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Wikipedia

Dallas Stars

The Dallas Stars are a professional ice hockey team based in Dallas. They compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Central Division in the Western Conference, and were founded during the 1967 NHL expansion as the Minnesota North Stars, based in Bloomington, Minnesota. Before the 1978–79 NHL season, the team merged with the Cleveland Barons after the league granted them permission due to each team's respective financial struggles. Eventually, the franchise relocated to Dallas for the 1993–94 NHL season where the team was rebranded as the Dallas Stars. The Stars played out of Reunion Arena located in downtown Dallas from their relocation in 1993 until 2001, when the team moved less than 1.5 miles (2.4 km) into the American Airlines Center located in the nearby Victory Park neighborhood of Dallas, an arena they share with the Dallas Mavericks of the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Dallas Stars
2023–24 Dallas Stars season
ConferenceWestern
DivisionCentral
Founded1967
HistoryMinnesota North Stars
19671993
Dallas Stars
1993–present
Home arenaAmerican Airlines Center
CityDallas, Texas
Team colorsVictory green, black, silver, skyline green, white[1][2][3]
         
MediaBally Sports Southwest
The Ticket (1310 AM, 96.7 FM)
Owner(s)Tom Gaglardi
General managerJim Nill
Head coachPeter DeBoer
CaptainJamie Benn
Minor league affiliatesTexas Stars (AHL)
Idaho Steelheads (ECHL)
Stanley Cups1 (1998–99)
Conference championships3 (1998–99, 1999–00, 2019–20)
Presidents' Trophy2 (1997–98, 1998–99)
Division championships8 (1996–97, 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2005–06, 2015–16)
Official websitenhl.com/stars

The Stars have won eight division titles in Dallas, two Presidents' Trophies as the top regular season team in the league, the Western Conference championship three times, and the Stanley Cup in 1999, where center Joe Nieuwendyk won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player of the playoffs that year. Over the course of the franchise's history in both Minnesota and Dallas, the franchise has appeared in the Stanley Cup Finals five times (1981, 1991, 1999, 2000, and 2020).

In 2000, Neal Broten was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame. In 2009, Brett Hull became the first Dallas Stars player inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame, followed by Ed Belfour and Joe Nieuwendyk in 2011 and Mike Modano in 2014; Modano is the highest-scoring player in franchise history. In 2010, brothers Derian and Kevin Hatcher were also inducted to the United States Hockey Hall of Fame.

Franchise history edit

Minnesota North Stars (1967–1993) edit

The Minnesota North Stars began play in 1967 as part of the league's six-team expansion. Home games were played at the newly constructed Metropolitan Sports Center ("Met Center") in Bloomington, Minnesota. Initially successful both on the ice and at the gate, the North Stars fell victim to financial problems after several poor seasons in the mid-1970s.

 
The logo of the Minnesota North Stars from 1991 to 1993. When the team moved to Dallas in 1993, it used a similar logo, usually with the word "DALLAS" above "STARS," until 2013.

In 1978, the North Stars merged with the Cleveland Barons (formerly the California Golden Seals), owned by George III and Gordon Gund. With both teams on the verge of folding, the league permitted the two failing franchises to merge. The merged team continued as the Minnesota North Stars, while the Seals/Barons franchise records were retired. However, the Gunds were the merged team's principal owners, and the North Stars assumed the Barons' place in the Adams Division in order to balance out the divisions. The merger brought with it a number of talented players, and the North Stars were revived—they reached the Stanley Cup Finals in 1981, where they lost in five games to the New York Islanders. However, by the early 1990s, declining attendance and the inability to secure a new downtown revenue-generating arena led ownership to request permission to move the team to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1990. The league rejected the request and instead agreed to award an expansion franchise, the San Jose Sharks, to the Gund brothers. The North Stars were sold to a group of investors that were originally looking to place a team in San Jose, although one of the group's members, former Calgary Flames part-owner Norman Green, would eventually gain control of the team.[4] In the following season, the North Stars made it to the Stanley Cup Finals, only to lose to the Pittsburgh Penguins.

After the 1990–91 season, the North Stars suffered through declining profits coupled with distraction and uncertainty caused by relocation attempts. The team's fortunes were further impeded by the terms of the settlement with the Gund brothers, in which they were permitted to take a number of North Stars players to San Jose. In their final two seasons in Minnesota, the team adopted a new logo which omitted any reference to the word "North" from "North Stars", leading many fans to anticipate the team heading south.[5] Green explored the possibility of moving the team to Anaheim to play at a new arena (which is now the Honda Center) under construction,[6] and intended to call the team the Los Angeles Stars. However, in 1992 the league decided to award an expansion franchise to The Walt Disney Company to play in Anaheim's new arena, this franchise eventually became the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.

Relocation and Early Years in Dallas (1993–1998) edit

 
Reunion Arena was the first home for the Stars in Dallas. The arena was the Stars' home from 1993 to 2001.

In 1993, amid further attendance woes and bitter personal controversy, Green obtained permission from the league to move the team to Dallas, for the 1993–94 season, with the decision announced on March 10, 1993.[7] Green was convinced by former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach that Dallas would be a suitable market for an NHL team.[5] With the team's move to the Southern United States, Green decided to drop the "North" adjective but otherwise retained the "Stars" nickname, which in its shortened form quickly proved popular as it matched the state of Texas' official nickname as "The Lone Star State." An NHL franchise Dallas was an experiment for the league, as at that time the Stars would be one of the three southernmost teams in the league along with two recently created expansion teams in the Tampa Bay Lightning and Florida Panthers as the league's first real ventures into southern non-traditional hockey markets. The Stars would move into Reunion Arena, built in 1980, the downtown arena already occupied by the National Basketball Association's Dallas Mavericks.

To quell the ensuing controversy surrounding the North Stars move to Dallas, the NHL promised that the Twin Cities would receive an expansion franchise in the near future; that promise was fulfilled in 2000 in the form of the Minnesota Wild.

With the league changing the names of the conferences and divisions that season, the newly relocated Stars were placed in the Central Division of the Western Conference, although these were essentially continuations of the Norris Division and Campbell Conference respectively, both of which the North Stars had been part of. The first NHL game in Dallas was played on October 5, 1993, and was a 6–4 Stars win against the Detroit Red Wings.[8] Somewhat ironically, Minnesotan native Neal Broten scored the first Stars goal in Dallas. Though the Stars were relatively still low on the Dallas-Fort Worth sports pecking order upon their arrival, popularity of the team grew rapidly and the immediate success of the team on the ice, as well as Mike Modano's career-best season (50 goals, 93 points) helped spur the team's popularity in North Texas. The Stars set franchise bests in wins (42) and points (97) in their first season in Dallas, qualifying for the 1994 playoffs. The Stars further shocked the hockey world by sweeping the St. Louis Blues in the first round, but lost to the eventual Western Conference Champion Vancouver Canucks in the second round. The Stars' success in their first season along with Modano's spectacular on-ice performances, would be an integral part of the Stars' eventual franchise success in the immediate years to come.

The almost immediate success of the Stars was also helped by the long legacy of minor-league hockey in the area. Both incarnations of the Central Hockey League had two teams in the area, the Dallas Black Hawks and the Fort Worth Texans for years before the Stars' arrival. The two teams were bitter rivals, and some of the traditions and famous rivalry incidents, including what is thought to be the first known use anywhere at an athletic event of "Rock and Roll Part 2" by the Fort Worth Texans and the famous "10 Cent Beer Night" near-riot in 1978 helped create awareness of hockey. Amateur and youth hockey in North Texas were also extremely popular because of the long presence of the minor league teams.

Green, who had run into financial problems stemming from his business ventures outside of hockey, was forced to sell the team to businessman Tom Hicks in December 1995.[5]

Beginning of the Tom Hicks era and building for a championship edit

The 1994–95 season was shortened by an owners' lockout. The Stars traded captain Mark Tinordi along with Rick Mrozik to the Washington Capitals before the season began for Kevin Hatcher. Longtime North Stars hold-over Neal Broten was named his replacement, although he was traded too after only 17 games to the New Jersey Devils. Broten was replaced by Kevin's younger brother Derian Hatcher as team captain, a role he would serve in for the next decade. The Stars played only 48 games that season posting a record of 17–23–8. Despite the shortened season and the losing record, the Stars again made the playoffs, losing in five games to the Red Wings in the first round.[9]

 
The Stars made several moves to revamp the roster in the 1996 off-season, notably making a trade to acquire Sergei Zubov. He remained on the team until he left the league in 2009.

The 1995–96 season would be the first season under new owner Tom Hicks. In the off-season, the Stars traded for former Montreal Canadiens' captain and three-time Frank J. Selke Trophy winner Guy Carbonneau, who was then with the St. Louis Blues. With the Stars struggling to begin the season, general manager and head coach Bob Gainey traded for center Joe Nieuwendyk from the Calgary Flames in exchange for Corey Millen and Jarome Iginla, then a Stars prospect. The Stars recorded only 11 wins in the first half of the season, and Bob Gainey relinquished his coaching duties in January to be the full-time general manager of the team. The Stars soon hired Michigan K-Wings head coach Ken Hitchcock to replace him; it would be his first NHL head coaching position. The Stars then traded for Benoit Hogue from the Toronto Maple Leafs late in the season, but ultimately finished in sixth place in the Central Division, missing the playoffs for the first time since moving to Texas.[10]

In the 1996 off-season, the Stars continued to revamp their roster, adding defensemen Darryl Sydor from the Los Angeles Kings followed by Sergei Zubov from the Pittsburgh Penguins for Kevin Hatcher. Zubov would serve as the Stars' top defenseman and powerplay quarterback until leaving the league in 2009. On the ice, Ken Hitchcock's first season proved to be a good one. The Stars bested their 1994 totals, posting 48 wins and reaching the 100-point mark for the first time in franchise history. The Stars won the Central Division, their first division title since 1983–84 (when they were still the Minnesota North Stars) and were seeded second in the playoffs.[11] Despite the regular season success, the youthful Stars were upset in the first round by the Edmonton Oilers in seven games. Defenseman Grant Ledyard tripped in overtime of Game 7, allowing Todd Marchant to score the game- and series-winning goal on a breakaway against goaltender Andy Moog.

