks, a black circle and a triangle (the color of the triangle is either green or gray, depending on how the logo is used).


* Aging roadbeds and bridges are of large concern to the Department of Highways. Many interstate highway spans are approaching the end of their useful life span, several nearing forty-years of age. One such span in the [[Huntington, West Virginia|Huntington]] metro area shows significant signs of deterioration. The Hal Greer Blvd./[[West Virginia Route 10|WV 10]] crossings, approaching 40 years of life, have decayed to the point where regular maintaince is needed. A three-foot by three-foot segment of the westbound bridge collapsed in early 2002 after a harsh winter, for example, and this only highlights the problems being experienced on the original Interstate 64 spans. The two spans at Hal Greer Blvd. are slated to be replaced with a new wider crossing in the near future.
===Jerseys===
The Ducks have officially worn two unique regular jerseys and three unique third jerseys in their franchise history:


* In 2003, demolition of the West Pea Ridge Road overpass began. The bridge, built in 1961, utilized steel girders and had become deteriorated over the years and was replaced with prestressed concrete beams. Construction was completed in late-2004.
====Original Mighty Ducks Jerseys====
[[Image:MightyDucksJerseys.png|thumb|300px|Mighty Ducks of Anaheim jerseys: 1993-2006.]]
The original jerseys of the Ducks (then the Mighty Ducks) used jade, aubergine (eggplant), white and gray as primary colors for both the home and away jerseys. The team's dark jerseys were dominantly eggplant in color with diagonal gray and white stripes; the jersey is jade below the stripes, which appear on the arms and waist. The white jerseys were similar, except that the eggplant is replaced mainly with white. On the shoulders of both jerseys are patches featuring a forward-facing version of the main logo's "duck mask," surrounded by a circle reading "Mighty Ducks of Anaheim."


* Other notable recent projects:
====Ducks jerseys after 2006====
** Darnell Road Bridge replacement. This is just west of the [[Barboursville, West Virginia|Barboursville]]/[[US 60]] interchagne at milepost 15. The four-lane span is being replaced with a six-lane crossing at a cost of $7.5 million. It was completed in mid-2006.
[[Image:Anaheimducksjerseys.png|thumb|300px|Anaheim Ducks jerseys: 2006-2007.]]
** The Hubbard Branch overpass near milepost two was replaced in 2005.
About a year after the team was purchased from the Walt Disney Company by the Samuelis, [[Brian Burke (ice hockey)|Brian Burke]] initiated a name change dropping the "Mighty", after consultation with the fans showed that the typical fan had a willingness to update the "Mighty Ducks" name and jersey and also a desire to keep part of the traditions of the franchise. Burke sought inspiration for the jersey from the [[United States Military Academy]]{{Fact|date=June 2007}}, ending up with diagonal gold, white, black and orange stripes down the arms and waist with the word "Ducks" on the front. The jersey is similar to the team's most recent third jersey prior to the name change. The orange pays tribute to [[Orange County, California|Orange County]]<ref name=orangecolor>Anaheim Ducks. ''Anaheim Ducks 2006–2007 Media Guide''. Anaheim, California: Ben Franklin Press, 2006. Page 41.</ref>, where Anaheim is located.
** The Edgewood Drive overpass near milepost three and the 19th Street overpass near milepost 5.5 and Exit 6 was replaced in 2006.
** The Crossroads underpass to tunnel conversion was completed in 2006 at milepost 12.
** The second [[Kanawha River]] crossing between [[Dunbar, West Virginia|Dunbar]] and [[South Charleston, West Virginia|South Charleston]] is being twinned. In 2005, construction wrapped up on a new eastbound approach on the north bank of the river. In 2006, construction is wrapping up on the eastbound approach on the south bank. In 2008, the bridge itself is slated to be constructed. When complete, this will tie in with the three-lane segments on both sides of the river.
** The $5 million [[Milton, West Virginia|Milton]] interchange project at milepost 28 is slated to begin in 2007.
** The new [[US 35]] interchange in Teays Valley is being constructed. Work began in 2003 at a pseudo-flyover-diamond interchange variant. The new [[US 35]] corridor route will extend from Interstate 64 at Teays Valley to [[Henderson, West Virginia|Henderson]].


The state's long-term construction forecast, for a six-lane interstate from milepost 6 at [[Huntington, West Virginia|West Huntington]] to [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] and bridge replacements west of milepost 6 to the [[Kentucky]] state line will take 30 years to complete at present funding levels and cost more than $325 million.
The Ducks are not the first team from Southern California to win a title in the same year as a major uniform change. The [[Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim|Anaheim Angels]] won the [[2002 World Series]] the same year that they changed to their current red-and-white uniforms.
* Widening began on a segment from [[Nitro, West Virginia|Nitro]] to [[Dunbar, West Virginia|Dunbar]] in 2001 and was completed in 2004.
[[Image:Anaheim-ducks-07-jerseys.jpg|left|thumb|200px|2007-08 jerseys]]
* A small three-lane widening segment began in 2003 and was finished in 2004 near Teays Valley from mileposts 39 to 42.


==Miscellanea==
====2007–08 jerseys====
* Tolls are still collected on the portion of Interstate 64 which is shared with [[Interstate 77]] on the [[West Virginia Turnpike]] between [[Beckley, West Virginia|Beckley]] and [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]].


* The terrain near [[Charleston, West Virginia|Charleston]] results in the highway crossing the [[Kanawha River]] on major bridges no less than ''four times''.
For the 2007–08 NHL season, the Ducks, like all NHL teams, changed over to new Rbk Edge jerseys. The new Jersey shows only minor modifications from 2006–07, including a small NHL crest just below the neck. There are no third jerseys for this season.


* Exit 20, the main road to the Huntington Mall and its associated developments along with [[US 60]], was originally constructed as a diamond interchange that served [[Ona, West Virginia|Ona]] and US 60. The land surrounding the interchange was entirely rural and would not be developed until 1981 when the Huntington Mall was completed. The diamond interchange configuration was reconstructed into a five ramp partial cloverleaf. Exit 20A served US 60 while Exit 20B was for the Huntington Mall.
====Third jerseys====
** By 2001, development consumed both sides of the interstate. On holiday shopping days, traffic would congest at the interchange and cause major backups on the interstate. In 2001, the [[West Virginia Department of Transportation]] constructed a new ramp, Exit 20A, that would serve [[US 60]] and the west end of the Huntington Mall. The original Exit 20A ramp was removed. Exit 20B was kept, for the most part, in its current position with a left turn lane added that allowed it to serve the east end of the Huntington Mall, Melody Farm Road, and [[US 60]].


* The portion from the Charleston city limits to the Kentucky state line is signed as the "[[Cecil H. Underwood]] Freeway". The portion in the city limits of Charleston is signed as the "Nurse Veteran's Highway".
The [[third jersey]]s of the Mighty Ducks were created in 1995, 1997, and 2003. The 1995 jersey was jade with eggplant and white stripes on the collar and on the end of the sleeves. The logo was of team mascot Wildwing wearing a Mighty Ducks jersey while breaking through a sheet of ice. The jersey was short-lived; because of much criticism, it was retired at the end of the year.


