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1992 NHL expansion draft

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1992 NHL expansion draft
General information
DateJune 18, 1992
LocationMontreal, Quebec, Canada
Overview
LeagueNational Hockey League
Expansion teamsOttawa Senators
Tampa Bay Lightning
Expansion season1992–93
← 1991
1993 →

The 1992 NHL expansion draft was an expansion draft held by the National Hockey League (NHL) to fill the rosters of the league's two expansion teams for the 1992–93 season, the Ottawa Senators and the Tampa Bay Lightning. The draft was held on June 18, 1992, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Background

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In the 1960s and 1970s, the National Hockey League (NHL) saw a series of franchise expansions, culminating in the 1979 that coincided with the collapse of the NHL's chief competitor, the World Hockey Association.[1] However, a number of those expansion teams failed and were relocated, ending with the relocation of the Colorado Rockies in 1983–84 to New Jersey. Following that move, the NHL remained relatively stable for the remainder of the 1980s, which sparked a new interest in expansion in the late 1980s by the NHL owners with plans to go from the existing 21 teams to 30 by the end of the 1990s.[2] On April 6, 1989, it was announced that a report on expansion was to be presented to the NHL Board of Governors at their meeting in December.[3] The league opted to expand and a new franchise was awarded to San Jose.[2] The league then chose to expand by a further two locations, and eleven competitors submitted bids. One group based in Milwaukee chose to withdraw after the NHL announced that the expansion fee would be $50 million.[4] Two winners were selected from the ten remaining groups; Ottawa, Hamilton, Phoenix, Houston, Seattle, San Diego, Anaheim, Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Miami. Ottawa and Tampa were awarded the new franchises primarily because they were the only ones who submitted bids that accepted all the conditions the NHL placed on the bidders.[5] The expansion draft was to be league president John Ziegler's last act, as he had announced his departure.[6]

Rules

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21 of the 22 franchises in the league at the time of the draft were allowed to protect two goaltenders and fourteen position players (the San Jose Sharks were the only team exempt from protection restrictions as they were an expansion team the previous season). First and second-year players were not eligible to be selected.[7] To be exposed in the draft, position players had to have played at least 40 games in the 1991–92 season or 70 games over the previous two and goaltenders had to have played a minimum of 60 minutes in the NHL.[8]

The seven teams which had lost a defenseman in the preceding 1991 expansion draft (Boston Bruins, Calgary Flames, Chicago Blackhawks, Edmonton Oilers, Hartford Whalers, Montreal Canadiens, and Toronto Maple Leafs) could not lose one in this draft. However, they still had to protect the same number of defenseman as they had protected in the previous expansion draft, minus one.[9] Any team that had lost a goaltender in the 1991 expansion draft was exempt from making any of their goaltenders available in this draft.[7] Every other team had to make available at least one goaltender.[10] This clause (known to the league teams far in advance) led to several trades so that teams could fulfill the requirement without exposing their lead goaltenders. It also led to anomalies such as Ray LeBlanc (the star of the 1992 United States Olympic team) being put into the only NHL game of his career so that the Chicago Blackhawks could expose him and not Ed Belfour, Dominik Hasek or Jimmy Waite. To avoid exposing any of their three goaltenders, the Washington Capitals re-signed former goalie Bernie Wolfe, who was 40 years old and last played an NHL game in 1979. League president John Ziegler held up approval of the contract and summoned Capitals general manager David Poile to the NHL's headquarters in Toronto to explain himself; not willing to risk being sanctioned, the team signed Steve Weeks instead.[10]

Teams could make trades prior to the draft in order to protect players until the draft took place. Side deals between existing and expansion franchises to affect actual draft selection was prohibited.[7][11] That did not stop the teams from making those deals, as Ottawa made two.[11] The expansion teams were given a provisional copy of the players available prior to the draft, but a final copy was only submitted to the teams on the draft floor.[6] There were 42 players selected in the draft, two from each participating franchise. The Lightning and Senators were each to pick two goaltenders, seven defensemen, and twelve forwards. The goaltenders were selected first, followed by the defensemen and then the forwards.[12]

Draft

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Ahead of the draft, those selecting commented on the poor level of talent made available. Phil Esposito, the general manager of the expansion Tampa Bay Lightning, called the players available in the draft "not very good ones" and intended to trade some of those selected immediately in exchange for younger players.[12] John Ferguson, the director of player personnel for the expansion Ottawa Senators, stated that the teams were being offered "snow in winter".[6] The draft took place in the Regence Ballroom of the Radisson Gouverneurs Hotel in Montreal on June 18, 1992, and who selected first was decided by a coin toss on May 28, with Ottawa winning the right to have priority selection on goaltenders and forwards, while Tampa would have priority selection on defensemen.[9]

