2005–06 Edmonton Oilers season

2005–06 Edmonton Oilers
Western Conference Champions
Division 3rd Northwest
Conference 8th Western
2005–06 record 41–28–13
Home record 20–15–6
Road record 21–13–7
Goals for 256
Goals against 251
Team information
General Manager Kevin Lowe
Coach Craig MacTavish
Captain Jason Smith
Alternate captains Ethan Moreau
Ryan Smyth
Arena Rexall Place
Average attendance 16,832 (99.96%)
Minor league affiliations Hamilton Bulldogs (AHL)
Iowa Stars (AHL)
Greenville Grrrowl (ECHL)
Team leaders
Goals Ryan Smyth (36)
Assists Ales Hemsky (58)
Points Ales Hemsky (77)
Penalties in minutes Ethan Moreau (87)
Plus/minus Steve Staios (+10)
Wins Jussi Markkanen (15)
Goals against average Dwayne Roloson (2.43)
<2004–05 2006–07>

The 2005–06 Edmonton Oilers season was the Oilers' 27th season in the NHL, and they were coming off a 36–29–12–5 record with 89 points and finishing 9th in the Western Conference in 2003–04 and missed the playoffs. In 2005–06, the Oilers qualified for the playoffs in eighth place, and put on a playoff run that brought them to the Stanley Cup Final finishing with a loss in Game 7 to the victorious Carolina Hurricanes by a score of 3–1.

This was the first time an eighth seeded team reached the Stanley Cup finals (which was only repeated in 2012).

Offseason

Due to the 2004–05 NHL lockout, the 2004–05 NHL season was cancelled when the players and owners could not agree to a new CBA. The two sides would come to agreement, and there would be many changes for both the Oilers and the NHL as a whole.

The NHL introduced a salary cap of $39 million for the 2005–06, which meant the teams above that figure would cut salary to fit under the cap. The Oilers, who had a lot of cap room, took advantage of this, and the St. Louis Blues would trade former Hart- and Norris Trophy-winning Chris Pronger to the Oilers in exchange for Eric Brewer, Jeff Woywitka and Doug Lynch. Pronger would then sign a five-year, $31.25 million contract with Edmonton. The Oilers would then make another blockbuster trade, this time acquiring former Frank J. Selke Trophy winner Michael Peca from the New York Islanders for Mike York and a fourth-round draft pick.

The NHL also made a number of rule changes, such as adding a shootout to determine the winner of a game that was tied after five minutes of overtime to eliminate ties, goaltenders were not allowed to play the puck in the corners of the ice surface and the referees would crack down on obstruction.

Regular season

The Oilers would start off the season rather slowly, sitting with a 9–9–1 record after 19 games, but the club would get hot, going 21–9–7 in their next 37 games. As the trade deadline approached, the club did not have a clear number one goaltender, and they addressed this issue by trading their first-round draft pick in 2006 to the Minnesota Wild for Dwayne Roloson. Edmonton would also add former Calder Memorial Trophy winner Sergei Samsonov to the club, sending Marty Reasoner, Yan Stastny and a second-round draft pick (Milan Lucic) to the Boston Bruins to acquire him. The Oilers played mediocre hockey for the rest of the season, but nonetheless managed to finish in eighth place in the Western Conference and qualify for the playoffs for the first time since 2003.

Offensively, Ryan Smyth would lead the club with 36 goals, his highest total since scoring 39 goals in 1996–97, and 22-year-old Ales Hemsky would break-out, earning a club-high 58 assists and 77 points. Shawn Horcoff would also have a breakout season, scoring 22 goals and 73 points, as would Jarret Stoll, who scored 22 goals and earned 68 points. On defence, Chris Pronger would anchor the blueline, earning a defenceman-high 56 points, while Marc-Andre Bergeron would score 15 goals and 35 points from the blueline. Ethan Moreau had a club-high 87 penalty minutes.

In goal, Edmonton would use a trio of goaltenders until the arrival of Dwayne Roloson at the trade deadline. Mike Morrison would win ten games and have a 2.83 goals against average (GAA), but he would not last the season with the Oilers; he was claimed off waivers by the Ottawa Senators. Ty Conklin, the starter from 2003 to 2004, would appear in only 18 games, going 8–5–1 with a 2.80 GAA, before being sent to the minors. Jussi Markkanen won a club-high 15 games, and would serve as Dwayne Roloson's backup when the club acquired him. Roloson would post a team-best 2.43 GAA and have an 8–7–4 record with the team.

