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New York Rangers

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New York Rangers
Logo Alternate logo
Founded 1926
Home arena Madison Square Garden
Based in New York, New York
Colors Blue, red, white
Head coach Tom Renney
Captain none
Alternate captains Jaromir Jagr
Darius Kasparaitis
Steve Rucchin
General manager Glen Sather
Owner Madison Square Garden L.P.
Minor league affiliates Hartford Wolf Pack (AHL)
Charlotte Checkers (ECHL)

The New York Rangers (NYR) are a National Hockey League (NHL) team based in New York City, New York.

Contents

Facts

Founded: 1926-1927 (awarded May 15, 1926)
Arena: Madison Square Garden IV (capacity 18,200)
Former Home Arena: Madison Square Garden III (1926-1968)
Uniform colors: blue, red, white
Logo design: a shield with "NEW YORK" across the top and "RANGERS" diagonally across the middle, creating a red triangle on the top right and a white one on the bottom left.
Stanley Cup final appearances: (4 won, 6 lost) 1928, 1929, 1932, 1933, 1937, 1940, 1950, 1972, 1979, 1994
Team color jersey: Royal blue jersey with red and white stripes at elbows and bottom of jersey. "RANGERS" diagonally across chest from right shoulder in red with white trim. (The team has been long known by the nicknames Broadway Blues and Blueshirts.)
White jersey: White jersey with red, white and blue stripes at elbows, across shoulders and at bottom of jersey. Blue stripe at cuff. "RANGERS" diagonally across chest from right shoulder in blue with red trim.
Third Jersey: Navy blue jersey with white and silver stripes at elbows with red forearm. Chest logo features silver Statue of Liberty head on navy blue background and the letters "NYR" in red and silver. Stylized original Rangers shield on top of each shoulder.
Note: The NHL no longer refers to jerseys as "home" or "away" with the advent of third jerseys.
One of the NHL's 'Original Six' franchises, along with the Boston Bruins, Chicago Blackhawks, Detroit Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens, and Toronto Maple Leafs.
Main Rival(s): New York Islanders, New Jersey Devils, Philadelphia Flyers.

Franchise history

Early years

Tex Rickard was awarded an NHL franchise in 1926 to compete with the now-long-forgotten New York Americans. The team was immediately dubbed "Tex's Rangers", and the nickname stuck. Rickard managed to get future legendary Toronto Maple Leafs coach Conn Smythe to assemble the team, but Smythe had a falling-out with management and was let go in favor of Lester Patrick before the first season. The new team turned out to be a winner--in their first season, the Rangers won the American Division, but lost to the Boston Bruins in the playoffs.

The Rangers won the Stanley Cup over the now long-defunct Montreal Maroons in only their second year in business, but it was not without some desperation: Coach Patrick had to be their goaltender for two periods of game two of the finals after regular goalie Lorne Chabot was injured.

After a finals loss in 1929 and a few mediocre seasons in the early 1930s, the Rangers defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs to win their second Stanley Cup in 1933, led by brothers Bill and Bun Cook on the wings, and Frank Boucher in centre. The Rangers would spend the rest of the 1930s playing mainly .500 hockey until they won the Cup again in 1940 (over the Maple Leafs), when Patrick stepped down and handed the reins to Frank Boucher.

New York Rangers logo (used 1935-1948)
Enlarge
New York Rangers logo (used 1935-1948)

The Rangers would collapse by the mid-1940s, losing games by as much as 15-0 and having one goaltender with a 6.20 goals-against average. They would miss the playoffs for five consecutive seasons before squeaking into the fourth and final playoff spot in 1948. They lost the first round and would miss the playoffs again in 1949. In the 1950 finals the Rangers were forced to play all of their games of the road (home games in Toronto) while the circus was at the Garden. They would end up losing to the Detroit Red Wings in overtime of the seventh game.

The post-original six era

The Rangers remained a mark of futility in the NHL for the next 20 years, before rejuvenation in the late 1960s, symbolised by moving into a newly-rebuilt Madison Square Garden in 1967. They made the playoffs for the first time in five years on the strength of rookie goaltender Eddie Giacomin.

