2002–03 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season


The 2002–03 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season was the Ducks' tenth season in franchise history. The club qualified for the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in franchise history, falling to the New Jersey Devils.

Regular season

On February 12, 2003, Mike Leclerc scored just ten seconds into the overtime period to give the Mighty Ducks a 4–3 home win over the Calgary Flames. It would prove to be the fastest overtime goal scored during the 2002–03 regular season.

Divisional standings

Playoffs

Conference Quarterfinals

In what was a very large upset, the seventh-seed Mighty Ducks took a first-round series from the number-two seed and defending Stanley Cup champions, the Detroit Red Wings. The Mighty Ducks swept the Red Wings in four games to get revenge from 1997 and 1999, where the Mighty Ducks were swept by the Red Wings. In Game 1 of the series, when the game went to overtime, the sellout crowd at Joe Louis Arena thought the Wings had won the game thanks to a Luc Robitaille shot at 9:21. Some of the Detroit players had even left for the dressing room. However, after going to the video review, it was concluded Robitaille's shot ricocheted off the crossbar and the post, and the players were brought back to resume the game. Later, at 3:18 into the third overtime period, Paul Kariya scored the goal that would clinch a 2–1 win for Anaheim and a one-game lead in the series. Anaheim goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere faced 64 shots in game one. In Game 2, Anaheim came back from a 2–1 deficit by scoring two goals in the third period.
The Mighty Ducks won Game 3 at the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim, 2–1, to push the Red Wings to the brink of elimination. The Mighty Ducks then won Game 4, a 3–2 overtime victory, with Steve Rucchin delivering the decisive goal 6:53 into overtime. The Red Wings became only the second defending Stanley Cup champions to be swept the following year in a four-game opening series.

Conference Semifinals

The series opened at American Airlines Center in Dallas, where the heavily favored Stars and underdog Ducks engaged in an epic battle that took over 140 minutes and four overtimes to decide before Anaheim's Petr Sykora scored the game-winner 47 seconds into the fifth overtime, winning the game for the Ducks, 4–3. Dallas goaltender Marty Turco saw 54 shots while Anaheim's Jean-Sebastien Giguere saw 63. Game 2 saw another game tied after 60 minutes, but this time, Anaheim needed only 1:44 to win the game in the first overtime, 3–2, on a goal by Mike Leclerc. Dallas, much like Detroit in its first-round series against the Ducks, faced a 2–0 deficit headed to Anaheim.
Game 3 at Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim was a must-win for the Stars, and they came through, winning the game, 2–1, getting two clutch goals from Jere Lehtinen. But the Ducks refused to let the Stars back in the series, winning Game 4, 1–0, behind a 28-save shutout from Giguere. Not wanting to be eliminated in front of their home fans, a motivated Dallas team captured Game 5, 4–1. Unfortunately for the Stars, their bid to take the series to a Game 7 was denied when they were edged in Game 6, 4–3.

Conference Finals

In Game 1, Petr Sykora scored at 8:06 into double-overtime in a 1–0 Mighty Ducks victory. It was the Mighty Ducks' second shutout of the playoffs. Jean-Sebastien Giguere turned in a stellar performance in net for Anaheim, stopping all 39 shots he faced. For Game 2, the Wild played Dwayne Roloson instead of Manny Fernandez in net. As in Game 1, it was another shutout for Giguere as the Mighty Ducks won the game 2–0. Both goals were short-handed, and Giguere stopped all 24 shots he faced, making him 63-for-63 in the series. In Game 3, Giguere continued his goal-tending excellence, stopping all 35 shots he faced in a 4–0 Mighty Ducks victory that pushed the Wild to the brink of elimination. Giguere had now stopped the first 98 shots he saw in the series. In Game 4, The Mighty Ducks won the game, 2–1. Both goals came from Adam Oates, and the Mighty Ducks headed to their first Stanley Cup Final. The only good news for the Wild was that they avoided a fourth consecutive shutout, as Andrew Brunette scored the first Minnesota goal of the series. Still, Giguere was 122-for-123 in the series, a robust.992 save percentage.

Stanley Cup finals

Player statistics

Regular season

;Scoring
PlayerGPGAPtsPIM
8225568148
8234255924
8220385812
679364516
8211223330
7912183054
579192834
6710152512
814182265
4610112114
507142112
768111916
315131816
344111518
12103132
61481278
243696
4426822
8026876
7034740
4432518
3914512
1222415
31213115
8012374
1611244
101012
220110
20110
2901143
650008
40000
20008

;Goaltending
PlayerMINGPWLTGAGAASASVSV%SO
377565342261452.3018201675.9208
1203226113391.95548509.9291
Team:497882403391842.2223682184.9229

Playoffs

;Scoring
PlayerGPGAPtsPIM
2149136
21491312
2166126
21291112
2173102
21371018
214488
2126810
214268
2124612
2123526
213144
2104416
210442
211126
151010
110112
210110
210116
20000
100000
10000
10000
40002

;Goaltending
PlayerMINGPWLTGAGAASASVSV%SO
140721156381.62697659.9455
2020013.0065.8330
Team:142721156391.64703664.9455

Awards and records

The Ducks picks at the 2002 NHL Entry Draft in Toronto, Ontario.
Round#PlayerPositionNationalityCollege/Junior/Club Team
17Joffrey LupulForwardMedicine Hat Tigers
237Tim BrentForwardToronto St. Michael's Majors
371Brian LeeDefenseErie Otters
4103Joonas VihkoForwardHIFK
5140George DavisForwardCape Breton Screaming Eagles
6173Luke FritshawDefensePrince Albert Raiders
9261Francois CaronDefenseMoncton Wildcats
9267Chris PetrowDefenseOshawa Generals

Roster

Other Anaheim–based teams in 2002–03