1992–93 Montreal Canadiens season

1992–93 Montreal Canadiens
Stanley Cup Champions
Wales Conference Champions
Division 3rd Adams
Conference 4th Wales
1992–93 record 48–30–6
Home record 27–13–2
Road record 21–17–4
Goals for 326 (9th)
Goals against 280 (T-7th)
Team information
General Manager Serge Savard
Coach Jacques Demers
Captain Guy Carbonneau
Alternate captains Kirk Muller (Jan-Apr)
Denis Savard
Brian Skrudland (Oct-Jan)
Arena Montreal Forum
Average attendance 17,018
Team leaders
Goals Brian Bellows (40)
Assists Vincent Damphousse (58)
Points Vincent Damphousse (97)
Penalties in minutes Lyle Odelein (205)
Plus/minus (+): Lyle Odelein (+35)
(–): Guy Carbonneau (–9)
Wins Patrick Roy (31)
Goals against average Patrick Roy (3.20)
<1991–92 1993–94>

The 1992–93 Montreal Canadiens season was the Montreal Canadiens' 76th season in the NHL, and their 84th overall, Coming off of a disappointing second round playoff exit against the Boston Bruins during the 1991–92 season, the 3rd straight season the Bruins had defeated the Habs in the playoffs, the Canadiens were champions for 1992–93 NHL season.

As of 2016, the Canadiens are the most recent Canadian-based team to win the Stanley Cup, having won the 1993 Stanley Cup Finals.[1]

Offseason

In the off-season, the Canadiens would replace head coach Pat Burns and hire former Quebec Nordiques, St. Louis Blues and Detroit Red Wings head coach Jacques Demers to take his spot. The team also made some trades during the summer, acquiring Vincent Damphousse from the Edmonton Oilers, and Brian Bellows from the Minnesota North Stars.

Denis Savard is named an alternate captain, following Mike McPhee's trade to the North Stars.

Regular season

The Canadiens would get off to a quick start, sitting on top of the Adams Division with a 16–5–3 record in their opening 24 games. The team would slump to an 8–9–2 record in their next 19 games, and fall behind their provincial rivals, the Quebec Nordiques, in the standings. Montreal would get hot, going 17–4–1, to take a commanding lead in the division, but a late-season slump, as Montreal would have a record of 7–11–0 in their final 18 games, falling behind the Boston Bruins and Nordiques to finish third in the division with 102 points and a 48–30–6 record.

On January 25, 1993, rookie Ed Ronan scored just 14 seconds into the overtime period to give the Canadiens a 3-2 home win over the Boston Bruins.[2] It would prove to be the fastest overtime goal scored during the 1992-93 NHL regular season.[3]

Four Canadiens (Brian Bellows, Vincent Damphousse, Stephan Lebeau and Kirk Muller) reached the 30-goal plateau.[4] In his first season with the team, Vincent Damphousse led the club offensively, scoring 39 goals and earning a team high 97 points. Brian Bellows, also in his first season in Montreal, had a team high 40 goals, and finished with 88 points. Kirk Muller scored 37 goals and had 94 points, while Stephan Lebeau had a breakout season, earning 80 points. Eric Desjardins led the blueline with 13 goals and 45 points, while Mathieu Schneider also recorded 13 goals from the blueline, and finished with 44 points.

In goal, Patrick Roy played the majority of the games, leading the club with 31 wins and a 3.20 GAA in 62 games, and earn two shutouts along the way. Andre Racicot backed up Roy, and won 17 of 26 games, while posting a 3.39 GAA, and a shutout.