By 1972, the Rangers reached the Stanley Cup finals despite losing high-scoring center Jean Ratelle (who had been on track over Bruin Phil Esposito to become the only Ranger since Bryan Hextall in 1942 to lead the NHL in scoring) to injury during the stretch drive of the regular season. The strength of people like Brad Park, Vic Hadfield, and Rod Gilbert would still carry them through the playoffs. They would defeat the defending champion Montreal Canadiens in the first round and the Chicago Blackhawks in the second, but lost to the Boston Bruins in the finals.

After some off years in the mid-to-late 1970s, they picked up Phil Esposito from the Bruins in 1976. Swedish Anders Hedberg would defect to the Rangers from the maverick World Hockey Association and would lead the team in scoring his first season. In 1979, they defeated the surging New York Islanders in the semi-finals and would return to the finals again before bowing out to the Canadiens. The Islanders had their revenge however, eliminating the Rangers the following year en route to four consecutive Stanley Cup titles.

The Rangers stayed competitive through the 1980s and early 1990s, making the playoffs each year except for one but never going very far. An exception was the 1985-86 NHL season, when the Rangers, behind rookie goaltender John Vanbiesbrouck, upended the Patrick Division winner Philadelphia Flyers in a decisive fifth game followed by a six game win over the Washington Capitals in the Patrick Division Finals. The Montreal Canadiens disposed of the Rangers in the Wales Conference Finals, behind a rookie of their own named Patrick Roy.

Still, the many playoff failures convinced Rangers fans that this was a manifestation of the Curse of 1940, which is said to have begun when the Rangers' management burnt the mortgage to Madison Square Garden in the bowl of the Stanley Cup after the 1940 victory, or to have been cast by Red Dutton following the folding of the New York Americans. Frustration was at its peak when the 1991-92 squad captured the President's Trophy, took a 2-1 series lead on the Pittsburgh Penguins, and then faltered in three straight (most observers note a Ron Francis slapshot from the blue line that eluded Mike Richter as the series' turning point) to the eventual Cup winners. The following year a 1-11 finish landed the Rangers in the Patrick Division cellar. Coach Roger Neilson did not finish out the season. The offseason hiring of controversial head coach Mike Keenan was criticized by many who pointed out Keenan's 0-3 record in the Finals.

The 1993-94 season

1994 was a magical year for Rangers fans. Two years previous, they picked up center Mark Messier, an integral part of the Edmonton Oilers' Cup-winning teams in the 1980s. Adam Graves also defected from the Oilers to the Rangers. Brian Leetch and rookie Sergei Zubov were solid on defense. In fact, Zubov led the team in scoring with 89 points. Graves would set a new team record with 52 goals, breaking the old record held by Vic Hatfield.

Main logo for third alternate jersey, 1997 - current
Enlarge
Main logo for third alternate jersey, 1997 - current

After clinching the President's Trophy for the best regular season record in the league, the Rangers were pitted against their archrivals, the 8th seeded New York Islanders in the first round of the playoffs. The Isles proved to be no match, as they were swept in four games by an aggregate score of 22-3. In the second round, the Washington Capitals were dismissed in five games, and set the stage for a matchup with the New Jersey Devils in the Conference Finals.

Despite a 6-0 regular season record against New Jersey, the Devils took the Rangers to a full seven games. The series was highlighted by three dramatic multiple overtime games, of which the Rangers won two. Stephane Matteau scored both of those overtime goals, one of which ended Game 3 at 6:13 of the second overtime. Still, after the fifth game the Rangers trailed in the series 3-2 and faced elimination, prompting captain Mark Messier to boldly guarantee a victory in Game 6 at New Jersey. Halfway through the game, the Rangers trailed 2-0 before Messier setup Alexei Kovalev late in the second period. In what is now considered one of the greatest individual performances in sports history, Messier delivered a hat trick in the third period to give the Rangers a 4-2 win and send the series to a decisive seventh game. In that seventh game, a Brian Leetch goal midway through the second period stood until Valeri Zelepukin tied the game for the Devils by stuffing the puck under goaltender Mike Richter's pads with 7.7 seconds remaining in regulation. It appeared once again that the curse of 1940 would undo the Rangers. Surprisingly, Matteau's second overtime winner would clinch the series for the Blueshirts, coming at 4:24 of the second overtime of Game 7. Rangers' announcer Howie Rose called the play in dramatic fashion shouting simply, "Matteau! Matteau! Matteau!"

