1995–96 Ottawa Senators season

1995–96 Ottawa Senators
Division6th Northeast
Conference13th Eastern
1995–96 record18–59–5
Home record8–28–5
Road record10–31–0
Goals for191
Goals against291
Team information
General managerRandy Sexton (Oct.–Dec.)
Pierre Gauthier (Dec.–Apr.)
CoachRick Bowness (Oct.–Nov.)
Dave Allison (Nov.–Jan.)
Jacques Martin (Jan.–Apr.)
CaptainRandy Cunneyworth
Alternate captainsSteve Duchesne
Tom Chorske
ArenaOttawa Civic Centre (Oct.–Dec.)
The Palladium[a] (Jan.–Apr.)
Average attendance13,252 (2 arenas combined)
Minor league affiliate(s)Prince Edward Island Senators
Thunder Bay Senators
Team leaders
GoalsDaniel Alfredsson (26)
AssistsDaniel Alfredsson (35)
PointsDaniel Alfredsson (61)
Penalty minutesDennis Vial (276)
Plus/minusPat Elyniuk (+2)
WinsDamian Rhodes (10)
Goals against averageDamian Rhodes (2.77)

The 1995–96 Ottawa Senators season was the fourth season of the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). This season was plenty of change for the club. The club changed coaching staffs twice, changed their general manager and moved into the new Palladium arena in Kanata. The team again finished last in the league, even though they knocked the defending Stanley Cup champion New Jersey Devils out of playoff contention in the last game of the season, allowing the Tampa Bay Lightning to clinch the playoff berth at the expense of the Devils.[1][2]

Offseason

Prior to the season, on August 2, 1995, Brian Smith, former NHL hockey player and sportscaster at Ottawa TV station CJOH-TV was killed. He had been the primary reporter on the Senators for the station. The Senators honored him with a patch on their jerseys, with his nickname 'Smitty' and number 18, which they wore on their jerseys for the whole season. The team raised a banner in his memory.

Regular season

Northeast Division Teams

The Senators finished last in wins (18), points (41), goals scored (191), even-strength goals scored (132), power-play goals scored (53) and power-play percentage (12.33%). They also tied the New York Rangers and the Tampa Bay Lightning for fewest short-handed goals scored (6).[3]

There were some bright spots during the season, rookie Daniel Alfredsson led the team offensively with 61 points (26 goals-35 assists), while Alexei Yashin was out of the lineup for 36 games. Alfredsson won the Calder Memorial Trophy, awarded to the NHL's rookie of the year.

After getting off to a good start with a 6–5–0 record, the Senators lost their next eight games, which ended up costing head coach Rick Bowness his job, as the club replaced him with Dave Allison, who was previously the head coach of the Senators AHL affiliate, the Prince Edward Island Senators. The Dave Allison era did not last long in Ottawa, as the club won two of 25 games (2–22–1) before he was replaced by Jacques Martin. Under Martin, the Senators was more competitive, going 10–24–4 in his 38 games to finish the year with an 18–59–5, their fourth straight season at the bottom of the NHL standings.

Highlights

After taking over from the fired Randy Sexton as General Manager, on December 6, 1995, Pierre Gauthier made three moves to strengthen the club. He hired Jacques Martin as head coach, signed hold-out Alexei Yashin to a contract and engineered a blockbuster trade on January 23, 1996, dealing away Don Beaupre, Martin Straka, and Bryan Berard, while acquiring Damian Rhodes and Wade Redden. It was a three-way trade between the Senators, the Toronto Maple Leafs, and the New York Islanders and was necessary because Berard, the Senators' first-round pick, was refusing to report to the Senators.

The Senators left the Ottawa Civic Centre and played their first game in The Palladium on January 17, 1996, against the Montreal Canadiens. The raising of the Senators' Stanley Cup banners failed, leaving the banners obscuring some fans' view of the scoreboard. The Senators lost 3–0 to the Canadiens.

On April 13, 1996, the Senators played the defending Stanley Cup champion New Jersey Devils, who must win to clinch the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. The Senators played the role of spoiler, defeating New Jersey 5–2, officially eliminating the Devils from post-season play and giving the Tampa Bay Lightning, the team that entered the league the same year as the Senators, its first playoff berth.

