2006-07 Buffalo Sabres season
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2006-07 Buffalo Sabres | |
---|---|
Division | 1st Northeast |
Conference | 1st Eastern |
2006-07 record | 48-20-7 |
Home record | 25-10-3 |
Road record | 23-10-4 |
Goals for | 282 |
Goals against | 224 |
General Manager | Darcy Regier |
Coach | Lindy Ruff |
Captain | Daniel Briere Chris Drury |
Alternate captains | Teppo Numminen |
Arena | HSBC Arena |
Average attendance | 18,690 |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Thomas Vanek (37) |
Assists | Daniel Briere (58) |
Points | Daniel Briere (89) |
Penalties in minutes | Andrew Peters (125) |
Wins | Ryan Miller (35) |
Goals against average | Ty Conklin (2.75) |
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The Buffalo Sabres 2006-07 Season began with the team attempting to rebound from a disappointing end to the 2005-06 season, in which the Sabres advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals before losing in seven games to the Carolina Hurricanes. The team lost several veterans to free agency, including J.P. Dumont, Jay McKee and Mike Grier. Conversely, the team signed only one new player to the roster: defenseman Jaroslav Spacek. The team planned to rely on young players from their own organization -- Jiri Novotny, Paul Gaustad and Nathan Paetsch, to name a few -- to fill the holes left by the departing players.
Controversy swirled around the team's logo and jersey, meanwhile, as the look was changed. The team's colors were reverted back to blue and gold, which they had worn from their addition to the league as an expansion team until 1996-97, when the colors were changed to black and red. The new logo, though, was said to resemble to many a slug or a wig. There were strong efforts to prevent the team from wearing this new jersey, although none were successful. The team's new third jersey, meanwhile, featured the team's original logo. Despite the controversy, however, the NHL reported that sales of Sabres merchandise were up approximately 1170% from the 2005-2006 season.[1]
The Sabres were very successful early in the season, tying an NHL record by winning their first ten games, before finally suffering a shootout loss to the Atlanta Thrashers[2]. They did not lose a game in regulation until exactly one month into the season, in their thirteenth game, when they lost to Toronto[3]. The Sabres also set an NHL record by winning their first ten road games of the season[4], not losing outside of HSBC Arena until November 18 in Ottawa.
On January 9, it was announced that three members of the Sabres had been voted to start the All-Star Game for the Eastern Conference: forward Daniel Briere, defenseman Brian Campbell, and goaltender Ryan Miller. It was the first All-Star appearance for each.[5] In addition, as the Sabres had the best record in the Eastern Conference as of the end of All-Star voting, head coach Lindy Ruff was assigned to coach the Eastern Conference team.[6] Briere recorded a goal and four assists in the game, and was named Most Valuable Player of the game.[7] Thomas Vanek was also invited to All-Star Weekend to play in the YoungStars game.[8]
On January 13, Jason Pominville recorded his 20th goal of the season, becoming the fourth Sabre (after Chris Drury, Thomas Vanek and Maxim Afinogenov) to record 20 goals before the All-Star break. At the time of Pominville's 20th goal, no other team in the NHL had more than two players with 20 goals.[9] Daniel Briere became the fifth Sabre to record 20 goals as he scored a hat trick on January 30 against the Boston Bruins. With the feat, the Sabres became the first team since the 1995-96 Pittsburgh Penguins to have five 20-goal scorers before February.[10]
In February, the Sabres found themselves battling injury problems. Forward Tim Connolly had been on the long-term injury list all season, and he was joined by Paul Gaustad when a tendon in his leg was sliced on February 7 against the Ottawa Senators. Jaroslav Spacek was broke his left hand soon thereafter, and the Sabres lost Maxim Afinogenov, who broke his left wrist, and Jiri Novotny with a high ankle sprain. Ales Kotalik was next to go down, with a knee sprain, and forward Daniel Paille broke his finger. Against the Ottawa Senators on February 22, captain Chris Drury was injured by a blow to the head by Chris Neil, sparking a wild brawl which saw a fight between Martin Biron and Senators goaltender Ray Emery, and later between Emery and Sabres enforcer Andrew Peters.[11]
The Sabres were the last team to be involved in a trade in the 2006-07 season. On the day of the NHL trade deadline, though, they made four trades. Goaltender Martin Biron, who had been the longest-tenured Sabre, was sent to Philadelphia for Philadelphia's second-round pick in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft. Buffalo's fifth-round pick in that draft was sent to Columbus in exchange for another backup goalie, Ty Conklin. Jiri Novotny was sent along with Buffalo's 2007 first-round pick to Washington in exchange for Dainius Zubrus and Timo Helbling. Finally, the Sabres sent their fourth-round pick in 2007 to Nashville for Mikko Lehtonen, a minor league defenseman.[12]
Due to injuries, many Sabres prospects have been called up from the team's American Hockey League affiliate, the Rochester Americans, and made their NHL debuts during the season; Mike Card, Michael Funk, Patrick Kaleta, Clarke MacArthur, Mark Mancari, Michael Ryan, Andrej Sekera and Drew Stafford all played their first career NHL game during the 2006-07 season.