At the beginning of the 1992-93 NHL season, Upper Deck made Patrick Roy a spokesperson. Roy was an ideal choice as he was a hockey card collector, and his collection amounted to over 150,000 cards. An ad campaign was launched and it had an adverse effect on Patrick Roy’s season. Upper Deck had a slogan called “Trade Roy”, and it was posted on billboards throughout the city of Montreal.[5] A Journal de Montreal poll, published on January 13, 1993, indicated that 57% of fans favoured trading Patrick Roy.[6] Before the trading deadline, Canadiens General Manager Serge Savard insisted that he would consider a trade for Roy.[7] The Canadiens would end the season by winning only 8 of their last 19 games.[8]

Final standings

Adams Division
GP W L T GF GA PTS
Boston Bruins 84 51 26 7 332 268 109
Quebec Nordiques 84 47 27 10 351 300 104
Montreal Canadiens 84 48 30 6 326 280 102
Buffalo Sabres 84 38 36 10 335 297 86
Hartford Whalers 84 26 52 6 284 369 58
Ottawa Senators 84 10 70 4 202 395 24

[9]Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Note: Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold.

Wales Conference[10]
R Div GP W L T GF GA Pts
1 p Pittsburgh Penguins PTK 84 56 21 7 367 268 119
2 Boston Bruins ADM 84 51 26 7 332 268 109
3 Quebec Nordiques ADM 84 47 27 10 351 300 104
4 Montreal Canadiens ADM 84 48 30 6 326 280 102
5 Washington Capitals PTK 84 43 34 7 325 286 93
6 New York Islanders PTK 84 40 37 7 335 297 87
7 New Jersey Devils PTK 84 40 37 7 308 299 87
8 Buffalo Sabres ADM 84 38 36 10 335 297 86
9 Philadelphia Flyers PTK 84 36 37 11 319 319 83
10 New York Rangers PTK 84 34 39 11 304 308 79
11 Hartford Whalers ADM 84 26 52 6 284 369 58
12 Ottawa Senators ADM 84 10 70 4 202 395 24

p – Won Presidents' Trophy (and division)
Divisions: PTK – Patrick, ADM – Adams
bold Qualified for playoffs