==Exit list==
{| class="wikitable"
{| class=wikitable
!County
!Location
![[Exit number|#]]
!Destinations
!Notes
|-
|-
|[[Wayne County, WV|Wayne]]
! Third Jersey<br>1995–96
|[[Kenova, WV|Kenova]]
! Third Jerseys<br>1997–2000, dark<br>1997–2001, white
|1
! Third Jersey<br>2003–2006
|{{jct|state=WV|US|52|dir1=south|name1=[[WV 75]]|city1=Kenova|city2=Ceredo}}
|West end of US 52 overlap
|-
|-
|rowspan=8|[[Cabell County, WV|Cabell]]
|[[Image:MightyDucksThirdJersey1.png|150px]]
|rowspan=3|[[Huntington, WV|Huntington]]
|[[Image:MightyDucksThirdJerseys2.png|150px]]
|6
|[[Image:MightyDucksThirdJersey3.png|150px]]
|{{jct|state=WV|US|52|dir1=north|city1=West Huntington}}, [[Ironton, OH|Ironton]]
|}
|East end of US 52 overlap

The 1997 third jersey came with a rare fourth jersey partner. The third was a jade-colored jersey with silver and eggplant stripes at the shoulders outlined in thin yellow, and a silver stripe at the bottom. It had the Mighty Ducks logo in the center of the chest. The fourth jersey was much like it. It was white with jade, eggplant, and silver stripes at the shoulders of the jersey, but no bottom stripe. These jerseys saw action until the end of [[1999–2000 NHL season|1999–2000]], when they stopped playing with their third jerseys, and used only the fourth. At the end of [[2000–01 NHL season|2000–01]], the fourth was also retired.

The 2003 third jersey was black with purple and gray stripes at the waist and on the sleeves. It had the alternate script logo of the present Mighty Ducks and old-style laces at the neck, as well as a shoulder patch displaying an interlocking "MD" (for "Mighty Ducks"). The popularity of this jersey amongst fans was so great it replaced the eggplant and jade jersey, serving as the home jersey for the last half of the 2005–06 season and playoffs. It was dropped following the season as the team went to a modified name, new uniforms, and color scheme; however, this popular jersey influenced the design of the new jerseys for 2006-07. It was the only time in the modern NHL days when a mainly black jersey was not worn with black pants, they were purple.

===Mascot===

The official mascot for the Anaheim Ducks is an [[Anthropomorphism|anthropomorphized]] duck by the name of Wild Wing. He has been the team's mascot since its inaugural season, and his name was chosen through fan voting. He wears a Ducks jersey with the number 93 on the back, referring to the year the Ducks became an NHL team.

He regularly descends from the rafters of the arena when making his in-game entrances.<ref>http://www.anaheimducks.com/fanzone/wing.php</ref> In one such descent the rigging that lowered Wild Wing from the rafters malfunctioned leaving the mascot trapped fifty feet above the ice for several minutes. Another well known blunder occurred in October 1995 when Wild Wing, attempting to jump through a "wall of fire", accidentally tripped causing the mascot to land on the fire and set his costume ablaze.<ref>[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/more/news/2003/07/10/mascot_timeline/ SI.com - More Sports - A history of bizarre mascot incidents - Saturday July 12, 2003 01:48 PM<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

His physical appearance is similar to the duck mask in the original Mighty Ducks logo. A bronze statue of Wild Wing is also located outside the team's arena, Honda Center.<ref>[http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/news/atoz/article_1146482.php News: Mallard nests at The Pond - OCRegister.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

The mascot's name was also used for the leader of the Ducks, [[Wildwing Flashblade]], in [[Disney]]'s [[Mighty Ducks]] cartoon series.

During the same time in which the team announced a name change as well as change in jersey designs, there was an attempt by the team's owners to change or replace the mascot, Wild Wing, but was halted after a highly successful petition by fans.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}

== Rivalries ==
=== '''Los Angeles Kings''' ===

Although there is no enmity between the city of [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] and adjacent [[Orange County, California|Orange County]], the [[Los Angeles Kings]] and Anaheim Ducks share an on-ice rivalry due to geographic proximity. The two teams are situated in the same metropolitan area, and share a television market. The rivalry started with the Ducks' inaugural season in 1993–94, and has since continued. As of 2007–08, the Kings and Ducks have never met in the playoffs, nor made the playoffs in the same year.

During regular season (and, to some extent, pre-season) games, Kings fans arrive at [[Honda Center]] in numbers for away games against the Ducks, and vice-versa for Ducks fans at [[Staples Center]], causing any goal by either team to be celebrated just as loud as if the home team scored. Chants in favor of either team are common. Games between the [[Southern California]] crosstown-rivals are often physical and fight-filled. The rivalry was showcased for the NHL Premier in London at the start of the 2007–08 NHL Season with two games between the teams.

=== Detroit Red Wings ===

The rivalry between the Ducks and [[Detroit Red Wings]] has been growing over the years, mainly because of meetings in the playoffs. The Ducks have faced Detroit more than any other team in the playoffs in the Ducks' franchise history.

The Ducks and Red Wings became rivals during the 1997 NHL playoffs, when the two teams met in the Western Conference Semifinals. Detroit swept the Ducks in four very close games, three of which that went into overtime. Detroit would sweep Anaheim again in the first round of the 1999 Playoffs, this time in a more convincing manner.

The two teams would not meet in the playoffs again until the [[2002–03 NHL season|2003]] Playoffs. The Red Wings were the heavy favorite as they were the defending Stanley Cup champions. This time, however, the Ducks shocked the hockey world as they swept the Red Wings in a four-game upset. The Ducks' defeat of the Wings' in the '03 playoffs would set a tone between the two teams.

In the 2007 Western Conference Finals, the Ducks rallied from a 2–1 series deficit and overcame the absence of [[Chris Pronger]], who was suspended for one game, due to his elbow to the head on [[Tomas Holmstrom]] of Detroit in Game 3. Many feel the turning point of this series was the Ducks' 5–3 win over Detroit in Game 4. Game 5 saw Detroit ahead 1–0 and dominate the Ducks for over 59 minutes of play, until Anaheim finally tied the game with under a minute to go in play, and sent it into overtime. The Ducks capitalized on the shocker and won with an overtime goal from [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]], who stole the puck off a turnover in front of a sprawling [[Dominik Hašek|Dominik Hasek]]. This rallied the Ducks to defeat the Wings in Game 6 and win the series.

Other contributing factors for the rivalry include a number of former Red Wings choosing to sign as free agents with the Ducks, including Sergei Fedorov in [[2003–04 NHL season|2003]], and [[Matthieu Schneider]] and [[Todd Bertuzzi]] in [[2007–08 NHL season|2007]]. The presence of Pronger, considered a sports villain by Detroiters dating back to his career in St. Louis, has also contributed to the growth of this nascent rivalry between Western Conference contenders.

=== Edmonton Oilers ===
This rivalry has grown just within the last two years. This particular rivalry is not only fought on the ice but off the ice as well between Burke and Oilers GM Kevin Lowe. It started during the 2006 Western Conference Finals when the eight seeded Oilers, along with Chris Pronger, beat the sixth seeded Ducks in five games to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals.