During the 1997 off-season, the Stars signed star goaltender Ed Belfour as a free agent after a well-publicized falling-out with the San Jose Sharks, which had traded a number of players to the Chicago Blackhawks to obtain him in January in the previous season.[12] Andy Moog was allowed to leave via free agency, but later returned to the Stars as an assistant coach. The 1997–98 season was another banner year for the Stars. The Stars again set franchise records in wins (49) and points (109). Dallas acquired Mike Keane at the deadline from the New York Rangers. The Stars won the franchise's first Presidents' Trophy as the league's best regular season team, as well as the Central Division title for the second season in a row. Belfour set franchise season records for goals against average (1.88), wins (37) and just missed out on the Jennings Trophy by one goal to Martin Brodeur of the New Jersey Devils. The Stars were the first overall seed for the 1998 Stanley Cup playoffs and defeated the eighth-seeded San Jose Sharks in six games in the first round. Notorious enforcer Bryan Marchment injured Joe Nieuwendyk's right knee, forcing him to miss the rest of the playoffs with torn ligaments. In the second round, they again met the Edmonton Oilers, this time defeating them in five games. However, without Nieuwendyk, the Stars lacked the firepower to overcome the defending Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings in the Western Conference Finals and lost in six games. The Red Wings went on to win their second consecutive Stanley Cup.

Contending for Titles and 1999 Stanley Cup Championship (1998–2004) edit

1999 Stanley Cup Championship and 2000 Stanley Cup Finals runs edit

In the 1998 off-season, after falling just short in the Western Conference Finals, the Stars added what they believed was the final piece toward winning a championship: star goalscoring winger Brett Hull. Hull had already had a successful career with the St. Louis Blues, with three consecutive 70-goal seasons and a Hart Memorial Trophy, but a fallout with Blues management led Hull to leave St. Louis via free agency.[13] Additionally, this was the first season for the Stars in the Pacific Division after the 1998 NHL division re-alignment.

In the 1998–99 season, the Stars won 51 games, surpassing the 50-win mark for the first time in franchise history. They also recorded 114 points, which still stands today as a franchise record. They won their first Pacific Division by 24 points (their third consecutive division title), a second consecutive Presidents' Trophy, the Jennings Trophy as the league's top defensive team, and were awarded home-ice advantage throughout the 1999 playoffs. Winger Jere Lehtinen was also awarded the Frank J. Selke Trophy.[14]

 
Joe Nieuwendyk helped the Stars win their first Stanley Cup in 1999. Nieuwendyk was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy for that year's playoffs.

In the first round of the playoffs, Dallas faced the Edmonton Oilers. The Stars swept the Oilers in four close games, winning Game 4 in the third overtime on a goal by Joe Nieuwendyk. They then faced the St. Louis Blues in the second round. After taking a 2–0 series lead, the Blues came back to tie the series. The Stars then won the next two games to beat the Blues in six games. The series again ended on an overtime goal, this time in Game 6 from Mike Modano. In the Conference Finals, they faced the Colorado Avalanche for the first time in Stars playoff history. This would be the first of four playoff meetings between the Stars and Avalanche in the next seven years. After both the Stars and the Avalanche split the first four games at a 2–2 series tie, the Avalanche won Game 5 by a score of 7–5, taking a 3–2 series lead, The Stars rallied winning game six on the road, and Game 7 at home, both by 4–1 scorelines.[15]

This was the Stars' first Stanley Cup Finals appearance as the Dallas Stars, although they made the finals twice as the Minnesota North Stars. They faced the Eastern Conference champion Buffalo Sabres, who had defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs 4–1 in the Eastern Conference Finals. After splitting the first four games, the Stars vaunted defense would hold the Sabres to only one goal in the next two, winning Game 5 2–0 and Game 6 2–1 on a triple-overtime goal by Brett Hull. Hull's goal at 14:51 of the third overtime was allowed to stand only after a lengthy official review. That season, the league still had the "crease rule" in effect, which provided that if any player of the attacking team who did not have possession of the puck entered the crease before the puck, then any resulting goal was disallowed. Hull had initially gained possession of the puck outside the crease and had made a shot that was blocked by Buffalo goaltender Dominik Hasek. One of Hull's skates entered the crease as he corralled the rebound, and Hull's second shot scored the Cup-winning goal. The goal was eventually allowed, as having simply blocked Hull's shot rather than catching it, Hasek never took possession of the puck away from Hull. Officials therefore determined that rather than calling it a loose puck, Hull would be considered to have had continuous possession of the puck from before his first shot outside the crease. The complexity of the crease rule, and the attendant difficulties in understanding its application by fans and players alike, combined with the controversy arising out of the disputed Stanley Cup-winning goal, resulted in the crease rule being repealed the following season. Hull's goal marked the 13th time a Stanley Cup-winning goal was scored in overtime, and only the fourth to be scored in multiple overtimes. This was the only time between 1995 and 2003 that a team other than the New Jersey Devils, Colorado Avalanche or Detroit Red Wings won the Stanley Cup.

The team added veterans Kirk Muller, Dave Manson and Sylvain Cote in an effort to defend their Stanley Cup championship in 1999–2000. On December 31, 1999, Brett Hull scored his 600 and 601st career goals in a 5–4 win over the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. The Stars ultimately won the Pacific Division for the second year in a row, and were seeded second in the Western Conference. Dallas then defeated the Edmonton Oilers and San Jose Sharks in the first and second rounds, both 4–1 series victories. The Stars, for the second season in a row, defeated the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference Finals in seven games to reach their second consecutive Stanley Cup Finals, where they met the New Jersey Devils. Because the Devils finished the regular season with one more point than Dallas, the Stars had to play their first playoff series without home-ice advantage since 1995.[16] The Stars lost all three games at the Reunion Arena in the Finals, and lost the series in Game 6 on a double-overtime goal by New Jersey forward Jason Arnott.

2001–2004 edit

Hoping to win back the Stanley Cup, the Stars again captured the Pacific Division, posting a solid 48–24–8–2 record in the 2000–01 season. In the playoffs, the Stars and the Edmonton Oilers met in the first round, battling back-and-forth through the first four games, with each game decided by one goal, including three going into overtime. Game 5 would also go to overtime, as the Stars took a 3–2 series lead on a goal by Kirk Muller. However, in Game 6 in Edmonton, the Stars did not need overtime, advancing to the second round with a 3–1 win. Facing the St. Louis Blues, the Stars would run out of gas, being swept in four straight games. The Game 2 loss would be the last NHL game played in Reunion Arena.

 
Marty Turco was awarded the starting goaltender position in the 2002–03 season, with the departure of Ed Belfour to free agency.

Moving into the brand new American Airlines Center for the 2001–02 season, the Stars had a slow start to the season, as goaltender Ed Belfour struggled through one of his worst seasons. Head coach Ken Hitchcock was eventually fired, being replaced by Rick Wilson. Despite the coaching change, the Stars continued to play poor hockey. With the prospect of missing the playoffs, the Stars traded 1999 Conn Smythe winner Joe Nieuwendyk and Jamie Langenbrunner to the New Jersey Devils in exchange for Randy McKay and Jason Arnott, who scored the game-winning goal in the 2000 Finals against Dallas. The Stars would eventually go on to post a respectable record of 35–28–13–5. However, it would not be enough for the playoffs, as they fell four points short of the final eighth spot in the Western Conference. Following the season, coach Rick Wilson would return to assistant coaching duties, as the Stars brought in Dave Tippett as his replacement.

As in the 2002 off-season, Ed Belfour left via free agency to the Toronto Maple Leafs. To begin the 2002–03 season, the Stars awarded the starting goaltending position to Marty Turco, who went on to have one of the best seasons in NHL history, posting the lowest goals-against average (GAA) since 1940, at 1.76. However, missing 18 games late in the season likely cost him a shot at the Vezina Trophy, awarded to the league's top regular season goaltender. Regardless, the Stars posted the best record in the Western Conference at 46–17–15–4, and along the way, two-way star Jere Lehtinen won his third Frank J. Selke Trophy. In the playoffs, the Stars once again met the Edmonton Oilers, and once again the Oilers would prove a contentious opponent, winning two of the first three games. However, the Stars would prove the better team again by winning the next three games to take the series in six games. The Stars' second-round series against the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim got off to an unbelievable start, as the game went deep into overtime tied 3–3. However, Mighty Ducks goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere stopped 60 shots as the Ducks scored early in the fifth overtime. Game 2 would be more of the same, as the Ducks stunned the Stars in overtime. Desperately needing a win, the Stars bounced back to take Game 3 in Anaheim. However, the Ducks would take a 3–1 series lead by breaking a scoreless tie late in the third period of Game 4. In Game 5, the Stars finally solved Giguere by scoring four goals to keep their playoff hopes alive. However, the Stars' dreams of a return trip to the Stanley Cup Finals would end in heartbreaking fashion as the Ducks broke a 3–3 tie with 1:06 left in Game 6 on a goal by defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh.

Coming off their disappointing playoff loss, the Stars would get off to a shaky start to the 2003–04 season, as they played mediocre hockey through the first three months of the season, posting a sub-.500 record. However, as the calendar turned to 2004, the Stars began to find their game, as they posted a 9–4–3 record in January. As the season wore on, the Stars would get stronger, climbing up the playoff ladder and eventually reaching second place in the Pacific Division, where they finished with a solid 41–26–13–2 record; Marty Turco had another outstanding season, recording a 1.98 GAA. However, the Stars could not carry their momentum into the playoffs, as they were beaten by the Colorado Avalanche in five games in the first round.

Post-Lockout Era (2005–2008) edit

Coming out of the owners' lockout that cancelled the entire 2004–05 season, the Stars remained one of the strongest teams in the Western Conference for the start of 2005–06, as they won four of their first five games on the way to a solid October. November would be even better for Dallas, as they won 10 of 13 games and took over first place in the Pacific Division, a position they would hold most of the season, as they went on to finish with a terrific record of 53–23–6. One reason for the Stars' success was their strong play in shootouts, as forward Jussi Jokinen was nearly automatic, making 10-of-13 shot attempts. Also performing strongly in shootouts was Sergei Zubov, who used a slow-but-steady backhand to go 7-for-12, as the Stars ultimately won 12 of 13 games that were settled by a shootout. As the number two seed in the Western Conference, the Stars faced the seventh-seeded Colorado Avalanche. The Stars were favorited to win the Western Conference, and some even predicted them to win the Stanley Cup. However, the Stars would stumble right from the start, losing Game 1 by a score of 5–2 as the Avalanche scored five unanswered goals after the Stars jumped out to a promising 2–0 lead. Game 2 would see the Stars suffer another setback at home, as the Stars lost in overtime 5–4 on a goal by Joe Sakic. On the road in Game 3, the Stars led 3–2 in the final minute before the Avalanche forced overtime on a goal by Andrew Brunette, while Alex Tanguay won the game just 69 seconds into overtime to put the Stars in a 3–0 hole. The Stars would avoid the sweep with a 4–1 win in Game 4, but overtime would doom them again in Game 5, as Andrew Brunette scored the series winner at 6:05, ending the Stars' playoffs hopes after just five games.