Schedule and results

Regular season results
No. R Date Score Opponent Record
1WOctober 6, 19925–1 @ Hartford Whalers (1992–93) 1–0–0
2LOctober 8, 19923–5 @ Ottawa Senators (1992–93) 1–1–0
3TOctober 10, 19923–3 OT Pittsburgh Penguins (1992–93) 1–1–1
4LOctober 11, 19922–8 @ Buffalo Sabres (1992–93) 1–2–1
5LOctober 15, 19922–5 @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1992–93) 1–3–1
6WOctober 17, 19928–1 Minnesota North Stars (1992–93) 2–3–1
7WOctober 19, 19926–2 St. Louis Blues (1992–93) 3–3–1
8WOctober 21, 19928–4 San Jose Sharks (1992–93) 4–3–1
9TOctober 23, 19923–3 OT @ New York Rangers (1992–93) 4–3–2
10WOctober 24, 19927–6 @ Philadelphia Flyers (1992–93) 5–3–2
11WOctober 28, 19924–3 Tampa Bay Lightning (1992–93) 6–3–2
12WOctober 31, 19924–3 New York Rangers (1992–93) 7–3–2
13WNovember 2, 19922–1 Winnipeg Jets (1992–93) 8–3–2
14WNovember 4, 19924–3 @ Detroit Red Wings (1992–93) 9–3–2
15WNovember 7, 19925–1 Detroit Red Wings (1992–93) 10–3–2
16WNovember 9, 19925–2 Calgary Flames (1992–93) 11–3–2
17WNovember 11, 19928–3 @ New Jersey Devils (1992–93) 12–3–2
18LNovember 14, 19923–4 OT Philadelphia Flyers (1992–93) 12–4–2
19WNovember 16, 19926–3 Boston Bruins (1992–93) 13–4–2
20WNovember 17, 19925–3 @ Ottawa Senators (1992–93) 14–4–2
21LNovember 19, 19923–4 @ Quebec Nordiques (1992–93) 14–5–2
22WNovember 21, 19923–1 Ottawa Senators (1992–93) 15–5–2
23TNovember 23, 19921–1 OT Washington Capitals (1992–93) 15–5–3
24WNovember 25, 19926–1 @ Hartford Whalers (1992–93) 16–5–3
25LNovember 28, 19925–6 Vancouver Canucks (1992–93) 16–6–3
26WNovember 30, 19923–0 Buffalo Sabres (1992–93) 17–6–3
27LDecember 3, 19923–4 @ Boston Bruins (1992–93) 17–7–3
28WDecember 5, 19923–2 OT @ Winnipeg Jets (1992–93) 18–7–3
29LDecember 6, 19920–2 @ Chicago Blackhawks (1992–93) 18–8–3
30TDecember 8, 19925–5 OT @ Los Angeles Kings (1992–93) 18–8–4
31WDecember 12, 19925–1 Boston Bruins (1992–93) 19–8–4
32LDecember 13, 19925–10 @ New York Rangers (1992–93) 19–9–4
33LDecember 16, 19921–5 Quebec Nordiques (1992–93) 19–10–4
34WDecember 17, 19928–3 @ Quebec Nordiques (1992–93) 20–10–4
35WDecember 19, 19924–2 Buffalo Sabres (1992–93) 21–10–4
36LDecember 21, 19922–5 Hartford Whalers (1992–93) 21–11–4
37LDecember 23, 19922–6 New York Islanders (1992–93) 21–12–4
38LDecember 27, 19922–5 @ Vancouver Canucks (1992–93) 21–13–4
39WDecember 29, 19926–3 @ Edmonton Oilers (1992–93) 22–13–4
40LDecember 31, 19923–5 @ Calgary Flames (1992–93) 22–14–4
41TJanuary 2, 19935–5 OT @ Los Angeles Kings (1992–93) 22–14–5
42WJanuary 4, 19934–1 San Jose Sharks (1992–93) 23–14–5
43WJanuary 5, 19932–1 @ San Jose Sharks (1992–93) 24–14–5
44LJanuary 9, 19934–5 Toronto Maple Leafs (1992–93) 24–15–5
45WJanuary 10, 19937–5 @ Hartford Whalers (1992–93) 25–15–5
46WJanuary 13, 19937–3 Hartford Whalers (1992–93) 26–15–5
47WJanuary 14, 19935–3 @ Quebec Nordiques (1992–93) 27–15–5
48WJanuary 16, 19933–0 New York Rangers (1992–93) 28–15–5
49WJanuary 20, 19933–2 New Jersey Devils (1992–93) 29–15–5
50LJanuary 22, 19932–6 @ New Jersey Devils (1992–93) 29–16–5
51LJanuary 23, 19930–4 @ Toronto Maple Leafs (1992–93) 29–17–5
52WJanuary 25, 19933–2 OT Boston Bruins (1992–93) 30–17–5
53LJanuary 27, 19935–6 Hartford Whalers (1992–93) 30–18–5
54WJanuary 30, 19935–3 Ottawa Senators (1992–93) 31–18–5
55WJanuary 31, 19936–4 Philadelphia Flyers (1992–93) 32–18–5
56WFebruary 3, 19937–2 Los Angeles Kings (1992–93) 33–18–5
57WFebruary 9, 19935–3 @ New York Islanders (1992–93) 34–18–5
58TFebruary 11, 19930–0 OT @ Philadelphia Flyers (1992–93) 34–18–6
59WFebruary 13, 19934–1 @ Ottawa Senators (1992–93) 35–18–6
60LFebruary 17, 19932–5 Boston Bruins (1992–93) 35–19–6
61WFebruary 20, 19935–4 Ottawa Senators (1992–93) 36–19–6
62WFebruary 21, 19934–3 Edmonton Oilers (1992–93) 37–19–6
63WFebruary 23, 19935–1 @ St. Louis Blues (1992–93) 38–19–6
64WFebruary 26, 19936–4 @ Buffalo Sabres (1992–93) 39–19–6
65WFebruary 27, 19938–4 Buffalo Sabres (1992–93) 40–19–6
66WMarch 1, 19935–2 @ Boston Bruins (1992–93) 41–19–6
67LMarch 3, 19931–3 @ Tampa Bay Lightning (1992–93) 41–20–6
68LMarch 6, 19933–4 @ Minnesota North Stars (1992–93) 41–21–6
69WMarch 10, 19935–1 New York Islanders (1992–93) 42–21–6
70LMarch 11, 19932–5 @ Boston Bruins (1992–93) 42–22–6
71LMarch 13, 19932–5 Quebec Nordiques (1992–93) 42–23–6
72WMarch 18, 19935–2 @ Quebec Nordiques (1992–93) 43–23–6
73WMarch 20, 19936–2 Chicago Blackhawks (1992–93) 44–23–6
74LMarch 22, 19933–8 Buffalo Sabres (1992–93) 44–24–6
75WMarch 24, 19936–5 OT @ Hartford Whalers (1992–93) 45–24–6
76LMarch 25, 19930–2 @ Boston Bruins (1992–93) 45–25–6
77WMarch 27, 19934–3 OT Ottawa Senators (1992–93) 46–25–6
78LMarch 31, 19932–6 Quebec Nordiques (1992–93) 46–26–6
79LApril 2, 19930–4 @ Washington Capitals (1992–93) 46–27–6
80WApril 3, 19933–2 @ New York Islanders (1992–93) 47–27–6
81LApril 7, 19933–4 OT @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1992–93) 47–28–6
82LApril 10, 19931–5 Boston Bruins (1992–93) 47–29–6
83LApril 12, 19932–3 OT Washington Capitals (1992–93) 47–30–6
84WApril 13, 19933–2 OT @ Buffalo Sabres (1992–93) 48–30–6