After the season the Ducks felt they needed one more elite defenceman to make the necessary leap to become the Stanley Cup Champions. So on July 3rd, 2006 the Ducks traded Joffrey Lupul, Ladislav Smid, their 2007 first round draft pick, a 2008 second round pick and a conditional 2008 first round draft pick, if they made it to the finals, for Pronger. The Ducks now had the Oilers virtual MVP during those playoffs and with Pronger went on to win the 2007 Stanley Cup, while the Oilers missed the playoffs altogether. The Oilers then traded Lupul after the season to the Flyers so, in effect, all that remained from that trade was Smid and their 2007 first round draft choice.

After those playoffs the Oilers made an a huge offer to restricted free agent Dustin Penner. Burke called the move "gutless" and claimed Lowe was, "Running his team into the sewer." Naturally Burke didn't match the offer and the Ducks received Edmonton's 2008 first round pick as well as a 2008 second and third round pick. The first game between these two clubs during the 2007–08 season at Honda Center, two retired police officers were placed in between Burke's box and the visiting general managers box just in case there was an incident.

During the 2008 offseason Burke and Lowe once again fired back at one another. Burke said Lowe successfully eliminated the second contract by his signings the previous summer. Lowe said Burke was a "moron" in a "pathetic hockey market" and claimed he was unethical in signing Scott Niedermayer. Lowe also claimed Burke inherited a great team in Anaheim while leaving his previous team, the Vancouver Canucks, in ruins.

=== Other rivalries ===

Some other minor adversaries of the Ducks include the [[San Jose Sharks]] and the [[Dallas Stars]], who both play in the Pacific Division with the Ducks.

The Ducks and Sharks have never met in the playoffs, but most games between the two teams often promise an entertaining game filled with great goaltending, hard checking, and end to end rushes.

The Ducks rivalry with Dallas goes even further, as both teams met twice in the playoffs during their histories. The first playoff meeting with Dallas came in 2003, when the Ducks were en-route to a Cinderella playoff run that would see them only fail in losing the [[Stanley Cup]] to the [[New Jersey Devils]] in a hard-fought seven-game series. The Ducks came in as a seventh-seeded team in the 2003 playoffs, matched up with Dallas in the Western Conference Semifinal. The Ducks posted two dramatic overtime wins in Games 1 and 2 in Dallas, with the former lasting well over five overtime periods before a [[Petr Sykora]] goal wound end the grueling marathon. Games 3 and 4 were in Anaheim, this time with Dallas ending the Ducks' home unbeaten streak with a 2-1 win in Game 3. Game 4 saw a dramatic Ducks win in which Jason Arnott was whistled for a penalty with under 2 minutes to go in regulation. Former Duck [[Mike Leclerc]] sealed the bid on a wrist shot that managed to beat [[Marty Turco]] from a few feet out on an angle from the net. The Ducks won Game 4 by a score of 1-0. Dallas managed to steal Game 5 from the Ducks by a 5-2 score on home ice that saw the Ducks replace [[Jean-Sébastien Giguère|Jean-Sebastien Giguere]] in goal with former backup [[Martin Gerber]]. Game 6 would come back to Anaheim, as the Ducks had a chance to end the series on home ice. Again, the game would end in dramatic fashion as the Ducks held Dallas at bay at a 3-2 score, until [[Stu Barnes]] of Dallas would score a disallowed goal, however Dallas would come back some few minutes later to tie the game. Sandis Ozolinsh scored on a one-timed wristshot from in front of the circle that would beat Marty Turco, and edge the Stars in a nail-biting game, by a final score of 4-3, and a Ducks series win in six games.

In 2008, the two teams met again in the Western Conference Quarterfinals, as the Ducks and Stars finished fourth and fifth, respectively, earning both teams a rendezvous in the first round, with Anaheim in the favor of home-ice advantage. The Ducks came off a Stanley Cup win in 2007, and were favored to win the series, although the Stars boasted a powerful lineup, stacked with trade deadline acquisition [[Brad Richards]] from the [[Tampa Bay Lightning]], and the leadership of veteran [[Mike Modano]], not to mention the blossoming defensive play of [[Stephane Robidas]], and workhorse-like qualities of [[Brenden Morrow]]. The Stars were depleted on defense, as [[Philippe Boucher]] and [[Sergei Zubov]] sat out most of the series nursing injuries. Conversely, the Ducks were without leading scorer [[Corey Perry]], which would hurt the team as the Ducks failed to produce offensively throughout the series. Game 1 saw Dallas get the upper hand, pulling off a stunning opening-game defeat, shutting out the Ducks 4-0 in a game where the Ducks took numerous undisciplined penalties. The Ducks looked to exact revenge for the embarrassing Game 1 loss in Game 2, but failed as Dallas took advantage early, on an offensive zone turnover that resulted in a breakaway goal for [[Mike Ribeiro]]. The Ducks rallied from a 2-0 deficit in the second period on goals from [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]] and [[Travis Moen]] to tie the game at 2, bringing a sold-out Honda Center crowd to their feet. In the third period, however, Dallas took advantage of a Ducks hooking call, and more undisciplined play, closing out the Ducks 5-2 in Game 2. With the Ducks down 2 games to none, tremendous pressure was placed on the Ducks to stay alive in the series. Game 3 would be played in front of a raucous Dallas crowd, only to see the Ducks stay alive by winning 4-2, with the help of two power-play goals from [[Chris Pronger]], goals from [[Todd Marchant]] and Travis Moen, and the goaltending of Giguere. Game 4 though, would again shift in Dallas's favor, as they again exploited the Ducks lack of offense, with goals from [[Joel Lundqvist]], [[Steve Ott]], and [[Stu Barnes]]. [[Mathieu Schneider]]'s goal for the Ducks with about 8 seconds to go proved futile for the Ducks in Game 4, as Dallas won 3-1. The Ducks came back to Anaheim for Game 5 energized, as Corey Perry returned from a laceration in his leg, and got the Ducks on the board with a wristshot that beat Turco five-hole for a 1-0 lead. The Stars played considerably weaker in Game 5, as the Ducks managed to beat Turco, in a game that saw goals from [[Ryan Getzlaf]], Perry, Marchant, Selanne, and [[Sean O'Donnell]]. Game 6 returned to Dallas with hope that the Ducks could rebound, and even the series. All looked well for the Ducks in the second period, as the Ducks got the scoring rolling on a goal from Corey Perry, scoring similarly to the goal he scored in Game 5. However, Dallas again took advantage of a Ducks penalty early in the 3rd, as goals from Robidas, Barnes, [[Loui Eriksson]], and Modano put a dagger in the heart for the Ducks hopes of a repeat in 2008. Dallas won the series in six games.

==Season-by-season record==
''This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Ducks. For the full season-by-season history, see [[List of Anaheim Ducks seasons]].''