The Senators had prepared their draft list using an Apple laptop. However, no one had checked to see if the laptop had been charged and on the day of the draft, the computer's battery was found to be dead. Furthermore, the Senators did not open the final list provided to them. Mel Bridgman, general manager of the Senators, took goaltender Peter Sidorkiewicz with his first selection. The New York Rangers wanted to protect their lineup and had goaltender Mark Laforest available. They made a side deal with Ottawa, initially offering two young prospects if Ottawa selected Laforest, however, they changed their mind and instead wanted a draft pick in the 1992 NHL entry draft back from Ottawa for the two prospects. While the entire room waited, the Senators, missing their draft list, debated at their table, eventually coming to an agreement with the Rangers to acquire one prospect and the New York Rangers ninth round selection in the 1992 entry draft in exchange for selecting Laforest. Ottawa made a second side deal, this time with the New Jersey Devils, who wanted to protect Viacheslav Fetisov from selection. Ottawa, with their third pick, took Brad Shaw in exchange for a young prospect.[13]

Once the draft reached the forwards portion, Ottawa fell apart.[11] At pick 33, Bridgman attempted to select Todd Ewen from the Montreal Canadiens. However, the Canadiens had already lost two players in the draft, including one to the Senators, and none of their players were available to be selected. Bridgman apologized and then returned to the podium a few minutes later to select Mark Freer from the Philadelphia Flyers. At pick 40, the Senators tried to take Todd Hawkins from Toronto, but the Maple Leafs had already lost the maximum number of players too. Bridgman retreated back to Ottawa's table and then after a discussion, returned to select C. J. Young from Calgary, but the was not eligible to be selected as he was not on the final copy of the list provided by the league.[14] Ziegler, unimpressed by Ottawa's failures, sent the team a note telling them to get their act together. Bridgman returned to the podium for the third time to select Darcy Loewen from the Buffalo Sabres.[15]

Analysis of the team's selections showed that the Lightning and Senators had chosen different ways to construct their franchises. Tampa went with NHL veterans, attempting to ice a team that could still compete, while Ottawa, with a number of youthful selections, chose to build for the future.[16]

Draft results

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The following players were selected by the Ottawa Senators and Tampa Bay Lightning;[9][17]

# Player Drafted from Drafted by
1. Peter Sidorkiewicz (G) Hartford Whalers Ottawa Senators
2. Wendell Young (G) Pittsburgh Penguins Tampa Bay Lightning
3. Mark Laforest (G) New York Rangers Ottawa Senators
4. Frederic Chabot (G) Montreal Canadiens Tampa Bay Lightning
5. Brad Shaw (D) New Jersey Devils Ottawa Senators
6. Joe Reekie (D) New York Islanders Tampa Bay Lightning
7. Shawn Chambers (D) Washington Capitals
8. Darren Rumble (D) Philadelphia Flyers Ottawa Senators
9. Peter Taglianetti (D) Pittsburgh Penguins Tampa Bay Lightning
10. Dominic Lavoie (D) St. Louis Blues Ottawa Senators
11. Brad Miller (D) Buffalo Sabres
12. Bob McGill (D) Detroit Red Wings Tampa Bay Lightning
13. Ken Hammond (D) Vancouver Canucks Ottawa Senators
14. Jeff Bloemberg (D) New York Rangers Tampa Bay Lightning
15. Doug Crossman (D) Quebec Nordiques
16. Kent Paynter (D) Winnipeg Jets Ottawa Senators
17. Rob Ramage (D) Minnesota North Stars Tampa Bay Lightning
18. John Van Kessel (D) Los Angeles Kings Ottawa Senators
19. Michel Mongeau (C) St. Louis Blues Tampa Bay Lightning
20. Sylvain Turgeon (LW) Montreal Canadiens Ottawa Senators
21. Mike Peluso (F) Chicago Blackhawks
22. Anatoli Semenov (C) Edmonton Oilers Tampa Bay Lightning
23. Rob Murphy (C) Vancouver Canucks Ottawa Senators
24. Mike Hartman (LW) Winnipeg Jets Tampa Bay Lightning
25. Mark Lamb (C) Edmonton Oilers Ottawa Senators
26. Basil McRae (LW) Minnesota North Stars Tampa Bay Lightning
27. Laurie Boschman (F) New Jersey Devils Ottawa Senators
28. Rob DiMaio (RW) New York Islanders Tampa Bay Lightning
29. Jim Thomson (RW) Los Angeles Kings Ottawa Senators
30. Steve Maltais (W) Quebec Nordiques Tampa Bay Lightning
31. Lonnie Loach (LW) Detroit Red Wings Ottawa Senators
32. Dan Vincelette (LW) Chicago Blackhawks Tampa Bay Lightning
33. Mark Freer (C) Philadelphia Flyers Ottawa Senators
34. Tim Bergland (RW) Washington Capitals Tampa Bay Lightning
35. Chris Lindberg (LW) Calgary Flames Ottawa Senators
36. Brian Bradley (C) Toronto Maple Leafs Tampa Bay Lightning
37. Jeff Lazaro (RW) Boston Bruins Ottawa Senators
38. Keith Osborne (RW) Toronto Maple Leafs Tampa Bay Lightning
39. Darcy Loewen (LW) Buffalo Sabres Ottawa Senators
40. Shayne Stevenson (C) Boston Bruins Tampa Bay Lightning
41. Blair Atcheynum (RW) Hartford Whalers Ottawa Senators
42. Tim Hunter (F) Calgary Flames Tampa Bay Lightning

