2005–06 Pittsburgh Penguins season

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2005–06 Pittsburgh Penguins
Division 5th Atlantic
Conference 15th Eastern
2005–06 record 22–46–14
Coach Ed Olczyk
Captain Mario Lemieux (Oct-Jan)
Vacant (Jan-Apr)
Alternate captains Sidney Crosby
Sergei Gonchar
John LeClair
Mark Recchi
Team leaders
Goals Sidney Crosby (39)
Assists Sidney Crosby (63)
Points Sidney Crosby (102)
Penalties in minutes Brooks Orpik (124)
Wins Marc-Andre Fleury (13)
Goals against average Marc-Andre Fleury (3.25)

The Pittsburgh Penguins season was the team's 38th season in the National Hockey League. It was the rookie season for 1st overall draft pick Sidney Crosby.

Contents:
Regular seasonPlayoffsPlayer statsAwards and records - Transactions
Roster - Draft picksFarm teamsSee alsoReferences


[edit] Offseason

[edit] NHL Draft

Round # Player Position Nationality College/Junior/Club Team
1 1 Sidney Crosby Center Flag of Canada Canada Rimouski Oceanic (QMJHL)
3 62 Kristopher Letang Defence Flag of Canada Canada Val-d'Or Foreurs (QMJHL)
4 125 Tommi Leinonen Defence Flag of Finland Finland Kärpät Jr. (Finland)
5 126 Tim Crowder Flag of Canada Canada South Surrey Eagles (BCHL)
6 194 Jean-Philippe Paquet Flag of Canada Canada Shawinigan Cataractes (QMJHL)
7 195 Joe Vitale Flag of the United States United States Sioux Falls Stampede (USHL)

[edit] Regular season

Sidney Crosby with the Penguins.
Sidney Crosby with the Penguins.
  • Sidney Crosby played his first professional NHL game on October 5, 2005 against the New Jersey Devils, and registered an assist on the team's first goal of the season, scored by Mark Recchi in a 5–1 loss.[1]
  • November 11, 2005 - Sidney Crosby beat Jose Theodore of the Montreal Canadiens to win his first career shootout
  • November 22, 2005 - Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin face each other for the first time
  • March 12, 2006 – Marc-Andre Fleury gets a shutout by stopping 22 shots against the Philadelphia Flyers
  • March 29, 2006 – John LeClair scores the 400th goal of his career
  • January 24, 2006 - Mario Lemieux announces his retirement.
  • April 13, 2006 – Sidney Crosby scores four points in one game, including his 90th point of the season
  • April 17, 2006 - Sidney Crosby becomes the youngest player to score 100 points in one season.

[edit] Season standings

Atlantic Division GP W L OTL GF GA PTS
New Jersey Devils 82 46 27 9 242 229 101
Philadelphia Flyers 82 45 26 11 267 259 101
New York Rangers 82 44 26 12 257 215 100
New York Islanders 82 36 40 6 230 278 78
Pittsburgh Penguins 82 22 46 14 244 316 58

[edit] Roster

Pittsburgh Penguins
view  talk  edit
Goaltenders

Defensemen

Wingers

Centers


[edit] Sidney Crosby

Sidney Crosby was selected first overall in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft by the Pittsburgh Penguins on July 30, 2005. Due to the labour stoppage in the previous season, the 2005 draft was conducted via a weighted lottery based on each team's playoff appearances and draft lottery victories in the last four years. This lottery system led to the draft being popularly referred to as the Sidney Crosby Lottery or the Sidney Crosby Sweepstakes.[2]

On December 16, 2005, Michel Therrien named Crosby as an alternate captain for the Penguins. The move drew criticism from some hockey pundits, including Don Cherry, who claimed that Crosby had done nothing to earn the position.[3]

Crosby finished his rookie season with the franchise record in assists (63) and points (102) for a rookie, both of which had been previously held by Mario Lemieux. Crosby is the youngest player in the history of the NHL to score 100 points in a single season, and only the seventh rookie ever to hit the benchmark.[4] Overall, Crosby finished sixth in the NHL scoring race and seventh in the NHL in assists. Among Canadian NHL players, he trailed only Joe Thornton and Dany Heatley. While both Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals had solid rookie campaigns, Crosby finished second behind Ovechkin for the Calder Memorial Trophy.