Dallas hosts the All-Star Game (2006–07 season) edit

Following the previous season's disappointing first-round playoff loss at the hands of the seventh-seeded Avalanche, the Stars made a number of changes during the 2006 off-season. Former Stars goalkeeper Andy Moog was promoted to assistant general manager for player development (he kept his job as goaltending coach) and former player Ulf Dahlen was hired as an assistant coach. The Stars allowed center Jason Arnott, defenseman Willie Mitchell and goaltender Johan Hedberg to leave as free agents. Forward Niko Kapanen was traded to the Atlanta Thrashers and the remaining two years on fan-favorite right winger Bill Guerin's contract were bought out. The Stars also received Patrik Stefan and Jaroslav Modry in the Atlanta trade, and signed Eric Lindros, Jeff Halpern, Matthew Barnaby and Darryl Sydor as free agents. Young goaltender Mike Smith was promoted to the NHL to serve as Marty Turco's backup. During the season, key future pieces – center Mike Ribeiro and defenseman Mattias Norstrom – were added through separate trades. Young players Joel Lundqvist, Krys Barch, Nicklas Grossmann and Chris Conner all saw significant ice time while other players were out of the lineup with injuries.

 
Mike Modano scoring his 500th goal on November 7, 2007, against the San Jose Sharks. He was the second American-born player to reach the milestone.

On September 29, 2006, Brenden Morrow was announced as new team captain, taking the role over from Mike Modano, who had served as the incumbent since 2003.[17] On March 13, 2007, Modano scored his 500th career NHL goal, making him only the 39th player and second American to ever reach the milestone. On March 17, Modano scored his 502nd and 503rd NHL goals, breaking the record for an American-born player, previously held by Joe Mullen.

On January 24, 2007, the NHL All-Star Game was held at the American Airlines Center. Defenseman Philippe Boucher and goaltender Marty Turco would represent the Stars as part of the Western Conference All-Star roster. The Stars qualified for the playoffs as the sixth seed in the Western Conference and squared off against the Vancouver Canucks in the first round. Marty Turco delivered three shutout wins in Games 2, 5 and 6, but the Stars' offense failed to capitalize and they lost the series in seven games, the third season in a row that they lost in the first round.

Return to playoff prominence (2007–08 season) edit

In the 2007 NHL Entry Draft, the Stars drafted the relatively unknown Jamie Benn 129th overall. After starting a lackluster 7–7–3 in the 2007–08 season, general manager Doug Armstrong was fired by the team.[18] He was replaced by an unusual "co-general manager" arrangement of former assistant GM Les Jackson and former Stars player Brett Hull. On November 8, 2007, Mike Modano became the top American born point scorer of all-time, finishing off a shorthanded breakaway opportunity on San Jose Sharks goaltender Evgeni Nabokov.[19]

On February 26, 2008, just hours before the trade deadline, the Stars traded for All-Star center Brad Richards from the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for backup goaltender Mike Smith and forwards Jussi Jokinen and Jeff Halpern.[20] The Stars rallied to a final record of 45–30–7 and qualified for the playoffs as the fifth seed, matching up with the defending Stanley Cup champion, the Anaheim Ducks, in the first round.[21] After a rough end to the season, only winning two games in March of that year, the Stars shocked everyone by winning the first two games of the series in Anaheim, and then would go on to finish off the Ducks in six games, their first playoff series win since 2003. In the second round, the Stars matched up with the Pacific Division champion San Jose Sharks. Once again, the Stars surprised everyone by winning the first two games of the series on the road. In Game 2, Brad Richards tied an NHL record by recording four points in the third period.[22] The Stars would then take a 3–0 series lead after a Mattias Norstrom overtime goal in Game 3. After the Sharks staved off elimination with back to back wins in Games 4 and 5, captain Brenden Morrow finished the Sharks off in Game 6 with a powerplay goal nearly halfway into the fourth overtime, a moment nicknamed "Cinco De Morrow" by Stars fans as Game 6 ended in the early morning hours of the Cinco De Mayo holiday on May 5.[23] The win sent the Stars to their first Western Conference Finals since 2000, where they met the powerhouse Detroit Red Wings. After falling behind in the series 3–0, the Stars made a series of it winning Games 4 and 5 before ultimately being ousted by the Red Wings in six games.[24]

Transition Seasons (2008–2011) edit

 
Brad Richards shoots the puck in pregame warm-up during the 2008–09 season. Injuries to Richards and other teammates during the course of the 2008–09 season led the Stars to miss their first playoffs since 2002.

The 2008–09 season saw the early loss for the season of captain Brenden Morrow to an ACL tear. Off-season free agent acquisition Sean Avery caused a media uproar over comments he made to a Canadian reporter about ex-girlfriend Elisha Cuthbert and her relationship with Calgary Flames' defenseman Dion Phaneuf before a game in Calgary. The incident forced the team to suspend Avery for the season; he was later waived by the Stars. That incident, plus injuries to key players Brad Richards and Sergei Zubov, caused the Stars to tailspin to a 12th-place finish and the first missed playoffs for Dallas since 2002.

In the wake of the season, the Stars hired a new general manager, former player and alternate captain Joe Nieuwendyk. Hull and Jackson remained with the Stars, but were reassigned to new roles within the organization. Less than a week after he was hired, Nieuwendyk fired six-season head coach Dave Tippett on June 10, 2009, and hired Marc Crawford the next day as his replacement. Other off-season moves included the addition of Charlie Huddy as assistant coach in charge of defense and the promotions of Stu Barnes and Andy Moog to assistant coaches.

The Stars' 2009–10 season was similar to the previous one. Inconsistent play and defensive struggles plagued the team throughout the season, as they failed to adjust to Marc Crawford's new offensively-minded system, and owner Tom Hicks' financial troubles prevented the team from spending more than $45 million on payroll, over $11 million beneath the league salary cap.[25] The Stars failed to win more than three games in a row all season, finished in last in the Pacific Division and repeated their 12th place conference finish from the year before with a record of 37–31–14 for 88 points.[26] This was the first time that they would miss the playoffs two seasons in a row since the Stars moved to Texas. In the off-season, long-time goaltender Marty Turco was let go in favor of Kari Lehtonen to become the team's number one goaltender for the future.[27] In the Star's last game of the season, away against the Minnesota Wild, Mike Modano was named the game's first star and skated around the rink after the game wearing his North Stars uniform, receiving a rousing ovation.[28]

 
Kari Lehtonen during the 2010–11 season. He was named the team's number one goaltender after they let go of longtime goaltender Marty Turco.

In the 2010 off-season, the Stars released Marty Turco and Mike Modano, the face of the franchise for the past two decades. Modano subsequently signed with the Detroit Red Wings while Turco joined the Chicago Blackhawks. Winger Jere Lehtinen, who played his entire career with the Stars, announced his retirement in December 2010. The team also made key acquisitions, such as winger Adam Burish (who was on the 2010 Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks) and goaltender Andrew Raycroft. They also gave Jonathan Cheechoo a try-out, but he was cut and later signed with division rivals San Jose Sharks.

To begin the 2010–11 season, the Stars won their first three games in a row, going on a three-game win streak for the first time since the 2008–09 season by beating the New Jersey Devils in overtime in the season opener, New York Islanders in a shootout, and against the Red Wings in the Stars' home opener that featured an emotional return for Mike Modano, as the Stars crowd gave Modano a standing ovation as he was shown on the American Airlines Center jumbotron during a timeout in the game.

After a hot start to the new season, the Stars would dominate the first half of the season, staying in both the Pacific Division lead and within the top three spots of the Western Conference. Through the first half of the season they compiled a 30–15–6 record. However, after the All-Star Break the Stars went into a slump, going on numerous losing streaks which included one-goal losses and blowing late leads in numerous games. Through this though, the Stars still remained in the playoff picture. On the day of the trade deadline, the Stars traded up and comer James Neal and Matt Niskanen to the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for defenseman Alex Goligoski. After struggling much of the second half of the season the Stars still had a chance to make the playoffs by winning all their games in the month of April. They managed to win all of them except for their season finale as they lost on the road at the Minnesota Wild 5–3, costing them a playoff spot.

After missing the playoffs for the third consecutive season, Dallas fired coach Marc Crawford on April 12, 2011.[29] In the spring of 2011, according to Darren Dreger of TSN, the team had been "financially managed" by the league for over a year. On June 16, 2011, Dallas hired Glen Gulutzan to be head coach, making him the sixth coach since the franchise's move from Minnesota.[30] On September 13, 2011, lenders voted to agree to have the Stars file for bankruptcy and sold at auction.[31] On September 21, 2011, Mike Modano announced his retirement from the league. By October 22, 2011, competing bids to buy the club were due. Vancouver businessman and Kamloops Blazers owner Tom Gaglardi's bid was the only one submitted, clearing the way for him to enter the final stages of taking over ownership of the team. Gaglardi's purchase was approved by the NHL Board of Governors on November 18, 2011.[31]

A bankruptcy court judge approved the bid for an enterprise value of $240 million. First lien creditors got about 75 cents on the dollar. The Stars lost $38 million during their last fiscal year and $92 million over the last three seasons.[32]

Arrival of Tom Gaglardi and "Victory Green" Era (2011–present) edit

As the new owner, Gaglardi's first move was bringing back former Stars President Jim Lites to once again take the reins as team president and CEO. To begin the 2011–12 season, the Stars once again jumped out to a fast start, going 22–15–1 through the first 38 games of the season. However, when the second half of the season began, the Stars slumped through the months of January and February, before getting hot again in late February. Throughout March, the Stars regained the lead of the Pacific Division. Beginning on March 26, 2012, the Stars embarked on a western road trip that saw them visit the Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, Vancouver Canucks and San Jose Sharks. Going into the road trip, the Stars were in control of their own destiny, having to gain four points on the road trip to win their first Pacific Division title since the 2005–06 season. After the Stars lost 5–4 in Calgary to the Flames, the Stars beat the Oilers two nights later, 3–1. This would be their last win of the season, as the Stars were rolled over by the Canucks and Sharks. Even though they had lost the division crown, the Stars still had a chance to clinch a playoff spot. However, the Stars were eliminated from playoff contention on April 5 in a 2–0 loss to the playoff-bound Nashville Predators. The team failed to qualify for the playoffs for the fourth consecutive year, setting a franchise record for consecutive seasons without a playoff appearance.[33][34]

 
Tyler Seguin with the Stars in the 2013–14 season. The Stars acquired Seguin as a part of a seven-player trade with the Boston Bruins during the 2013 off-season.