Final standings

Northeast Division
No. GP W L T GF GA PTS
1 Pittsburgh Penguins 82 49 29 4 362 284 102
2 Boston Bruins 82 40 31 11 282 269 91
3 Montreal Canadiens 82 40 32 10 265 248 90
4 Hartford Whalers 82 34 39 9 237 259 77
5 Buffalo Sabres 82 33 42 7 247 262 72
6 82 18 59 5 191 291 41
Eastern Conference[4]
R Div GP W L T GF GA Pts
1 Philadelphia Flyers ATL 82 45 24 13 282 208 103
2 Pittsburgh Penguins NE 82 49 29 4 362 284 102
3 New York Rangers ATL 82 41 27 14 272 237 96
4 Florida Panthers ATL 82 41 31 10 254 234 92
5 Boston Bruins NE 82 40 31 11 282 269 91
6 Montreal Canadiens NE 82 40 32 10 265 248 90
7 Washington Capitals ATL 82 39 32 11 234 204 89
8 Tampa Bay Lightning ATL 82 38 32 12 238 248 88
9 New Jersey Devils ATL 82 37 33 12 215 202 86
10 Hartford Whalers NE 82 34 39 9 237 259 77
11 Buffalo Sabres NE 82 33 42 7 247 262 73
12 New York Islanders ATL 82 22 50 10 229 315 54
13 NE 82 18 59 5 191 291 41

