Dallas Stars

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Dallas Stars
Dallas Stars logo
founding February 9, 1966
history Minnesota North Stars
1967 - 1993
Dallas Stars
since 1993
Stadion American Airlines Center
Location Dallas , Texas
Team colors Green, silver, black, white
league National Hockey League
Conference Western Conference
division Central Division
Head coach CanadaCanada Rick Bowness (interim)
Team captain CanadaCanada Jamie Benn
General manager CanadaCanada Jim Nill
owner CanadaCanada Tom Gaglardi
Cooperations Texas Stars ( AHL )
Idaho Steelheads ( ECHL )
Stanley Cups 1999
Conference title 1998/99 , 1999/00
Division title 1996/97 , 1997/98 , 1998/99 ,
1999/00 , 2000/01 , 2002/03 ,
2005/06 , 2015/16

The Dallas Stars ( IPA : [ˈdæləs stɑɹs] ) are an American ice hockey franchise of the National Hockey League from Dallas , Texas . It was founded on February 9, 1966 under the name Minnesota North Stars and began playing at the beginning of the 1967/68 season . Before the 1993/94 season , the franchise moved from Minneapolis to Dallas and changed its name to its current name. The team colors are green, gold, black and white.

The stars play their home games at the American Airlines Center and are the league's only franchise based in the state of Texas. After the team initially had problems finding their way after the move, it became a title contender at the end of the 1990s. During this time, the franchise won the prestigious Stanley Cup once and the Presidents' Trophy twice . Since then, there have been no further major successes.

history

Ice hockey in Minnesota (1967 to 1993)

Minnesota North Stars logo.

After the NHL decided to expand the league from the so-called " Original Six " to twelve teams, a team was settled in Bloomington , Minnesota , which played as Minnesota North Stars at the Metropolitan Sports Center from the 1967/68 season . After initial success, the franchise got economic problems in the mid-1970s and was taken over by George and Gordon Gund , the owners of the Cleveland Barons , for the 1978/79 season . Both teams merged and continued as Minnesota North Stars . In the 1980/81 season , the newly formed team reached the Stanley Cup final for the first time , where they lost to the New York Islanders . In the early 1990s, the franchise considered relocating to the San Francisco Bay Area due to falling audience numbers and the lack of a modern venue , but this was rejected by the NHL. Instead, the league issued the license for the newly formed San Jose Sharks to the Gund brothers. The North Stars, however, were sold to a group of investors.

After the team had reached the Stanley Cup final again in the 1990/91 season , the franchise was relocated to Dallas in the state of Texas in 1993 due to the ongoing problems . The team played in the Reunion Arena , the addition of Stars was kept in the team name and the new location was added. The NHL, meanwhile, promised the fans of the North Stars that they would want to set up a franchise in the region again in the future, which was finally realized in 2000 with the Minnesota Wild .

On the way to becoming a top team (1993 to 2001)

The stars' logo used from 1993 to 2013.

Already in the first season in their new home, the stars reached the play-offs under coach Bob Gainey , who had previously worked in Minnesota and at the same time played the most successful premiere season of a team of the 1990s expansion with 97 main round points. Only in the Conference semi-finals did the franchise fail in five games against what would later be the Stanley Cup finalist Vancouver Canucks . In the following season , owner Norman Green separated from the team and sold it in December 1995 to the media mogul Tom Hicks . Again, the stars reached the play-offs, but failed in the quarter-finals. When in the 1995/96 season it became apparent that the final round would be missed for the first time, the franchise hired the then successful junior coach Ken Hitchcock in January 1996 , under whose leadership the turnaround should succeed.

Although the stars missed the play-offs in the season , they improved in the 1996/97 season by 38 points to 104 points, which meant victory in the Central Division . In the play-offs, however, the team lost in the quarterfinals against the Edmonton Oilers . At the end of the 1997/98 game year , the team won the Presidents' Trophy with 109 points and failed in the play-offs after victories over San Jose and Edmonton only in the conference final at the eventual Stanley Cup winner Detroit Red Wings .