'''''Note:''' GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes''

{| class="wikitable"
|- style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;" |
|Season || GP || W || L || T || OTL || Pts || GF || GA || PIM || Finish || Playoffs
|-
|-
|8
| [[2003–04 NHL season|2003–04]] || 82 || 29 || 35 || 10 || 8 || 76 || 184 || 213 || 1131 || 4th, Pacific || Did not qualify
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|152|dir1=south|WV|527|dir2=north|name2=5th Street East}}
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
|
| [[2004–05 NHL season|2004–05]] || colspan="11"| ''Season cancelled due to [[2004–05 NHL lockout]]
|-
|-
|11
| [[2005–06 NHL season|2005–06]] <sup>1</sup> || 82 || 43 || 27 || — || 12 || 98 || 254 || 229 || 1462 || 3rd, Pacific || Lost in Conference Finals, 1–4 ([[Edmonton Oilers|Oilers]])
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|10|name1=Hal Greer Boulevard|city1=Downtown Huntington}}
|- style="font-weight:bold"
|
| [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]] || 82 || 48 || 20 || — || 14 || 110 || 258 || 208 || 1263 || 1st, Pacific || [[Stanley Cup]] Champions, 4–1 ([[Ottawa Senators|Senators]])
|-
|-
|rowspan=4|[[Barboursville, WV|Barboursville]]
|[[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]] || 82 || 47 || 27 || – || 8 || 102 || 205 || 191 || 1465 || 2nd, Pacific || Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 2–4 ([[Dallas Stars|Stars]])
|}
|15
|{{jct|state=WV|US|60|name1=29th Street East}}

|
:<sup>1</sup> <small> As of the [[2005–06 NHL season]], all games will have a winner; the OTL column includes SOL (Shootout losses).</small>

==Current roster==
{{Anaheim Ducks roster}}

==Team and player honors==
[[Image:Jiggy-ducks2-cropped.jpg|thumb|225px|right|[[Jean-Sébastien Giguère|Jean-Sebastien Giguere]], winner of the [[Conn Smythe Trophy]] in 2003.]]
===NHL awards and trophies===
<div style="float:left; width:48%;">
'''[[Stanley Cup]]'''
*[[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]]

'''[[Clarence S. Campbell Bowl]]'''
*[[2002–03 NHL season|2002–03]], [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]]

'''[[Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy]]'''
*[[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]]: [[2005–06 NHL season|2005–06]]

'''[[Conn Smythe Trophy]]'''
*[[Jean-Sébastien Giguère|Jean-Sebastien Giguere]]: [[2002–03 NHL season|2002–03]]
*[[Scott Niedermayer]]: [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]]

'''[[Lady Byng Memorial Trophy]]'''
*[[Paul Kariya]]: [[1995–96 NHL season|1995–96]], [[1996–97 NHL season|1996–97]]

'''[[Rocket Richard Trophy]]'''
*[[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]]: [[1998–99 NHL season|1998–99]]
</div><br clear="all">

===Honored members===
''Hall of Famers'':
*'''[[Jari Kurri]]''' played for the Ducks during the 1996–97 season, and was inducted in 2001.

''Retired Numbers'':
*'''99''' [[Wayne Gretzky]] retired league-wide on [[February 6]], [[2000]].

==Leaders==
[[Image:Snieds-ducks.jpg|thumb|200px|right|[[Scott Niedermayer]], winner of the 2007 Conn Smythe Trophy.]]
===Team captains===
*[[Troy Loney]], 1993–94
*[[Randy Ladouceur]], 1994–96
*[[Paul Kariya]], 1996–2003
*[[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]], 1998
*[[Steve Rucchin]], 2003–04
*No captain, 2004–05 <small>([[2004–05 NHL lockout|Lockout]])</small>
*[[Scott Niedermayer]], 2005–07
*[[Chris Pronger]], 2007- ''present''

===Coaches===
*[[Ron Wilson (ice hockey b. 1955)|Ron Wilson]], 1993–97
*[[Pierre Pagé|Pierre Page]], 1997–98
*[[Craig Hartsburg]], 1998–2000
*[[Guy Charron]], 2000–01
*[[Bryan Murray (ice hockey)|Bryan Murray]], 2001–02
*[[Mike Babcock]], 2002–05
*[[Randy Carlyle]], 2005- ''present''

==First-round draft picks==
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
*[[1993 NHL Entry Draft|1993]]: [[Paul Kariya]] (4th overall)
*[[1994 NHL Entry Draft|1994]]: [[Oleg Tverdovsky]] (2nd overall)
*[[1995 NHL Entry Draft|1995]]: [[Chad Kilger]] (4th overall)
*[[1996 NHL Entry Draft|1996]]: [[Ruslan Salei]] (9th overall)
*[[1997 NHL Entry Draft|1997]]: [[Michael Holmqvist]] (18th overall)
*[[1998 NHL Entry Draft|1998]]: [[Vitaly Vishnevski]] (5th overall)
*[[1999 NHL Entry Draft|1999]]: None
*[[2000 NHL Entry Draft|2000]]: [[Alexei Smirnov (ice hockey)|Alexei Smirnov]] (12th overall)
*[[2001 NHL Entry Draft|2001]]: [[Stanislav Chistov]] (5th overall)
*[[2002 NHL Entry Draft|2002]]: [[Joffrey Lupul]] (7th overall)
*[[2003 NHL Entry Draft|2003]]: [[Ryan Getzlaf]] (19th overall) & [[Corey Perry]] (28th overall)
*[[2004 NHL Entry Draft|2004]]: [[Ladislav Smid]] (9th overall)
*[[2005 NHL Entry Draft|2005]]: [[Bobby Ryan]] (2nd overall)
*[[2006 NHL Entry Draft|2006]]: [[Mark Mitera]] (19th overall)
*[[2007 NHL Entry Draft|2007]]: [[Logan MacMillan]] (19th overall)
*[[2008 NHL Entry Draft|2008]]: [[Jake Gardiner]] (17th overall)
</div>

