1996–97 Calgary Flames | |
---|---|
Division | 5th Pacific |
Conference | 10th Western |
1996–97 record | 32–41–9 |
Home record | 21–18–2 |
Road record | 11–23–7 |
Goals for | 214 (23rd) |
Goals against | 239 (12th) |
Team information | |
General Manager | Al Coates |
Coach | Pierre Page |
Captain | Theoren Fleury |
Arena | Canadian Airlines Saddledome |
Average attendance | 17,089 |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Theoren Fleury (29) |
Assists | Theoren Fleury (38) |
Points | Theoren Fleury (67) |
Penalties in minutes | Todd Simpson (208) |
Wins | Trevor Kidd (21) |
Goals against average | Trevor Kidd (2.84) |
The 1996–97 Calgary Flames season was the 17th National Hockey League season in Calgary. It was another season of decline, as the Flames began the rebuilding process after remaining near the top of the league standings for nearly a decade. Finishing 5th in the Pacific Division, the Flames missed the playoffs for the first time since the 1991–92 season, and for only the second time since coming to Calgary.
As a result of missing the playoffs, the Flames fired head coach Pierre Page following the season, replacing him with Brian Sutter. Page ended his Flames career with a coaching record of 66–78–20. His .463 winning percentage was, at the time, the worst for any coach in Flames history.
On November 23, 1996, rugged forward Sasha Lakovic authored one of the more memorable moments in the history of the Battle of Alberta when he attempted to leap over the glass at Northlands Coliseum in Edmonton to attack a drunken fan who had reached over the barrier to dump a beer on the head of Flames assistant coach Guy Lapointe. Lakovic, who was held back by his team-mates from going into the crowd, was suspended two games, while the Edmonton Oilers were fined $20,000 for having inadequate security.
Theoren Fleury was named to the Western Conference team at the 47th National Hockey League All-Star Game, where he recorded an assist.