The Oilers allowed the fewest shorthanded goals in the NHL, with just five.[1]

Season standings

Northwest Division
No. CR GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
13 Calgary Flames 82 46 25 11 218 200 103
27 Colorado Avalanche 82 43 30 9 283 257 95
3 8 Edmonton Oilers 82 41 28 13 256 251 95
49 Vancouver Canucks 82 42 32 8 256 255 92
511 Minnesota Wild 82 38 36 8 231 215 84

[2] Note: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points
         Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.

Western Conference[3]
R Div GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
1 P- Detroit Red Wings CE 82 58 16 8 305 209 124
2 Y- Dallas Stars PA 82 53 23 6 265 218 112
3 Y- Calgary Flames NW 82 46 25 11 218 200 103
4 X- Nashville Predators CE 82 49 25 8 259 227 106
5 X- San Jose Sharks PA 82 44 27 11 266 242 99
6 X- Mighty Ducks of Anaheim PA 82 43 27 12 254 229 98
7 X- Colorado Avalanche NW 82 43 30 9 283 257 95
8 X- Edmonton Oilers NW 82 41 28 13 256 251 95
8.5
9 Vancouver Canucks NW 82 42 32 8 256 255 92
8 Los Angeles Kings PA 82 42 35 5 249 270 89
11 Minnesota Wild NW 82 38 36 8 231 215 84
12 Phoenix Coyotes PA 82 38 39 5 246 271 81
13 Columbus Blue Jackets CE 82 35 43 4 223 279 74
14 Chicago Blackhawks CE 82 26 43 13 211 285 65
15 St. Louis Blues CE 82 21 46 15 197 292 57

Divisions: CE – Central, PA – Pacific, NW – Northwest

P- Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y- Clinched Division; X- Clinched Playoff spot

Schedule and results

2005–06 Game Log

Legend:       Win (2 points)       Loss (0 points)       Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)

Playoffs

Edmonton would open up the playoffs against the Presidents' Trophy winners, the Detroit Red Wings, who finished with 124 points during the season. Hockey experts almost unanimously predicted a Detroit victory; however, the Oilers had played the season in a tougher division than the Red Wings, who played 24 of their 82 games against the Columbus Blue Jackets, Chicago Blackhawks and St. Louis Blues, who had finished 25th, 28th and 30th, respectively, in the standings. In Game 1 at Joe Louis Arena, the Oilers played a tight defensive style and took the Wings to double overtime before losing 3–2, despite being outshot 57–25 in the game. The Oilers tied the series with a solid 4–2 win in Game 2 to return home with a split. Game 3 at Rexall Place saw the Oilers squander a late two-goal lead as the Wings forced the game to double overtime, where the Oilers won on a goal by Jarret Stoll. Game 4 saw the Red Wings score three powerplay goals and tie the series with a 4–2 win, and the teams returned to Detroit for Game 5. With the series tied 2–2, the Oilers jumped out to an early 3–0 lead and hung on for a 3–2 win, behind the strong two-way play of defenceman Chris Pronger. The Oilers returned home looking to complete the upset in Game 6, but fell behind the Red Wings 2–0 by the second intermission. Then the Oilers caught fire in the third period, tying the game on two goals from Fernando Pisani. After the Red Wings scored to re-take the lead, the Oilers again tied the game on a crease-crashing goal from Ales Hemsky. In the final minute of play, Hemsky roofed a pass from Sergei Samsonov behind Detroit goaltender Manny Legace, and the Edmonton crowd exploded in jubilation.[86] The Oilers hung on to win the game 4–3, eliminating the heavily-favoured Red Wings in six games. It was the Oilers' first playoff series win since eliminating the Colorado Avalanche in 1998.

The opening round of the 2006 NHL playoffs had an unprecedented development in the Western Conference: in each of the four series played, the team with the lower points total had emerged as the victor. As a result, in the Conference Semifinals, the eighth-place Oilers would face the fifth-place San Jose Sharks, who finished the season with only four more points than Edmonton, at 99. Still, the Sharks were considered a tough opponent, having NHL MVP and scoring leader Joe Thornton, along with League goals leader Jonathan Cheechoo among their stars.