Divisions: ATL – Atlantic, NE – Northeast

bold – Qualified for playoffs


Schedule and results

1995–96 regular season[5]
October: 5–5–0 (home: 2–2–0; road: 3–3–0)
Game Date Score Opponent Record Attendance Recap
1 October 7, 1995 1–3 Buffalo Sabres (1995–96) 0–1–0 9,567 L
2 October 13, 1995 2–6 @ Florida Panthers (1995–96) 0–2–0 10,895 L
3 October 15, 1995 7–4 @ Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96) 1–2–0 13,488 W
4 October 19, 1995 4–2 Calgary Flames (1995–96) 2–2–0 8,424 W
5 October 21, 1995 1–4 @ New Jersey Devils (1995–96) 2–3–0 17,620 L
6 October 22, 1995 4–2 @ New York Rangers (1995–96) 3–3–0 18,200 W
7 October 24, 1995 2–1 @ Detroit Red Wings (1995–96) 4–3–0 19,512 W
8 October 26, 1995 5–4 Los Angeles Kings (1995–96) 5–3–0 10,575 W
9 October 28, 1995 1–4 Florida Panthers (1995–96) 5–4–0 8,660 L
10 October 29, 1995 2–5 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96) 5–5–0 17,328 L
November: 1–11–1 (home: 0–5–1; road: 1–6–0)
Game Date Score Opponent Record Attendance Recap
11 November 2, 1995 5–0 @ Hartford Whalers (1995–96) 6–5–0 10,458 W
12 November 4, 1995 4–5 Hartford Whalers (1995–96) 6–6–0 8,794 L
13 November 8, 1995 1–7 Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96) 6–7–0 10,137 L
14 November 9, 1995 3–4 @ Boston Bruins (1995–96) 6–8–0 17,261 L
15 November 11, 1995 2–3 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (1995–96) 6–9–0 8,988 L
16 November 15, 1995 2–3 @ Hartford Whalers (1995–96) 6–10–0 7,641 L
17 November 16, 1995 3–5 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96) 6–11–0 17,220 L
18 November 18, 1995 1–5 @ Montreal Canadiens (1995–96) 6–12–0 17,302 L
19 November 19, 1995 0–6 @ Buffalo Sabres (1995–96) 6–13–0 10,697 L
20 November 22, 1995 1–3 Winnipeg Jets (1995–96) 6–14–0 8,426 L
21 November 25, 1995 3–3 OT Boston Bruins (1995–96) 6–14–1 9,419 T
22 November 28, 1995 2–7 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96) 6–15–1 16,162 L
23 November 30, 1995 3–5 New York Islanders (1995–96) 6–16–1 8,167 L
December: 2–12–0 (home: 0–5–0; road: 2–7–0)
Game Date Score Opponent Record Attendance Recap
24 December 2, 1995 2–4 New York Rangers (1995–96) 6–17–1 8,194 L
25 December 5, 1995 1–4 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1995–96) 6–18–1 15,746 L
26 December 7, 1995 5–2 @ Chicago Blackhawks (1995–96) 7–18–1 17,552 W
27 December 9, 1995 3–7 Colorado Avalanche (1995–96) 7–19–1 9,169 L
28 December 12, 1995 1–2 @ San Jose Sharks (1995–96) 7–20–1 17,190 L
29 December 13, 1995 2–6 @ Los Angeles Kings (1995–96) 7–21–1 11,221 L
30 December 15, 1995 2–4 @ Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (1995–96) 7–22–1 17,174 L
31 December 17, 1995 1–4 @ Vancouver Canucks (1995–96) 7–23–1 16,006 L
32 December 18, 1995 1–3 @ Edmonton Oilers (1995–96) 7–24–1 8,419 L
33 December 23, 1995 2–4 Buffalo Sabres (1995–96) 7–25–1 8,615 L
34 December 26, 1995 4–6 @ New York Rangers (1995–96) 7–26–1 18,200 L
35 December 27, 1995 4–3 @ Buffalo Sabres (1995–96) 8–26–1 12,175 W
36 December 30, 1995 1–4 Montreal Canadiens (1995–96) 8–27–1 10,575 L
37 December 31, 1995 0–3 Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96) 8–28–1 8,522 L
January: 1–10–1 (home: 1–5–1; road: 0–5–0)
Game Date Score Opponent Record Attendance Recap
38 January 3, 1996 1–4 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96) 8–29–1 15,632 L
39 January 5, 1996 2–4 @ Hartford Whalers (1995–96) 8–30–1 12,239 L
40 January 6, 1996 4–5 @ New York Islanders (1995–96) 8–31–1 12,175 L
41 January 11, 1996 1–6 @ Washington Capitals (1995–96) 8–32–1 11,511 L
42 January 13, 1996 1–4 @ Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96) 8–33–1 21,829 L
43 January 17, 1996 0–3 Montreal Canadiens (1995–96) 8–34–1 18,500 L
44 January 22, 1996 3–7 Chicago Blackhawks (1995–96) 8–35–1 13,872 L
45 January 24, 1996 3–4 Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96) 8–36–1 17,149 L
46 January 25, 1996 2–4 Detroit Red Wings (1995–96) 8–37–1 16,882 L
47 January 27, 1996 2–2 OT Toronto Maple Leafs (1995–96) 8–37–2 18,500 T
48 January 29, 1996 4–2 St. Louis Blues (1995–96) 9–37–2 13,125 W
49 January 31, 1996 1–3 Boston Bruins (1995–96) 9–38–2 15,795 L
February: 3–8–1 (home: 0–4–1; road: 3–4–0)
Game Date Score Opponent Record Attendance Recap
50 February 1, 1996 2–4 Washington Capitals (1995–96) 9–39–2 12,322 L
51 February 3, 1996 2–3 OT New Jersey Devils (1995–96) 9–40–2 18,280 L
52 February 6, 1996 1–3 @ Calgary Flames (1995–96) 9–41–2 16,442 L
53 February 8, 1996 2–6 @ Winnipeg Jets (1995–96) 9–42–2 8,673 L
54 February 10, 1996 5–3 @ Montreal Canadiens (1995–96) 10–42–2 17,535 W
55 February 12, 1996 4–1 @ New York Islanders (1995–96) 11–42–2 7,567 W
56 February 15, 1996 2–2 OT San Jose Sharks (1995–96) 11–42–3 13,556 T
57 February 17, 1996 1–2 OT New York Rangers (1995–96) 11–43–3 18,500 L
58 February 20, 1996 7–1 @ St. Louis Blues (1995–96) 12–43–3 19,736 W
59 February 22, 1996 2–3 @ Dallas Stars (1995–96) 12–44–3 14,818 L
60 February 25, 1996 2–4 @ Colorado Avalanche (1995–96) 12–45–3 16,061 L
61 February 28, 1996 2–3 OT Buffalo Sabres (1995–96) 12–46–3 13,419 L
March: 3–10–1 (home: 3–5–1; road: 0–5–0)
Game Date Score Opponent Record Attendance Recap
62 March 1, 1996 2–3 Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96) 12–47–3 18,500 L
63 March 2, 1996 1–4 New Jersey Devils (1995–96) 12–48–3 15,510 L
64 March 7, 1996 1–5 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96) 12–49–3 13,377 L
65 March 9, 1996 2–3 @ Montreal Canadiens (1995–96) 12–50–3 17,959 L
66 March 13, 1996 4–1 Dallas Stars (1995–96) 13–50–3 13,226 W
67 March 15, 1996 2–0 Vancouver Canucks (1995–96) 14–50–3 17,850 W
68 March 17, 1996 5–0 Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96) 15–50–3 15,102 W
69 March 19, 1996 2–5 @ Florida Panthers (1995–96) 15–51–3 12,255 L
70 March 21, 1996 1–3 @ Boston Bruins (1995–96) 15–52–3 17,565 L
71 March 22, 1996 1–1 OT Hartford Whalers (1995–96) 15–52–4 13,596 T
72 March 24, 1996 2–3 Edmonton Oilers (1995–96) 15–53–4 13,188 L
73 March 27, 1996 2–4 Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96) 15–54–4 15,183 L
74 March 29, 1996 0–5 @ Washington Capitals (1995–96) 15–55–4 18,130 L
75 March 30, 1996 1–3 Montreal Canadiens (1995–96) 15–56–4 18,500 L
April: 3–3–1 (home: 2–2–1; road: 1–1–0)
Game Date Score Opponent Record Attendance Recap
76 April 1, 1996 1–1 OT Boston Bruins (1995–96) 15–56–5 13,335 T
77 April 3, 1996 3–2 Florida Panthers (1995–96) 16–56–5 13,074 W
78 April 5, 1996 4–2 New York Islanders (1995–96) 17–56–5 16,541 W
79 April 6, 1996 3–4 Washington Capitals (1995–96) 17–57–5 15,101 L
80 April 10, 1996 2–5 @ Buffalo Sabres (1995–96) 17–58–5 15,111 L
81 April 11, 1996 3–5 Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96) 17–59–5 18,500 L
82 April 13, 1996 5–2 @ New Jersey Devils (1995–96) 18–59–5 19,040 W

