Pacific Division (NHL)
Formerly | Smythe Division |
---|---|
Conference | Western Conference |
League | National Hockey League |
Sport | Ice hockey |
Founded | 1993 Suspended in 2020β21 2021 (reactivated) |
No. of teams | 8 |
Most recent champion(s) | Vegas Golden Knights (4th title) |
Most titles | Anaheim Ducks and San Jose Sharks (6 titles each) |
The National Hockey League's Pacific Division was formed in 1993 as part of the Western Conference in a league realignment. It is also one of the two successors of the Smythe Division (the other one was the Northwest Division), though of the current teams, only the Anaheim Ducks, Seattle Kraken and Vegas Golden Knights did not play in the Smythe Division. Due to subsequent realignments, three of the Pacific Division's original teams (the Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, and Vancouver Canucks) left the division in 1998 but returned in 2013. The division is the only one in the NHL without any Original Six teams. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting closure of the CanadaβUnited States border, all eight teams were transferred into two different divisions for the 2020β21 NHL season. The American-based teams were moved to the West Division, while the Canadian-based teams were placed into the North Division.
With the addition of the expansion Seattle Kraken to the division in the 2021β22 NHL season and the NHL becoming a 32 team league, the Coyotes were moved to the Central Division to balance out the divisional alignment of eight teams per division.[1]
Division lineups
1993β1995
- Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
- Calgary Flames
- Edmonton Oilers
- Los Angeles Kings
- San Jose Sharks
- Vancouver Canucks
Changes from the 1992β93 season
- The Pacific Division is formed as a result of NHL realignment
- The Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, Los Angeles Kings, San Jose Sharks, and Vancouver Canucks come from the Smythe Division
- The Mighty Ducks of Anaheim are added as an expansion team
1995β1998
- Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
- Calgary Flames
- Colorado Avalanche
- Edmonton Oilers
- Los Angeles Kings
- San Jose Sharks
- Vancouver Canucks
Changes from the 1994β95 season
- The Quebec Nordiques relocate to Denver, Colorado, and become the Colorado Avalanche
- The Colorado Avalanche come from the Northeast Division
1998β2006
- Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
- Dallas Stars
- Los Angeles Kings
- Phoenix Coyotes
- San Jose Sharks
Changes from the 1997β98 season
- The Calgary Flames, Colorado Avalanche, Edmonton Oilers, and Vancouver Canucks move to the Northwest Division
- The Dallas Stars and Phoenix Coyotes come from the Central Division
2006β2013
- Anaheim Ducks
- Dallas Stars
- Los Angeles Kings
- Phoenix Coyotes
- San Jose Sharks
Changes from the 2005β06 season
- The Mighty Ducks of Anaheim changed their name to the Anaheim Ducks
2013β2014
- Anaheim Ducks
- Calgary Flames
- Edmonton Oilers
- Los Angeles Kings
- Phoenix Coyotes
- San Jose Sharks
- Vancouver Canucks
Changes from the 2012β13 season
- The Northwest Division is dissolved due to NHL realignment
- The Dallas Stars move to the Central Division
- The Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, and Vancouver Canucks come from the Northwest Division
2014β2017
- Anaheim Ducks
- Arizona Coyotes
- Calgary Flames
- Edmonton Oilers
- Los Angeles Kings
- San Jose Sharks
- Vancouver Canucks
Changes from the 2013β14 season
- The Phoenix Coyotes changed their name to the Arizona Coyotes
2017β2020
- Anaheim Ducks
- Arizona Coyotes
- Calgary Flames
- Edmonton Oilers
- Los Angeles Kings
- San Jose Sharks
- Vancouver Canucks
- Vegas Golden Knights
Changes from the 2016β17 season
- The Vegas Golden Knights are added as an expansion team
2020β2021
- Division not used for the 2020β21 NHL season
Changes from the 2019β20 season
- Due to COVID-19 restrictions the NHL realigned into four divisions with no conferences for the 2020β21 season