Game 1 at the HP Pavilion ended in a 2–1 San Jose victory as the Sharks executed a physical forechecking gameplan and outshot the Oilers 30–16. In Game 2, the Sharks entered the ice to a cheer that eclipsed 109 decibels, and they rode their fans' emotion to another slim 2–1 victory. The Sharks had taken a two-game lead in the series, but were now missing Milan Michalek, one of their best offensive forwards. Michalek had been blasted in open ice by Oilers' forward Raffi Torres in Game 2.[87] When the teams returned to Rexall Place for Game 3, the Edmonton crowd exploded; the noise in the building eclipsed 114 decibels as the Oilers came onto the ice. The Oilers parlayed the noise into inspired play, running roughshod all over the ice and outshooting the Sharks 15–2 by the end of the first period. Sharks goaltender Vesa Toskala held tough, however, and the Oilers only took a 1–0 lead into the first intermission. By the third period, the Sharks had taken a 2–1 lead, and it stood until Torres tied the game with a wrist-shot as he came down the wing. The game went into overtime, and the Sharks nearly ended it on a 2-on-1 rush, as Thornton passed to Cheechoo for the shot, but Dwayne Roloson dove across the crease and sniped the puck out of mid-air. The game finally ended in the third overtime, as the Oilers' top line of Horcoff, Hemsky and Smyth worked a passing play into the San Jose crease, where Horcoff jammed the puck in the San Jose goal for the Edmonton win. In Game 4 in Edmonton, the Oilers were trailing 3–2 in the second period when Sergei Samsonov's penalty expired and he was sent in alone on Toskala. To everyone's shock, Toskala came charging out of the net to get the puck before Samsonov. Toskala lost the puck and Samsonov slid a backhand into the open net to tie the game. The Edmonton crowd exploded in delight, and the Oilers never looked back, cruising to a 6–3 win. Game 5 in San Jose was the site of an unfortunate incident: the American feed of the Game 4 broadcast in Edmonton had picked up background noise during the playing of the American National Anthem. San Jose fans had thought it was booing, and in Game 5, a majority of San Jose fans booed the entire Canadian National Anthem. The game itself saw the Oilers carry over the momentum they gained from Game 4, and they struck for three powerplay goals and one shorthanded goal en route to another 6–3 win. In Game 6 in Edmonton, the Edmonton crowd loudly cheered the singing of the American anthem, and then joined anthem singer Paul Lorieau in a throaty and passionate rendition of "O Canada." The Oilers picked up where they had left off in the previous game – they stymied the Sharks' high-scoring forwards and Dwayne Roloson made 24 saves for his first career playoff shutout as the Oilers eliminated the Sharks in six games. The Oilers had earned a trip to the Western Conference Finals for the first time since 1991–92.

In the Conference Finals, the Oilers faced the sixth-seeded Anaheim Ducks, with the series to open at the Arrowhead Pond. In Game 1, Michael Peca extended his playoff goal-scoring streak to three games, and Roloson stopped 31 of 32 shots as the Oilers stunned the Anaheim crowd into silence with a 3–1 victory. Peca would extend his goal streak in Game 2, scoring an empty-netter as the Oilers again iced the Ducks in their home rink, 3–1. Raffi Torres and Marc-Andre Bergeron missed the game, as a bad flu had hit the Oilers' dressing room. The Oilers returned home with a 2–0 series lead, and the Edmonton fans stole the show in Game 3. The crowd was in bedlam by the time the Oilers hit the ice, prompting TV analyst Don Cherry to scream, "This is unbelievable! I don't know how they can lose with this crowd!" Then during the national anthem, after the opening verse, anthem singer Paul Lorieau spontaneously turned the microphone over to the crowd, who finished the song.[88] It was hailed as one of the most touching moments of the entire year in sports. When the game started, the Ducks attempted to literally fight their way back into the series, as skirmishes ensued after nearly every whistle. By the end of the first period, the Oilers held a slim 1–0 lead, which held until the third period when the Oilers got goals from Peca, Steve Staios and Chris Pronger. By now, the effects of the flu were noticeable on the Oilers, and late in the game the Ducks fought back to make it close, but the Oilers prevailed with a 5–4 win despite being outshot 38–22. In Game 4, the Ducks started Jean-Sebastien Giguere for the first time in the playoffs and avoided the series sweep by outskating the Oilers, winning the game 6–3 off the strength of two goals by Dustin Penner. The Ducks again outshot the Oilers 45–23 in the tilt. In Game 5 in Anaheim, the Ducks jumped out to an early 1–0 lead, but second period goals by Torres and Ethan Moreau put the Oilers in front. The Oilers would never relinquish their lead as the Ducks pressed furiously for the equalizer. Edmonton would win the Clarence Campbell Trophy for the seventh time in team history and claim the series in five games. The win earned the Oilers their first trip to the Stanley Cup Finals since their last Cup win in 1990.