Legend: W Win (2 points) L Loss (0 points) T Tie (1 point)

Player statistics

Scoring

  • Position abbreviations: C = Centre; D = Defence; G = Goaltender; LW = Left wing; RW = Right wing
  • † = Joined team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, signing) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Senators only.
  • ‡ = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Senators only.
No. Player Pos Regular season
GP G A Pts +/- PIM
11 Daniel Alfredsson RW 82 26 35 61 −18 28
19 Alexei Yashin C 46 15 24 39 −15 28
7 Randy Cunneyworth LW 81 17 19 36 −31 130
28 Steve Duchesne D 62 12 24 36 −23 42
76 Radek Bonk C 76 16 19 35 −5 36
17 Tom Chorske LW 72 15 14 29 −9 21
82 Martin Straka C 43 9 16 25 −14 29
9 Dan Quinn C 28 6 18 24 −8 24
4 Sean Hill D 80 7 14 21 −26 94
23 Jaroslav Modry D 64 4 14 18 −17 38
78 Pavol Demitra LW 31 7 10 17 −3 6
91 Alexandre Daigle C 50 5 12 17 −30 24
13 Ted Drury C 42 9 7 16 −19 54
22 Antti Tormanen RW 50 7 8 15 −15 28
5 Kerry Huffman D 43 4 11 15 −18 63
20 Trent McCleary RW 75 4 10 14 −15 68
10 Rob Gaudreau RW 52 8 5 13 −19 15
94 Stan Neckar D 82 3 9 12 −16 54
12 Dave Archibald C 44 6 4 10 −14 18
49 Michel Picard LW 17 2 6 8 −1 10
2 Lance Pitlick D 28 1 6 7 −8 20
36 Troy Mallette LW 64 2 3 5 −7 171
21 Dennis Vial D 64 1 4 5 −13 276
3 Frank Musil D 65 1 3 4 −10 85
25 Pat Elynuik RW 29 1 2 3 2 16
29 Phil Bourque LW 13 1 1 2 −3 14
6 Chris Dahlquist D 24 1 1 2 −7 14
14 Jean-Yves Roy RW 4 1 1 2 3 2
33 Don Beaupre G 33 0 2 2 17
27 Janne Laukkanen D 20 0 2 2 0 14
26 Scott Levins RW 27 0 2 2 −3 80
1 Damian Rhodes G 36 0 2 2 4
16 Dave McLlwain RW 1 0 1 1 0 2
35 Mike Bales G 20 0 0 0 2
27 Joe Cirella†‡ D 6 0 0 0 −3 4
24 Daniel Laperriere D 6 0 0 0 2 4
18 Patrick Traverse D 5 0 0 0 −1 2