[11]

Playoffs

In the playoffs, the Canadiens would open up against their Battle of Quebec rivals, the Quebec Nordiques. Quebec finished in second place in the division, two points ahead of Montreal. Quebec opened the series with two wins on home ice, sending the series back to Montreal. The Canadiens responded in the third game with a 2–1 overtime win, to cut the Nordiques series lead to 2–1. Montreal followed that up with a solid 3–2 win in game four to even the series as it shifted back to Quebec City. Game five couldn't be settled in regulation time, as the Canadiens and Nordiques were tied 4–4, and Montreal would stun the Nordiques home crowd with an overtime goal to win the game 5–4, and take control of the series with a 3–2 lead, heading back to the Forum for the sixth game. Montreal then closed out the series at home, defeating the Nordiques 6–2, and advance to the second round of the playoffs for the tenth straight season.

Up next was the Buffalo Sabres, who had upset the division-winning Boston Bruins in the opening round. Montreal finished 16 points ahead of the Sabres during the regular season. The Canadiens, who ended their series with the Nordiques with four straight wins, continued their hot streak, defeating the Sabres by identical 4–3 scores in the opening two games, winning the second game in overtime. The series then moved to Buffalo, but Montreal recorded another 4–3 overtime victory, to take a commanding 3–0 series lead. The Habs would sweep Buffalo, with yet another 4–3 overtime win in game four, moving to the Conference final for the first time since 1989.

The Canadiens next opponent would be the surprising New York Islanders, who had just defeated the heavily favoured Pittsburgh Penguins to earn a spot in the Conference finals. The Islanders had 87 points in the regular season, which was 15 less than Montreal. The Canadiens stayed red hot, with a 4–1 victory in the first game, before winning 4–3 in double overtime to take a 2–0 series lead, and extend their winning streak to 10 games. Game three on Long Island would again head into overtime, with Montreal winning again, by a score of 2–1, to win their eleventh straight playoff game, tying the NHL record which was set by the Pittsburgh Penguins and Chicago Blackhawks in the 1992 playoffs. The Islanders would hold off the Canadiens in the fourth game to avoid the sweep and end the Canadiens winning streak, however, Montreal would close out the series in the fifth game, and move to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in four years.

Montreal's final opponent of the playoffs would be the Los Angeles Kings. The Kings, led by Wayne Gretzky, had defeated the Calgary Flames, Vancouver Canucks, and Toronto Maple Leafs to earn their first ever trip to the Stanley Cup Finals. Los Angeles finished the season with 88 points, 14 less than Montreal.

