1974–75 Philadelphia Flyers season

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
1974–75 Philadelphia Flyers
Campbell Conference Champions
Patrick Division Champions
Division 1st Patrick
Conference 1st Campbell
1974–75 record 51–18–11
Home record 32–6–2
Road record 19–12–9
Goals for 293 (6th)
Goals against 181 (1st)
Team information
General Manager Keith Allen
Coach Fred Shero
Captain Bobby Clarke
Alternate captains Terry Crisp
Gary Dornhoefer
Arena Spectrum
Average attendance 17,077[1]
Team leaders
Goals Reggie Leach (45)
Assists Bobby Clarke (89)
Points Bobby Clarke (116)
Penalties in minutes Dave Schultz (472)
Plus/minus Bobby Clarke (+79)
Wins Bernie Parent (44)
Goals against average Bernie Parent (2.04)
<1973–74 1975–76>

The 1974–75 Philadelphia Flyers season was the Philadelphia Flyers eighth season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The Flyers repeated as Stanley Cup champions. The 1974–75 Flyers were the last Stanley Cup champion to be composed entirely of Canadian-born players.[2]

Regular season

In 1974–75, Dave Schultz topped his mark from the previous season by setting an NHL record for penalty minutes (472 in all). Bobby Clarke's efforts earned him his second Hart Trophy and Bernie Parent was the lone recipient of the Vezina Trophy. The Flyers as a team improved their record slightly with a mark of 51–18–11, the best record in the league.

Season standings

Patrick Division[3]
GP W L T GF GA DIFF Pts
1 Philadelphia Flyers 80 51 18 11 293 181 +112 113
2 New York Rangers 80 37 29 14 319 276 +43 88
3 New York Islanders 80 33 25 22 264 221 +43 88
4 Atlanta Flames 80 34 31 15 243 233 +10 83


Playoffs

After a first-round bye, the Flyers easily swept the Toronto Maple Leafs and were presented with another New York-area team in the semi-finals. The Flyers looked to be headed toward another sweep against the New York Islanders after winning the first three games. The Islanders, however, fought back by winning the next three games, setting up a deciding seventh game. The Flyers were finally able to shut the door on the Islanders, winning Game 7, 4–1.

Facing the Buffalo Sabres in the Stanley Cup Finals, the Flyers won the first two games at home. Game 3, played in Buffalo, would go down in hockey lore as "The Fog Game" due to an unusual May heat wave in Buffalo which forced parts of the game to be played in heavy fog, as Buffalo's arena lacked air conditioning. The Flyers lost Games 3 and 4, but won Game 5 at home in dominating fashion, 5–1. On the road for Game 6, Bob Kelly scored the decisive goal and Parent posted another shutout (his fourth of the playoffs) as the Flyers repeated as Stanley Cup champions. Parent also repeated as the playoff MVP, winning his second consecutive Conn Smythe Trophy.

Philadelphia Flyers 1975 Stanley Cup champions

Roster

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders


  Coaching and administrative staff
  • Chairman/Owner: Ed Snider
  • President: Joe Scott
  • Vice chairman: F. Eugene Dixon Jr.
  • Head Coach: Fred Shero
  • Vice President/general manager: Keith Allen
  • Vice President: Lou Scheinfield
  • Assistant Coach: Mike Nykoluk
  • Director of Player Development: Marcel Pelletier
  • Assistant Coach: Barry Ashbee,
  • Trainer: Frank Lewis
  • Assistant Trainer: Jim McKenzie
  • Director of Public Relations: Joe Kadlec (left off Cup)
  • Director of Public Relations John Brogan (left off Cup)

Stanley Cup engraving

  • Edward "Ted" Harris won 5 Stanley Cups. He was engraved on the Stanley Cup with Montreal Canadiens as Edward Harris in 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969. Harris was engraved as Ted Harris with Philadelphia Flyers in 1975.
  • Joe Kadlec, John Brogan (Directors of Public Relations) were included on Philadelphia's Stanley Cup winning pictures in 1974, 1975, but their names do not appear on the Stanley Cup.
  • Bobby Taylor only played 3 regular season games after coming out of retirement. His name was engraved on the Stanley Cup.
  • Philadelphia Flyers was the last Stanley Cup winning team to have every player born in Canada.

