1995–96 Florida Panthers season

The 1995–96 Florida Panthers season was their most successful season ever. In only their third season in the National Hockey League, the Panthers qualified for the playoffs, and won three playoff series to become Eastern Conference champions. In the 1996 Stanley Cup Finals, they lost to the Colorado Avalanche in four games.

1995–96 Florida Panthers
Eastern Conference champions
Division3rd Atlantic
Conference4th Eastern
1995–96 record41–31–10
Home record25–12–4
Road record16–19–6
Goals for254
Goals against234
Team information
General managerBryan Murray
CoachDoug MacLean
CaptainBrian Skrudland
Alternate captainsScott Mellanby
Gord Murphy
ArenaMiami Arena
Team leaders
GoalsScott Mellanby (32)
AssistsRobert Svehla (49)
PointsScott Mellanby (70)
Penalty minutesPaul Laus (236)
Plus/minusBill Lindsay (+13)
WinsJohn Vanbiesbrouck (26)
Goals against averageJohn Vanbiesbrouck (2.68)

Offseason

NHL draft

Florida's draft picks at the 1995 NHL Entry Draft held at the Edmonton Coliseum in Edmonton, Alberta.

Round Pick Player Nationality College/junior/club team
110Radek Dvorak (RW) Czech RepublicHC České Budějovice (Czech)
236Aaron MacDonald (G) CanadaSwift Current Broncos (WHL)
362Mike O'Grady (D) CanadaLethbridge Hurricanes (WHL)
480Dave Duerden (LW) CanadaPeterborough Petes (OHL)
488Daniel Tjarnqvist (D) SwedenRögle BK (Sweden)
5114Francois Cloutier (LW) CanadaHull Olympiques (QMJHL)
7166Peter Worrell (LW) CanadaHull Olympiques (QMJHL)
8192Filip Kuba (D) Czech RepublicHC Vítkovice (Czech Republic)
9218David Lemanowicz (G) CanadaSpokane Chiefs (WHL)

Unregular season

Year of the Rat

A very unusual goal celebration developed in Miami. On the night of the Panthers' 1995–96 home opener, a rat scurried across the Florida locker room. Panthers winger Scott Mellanby reacted by "one-timing" the rat against the wall, killing it . That night he scored two goals, which goaltender John Vanbiesbrouck quipped was "a rat trick". Two nights later, as the story found its way into the world, a few fans threw rubber rats on the ice in celebration of a goal. The rubber rat count went from 16 for the third home game to over 2,000 during the playoffs. In an amusing coincidence, 1996 was also year of the Rat according to Chinese astrology.

In the 1996 playoffs, as the fourth seed, the Panthers defeated the Boston Bruins in five games, then upset the top-seeded Philadelphia Flyers in six and the second-seeded Pittsburgh Penguins in seven games to reach the Stanley Cup Final. Their opponents, the Colorado Avalanche, eliminated the Panthers in four games.

Final standings

Atlantic Division
No. GP W L T GF GA Pts
1Philadelphia Flyers82452413282208103
2New York Rangers8241271427223796
3Florida Panthers8241311025423492
4Washington Capitals8239321123420489
5Tampa Bay Lightning8238321223824888
6New Jersey Devils8237331221520286
7New York Islanders8222501022931554
Eastern Conference[1]
R Div GP W L T GF GA Pts
1Philadelphia FlyersATL82452413282208103
2Pittsburgh PenguinsNE8249294362284102
3New York RangersATL8241271427223796
4Florida PanthersATL8241311025423492
5Boston BruinsNE8240311128226991
6Montreal CanadiensNE8240321026524890
7Washington CapitalsATL8239321123420489
8Tampa Bay LightningATL8238321223824888
9New Jersey DevilsATL8237331221520286
10Hartford WhalersNE823439923725977
11Buffalo SabresNE823342724726273
12New York IslandersATL8222501022931554
13Ottawa SenatorsNE821859519129141