On July 1, 2012, the team signed free agent veterans Jaromir Jagr, Ray Whitney, and Aaron Rome. The next day, the Stars traded fan-favorite Steve Ott and Adam Pardy to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for center Derek Roy. When 2012–13 NHL lockout ended in January 2013 and a 48-game season began the Stars embarked on an up-and-down season, though staying in the race for one of the eight Western Conference playoff spots most of the shortened season. In mid-season, forward Michael Ryder was traded to his former team, the Montreal Canadiens, for Erik Cole. This shocked many as Ryder has become an almost overnight fan-favorite to Stars fans in his time with Dallas thanks to his stellar 35-goal campaign the previous season in 2011–12.[35] Before the trade deadline in early April, the Stars began to falter and team captain Brenden Morrow was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins; Roy was traded to the Vancouver Canucks; Jagr to the Boston Bruins; and Tomas Vincour to the Colorado Avalanche to close out the NHL trade deadline, all in exchange for draft picks and prospects.[36] After all of the trades at the trade deadline, the Stars' remaining young players pulled together to win six of their next eight games, thus propelling the Stars back into the 2013 playoff race. However, the Stars would drop their final five games, losing all of them while gaining only one point, eliminating them from playoff contention. The Stars had now missed the playoffs in five straight seasons, continuing to set the all-time record for the franchise (dating back to the franchise's history in Minnesota) for most consecutive seasons without a playoff appearance.

2013–2019: Emergence of Jamie Benn and Arrival of Tyler Seguin edit

The day after their final regular season game of the 2012–13 season (a 3–0 loss to the Detroit Red Wings), the Stars fired general manager Joe Nieuwendyk. The next day, the Stars introduced their 11th all-time general manager, Jim Nill, the former assistant general manager of the Red Wings. On May 14, 2013, the coaching staff was also fired,[37] and on May 31, 2013, Scott White was re-introduced as the director of hockey operations.[38] Nill made his first big trade as general manager when he acquired the former second overall draft pick from the 2010 NHL Entry Draft in Tyler Seguin, as well as Rich Peverley and Ryan Button from the Boston Bruins in exchange for Loui Eriksson, Reilly Smith, Matt Fraser and Joe Morrow.

During the 2013 off-season, the league underwent a major realignment. Dallas' returned to a revamped Central Division, bringing them a much more broadcast-friendly schedule for divisional away games. The Stars had long lobbied for this, as they were unhappy with the large number of games they had to play on the road in the Pacific Time Zone as a member of the Pacific Division since the 1998–99 season. Under new head coach Lindy Ruff and led by 84-point and 79-point campaigns from Seguin and newly-minted captain Jamie Benn respectively,[39] the Stars made it to the 2014 playoffs, returning to the Playoffs for the first time since 2008 with a successful 40–31–11 record, finishing with 91 points and fifth in the Central Division during the 2013–14 season. They lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Anaheim Ducks in six games with a 5–4 overtime loss in Game 6.

 
Leading the league in points, Stars' captain Jamie Benn won the Art Ross Trophy for the 2014–15 season. Benn was also named captain of the Stars prior to the 2013–14 season.

Nill made another big trade as general manager when he acquired Jason Spezza and Ludwig Karlsson from the Ottawa Senators in exchange for Alex Chiasson, Nick Paul, Alex Guptill and a second-round pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft. He also signed Senators player Ales Hemsky as a free agent on a three-year, $12 million contract on July 1, 2014. Despite these moves and a 92-point 41–31–10 campaign, the Stars finished with the second-lowest goaltender save percentage in the league during the 2014–15 season, which resulted in them failing to qualify for the 2015 playoffs due to their sixth-place finish in the Central Division. The lone bright spot of the 2014–15 season was Jamie Benn winning the Art Ross Trophy. On April 11, 2015, Benn scored four points in the Stars' last regular season game to finish with 87 points on the season and win the Art Ross Trophy. His final point, a secondary assist with 8.5 seconds left in regulation in the game, allowed him to overtake John Tavares for the award.[40]

In the 2015 off-season the Stars made a couple additions to the team, first trading with the Chicago Blackhawks for three-time Stanley Cup champion Patrick Sharp as well as defenseman Stephen Johns in exchange for Trevor Daley and Ryan Garbutt.[41] The Stars also signed via free agency Sharp's teammate from the Blackhawks Johnny Oduya to a two-year contract.[42] In the 2015–16 season, the Stars won their first Central Division title since 1998 and posted the best regular season record in the Western Conference with a 50–23–9 record good enough for 109 points. In the first round of the playoffs, they defeated the Minnesota Wild in six games. In the second round, they faced the St. Louis Blues in the playoffs for the first time since 2001, but lost the series in seven games. The Stars finished with a 34–37–11 record in an injury-plagued 2016–17 season, missing the playoffs for the seventh time in the past nine seasons. As a result, the team announced that head coach Lindy Ruff's contract would not be renewed. Ken Hitchcock returned as head coach for the following season, however once again the Stars missed the playoffs. Hitchcock retired after the season and was succeeded at the head coaching spot by Jim Montgomery. Montgomery's first season as the Stars coach saw the team finish with a 43–32–7 record, good enough to return to the playoffs as the first wild card team in the Western Conference. The Stars defeated the Central Division-champion Nashville Predators in a six-game series the first round, but fell to the eventual Stanley Cup champion St. Louis Blues in seven games, losing Game 7 on the road in double-overtime by a score of 2–1 despite a 52-save performance by goaltender Ben Bishop.

2019–2020: NHL Winter Classic hosts and 2020 Western Conference Championship edit

Going into the 2019–20 season, the Stars added veteran forwards Joe Pavelski from the San Jose Sharks and Corey Perry of the Anaheim Ducks in free agency. To start the 2019–20 season the Stars sputtered to a 1–7–1 start through their first nine games. However the Stars soon rallied and rattled off a 14–1–1 record between October 19 and November 25 of 2019, which catapulted the Stars to an eventual season record of 37–24–8 through 69 games, as the regular season was suspended in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Barely two full months into his second season as Stars head coach, on December 10, 2019 the Stars fired head coach Jim Montgomery for "unprofessional conduct inconsistent with the core values and beliefs of the Dallas Stars and the National Hockey League."[43] General manager Jim Nill said the situation had come to light the previous weekend, and involved "a material act of unprofessionalism" egregious enough to demand Montgomery's immediate firing. He did not offer specifics "out of respect for everyone involved," only saying that it did not involve abuse of players or criminal conduct.[44] Rick Bowness, who joined the team a month after Montgomery's hiring in May 2018, was named interim coach, while Derek Laxdal (who was the head coach of the Stars' AHL affiliate Texas Stars at the time) would be promoted to the assistant coaching position that was vacated by Bowness.[45]

On January 1, 2020 the Stars hosted the Nashville Predators in the 2020 NHL Winter Classic at the Cotton Bowl in a rematch of the previous seasons' first-round playoff series, where the Stars prevailed with a 4–2 victory. This was the first NHL outdoor game for both teams[46] and with a sold-out crowd of 85,630 at the Cotton Bowl, it was the second-most attended game in NHL history.[47] The NHL returned from the March 2020 regular season pause due to the COVID-19 Pandemic a little under six months later in August 2020, where the Stars advanced to the playoffs. By virtue of having one of the top four highest point percentages in the Western Conference at the time the season was suspended, the Stars played in a round-robin tournament against three of the other top four teams in the Western Conference (Vegas Golden Knights, Colorado Avalanche, and St. Louis Blues) in order to determine the team's seed for the playoffs;[48] Dallas was ultimately seeded as the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference,[49] entering them into a first-round series against the Calgary Flames. The Stars defeated the Flames in six games in the first round, and then defeated the Colorado Avalanche in a seven game series that ended with a Joel Kiviranta hat-trick performance in Game 7, which included his series-winning OT goal. The Stars would defeat the Vegas Golden Knights in five games in the Western Conference Finals to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since 2000,[50] as the Stars would end a second consecutive series of the playoffs with a series-winning OT goal when Denis Gurianov scored 3:36 into the first overtime period of Game 5, winning the game 3–2 for the Stars. The Stars would go on to face the Eastern Conference champion Tampa Bay Lightning in the Stanley Cup Finals, the Stars won Game 1 of the series by a 4–1 score but would eventually fall to the Lightning in six games.[51]

2020–present edit

Coming off the Stars' run to the 2020 Stanley Cup Finals, interim head coach Rick Bowness was named full-time head coach on October 29, 2020.[52] In the following season, an injury-plagued campaign caused the Stars to finish the COVID-shortened 56-game schedule with a 23–19–14 record, finishing fifth in the Central Division with 60 points and missing the playoffs for the first time since 2018. The Stars would rebound in the 2021–22 season with a 98-point 46–30–6 record, good enough for the first wild-card spot in the Western Conference playoffs where they played the Pacific Division-champion Calgary Flames in the first round. They were defeated by the Flames in seven games,losing 3–2 in overtime of Game 7 in Calgary. In Game 7 the Stars took the game to overtime despite the Flames making twice as many shots and attempts as the Stars, with the Stars' young starting netminder Jake Oettinger recording 64 saves, the second-highest in playoff history behind only Kelly Hrudey's 73 during the 1987 Easter Epic.[53] The Stars were eliminated when Flames forward Johnny Gaudreau finally scored 15:09 into the first overtime period to end the game 3–2. After the team's playoff elimination, head coach Rick Bowness announced that he would be leaving the team.[54]

On June 21, 2022 the Stars hired Peter DeBoer as their head coach, the 10th in franchise history since the team moved to Dallas.[55] In the 2022 off-season the Stars added in free agency both forward Mason Marchment[56] and defenseman Colin Miller,[57] however lost veteran defenseman John Klingberg to the Anaheim Ducks via free agency after eight seasons with the Stars.[58] Led by their trio of veterans Tyler Seguin, Joe Pavelski, and captain Jamie Benn, as well as the emergence of a young core of players including netminder Jake Oettinger, forwards Jason Robertson, Roope Hintz, and Wyatt Johnston, and defenseman Miro Heiskanen, the Stars completed their first season under Peter DeBoer with a 108-point 47–21–14 regular season record, just barely being beat out by the Colorado Avalanche by one point for the 2022–23 Central Division title.[59] In only his second full season with the Stars, Jason Robertson set a new Dallas Stars record for total points in a season with 109 points, surpassing the previous record of 93 points set by Mike Modano in the Stars' first season in Dallas back in 1993–94. Robertson accomplished this feat in a game at the Arizona Coyotes on March 31, 2023 when he scored a goal as part of a Stars 5–2 win over the Coyotes, his goal was his record-breaking 94th point of the season and 100th goal of his career.[60] Captain Jamie Benn also had a resurgent regular season, finishing with a 78-point season that included 33 goals scored for a season nicknamed by both Stars fans and pundits alike as the “Bennaissance”[61] for his first 75-plus point season since 2017–18.[62]