Schedule and results

Regular season

1974–75 regular season
October: 6–3–1 (home: 3–2–1; road: 3–1–0)
Game Date Visitor Score Home Decision Attendance Record Points
1 October 10 Los Angeles 5–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 0–1–0 0
2 October 12 Buffalo 1–6 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 1–1–0 2
3 October 13 Kansas City 2–3 Philadelphia Stephenson 17,007 2–1–0 4
4 October 17 Boston 4–1 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 2–2–0 4
5 October 19 Philadelphia 6–3 Pittsburgh Stephenson 13,404 3–2–0 6
6 October 20 Montreal 2–2 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 3–2–1 7
7 October 22 Philadelphia 4–2 Los Angeles Parent 13,558 4–2–1 9
8 October 25 Philadelphia 1–4 California Taylor 12,398 4–3–1 9
9 October 26 Philadelphia 3–2 Vancouver Parent 15,570 5–3–1 11
10 October 31 NY Rangers 1–5 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 6–3–1 13
November: 8–3–2 (home: 5–2–0; road: 3–1–2)
Game Date Visitor Score Home Decision Attendance Record Points
11 November 2 Philadelphia 3–0 Montreal Parent 18,005 7–3–1 15
12 November 3 NY Islanders 1–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 8–3–1 17
13 November 5 Philadelphia 4–4 NY Islanders Parent 14,865 8–3–2 18
14 November 7 Minnesota 0–2 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 9–3–2 20
15 November 9 Washington 2–6 Philadelphia Stephenson 17,007 10–3–2 22
16 November 10 California 0–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 11–3–2 24
17 November 13 Philadelphia 3–2 NY Rangers Parent 17,500 12–3–2 26
18 November 15 Philadelphia 2–2 Atlanta Parent 15,141 12–3–3 27
19 November 16 Philadelphia 3–5 St. Louis Stephenson 18,607 12–4–3 27
20 November 21 Vancouver 4–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 12–5–3 27
21 November 23 Philadelphia 6–3 Toronto Parent 16,485 13–5–3 29
22 November 24 Atlanta 4–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 13–6–3 29
23 November 27 Detroit 2–6 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 14–6–3 31
December: 10–1–2 (home: 7–0–0; road: 3–1–2)
Game Date Visitor Score Home Decision Attendance Record Points
24 December 1 Kansas City 0–10 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 15–6–3 33
25 December 5 Chicago 2–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 16–6–3 35
26 December 6 Philadelphia 3–3 Kansas City Parent 8,971 16–6–4 36
27 December 8 NY Islanders 2–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 17–6–4 38
28 December 12 Minnesota 0–6 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 18–6–4 40
29 December 13 Philadelphia 3–2 Atlanta Parent 15,141 19–6–4 42
30 December 15 St. Louis 2–7 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 20–6–4 44
31 December 19 Toronto 1–5 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 21–6–4 46
32 December 21 Philadelphia 2–2 Detroit Stephenson 14,393 21–6–5 47
33 December 22 Pittsburgh 0–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 22–6–5 49
34 December 26 Philadelphia 4–1 Washington Parent 18,130 23–6–5 51
35 December 28 Philadelphia 1–2 Chicago Parent 19,000 23–7–5 51
36 December 29 Philadelphia 5–2 Buffalo Parent 15,863 24–7–5 53
January: 7–3–2 (home: 4–1–0; road: 3–2–2)
Game Date Visitor Score Home Decision Attendance Record Points
37 January 1 Philadelphia 2–0 Vancouver Parent 15,578 25–7–5 55
38 January 4 Philadelphia 2–2 Los Angeles Parent 16,005 25–7–6 56
39 January 5 Philadelphia 1–5 California Parent 11,153 25–8–6 56