The 1998/99 season was the most successful in the history of the Dallas Stars, who switched to the Pacific Division through league reform and set a new franchise record with 114 points in the regular season. The team achieved a total of 51 victories and won the Presidents' Trophy again. In the play-offs, the stars were able to win the Stanley Cup for the first and so far only time . Brett Hull managed the decisive goal in the sixth game of the final series against the Buffalo Sabers , after the team had previously won the conference final in seven games against rivals Colorado Avalanche . As reigning champions, Dallas reached the Stanley Cup final again in the following season after victories over Edmonton, San Jose and Colorado, but lost there with 2-4 games against the New Jersey Devils .

Also in the 2000/01 season , the franchise reached the play-offs, but failed in the Conference semifinals with 0-4 games to the St. Louis Blues .

Change and return to the play-offs (2002 to 2008)

Brenden Morrow , the fifth team captain in franchise history.

For the 2001/02 season , the franchise moved from the Reunion Arena, which no longer met modern requirements, to the newly built American Airlines Center, which can hold 18,500 spectators . There the team was initially unable to meet the demands that had grown due to the successes and missed the play-offs for the first time in spring 2002 with the worst number of points since 1996. Coach Ken Hitchcock was dismissed in February and replaced by his previous assistant Rick Wilson until the end of the season . Bob Gainey was also relieved of his position as general manager . He was succeeded by Doug Armstrong .

The post of head coach was handed over to a young, ambitious man after the season with Dave Tippett . The team's former leaders such as Brett Hull and Ed Belfour left the team. In the following years, the stars did not manage to build on the successes of previous years despite well-known players such as Bill Guerin , Jason Arnott , Pierre Turgeon or Scott Young . In the first three seasons under Dave Tippett, the stars qualified without interruption for the play-offs, but won only one series - in the 2002/03 season against the Edmonton Oilers . After the disappointing elimination in the 2006 play-offs against the Colorado Avalanche , owner Tom Hicks announced that stars Jason Arnott and Bill Guerin would be leaving the club. The rest of the roster, which still included Stanley Cup winners like Sergei Subow , Jere Lehtinen and Mike Modano , was also held on to by coach Dave Tippett. The team reached the play-offs, but were already defeated in the Conference quarter-finals in seven games to the Vancouver Canucks , although Dallas' goalkeeper Marty Turco was able to book three shutouts .

In the summer break before the 2007/08 season , Eric Lindros and Matthew Barnaby ended their careers due to sustained injuries, and regulars Ladislav Nagy and Darryl Sydor left the franchise, which then increasingly relied on young players from the farm teams . After a moderate start to the season with a record of seven wins and seven losses, General Manager Doug Armstrong was fired in November 2007 and replaced by the duo Les Jackson and Brett Hull. The Stars finished the regular season with 97 points in third place in the Pacific Division and fifth in the Western Conference . After victories over the Anaheim Ducks and San Jose Sharks , which could be defeated in a sixth game lasting more than five hours, the team moved into the conference final for the first time since 2000, which however was lost to the Detroit Red Wings .

Slump at the end of the decade (since 2008)

The second Dallas Stars logo used since 2013.

Captain Brenden Morrow was seriously injured early in the following season , while new signing Sean Avery was suspended for the remainder of the season and later released due to derogatory public remarks. In addition, there were further failures, so that the stars missed the play-offs for the first time since 2002. As a result, with the former player Joe Nieuwendyk, a new general manager was committed. In addition, Marc Crawford replaced Dave Tippett as coach.

In another disappointing season with no playoffs , it was announced that owner Tom Hicks would be offering the team for sale as well as the Texas Rangers baseball team due to financial problems . Due to the financially precarious situation, no further investments in the squad were made during the 2009/10 season and summer 2010 and the team's salary limit is well below the limit of the league-wide salary cap . In June 2010, General Manager Joe Nieuwendyk announced that the Dallas Stars will not be offering new contracts to players Mike Modano and Marty Turco . With Modano, after 21 seasons, the franchise's identifying figure went to the Detroit Red Wings. Tom Gaglardi became the third owner of the Dallas Stars on November 21, 2011 after a bankruptcy court accepted Gaglardi's $ 240 million offer.