Along with trade deadline acquisitions Max Domi[63] and Evgenii Dadonov,[64] the Stars entered the 2023 playoffs as the number two seed in the Central Division, matching them up in a first round series against the Minnesota Wild for their first playoff series versus one another since 2016. The Stars opened the playoffs at home with an double-overtime loss in Game 1, as nearly midway through regulation of Game 1 Joe Pavelski was knocked out with a concussion for the remainder of the first round series on a hit by Wild defenseman Matt Dumba.[65] The Stars responded with a win in Game 2 fueled by a Roope Hintz hat-trick performance,[66] winning four of the next five games in the series after Game 1 to eliminate the Wild in six games. The Stars then faced the Seattle Kraken in the second round of the playoffs. The Kraken, in only their second season of existence, had upset the defending Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche in the first round. Pavelski returned to the Stars for Game 1 of the series, scoring all four of the Stars' goals in the game, however the Stars lost by a score of 5–4 in overtime.[67] The Stars would go on to win the series, winning Game 7 at home by a score of 2-1,[68] sending the Stars to the Western Conference Finals and setting up a rematch of the 2020 Western Conference Finals versus the Vegas Golden Knights. The Stars would immediately go down 3-0 in the series versus Vegas after dropping the first two games in overtime on the road and a 4-0 loss at home in Game 3, in Game 3 captain Jamie Benn was suspended for two games for an illegal cross-check on Vegas captain Mark Stone.[69] Though the Stars would win Games 4 and 5 without Benn and extend the series, the Golden Knights would ultimately defeat the Stars in six games with a 6–0 win in Game 6.[70]

Team information edit

Arena edit

 
The American Airlines Center is the second, and current home arena used by the Dallas Stars.

When the Stars first moved from Minnesota, they played in Reunion Arena, which they shared with the National Basketball Association's Dallas Mavericks. For hockey, Reunion Arena held 17,001 for NHL games. Throughout the hockey history of Reunion Arena, the arena was known for having one of the worst ice surfaces in the league, especially in its final days hosting the Stars. The Stars played at Reunion for eight years, from 19932001. Before the 2001–02 NHL season, both the Stars and the Mavericks moved into the new American Airlines Center, which is in the Victory Park neighborhood of Dallas, just north of Reunion Arena. The American Airlines Center holds 18,584 for Stars and NHL games. On January 24, 2007, the AAC hosted the 2007 National Hockey League All-Star Game. The AAC and the Dallas Stars have won several local and NHL awards for the "Best Fan Experience".[71]

Broadcast edit

All Dallas Stars games are broadcast on radio on KTCK under a five-year deal announced in January 2009.[72] KTCK replaced WBAP, which had broadcast games since the beginning of the 1994 season after KLIF has broadcast the first season in Dallas in 1993. Television coverage occurs primarily on Bally Sports Southwest, with KTXA (Channel 21) or BSSW+ broadcasting games when BSSW has a conflict.

The Stars, along with the Buffalo Sabres and Carolina Hurricanes are one of only three NHL teams to simulcast the entirety of their games on TV and radio, which the team has done since their 1993 arrival in Dallas. The original broadcast team from 1993 to 1996 was Mike Fornes (play-by-play) and Ralph Strangis (color). Fornes left the broadcast team after the 1995–96 season; Strangis moved to the play-by-play role and color commentator Daryl "Razor" Reaugh was added. Although both the DFW area's large media market and the team's fan base could theoretically support separate television and radio broadcast teams, the Stars have continued simulcasting due to the popularity of "Ralph and Razor" (as they are known) among local listeners and viewers. Like other NHL teams, the Stars now have a live radio broadcast transmitted inside American Airlines Center on 97.5 FM. This is done because AM radio signals often cannot penetrate concrete and steel building exteriors.

Strangis retired from the booth after the 2014–15 season and was replaced by Dave Strader. In June 2016, Strader was diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma, a fairly rare and aggressive form of cancer of the bile duct. To begin the 2016–17 season, Reaugh assumed play-by-play duties while Strader underwent treatment. Studio analyst and former Stars defenseman, Craig Ludwig, took over as color commentator. During a break in Strader's treatment, he returned to the broadcast booth on February 18, 2017, a 4–3 overtime home win against the Tampa Bay Lightning. After the game, the Stars saluted Strader at center ice. On October 1, 2017, Strader died of cancer at age 62, leaving Reaugh and Ludwig to call the 2017–18 season. In July 2018, the Stars announced that Reaugh would return to color commentary for the 2018–19 season, with former studio host Josh Bogorad taking over the play-by-play.[73]

Logo and jersey design edit

When they debuted in Dallas for the 1993–94 season, they kept the same uniform design from their later Minnesota days, except for the addition of the Texas logo patch on the shoulders. Away uniforms were black and home uniforms were white. With minor trim changes, a darker shade of green, and the word 'Dallas' added in the 1994–95 season, they kept this original design until after their 1999 Stanley Cup-winning campaign. During this time the black pants included the word "Dallas" in gold run through the sides with green stripes.

In the 1997–98 season, the Stars introduced an alternate uniform that partly resembled those worn during the NHL All-Star Game at the time. The uniform was mostly green on top and black at the bottom, in a star-shaped design. For the 1999–2000 season, it became the primary away uniform, and was paired with a new home uniform featuring the same basic design, with white on top and green at the bottom. They kept this design until the 2006–07 season, during which the league switched color designations on home and away jerseys in the 2003–04 season. The striping was also eliminated on the black pants. The Stars introduced an alternate jersey for the 2003–04 season that proved both embarrassing and unpopular to critics and fans. The uniform, which introduced a red as a new trim color, was black with a green bottom and featured a modern representation of the constellation Taurus topped by a trailing green star with red trail marks. However, fans and critics derided the uniform crest for its resemblance to a uterus, nicknaming it the "Mooterus." The uniform was used until the 2005–06 season.

With the switch to the Reebok Edge uniform system, the jerseys underwent a complete redesign. The home black jersey, introduced for the 2007–08 season, features the player's number on the chest and an arched 'Dallas' in white with gold trim, with the primary logo on the shoulders. The primary away jerseys, which were used from 2007 to 2010 and was used as an alternate for its final season, had the Stars logo crest in front and the uniform number on the top right, with the Texas alternate logo on the shoulders. An alternate white jersey based on the home black jersey was introduced for the 2008–09 season; they became the regular away uniforms for the 2010–11 season. The lettering is in green with gold and black trim. Both uniforms were used until the 2012–13 season.

A new logo and uniforms were introduced for the 2013–14 season. Silver replaced gold as the tertiary color, while green (in a new shade called "Victory Green," similar to the old North Stars' shade of green) was reintroduced as a primary uniform color. The new logo features the letter D centering a star, symbolizing Dallas' nickname as "The Big D." The home uniforms are in green with black and white striping, while the away uniforms are in white with a green shoulder yoke, and black and green striping. The inner collar features the team name on the home uniforms, and the city name on the away uniforms. The secondary logo, with the primary inside a roundel with the team name, is featured in the shoulders. This design was retained once Adidas took over as uniform supplier prior to the 2017–18 season, the only exception being "Victory Green" replacing both "Stars" and "Dallas" on the inner collar of the home and away uniforms respectively.

The Stars unveiled a special edition uniform for the 2020 NHL Winter Classic, featuring a design inspired from the defunct USHL Dallas Texans hockey club. The uniform features the word "Stars" (with the star substituting for the letter A) in the middle of the big letter "D". Both are in white with silver trim. A silhouette of the state of Texas in silver and green trim with the letter "D" inside adorns the left sleeve.

For the 2020–21 season, the Stars added a black alternate uniform with neon green accents (presumably in honor of the Bank of America Plaza tower in downtown Dallas) featuring the alternate "Texas D" logo in front. A neon green star is added on the left side of the collar, symbolizing Texas' "Lone Star State" nickname. Numbers are in 3D-accented black with neon green accents. The Stars also released a "Reverse Retro" alternate uniform for the 2020–21 season in collaboration with Adidas, bringing back the 1999–2007 uniform design but with the current color scheme in place of the original green, gold and black colors. The design also featured white pants. A second "Reverse Retro" alternate was released in the 2022–23 season, using the 1993–94 black uniform but with the current Victory Green and silver stripes.

Minor league affiliates edit

 
The Texas Stars, based in Cedar Park, are the Stars current American Hockey League affiliate.

The Dallas Stars are presently affiliated with two minor league teams. The Texas Stars are the American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate of the Dallas Stars, who after becoming unaffiliated with the Iowa Stars in 2008, did not have an AHL affiliate for the 2008–09 season. The Texas Stars began play in the AHL in the 2009–10 season as an affiliate for Dallas. They are located in Cedar Park, Texas (northwest of Austin).

In addition to their AHL affiliate, the Dallas Stars are also affiliated with the Idaho Steelheads of the ECHL. Based in Boise, the Steelheads play home games at the Idaho Central Arena since 2003.

Traditions edit

Since the 2005–06 season, national anthems are performed by Celena Rae, a Fort Worth native and a former semi-finalist on American Idol. During "The Star-Spangled Banner", the fans yell the team name "stars" in the lines "whose broad stripes and bright stars" and "O say does that star spangled banner yet wave".[74] At games, as part of the entertainment, a Kahlenberg KDT-123 fog horn sounds after every Stars goal.[75]

When the Stars take the ice at the beginning of each game, the song "Puck Off" (also referred to as the "Dallas Stars Fight Song") by Pantera, is played in the arena. Members of the Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington metropolitan area band had become friends with members of the Stars in the 1990s, especially following the team's Stanley Cup win in 1999.[76] "Puck Off" later also became the team's goal celebration song. During the song, fans chant the only lyrics in the song, "Dallas! Stars! Dallas! Stars!" while pumping their fists in the air. After a penalty on the opposing team is announced, Stars public address announcer shouts, "Your Dallas Stars are on...the..." with the fans finishing "power play!", immediately after which a clip of the Muse song "Knights of Cydonia" is played. After each Stars win, the Stevie Ray Vaughan (a Dallas native) and Double Trouble song "The House is a Rockin'" is played. A song of unknown origin called "The Darkness Music" is played after nearly every away goal.[77] In recent years, fans have usually yelled, "Who cares!?" after away team goals are announced by the public address announcer.[78]

The Stars have hosted a home game on New Year's Eve every year since 1997, except in 2004, 2012, 2019, 2020 and 2021 (the first two being due to lockouts, the third being due to their participation in the 2020 NHL Winter Classic, the fourth being due to the delayed off-season caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the fifth was postponed to February 13 due to a team-wide COVID-19 outbreak). For a period of time, the game coincided with the Big D NYE celebration (now on hiatus) on the south side of the arena in AT&T Plaza.[79]