Edmonton would face the Eastern Conference champion Carolina Hurricanes in the Finals. In the opening game, goaltender Dwayne Roloson would go down to injury midway through the third period with the score tied 4–4, and Ty Conklin came in to replace Roloson. Conklin, however, would allow the winning goal as Carolina won the game 5–4. With Jussi Markkanen starting in Game 2, the Hurricanes dominated the Oilers, winning the game 5–0. Edmonton would rebound in Game 3, playing their first home game in the Stanley Cup Finals since May 22, 1990, with a 2–1 victory, but the Hurricanes would take Game 4 2–1 to take a commanding 3–1 series lead. The Oilers, facing elimination, would take Game 5 to overtime, and eventually win 4–3 score to stay alive in the series. The series then returned to Edmonton for Game 6, and the Oilers shutout Carolina 4–0, setting up the Stanley Cup-deciding Game 7. The Hurricanes, led by goaltender Cam Ward, played a solid defensive game and held the Oilers to just a single goal (scored by Fernando Pisani, his 14th of the playoffs), while the Hurricanes managed to put two behind Jussi Markkanen, as well as score an empty-netter, to seal the game and their first Stanley Cup victory in team history.

2006 Stanley Cup Playoffs

Player statistics

Regular season
Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Hemsky, AlesAles Hemsky RW 81 19 58 77 64-5714
Horcoff, ShawnShawn Horcoff C 79 22 51 73 850335
Stoll, JarretJarret Stoll C 82 22 46 68 7441114
Smyth, RyanRyan Smyth LW 75 36 30 66 58-51923
Pronger, ChrisChris Pronger D 80 12 44 56 7421003
Torres, RaffiRaffi Torres LW 82 27 14 41 504603
Pisani, FernandoFernando Pisani RW 80 18 19 37 425412
Bergeron, Marc-AndreMarc-Andre Bergeron D 75 15 20 35 383801
Dvorak, RadekRadek Dvorak RW 64 8 20 28 26-2202
Staios, SteveSteve Staios D 82 8 20 28 8410101
Moreau, EthanEthan Moreau LW 74 11 16 27 876244
Reasoner, MartyMarty Reasoner C 58 9 17 26 20-12501
Peca, MichaelMichael Peca C 71 9 14 23 56-4221
Spacek, JaroslavJaroslav Spacek D 31 5 14 19 243300
Smith, JasonJason Smith D 76 4 13 17 841000
Samsonov, SergeiSergei Samsonov LW 19 5 11 16 60400
Laraque, GeorgesGeorges Laraque RW 72 2 10 12 73-5000
Ulanov, IgorIgor Ulanov D 37 3 6 9 29-11100
Harvey, ToddTodd Harvey RW/C 63 5 2 7 32-7000
Cross, CoryCory Cross D 34 2 3 5 38-5010
Tarnstrom, DickDick Tarnstrom D 22 1 3 4 24-5000
Rita, JaniJani Rita LW 21 3 0 3 60000
Murray, RemRem Murray C/LW 9 1 1 2 21000
Semenov, AlexeiAlexei Semenov D 11 1 1 2 17-3000
Greene, MattMatt Greene D 27 0 2 2 43-6000
Pouliot, Marc-AntoineMarc-Antoine Pouliot C 8 1 0 1 01000
Markkanen, JussiJussi Markkanen G 37 0 1 1 00000
Roloson, DwayneDwayne Roloson G 19 0 1 1 20000