The first game, held at the Forum, would belong to the Kings, as they stunned the Montreal crowd with a 4–1 victory. Montreal rebounded in game two, as a late penalty call on Marty McSorley for using an illegal stick gave the Canadiens a late powerplay, on which they scored on to tie the game up at 2–2. The game would head into overtime, and Montreal again prevailed, winning the game 3–2 to tie up the series. The series moved to Los Angeles for the third game, and Montreal continued their overtime magic, with a 4–3 OT victory to take a 2–1 series lead. The fourth game would again head into overtime, and again, the Canadiens won, their NHL record tenth consecutive overtime victory, to take a 3–1 series lead with the series headed back to Montreal for the fifth game. The Canadiens would have few problems with a tired Kings team in the 5th game, winning 4–1, and earning their 24th Stanley Cup in team history. Patrick Roy would be named the winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy. It would be their most recent Stanley Cup championship as of 2015, and the last time a Canadian team won the Cup. Patrick Roy would win two more Stanley Cups with the Colorado Avalanche in 1996 and 2001.

Montreal Canadiens 4, Quebec Nordiques 2

# Date Visitor Score Home Record
1 April 18 Montreal Canadiens 2–3 (OT) Quebec Nordiques 0–1
2 April 20 Montreal Canadiens 1–4 Quebec Nordiques 0–2
3 April 22 Quebec Nordiques 1-2 (OT) Montreal Canadiens 1-2
4 April 24 Quebec Nordiques 2–3 Montreal Canadiens 2–2
5 April 26 Montreal Canadiens 5–4 (OT) Quebec Nordiques 3–2
6 April 28 Quebec Nordiques 2–6 Montreal Canadiens 4–2

Montreal Canadiens 4, Buffalo Sabres 0

# Date Visitor Score Home Record
1 May 2 Buffalo Sabres 3–4 Montreal Canadiens 1–0
2 May 4 Buffalo Sabres 3–4 (OT) Montreal Canadiens 2–0
3 May 6 Montreal Canadiens 4–3 (OT) Buffalo Sabres 3–0
4 May 8 Montreal Canadiens 4–3 (OT) Buffalo Sabres 4–0

Montreal Canadiens 4, New York Islanders 1

# Date Visitor Score Home Record
1 May 16 New York Islanders 1–4 Montreal Canadiens 1–0
2 May 18 New York Islanders 3–4 (2OT) Montreal Canadiens 2–0
3 May 20 Montreal Canadiens 2–1 (OT) New York Islanders 3–0
4 May 22 Montreal Canadiens 1–4 New York Islanders 3–1
5 May 24 New York Islanders 2–5 Montreal Canadiens 4–1

Montreal Canadiens 4, Los Angeles Kings 1

For more details on this topic, see 1993 Stanley Cup Finals.
# Date Visitor Score Home Record
1 June 1 Los Angeles Kings 4–1 Montreal Canadiens 0–1
2 June 3 Los Angeles Kings 2–3 (OT) Montreal Canadiens 1–1
3 June 5 Montreal Canadiens 4–3 (OT) Los Angeles Kings 2–1
4 June 7 Montreal Canadiens 3–2 (OT) Los Angeles Kings 3–1
5 June 9 Los Angeles Kings 1–4 Montreal Canadiens 4–1