Season-by-season record edit

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Stars. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Dallas Stars seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, OTL = Overtime losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
2018–19 82 43 32 7 93 210 202 4th, Central Lost in Second Round, 3–4 (Blues)
2019–20 69 37 24 8 82 180 177 3rd, Central Lost in Stanley Cup Finals, 2–4 (Lightning)
2020–21 56 23 19 14 60 158 154 5th, Central Did not qualify
2021–22 82 46 30 6 98 238 246 4th, Central Lost in First Round, 3–4 (Flames)
2022–23 82 47 21 14 108 285 218 2nd, Central Lost in Conference Finals, 2–4 (Golden Knights)

Players edit

Current roster edit

Updated February 14, 2024[80][81]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
14   Jamie Benn (C) LW L 34 2007 Victoria, British Columbia
63   Evgenii Dadonov   RW L 34 2023 Chelyabinsk, Soviet Union
10   Ty Dellandrea C R 23 2018 Port Perry, Ontario
95   Matt Duchene C L 33 2023 Haliburton, Ontario
12   Radek Faksa C L 30 2012 Vítkov, Czech Republic
2   Jani Hakanpaa D R 31 2021 Kirkkonummi, Finland
44   Joel Hanley D L 32 2018 Keswick, Ontario
55   Thomas Harley D L 22 2019 Syracuse, New York
4   Miro Heiskanen (A) D L 24 2017 Espoo, Finland
24   Roope Hintz C/LW L 27 2015 Tampere, Finland
53   Wyatt Johnston C R 20 2021 Toronto, Ontario
23   Esa Lindell (A) D L 29 2012 Helsinki, Finland
5   Nils Lundkvist D R 23 2022 Piteå, Sweden
27   Mason Marchment LW L 28 2022 Uxbridge, Ontario
29   Jake Oettinger G L 25 2017 Lakeville, Minnesota
16   Joe Pavelski (A) RW/C R 39 2019 Plover, Wisconsin
21   Jason Robertson LW L 24 2017 Arcadia, California
91   Tyler Seguin (A) C R 32 2013 Brampton, Ontario
15   Craig Smith RW R 34 2023 Madison, Wisconsin
18   Sam Steel C L 26 2023 Ardrossan, Alberta
20   Ryan Suter D L 39 2021 Madison, Wisconsin
41   Scott Wedgewood G L 31 2022 Brampton, Ontario


Team captains edit

Note: This list does not include former captains of the Minnesota North Stars and Oakland Seals

League and team honors edit

Awards and trophies edit

First-round draft picks edit

Note: This list does not include selections of the Minnesota North Stars.

Hall of Famers edit

The Dallas Stars presently acknowledge an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame. Hall of Fame inductees acknowledged by the Stars include 13 former players and three builders of the sport.[82] The three individuals recognized as builders by the Hall of Fame includes former Stars executives, and head coaches. The tenure of five player inductees, and the three builders acknowledged by the Stars occurred when the franchise was based in Minnesota (1967–1993). Mike Modano is the only Hall of Fame inductee that played with the franchise before and after its relocation to Dallas.

In addition to players and builders, the Stars also acknowledge an affiliation Hockey Hall of Fame inductee Dave Strader. Providing play-by-play for the Stars, he was a recipient of the Hall of Fame's Foster Hewitt Memorial Award for his contributions in hockey broadcasting.[82][83]

Retired numbers edit

Dallas Stars retired numbers
No. Player Position Career Date of retirement
7 Neal Broten[b] C 1981–1995, 1997 February 7, 1998
8 Bill Goldsworthy[a] RW 1967–1977 February 15, 1992
9 Mike Modano[b] C 1989–2010 March 8, 2014
19 Bill Masterton[a] C 1967–1968 January 17, 1987
26 Jere Lehtinen RW 1995–2010 November 24, 2017[84]
56 Sergei Zubov D 1996–2009 January 28, 2022[85]

Notes:

Franchise scoring leaders edit

 
Brenden Morrow is the Stars' tenth all-time points leader. He recorded 528 points playing with the Stars.

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise (Minnesota and Dallas) history.[87] Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

  •  *  – current Stars player

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game

Franchise individual records edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Entire tenure with the franchise occurred when the team was based in Minnesota
  2. ^ a b c A portion of their tenure with the franchise occurred when the team was based in Minnesota

References edit

  1. ^ Heika, Mike (October 20, 2022). "Stars unveil adidas Reverse Retro 2022 jerseys". DallasStars.com (Press release). NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  2. ^ "Returning to roots, Stars unveil 'Blackout' alternate jersey". DallasStars.com (Press release). NHL Enterprises, L.P. October 28, 2020. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  3. ^ "Brand Assets". DallasStars.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  4. ^ Cameron, Steve (1994). Feeding Frenzy! The Wild New World of the San Jose Sharks. Taylor Publishing Co. pp. 29–38.
  5. ^ a b c . Dmagazine.com. Archived from the original on May 20, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  6. ^ Dillman, Lisa; Stephens, Eric; Cooper, Josh. "How the Mighty Ducks took flight, an oral history". The Athletic. from the original on May 2, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
  7. ^ "Patrick Plus: Thanks, Norm Green". Star Tribune. from the original on April 19, 2016. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
  8. ^ "Dallas Stars First Game October 5, 1993 Broten Goal". St. Cloud Times. October 6, 1993. p. 19. from the original on August 27, 2022. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  9. ^ "Dallas Stars Franchise Index". Hockey-Reference.com. from the original on May 19, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  10. ^ "Dallas Stars Franchise Index". Hockey-Reference.com. from the original on September 15, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  11. ^ "1996–97 NHL Season Summary". Hockey-Reference.com. from the original on October 20, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  12. ^ "Ed Belfour". Hockeygoalies.org. from the original on September 3, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  13. ^ "St. Louis Blues Legends: Brett Hull". Stlouisblueslegends.blogspot.com. January 9, 2011. from the original on August 28, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  14. ^ "1998–99 NHL Season Summary". Hockey-Reference.com. from the original on May 3, 2018. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  15. ^ "1999 NHL Playoffs Summary". Hockey-Reference.com. from the original on August 7, 2008. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  16. ^ "1999-00 NHL Season Summary". Hockey-Reference.com. from the original on September 14, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  17. ^ "Morrow replaces Modano as Stars captain – NHL". ESPN. September 29, 2006. from the original on November 5, 2012. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
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External links edit

