1974–75 Washington Capitals season


The 1974–75 Washington Capitals season was the first in Capitals history. Along with the Kansas City Scouts, the Capitals joined the National Hockey League as an expansion team for the 1974–75 season. The team was owned by Abe Pollin, owner of the NBA's Washington Bullets. Pollin had built the Capital Centre in suburban Landover, Maryland, to house both the Bullets and the Capitals. His first act as owner was to hire Hall of Famer Milt Schmidt as general manager.

Offseason

NHL Draft

Expansion Draft

Regular season

Along with the Kansas City Scouts, the Capitals joined the NHL as an expansion team for the 1974–75 season. With a combined 30 teams between the NHL and the rival World Hockey Association, the talent pool available to stock the new teams was extremely thin. In their first season, the Capitals would set an NHL record for futility, losing 67 of 80 games, and only winning one on the road. The Scouts fared only marginally better, and the expansion was widely seen as having been a mistake.
The Capitals' inaugural season was dreadful, even by expansion standards. They finished 8–67–5, which is the worst record in NHL history. Their 21 points were half that of their expansion brethren, the Scouts. They won only eight games, the fewest ever by a team playing at least 70 games. Their.131 winning percentage is still the worst in NHL history. They also set records for most road losses, most consecutive road losses and most consecutive losses, most of which have now been broken. Schmidt himself had to take over the coaching reins late in the season. The Capitals failed to qualify for the playoffs.
On an interesting note, of Washington's eight wins, seven of them were decided by two goals or more, with their season superlative 8-4 win in their final game.

Final standings

Schedule and results

Playoffs

The Capitals had an appalling first season and did not qualify for the playoffs. They had the worst points percentage all-time in NHL post expansion history with a 0.131 win percentage average. In addition, they had the worst road record in NHL history, winning their only road game against the California Golden Seals in the 76th game of the season and third-to-last road game of the season.

Player statistics

Regular season

;Scoring
PlayerPosGPGAPtsPIM+/-PPGSHGGWG
RW7322365812-48721
LW532015358-41800
LW7616122859-65502
D7642327182-54000
C5012142627-39411
LW677192684-54000
LW519152483-28110
LW/D752192154-52100
LW798111977-34120
LW251171812-37201
LW22413178-29100
RW2897168-20400
RW46114158-26320
LW/C455101522-37000
LW27581321-24000
LW65561141-42000
D63381156-56200
RW381101125-19100
C16641021-14001
C21551012-12100
D59371052-82300
LW394597-29001
D4417844-68100
D2015616-54000
RW143258-14101
RW180446-14000
D1911216-14100
G35022100000
LW502200000
D1210114-14000
LW41010-2100
C21012-2000
D4001168-40000
G800020000
G4800040000
D30002-3000
C90000-8000
RW10000-1000
D100000000

;Goaltending
PlayerMINGPWLTGAGAASO
25884883622355.451
4008070466.900
18123502431625.360
Team:48008086754435.541

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes; PPG=Power-play goals; SHG=Short-handed goals; GWG=Game-winning goals
MIN=Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; SO = Shutouts;

Roster