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1969–70 Chicago Black Hawks season

1969–70 Chicago Black Hawks
East Division champions
Division 1st East
1969–70 record 45–22–9
Home record 26–7–5
Road record 19–15–4
Goals for 250
Goals against 170
Team information
General Manager Tommy Ivan
Coach Billy Reay
Captain Pat Stapleton
Alternate captains Stan Mikita
Eric Nesterenko
Arena Chicago Stadium
Team leaders
Goals Stan Mikita (39)
Assists Stan Mikita (47)
Points Stan Mikita (86)
Penalties in minutes Keith Magnuson (213)
Plus/minus Keith Magnuson (+38)
Wins Tony Esposito (38)
Goals against average Tony Esposito (2.17)
← 1968–69
1970–71 →

The 1969–70 Chicago Black Hawks season was the Hawks' 44th season in the NHL, and the club was coming off a sixth-place finish in the East Division in 1968–69, failing to qualify for the playoffs for the first time since the 1957–58 season. Despite missing the playoffs, the Black Hawks had a record of 34–33–9, earning 77 points, as they had their ninth consecutive season of playing over .500 hockey.

During the off-season, Chicago claimed goaltender Tony Esposito from the Montreal Canadiens in the intra-league draft on June 11, 1969. The Hawks also named Pat Stapleton as their new team captain. The Black Hawks did not have a captain for the 1968–69 season, as the spot was not filled after former captain Pierre Pilote was traded during the 1968 off-season.

The Black Hawks would begin the season very slow, as they lost their opening five games to quickly fall into the East Division cellar. Chicago would then rebound, and after 35 games, the Hawks had a 15–15–5 record. The Black Hawks would then get hot, as they went on a seven-game winning streak, and continued to play great hockey for the rest of the season, as Chicago won a franchise record 45 games, earning a club record 99 points, and finished in first place for the second time in franchise history. The Hawks and Boston Bruins both finished the year with 99 points, however, since Chicago won five more games, they were awarded the Prince of Wales Trophy.

Offensively, the Hawks were led by Stan Mikita, who scored a team high 39 goals, 47 assists and 86 points, as he finished third in the NHL scoring race. Bobby Hull had another solid season, scoring 38 goals and 67 points, while Pit Martin had 30 goals and 63 points. Team captain Pat Stapleton led the defense with 42 points, while Keith Magnuson had a club record 213 penalty minutes, along with a club high +38 rating.


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