Venues

The American Airlines Center, the current venue
The Reunion Arena, home of the stars from 1993 to 2001

The stars have played their home games since 2001 in the American Airlines Center , a multifunctional arena with a capacity of 18,584 . American Airlines secured the naming rights to the arena in 1999 and gave it its current name. The company holds the naming rights for the arena until 2031 and pays 195 million US dollars for the entire duration of 30 years.

From 1993 to 2001 the club played in the Reunion Arena , which opened in 1980 and has a capacity of 16,923 places for ice hockey events. The Reunion Arena is located in downtown Dallas . Even before the stars moved, the arena was home to the Dallas Mavericks basketball team . In 1998, the stars aimed to build a new hall together with the Mavericks.

Farm teams

season Farm team league
1993 / 94-1994 / 95 Kalamazoo Wings IHL
1994 / 95-1997 / 98 Dayton Bombers ECHL
1995 / 96-1999 / 00 Michigan K-Wings IHL
2000/01 Utah grizzlies IHL
2001/02–2003/04 Utah grizzlies AHL
2002/03–2003/04 Fort Worth Brahmas CHL
season Farm team league
2004/05 Hamilton Bulldogs AHL
2004/05 Houston Eros AHL
2005 / 06–2007 / 08 Iowa stars AHL
since 2005/06 Idaho steelheads ECHL
since 2009/10 Texas Stars AHL
2009 / 10–2010 / 11 All Americans CHL / ECHL 1
1 in the ECHL since the 2014/15 season

Like all NHL teams, the Dallas Stars maintain farm teams in sub-leagues . After moving from Minnesota, management in Dallas focused on the International Hockey League . The Kalamazoo Wings , which later played as Michigan K-Wings, were the first address here. The Utah Grizzlies , with whom there was a cooperation from 2000, switched to the AHL after the IHL was dissolved.

In the AHL, however, the collaborations that were concluded were mostly short-lived. From the summer of 2008, when the cooperation with the Iowa Stars was ended, the Stars had no direct cooperation with a team of the American Hockey League , which is declared as a minor league of class AAA and thus the highest possible level below the NHL. The stars' talents were hosted by a variety of AHL teams including the Manitoba Moose , Grand Rapids Griffins , Hamilton Bulldogs , Peoria Rivermen , Iowa Chops and Houston Eros . This has changed since the Texas Stars started playing in the 2009/10 season and the Dallas Stars have a permanent farm team in Austin, Texas. Another talent factory for the stars is based in Boise , Idaho , where the Idaho Steelheads play in the ECHL .

Achievements and honors

Sporting successes

The Dallas Stars celebrated their first major success in the 1997/98 season with first place after the end of the regular season and the associated win of the Presidents' Trophy . With 49 wins in 82 season games, the Stars led the league and occupied the top position two points ahead of the New Jersey Devils . In the following 1998/99 season , the Stars were again the most successful team of the regular season. This time they were nine points ahead of New Jersey with 51 wins. The good performance of the regular season could also be continued in the playoffs and so the stars won the Stanley Cup for the first time in 1999 . In the final they prevailed against the Buffalo Sabers 4-2 .

As the best team in the Western Conference , Dallas was again in the finals in the 1999/00 season , but lost to the New Jersey Devils 4-2.

The stars finished the regular season as the best team in their division eight times. In the 2015/16 season they were also the team with the highest points in the Western Conference.

NHL Awards and All-Star Team Nominations

Since the franchise was founded , six Dallas Stars players have won one of the individual NHL awards . In addition, three players made it into one of the All-Star teams and another one into the All-Rookie team .