===1993 expansion draft===
*[[1993 NHL Expansion Draft]]
{| border="1" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" class="wikitable"
|-
|-
|18
! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="9.0%" | #
|{{jct|state=WV|to1=to|US|60|WV|2|name2=[[WV 193]]|city1=Barboursville}}
! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="25.0%" | Player
|
! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="25.0%" | Drafted From
|-
|-
|20A
| 1. (2) || [[Guy Hebert]] (G) || [[St. Louis Blues (hockey)|St. Louis Blues]]
|{{jct|state=WV|to1=to|US|60|road=West Mall Road (CR 160/18)}}
|Eastbound exit only
|-
|-
|20B
| 2. (3) || [[Glenn Healy]] (G) || [[New York Islanders]]
|{{jct|state=WV|CR|60|denom1=89|name1=East Mall Road|to2=to|US|60|city1=Barboursville}}
|Signed as exit 20 westbound
|-
|-
|[[Milton, WV|Milton]]
| 3. (6) || [[Ron Tugnutt]] (G) || [[Edmonton Oilers]]
|28
|{{jct|state=WV|to1=to|US|60|city1=Milton|name1=CR 13}}
|
|-
|-
|rowspan=5|[[Putnam County, WV|Putnam]]
| 4. (7) || [[Alexei Kasatonov]] (D) || [[New Jersey Devils]]
|[[Hurricane, WV|Hurricane]]
|34
|{{jct|state=WV|CR|19|city1=Hurricane}}
|
|-
|-
|
| 5. (8) || [[Sean Hill]] (D) || [[Montreal Canadiens]]
|39
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|34|city1=Teays Valley|city2=Winfield}}
|
|-
|-
|
| 6. (11)|| [[Bill Houlder]] (D) || [[Buffalo Sabres]]
|40
|{{jct|state=WV|US|35|city1=Winfield|city2=Point Pleasant}}
|
|-
|-
|
| 7. (14)|| [[Bobby Dollas]] (D) || [[Detroit Red Wings]]
|44
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|817|city1=St. Albans}}
|
|-
|-
|[[Nitro, WV|Nitro]]
| 8. (16)|| [[Randy Ladouceur]] (D) || [[Hartford Whalers]]
|45
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|25|city1=Nitro}}
|
|-
|-
|rowspan=10|[[Kanawha County, WV|Kanawha]]
| 9. (17)|| [[David Williams (ice hockey)|David Williams]] (D) || [[San Jose Sharks]]
|
|47
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|622|name1=Goff Mountain Road|city1=Cross Lanes}}
|Signed as exits 47A (south) and 47B (north) eastbound
|-
|-
|
| 10. (19)|| [[Dennis Vial]] (D) || [[Tampa Bay Lightning]]
|50
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|25|city1=Institute}}
|
|-
|-
|[[Dunbar, WV|Dunbar]]
| 11. (22)|| [[Mark Ferner]] (D) || [[Ottawa Senators]]
|53
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|25|city1=Dunbar|CR|25|denom2=25|name2=Roxalana Road}}
|
|-
|-
|rowspan=3|[[South Charleston, WV|South Charleston]]
| 12. (23)|| [[Steven King]] (RW) || [[New York Rangers]]
|54
|{{jct|state=WV|US|60|to2=to|WV|601|name1=MacCorkle Avenue|name2=Jefferson Road}}
|
|-
|-
|55
| 13. (26)|| [[Troy Loney]] (LW) || [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]
|{{jct|state=WV|to1=to|WV|601|road=[[Kanawha Turnpike]] (CR 12)}}
|Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
|-
|-
|56
| 14. (28)|| [[Stu Grimson]] (LW) || [[Chicago Blackhawks]]
|Montrose Drive (CR 50/64)
|
|-
|-
|rowspan=4|[[Charleston, WV|Charleston]]
| 15. (29)|| [[Tim Sweeney]] (LW) || [[Boston Bruins]]
|58A
|{{jct|state=WV|US|119|dir1=south|road=Oakwood Road|city1=Logan}}
|West end of US 119 overlap
|-
|-
|58B
| 16. (31)|| [[Terry Yake]] (C) || [[Hartford Whalers]]
|{{jct|state=WV|US|119|dir1=north|road=Virginia Street}} - [[Charleston Civic Center|Civic Center]]
|East end of US 119 overlap; eastbound exit and westbound entrance
|-
|-
|58C
| 17. (34)|| [[Jarrod Skalde]] (C) || [[New Jersey Devils]]
|{{jct|state=WV|US|60|name1=Lee Street, Washington Street}} - [[Charleston Civic Center|Civic Center]]
|
|-
|-
|59
| 18. (36)|| [[Bob Corkum]] (C) || [[Buffalo Sabres]]
|{{jct|state=WV|I|77|dir1=north|to2=to|I|79|city1=Parkersburg}}
|West end of I-77 overlap
|-
|-
!colspan=5|See [[Interstate 77 in West Virginia#Exit list|Interstate 77]]
| 19. (37)|| [[Anatoli Semenov]] (C) || [[Vancouver Canucks]]
|-
|-
|rowspan=5|[[Raleigh County, WV|Raleigh]]
| 20. (39)|| [[Joe Sacco (ice hockey)|Joe Sacco]] (RW) || [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
|
|121
|{{jct|state=WV|I|77|dir1=south|city1=Bluefield}}
|East end of I-77 overlap
|-
|-
|
| 21. (42)|| [[Lonnie Loach]] (LW) || [[Los Angeles Kings]]
|124
|{{jct|state=WV|to1=to|US|19|name1=Eisenhower Drive|city1=Beckley|city2=East Beckley}}
|
|-
|-
|
| 22. (44)|| [[Jim Thomson (ice hockey b. 1965)|Jim Thomson]] (RW) || [[Los Angeles Kings]]
|125
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|307|city1=Beaver|CR|9|denom2=9|name2=Airport Road}}
|Signed as exits 125A (WV 307) and 125B (CR 9/9) eastbound
|-
|-
|
| 23. (45)|| [[Trevor Halverson]] (LW) || [[Washington Capitals]]
|129
|{{jct|state=WV|CR|9|city1=Shady Spring|name1=Grandview Road}}
|Signed as exits 129A (south) and 129B (north) eastbound
|-
|-
|
| 24. (47)|| [[Robin Bawa]] (RW) || [[San Jose Sharks]]
|133
|{{jct|state=WV|CR|27|name1=Pluto Road|city1=Bragg}}
|
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Summers County, WV|Summers]]
|
|139
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|20|city1=Hinton|city2=Sandstone|name1=CR 7}}
|
|-
|
|143
|{{jct|state=WV|to1=to|WV|20|city1=Meadow Bridge|city2=Green Sulphur Springs|name1=CR 4}}
|
|-
|rowspan=7|[[Greenbrier County, WV|Greenbrier]]
|
|150
|{{jct|state=WV|CR|29|denom1=4|city1=Dawson}}
|
|-
|
|156
|{{jct|state=WV|US|60|name1=[[Midland Trail (West Virginia)|Midland Trail]]|city1=Sam Black Church}}
|
|-
|
|161
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|12|city1=Alta}}
|
|-
|[[Lewisburg, WV|Lewisburg]]
|169
|{{jct|state=WV|US|219|city1=Lewisburg|city2=Ronceverte}}
|
|-
|
|175
|{{jct|state=WV|to1=to|US|60|WV|92|city1=White Sulphur Springs|city2=Caldwell|name2=CR 60/14}}
|
|-
|
|181
|{{jct|state=WV|US|60|dir1=west|to2=to|WV|92|city1=White Sulphur Springs}}
|West end of US 60 overlap; westbound exit and eastbound entrance
|-
|
|183
|{{jct|state=WV|WV|311}} - [[Crows, Virginia|Crows]]
|Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
|}
|}


== References ==
==Franchise scoring leaders==
<div class="references-small"><references/>
<!--PLEASE DO NOT UPDATE STATISTICS MID-SEASON, AS IT CREATES MORE PROBLEMS THAN IT SOLVES, AND WIKIPEDIA'S PURPOSE IS NOT TO PROVIDE UP-TO-THE-MINUTE STATISTICS. PLEASE SAVE THE UPDATING OF STATISTICS UNTIL THE END OF THE REGULAR SEASON AND/OR PLAYOFFS.-->
# Cahal, Sherman. "Interstate 64." American Byways. 17 July 2005.
These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.
# Bridge Work Starts 6-Lane I-64. 1 March 2005. Herald Dispatch. 7 April 2005 [http://www.heralddispatch.com/2005/March/01/LNtop1.htm].