40 January 9 NY Islanders 3–1 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 25–9–6 56
41 January 11 Philadelphia 0–6 Montreal Parent 18,721 25–10–6 56
42 January 12 California 1–2 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 26–10–6 58
43 January 14 Philadelphia 6–4 Kansas City Parent 8,057 27–10–6 60
44 January 16 Washington 0–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 28–10–6 62
45 January 18 Atlanta 1–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 29–10–6 64
46 January 23 Philadelphia 7–2 St. Louis Parent 18,022 30–10–6 66
47 January 26 Philadelphia 2–2 Boston Parent 15,003 30–10–7 67
48 January 30 Toronto 1–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 31–10–7 69
February: 5–7–2 (home: 4–1–0; road: 1–6–2)
Game Date Visitor Score Home Decision Attendance Record Points
49 February 1 Buffalo 0–6 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 32–10–7 71
50 February 2 Philadelphia 1–5 Boston Parent 15,003 32–11–7 71
51 February 5 Philadelphia 4–3 NY Rangers Parent 17,500 33–11–7 73
52 February 6 NY Rangers 3–1 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 33–12–7 73
53 February 8 Philadelphia 0–5 Minnesota Stephenson 15,230 33–13–7 73
54 February 11 Philadelphia 1–3 St. Louis Parent 17,924 33–14–7 73
55 February 13 Chicago 1–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 34–14–7 75
56 February 15 Philadelphia 1–1 NY Islanders Parent 14,865 34–14–8 76
57 February 16 Boston 3–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 35–14–8 78
58 February 19 Philadelphia 3–4 Detroit Parent 14,150 35–15–8 78
59 February 20 Philadelphia 6–6 Buffalo Parent 15,863 35–15–9 79
60 February 23 Philadelphia 1–2 NY Rangers Parent 17,500 35–16–9 79
61 February 26 Philadelphia 4–7 Atlanta Parent 15,087 35–17–9 79
62 February 27 Vancouver 1–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 36–17–9 81
March: 13–1–1 (home: 8–0–0; road: 5–1–1)
Game Date Visitor Score Home Decision Attendance Record Points
63 March 1 Kansas City 0–3 Philadelphia Stephenson 17,007 37–17–9 83
64 March 2 St. Louis 2–4 Philadelphia Stephenson 17,007 38–17–9 85
65 March 5 Philadelphia 9–2 Minnesota Stephenson 14,587 39–17–9 87
66 March 8 Philadelphia 2–8 Pittsburgh Taylor 13,404 39–18–9 87
67 March 9 Detroit 5–8 Philadelphia Stephenson 17,007 40–18–9 89
68 March 13 Pittsburgh 0–6 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 41–18–9 91
69 March 15 Philadelphia 4–4 Toronto Taylor 16,485 41–18–10 92
70 March 16 Los Angeles 0–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 42–18–10 94
71 March 18 Philadelphia 7–2 Washington Parent 18,130 43–18–10 96
72 March 22 Minnesota 0–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 44–18–10 98
73 March 23 Montreal 1–2 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 45–18–10 100
74 March 25 Philadelphia 5–3 Vancouver Parent 15,570 46–18–10 102
75 March 26 Philadelphia 6–2 California Parent 11,068 47–18–10 104
76 March 29 Philadelphia 5–2 Chicago Parent 18,000 48–18–10 106
77 March 30 Chicago 1–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 49–18–10 108
April: 2–0–1 (home: 1–0–1; road: 1–0–0)
Game Date Visitor Score Home Decision Attendance Record Points
78 April 3 NY Rangers 1–1 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 49–18–11 109
79 April 5 Philadelphia 4–1 NY Islanders Parent 14,865 50–18–11 111
80 April 6 Atlanta 2–6 Philadelphia Parent 17,007 51–18–11 113
Legend:

      Win (2 points)       Loss (0 points)       Tie (1 point)

Playoffs

1975 Stanley Cup playoffs
Quarter-finals vs. Toronto Maple Leafs – Flyers win 4–0
Game Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Series
1 April 13 Toronto 3–6 Philadelphia Parent 17,077 Flyers lead 1–0
2 April 15 Toronto 0–3 Philadelphia Parent 17,077 Flyers lead 2–0
3 April 17 Philadelphia 2–0 Toronto Parent 16,485 Flyers lead 3–0
4 April 19 Philadelphia 4–3 Toronto OT Parent 16,485 Flyers win 4–0
Semi-finals vs. New York Islanders – Flyers win 4–3
Game Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Series
1 April 29 NY Islanders 0–4 Philadelphia Stephenson 17,077 Flyers lead 1–0
2 May 1 NY Islanders 4–5 Philadelphia OT Stephenson 17,077 Flyers lead 2–0
3 May 4 Philadelphia 1–0 NY Islanders Parent 14,865 Flyers lead 3–0
4 May 7 Philadelphia 3–4 NY Islanders OT Parent 14,865 Flyers lead 3–1
5 May 8 NY Islanders 5–1 Philadelphia Parent 17,077 Flyers lead 3–2
6 May 11 Philadelphia 1–2 NY Islanders Parent 14,865 Series tied 3–3
7 May 13 NY Islanders 1–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,077 Flyers win 4–3
Stanley Cup Finals vs. Buffalo Sabres – Flyers win 4–2
Game Date Visitor Score Home OT Decision Attendance Series
1 May 15 Buffalo 1–4 Philadelphia Parent 17,077 Flyers lead 1–0
2 May 18 Buffalo 1–2 Philadelphia Parent 17,077 Flyers lead 2–0
3 May 20 Philadelphia 4–5 Buffalo OT Parent 15,863 Flyers lead 2–1
4 May 22 Philadelphia 2–4 Buffalo Parent 15,863 Series tied 2–2
5 May 25 Buffalo 1–5 Philadelphia Parent 17,077 Flyers lead 3–2
6 May 27 Philadelphia 2–0 Buffalo Parent 15,863 Flyers win 4–2
Legend:

      Win       Loss

Player statistics

Scoring

Regular season Playoffs
No. Player Age Pos GP G A Pts +/- PIM GP G A Pts +/- PIM
16 Bobby Clarke 25 C 80 27 89 116 79 125 17 4 12 16 6 16
19 Rick MacLeish 25 C 80 38 41 79 29 50 17 11 9 20 17 8
5, 27 Reggie Leach 24 RW 80 45 33 78 53 63 17 8 2 10 5 6
7 Bill Barber 22 LW 79 34 37 71 46 66 17 6 9 15 6 8
18 Ross Lonsberry 27 LW 80 24 25 49 28 99 17 4 3 7 2 10
12 Gary Dornhoefer 31 RW 69 17 27 44 23 102 17 5 5 10 11 33
10 Bill Clement 24 C 68 21 16 37 21 42 12 1 0 1 0 8
6 Andre Dupont 25 D 80 11 21 32 41 276 17 3 2 5 3 49
26 Orest Kindrachuk 24 C 60 10 21 31 8 72 14 0 2 2 −3 12
9 Bob Kelly 24 LW 67 11 18 29 21 99 16 3 3 6 8 15
3, 4 Tom Bladon 22 D 76 9 20 29 42 54 13 1 3 4 4 12
11 Don Saleski 25 RW 63 10 18 28 7 107 17 2 3 5 3 25
15 Terry Crisp 31 C 71 8 19 27 11 20 9 2 4 6 3 0
8 Dave Schultz 25 LW 76 9 17 26 16 472 17 2 3 5 3 83
20 Jimmy Watson 22 D 68 7 18 25 41 72 17 1 8 9 16 10
14 Joe Watson 31 D 80 6 17 23 42 42 17 0 4 4 2 6
2 Ed Van Impe 34 D 78 1 17 18 39 109 17 0 4 4 16 28
4, 5, 23, 29 Larry Goodenough 22 D 20 3 9 12 12 0 5 0 4 4 0 2
25 Ted Harris 38 D 70 1 6 7 27 48 16 0 4 4 4 4
21 Bob Sirois 20 RW 3 1 0 1 1 4
1 Bernie Parent 29 G 68 0 0 0 N/A 16 15 0 0 0 N/A 0
35 Wayne Stephenson 30 G 12 0 0 0 N/A 0 2 0 1 1 N/A 0
5 Serge Lajeunesse 24 D 5 0 0 0 1 2
30 Bobby Taylor 30 G 3 0 0 0 N/A 2
5, 17 Mike Boland 25 RW 2 0 0 0 0 0
29 Jack McIlhargey 22 D 2 0 0 0 −1 11
17 Randy Osburn 22 LW 1 0 0 0 0 0

Goaltending

Regular season Playoffs
No. Player Age GP GS W L T SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI GP GS W L SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI
1 Bernie Parent 29 68 68 44 14 9 1674 137 2.04 .918 12 4,034:37 15 15 10 5 381 29 1.89 .924 4 920:09
35 Wayne Stephenson 30 12 10 7 2 1 274 29 2.73 .894 1 637:48 2 2 2 0 51 4 1.95 .922 1 122:56
30 Bobby Taylor 30 3 2 0 2 1 70 13 6.52 .814 0 119:39