The Stanley Cup Finals pitted the Rangers against the upstart Vancouver Canucks, who were the seventh seed in the Western Conference. After dropping Game 1, largely due to Canucks' goaltender Kirk McLean's 52 save performance, the Rangers won the next three games to take a commanding 3-1 series lead. The Rangers lost Game 5 in New York and then Game 6 in Vancouver forcing another seventh game at Madison Square Garden. The Rangers did not disappoint, using goals from Leetch, Graves, and Messier to seal a 3-2 victory and the Rangers first Cup in 54 years. Brian Leetch became the first American to win the Conn Smythe Trophy and Mark Messier became the first Rangers captain to hoist the Cup on Garden ice.

Recent years

The 1998-99 Rangers pose with Gretzky after his last game.
The 1998-99 Rangers pose with Gretzky after his last game.

The Rangers continued to be Cup favorites in the mid-to-late 1990s, even landing an aging Wayne Gretzky, but they would fizzle out. Their 1994 stars were aging and many retired or dropped off in performance. After General Manager Neil Smith ran Messier out of town in the summer of 1997 and failed in a bid to replace him with Avalanche superstar Joe Sakic, the Rangers began a streak of seven seasons (and counting) without making the playoffs.

In March 2000, Smith was fired along with head coach John Muckler, and that summer James Dolan hired Glen Sather to replace him. By 2001, the Rangers had landed a lot of star power. Theoren Fleury joined the Rangers after spending most of his career with the Calgary Flames. Eric Lindros joined the Rangers from the Philadelphia Flyers. They got Pavel Bure late in the 2001-02 season from the Florida Panthers. However, the Rangers still finished out of the playoffs despite having the league's highest payroll. Later years saw other stars such as Alexei Kovalev, Jaromir Jagr, Anson Carter and Bobby Holik added, but in 2002-03 and 2003-04, the team again missed the playoffs. Owners of the highest team payroll with numerous star players coupled with their consistent failure to make the post-season (7 seasons and counting) has earned the Rangers the honor of being the NHL's poster child for underachievers.

Towards the end of the 2003-04 season, Sather finally gave in to a rebuilding process, and traded away Leetch, Kovalev, and eight others for numerous prospects and draft picks. Bure is now retired, while Lindros signed with the Maple Leafs prior to the 2005-06 season.

The post lock-out Rangers, under new head coach Tom Renney, have seen the team move away from the high priced veterans for recent years towards a group of young talented players such as Petr Prucha, Dominic Moore and Blair Betts but the focus of the team remains superstar Jaromir Jagr. The Rangers were largely expected to struggle during 2005/06 but behind stellar performances by Swedish rookie goalie Henrik Lundqvist, surprising Czech rookie Petr Průcha and Jagr, the Rangers are currently at the top of the Atlantic Division halfway into the season, boasting their best record since the last time they made the playoffs in '97.