Season statistics

Abbreviations: GP = games, W = wins, L = defeats, T = draws, OTL = defeats after overtime , Pts = points, GF = goals scored, GA = goals conceded

season GP W. L. T OTL Pts GF GA space Playoffs
1993/94 84 42 29 13 - 97 286 265 3rd, Central Conference quarter-finals win, 4-0 ( St. Louis )
Conference semi-finals lost, 4-0 ( Vancouver )
1994/95 1 48 17th 23 8th - 43 136 135 5th, Central Conference quarterfinals lost, 4-1 ( Detroit )
1995/96 82 26th 42 14th - 66 227 280 6th, Central not qualified
1996/97 82 48 26th 8th - 104 252 198 1st, Central Conference quarter-finals lost, 3-4 ( Edmonton )
1997/98 82 49 22nd 11 - 109 242 167 1st, Central Conference quarterfinals win, 4-2 ( San Jose )
Conference semi-finals win, Conference finals 4-1 ( Edmonton )
Conference finals defeat, 4-2 ( Detroit )
1998/99 82 51 19th 12 - 114 236 168 1st, Pacific Conference quarter-finals win, 4-0 ( Edmonton )
conference semi-finals, 4-2 ( St. Louis )
conference finals, 4: 3 ( Colorado )
Stanley Cup finals , 4-2 ( Buffalo )
1999/00 82 43 23 10 6th 102 211 184 1st, Pacific Conference quarter-finals win, 4-1 ( Edmonton )
conference semi-finals win, Conference finals 4-1 ( San Jose ),
conference finals 4-3 ( Colorado )
Stanley Cup final defeat, 4-1 ( New Jersey )
2000/01 82 48 24 8th 2 106 241 187 1st, Pacific Conference quarterfinals win, 4-2 ( Edmonton )
Conference semi-finals lost, 4-2 ( St. Louis )
2001/02 82 36 28 13 5 90 215 213 4th, Pacific not qualified
2002/03 82 46 17th 15th 4th 111 245 169 1st, Pacific Conference quarter-finals win, 4-2 ( Edmonton )
Conference semi-finals defeat, 4-2 ( Anaheim )
2003/04 82 41 26th 13 2 97 194 175 2nd, Pacific Conference quarterfinals lost, 4-1 ( Colorado )
2004/05 2 - - - - - - - - - -
2005/06 82 53 23 - 6th 112 265 218 1st, Pacific Conference quarterfinals lost, 4-1 ( Colorado )
2006/07 82 50 25th - 7th 107 226 197 3rd, Pacific Conference quarterfinals lost, 3-4 ( Vancouver )
2007/08 82 45 30th - 7th 97 242 207 3rd, Pacific Conference quarterfinals win, 4-2 ( Anaheim )
Conference semi-finals win, Conference finals 4-2 ( San Jose )
Conference finals 2-4-2 defeat ( Detroit )
2008/09 82 36 35 - 11 83 230 257 3rd, Pacific not qualified
2009/10 82 37 31 - 14th 88 237 254 5th, Pacific not qualified
2010/11 82 42 29 - 11 95 227 233 5th, Pacific not qualified
2011/12 82 42 35 - 5 89 211 222 4th, Pacific not qualified
2012/13 3 48 22nd 22nd - 4th 48 130 142 5th, Pacific not qualified
2013/14 82 40 31 - 11 91 234 226 5th, Central Conference quarterfinals lost, 2-4 ( Anaheim )
2014/15 82 41 31 - 10 92 261 260 6th, Central not qualified
2015/16 82 50 23 - 9 109 267 230 1st, Central Conference quarter-finals win, 2-2 ( Minnesota )
Conference semi-finals lost, 4-2 ( St. Louis )
2016/17 82 34 37 - 11 79 222 260 6th, Central not qualified
2017/18 82 42 32 - 8th 92 231 222 6th, Central not qualified
2018/19 82 43 32 - 7th 93 209 200 4th, Central Conference quarter-finals win, 2-2 ( Nashville )
Conference semi-finals lost, 4-2 ( St. Louis )
total 1984 724 695 125 140 2314 5677 5269 15 playoff appearances
30 series: 16 wins, 14 losses
173 games: 90 wins, 83 losses
1 season shortened due to the NHL lockout in 1994/95
2 season because of the NHL lockout 2004/05 failed
3 season shortened due to the 2012/13 NHL lockout

Franchise records

Selected player records of the franchise over the entire career as well as over individual seasons are listed below.