# Motorists can expect delays as I-64 bridge project begins. 7 April 2005. Herald Dispatch. 7 April 2005 [http://www.heralddispatch.com/2005/April/07/LNtop2.htm].
'''''Note:''' Pos = Position; GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game; * = current Ducks player''
</div>

<table>
<tr>
<td style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;" align="center">Points</td>
<td style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;text-align=center;" align="center">Goals</td>
<td style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;text-align=center;" align="center">Assists</td>
</tr>
<tr><td>
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;" |
| align="left" | Player || Pos || GP || G || A || Pts || P/G
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]]* || RW || 582 || 325 || 364 || '''689''' || 1.18
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Paul Kariya]] || LW || 606 || 300 || 369 || '''669''' || 1.10
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Steve Rucchin]] || C || 616 || 153 || 279 || '''432''' || .70
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Andy McDonald]] || C || 358 || 88 || 155 || '''243''' || .68
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Matt Cullen]] || C || 427 || 65 || 135 || '''200''' || .47
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Ryan Getzlaf]]* || C || 216 || 63 || 116 || '''179''' || .83
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Oleg Tverdovsky]] || D || 324 || 45 || 125 || '''170''' || .52
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Scott Niedermayer]]* || D || 209 || 36 || 121 || '''157''' || .75
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Chris Kunitz]]* || LW || 251 || 65 || 92 || '''157''' || .63
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Marty McInnis]] || LW || 272 || 57 || 88 || '''145''' || .53
|}
</td>
<td>
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;" |
| align="left" | Player || Pos || G
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]]* || RW || 325
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Paul Kariya]] || LW || 300
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Steve Rucchin]] || C || 153
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Andy McDonald]] || C || 92
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Matt Cullen]] || C || 65
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Chris Kunitz]]* || LW || 65
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Petr Sykora]] || RW || 64
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Ryan Getzlaf]]* || C || 63
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Joe Sacco]] || LW || 62
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Corey Perry]]* || RW || 59
|}
</td>
<td>
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;" |
| align="left" | Player || Pos || A
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Paul Kariya]] || LW || 369
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]]* || RW || 364
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Steve Rucchin]] || C || 279
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Andy McDonald]] || C || 167
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Matt Cullen]] || C || 135
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Oleg Tverdovsky]] || D || 125
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Scott Niedermayer]]* || D || 121
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Ryan Getzlaf]]* || C || 116
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Chris Kunitz]]* || LW || 92
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Fredrik Olausson]] || D || 90
|}
</td>
</tr>
</table>

==Franchise individual records==
*Most goals in a season: [[Teemu Selänne|Teemu Selanne]], 52 (1997–98)
*Most assists in a season: [[Paul Kariya]], 62 (1998–99)
*Most points in a season: Teemu Selanne, 109 (1996–97)
*Most penalty minutes in a season: [[Todd Ewen]], 285 (1995–96)
*Most points in a season, defenceman: [[Scott Niedermayer]], 69 (2006–07)
*Most points in a season, rookie: [[Dustin Penner]], 45 (2006–07)
*Most wins in a season: [[Jean-Sébastien Giguère|Jean-Sebastien Giguere]], 36 (2006–07)
*Most shutouts in a season: Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 8 (2002–03)

==Broadcasters==
*[[John Ahlers]] TV play-by-Play
*[[Brian Hayward]] TV color analyst
*[[Steve Carroll]] Radio play-by-Play
*[[Brent Severyn]] Radio color analyst

==References==
{{reflist}}

==See also==
*[[List of NHL players]]
*[[List of NHL seasons]]

==External links==
*[http://www.anaheimducks.com/ Official website of the Anaheim Ducks]
*[http://www.allduckswiki.info/ Anaheim Ducks Wiki]

{{commons|Anaheim Ducks}}
{{Navboxes|titlestyle=background:black;color:#F47937|list1=
<span/>
{{start box}}
{{succession box | before = [[Carolina Hurricanes]] | title = [[Stanley Cup]] Champions | years = [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]] | after = [[Detroit Red Wings]]}}
{{end box}}

{{Anaheim Ducks}}
{{NHL}}
{{Greater Los Angeles Area Sports}}
}}


{{state detail page browse|type=I|route=64|state=West Virginia|statebefore=Kentucky|stateafter=Virginia}}
[[Category:Anaheim Ducks| ]]
[[Category:Sports clubs established in 1993]]
[[Category:The Mighty Ducks]]
[[Category:Sports in Los Angeles, California]]
[[Category:Sports in Anaheim, California]]
[[Category:Ice hockey teams in California]]


[[Category:Interstate Highways in West Virginia|64]]
[[be-x-old:Анахайм Дакс]]
[[Category:Charleston, West Virginia]]
[[bg:Анахайм Дъкс]]
[[cs:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[da:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[de:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[et:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[fa:آناهایم داکس]]
[[fr:Ducks d'Anaheim]]
[[hr:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[id:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[it:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[he:אנהיים דאקס]]
[[lv:Anaheimas "Ducks"]]
[[lt:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[nl:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[ja:アナハイム・ダックス]]
[[no:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[pl:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[pt:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[ru:Анахайм Дакс]]
[[simple:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[sk:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[sh:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[fi:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[sv:Anaheim Ducks]]
[[uk:Анагайм Дакс]]
[[zh:安那翰鴨]]

Revision as of 16:39, 11 October 2008

Interstate 64 marker

Interstate 64

Route information
Maintained by WVDOH
NHSEntire route
Location
CountryUnited States
StateWest Virginia
Highway system

Interstate 64 travels for 184 miles within the state of West Virginia, passing by the major towns and cities of Huntington, Charleston, Beckley, and Lewisburg. It has only two major junctions within the state: Interstate 77 in Charleston and in Beckley.

History

Early beginnings

The first interstate highway segment to be let to construction was in Cabell County in 1957. This segment, from US 60 (milepost 15) to Ona (milepost 20) was completed in 1960 [1].

In 1962, a lengthy segment from Exit 28 at Milton to just west of Exit 44 was opened to traffic[1]. This included interchanges 34 and 39. One year later, Interstate 64 was completed to Exit 44, serving originally WV 17, now US 35 near St. Albans.

In 1964, an 8-mile segment of interstate opened from Exit 20 at Ona to Exit 28 at Milton[1].

1965 saw the completion of a major part of Interstate 64. A lengthy segment opened from the Kentucky state line (milepost 0) to Exit 15 at Barboursville[1]. This consisted of four interchanges: Kenova and Ceredo at milepost 1, the West Huntington Expressway (WV 94, later US 52) at milepost six, US 52 and downtown Huntington (later WV 152/WV 527) at milepost eight, and Hal Greer Blvd. and WV 10 at milepost 10. Two steel-girder bridges were completed over the Big Sandy River connecting Kentucky to West Virginia. That bridge was replaced in 2000 in a reconstruction effort that raised the bridge level and replaced deteriorating bridge girders.

In 1966, the first Kanawha River crossing was completed with new interstate mainlines extending from Exit 44 near St. Albans to Exit 50 at Institute under four contracts[1]. This included three new interchanges: Nitro at milepost 45, Cross Lanes at milepost 47 and Institute at milepost 50. One year later, Interstate 64 was extended eastward to Dunbar at milepost 52.40 with a new interchange constructed at that location. For six years, the interstate would end just outside of Charleston's borders.

Charleston's routing troubles

Template:ImageStackRight Planning for the routing of Interstate 64, as well as for Interstate 77 and Interstate 79 through Charleston, was embroiled in controversy since the 1950s. Several alignments were considered which included a northern arc around the Charleston metro area, a downtown route and a southern arc south of South Charleston.