Season-by-season record

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes

Season League GP W L T OTL Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs
1926-27 NHL 44 25 13 6 -- 56 95 72 385 1st, America SF, 1-3 TG (Bruins)
1927-28 NHL 44 19 16 9 -- 47 94 79 462 2nd, America Stanley Cup Champions, 3-2
1928-29 NHL 44 21 13 10 -- 52 72 65 384 2nd, America Final, 0-2 (Bruins)
1929-30 NHL 44 17 17 10 -- 44 136 143 445 3rd, America SF, 0-2 (Canadiens)
1930-31 NHL 44 19 16 9 -- 47 106 87 514 3rd, America SF, 0-2 (Blackhawks)
1931-32 NHL 48 23 17 8 -- 54 134 112 511 1st, America Final, 0-3 (Maple Leafs)
1932-33 NHL 48 23 17 8 -- 54 135 107 599 3rd, America Stanley Cup Champions, 3-1
1933-34 NHL 48 21 19 8 -- 50 120 113 401 3rd, America QF, 1-2 TG (Maroons)
1934-35 NHL 48 22 20 6 -- 50 137 139 334 3rd, America SF, 4-5 TG (Maroons)
1935-36 NHL 48 19 17 12 -- 50 91 96 381 4th, America Missed Playoffs
1936-37 NHL 48 19 20 9 -- 47 117 106 312 3rd, America Final, 2-3 (Red Wings)
1937-38 NHL 48 27 15 6 -- 60 149 96 435 2nd, America QF, 1-2 (Americans)
1938-39 NHL 48 26 16 6 -- 58 149 105 393 2nd, NHL SF, 3-4 (Bruins)
1939-40 NHL 48 27 11 10 -- 64 136 77 520 2nd, NHL Stanley Cup Champions, 4-2
1940-41 NHL 48 21 19 8 -- 50 143 125 356 4th, NHL SF, 1-2 (Red Wings)
1941-42 NHL 48 29 17 2 -- 60 177 143 400 1st, NHL SF, 2-4 (Maple Leafs)
1942-43 NHL 50 11 31 8 -- 30 161 253 352 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1943-44 NHL 50 6 39 5 -- 17 162 310 253 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1944-45 NHL 50 11 29 10 -- 32 154 247 305 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1945-46 NHL 50 13 28 9 -- 35 144 191 285 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1946-47 NHL 60 22 32 6 -- 50 167 186 426 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1947-48 NHL 60 21 26 13 -- 55 176 201 480 4th, NHL Round 1, 2-4 (Red Wings)
1948-49 NHL 60 18 31 11 -- 47 133 172 413 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1949-50 NHL 70 28 31 11 -- 67 170 189 639 4th, NHL Final, 3-4 (Red Wings)
1950-51 NHL 70 20 29 21 -- 61 169 201 774 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1951-52 NHL 70 23 34 13 -- 59 192 219 532 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1952-53 NHL 70 17 37 16 -- 50 152 211 548 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1953-54 NHL 70 29 31 10 -- 68 161 182 717 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1954-55 NHL 70 17 35 18 -- 52 150 210 690 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1955-56 NHL 70 32 28 10 -- 74 204 203 911 3rd, NHL SF, 1-4 (Canadiens)
1956-57 NHL 70 26 30 14 -- 66 184 227 870 4th, NHL SF, 1-4 (Canadiens)
1957-58 NHL 70 32 25 13 -- 77 195 188 781 2nd, NHL SF, 2-4 (Bruins)
1958-59 NHL 70 26 32 12 -- 64 201 217 860 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1959-60 NHL 70 17 38 15 -- 49 187 247 850 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1960-61 NHL 70 22 38 10 -- 54 204 248 591 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1961-62 NHL 70 26 32 12 -- 64 195 207 668 4th, NHL SF, 2-4 (Maple Leafs)
1962-63 NHL 70 22 36 12 -- 56 211 233 657 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1963-64 NHL 70 22 38 10 -- 54 186 242 715 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1964-65 NHL 70 20 38 12 -- 52 179 246 760 5th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1965-66 NHL 70 18 41 11 -- 47 195 261 894 6th, NHL Missed Playoffs