Career

Mike Modano holds various franchise and team records
Surname number
Most games Mike Modano 1,459 (in 21 seasons)
Most consecutive games Danny Grant 442 (December 4, 1968 to April 7, 1974)
Most goals Mike Modano 557
Most templates Mike Modano 802
Most of the points Mike Modano 1,359 (557 goals + 802 assists)
Most penalty minutes Shane Churla 1,883
Most shutouts Marty Turco 40

season

Surname number season
Most goals Dino Ciccarelli
Brian Bellows
55 1981/82
1989/90
Most templates Neal loaves 76 1985/86
Most of the points Bobby Smith 114 (43 goals + 71 assists) 1981/82
Most points as a rookie Neal loaves 98 (38 goals + 60 assists) 1981/82
Most points as a defender Craig Hartsburg 77 (17 goals + 60 assists) 1981/82
Most penalty minutes Basil McRae 382 1987/88
Most wins as a goalkeeper Marty Turco 41 2005/06

Team records

The records listed include only accomplishments since the company's move and renaming to Dallas Stars in 1993.

Career

Surname number
Most games Mike Modano 1,142 (in 16 seasons)
Most goals Mike Modano 434
Most templates Mike Modano 616
Most of the points Mike Modano 1,050 (434 goals + 616 assists)
Most penalty minutes Brenden Morrow 1,203
Most shutouts Marty Turco 40

season

Surname number season
Most goals Mike Modano 50 1993/94
Most templates Brad Richards 67 2009/10
Most of the points Mike Modano 93 (50 goals + 43 assists) 1993/94
Most points as a rookie Jussi Jokinen 55 (18 goals + 38 assists) 2005/06
Most points as a defender Sergei Zubov 71 (13 goals + 58 assists) 2005/06
Most penalty minutes Shane Churla 333 1993/94
Most wins as a goalkeeper Marty Turco 41 2005/06

Trainer

Abbreviations: GC = games, W = wins, L = defeats, T = draws, OTL = defeats after
overtime , Pts = points, Pts% = point quota

Surname season Regular season Playoffs
GC W. L. T OTL Pts Pts% GC W. L.
Bob Gainey 1993 / 94–1995 / 96 * 171 70 71 30th - 170 .409 14th 6th 8th
Ken Hitchcock 1995/96 * –2001 / 02 * 503 277 154 60 12 626 .550 80 47 33
Rick Wilson 2001/02 * 32 13 11 7th 1 34 .406 - - -
Dave Tippett 2002 / 03–2008 / 09 492 271 156 28 37 607 .550 47 21st 26th
Marc Crawford 2009 / 10–2010 / 11 164 79 60 - 25th 183 .481 - - -
Glen Gulutzan 2011 / 12–2012 / 13 130 64 57 - 9 137 .492 - - -
Lindy Ruff 2013 / 14–2016 / 17 328 165 122 - 41 371 .566 19th 9 10
Ken Hitchcock 2017/18 82 42 32 - 8th 92 .561 - - -
Jim Montgomery 2018 / 19–2019 / 20 * 114 61 43 - 10 132 .579 13 7th 6th
Rick Bowness since 2019/20 *