Through his first season, Crosby was accused by opposing players and coaches of taking dives and complaining to officials, which has been attributed to his youth.[5] During his rookie campaign, he led both his team and all NHL rookies in penalty minutes, and this magnified his reputation for complaining to NHL officials.[6] Hockey analyst Kelly Hrudey compared Crosby to Gretzky, who had a similar reputation as a "whiner" in his youth, and suggested that as Crosby matured, he would mellow out and his reputation would fade.[6]

[edit] Mario Lemieux

After the lockout concluded, Lemieux returned to the ice for the 2005–2006 season. Hopes for the Penguins were high due to the salary cap and revenue sharing, which enabled the team to compete in the market for several star players. Another reason for optimism was the Penguins winning the lottery for the first draft pick, enabling them to select Sidney Crosby. Lemieux opened up his home to Crosby to help the rookie settle in Pittsburgh and Lemieux also served as Crosby's mentor.

On January 24, 2006, Mario Lemieux announced his second and permanent retirement from professional hockey at the age of 40. This followed a half-season in which he struggled not only with the increased speed of the "new NHL" but also with yet another threatening physical ailment, a heart condition called atrial fibrillation that caused him to experience irregular heartbeats.

Although he had put up points at a pace that most NHL forwards would be perfectly content with (22 points in 26 games) in his last season, Lemieux still remarked that "I can no longer play at a level I was accustomed to in the past".

[edit] Player statistics

[edit] Forwards

Note: GP= Games played; G= Goals; AST= Assists; PTS = Points; PIM = Points

Player GP G AST PTS PIM
Colby Armstrong 47 16 24 40 58
Rico Fata 20 0 0 0 10
Ryan VandenBussche 20 1 0 1 42
Konstantin Koltsov 60 3 6 9 20
Michel Ouellet 50 16 16 32 16
Zigmund Palffy 42 11 31 42 12
Mark Recchi 63 24 33 57 56
Niklas Nordgren 15 0 0 0 4
Guillaume Lefebvre 9 0 0 0 9
Andre Roy 42 2 1 3 116
Matt Murley 41 1 5 6 24
Jani Rita 30 3 4 7 4
Lasse Pirjeta 25 4 3 7 18
Tomas Surovy 53 12 13 25 45
John LeClair 73 22 29 51 61
Mario Lemieux 26 7 15 22 16
Ryan Malone 77 22 22 44 63
Matt Hussey 13 0 1 1 0
Shane Endicott 41 1 1 2 43
Maxime Talbot 48 5 3 8 59
Eric Boguniecki 38 5 6 11 29
Erik Christensen 33 6 7 13 34
Andy Hilbert 19 7 11 18 16
Sidney Crosby 81 39 63 102 110

[edit] Defencemen

Note: GP= Games played; G= Goals; AST= Assists; PTS = Points; PIM = Points

Player GP G AST PTS PIM
Alain Nasreddine 6 0 0 0 8
Lyle Odelein 27 0 1 1 50
Cory Cross 6 0 1 1 6
Eric Cairns 27 1 0 1 87
Rob Scuderi 57 0 4 4 36
Steve Poapst 21 0 4 4 10
Noah Welch 5 1 3 4 2
Brooks Orpik 64 2 7 9 124
Dick Tarnstrom 33 5 5 10 52
Josef Melichar 72 3 12 15 66
Richard Jackman 49 6 22 28 46
Ryan Whitney 68 6 32 38 85
Sergei Gonchar 75 12 46 58 100

[edit] Goaltending

Note: GP= Games played; W= Wins; L= Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals Against

Player GP W L T SO GAA
Marc-Andre Fleury 50 13 27 6 1 3.25
Sebastien Caron 26 8 9 5 1 3.98
Jocelyn Thibault 16 1 9 3 0 4.46
Dany Sabourin 1 0 1 0 0 11.68

[edit] Awards and records

[edit] References

  1. ^ Crosby nets first point in loss to Devils. TSN (2005–10–05). Retrieved on 2006–11–17.
  2. ^ 2005 Year in Review. CBC (2005–12–20). Retrieved on 2006–11–17.
  3. ^ Crosby doesn't deserve 'A': Cherry. Canadian Press (2005–12–17). Retrieved on 2006–11–17.
  4. ^ Campigotto, Jess (2006–09–27). The education of Sidney Crosby. CBC Sports. Retrieved on 2006–11–17.
  5. ^ Basu, Arpon (2006–03–22). Don't forget, Sid's still a Kid. thefourthperiod.com. Retrieved on 2006–12–24.
  6. ^ a b Campigotto, Jesse (2006–09–27). The education of Sidney Crosby. CBC Sports. Retrieved on 2006–12–24.