Awards and records

Awards

Type Award/honor Recipient Ref
League (annual) Conn Smythe Trophy Bernie Parent [4]
Hart Memorial Trophy Bobby Clarke [5]
NHL First All-Star Team Bobby Clarke (Center) [6]
Bernie Parent (Goaltender)
Vezina Trophy Bernie Parent [7]
League (in-season) NHL All-Star Game selection Bill Barber [8]
Bobby Clarke
Bernie Parent
Fred Shero (Coach)
Ed Van Impe
Jim Watson
Team Barry Ashbee Trophy Joe Watson [9]

Records

  •  dagger  NHL record

Individual

Franchise player records set during the 1974–75 season
Record Type Total Player Date(s) Ref
Games with a point Streak 18[lower-alpha 1] Bobby Clarke 2/26/1975 – 4/3/1975 [10]
Most assists Season 89[lower-alpha 2] Bobby Clarke [11]
Most penalties in minutes Season 472dagger Dave Schultz [10]
Most shutouts Season 12[lower-alpha 3] Bernie Parent [12]
Hat tricks, playoffs Season 2 Rick MacLeish [13]
Most shutouts, playoffs Season 4 Bernie Parent [14]

Team

Franchise team records set during the 1974–75 season
Record Type Total Refs
Most shutouts, playoffs Season 5[lower-alpha 4] [15]

Milestones

Franchise firsts[16]
Milestone Player Details Date Ref
Penalty shot goal Orest Kindrachuk Scored at 10:41 of the second period against Michel Belhumeur November 9, 1974 [17]

Transactions

The Flyers were involved in the following transactions from May 20, 1974, the day after the deciding game of the 1974 Stanley Cup Finals, through May 27, 1975, the day of the deciding game of the 1975 Stanley Cup Finals.[18]

Trades

Date Details Ref
May 24, 1974 To Philadelphia Flyers
Reggie Leach
To California Golden Seals
Al MacAdam
Larry Wright
1st-round pick in 1974
[19]
May 27, 1974 To Philadelphia Flyers
Dave Fortier
Randy Osburn
To Toronto Maple Leafs
Bill Flett
[20]
August 20, 1974 To Philadelphia Flyers
cash
To Syracuse Eagles (AHL)
Larry Keenan
[21]
September 13, 1974 To Philadelphia Flyers
Wayne Stephenson
To St. Louis Blues
rights to Randy Andreachuk
2nd-round pick in 1975
[22]
September 15, 1974 To Philadelphia Flyers
Ted Harris
To St. Louis Blues
future considerations
[23]
December 11, 1974 To Philadelphia Flyers
rights to Ron Chipperfield
To California Golden Seals
George Pesut
[24][25]

Signings

Internal

The following players were either re-signed by the Flyers or, in the case of the team's selections in the NHL Entry Draft, signed to contracts.

Date Player Term Ref
June 11, 1974 Bob Sirois (DP) multi-year [26]
June 20, 1974 Norm Barnes (DP) multi-year [27]
June 20, 1974 Bill Barber multi-year [27]
June 20, 1974 Tom Bladon multi-year [27]
June 20, 1974 Reggie Leach multi-year [27]
June 20, 1974 Don McLean (DP) multi-year [27]
June 20, 1974 Randy Osburn multi-year [27]
June 20, 1974 Graham Parsons multi-year [27]
August 27, 1974 Steve Short (DP) multi-year [28]

Drafts

Intra-League

The 1974 NHL Intra-League Draft was held on June 10, 1974.[29][30] It cost $40,000 to make a claim.[29]

Date Player Team Ref
June 10, 1974 Dave Fortier to New York Islanders [31]

Expansion

The 1974 NHL Expansion Draft was held on June 12, 1974.[32][33] It featured two expansion teams, the Kansas City Scouts and Washington Capitals, selecting players from the 16 existing NHL teams.[32] Each NHL team placed 15 skaters and 2 goaltenders on a protected list from which the two expansion teams could not select.[32]