* Change during the current season

The stars have great consistency among their coaches. Bob Gainey previously served as a trainer and general manager in Minnesota. In the middle of the 1995/96 season , Gainey got Ken Hitchcock to support him in order to focus exclusively on his role as general manager from now on. Hitchcock led the stars into the final series twice and won the Stanley Cup with the team in 1999 . After a poor start to the 2001/02 season and disagreements between players and management, the stars parted ways with their coach. Bob Gainey also had to leave at this point. The long-time assistant coach Rick Wilson trained the team until the end of the season and moved back to the second tier at the end of the season. For the following season 2002/03 a new coach was committed with Dave Tippett . Tippett was previously an assistant coach with the Los Angeles Kings and stayed in office until the summer of 2009. He was succeeded in June 2009 by Marc Crawford , who was released from his post in April 2011 after missing the playoffs twice. He was followed two months later by Glen Gulutzan , who had previously coached various teams from the minor leagues for ten years . Gulutzan was sacked after two seasons without a play-off participation at the end of the 2012/13 season and replaced by Lindy Ruff . Ruff led the stars into the playoffs twice in the following four years, but without establishing long-term success. His expiring contract was not renewed after the 2016/17 season before a few days later Ken Hitchcock was introduced as his successor, who had already looked after the stars from 1996 to 2002. Hitchcock was subsequently only active for one more season for Dallas before he declared his coaching career over. He was succeeded by Jim Montgomery , who was replaced by Rick Bowness on an interim basis after less than one and a half seasons .

General manager

Surname season
Bob Gainey 1993 / 94–2001 / 02 *
Doug Armstrong 2001/02 * - 2007/08 *
Brett Hull ** 2007/08 * –2008 / 09
Les Jackson **
Joe Nieuwendyk 2009 / 10–2012 / 13
Jim Nill since 2013/14

* Change during the current season
** Co-General Manager

player

Squad for the 2019/20 season

As of August 6, 2020

No. Nat. player Item Date of birth in org. since place of birth
30th United StatesUnited States Ben Bishop G November 21, 1986 2017 Denver , Colorado , USA
35 RussiaRussia Anton Chudobin G 0May 7, 1986 2018 Ust-Kamenogorsk , Kazakh SSR
42 CanadaCanada Taylor Fedun D. 04th June 1988 2018 Edmonton , Alberta , Canada
4th FinlandFinland Miro Heiskanen D. July 18, 1999 2017 Espoo , Finland
28 United StatesUnited States Stephen Johns D. April 18, 1992 2015 Ellwood City , Pennsylvania , USA
3 SwedenSweden John KlingbergA D. August 14, 1992 2011 Lerum , Sweden
23 FinlandFinland Esa Lindell D. May 23, 1994 2014 Vantaa , Finland
2 Flags of Canada and the United States.svg Jamie Oleksiak D. December 21, 1992 2019 Toronto , Ontario , Canada
5 SlovakiaSlovakia Andrej Sekera D. 0June 8, 1986 2019 Bojnice , Czechoslovakia
14th CanadaCanada Jamie BennC. LW July 18, 1989 2009 Victoria , British Columbia , Canada
11 CanadaCanada Andrew Cogliano C. June 14, 1987 2019 Toronto , Ontario , Canada
15th CanadaCanada Blake Comeau LW February 18, 1986 2018 Meadow Lake , Saskatchewan , Canada
18th CanadaCanada Jason Dickinson C. 04th July 1995 2014 Georgetown , Ontario , Canada
37 CanadaCanada Justin Dowling C. 0October 1, 1990 2014 Calgary , Alberta , Canada
12 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Radek Faksa C. 0January 9, 1994 2012 Opava , Czech Republic
34 RussiaRussia Denis Guryanov RW 0June 7, 1997 2016 Tolyatti , Russia
10 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Martin Hanzal Injured.svg C. February 20, 1987 2017 České Budějovice , Czechoslovakia
24 FinlandFinland Roope Hintz LW November 17, 1996 2017 Tampere , Finland
13 SwedenSweden Mattias Janmark C. 0December 8, 1992 2015 Stockholm , Sweden
16 United StatesUnited States Joe Pavelski C. July 11, 1984 2019 Stevens Point , Wisconsin , USA
10 CanadaCanada Corey Perry RW May 16, 1985 2019 Peterborough , Ontario , Canada
47 RussiaRussia Alexander RadulovA. RW 05th July 1986 2017 Nizhny Tagil , Russian SFSR
91 CanadaCanada Tyler SeguinA C. January 31, 1992 2013 Brampton , Ontario , Canada