Goaltending

  • † = Joined team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, signing) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Senators only.
  • ‡ = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Senators only.
No. Player Regular season
GP W L T SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI
1 Damian Rhodes 36 10 22 4 1041 98 2.77 .906 2 2123
33 Don Beaupre 33 6 23 0 892 110 3.73 .877 1 1770
35 Mike Bales 20 2 14 1 560 72 4.15 .871 0 1040

Awards and records

Awards

Type Award/honour Recipient Ref
League
(annual)
Calder Memorial Trophy Daniel Alfredsson [6]
NHL All-Rookie Team Daniel Alfredsson (Forward) [7]
League
(in-season)
NHL All-Star Game selection Daniel Alfredsson [8]
NHL Rookie of the Month Daniel Alfredsson (November) [9]
Daniel Alfredsson (April) [10]
Team Molson Cup Damian Rhodes [11]

Milestones

Milestone Player Date Ref
First game Daniel Alfredsson October 7, 1995 [12]
Trent McCleary
Antti Tormanen
Patrick Traverse December 30, 1995

Transactions

July 1995

July 8 Acquired Jaroslav Modrý from the New Jersey Devils for a 4th round pick in the 1995 NHL entry draft - (Alyn McCauley).
July 31 Lost free agent Darren Rumble to the Philadelphia Flyers to a 1-year, $300,000 contract.

Source[13]

August 1995

August 1 Signed free agent Dan Quinn from the Los Angeles Kings to a 2-year, $1.05 mil contract.
August 4 Acquired Steve Duchesne from the St. Louis Blues for a 2nd round pick in the 1996 NHL entry draft - (Cory Sarich).
August 7 Lost free agent Corey Foster to the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 1-year contract.
August 9 Signed free agent Eric Lavigne from the Los Angeles Kings to a 1-year contract.

Source[14]

September 1995

September 20 Traded Jean-François Labbé to the Colorado Avalanche for future considerations.

Source[15]

October 1995

October 2 Claimed Justin Hocking from the Los Angeles Kings in the 1995 NHL Waiver Draft.
Claimed Ted Drury from the Colorado Avalanche in the 1995 NHL Waiver Draft.
October 4 Claimed Tom Chorske off of waivers from the New Jersey Devils.
October 5 Acquired Jean-Yves Roy from the New York Rangers for Steve Larouche. New Jersey Devils received 3rd round draft pick in 1997 NHL entry draft - (Josh Langfeld for waiver draft payment for Tom Chorske.
October 7 Acquired Frank Musil from the Calgary Flames for a 4th round pick in the 1997 NHL entry draft - (Chris St. Croix).
October 10 Signed free agent Joe Cirella from the Florida Panthers to a 1-year, $150,000 (CAD) contract.
October 13 Resigned Frank Musil to a 1-year, $500,000 contract.

Source[16]

December 1995

December 1 Released Joe Cirella.
December 31 Re-signed Alexei Yashin to a 5-year, $13.6 million contract.