1966-67 NHL 70 30 28 12 -- 72 188 189 664 4th, NHL SF, 0-4 (Canadiens)
1967-68 NHL 74 39 23 12 -- 90 226 183 673 2nd, Eastern QF, 2-4 (Blackhawks)
1968-69 NHL 76 41 26 9 -- 91 231 196 806 3rd, Eastern QF, 0-4 (Canadiens)
1969-70 NHL 76 38 22 16 -- 92 246 189 853 4th, Eastern QF, 2-4 (Bruins)
1970-71 NHL 78 49 18 11 -- 109 259 177 952 2nd, Eastern SF, 3-4 (Blackhawks)
1971-72 NHL 78 48 17 13 -- 109 317 192 1010 2nd, Eastern Final, 2-4 (Bruins)
1972-73 NHL 78 47 23 8 -- 102 297 208 765 3rd, Eastern SF, 1-4 (Blackhawks)
1973-74 NHL 78 40 24 14 -- 94 300 251 782 3rd, Eastern SF, 3-4 (Flyers)
1974-75 NHL 80 37 29 14 -- 88 319 276 1053 2nd, Patrick R1, 1-2 (Islanders)
1975-76 NHL 80 29 42 9 -- 67 262 333 911 4th, Patrick Missed Playoffs
1976-77 NHL 80 29 37 14 -- 72 272 310 1164 4th, Patrick Missed Playoffs
1977-78 NHL 80 30 37 13 -- 73 279 280 1057 4th, Patrick R1, 1-2 (Sabres)
1978-79 NHL 80 40 29 11 -- 91 316 292 1214 3rd, Patrick Final, 1-4 (Canadiens)
1979-80 NHL 80 38 32 10 -- 86 308 284 1342 3rd, Patrick QF, 1-4 (Flyers)
1980-81 NHL 80 30 36 14 -- 74 312 317 1981 4th, Patrick SF, 0-4 (Islanders)
1981-82 NHL 80 39 27 14 -- 92 316 306 1402 2nd, Patrick Div Final, 2-4 (Islanders)
1982-83 NHL 80 35 35 10 -- 80 306 287 1100 4th, Patrick Div Final, 2-4 (Islanders)
1983-84 NHL 80 42 29 9 -- 93 314 304 1471 4th, Patrick Div SF, 2-3 (Islanders)
1984-85 NHL 80 26 44 10 -- 62 295 345 1301 4th, Patrick Div SF, 0-3 (Flyers)
1985-86 NHL 80 36 38 6 -- 78 280 276 1496 4th, Patrick Conf Final, 1-4 (Canadiens)
1986-87 NHL 80 34 38 8 -- 76 307 323 1718 4th, Patrick Div SF, 2-4 (Flyers)
1987-88 NHL 80 36 34 10 -- 82 300 283 1775 5th, Patrick Missed Playoffs
1988-89 NHL 80 37 35 8 -- 82 310 307 1891 3rd, Patrick Div SF, 0-4 (Penguins)
1989-90 NHL 80 36 31 13 -- 85 279 267 2021 1st, Patrick Div Final, 1-4 (Capitals)
1990-91 NHL 80 36 31 13 -- 81 258 258  ?? 2nd, Patrick Div SF, 2-4 (Capitals)
1991-92 NHL 80 50 25 5 -- 105 321 246  ?? 1st, Patrick Div Final, 2-4 (Penguins)
1992-93 NHL 84 34 39 11 -- 79 304 308  ?? 6th, Patrick Missed Playoffs
1993-94 NHL 84 52 24 8 -- 112 299 231 ?? 1st, Atlantic Stanley Cup Champions, 4-3
1994-951 NHL 48 22 23 3 -- 47 139 134  ?? 4th, Atlantic Conf SF, 0-4 (Flyers)
1995-96 NHL 82 41 27 14 -- 96 272 237  ?? 2nd, Atlantic Conf SF, 1-4 (Penguins)
1996-97 NHL 82 38 34 10 -- 86 258 231  ?? 4th, Atlantic Conf Final, 1-4 (Flyers)
1997-98 NHL 82 25 39 18 -- 68 197 231  ?? 5th, Atlantic Missed Playoffs
1998-99 NHL 82 33 38 11 -- 77 217 227 1087 4th, Atlantic Missed Playoffs
1999-00 NHL 82 29 38 12 3 73 218 246 916 4th, Atlantic Missed Playoffs
2000-01 NHL 82 33 43 5 1 72 250 290  ?? 4th, Atlantic Missed Playoffs
2001-02 NHL 82 36 38 4 4 80 227 258  ?? 4th, Atlantic Missed Playoffs
2002-03 NHL 82 32 36 10 4 78 210 231  ?? 4th, Atlantic Missed Playoffs
2003-04 NHL 82 27 40 7 8 69 206 250  ?? 4th, Atlantic Missed Playoffs
2004-052 NHL -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
2005-063 NHL 68 39 19 -- 10 88 219 167  ?? -- --
1 Season was shortened due to the 1994-95 NHL lockout.
2 Season was cancelled due to the 2004-05 NHL lockout.
3 Season ongoing. Stats as of March 21, 2006.