Player statistics

Regular season

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM +/- PPG SHG GWG
Damphousse, VincentVincent Damphousse C 84 39 58 97 985938
Muller, KirkKirk Muller LW 80 37 57 94 7781204
Bellows, BrianBrian Bellows LW 82 40 48 88 4441605
Lebeau, StephanStephan Lebeau C 71 31 49 80 2023807
Keane, MikeMike Keane RW 77 15 45 60 9529001
Savard, DenisDenis Savard C 63 16 34 50 901412
Dionne, GilbertGilbert Dionne LW 75 20 28 48 635612
Desjardins, EricEric Desjardins D 82 13 32 45 9820701
Leclair, JohnJohn LeClair LW 72 19 25 44 3311202
Schneider, MathieuMathieu Schneider D 60 13 31 44 918302
Brisebois, PatricePatrice Brisebois D 70 10 21 31 796402
Haller, KevinKevin Haller D 73 11 14 25 1177601
Brunet, BenoitBenoit Brunet LW 47 10 15 25 1913001
Daigneault, J. J.J. J. Daigneault D 66 8 10 18 5725001
Leeman, GaryGary Leeman RW 20 6 12 18 149101
Carbonneau, GuyGuy Carbonneau C 61 4 13 17 20-9010
DiPietro, PaulPaul DiPietro C 29 4 13 17 1411000
Odelein, LyleLyle Odelein D 83 2 14 16 20535000
Ewen, ToddTodd Ewen RW 75 5 9 14 1936001
Ronan, EdEd Ronan RW 53 5 7 12 206001
Skrudland, BrianBrian Skrudland C 23 5 3 8 551021
Roberge, MarioMario Roberge LW 50 4 4 8 1422003
Hill, SeanSean Hill D 31 2 6 8 54-5101
Belanger, JesseJesse Belanger C 19 4 2 6 41000
Petrov, OlegOleg Petrov RW 9 2 1 3 102001
Dufresne, DonaldDonald Dufresne D 32 1 2 3 320000
Roy, PatrickPatrick Roy G 62 0 2 2 160000
Racicot, AndreAndre Racicot G 26 0 1 1 60000
Ramage, RobRob Ramage D 8 0 1 1 8-3000
Carnback, PatrikPatrik Carnback C 6 0 0 0 2-4000
Chabot, FredericFrederic Chabot G 1 0 0 0 00000
Charron, EricEric Charron D 3 0 0 0 20000
Kjellberg, PatricPatric Kjellberg RW 7 0 0 0 2-3000
Stevenson, TurnerTurner Stevenson RW 1 0 0 0 0-1000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L T GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Roy, PatrickPatrick Roy 3595 62 31 25 5 192 3.20 218141622.894
Racicot, AndreAndre Racicot 1433 26 17 5 1 81 3.39 1682601.881
Chabot, FredericFrederic Chabot 40 1 0 0 0 1 1.50 01918.947
Team: 5068 84 48 30 6 274 3.24 325152241.891

Playoffs

Scoring
Player Pos GP G A Pts PIM PPG SHG GWG
Damphousse, VincentVincent Damphousse C 20 11 12 23 16503
Muller, KirkKirk Muller LW 20 10 7 17 18303
Bellows, BrianBrian Bellows LW 18 6 9 15 18200
Keane, MikeMike Keane RW 19 2 13 15 6000
Desjardins, EricEric Desjardins D 20 4 10 14 23101
DiPietro, PaulPaul DiPietro C 17 8 5 13 8001
Dionne, GilbertGilbert Dionne LW 20 6 6 12 20101
Leclair, JohnJohn LeClair LW 20 4 6 10 14003
Brunet, BenoitBenoit Brunet LW 20 2 8 10 8101
Haller, KevinKevin Haller D 17 1 6 7 16100
Carbonneau, GuyGuy Carbonneau C 20 3 3 6 10012
Lebeau, StephanStephan Lebeau C 13 3 3 6 6101
Odelein, LyleLyle Odelein D 20 1 5 6 30000
Ronan, EdEd Ronan RW 14 2 3 5 10000
Savard, DenisDenis Savard C 14 0 5 5 4000
Daigneault, J. J.J. J. Daigneault D 20 1 3 4 22000
Brisebois, PatricePatrice Brisebois D 20 0 4 4 18000
Leeman, GaryGary Leeman RW 11 1 2 3 2000
Schneider, MathieuMathieu Schneider D 11 1 2 3 16000
Belanger, JesseJesse Belanger C 9 0 1 1 0000
Roy, PatrickPatrick Roy G 20 0 1 1 4000
Dufresne, DonaldDonald Dufresne D 2 0 0 0 0000
Ewen, ToddTodd Ewen RW 1 0 0 0 0000
Hill, SeanSean Hill D 3 0 0 0 4000
Petrov, OlegOleg Petrov RW 1 0 0 0 0000
Racicot, AndreAndre Racicot G 1 0 0 0 0000
Ramage, RobRob Ramage D 7 0 0 0 4000
Roberge, MarioMario Roberge LW 3 0 0 0 0000
Goaltending
Player MIN GP W L GA GAA SO SA SV SV%
Roy, PatrickPatrick Roy 1293 20 16 4 46 2.13 0647601.929
Racicot, AndreAndre Racicot 18 1 0 0 2 6.67 097.778
Team: 1311 20 16 4 48 2.20 0656608.927