[edit] Regular season
[edit] Season standings
Northeast Division | GP | W | L | OTL | PTS | GF | GA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Buffalo Sabres | 75 | 48 | 20 | 7 | 103 | 282 | 224 |
Ottawa Senators | 76 | 45 | 23 | 8 | 98 | 267 | 206 |
Montreal Canadiens | 76 | 39 | 31 | 6 | 84 | 225 | 235 |
Toronto Maple Leafs | 75 | 36 | 29 | 10 | 82 | 232 | 242 |
Boston Bruins | 75 | 34 | 35 | 6 | 74 | 206 | 265 |
As of March 25, 2007. For current standings, see 2006-07 NHL season
[edit] Game log
[edit] October
Record for month 10-0-1 (Home 4-0-1 Away 6-0-0)
# | Date | Visitor | Score | Home | OT | Decision | Attendance | Record | Pts |
1 | October 4 | Buffalo | 3 - 2 | Carolina | SO | Miller | 18,840 | 1-0-0 | 2 |
2 | October 6 | Montreal | 4 - 5 | Buffalo | SO | Miller | 18,690 | 2-0-0 | 4 |
3 | October 7 | Buffalo | 4 - 3 | Ottawa | Biron | 19,202 | 3-0-0 | 6 | |
4 | October 13 | Buffalo | 3 - 2 | Detroit | SO | Miller | 20,066 | 4-0-0 | 8 |
5 | October 14 | NY Rangers | 4 - 7 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 5-0-0 | 10 | |
6 | October 17 | Philadelphia | 1 - 9 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 6-0-0 | 12 | |
7 | October 20 | Carolina | 4 - 5 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 7-0-0 | 14 | |
8 | October 21 | Buffalo | 6 - 2 | Boston | Biron | 14,382 | 8-0-0 | 16 | |
9 | October 23 | Buffalo | 4 - 1 | Montreal | Miller | 21,273 | 9-0-0 | 18 | |
10 | October 26 | Buffalo | 3 - 0 | NY Islanders | Miller | 8,861 | 10-0-0 | 20 | |
11 | October 28 | Atlanta | 5 - 4 | Buffalo | SO | Miller | 18,690 | 10-0-1 | 21 |
[edit] November
Record for Month 9-3-1 (Home 4-2-1 Away 5-1-0)
# | Date | Visitor | Score | Home | OT | Decision | Attendance | Record | Pts |
12 | November 2 | Buffalo | 5 - 4 | Boston | SO | Miller | 12,547 | 11-0-1 | 23 |
13 | November 4 | Toronto | 4 - 1 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 11-1-1 | 23 | |
14 | November 5 | Buffalo | 4 - 3 | NY Rangers | OT | Biron | 18,200 | 12-1-1 | 25 |
15 | November 10 | Florida | 4 - 5 | Buffalo | OT | Biron | 18,690 | 13-1-1 | 27 |
16 | November 11 | Buffalo | 5 - 4 | Philadelphia | OT | Biron | 19,633 | 14-1-1 | 29 |
17 | November 13 | Buffalo | 7 - 4 | Carolina | Biron | 14,387 | 15-1-1 | 31 | |
18 | November 15 | Ottawa | 4 - 2 | Buffalo | Biron | 18,690 | 15-2-1 | 31 | |
19 | November 17 | Pittsburgh | 2 - 4 | Buffalo | Biron | 18,690 | 16-2-1 | 33 | |
20 | November 18 | Buffalo | 1 - 4 | Ottawa | Miller | 19,770 | 16-3-1 | 33 | |
21 | November 20 | Tampa Bay | 2 - 7 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 17-3-1 | 35 | |
22 | November 22 | Toronto | 4 - 7 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 18-3-1 | 37 | |
23 | November 24 | Montreal | 2 - 1 | Buffalo | OT | Miller | 18,690 | 18-3-2 | 38 |
24 | November 26 | Buffalo | 3 - 2 | NY Rangers | OT | Miller | 18,200 | 19-3-2 | 40 |
[edit] December
Record for Month 9-4-1 (Home 5-2-0 Away 4-2-1)
# | Date | Visitor | Score | Home | OT | Decision | Attendance | Record | Pts |
25 | December 1 | NY Rangers | 3 - 4 | Buffalo | SO | Miller | 18,690 | 20-3-2 | 42 |