Divisions: ATL – Atlantic, NE – Northeast

bold – Qualified for playoffs

Schedule and results

No. R Date Score Opponent Record
1LOctober 7, 19950–4@ New Jersey Devils (1995–96)0–1–0
2WOctober 8, 19954–3Calgary Flames (1995–96)1–1–0
3WOctober 11, 19956–1Montreal Canadiens (1995–96)2–1–0
4WOctober 13, 19956–2Ottawa Senators (1995–96)3–1–0
5WOctober 15, 19955–3New York Islanders (1995–96)4–1–0
6LOctober 17, 19953–6Chicago Blackhawks (1995–96)4–2–0
7WOctober 21, 19953–0Hartford Whalers (1995–96)5–2–0
8WOctober 24, 19956–1@ Toronto Maple Leafs (1995–96)6–2–0
9LOctober 25, 19952–7@ Montreal Canadiens (1995–96)6–3–0
10WOctober 28, 19954–1@ Ottawa Senators (1995–96)7–3–0
11LOctober 31, 19954–5 OTNew York Islanders (1995–96)7–4–0
12WNovember 2, 19952–1@ Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96)8–4–0
13WNovember 3, 19953–2@ Washington Capitals (1995–96)9–4–0
14WNovember 5, 19954–1Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96)10–4–0
15WNovember 7, 19954–2Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96)11–4–0
16WNovember 9, 19952–1Edmonton Oilers (1995–96)12–4–0
17WNovember 11, 19954–1Buffalo Sabres (1995–96)13–4–0
18WNovember 14, 19955–2Toronto Maple Leafs (1995–96)14–4–0
19TNovember 16, 19952–2 OTVancouver Canucks (1995–96)14–4–1
20LNovember 18, 19952–3@ Los Angeles Kings (1995–96)14–5–1
21WNovember 19, 19954–3@ Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (1995–96)15–5–1
22WNovember 21, 19954–3New Jersey Devils (1995–96)16–5–1
23WNovember 26, 19955–1Los Angeles Kings (1995–96)17–5–1
24LNovember 29, 19951–2 OTPhiladelphia Flyers (1995–96)17–6–1
25LDecember 1, 19951–2@ Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96)17–7–1
26WDecember 2, 19955–3@ Hartford Whalers (1995–96)18–7–1
27WDecember 5, 19954–3@ Washington Capitals (1995–96)19–7–1
28TDecember 7, 19953–3 OTMighty Ducks of Anaheim (1995–96)19–7–2
29WDecember 9, 19953–1Boston Bruins (1995–96)20–7–2
30WDecember 11, 19952–1@ New Jersey Devils (1995–96)21–7–2
31WDecember 12, 19953–1@ New York Islanders (1995–96)22–7–2
32LDecember 14, 19954–6@ Boston Bruins (1995–96)22–8–2
33WDecember 16, 19957–2@ Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96)23–8–2
34WDecember 21, 19956–1Winnipeg Jets (1995–96)24–8–2
35WDecember 23, 19952–1New Jersey Devils (1995–96)25–8–2
36LDecember 28, 19954–5Washington Capitals (1995–96)25–9–2
37LDecember 30, 19955–6@ Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96)25–10–2
38LJanuary 3, 19962–7@ Vancouver Canucks (1995–96)25–11–2
39WJanuary 5, 19963–2@ Edmonton Oilers (1995–96)26–11–2
40LJanuary 6, 19960–2@ Calgary Flames (1995–96)26–12–2
41WJanuary 8, 19965–2@ San Jose Sharks (1995–96)27–12–2
42TJanuary 10, 19964–4 OT@ Colorado Avalanche (1995–96)27–12–3
43TJanuary 12, 19966–6 OT@ Dallas Stars (1995–96)27–12–4
44WJanuary 16, 19964–1San Jose Sharks (1995–96)28–12–4
45TJanuary 22, 19961–1 OT@ Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96)28–12–5
46WJanuary 23, 19965–4@ Washington Capitals (1995–96)29–12–5
47LJanuary 25, 19962–6Montreal Canadiens (1995–96)29–13–5
48WJanuary 27, 19966–3Buffalo Sabres (1995–96)30–13–5
49WJanuary 29, 19962–1Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96)31–13–5
50LJanuary 31, 19961–6@ Buffalo Sabres (1995–96)31–14–5
51TFebruary 1, 19962–2 OT@ Boston Bruins (1995–96)31–14–6
52WFebruary 3, 19965–3@ Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96)32–14–6
53LFebruary 6, 19962–4@ Detroit Red Wings (1995–96)32–15–6
54WFebruary 8, 19963–1Detroit Red Wings (1995–96)33–15–6
55TFebruary 11, 19962–2 OTSt. Louis Blues (1995–96)33–15–7
56LFebruary 14, 19962–4Philadelphia Flyers (1995–96)33–16–7
57LFebruary 16, 19964–5 OTColorado Avalanche (1995–96)33–17–7
58WFebruary 18, 19966–4Dallas Stars (1995–96)34–17–7
59WFebruary 21, 19964–1@ New Jersey Devils (1995–96)35–17–7
60LFebruary 24, 19960–4New York Rangers (1995–96)35–18–7
61LFebruary 25, 19961–6@ Buffalo Sabres (1995–96)35–19–7
62TFebruary 29, 19962–2 OTWashington Capitals (1995–96)35–19–8
63LMarch 2, 19961–7@ Hartford Whalers (1995–96)35–20–8
64LMarch 5, 19960–2@ St. Louis Blues (1995–96)35–21–8
65LMarch 7, 19963–5@ Winnipeg Jets (1995–96)35–22–8
66LMarch 10, 19961–4Boston Bruins (1995–96)35–23–8
67LMarch 11, 19964–8@ Chicago Blackhawks (1995–96)35–24–8
68TMarch 13, 19963–3 OT@ New York Rangers (1995–96)35–24–9
69WMarch 17, 19963–0New Jersey Devils (1995–96)36–24–9
70WMarch 19, 19965–2Ottawa Senators (1995–96)37–24–9
71WMarch 21, 19963–2New York Islanders (1995–96)38–24–9
72LMarch 23, 19962–4@ Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96)38–25–9
73LMarch 27, 19960–3@ New York Rangers (1995–96)38–26–9
74LMarch 28, 19962–3Pittsburgh Penguins (1995–96)38–27–9
75LMarch 30, 19961–2Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96)38–28–9
76WApril 1, 19963–2Hartford Whalers (1995–96)39–28–9
77LApril 3, 19962–3@ Ottawa Senators (1995–96)39–29–9
78LApril 6, 19961–2@ Montreal Canadiens (1995–96)39–30–9
79WApril 8, 19965–3@ New York Rangers (1995–96)40–30–9
80LApril 10, 19961–2Tampa Bay Lightning (1995–96)40–31–9
81TApril 12, 19961–1 OT@ New York Islanders (1995–96)40–31–10
82WApril 14, 19965–1New York Rangers (1995–96)41–31–10

