1998–99 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season


The 1998–99 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season was the sixth season in franchise history.

Off-season

The roster was shaken up a lot during the previous season and only a few changes took place in the summer. The Ducks traded Dave Karpa and a 2000 4th round pick to the Carolina Hurricanes for Kevin Haller and Stu Grimson on June 18. Two months later they acquired Jim Mckenzie for Jean-Francois Jomphe on August 11. They signed veteran Fredrik Olausson, who was with the Ducks before, to give the team scoring from the blue line, and Pascal Trepanier. Rookies Antti Aalto and Johan Davidsson made the roster while Mike Crowley who played very well last season would see more ice time with the parent team.
For the first time since the Ducks traded Ron Tugnutt to the Montreal Canadiens in 1994 the team saw just their second change in net, losing Mikhail Shtalenkov to the Nashville Predators in the 1998 NHL Expansion Draft. That left them with Prospects Patrick Lalime and Chris Mason for the back up position.
Just before the season started the Ducks acquired Dominic Roussel from the Nashville Predators for Chris Mason and Marc Moro on October 5, 1998 which gave the team more experience in case Hebert would be sidelined like last season. Days later they sent Doug Houda to Detroit on October 9.

Regular season

The season was much more consistent than last season. Anaheim started off slow, losing their first three games and scoring only one goal but was unbeaten the next six games. On October 27, 1998 they added Marty McInnes, a key player who gave them more scoring depth for the team's upcoming success and dominating Powerplay. On November 8 Tomas Sandstrom suffered a broken left wrist which kept him sidelined until late December thus relying more on their star players and hoping for others to fill the void. The team managed to comeback a few times after going winless some games and even put up winning streaks like in early December and early February. January turned out to be the very tough going 4-9-1 and winless a second time since late November. Overall the Ducks were hovering around the.500 mark fighting to go to the post season.
In February the team pushed themselves into the Play Off as the Mighty Ducks went 13-3-1 from February 3 until March 10 including a team record seven game winning streak. The Ducks finished the season 6 in the west as the team was unable to maintain their amazing run.
The Blues only lost 1 game in their last nine games where as the Ducks only won one game out of their last seven, ironically against the Coyotes, missing out on 5th place facing Phoenix rather than the Red Wings.
During that winning-streak the team only allowed 1 goal in each of those games, highlighting the great goaltending of Guy Hebert, who had career year and his best season since 1996/97. Dominic Roussel also enjoyed a stellar comeback in the NHL as the team's backup. Both goalies provided excellent goaltending for the Ducks, each posting a save percentage above.920 as well as a superb GAA. Those great numbers were supported by their Defense as the team allowed 55 goals less than last year. Offensively the Ducks only scored 10 goals more than last season but relied heavily on their first line combining for 109 goals. Additional scoring was only provided by Marty McInnes, Fredrik Olausson and Tomas Sandstrom, who missed 24 games due to injury. Matt Cullen enjoyed a good second season, tallying 11 goals which was almost double than last year while Travis Green only scored 13 goals and 30 points which was below expectation.
The Mighty Ducks finished the regular season with the most power-play goals, 83, and the best power-play percentage, 21.96% in the NHL.

Final standings

Schedule and results

Playoffs

The Mighty Ducks met the Detroit Red Wings in the first round of the playoffs. The Wings swept the Mighty Ducks in four games.
Late in Game 3 Stu Grimson cross-checked Kris Draper in the face in front of the Red Wings which caused a brawl between both teams.
Game 1: Mighty Ducks 3, Detroit 5
Game 2: Mighty Ducks 1, Detroit 5
Game 3: Detroit 4, Mighty Ducks 2
Game 4: Detroit 3, Mighty Ducks 0
Detroit Wins Series 4-0

Player statistics

Regular season

;Scoring
PlayerGPGAPtsPIM
75476010730
82396210140
6923396222
7416405630
7518345236
5815173242
7913173081
7511142547
742141665
75561183
7354999
8054934
7335824
6435814
72178142
82167122
4524648
2023516
6304460
73303158
70123112
20110
690110
100110
70004
180000
60000

;Goaltending
PlayerMINGPWLTGAGAASASVSV%SO
408369312991652.4221141949.9226
88418454372.51478441.9231
Team:4967823534132022.4425922390.9227

Playoffs

;Scoring
PlayerGPGAPtsPIM
42242
31340
40330
42022
40224
410110
40114
40112
40002
10000
40000
10000
40000
300030
40002
40000
10000
40004
40002
40006
30004
40004
10002

;Goaltending
PlayerMINGPWLTGAGAASASVSV%SO
3010124.00119.8180
208403154.33124109.8790
Team:238404174.29135118.8740

Awards and records

Transactions

Acquired Marty McInnes from the Chicago Blackhawks for a 4th round draft pick on October 27, 1998
Traded Drew Bannister to the Tampa Bay Lightning for a 2000 5th round pick on December 10, 1998
Traded Josef Marha to the Chicago Blackhawks for future considerations on January 28, 1999

Roster

Draft picks

Anaheim's draft picks at the 1998 NHL Entry Draft held at the Marine Midland Arena in Buffalo, New York.
Round#PlayerNationalityCollege/Junior/Club Team
15Vitaly VishnevskiyTorpedo Yaroslavl
232Stephen PeatRed Deer Rebels
4112Viktor WallinHV71
6150Trent HunterPrince George Cougars
7178Jesse FibigerUniversity of Minnesota Duluth
8205David BernierQuebec Remparts
9233Pelle PrestbergFarjestad BK
9245Andreas AnderssonHV71

Farm teams

Other Anaheim–based teams in 1998–99

*Played Occasional Games in Anaheim