26 | December 2 | Buffalo | 4 - 7 | Washington | Biron | 17,162 | 20-4-2 | 42 | |
27 | December 5 | Buffalo | 4 - 1 | Tampa Bay | Miller | 20,025 | 21-4-2 | 44 | |
28 | December 7 | Buffalo | 1 - 3 | Florida | Miller | 15,385 | 21-5-2 | 44 | |
29 | December 9 | Buffalo | 3 - 2 | Montreal | SO | Miller | 21,273 | 22-5-2 | 46 |
30 | December 12 | Buffalo | 3 - 2 | New Jersey | Miller | 11,156 | 23-5-2 | 48 | |
31 | December 14 | Florida | 1 - 2 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 24-5-2 | 50 | |
32 | December 16 | Ottawa | 3 - 1 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 24-6-2 | 50 | |
33 | December 19 | Montreal | 5 - 2 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 24-7-2 | 50 | |
34 | December 21 | Buffalo | 7 - 2 | Nashville | Biron | 16,616 | 25-7-2 | 52 | |
35 | December 23 | Buffalo | 2 - 3 | St. Louis | OT | Biron | 12,513 | 25-7-3 | 53 |
36 | December 26 | Washington | 3 - 6 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 26-7-3 | 55 | |
37 | December 28 | Carolina | 1 - 4 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 27-7-3 | 57 | |
38 | December 30 | Atlanta | 1 - 4 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 28-7-3 | 59 |
[edit] January
Record for Month 6-7-1 (Home 4-3-0 Away 2-4-1)
# | Date | Visitor | Score | Home | OT | Decision | Attendance | Record | Pts |
39 | January 1 | NY Islanders | 1 - 3 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 29-7-3 | 61 | |
40 | January 3 | Buffalo | 3 - 6 | Ottawa | Miller | 19,777 | 29-8-3 | 61 | |
41 | January 5 | Pittsburgh | 4 - 2 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 29-9-3 | 61 | |
42 | January 6 | Buffalo | 4 - 3 | Toronto | Biron | 19,487 | 30-9-3 | 63 | |
43 | January 10 | Buffalo | 2 - 1 | Chicago | Miller | 14,041 | 31-9-3 | 65 | |
44 | January 11 | Toronto | 4 - 2 | Buffalo | Biron | 18,690 | 31-10-3 | 65 | |
45 | January 13 | Tampa Bay | 3 - 2 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 31-11-3 | 65 | |
46 | January 15 | Buffalo | 2 - 3 | Boston | SO | Miller | 15,585 | 31-11-4 | 66 |
47 | January 17 | Boston | 3 - 6 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 32-11-4 | 68 | |
48 | January 19 | Vancouver | 3 - 4 | Buffalo | SO | Miller | 18,690 | 33-11-4 | 70 |
49 | January 20 | Buffalo | 3 - 4 | Montreal | Biron | 21,273 | 33-12-4 | 70 | |
50 | January 26 | Buffalo | 2 - 3 | Columbus | Miller | 18,136 | 33-13-4 | 70 | |
51 | January 27 | Buffalo | 3 - 5 | NY Islanders | Miller | 15,218 | 33-14-4 | 70 | |
52 | January 30 | Boston | 1 - 7 | Buffalo | Biron | 18,690 | 34-14-4 | 72 |
[edit] February
Record for Month 8-2-1 (Home 5-0-1 Away 3-2-0)
# | Date | Visitor | Score | Home | OT | Decision | Attendance | Record | Pts |
53 | February 1 | Buffalo | 3 - 1 | Boston | Biron | 13,853 | 35-14-4 | 74 | |
54 | February 3 | Buffalo | 2 - 3 | New Jersey | Miller | 18,589 | 35-15-4 | 74 | |
55 | February 6 | Buffalo | 4 - 3 | Atlanta | SO | Miller | 17,881 | 36-15-4 | 76 |
56 | February 7 | Ottawa | 2 - 3 | Buffalo | Biron | 18,690 | 37-15-4 | 78 | |
57 | February 10 | Calgary | 2 - 3 | Buffalo | SO | Miller | 18,690 | 38-15-4 | 80 |