The mayor at the time, John Shanklin, mayor for eight years from 1959 to 1967, was originally a strong opponent of any interstate highway going through the center of the city. Shanklin reversed his decision soon after, stated that Charleston can adjust to the impact and that it will eventually become a "great thing."

In 1971, the city and many residents were swimming in controversy over the routings of the interstate highways. The long planned interstates through West Virginia were either to run directly through the city center or skirt it.

The plan was to bring Interstate 64 through the Triangle District, just west of the downtown center, an urban blight where many of the city's black population lived. Home to the city's highest crime rates where shootings daily were common; it was referred to as the "Red Light District." Urban renewals in the past had failed. Residents living in the Triangle District formed committees and rebelled. They called the highway routing foolish because it wanted to make Charleston just another exit on an endless ribbon of concrete and that it was racist because the black population would bear the brunt of the relocation.[citation needed]

Federal transportation secretary John Volpe stalled for months at the decision on the routing of Interstate 64 through Charleston. By late 1971, however, the final decision was made to route the interstate through the Triangle District. The Triangle Improvement Council fought the decision for the downtown routing and took its case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. They failed however, as they had no basis for their case.[citation needed] Construction began in September 1971, cutting away parts of 14 mountains and demolishing over 1,000 homes on the south banks of the Kanawha River.[citation needed] WV 14 and other roads were relocated. The Fort Hill project, named so because of the mountain that lies near the massive US 119 interchange, became one of the largest earth-moving projects on the North American continent up to that point and one of the biggest changes that Charleston has ever known.

  • 1971: (Uses Interstate 77 mileage.) Construction began for the connection between the Interstate 77/64 interchange at Exit 101 (MP 101.64) to Exit 96 (MP 95.87)[1].
  • 1974: Interstate 64 opened to traffic from milepost 52.40, two miles east of Exit 50 at Institute to Exit 55 (milepost 55.45). This included the construction of an interchange at milepost 54 for US 60 and WV 601 and a second Kanawha River span. When the river crossing was completed, it was one of the largest steel girder bridges in the United States at the time. Also, Interstate 77/64 opened from Exit 100 (MP 100.16) to Exit 99 (MP 99.12)[1].
  • 1975: Interstate 64 was completed to Interstate 77 which included the US 119 Fort Hill interchange (Exit 58A) at milepost 57.48. This segment also involved the construction of the third Kanawha River span, Exits 58B and 58C and the Interstate 77 junction at milepost 58.78. This three-level junction spans local streets and is the largest interchange in West Virginia with piers embedded in buildings, over water and over nearby streets. This also included the viaduct over the Triangle District[1].
  • 1976: Interstate 77/64 opened from Exit 96 (MP 95.87) to the northern terminus of the West Virginia Turnpike at milepost 99.12 (Exit 99). The interstate concurrency was opened to traffic from Exit 100 (MP 100.16) to Exit 101 (MP 101.64). This completed the last segment of interstate within Charleston city limits[1].

Charleston east to Virginia

Template:ImageStackRight

The alignment of Interstate 64 was to originally parallel US 60 from Charleston to the Virginia state line. This would go through environmentally sensitive areas such as Hawk's Nest and the New River Gorge area and might have disrupted the natural beauty and the isolation of the area.

In 1969, Governor Arch Moore announced a delay in the construction of Interstate 64 east of Charleston. He concluded that a study needed to be done on whether the highway should run parallel to US 60 east of Charleston. On March 28, 1974, Governor Moore concluded that Interstate 64 would be routed from Sam Black Church almost due west to a junction with the West Virginia Turnpike (I-77) near Beckley, rather than following the U.S. 60 alignment as initially proposed. From that point, I-64 was concurrent with the northern portion of an upgraded West Virginia Turnpike to reach the Charleston area. This section of I-64 is the only portion in West Virginia which is a toll road.

In 1971, Interstate 64 was completed from WV 12 (MP 161.46) to the Virginia state line at MP 184.02. This included six interchanges Exit 161 for WV 12, Exit 169 for US 219 and Lewisburg, Exit 175 for US 60 for White Sulphur Springs, Exit 181 for US 60 (WB only), and for WV 311 (EB only) at Exit 183. It was extended westward to Exit 156 (MP 155.98) at Sam Black Church in 1973[1].

The final segment of Interstate 64 to be completed was between Sam Black Church and the West Virginia Turnpike near Beckley[1]. This revised interstate alignment traverses through an entirely rural area with extremely rugged terrain. Opened in 1988, this final portion is 38-miles long and cost approximately $300 million to construct, making it one of the most expensive segments of interstate highway in the United States at $7.8 million per mile. It has some extremely rugged terrain, with one segment boasting a 7% grade downhill eastbound for seven miles at Sandstone Mountain. Anticipating loss of braking situations, two emergency truck escape ramps were built to be used by runaway trucks. These emergency ramps were used with such frequency that, in addition to large warning signs alerting truckers to the steep grade, a special truck speed advisory system was installed to automatically weigh each truck and indicate the speed at which it should begin the downhill section.

Even with careful adherence to reduced speeds for truckers, the journey from Charleston to Lewisburg is far quicker and far safer on I-64 than the older routing via U.S. 60, much of which winds through the mountains as the Midland Trail, a two-lane scenic byway, passing through hamlets such as Rainelle and Ansted.

The New River crossing is at milepost 137 atop the Robert C. Byrd Bridge; Byrd, as a U.S. Senator from West Virginia, pushed for the substantial funds required to complete Interstate 64. The highway also traverses through a wildlife refuge and marsh near milepost 154.

Huntington's inaccessibility

The difficulty of reaching downtown Huntington from Interstate 64 was quite evident since the highway's opening in the early-1960s. When the highway was first proposed in the late-1950s, Interstate 64 was originally to be led into the city of Huntington and cross much of the city on a viaduct similar to Charleston's. When the interstate was completed on the outskirts of the city instead, other means of shuttling people to and from the interstate and downtown were needed. A plan was devised that would radically reshape the city's major roadways. Two new underpasses would be constructed to carry traffic under the CSX railroad tracks that bisect the city -- one at 15th Street and the other at 5th Street. The original intent was to pair a new and widened 15th Street with Hal Greer Blvd. (WV 10 (they parallel each other) and its existing underpass, and make each a flow in one direction. The plan also goes on to state that the curves on 5th Street Road would be straightened out and a wider bridge to be constructed at Four Pole Creek at Ritter Park. 5th Street from the bridge to the future underpass would be widened as well.

This never happened in full terms as money was in short supply. It would have been expensive to construct all segments of the plan. NIMBYism was also prevalent, as many residents complained it would destroy the quiet, residential neighborhood appeal.

Part of the plan was completed, however, in the early-1960s along Hal Greer Blvd. (WV 10). Proceeding southbound, Hal Greer Blvd. would use two 90-degree turns and use part of 15th Street as a four-lane one-way road. This would have been the southern end of the new 15th Street that was never fully constructed. Work began on March 19, 2003 to remove the dogleg as it appears the plan to add new underpasses and truly widen 15th Street will never be completed.

Continuing improvements

Continuing improvements and new interchanges were discussed throughout the 1990s and 2000s.