  • Official website

dallas, stars, professional, hockey, team, based, dallas, they, compete, national, hockey, league, member, central, division, western, conference, were, founded, during, 1967, expansion, minnesota, north, stars, based, bloomington, minnesota, before, 1978, sea. The Dallas Stars are a professional ice hockey team based in Dallas They compete in the National Hockey League NHL as a member of the Central Division in the Western Conference and were founded during the 1967 NHL expansion as the Minnesota North Stars based in Bloomington Minnesota Before the 1978 79 NHL season the team merged with the Cleveland Barons after the league granted them permission due to each team s respective financial struggles Eventually the franchise relocated to Dallas for the 1993 94 NHL season where the team was rebranded as the Dallas Stars The Stars played out of Reunion Arena located in downtown Dallas from their relocation in 1993 until 2001 when the team moved less than 1 5 miles 2 4 km into the American Airlines Center located in the nearby Victory Park neighborhood of Dallas an arena they share with the Dallas Mavericks of the National Basketball Association NBA Dallas Stars2023 24 Dallas Stars seasonConferenceWesternDivisionCentralFounded1967HistoryMinnesota North Stars1967 1993Dallas Stars1993 presentHome arenaAmerican Airlines CenterCityDallas TexasTeam colorsVictory green black silver skyline green white 1 2 3 MediaBally Sports SouthwestThe Ticket 1310 AM 96 7 FM Owner s Tom GaglardiGeneral managerJim NillHead coachPeter DeBoerCaptainJamie BennMinor league affiliatesTexas Stars AHL Idaho Steelheads ECHL Stanley Cups1 1998 99 Conference championships3 1998 99 1999 00 2019 20 Presidents Trophy2 1997 98 1998 99 Division championships8 1996 97 1997 98 1998 99 1999 00 2000 01 2002 03 2005 06 2015 16 Official websitenhl wbr com wbr starsThe Stars have won eight division titles in Dallas two Presidents Trophies as the top regular season team in the league the Western Conference championship three times and the Stanley Cup in 1999 where center Joe Nieuwendyk won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player of the playoffs that year Over the course of the franchise s history in both Minnesota and Dallas the franchise has appeared in the Stanley Cup Finals five times 1981 1991 1999 2000 and 2020 In 2000 Neal Broten was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame In 2009 Brett Hull became the first Dallas Stars player inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame followed by Ed Belfour and Joe Nieuwendyk in 2011 and Mike Modano in 2014 Modano is the highest scoring player in franchise history In 2010 brothers Derian and Kevin Hatcher were also inducted to the United States Hockey Hall of Fame Contents 1 Franchise history 1 1 Minnesota North Stars 1967 1993 1 2 Relocation and Early Years in Dallas 1993 1998 1 2 1 Beginning of the Tom Hicks era and building for a championship 1 3 Contending for Titles and 1999 Stanley Cup Championship 1998 2004 1 3 1 1999 Stanley Cup Championship and 2000 Stanley Cup Finals runs 1 3 2 2001 2004 1 4 Post Lockout Era 2005 2008 1 4 1 Dallas hosts the All Star Game 2006 07 season 1 4 2 Return to playoff prominence 2007 08 season 1 5 Transition Seasons 2008 2011 1 6 Arrival of Tom Gaglardi and Victory Green Era 2011 present 1 6 1 2013 2019 Emergence of Jamie Benn and Arrival of Tyler Seguin 1 6 2 2019 2020 NHL Winter Classic hosts and 2020 Western Conference Championship 1 6 3 2020 present 2 Team information 2 1 Arena 2 2 Broadcast 2 3 Logo and jersey design 2 4 Minor league affiliates 2 5 Traditions 3 Season by season record 4 Players 4 1 Current roster 4 2 Team captains 5 League and team honors 5 1 Awards and trophies 5 2 First round draft picks 5 3 Hall of Famers 5 4 Retired numbers 5 5 Franchise scoring leaders 5 6 Franchise individual records 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksFranchise history editMinnesota North Stars 1967 1993 edit Main article Minnesota North Stars The Minnesota North Stars began play in 1967 as part of the league s six team expansion Home games were played at the newly constructed Metropolitan Sports Center Met Center in Bloomington Minnesota Initially successful both on the ice and at the gate the North Stars fell victim to financial problems after several poor seasons in the mid 1970s nbsp The logo of the Minnesota North Stars from 1991 to 1993 When the team moved to Dallas in 1993 it used a similar logo usually with the word DALLAS above STARS until 2013 In 1978 the North Stars merged with the Cleveland Barons formerly the California Golden Seals owned by George III and Gordon Gund With both teams on the verge of folding the league permitted the two failing franchises to merge The merged team continued as the Minnesota North Stars while the Seals Barons franchise records were retired However the Gunds were the merged team s principal owners and the North Stars assumed the Barons place in the Adams Division in order to balance out the divisions The merger brought with it a number of talented players and the North Stars were revived they reached the Stanley Cup Finals in 1981 where they lost in five games to the New York Islanders However by the early 1990s declining attendance and the inability to secure a new downtown revenue generating arena led ownership to request permission to move the team to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1990 The league rejected the request and instead agreed to award an expansion franchise the San Jose Sharks to the Gund brothers The North Stars were sold to a group of investors that were originally looking to place a team in San Jose although one of the group s members former Calgary Flames part owner Norman Green would eventually gain control of the team 4 In the following season the North Stars made it to the Stanley Cup Finals only to lose to the Pittsburgh Penguins After the 1990 91 season the North Stars suffered through declining profits coupled with distraction and uncertainty caused by relocation attempts The team s fortunes were further impeded by the terms of the settlement with the Gund brothers in which they were permitted to take a number of North Stars players to San Jose In their final two seasons in Minnesota the team adopted a new logo which omitted any reference to the word North from North Stars leading many fans to anticipate the team heading south 5 Green explored the possibility of moving the team to Anaheim to play at a new arena which is now the Honda Center under construction 6 and intended to call the team the Los Angeles Stars However in 1992 the league decided to award an expansion franchise to The Walt Disney Company to play in Anaheim s new arena this franchise eventually became the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim Relocation and Early Years in Dallas 1993 1998 edit nbsp Reunion Arena was the first home for the Stars in Dallas The arena was the Stars home from 1993 to 2001 In 1993 amid further attendance woes and bitter personal controversy Green obtained permission from the league to move the team to Dallas for the 1993 94 season with the decision announced on March 10 1993 7 Green was convinced by former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach that Dallas would be a suitable market for an NHL team 5 With the team s move to the Southern United States Green decided to drop the North adjective but otherwise retained the Stars nickname which in its shortened form quickly proved popular as it matched the state of Texas official nickname as The Lone Star State An NHL franchise Dallas was an experiment for the league as at that time the Stars would be one of the three southernmost teams in the league along with two recently created expansion teams in the Tampa Bay Lightning and Florida Panthers as the league s first real ventures into southern non traditional hockey markets The Stars would move into Reunion Arena built in 1980 the downtown arena already occupied by the National Basketball Association s Dallas Mavericks To quell the ensuing controversy surrounding the North Stars move to Dallas the NHL promised that the Twin Cities would receive an expansion franchise in the near future that promise was fulfilled in 2000 in the form of the Minnesota Wild With the league changing the names of the conferences and divisions that season the newly relocated Stars were placed in the Central Division of the Western Conference although these were essentially continuations of the Norris Division and Campbell Conference respectively both of which the North Stars had been part of The first NHL game in Dallas was played on October 5 1993 and was a 6 4 Stars win against the Detroit Red Wings 8 Somewhat ironically Minnesotan native Neal Broten scored the first Stars goal in Dallas Though the Stars were relatively still low on the Dallas Fort Worth sports pecking order upon their arrival popularity of the team grew rapidly and the immediate success of the team on the ice as well as Mike Modano s career best season 50 goals 93 points helped spur the team s popularity in North Texas The Stars set franchise bests in wins 42 and points 97 in their first season in Dallas qualifying for the 1994 playoffs The Stars further shocked the hockey world by sweeping the St Louis Blues in the first round but lost to the eventual Western Conference Champion Vancouver Canucks in the second round The Stars success in their first season along with Modano s spectacular on ice performances would be an integral part of the Stars eventual franchise success in the immediate years to come The almost immediate success of the Stars was also helped by the long legacy of minor league hockey in the area Both incarnations of the Central Hockey League had two teams in the area the Dallas Black Hawks and the Fort Worth Texans for years before the Stars arrival The two teams were bitter rivals and some of the traditions and famous rivalry incidents including what is thought to be the first known use anywhere at an athletic event of Rock and Roll Part 2 by the Fort Worth Texans and the famous 10 Cent Beer Night near riot in 1978 helped create awareness of hockey Amateur and youth hockey in North Texas were also extremely popular because of the long presence of the minor league teams Green who had run into financial problems stemming from his business ventures outside of hockey was forced to sell the team to businessman Tom Hicks in December 1995 5 Beginning of the Tom Hicks era and building for a championship edit The 1994 95 season was shortened by an owners lockout The Stars traded captain Mark Tinordi along with Rick Mrozik to the Washington Capitals before the season began for Kevin Hatcher Longtime North Stars hold over Neal Broten was named his replacement although he was traded too after only 17 games to the New Jersey Devils Broten was replaced by Kevin s younger brother Derian Hatcher as team captain a role he would serve in for the next decade The Stars played only 48 games that season posting a record of 17 23 8 Despite the shortened season and the losing record the Stars again made the playoffs losing in five games to the Red Wings in the first round 9 nbsp The Stars made several moves to revamp the roster in the 1996 off season notably making a trade to acquire Sergei Zubov He remained on the team until he left the league in 2009 The 1995 96 season would be the first season under new owner Tom Hicks In the off season the Stars traded for former Montreal Canadiens captain and three time Frank J Selke Trophy winner Guy Carbonneau who was then with the St Louis Blues With the Stars struggling to begin the season general manager and head coach Bob Gainey traded for center Joe Nieuwendyk from the Calgary Flames in exchange for Corey Millen and Jarome Iginla then a Stars prospect The Stars recorded only 11 wins in the first half of the season and Bob Gainey relinquished his coaching duties in January to be the full time general manager of the team The Stars soon hired Michigan K Wings head coach Ken Hitchcock to replace him it would be his first NHL head coaching position The Stars then traded for Benoit Hogue from the Toronto Maple Leafs late in the season but ultimately finished in sixth place in the Central Division missing the playoffs for the first time since moving to Texas 10 In the 1996 off season the Stars continued to revamp their roster adding defensemen Darryl Sydor from the Los Angeles Kings followed by Sergei Zubov from the Pittsburgh Penguins for Kevin Hatcher Zubov would serve as the Stars top defenseman and powerplay quarterback until leaving the league in 2009 On the ice Ken Hitchcock s first season proved to be a good one The Stars bested their 1994 totals posting 48 wins and reaching the 100 point mark for the first time in franchise history The Stars won the Central Division their first division title since 1983 84 when they were still the Minnesota North Stars and were seeded second in the playoffs 11 Despite the regular season success the youthful Stars were upset in the first round by the Edmonton Oilers in seven games Defenseman Grant Ledyard tripped in overtime of Game 7 allowing Todd Marchant to score the game and series winning goal on a breakaway against goaltender Andy Moog During the 1997 off season the Stars signed star goaltender Ed Belfour as a free agent after a well publicized falling out with the San Jose Sharks which had traded a number of players to the Chicago Blackhawks to obtain him in January in the previous season 12 Andy Moog was allowed to leave via free agency but later returned to the Stars as an assistant coach The 1997 98 season was another banner year for the Stars The Stars again set franchise records in wins 49 and points 109 Dallas acquired Mike Keane at the deadline from the New York Rangers The Stars won the franchise s first Presidents Trophy as the league s best regular season team as well as the Central Division title for the second season in a row Belfour set franchise season records for goals against average 1 88 wins 37 and just missed out on the Jennings Trophy by one goal to Martin Brodeur of the New Jersey Devils The Stars were the first overall seed for the 1998 Stanley Cup playoffs and defeated the eighth seeded San Jose Sharks in six games in the first round Notorious enforcer Bryan Marchment injured Joe Nieuwendyk s right knee forcing him to miss the rest of the playoffs with torn ligaments In the second round they again met the Edmonton Oilers this time defeating them in five games However without Nieuwendyk the Stars lacked the firepower to overcome the defending Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings in the Western Conference Finals and lost in six games The Red Wings went on to win their second consecutive Stanley Cup Contending for Titles and 1999 Stanley Cup Championship 1998 2004 edit 1999 Stanley Cup Championship and 2000 Stanley Cup Finals runs edit See also 1999 Stanley Cup Finals In the 1998 off season after falling just short in the Western Conference Finals the Stars added what they believed was the final piece toward winning a championship star goalscoring winger Brett Hull Hull had already had a successful career with the St Louis Blues with three consecutive 70 goal seasons and a Hart Memorial Trophy