Winchester, BradBrad Winchester C/LW 19 0 1 1 21-2000
Brodziak, KyleKyle Brodziak C 10 0 0 0 4-4000
Conklin, TyTy Conklin G 18 0 0 0 20000
Jacques, Jean-FrancoisJean-Francois Jacques LW 7 0 0 0 0-3000
Kolanos, KrysKrys Kolanos C 6 0 0 0 2-1000
Morrison, MikeMike Morrison G 21 0 0 0 20000
Roy, MathieuMathieu Roy D 1 0 0 0 0-1000
Smith, DanDan Smith D 7 0 0 0 71000
Stastny, YanYan Stastny C 3 0 0 0 0-2000
Syvret, DannyDanny Syvret D 10 0 0 0 6-1000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T/OT GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Markkanen, JussiJussi Markkanen 2016 37 15 12 6 105 3.12 0873768.880
Morrison, MikeMike Morrison 892 21 10 4 2 42 2.83 0361319.884
Conklin, TyTy Conklin 922 18 8 5 1 43 2.80 1359316.880
Roloson, DwayneDwayne Roloson 1163 19 8 7 4 47 2.42 1497450.905
Team: 4993 82 41 28 13 237 2.85 220901853.887
Playoffs
Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Pronger, ChrisChris Pronger D 24 5 16 21 2610300
Horcoff, ShawnShawn Horcoff C 24 7 12 19 124112
Pisani, FernandoFernando Pisani RW 24 14 4 18 104315
Hemsky, AlesAles Hemsky RW 24 6 11 17 14-3402
Smyth, RyanRyan Smyth LW 24 7 9 16 22-2401
Samsonov, SergeiSergei Samsonov LW 24 4 11 15 142100
Spacek, JaroslavJaroslav Spacek D 24 3 11 14 24-3200
Peca, MichaelMichael Peca C 24 6 5 11 205011
Torres, RaffiRaffi Torres LW 22 4 7 11 162101
Stoll, JarretJarret Stoll C 24 4 6 10 24-4201
Staios, SteveSteve Staios D 24 1 5 6 280100
Smith, JasonJason Smith D 24 1 4 5 165001
Murray, RemRem Murray C/LW 24 0 4 4 20000
Bergeron, Marc-AndreMarc-Andre Bergeron D 18 2 1 3 140200
Moreau, EthanEthan Moreau LW 21 2 1 3 190000
Winchester, BradBrad Winchester C/LW 10 1 2 3 4-2001
Harvey, ToddTodd Harvey RW/C 10 1 1 2 40000
Laraque, GeorgesGeorges Laraque RW 15 1 1 2 442000
Dvorak, RadekRadek Dvorak RW 16 0 2 2 4-1000
Roloson, DwayneDwayne Roloson G 18 0 2 2 140000
Tarnstrom, DickDick Tarnstrom D 12 0 2 2 101000
Petersen, TobyToby Petersen C 2 1 0 1 01000
Greene, MattMatt Greene D 18 0 1 1 341000
Conklin, TyTy Conklin G 1 0 0 0 00000
Markkanen, JussiJussi Markkanen G 6 0 0 0 00000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Roloson, DwayneDwayne Roloson 1160 18 12 5 45 2.33 1618573.927
Markkanen, JussiJussi Markkanen 360 6 3 3 13 2.17 1137124.905
Conklin, TyTy Conklin 6 1 0 1 1 10.00 032.667
Team: 1526 24 15 9 59 2.32 2758699.922

[113]

Note:

Pos = Position; GPI = Games played in; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes; +/- = Plus/minus; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals
Min, TOI = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T,T/OT = Ties; OTL = Overtime losses; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;