  • In 2002, cable median barriers were installed from milepost 6 to milepost 15 as a stopgap measure. These new barriers, installed for $2 million, required the regradeing of the median and upgrades to the drainage system. These new protective devices have proved to be worthwhile, preventing many crossover accidents which have plagued the highway since the 1990s, mostly attributed to an increase in traffic on the overburdened interstate highway. This cable barrier system was extended to Exit 28 at Milton in 2005 and future measures will ensure that the rest of the interstate highway system in West Virginia, where a depressed grassy median of similar width exists, will receive one.
  • Aging roadbeds and bridges are of large concern to the Department of Highways. Many interstate highway spans are approaching the end of their useful life span, several nearing forty-years of age. One such span in the Huntington metro area shows significant signs of deterioration. The Hal Greer Blvd./WV 10 crossings, approaching 40 years of life, have decayed to the point where regular maintaince is needed. A three-foot by three-foot segment of the westbound bridge collapsed in early 2002 after a harsh winter, for example, and this only highlights the problems being experienced on the original Interstate 64 spans. The two spans at Hal Greer Blvd. are slated to be replaced with a new wider crossing in the near future.
  • In 2003, demolition of the West Pea Ridge Road overpass began. The bridge, built in 1961, utilized steel girders and had become deteriorated over the years and was replaced with prestressed concrete beams. Construction was completed in late-2004.
  • Other notable recent projects:
    • Darnell Road Bridge replacement. This is just west of the Barboursville/US 60 interchagne at milepost 15. The four-lane span is being replaced with a six-lane crossing at a cost of $7.5 million. It was completed in mid-2006.
    • The Hubbard Branch overpass near milepost two was replaced in 2005.
    • The Edgewood Drive overpass near milepost three and the 19th Street overpass near milepost 5.5 and Exit 6 was replaced in 2006.
    • The Crossroads underpass to tunnel conversion was completed in 2006 at milepost 12.
    • The second Kanawha River crossing between Dunbar and South Charleston is being twinned. In 2005, construction wrapped up on a new eastbound approach on the north bank of the river. In 2006, construction is wrapping up on the eastbound approach on the south bank. In 2008, the bridge itself is slated to be constructed. When complete, this will tie in with the three-lane segments on both sides of the river.
    • The $5 million Milton interchange project at milepost 28 is slated to begin in 2007.
    • The new US 35 interchange in Teays Valley is being constructed. Work began in 2003 at a pseudo-flyover-diamond interchange variant. The new US 35 corridor route will extend from Interstate 64 at Teays Valley to Henderson.

The state's long-term construction forecast, for a six-lane interstate from milepost 6 at West Huntington to Charleston and bridge replacements west of milepost 6 to the Kentucky state line will take 30 years to complete at present funding levels and cost more than $325 million.

  • Widening began on a segment from Nitro to Dunbar in 2001 and was completed in 2004.
  • A small three-lane widening segment began in 2003 and was finished in 2004 near Teays Valley from mileposts 39 to 42.

Miscellanea

  • The terrain near Charleston results in the highway crossing the Kanawha River on major bridges no less than four times.
  • Exit 20, the main road to the Huntington Mall and its associated developments along with US 60, was originally constructed as a diamond interchange that served Ona and US 60. The land surrounding the interchange was entirely rural and would not be developed until 1981 when the Huntington Mall was completed. The diamond interchange configuration was reconstructed into a five ramp partial cloverleaf. Exit 20A served US 60 while Exit 20B was for the Huntington Mall.
    • By 2001, development consumed both sides of the interstate. On holiday shopping days, traffic would congest at the interchange and cause major backups on the interstate. In 2001, the West Virginia Department of Transportation constructed a new ramp, Exit 20A, that would serve US 60 and the west end of the Huntington Mall. The original Exit 20A ramp was removed. Exit 20B was kept, for the most part, in its current position with a left turn lane added that allowed it to serve the east end of the Huntington Mall, Melody Farm Road, and US 60.
  • The portion from the Charleston city limits to the Kentucky state line is signed as the "Cecil H. Underwood Freeway". The portion in the city limits of Charleston is signed as the "Nurse Veteran's Highway".

Exit list

County Location # Destinations Notes
Wayne Kenova 1
US 52 south (WV 75) – Kenova, Ceredo
West end of US 52 overlap
Cabell Huntington 6
US 52 north – West Huntington, Ironton
East end of US 52 overlap
8

WV 152 south / WV 527 north (5th Street East)
11 WV 10 (Hal Greer Boulevard) – Downtown Huntington
Barboursville 15 US 60 (29th Street East)
18

To US 60 / WV 2 (WV 193) – Barboursville
20A
To US 60Module:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
Eastbound exit only
20B
CR 6089 (East Mall Road) to US 60 – Barboursville
Signed as exit 20 westbound
Milton 28
To US 60 (CR 13) – Milton
Putnam Hurricane 34 CR 19 – Hurricane
39 WV 34 – Teays Valley, Winfield
40 US 35 – Winfield, Point Pleasant
44 WV 817 – St. Albans
Nitro 45 WV 25 – Nitro
Kanawha 47 WV 622 (Goff Mountain Road) – Cross Lanes Signed as exits 47A (south) and 47B (north) eastbound
50 WV 25 – Institute
Dunbar 53 WV 25 / CR 2525 (Roxalana Road) – Dunbar
South Charleston 54
US 60 (MacCorkle Avenue) to WV 601 (Jefferson Road)
55
To WV 601Module:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
56 Montrose Drive (CR 50/64)
Charleston 58A
US 119 south – LoganModule:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
West end of US 119 overlap
58B
US 119 northModule:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated - Civic Center
East end of US 119 overlap; eastbound exit and westbound entrance
58C US 60 (Lee Street, Washington Street) - Civic Center
59

I-77 north to I-79 – Parkersburg
West end of I-77 overlap
See Interstate 77
Raleigh 121
I-77 south – Bluefield
East end of I-77 overlap
124
To US 19 (Eisenhower Drive) – Beckley, East Beckley
125 WV 307 / CR 99 (Airport Road) – Beaver Signed as exits 125A (WV 307) and 125B (CR 9/9) eastbound
129 CR 9 (Grandview Road) – Shady Spring Signed as exits 129A (south) and 129B (north) eastbound
133 CR 27 (Pluto Road) – Bragg
Summers 139 WV 20 (CR 7) – Hinton, Sandstone
143
To WV 20 (CR 4) – Meadow Bridge, Green Sulphur Springs
Greenbrier 150 CR 294 – Dawson
156 US 60 (Midland Trail) – Sam Black Church
161 WV 12 – Alta
Lewisburg 169 US 219 – Lewisburg, Ronceverte
175

To US 60 / WV 92 (CR 60/14) – White Sulphur Springs, Caldwell
181

US 60 west to WV 92 – White Sulphur Springs
West end of US 60 overlap; westbound exit and eastbound entrance
183 WV 311 - Crows Eastbound exit and westbound entrance

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Release Date Report. West Virginia Department of Transportation. August 2003.
  1. Cahal, Sherman. "Interstate 64." American Byways. 17 July 2005.
  2. Bridge Work Starts 6-Lane I-64. 1 March 2005. Herald Dispatch. 7 April 2005 [1].
  3. Motorists can expect delays as I-64 bridge project begins. 7 April 2005. Herald Dispatch. 7 April 2005 [2].


Interstate 64
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Kentucky
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