Player statistics

Regular season
Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Scott MellanbyRW7932387016041903
Rob NiedermayerC8226356110711106
Robert SvehlaD818495794-3700
Johan GarpenlovLW8223285136-10807
Stu BarnesC7219254446-12805
Jesse BelangerC6317213810-5701
Jody HullRW78201737255203
Tom FitzgeraldRW8213213475-3162
Bill LindsayRW731222345713032
Jason WoolleyD526283432-9300
Gord MurphyD7082230305400
Radek DvorakRW77131427205004
Brian SkrudlandC79720271296011
Dave LowryLW6310142436-2001
Mike HoughLW6471623374011
Ed JovanovskiD70101121137-3202
Terry CarknerD73310138010100
Magnus SvenssonD27291121-1201
Ray SheppardRW14821040202
Geoff SmithD31371020-4200
Paul LausD78369236-2000
Martin StrakaC1224661100
Gilbert DionneLW512300000
Brett HarkinsLW80336-2000
Rhett WarrenerD28033464000
Brad SmythRW71124-3100
David NemirovskyRW90222-1000
John VanbiesbrouckG57022100000
Bob KudelskiRW1301101000
Steve WashburnC101101000
Mike CasselmanC30000-1000
Mark FitzpatrickG34000120000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
John Vanbiesbrouck317857262071422.68214731331.904
Mark Fitzpatrick17863415113882.960810722.891
Team:4964824131102302.78222832053.899
Playoffs
Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Dave LowryLW2210717398402
Ray SheppardRW21881644300
Stu BarnesC2261016410202
Bill LindsayRW225510186011
Scott MellanbyRW2236944-10200
Ed JovanovskiD22189522000
Rob NiedermayerC2253812-8202
Tom FitzgeraldRW22448343002
Paul LausD21268623000
Jason WoolleyD13268143101
Johan GarpenlovLW204268-2000
Robert SvehlaD22066323000
Mike HoughLW2241585002
Jody HullRW1432504000
Martin StrakaC132242-2000
Radek DvorakRW1613402000
Brian SkrudlandC21134186000
Terry CarknerD22044108000
Gord MurphyD1404461000
John VanbiesbrouckG22011200000
Rhett WarrenerD2101103000
Steve WashburnC101100000
Mark FitzpatrickG200000000
Geoff SmithD10002-1000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
John Vanbiesbrouck1332221210502.251735685.932
Mark Fitzpatrick6020066.0003024.800
Team:1392221210562.411765709.927

[2]

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals
      MIN = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;

Trades

The Panthers acquired Ray Sheppard from the San Jose Sharks on the trade deadline in 1996.