- The Anaheim Ducks, Arizona Coyotes, Los Angeles Kings, San Jose Sharks and Vegas Golden Knights move to the West Division
- The Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers and Vancouver Canucks move to the North Division
2021βpresent
- Anaheim Ducks
- Calgary Flames
- Edmonton Oilers
- Los Angeles Kings
- San Jose Sharks
- Seattle Kraken
- Vancouver Canucks
- Vegas Golden Knights
Changes from the 2020β21 season
- The league returned to using a four division and two conference alignment
- The Anaheim Ducks, Los Angeles Kings, San Jose Sharks and Vegas Golden Knights come from the West Division
- The Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers and Vancouver Canucks come from the North Division
- The Seattle Kraken are added as an expansion team
Division champions
- 1994 β Calgary Flames (42β29β13, 97 pts)
- 1995 β Calgary Flames (24β17β7, 55 pts)
- 1996 β Colorado Avalanche (47β25β10, 104 pts)
- 1997 β Colorado Avalanche (49β24β9, 107 pts)
- 1998 β Colorado Avalanche (39β26β17, 95 pts)
- 1999 β Dallas Stars (51β19β12, 114 pts)
- 2000 β Dallas Stars (43β23β10β6, 102 pts)
- 2001 β Dallas Stars (48β24β8β2, 106 pts)
- 2002 β San Jose Sharks (44β27β8β3, 99 pts)
- 2003 β Dallas Stars (46β17β15β4, 111 pts)
- 2004 β San Jose Sharks (43β21β12β6, 104 pts)
- 2005 β no season (NHL Lockout)
- 2006 β Dallas Stars (53β23β6, 112 pts)
- 2007 β Anaheim Ducks (48β20β14, 110 pts)
- 2008 β San Jose Sharks (49β23β10, 108 pts)
- 2009 β San Jose Sharks (53β18β11, 117 pts)
- 2010 β San Jose Sharks (51β20β11, 113 pts)
- 2011 β San Jose Sharks (48β25β9, 105 pts)
- 2012 β Phoenix Coyotes (42β27β13, 97 pts)
- 2013 β Anaheim Ducks (30β12β6, 66 pts)
- 2014 β Anaheim Ducks (54β20β8, 116 pts)
- 2015 β Anaheim Ducks (51β24β7, 109 pts)
- 2016 β Anaheim Ducks (46β25β11, 103 pts)
- 2017 β Anaheim Ducks (46β23β13, 105 pts)
- 2018 β Vegas Golden Knights (51β24β7, 109 pts)
- 2019 β Calgary Flames (50β25β7, 107 pts)
- 2020 β Vegas Golden Knights (39β24β8, 86 pts)
- 2021 β Division suspended for season
- 2022 β Calgary Flames (50β21β11, 111 pts)
- 2023 β Vegas Golden Knights (51β22β9, 111 pts)
- 2024 β Vancouver Canucks (50β23β9, 109 pts)
- 2025 β Vegas Golden Knights (50β22β10, 110 pts)
Season results
(#) | Denotes team that won the Stanley Cup |
(#) | Denotes team that won the Clarence S. Campbell Bowl, but lost Stanley Cup Finals |
(#) | Denotes team that qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs |
β‘ | Denotes winner of the Presidents' Trophy |
Season | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1993β94 | (2) Calgary (97) | (7) Vancouver (85) | (8) San Jose (82) | Anaheim (71) | Los Angeles (66) | Edmonton (64) | ||
1994β95[a] | (2) Calgary (55) | (6) Vancouver (48) | (7) San Jose (42) | Los Angeles (41) | Edmonton (38) | Anaheim (37) | ||
1995β96 | (2) Colorado (104) | (6) Calgary (79) | (7) Vancouver (79) | Anaheim (78) | Edmonton (68) | Los Angeles (66) | San Jose (47) | |
1996β97 | (1) Colorado (107)β‘ | (4) Anaheim (85) | (7) Edmonton (81) | Vancouver (77) | Calgary (73) | Los Angeles (67) | San Jose (62) | |
1997β98 | (2) Colorado (95) | (5) Los Angeles (87) | (7) Edmonton (80) | (8) San Jose (78) | Calgary (67) | Anaheim (65) | Vancouver (64) | |
1998β99 | (1) Dallas (114)β‘ | (4) Phoenix (90) | (6) Anaheim (83) | (7) San Jose (80) | Los Angeles (69) | |||
1999β2000 | (2) Dallas (102) | (5) Los Angeles (94) | (6) Phoenix (90) | (8) San Jose (87) | Anaheim (83) | |||
2000β01 | (3) Dallas (106) | (5) San Jose (95) | (7) Los Angeles (92) | Phoenix (90) | Anaheim (66) | |||
2001β02 | (3) San Jose (99) | (6) Phoenix (95) | (7) Los Angeles (95) | Dallas (90) | Anaheim (69) | |||
2002β03 | (1) Dallas (111) | (7) Anaheim (95) | Los Angeles (78) | Phoenix (78) | San Jose (73) | |||
2003β04 | (2) San Jose (104) | (5) Dallas (97) | Los Angeles (81) | Anaheim (76) | Phoenix (68) | |||
2004β05 | No season due to 2004β05 NHL lockout | |||||||
2005β06 | (2) Dallas (112) | (5) San Jose (99) | (6) Anaheim (98) | Los Angeles (89) | Phoenix (81) | |||