Philadelphia Flyers protection lists at the 1974 NHL Expansion Draft
Status Players
Protected[32] Bill Barber, Tom Bladon, Bobby Clarke, Bill Clement, Terry Crisp (added after Nolet selection), Gary Dornhoefer, André Dupont, Bob Kelly, Orest Kindrachuk, Reggie Leach, Ross Lonsberry, Rick MacLeish, Bernie Parent (G), Don Saleski, Dave Schultz, Bobby Taylor (G), Ed Van Impe, Jimmy Watson, Joe Watson (added after Belhumeur selection)
Selections[34] Washington Capitals selected Michel Belhumeur 4th overall
Kansas City Scouts selected Simon Nolet 5th overall
Washington Capitals selected Bruce Cowick 18th overall

Reverse

The 1974 NHL Reverse Draft was held on June 13, 1974.[35][36] The Reverse Draft featured American Hockey League (AHL) and Western Hockey League (WHL) teams selecting unprotected players from NHL teams.[35] It cost $15,000 to make a claim.[35]

Date Player Team Ref
June 13, 1974 Rene Drolet to Tidewater Wings (AHL) [35]
June 13, 1974 Graham Parsons from Minnesota North Stars[lower-alpha 5] [35]

Departures

The following players left the team via free agency, release, or retirement. Players who were under contract and left the team during the season are marked with an asterisk (*).

Date Player New team (league) Via Ref
June 4, 1974 Barry Ashbee Retirement [37]

Draft picks

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Philadelphia's picks at the 1974 NHL amateur draft, which was held via conference call at the NHL's office in Montreal, Quebec, on May 28, 1974.[38] The Flyers first-round pick, 17th overall, was traded to the California Golden Seals along with Al MacAdam and Larry Wright for Reggie Leach on May 24, 1974.[39]

Round Pick Player Position Nationality Team (league)
2 35 Don McLean Defense  Canada Sudbury Wolves (OHA)
3 53 Bob Sirois Right Wing  Canada Montreal Red White and Blue (QMJHL)
4 71 Randy Andreachuk Center  Canada Kamloops Chiefs (WCHL)
5 89 Dennis Sobchuk Center  Canada Regina Pats (WCHL)
6 107 Willie Friesen Left Wing  Canada Swift Current Broncos (WCHL)
7 125 Rejean Lemelin Goaltender  Canada Sherbrooke Beavers (QMJHL)
8 142 Steve Short Left Wing  United States Minnesota Junior Stars (MJHL)
9 159 Peter McKenzie Defense  Canada St. Francis Xavier University (CIAU)
10 174 Marcel Labrosse Center  Canada Shawinigan Dynamos (QMJHL)
11 189 Scott Jessee Right Wing  United States Michigan Tech University (WCHA)
12 201 Richard Guay Goaltender  Canada Chicoutimi Saguenéens (QMJHL)
13 211 Brad Morrow Defense  United States University of Minnesota (WCHA)
14 219 Craig Arvidson Left Wing  United States University of Minnesota Duluth (WCHA)

Farm teams

The Flyers were affiliated with the Richmond Robins of the AHL[40] and the Philadelphia Firebirds of the NAHL.[41] The Flyers and the expansion Washington Capitals had a joint affiliation agreement with Richmond and both teams sent players there.[40] Richmond finished 2nd in their division and lost in seven games to the Hershey Bears in the first round of the playoffs.[42] Playing in the Pennsylvania Convention Center, the first-year Firebirds finished 2nd in the league but lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Long Island Cougars.

Notes

  1. Tied by Eric Lindros during the 1998–99 season.
  2. Tied by Clarke in 1975–76.
  3. Tied Parent's mark from 1973 to 1974 season.
  4. Tied in 2009–10.
  5. Selected by the Richmond Robins, the Flyers' AHL affiliate.

References

General
    • Flyers History: Season Overview
    • Game Scores & Results
    • Playoff Results
Specific
  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. 2014–15 NHL Official Guide & Record Book, p. 230–32
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. 10.0 10.1 2016–2017 Philadelphia Flyers Media Guide, p. 263
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. 2016–2017 Philadelphia Flyers Media Guide, p. 352
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  15. 2016–2017 Philadelphia Flyers Media Guide, p. 347
  16. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  19. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  20. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  21. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  22. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  23. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  24. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  25. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  26. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  27. 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 27.4 27.5 27.6 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  28. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  29. 29.0 29.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  30. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  31. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 32.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  33. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  34. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  35. 35.0 35.1 35.2 35.3 35.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  36. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  37. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  38. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  39. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  40. 40.0 40.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  41. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  42. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.