Playoffs

Eastern Conference Quarterfinals

The fifth-seeded Boston Bruins had one of the best offenses in the Eastern Conference, scoring 282 goals lead by Cam Neely (26 goals) and Adam Oates (25 goals, 67 assists). The Panthers won their first-ever playoff game 6-3 before a sold out Miami Arena,[3] and soon built a 3-0 lead despite being outshot by the Bruins on all games.[4] The Bruins stepped up to win Game 4 with a 6-2 blowout before the Boston crowd.[5] Game 5 was tied 3-3 when with 4:57 left, Bill Lindsay scored with a dive through the air goal while being tripped by star defenseman Ray Bourque, giving the Panthers their first-ever playoff series victory.[6] This was the last year in a record 29 consecutive seasons in the playoffs for the Bruins, as they missed the 1997 post-season.[7]

Eastern Conference Quarter-final vs. Boston (5)
GameDateVenueScoreOTAttendanceDecisionSeries
1April 17Miami ArenaFlorida 6 – 3 Boston14,703VanbiesbrouckPanthers lead 1–0
2April 22Miami ArenaFlorida 6 – 2 Boston14,703VanbiesbrouckPanthers lead 2–0
3April 24Fleet CenterFlorida 4 – 2 Boston14,922VanbiesbrouckPanthers lead 3-0
4April 25Fleet CenterBoston 6 – 2 Florida14,810RanfordPanthers lead 3–1
5April 27Miami ArenaFlorida 4 – 3 Boston14,703VanbiesbrouckPanthers win 4-1

Eastern Conference Semifinals

The Philadelphia Flyers finished atop the Eastern Conference in the regular season with 103 points, led by the high-scoring "Legion of Doom" and the strong goaltending of Garth Snow and Ron Hextall. Philadelphia had just eliminated the other Florida team, the Tampa Bay Lightning, in 5 games a 2-1 series deficit.[8]

Vanbiesbrouck posted a 2–0 shutout in Game 1,[9] and it took until midway through Game 2 for the Flyers to get rolling offensively in a narrow 3–2 win.[10] Game 3 saw Flyers veterans Dan Quinn, Dale Hawerchuk, Eric Desjardins and Hextall set the tone in a 3–1 victory.[11] With young defenseman Ed Jovanovski tightly covering Flyers superstar Eric Lindros, the Panthers reversed the tide,[12] defeating the Flyers in overtime in Game 4 and double-overtime in Game 5, in what would turn out to be the last Flyers game at the Spectrum.[13] Lindros promised to win game 6 to return the series to Philadelphia, but the Panthers won with a 4-1 score. Florida became the third team to reach the conference finals in their third season – following fellow expansion team New York Islanders in 1975 and the Quebec Nordiques in 1982.[14]

Eastern Conference Semifinal vs. Philadelphia (1)
GameDateVenueScoreOTAttendanceDecisionSeries
1May 2CoreStates SpectrumFlorida 2 – 0 Philadelphia17,380VanbiesbrouckPanthers lead 1–0
2May 4CoreStates SpectrumPhiladelphia 2 – 0 Florida17,380HextallTied 1–1
3May 7Miami ArenaPhiladelphia 3 – 2 Florida14,703HextallFlyers lead 2-1
4May 9Miami ArenaFlorida 4 – 3 PhiladelphiaOT14,703VanbiesbrouckTied 2–2
5May 12CoreStates SpectrumFlorida 2 – 1 Philadelphia2OT17,380VanbiesbrouckPanthers lead 3–2
6May 14Miami ArenaFlorida 4 – 1 Philadelphia14,703VanbiesbrouckPanthers win 4-2

Eastern Conference Finals

The 2-seeded Pittsburgh Penguins were energized by the return of Mario Lemieux, who missed the entire 1994–95 season due to injury, and had the league's best offense, scoring 362 goals, and the most wins in the Eastern conference with 49, finishing just one point behind the Flyers. The Penguins advanced to the third round for the first time since 1992, defeating the Washington Capitals in six games and the New York Rangers in five games.

Despite being outshot 33–25 in game one the Panthers came out on top with an impressive 5–1 win, with 32 saves by Vanbiesbrouck and two goals by forward Tom Fitzgerald. The Penguins wanting to avoid going down two games to none against the Panthers came out with a better effort in game two and won the game 3–2 and evened the series at one game each. In game three the Panthers fired an incredible 61 shots on Penguins goaltender Tom Barrasso and it paid off as the Panthers won 5–2 – two goals by Stu Barnes – to take a 2–1 series lead. The Penguins tied game four on Brad Lauer's goal with 11:03 remaining in regulation, and Bryan Smolinski scored with 3:31 to go to give the Penguins a 2–1 lead, tying the series. In game five the Penguins shut out the Panthers 3–0, with Barrasso stopping 28 shots.