2006β07 | (2) Anaheim (110) | (5) San Jose (107) | (6) Dallas (107) | Los Angeles (68) | Phoenix (67) | |||
2007β08 | (2) San Jose (108) | (4) Anaheim (102) | (5) Dallas (97) | Phoenix (83) | Los Angeles (71) | |||
2008β09 | (1) San Jose (117)β‘ | (8) Anaheim (91) | Dallas (83) | Phoenix (79) | Los Angeles (79) | |||
2009β10 | (1) San Jose (113) | (4) Phoenix (107) | (6) Los Angeles (101) | Anaheim (89) | Dallas (88) | |||
2010β11 | (2) San Jose (105) | (4) Anaheim (99) | (6) Phoenix (99) | (7) Los Angeles (98) | Dallas (95) | |||
2011β12 | (3) Phoenix (97) | (7) San Jose (96) | (8) Los Angeles (95) | Dallas (89) | Anaheim (80) | |||
2012β13[b] | (2) Anaheim (66) | (5) Los Angeles (59) | (6) San Jose (57) | Phoenix (51) | Dallas (48) | |||
2013β14 | (1) Anaheim (116) | (2) San Jose (111) | (3) Los Angeles (100) | Phoenix (89) | Vancouver (83) | Calgary (77) | Edmonton (67) | |
2014β15 | (1) Anaheim (109) | (2) Vancouver (101) | (3) Calgary (97) | Los Angeles (95) | San Jose (89) | Edmonton (62) | Arizona (56) | |
2015β16 | (1) Anaheim (103) | (2) Los Angeles (102) | (3) San Jose (98) | Arizona (78) | Calgary (77) | Vancouver (75) | Edmonton (70) | |
2016β17 | (1) Anaheim (105) | (2) Edmonton (103) | (3) San Jose (99) | (WC1) Calgary (94) | Los Angeles (86) | Arizona (70) | Vancouver (69) | |
2017β18 | (1) Vegas (109) | (2) Anaheim (101) | (3) San Jose (100) | (WC1) Los Angeles (98) | Calgary (84) | Edmonton (78) | Vancouver (73) | Arizona (70) |
2018β19 | (1) Calgary (107) | (2) San Jose (101) | (3) Vegas (93) | Arizona (86) | Vancouver (81) | Anaheim (80) | Edmonton (79) | Los Angeles (71) |
2019β20[c] | (3) Vegas (71 gp 86 pts. .606 ppct.) |
(5) Edmonton (71 gp 83 pts. .585 ppct.) |
(7) Vancouver (69 gp 78 pts. .565 ppct.) |
(8) Calgary (70 gp 79 pts. .564 ppct.) |
(11) Arizona (70 gp 74 pts. .529 ppct.) |
Anaheim (71 gp 67 pts. .472 ppct.) |
Los Angeles (70 gp 64 pts. .457 ppct.) |
San Jose (70 gp 63 pts. .450 ppct.) |
2020β21 | Division suspended for season; temporary realignment | |||||||
2021β22 | (1) Calgary (111) | (2) Edmonton (104) | (3) Los Angeles (99) | Vegas (94) | Vancouver (92) | San Jose (77) | Anaheim (76) | Seattle (60) |
2022β23 | (1) Vegas (111) | (2) Edmonton (109) | (3) Los Angeles (104) | (WC1) Seattle (100) | Calgary (93) | Vancouver (83) | San Jose (60) | Anaheim (58) |
2023β24 | (1) Vancouver (109) | (2) Edmonton (104) | (3) Los Angeles (99) | (WC2) Vegas (98) | Calgary (81) | Seattle (81) | Anaheim (59) | San Jose (47) |
2024β25 | (1) Vegas (110) | (2) Los Angeles (105) | (3) Edmonton (101) | Calgary (96) | Vancouver (90) | Anaheim (80) | Seattle (76) | San Jose (52) |
- Notes
- a The 1994β95 NHL season was shortened to 48 games due to the lockout.
- b The 2012β13 NHL season was shortened to 48 games due to the lockout.
- c The 2019β20 NHL season was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Due to the imbalance in the number of games played among teams, the regular season standings were determined by points percentage.
Stanley Cup winners produced
- 1996 β Colorado Avalanche
- 1999 β Dallas Stars
- 2007 β Anaheim Ducks
- 2012 β Los Angeles Kings
- 2014 β Los Angeles Kings
- 2023 β Vegas Golden Knights
Presidents' Trophy winners produced
- 1997 β Colorado Avalanche
- 1999 β Dallas Stars
- 2009 β San Jose Sharks
- 2011 β Vancouver Canucks
- 2012 β Vancouver Canucks
Pacific Division titles won by team
Teams in bold are currently in the division.
Team | Wins | Last win |
---|---|---|
Anaheim Ducks | 6 | 2017 |
San Jose Sharks | 6 | 2011 |
Dallas Stars | 5 | 2006 |
Vegas Golden Knights | 4 | 2025 |
Calgary Flames | 4 | 2022 |
Colorado Avalanche | 3 | 1998 |
Arizona Coyotes | 1 | 2012 |
Vancouver Canucks | 1 | 2024 |
Edmonton Oilers | 0 | β |
Los Angeles Kings | 0 | β |
Seattle Kraken | 0 | β |
References
- ^ Kaplan, Emily (December 4, 2018). "Seattle gets NHL expansion team, to debut in 2021-22 season". ESPN.com. Retrieved December 12, 2018.