[12]

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

Montreal Canadiens 1993 Stanley Cup champions

Roster

  Centres
  Wingers
  Defencemen
  Goaltenders


  Coaching and administrative staff

Stanley Cup engraving

Draft picks

Montreal's draft picks at the 1992 NHL Entry Draft

Round # Player Nationality College/junior/club team (league)
120 David Wilkie  United States Kamloops Blazers (WHL)
233 Valeri Bure  Russia Spokane Chiefs (WHL)
244 Keli Corpse  Canada Kingston Frontenacs (OHL)
368 Craig Rivet  Canada Kingston Frontenacs (OHL)
482 Louis Bernard  Canada Drummondville Voltigeurs (QMJHL)
492 Marc Lamothe  Canada Kingston Frontenacs (OHL)
5116 Don Chase  United States Springfield Olympics (NEJHL)
6140 Martin Sychra  Czechoslovakia ZKL Brno (Czech.)
7164 Christian Proulx  Canada St-Jean Lynx (QMJHL)
8188 Mike Burman  Canada North Bay Centennials (OHL)
9212 Earl Cronan  United States St. Mark's School (USHS)
10236 Trent Cavicchi  Canada Dartmouth Midgets (NS)
11260 Hiromuki Miura  Japan Kushiro High School (Japan)

Farm teams

Roster

1992-93 Montreal Canadiens season
Goaltenders

Defensemen

Wingers

Centers

[13]

See also

References

  1. Tim Warnsby (June 15, 2011). "Bruins win Stanley Cup". CBC Sports. Retrieved Feb 5, 2012. The Canucks weren't going to become the first Canadian-based team since the 1992-93 Montreal Canadiens to win the Stanley Cup with such little production.
  2. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19930126&slug=1682122
  3. http://www.hockey-reference.com/leagues/NHL_1993_games.html
  4. http://www.hockey-reference.com/teams/MTL/1993.html
  5. Patrick Roy, winning, nothing else, p.296, by Michel Roy, translated by Charles Phillips, 2008, John Wiley & Sons, Mississauga, ON, ISBN 978-0-470-15616-2
  6. Patrick Roy, winning, nothing else, p.296, by Michel Roy, translated by Charles Phillips, 2008, John Wiley & Sons, Mississauga, ON, ISBN 978-0-470-15616-2
  7. Patrick Roy, winning, nothing else, p.297, by Michel Roy, translated by Charles Phillips, 2008, John Wiley & Sons, Mississauga, ON, ISBN 978-0-470-15616-2
  8. Patrick Roy, winning, nothing else, p.299, by Michel Roy, translated by Charles Phillips, 2008, John Wiley & Sons, Mississauga, ON, ISBN 978-0-470-15616-2
  9. Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2011). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2012. Dan Diamond & Associates. p. 154. ISBN 9781894801225.
  10. "1992–1993 Conference Standings". National Hockey League. Retrieved June 29, 2014.
  11. "1992–93 Montreal Canadiens Games". Hockey-reference.com. Retrieved 2009-05-21.
  12. "1992-93 Montreal Canadiens Statistics - Hockey-Reference.com". hockey-reference.com. Retrieved 2009-05-28.
  13. http://www.hockey-reference.com/teams/MTL/1993.html
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