Notable players

Current squad

As of March 10, 2006 [1]

Goaltenders
Number Player Catches Acquired Place of Birth
30 Sweden Henrik Lundqvist L 2000 Are, Sweden
80 Canada Kevin Weekes L 2004 Toronto, Ontario
Defensemen
Number Player Shoots Acquired Place of Birth
3 Czech Republic Michal Rozsival R 2005 Vlasim, Czechoslovakia
6 Lithuania Darius Kasparaitis - A L 2002 Elektrenai, U.S.S.R.
8 Czech Republic Marek Malik L 2005 Ostrava, Czechoslovakia
16 United States Tom Poti L 2002 Worcester, Massachusetts
24 Latvia Sandis Ozolinsh L 2006 Riga, Latvia
34 Canada Jason Strudwick L 2004 Edmonton, Alberta
51 Russia Fedor Tyutin L 2001 Izhevsk, U.S.S.R.
Forwards
Number Player Shoots Position Acquired Place of Birth
14 Canada Jason Ward R C/RW 2005 Chapleau, Ontario
17 Czech Republic Petr Sykora L RW 2006 Pilsen, Czechoslovakia
18 Canada Dominic Moore L C 2000 Thornhill, Ontario
19 Canada Blair Betts L C 2004 Edmonton, Alberta
20 Canada Steve Rucchin - A L C 2005 Thunder Bay, Ontario
25 Czech Republic Petr Prucha R C/W 2005 Chrudim, Czechoslovakia
26 Czech Republic Martin Rucinsky L LW 2003 Most, Czechoslovakia
28 Canada Colton Orr R RW 2005 Winnipeg, Manitoba
41 United States Jed Ortmeyer R RW 2003 Omaha, Nebraska
44 United States Ryan Hollweg L LW 2005 Downey, California
68 Czech Republic Jaromir Jagr - A L RW 2004 Kladno, Czechoslovakia
81 Slovakia Marcel Hossa L LW/RW 2005 Ilava, Czechoslovakia
82 Czech Republic Martin Straka L C/LW 2005 Pilsen, Czechoslovakia
92 Sweden Michael Nylander L C 2004 Stockholm, Sweden

Hall of Famers


  • More than 20 others also played part of careers with Rangers

Team captains


Retired numbers

  • 1 Eddie Giacomin, G, 1965-75: Number retired on March 15, 1989
  • 7 Rod Gilbert, RW, 1961-78: Number retired on October 14, 1979
  • 11 Mark Messier, C, 1991-97 & 2000-05: Number retired on January 12, 2006
  • 35 Mike Richter, G, 1989-2003: Number retired on February 4, 2004
  • 99 Wayne Gretzky, C, 1996-99: Number retired league-wide by NHL on April 18, 1999

Franchise scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in the history of the Rangers. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season. Note: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points

Player POS GP G A Pts
Rod Gilbert RW 1065 406 615 1021
Brian Leetch D 1129 240 741 981
Jean Ratelle C 862 336 481 817
Andy Bathgate RW 719 272 457 729
Mark Messier C 698 250 441 691
Walt Tkaczuk C 945 227 451 678
Ron Greschner D 982 179 431 630
Steve Vickers LW 698 246 340 586
Vic Hadfield LW 839 262 310 572
Adam Graves RW 772 280 227 507

Broadcasters

See also

References

External links


National Hockey League 1917 to present
Current teams : Anaheim | Atlanta | Boston | Buffalo | Calgary | Carolina | Chicago | Colorado | Columbus | Dallas | Detroit | Edmonton | Florida | Los Angeles | Minnesota | Montreal | Nashville | New Jersey | NY Islanders | NY Rangers | Ottawa | Philadelphia | Phoenix | Pittsburgh | San Jose | St. Louis | Tampa Bay | Toronto | Vancouver | Washington
Trophies and awards: Stanley Cup | Prince of Wales | Clarence S. Campbell | Presidents' Trophy | Adams | Art Ross | Calder | Conn Smythe | Crozier | Hart | Jennings | King Clancy | Lady Byng | Masterton | Norris | Patrick | Pearson | Plus/Minus | Rocket Richard | Selke | Vezina

The content of this page is retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Rangers under GFDL