Awards and records

Milestones

Regular season
Player Milestone Reached
Chris Pronger 1,100th NHL PIM October 10, 2005
Brad Winchester 1st NHL Game
Matt Greene 1st NHL Game October 11, 2005
Kyle Brodziak 1st NHL Game October 15, 2005
Marty Reasoner 100th NHL Point October 18, 2005
Jason Smith 100th NHL Assist October 20, 2005
Alexei Semenov 100th NHL PIM October 21, 2005
Matt Greene 1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
October 27, 2005
Ethan Moreau 200th NHL Point October 28, 2005
Jason Smith 800th NHL PIM
Ryan Smyth 200th NHL Goal
Georges Laraque 100th NHL Point November 1, 2005
Alexei Semenov 100th NHL Game November 3, 2005
Danny Syvret 1st NHL Game November 4, 2005
Mike Morrison 1st NHL Game November 7, 2005
Radek Dvorak 700th NHL Game November 11, 2005
Steve Staios 800th NHL PIM November 13, 2005
Mike Morrison 1st NHL Win November 14, 2005
Jarret Stoll 100th NHL Game December 3, 2005
Raffi Torres 100th NHL PIM December 15, 2005
Ethan Moreau 100th NHL Assist December 17, 2005
Shawn Horcoff 300th NHL Game December 19, 2005
Shawn Horcoff 200th NHL PIM December 23, 2005
Ales Hemsky 100th NHL Point December 28, 2005
Shawn Horcoff 1st NHL Hat-trick January 10, 2006
Marc-Andre Bergeron 100th NHL Game January 12, 2006
Marc-Andre Bergeron 1st NHL Hat-trick January 14, 2006
Shawn Horcoff 100th NHL Assist
Jussi Markkanen 100th NHL Game January 16, 2006
Michael Peca 600th NHL PIM
Radek Dvorak 400th NHL Point January 19, 2006
Chris Pronger 100th NHL Goal January 25, 2006
Jean-Francois Jacques 1st NHL Game February 2, 2006
Steve Staios 100th NHL Assist February 6, 2006
Georges Laraque 800th NHL PIM February 10, 2006
Mathieu Roy 1st NHL Game February 12, 2006
Yan Stastny 1st NHL Game March 1, 2006
Steve Staios 600th NHL Game March 9, 2006
Ryan Smyth 700th NHL Game March 11, 2006
Jarret Stoll 100th NHL PIM
Ales Hemsky 200th NHL Game March 23, 2006
Marc Pouliot 1st NHL Game March 30, 2006
Jaroslav Spacek 200th NHL Point
Ales Hemsky 100th NHL Assist April 1, 2006
Marc Pouliot 1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
April 3, 2006
Brad Winchester 1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
Dick Tarnstrom 200th NHL PIM April 7, 2006
Chris Pronger 800th NHL Game April 9, 2006
Playoffs
Player Milestone Reached
Ales Hemsky 1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
April 21, 2006
Jaroslav Spacek
Jarret Stoll 1st NHL Game
Raffi Torres
Fernando Pisani 1st NHL Assist April 23, 2006
Steve Staios 1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
Jarret Stoll 1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
Brad Winchester 1st NHL Game
1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
Jaroslav Spacek 1st NHL Goal April 25, 2006
Raffi Torres 1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
Matt Greene 1st NHL Game April 27, 2006
Raffi Torres 1st NHL Assist
Jarret Stoll 1st NHL Assist April 29, 2006
Ales Hemsky 1st NHL Goal May 1, 2006
Ryan Smyth 50th NHL Game
Marc-Andre Bergeron 1st NHL Goal May 10, 2006
Jason Smith 1st NHL Goal May 12, 2006
Chris Pronger 50th NHL Assist May 14, 2006
Rem Murray 50th NHL Game May 17, 2006
Dwayne Roloson 1st NHL Shutout
Todd Harvey 50th NHL PIM May 19, 2006
Dwayne Roloson 1st NHL Assist
Toby Petersen 1st NHL Goal
1st NHL Point
May 23, 2006
Chris Pronger 100th NHL Game
Sergei Samsonov 50th NHL Game
Steve Staios 1st NHL Goal
Jason Smith 50th NHL PIM May 25, 2006
Ty Conklin 1st NHL Game June 5, 2006
Matt Greene 1st NHL assist
1st NHL point
Georges Laraque 50th NHL PIM June 7, 2006
Ethan Moreau
Jussi Markkanen 1st NHL Win June 10, 2006
Dick Tarnstrom 1st NHL Assist
1st NHL Point
June 14, 2006
Jussi Markkanen 1st NHL Shutout June 17, 2006
Jason Smith 50th NHL Game