58 | February 15 | Edmonton | 1 - 2 | Buffalo | OT | Miller | 18,690 | 39-15-4 | 82 |
59 | February 17 | Boston | 4 - 3 | Buffalo | SO | Miller | 18,690 | 39-15-5 | 83 |
60 | February 20 | Philadelphia | 3 - 6 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 40-15-5 | 85 | |
61 | February 22 | Ottawa | 5 - 6 | Buffalo | SO | Miller | 18,690 | 41-15-5 | 87 |
62 | February 24 | Buffalo | 5 - 6 | Ottawa | Miller | 20,040 | 41-16-5 | 87 | |
63 | February 27 | Buffalo | 6 - 1 | Toronto | Miller | 19,588 | 42-16-5 | 89 |
[edit] March
# | Date | Visitor | Score | Home | OT | Decision | Attendance | Record | Pts |
64 | March 2 | Montreal | 5 - 8 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 43-16-5 | 91 | |
65 | March 3 | Buffalo | 3 - 1 | Toronto | Miller | 19,515 | 44-16-5 | 93 | |
66 | March 7 | Colorado | 3 - 2 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 44-17-5 | 93 | |
67 | March 9 | Minnesota | 5 - 1 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 44-18-5 | 93 | |
68 | March 10 | New Jersey | 3 - 2 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 44-19-5 | 93 | |
69 | March 13 | Buffalo | 4 - 5 | Pittsburgh | SO | Miller | 17,132 | 44-19-6 | 94 |
70 | March 15 | Buffalo | 5 - 3 | Florida | Conklin | 18,111 | 45-19-6 | 96 | |
71 | March 16 | Buffalo | 3 - 2 | Tampa Bay | Miller | 21,264 | 46-19-6 | 98 | |
72 | March 18 | Buffalo | 3 - 4 | Atlanta | OT | Miller | 18,602 | 46-19-7 | 99 |
73 | March 21 | Washington | 2 - 5 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 47-19-7 | 101 | |
74 | March 23 | Toronto | 4 - 5 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 48-19-7 | 103 | |
75 | March 24 | Buffalo | 1 - 4 | Toronto | Miller | 19,571 | 48-20-7 | 103 | |
76 | March 29 | New Jersey | 3 - 4 | Buffalo | Miller | 18,690 | 49-20-7 | 105 |
- Green background indicates win.
- Red background indicates regulation loss.
- White background indicates overtime/shootout loss.
[edit] Playoffs
As of March 25, 2007, the Sabres are in 1st place in the Eastern Conference[13],
7 points ahead of 2nd place New Jersey
15 points ahead of 3rd place Atlanta
5 points ahead of 4th place Ottawa
[edit] Season Stats
[edit] Scoring Leaders
Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes
Player | GP | G | A | Pts | +/- | PIM |
Daniel Briere | 74 | 31 | 58 | 89 | +17 | 66 |
Thomas Vanek | 75 | 37 | 37 | 74 | +41 | 36 |
Chris Drury | 70 | 35 | 27 | 62 | E | 28 |
Jason Pominville | 75 | 32 | 30 | 62 | +22 | 26 |
Maxim Afinogenov | 53 | 23 | 34 | 57 | +17 | 66 |
as of March 24, 2007. For complete listing of scorers, see ESPN.com: Buffalo Sabres Player Stats
[edit] Goaltending
Note: GP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; GA = Goals Against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average
Player | GP | TOI | W | L | OTL | GA | SO | Sv% | GAA |
Ryan Miller | 58 | 3394 | 35 | 16 | 6 | 158 | 1 | .910 | 2.79 |
Martin Biron* | 19 | 1066 | 12 | 4 | 1 | 54 | 0 | .899 | 3.04 |
Ty Conklin* | 3 | 109 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | .926 | 2.75 |
*Stats reflect games played with Buffalo only.
