1995–96 Detroit Red Wings | |
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Presidents' Trophy winners
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Central Division champions
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Division | 1st Central |
Conference | 1st Western |
1995–96 record | 62–13–7 |
Home record | 36–3–2 |
Road record | 26–10–5 |
Goals for | 325 |
Goals against | 181 |
Team information | |
General Manager |
Scotty Bowman (interim) Jim Devellano (interim) Ken Holland (interim) |
Coach | Scotty Bowman |
Captain | Steve Yzerman |
Alternate captains |
Paul Coffey Sergei Fedorov |
Arena | Joe Louis Arena |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Sergei Fedorov (39) |
Assists | Sergei Fedorov (68) |
Points | Sergei Fedorov (107) |
Penalties in minutes | Keith Primeau (168) |
Plus/minus | Vladimir Konstantinov (+60) |
Wins | Chris Osgood (39) |
Goals against average | Kevin Hodson (1.10) |
With their 62 wins, the 1995–96 Detroit Red Wings eclipsed the all-time record of most regular-season wins, which had been set at 60 by the 1976–77 Montreal Canadiens. Their 131 points during the regular season were the most since the 1976–77 Montreal Canadiens accumulated 132 points (still an all-time record). They surpassed most of that year's NBA season win records, only NBA team records that the Red Wings did not surpass were the 64–18 Seattle SuperSonics and the 72–10 Chicago Bulls. The Red Wings had two winning streaks of nine games, and had a 13–game unbeaten streak from Sunday, March 3, 1996, to Sunday, March 31, going 12–0–1 during that stretch. Having the best record in the league, the Red Wings were awarded the Presidents' Trophy. During the 1995–96 regular season, the Red Wings were the only team to score at least one goal in all 82 of its games. While the team is remembered for its record-breaking regular season, it performed poorly in the playoffs. Detroit lost five games to Winnipeg and St. Louis, both teams that failed to get above 80 points in the regular season, including having to go to a decisive game 7 against St. Louis. They were ultimately upset by Colorado, winning only two of the six games in the series, and failed to reach the Stanley Cup Finals.
In September 1995, the former 1974 draft pick and attorney Bill Evo was appointed president the Detroit Red Wings.
The Red Wings finished first in wins (62), points (131), tied the Washington Capitals for most shutouts (9), allowed the fewest goals (181), the fewest even-strength goals (128), the fewest power-play goals (44) and had the best penalty-kill percentage (88.27%).
Note: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points
Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.
Divisions: CEN – Central, PAC – Pacific