Transactions

Trades
August 1, 2005 To Boston Bruins
Brad Isbister
To Edmonton Oilers
*4th round pick in 2006 - James DeLory
August 2, 2005 To St. Louis Blues
Eric Brewer
Doug Lynch
Jeff Woywitka
To Edmonton Oilers
Chris Pronger
August 3, 2005 To New York Islanders
Mike York
**4th round pick in 2006 - Kevin Montgomery
To Edmonton Oilers
Michael Peca
August 29, 2005 To Boston Bruins
*4th round pick in 2006 - James DeLory
To Edmonton Oilers
Yan Stastny
November 19, 2005 To Florida Panthers
Alexei Semenov
To Edmonton Oilers
5th round pick in 2006 - Bryan Pitton
December 13, 2005 To St. Louis Blues
Future considerations
To Edmonton Oilers
Blake Evans
January 26, 2006 To Pittsburgh Penguins
Jani Rita
Cory Cross
To Edmonton Oilers
Dick Tarnstrom
January 26, 2006 To Chicago Blackhawks
Tony Salmelainen
To Edmonton Oilers
Jaroslav Spacek
March 8, 2006 To Minnesota Wild
***1st round pick in 2006 - Trevor Lewis
****3rd round pick in 2007 - Spencer Machacek
To Edmonton Oilers
Dwayne Roloson
March 9, 2006 To Boston Bruins
Marty Reasoner
Yan Stastny
2nd round pick in 2006 - Milan Lucic
To Edmonton Oilers
Sergei Samsonov

*Later traded to the San Jose Sharks.
**Later traded to the Colorado Avalanche.
***Later traded to the Los Angeles Kings.
****Later traded to the Atlanta Thrashers.

Free agents acquired
Player Former team Contract terms
F Rem Murray Nashville Predators 1 year, $0.45 million
Free agents lost
Player New team Contract terms
D Scott Ferguson Minnesota Wild 1 year
F Mike Bishai Phoenix Coyotes 1 year
D Rocky Thompson St. Louis Blues 2 years
Players re-signed
Player Contract terms
D Chris Pronger 5 years, $31.25 million
G Jussi Markkanen 2 years, $1.7 million
D Igor Ulanov 1 year, $900,000
F Marty Reasoner 1 year, $650,000
D Dan Smith 1 year, $475,000
F Brad Winchester 2 years, $950,000
F Jarret Stoll 1 year, $501,600
F Jani Rita 1 year, $450,000
F Ales Hemsky 1 year, $901,740
F Raffi Torres 2 years, $1.975 million
F Shawn Horcoff 1 year, $1.0 million
F Ryan Smyth 2 years, $7.0 million

Draft picks

Edmonton's draft picks at the 2005 NHL Entry Draft

Round # Player Nationality NHL team College/Junior/Club Team (League)
125 Andrew Cogliano  Canada Edmonton Oilers St. Michael's Buzzers (OPJHL)
236 Taylor Chorney  United States Edmonton Oilers Shattuck-Saint Mary's School (Midget Major AAA)
381 Danny Syvret  Canada Edmonton Oilers (from Philadelphia Flyers) London Knights (OHL)
386 Robby Dee  United States Edmonton Oilers Breck School (USHS)
497 Chris VandeVelde  United States Edmonton Oilers Lincoln Stars (USHL)
4120 Vyacheslav Trukhno  Russia Edmonton Oilers Prince Edward Island Rocket (QMJHL)
5157 Fredrik Pettersson  Sweden Edmonton Oilers Frolunda HC (Sweden)
7220 Matthew Glasser  Canada Edmonton Oilers Fort McMurray Oil Barons (AJHL)

Roster

2005–06 Edmonton Oilers
Goaltenders

Defensemen

Wingers

Centres

See also

References

  1. http://www.hockey-reference.com/leagues/NHL_2006.html
  2. Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2009). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book/2010. Dan Diamond & Associates. p. 162.
  3. "2005–2006 Standings by Conference". National Hockey League. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  4. "Philadelphia Flyer Game Summary". Flyers History. Retrieved 2012-09-02.
  5. "Philadelphia Flyer Game Summary". Flyers History. Retrieved 2012-09-02.
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  11. "Philadelphia Flyer Game Summary". Flyers History. Retrieved 2012-09-02.
  12. "Philadelphia Flyer Game Summary". Flyers History. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
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  86. Hemsky goal vs Detroit, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuU6reWaT8U
  87. Raffi Torres hit on Milan Michalek, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0KC91Wuz2k&feature=related
  88. Oiler fans sing O Canada, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meLpuF9UMvk&feature=search
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