Team captains

year Surname
1993-1995 Mark Tinordi
1995 Neal loaves
1995-2003 Derian Hatcher
2003-2006 Mike Modano
2006-2013 Brenden Morrow
since 2013 Jamie Benn

Members of the Hockey Hall of Fame

Blocked jersey numbers

No. Surname Blocking date
7th Neal loaves February 7, 1998
8th Bill Goldsworthy February 15, 1992
9 Mike Modano March 8, 2014
19th Bill Masterton 17th January 1987
26th Jere Lehtinen November 24, 2017
99 Wayne Gretzky February 6, 2000 (league-wide)

In their franchise history, the Dallas Stars have so far officially banned three jersey numbers and have taken over two more from the predecessor franchise Minnesota North Stars . In addition, another one is no longer officially awarded.

As the first jersey number, the Dallas Stars blocked number 7 from Neal Broten , who, however, had already gone on the ice for the Minnesota North Stars. Bill Masterton and Bill Goldsworthy's banned numbers are entirely from the North Star era. Mike Modano's number 9 was also blocked on March 8, 2014 , followed by Jere Lehtinen's number 26 on November 24, 2017.

The shirt number 99 has generally been blocked in the NHL in honor of Wayne Gretzky .

First-round voting rights in the NHL Entry Draft

Top point collector

The top ten points collectors in the history of the Dallas Stars through the end of the 2018/19 regular season and the 2019 playoffs .

Abbreviations: Pos = position, GP = games, G = goals, A = assists, Pts = points, P / G = points per game

Regular season

Surname Item season GP G A. Pts P / G
Mike Modano C. 1993 / 94-2009 / 10 1142 434 616 1050 0.92
Jamie Benn LW since 2009/10 745 281 368 649 0.87
Sergei Zubov D. 1996 / 97-2008 / 09 839 111 438 549 0.65
Brenden Morrow LW 1999 / 00–2012 / 13 835 243 285 528 0.63
Jere Lehtinen RW 1995 / 96-2009 / 10 875 243 271 514 0.59
Tyler Seguin C. since 2013/14 469 206 258 464 0.99
Mike Ribeiro C. 2006 / 07–2011 / 12 461 123 284 407 0.88
Loui Eriksson LW 2006/07 - 2012/2013 501 150 207 357 0.71
Joe Nieuwendyk C. 1995 / 96-2001 / 02 442 178 162 340 0.77
Darryl Sydor D. 1995 / 96-2006 / 07 714 69 265 334 0.47
2008/09

Playoffs

Surname Item GP G A. Pts P / G
Mike Modano C. 135 46 72 118 0.87
Sergei Zubov D. 114 15th 57 72 0.63
Jere Lehtinen RW 108 27 22nd 49 0.45
Brett Hull RW 55 21st 25th 46 0.84
Brenden Morrow LW 78 17th 25th 42 0.54
Joe Nieuwendyk C. 61 25th 15th 40 0.66
Darryl Sydor D. 99 6th 32 38 0.38
Jamie Langenbrunner RW 69 15th 21st 36 0.52
Jamie Benn LW 32 11 19th 30th 0.94
Mike Keane RW 73 14th 12 26th 0.36

Well-known former players

Web links

Commons : Dallas Stars  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Steve Cameron: Feeding Frenzy! The Wild New World of the San Jose Sharks . Taylor Publishing Co., 1994, pp. 29-38.
  2. The Sporting News (February 4, 2002), A shocking end to the Hitchcock mystery ( Memento of July 8, 2012 in the web archive archive.today )
  3. andrewsstarpage.com, NHL Arena Naming Rights ( Memento of November 7, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  4. nhl.com, Dallas Stars to retire Mike Modano's No. 9