Source[17]

January 1996

January 23 Traded Dan Quinn to the Philadelphia Flyers for cash.
Acquired Damian Rhodes from the Toronto Maple Leafs and Wade Redden from the New York Islanders for Martin Straka and Bryan Berard to the New York Islanders and Don Beaupre to the Toronto Maple Leafs as part of three-team trade.
January 25 Acquired Janne Laukkanen from the Colorado Avalanche for the rights to Brad Larsen.

Source[18]

March 1996

March 1 Acquired an 8th round pick in the 1996 NHL entry draft - (Erich Goldmann) from the Pittsburgh Penguins for Dave McLlwain.
March 19 Acquired an 9th round pick in the 1996 NHL entry draft - (Sami Salo) from the Philadelphia Flyers for Kerry Huffman.
March 20 Acquired Kevin Brown from the Los Angeles Kings for Jaroslav Modrý and an 8th round pick in the 1996 NHL entry draft - (Steve Valiquette).

Source[19]

Draft picks

Ottawa's draft picks at the 1995 NHL entry draft in Edmonton, Alberta.[20]

Round # Player Nationality College/Junior/Club team (League)
1 1 Bryan Berard  United States Detroit Jr. Red Wings (OHL)
2 27 Marc Moro  Canada Kingston Frontenacs (OHL)
3 53 Brad Larsen  Canada Swift Current Broncos (WHL)
4 89 Kevin Bolibruck  Canada Peterborough Petes (OHL)
4 103 Kevin Boyd  Canada London Knights (OHL)
6 131 David Hruska  Czech Republic Banik Sokolov (Czech.)
8 183 Kaj Linna  Finland Boston University (NCAA)
8 184 Ray Schultz  Canada Tri-City Americans (WHL)
9 231 Erik Kaminski  United States Northeastern University (Boston) (NCAA)

Farm teams

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Renamed during season to Corel Centre.

References

  • "Ottawa Senators 1995-96 roster and scoring statistics at hockeydb.com". www.hockeydb.com. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  • "1995-96 Ottawa Senators Roster, Stats, Injuries, Scores, Results, Shootouts". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  • Garrioch, Bruce (1998), "Ottawa Senators 1992–93 to Date", Total Hockey
  • Ottawa Senators staff (2006). Ottawa Senators Media Guide 2007. Ottawa Senators.
  • NHL staff (2006). National Hockey League Guide & Record Book 2007. NHL.
  1. ^ 1996 NJ Devils Miss Playoffs vs Ottawa Senators - Chorske 2 Goals on YouTube
  2. ^ Yannis, Alex (April 14, 1996). "HOCKEY;The Devils' Playoff Chase Ends With a Whimper". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
  3. ^ "1995-96 NHL Summary".
  4. ^ "1995–1996 Conference Standings". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 3, 2014.
  5. ^ "1995-96 Ottawa Senators Schedule". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  6. ^ "Calder Memorial Trophy". records.nhl.com. Retrieved August 27, 2023.
  7. ^ "Postseason All-Star Teams". NHL.com. Retrieved August 27, 2023.
  8. ^ "1996 NHL All-Star Game Rosters". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved August 29, 2024.
  9. ^ "Alfredsson named rookie of the month - UPI Archives". UPI. December 1, 1995. Retrieved August 27, 2023.
  10. ^ "NHL Rookies of the Month". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved August 27, 2023.
  11. ^ Ottawa Senators 2014–15 Media Guide, p.162–82
  12. ^ "1995-96 NHL Debuts". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved October 6, 2024.
  13. ^ "Transactions". prosportstransactions.com. Retrieved June 12, 2023.
  14. ^ "Transactions". prosportstransactions.com. Retrieved June 12, 2023.
  15. ^ "Transactions". prosportstransactions.com. Retrieved June 12, 2023.
  16. ^ "Transactions".
  17. ^ "Transactions".
  18. ^ "Transactions".
  19. ^ "Transactions".
  20. ^ "1995 NHL Entry Draft Picks at hockeydb.com". www.hockeydb.com. Retrieved August 28, 2023.