Post-draft

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Esposito remained true to his word, trading three players selected in the draft before the start of the 1992–93 season;[18]

  • Frederic Chabot (traded to Montreal for goaltender Jean-Claude Bergeron on June 18, 1992)
  • Tim Hunter (traded to Quebec for future considerations on June 19, 1992)[a]
  • Jeff Bloemberg (traded to Edmonton for future considerations on September 25, 1992)

Furthermore, on draft day, the Lightning acquired forward Danton Cole from the Winnipeg Jets for future considerations. They also sent a third-round pick in the 1994 NHL entry draft, a fourth-round pick in 1995 and a sixth-round pick in 1996 to the St. Louis Blues for goaltender Pat Jablonski, forwards Darin Kimble and Steve Tuttle, and defenseman Rob Robinson.[18][b]

The Senators were equally as active with their selections. After being selected by the Senators, Laforest was traded back to the New York Rangers in exchange for Jody Hull. However, the Rangers were unwilling to accept Laforest's return and insisted the Senators keep him. However, the Senators mailed a new contract to an address that Laforest no longer used and the goaltender did not receive his contract before the mandatory date, making it ineligible. Ottawa then claimed the goaltender was a free agent and Laforest was forced to look for a new team.[19] Calgary Flames general manager Doug Risebrough had attempted to prevent Lindberg's selection by reportedly striking a deal with the Lightning and the Senators ahead of the draft, but angrily departed the draft room after the Senators selected him.[20] Five days after the draft on June 23, Lindberg was traded back to the Flames for defenseman Mark Osiecki as part of a pre-draft deal.[21] Neil Brady was acquired on September 3 for to complete the deal the Senators had with the Devils.[22]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Future considerations became forward Martin Simard, completed on September 14.[18]
  2. ^ Tampa would trade Kimble prior to the start of the season on September 4 to the Boston Bruins for forward Ken Hodge Jr. and defenseman Matt Hervey.[18]

Citations

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  1. ^ Laroche 2014, pp. 61, 200, 263.
  2. ^ a b Laroche 2014, p. 336.
  3. ^ MacGregor 1993, p. 12.
  4. ^ MacGregor 1993, pp. 16–17.
  5. ^ MacGregor 1993, pp. 17–19.
  6. ^ a b c MacGregor 1993, p. 2.
  7. ^ a b c Robinson 2004, p. 43.
  8. ^ Mendes, Ian; McIndoe, Sean (July 19, 2021). "What if the Senators and Lightning had the same expansion draft rules as Seattle and Vegas?". The Athletic. Retrieved September 2, 2025.
  9. ^ a b c "1992 NHL Expansion Draft". Tampa Bay Times. June 18, 1992. p. 3C. Retrieved September 2, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ a b Allen, Scott (June 20, 2017). "The time the Caps signed a 40-year-old financial planner to circumvent NHL rules". The Washington Post.
  11. ^ a b c MacGregor 1993, p. 3.
  12. ^ a b "Are Senators, Lightning getting short end of the stick in expansion draft?". Syracuse Herald-Journal. Associated Press. June 18, 1992. p. D5. Retrieved September 2, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ MacGregor 1993, pp. 2–3.
  14. ^ MacKinnon, John (June 19, 1992). "Goofy picks leave Bridgman red-faced". Ottawa Citizen. p. C1. Retrieved September 2, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ MacGregor 1993, p. 4.
  16. ^ Jones, Tom (June 19, 1992). "Lightning, Senators take different paths". Tampa Tribune. p. 8. Retrieved September 2, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "Draft Data". Tarrytown Daily News. June 19, 1992. p. 7. Retrieved September 3, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^ a b c d Tampa Bay Lightning 2024, p. 266.
  19. ^ Dittmeier, Bob (October 25, 1992). "Red Wings, Kelley Caught in Generational Pop Music Controversy". The Daily Gazette. p. F2. Retrieved September 3, 2025.
  20. ^ MacKinnon, John (June 20, 1992). "Easy come, easy go". Ottawa Citizen. p. 61. Retrieved September 3, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ Stewart, Monte (June 24, 1992). "Lindberg back with Flames". Calgary Herald. p. 32. Retrieved September 3, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  22. ^ "Future considerations net centre Brady for Senators". Ottawa Citizen. September 4, 1992. p. C2. Retrieved September 3, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.

References

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  • Laroche, Stephen (2014). Changing the Game: A History of NHL Expansion. Toronto: ECW Press. ISBN 978-1-77041-079-4.
  • MacGregor, Roy (1993). Road Games: A Year in the Life of the NHL. Toronto: MacFarlane Walter & Ross. ISBN 0-921912-70-6.
  • Robinson, Chris (2004). Ottawa Senators: Great Stories from the NHL's First Dynasty. Amazing Stories. Canmore, Alberta: Altitude Publishing. ISBN 1-55153-790-7.
  • 2024–25 Media Guide. Tampa Bay Lightning. 2024. OCLC 276870641.
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