[edit] Coaching Staff
- Lindy Ruff - Head Coach
- Brian McCutcheon - Associate Head Coach
- James Patrick - Assistant Coach
- Jim Corsi - Goaltender Coach
- Doug McKenney - Strength and Conditioning Coach
[edit] Transactions
[edit] Trades
July 10, 2006 | To Edmonton Oilers
Jan Hejda |
To Buffalo Sabres
7th round pick in 2007 |
July 14, 2006 | To Vancouver Canucks
Taylor Pyatt |
To Buffalo Sabres
4th round pick in 2007 |
February 27, 2007 | To Philadelphia Flyers
Martin Biron |
To Buffalo Sabres
2nd round pick in 2007 |
February 27, 2007 | To Columbus Blue Jackets
5th round pick in 2007 |
To Buffalo Sabres
Ty Conklin |
February 27, 2007 | To Washington Capitals
Jiri Novotny 1st round pick in 2007 |
To Buffalo Sabres
Dainius Zubrus Timo Helbling |
February 27, 2007 | To Nashville Predators
4th round pick in 2007 |
To Buffalo Sabres
Mikko Lehtonen |
[edit] Free Agents Acquired
Player | Former Team |
D Jaroslav Spacek | Edmonton Oilers |
[edit] Free Agents Lost
[edit] Lost to Waivers
Player | New Team | Date |
F Chris Thorburn | Pittsburgh Penguins | October 3 |
[edit] Draft Picks
Buffalo's picks at the 2006 NHL Entry Draft in Vancouver, British Columbia.[14] The Sabres had the 24th overall draft pick for their success in the 2005-06 NHL season.
Round | # | Player | Nationality | NHL Team | College/Junior/Club Team (League) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 24 | Dennis Persson (D) | ![]() |
Buffalo Sabres | VIK Västerås HK (Allsvenskan) |
2 | 46 | Jhonas Enroth (G) | ![]() |
Buffalo Sabres (from Vancouver) | Södertälje SK (Elitserien) |
2 | 57 | Mike Weber (D) | ![]() |
Buffalo Sabres | Windsor (OHL) |
4 | 117 | Felix Schutz (C) | ![]() |
Buffalo Sabres | Saint John Sea Dogs (QMJHL) |
5 | 147 | Alex Biega (D) | ![]() |
Buffalo Sabres | Salisbury (USHS-CN) |
7 | 207 | Benjamin Breault (C) | ![]() |
Buffalo Sabres | Baie-Comeau Drakkar (QMJHL) |
[edit] External Links
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Game log: Buffalo Sabres game log on espn.com
- Team standings: NHL standings on espn.com
- ^ "SABRES TOP NHL.COM MERCHANDISE SALES", Hockeybuzz.com, 2006-11-07. Retrieved on 2007-01-02.
- ^ "Thrashers put an end to Sabres' bid for NHL record start", espn.com, 2006-10-28. Retrieved on 2007-03-04.
- ^ "Sundin, Maple Leafs hand Sabres first loss in regulation", espn.com, 2006-11-04. Retrieved on 2007-03-04.
- ^ "Sabres defeat Canes, bump road record to 10-0", espn.com, 2006-11-13. Retrieved on 2007-03-04.
- ^ "2006-07 NHL All-Star Rosters", tsn.ca, 2007-01-09. Retrieved on 2007-01-15.
- ^ "Ruff, Carlyle to coach All-Star teams", tsn.ca, 2007-01-04. Retrieved on 2007-01-15.
- ^ "Briere shines, but West wins All-Star Game", tsn.ca, 2007-01-25. Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- ^ "NHL's bright future is on display", nhl.com, 2007-01-13. Retrieved on 2007-01-15.
- ^ "Richards nets tiebreaker in Lightning win over Sabres", espn.com, 2007-01-13. Retrieved on 2007-01-15.
- ^ "Drury leads the Sabres over Bruins", tsn.ca, 2007-02-01. Retrieved on 2007-02-02.
- ^ "Sabres outlast Sens in hard-fought battle", tsn.ca, 2007-02-23. Retrieved on 2007-02-28.
- ^ "Sabres beef up with Zubrus", nhl.com, 2007-02-27. Retrieved on 2007-02-27.
- ^ NHL Conference Standings ESPN.com - accessed March 26, 2007
- ^ 2006 NHL Entry Draft Results nhl.com - accessed December 9, 2006
Buffalo Sabres - Current Roster | |
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Goaltenders: Defensemen 5 Lydman • 6 Spacek • 10 Tallinder • 27 Numminen • 38 Paetsch • 45 Kalinin • 51 Campbell Forwards 9 Roy • 12 Kotalik • 15 Zubrus • 19 Connolly • 20 Paille • 21 Stafford • 22 Mair • 23 Drury • 26 Vanek • 28 Gaustad • 29 Pominville • 37 Ryan • 41 MacArthur • 48 Briere • 55 Hecht • 61 Afinogenov • 76 Peters
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