Leading the series three games to two Pittsburgh looked to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals in game six. The Penguins led 2–1 in the second period but the Panthers scored three of the next four goals and edged the Penguins 4–3 to tie the series at 3–3. In game seven Florida got a 1–0 lead on Mike Hough's goal at 13:13 of the first period. After a scoreless second period Pittsburgh tied the game on Petr Nedvěd's power-play goal at 1:23 of the third period. The Panthers regained the lead on Tom Fitzgerald's bizarre 58-foot slapshot at 6:18 and got an insurance goal from Johan Garpenlov at 17:23. Florida hung on to win the game 3–1, with a total of 39 saves by Vanbiesbrouck, and closed the series four games to three.[15]

By reaching the finals in only their third season, the Panthers became the fastest expansion team to do so until the Vegas Golden Knights did the same thing in their 2017-18 inaugural season.[16] Many Panthers players were managing their first trips to the finals after long careers, such as Vanbiesbrouck (13 years).

Eastern Conference Final vs. Pittsburgh (2)
GameDateVenueScoreOTAttendanceDecisionSeries
1May 18Civic ArenaFlorida 5 – 1 Pittsburgh17,355VanbiesbrouckPanthers lead 1–0
2May 20Civic ArenaPittsburgh 3 – 2 Florida17,181BarrassoTied 1–1
3May 24Miami ArenaFlorida 5 – 2 Pittsburgh14,703VanbiesbrouckPanthers lead 2-1
4May 26Miami ArenaPittsburgh 2 – 1 Florida14,703BarrassoTied 2–2
5May 28Civic ArenaPittsburgh 3 – 0 Florida17,355BarrassoPenguins lead 3-2
6May 30Miami ArenaFlorida 4 – 3 Pittsburgh14,703VanbiesbrouckTied 3-3
7June 1Civic ArenaFlorida 3 – 1 Pittsburgh17,355VanbiesbrouckPanthers win 4-3

Stanley Cup Finals

In the first Stanley Cup Finals where neither team had ever reached the decision before, the Panthers faced the Colorado Avalanche, who were in their inaugural season after relocating from Quebec City. Led by captain Joe Sakic, forward Peter Forsberg and defenceman Adam Foote, the Avalanche got even stronger once goaltender Patrick Roy joined the team on December 1995. The Avalanche finished the season with a 47–25–10 record for 104 points, won the Pacific Division and finished second in the Western Conference. On their way to the Western title, the Avs beat the Vancouver Canucks, the Chicago Blackhawks and Presidents' Trophy winners Detroit Red Wings, all in six games.[17]

The series started in Denver, and the Avs dominated the Panthers at the McNichols Sports Arena. On game 1, Vanbiesbrouck shut out Colorado for half the game, before three goals were scored in a stretch of 3:49 minutes in the second period, leading to a 3-1 victory. The following game was an 8–1 blowout, starting with three power play goals in the first period as Florida incurred in bad penalties that forced Vanbiesbrouck to be pulled out in favor of Mark Fitzpatrick. Returning to Miami, Game 3 was closer, with Florida scoring twice in the first period. But the Avs still came through, taking over the lead with a Joe Sakic goal early in the second period and holding on to a 3–2 victory.[18]

With their backs to the wall, the Panthers played a defensive game four. Vanbiesbrouck and Roy stood out, combining for 118 saves, and the two teams played a marathon game that took until the third overtime period. Uwe Krupp's unassisted goal at 4:31 ended 44 minutes and 31 seconds of overtime and gave the Avalanche a 1–0 win and a four-games-to-none series win. Goaltender Patrick Roy stopped all 63 shots he faced. Colorado outscored Florida 15–4 in the series, and Patrick Roy stopped 147 of 151 shots, for a save percentage of .974. Joe Sakic was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP, having led all skaters in goals with 18, and points with 34. For both Patrick Roy and Claude Lemieux, it was their third Stanley Cup win in eleven years.

Stanley Cup Final vs. Colorado (2)
GameDateVenueScoreOTAttendanceDecisionSeries
1May 18McNichols Sports ArenaColorado 3 – 1 Florida16,061RoyAvalanche lead 1–0
2May 20McNichols Sports ArenaColorado 8 – 1 Florida16,061RoyAvalanche lead 2-0
3May 24Miami ArenaColorado 3 – 2 Florida14,703RoyAvalanche lead 3-0
4May 26Miami ArenaColorado 1 – 0 Florida3OT14,703RoyAvalanche win 4-0

Awards and records

References

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