but a fallout with Blues management led Hull to leave St Louis via free agency 13 Additionally this was the first season for the Stars in the Pacific Division after the 1998 NHL division re alignment In the 1998 99 season the Stars won 51 games surpassing the 50 win mark for the first time in franchise history They also recorded 114 points which still stands today as a franchise record They won their first Pacific Division by 24 points their third consecutive division title a second consecutive Presidents Trophy the Jennings Trophy as the league s top defensive team and were awarded home ice advantage throughout the 1999 playoffs Winger Jere Lehtinen was also awarded the Frank J Selke Trophy 14 nbsp Joe Nieuwendyk helped the Stars win their first Stanley Cup in 1999 Nieuwendyk was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy for that year s playoffs In the first round of the playoffs Dallas faced the Edmonton Oilers The Stars swept the Oilers in four close games winning Game 4 in the third overtime on a goal by Joe Nieuwendyk They then faced the St Louis Blues in the second round After taking a 2 0 series lead the Blues came back to tie the series The Stars then won the next two games to beat the Blues in six games The series again ended on an overtime goal this time in Game 6 from Mike Modano In the Conference Finals they faced the Colorado Avalanche for the first time in Stars playoff history This would be the first of four playoff meetings between the Stars and Avalanche in the next seven years After both the Stars and the Avalanche split the first four games at a 2 2 series tie the Avalanche won Game 5 by a score of 7 5 taking a 3 2 series lead The Stars rallied winning game six on the road and Game 7 at home both by 4 1 scorelines 15 This was the Stars first Stanley Cup Finals appearance as the Dallas Stars although they made the finals twice as the Minnesota North Stars They faced the Eastern Conference champion Buffalo Sabres who had defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs 4 1 in the Eastern Conference Finals After splitting the first four games the Stars vaunted defense would hold the Sabres to only one goal in the next two winning Game 5 2 0 and Game 6 2 1 on a triple overtime goal by Brett Hull Hull s goal at 14 51 of the third overtime was allowed to stand only after a lengthy official review That season the league still had the crease rule in effect which provided that if any player of the attacking team who did not have possession of the puck entered the crease before the puck then any resulting goal was disallowed Hull had initially gained possession of the puck outside the crease and had made a shot that was blocked by Buffalo goaltender Dominik Hasek One of Hull s skates entered the crease as he corralled the rebound and Hull s second shot scored the Cup winning goal The goal was eventually allowed as having simply blocked Hull s shot rather than catching it Hasek never took possession of the puck away from Hull Officials therefore determined that rather than calling it a loose puck Hull would be considered to have had continuous possession of the puck from before his first shot outside the crease The complexity of the crease rule and the attendant difficulties in understanding its application by fans and players alike combined with the controversy arising out of the disputed Stanley Cup winning goal resulted in the crease rule being repealed the following season Hull s goal marked the 13th time a Stanley Cup winning goal was scored in overtime and only the fourth to be scored in multiple overtimes This was the only time between 1995 and 2003 that a team other than the New Jersey Devils Colorado Avalanche or Detroit Red Wings won the Stanley Cup The team added veterans Kirk Muller Dave Manson and Sylvain Cote in an effort to defend their Stanley Cup championship in 1999 2000 On December 31 1999 Brett Hull scored his 600 and 601st career goals in a 5 4 win over the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim The Stars ultimately won the Pacific Division for the second year in a row and were seeded second in the Western Conference Dallas then defeated the Edmonton Oilers and San Jose Sharks in the first and second rounds both 4 1 series victories The Stars for the second season in a row defeated the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference Finals in seven games to reach their second consecutive Stanley Cup Finals where they met the New Jersey Devils Because the Devils finished the regular season with one more point than Dallas the Stars had to play their first playoff series without home ice advantage since 1995 16 The Stars lost all three games at the Reunion Arena in the Finals and lost the series in Game 6 on a double overtime goal by New Jersey forward Jason Arnott 2001 2004 edit Hoping to win back the Stanley Cup the Stars again captured the Pacific Division posting a solid 48 24 8 2 record in the 2000 01 season In the playoffs the Stars and the Edmonton Oilers met in the first round battling back and forth through the first four games with each game decided by one goal including three going into overtime Game 5 would also go to overtime as the Stars took a 3 2 series lead on a goal by Kirk Muller However in Game 6 in Edmonton the Stars did not need overtime advancing to the second round with a 3 1 win Facing the St Louis Blues the Stars would run out of gas being swept in four straight games The Game 2 loss would be the last NHL game played in Reunion Arena nbsp Marty Turco was awarded the starting goaltender position in the 2002 03 season with the departure of Ed Belfour to free agency Moving into the brand new American Airlines Center for the 2001 02 season the Stars had a slow start to the season as goaltender Ed Belfour struggled through one of his worst seasons Head coach Ken Hitchcock was eventually fired being replaced by Rick Wilson Despite the coaching change the Stars continued to play poor hockey With the prospect of missing the playoffs the Stars traded 1999 Conn Smythe winner Joe Nieuwendyk and Jamie Langenbrunner to the New Jersey Devils in exchange for Randy McKay and Jason Arnott who scored the game winning goal in the 2000 Finals against Dallas The Stars would eventually go on to post a respectable record of 35 28 13 5 However it would not be enough for the playoffs as they fell four points short of the final eighth spot in the Western Conference Following the season coach Rick Wilson would return to assistant coaching duties as the Stars brought in Dave Tippett as his replacement As in the 2002 off season Ed Belfour left via free agency to the Toronto Maple Leafs To begin the 2002 03 season the Stars awarded the starting goaltending position to Marty Turco who went on to have one of the best seasons in NHL history posting the lowest goals against average GAA since 1940 at 1 76 However missing 18 games late in the season likely cost him a shot at the Vezina Trophy awarded to the league s top regular season goaltender Regardless the Stars posted the best record in the Western Conference at 46 17 15 4 and along the way two way star Jere Lehtinen won his third Frank J Selke Trophy In the playoffs the Stars once again met the Edmonton Oilers and once again the Oilers would prove a contentious opponent winning two of the first three games However the Stars would prove the better team again by winning the next three games to take the series in six games The Stars second round series against the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim got off to an unbelievable start as the game went deep into overtime tied 3 3 However Mighty Ducks goaltender Jean Sebastien Giguere stopped 60 shots as the Ducks scored early in the fifth overtime Game 2 would be more of the same as the Ducks stunned the Stars in overtime Desperately needing a win the Stars bounced back to take Game 3 in Anaheim However the Ducks would take a 3 1 series lead by breaking a scoreless tie late in the third period of Game 4 In Game 5 the Stars finally solved Giguere by scoring four goals to keep their playoff hopes alive However the Stars dreams of a return trip to the Stanley Cup Finals would end in heartbreaking fashion as the Ducks broke a 3 3 tie with 1 06 left in Game 6 on a goal by defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh Coming off their disappointing playoff loss the Stars would get off to a shaky start to the 2003 04 season as they played mediocre hockey through the first three months of the season posting a sub 500 record However as the calendar turned to 2004 the Stars began to find their game as they posted a 9 4 3 record in January As the season wore on the Stars would get stronger climbing up the playoff ladder and eventually reaching second place in the Pacific Division where they finished with a solid 41 26 13 2 record Marty Turco had another outstanding season recording a 1 98 GAA However the Stars could not carry their momentum into the playoffs as they were beaten by the Colorado Avalanche in five games in the first round Post Lockout Era 2005 2008 edit Coming out of the owners lockout that cancelled the entire 2004 05 season the Stars remained one of the strongest teams in the Western Conference for the start of 2005 06 as they won four of their first five games on the way to a solid October November would be even better for Dallas as they won 10 of 13 games and took over first place in the Pacific Division a position they would hold most of the season as they went on to finish with a terrific record of 53 23 6 One reason for the Stars success was their strong play in shootouts as forward Jussi Jokinen was nearly automatic making 10 of 13 shot attempts Also performing strongly in shootouts was Sergei Zubov who used a slow but steady backhand to go 7 for 12 as the Stars ultimately won 12 of 13 games that were settled by a shootout As the number two seed in the Western Conference the Stars faced the seventh seeded Colorado Avalanche The Stars were favorited to win the Western Conference and some even predicted them to win the Stanley Cup However the Stars would stumble right from the start losing Game 1 by a score of 5 2 as the Avalanche scored five unanswered goals after the Stars jumped out to a promising 2 0 lead Game 2 would see the Stars suffer another setback at home as the Stars lost in overtime 5 4 on a goal by Joe Sakic On the road in Game 3 the Stars led 3 2 in the final minute before the Avalanche forced overtime on a goal by Andrew Brunette while Alex Tanguay won the game just 69 seconds into overtime to put the Stars in a 3 0 hole The Stars would avoid the sweep with a 4 1 win in Game 4 but overtime would doom them again in Game 5 as Andrew Brunette scored the series winner at 6 05 ending the Stars playoffs hopes after just five games Dallas hosts the All Star Game 2006 07 season edit Following the previous season s disappointing first round playoff loss at the hands of the seventh seeded Avalanche the Stars made a number of changes during the 2006 off season Former Stars goalkeeper Andy Moog was promoted to assistant general manager for player development he kept his job as goaltending coach and former player Ulf Dahlen was hired as an assistant coach The Stars allowed center Jason Arnott defenseman Willie Mitchell and goaltender Johan Hedberg to leave as free agents Forward Niko Kapanen was traded to the Atlanta Thrashers and the remaining two years on fan favorite right winger Bill Guerin s contract were bought out The Stars also received Patrik Stefan and Jaroslav Modry in the Atlanta trade and signed Eric Lindros Jeff Halpern Matthew Barnaby and Darryl Sydor as free agents Young goaltender Mike Smith was promoted to the NHL to serve as Marty Turco s backup During the season key future pieces center Mike Ribeiro and defenseman Mattias Norstrom were added through separate trades Young players Joel Lundqvist Krys Barch Nicklas Grossmann and Chris Conner all saw significant ice time while other players were out of the lineup with injuries nbsp Mike Modano scoring his 500th goal on November 7 2007 against the San Jose Sharks He was the second American born player to reach the milestone On September 29 2006 Brenden Morrow was announced as new team captain taking the role over from Mike Modano who had served as the incumbent since 2003 17 On March 13 2007 Modano scored his 500th career NHL goal making him only the 39th player and second American to ever reach the milestone On March 17 Modano scored his 502nd and 503rd NHL goals breaking the record for an American born player previously held by Joe Mullen On January 24 2007 the NHL All Star Game was held at the American Airlines Center Defenseman Philippe Boucher and goaltender Marty Turco would represent the Stars as part of the Western Conference All Star roster The Stars qualified for the playoffs as the sixth seed in the Western Conference and squared off against the Vancouver Canucks in the first round Marty Turco delivered three shutout wins in Games 2 5 and 6 but the Stars offense failed to capitalize and they lost the series in seven games the third season in a row that they lost in the first round Return to playoff prominence 2007 08 season edit In the 2007 NHL Entry Draft the Stars drafted the relatively unknown Jamie Benn 129th overall After starting a lackluster 7 7 3 in the 2007 08 season general manager Doug Armstrong was fired by the team 18 He was replaced by an unusual co general manager arrangement of former assistant GM Les Jackson and former Stars player Brett Hull On November 8 2007 Mike Modano became the top American born point scorer of all time finishing off a shorthanded breakaway opportunity on San Jose Sharks goaltender Evgeni Nabokov 19 On February 26 2008 just hours before the trade deadline the Stars traded for All Star center Brad Richards from the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for backup goaltender Mike Smith and forwards Jussi Jokinen and Jeff Halpern 20 The Stars rallied to a final record of 45 30 7 and qualified for the playoffs as the fifth seed matching up with the defending Stanley Cup champion the Anaheim Ducks in the first round 21 After a rough end to the season only winning two games in March of that year the Stars shocked everyone by winning the first two games of the series in Anaheim and then would go on to finish off the Ducks in six games their first playoff series win since 2003 In the second round the Stars matched up with the Pacific Division champion San Jose Sharks Once again the Stars surprised everyone by winning the first two games of the series on the road In Game 2 Brad Richards tied an NHL record by recording four points in the third period 22 The Stars would then take a 3 0 series lead after a Mattias Norstrom overtime goal in Game 3 After the Sharks staved off elimination with back to back wins in Games 4 and 5 captain Brenden Morrow finished the Sharks off in Game 6 with a powerplay goal nearly halfway into the fourth overtime a moment nicknamed Cinco De Morrow by Stars fans as Game 6 ended in the early morning hours of the Cinco De Mayo holiday on May 5 23 The win sent the Stars to their first Western Conference Finals since 2000 where they met the powerhouse Detroit Red Wings After falling behind in the series 3 0 the Stars made a series of it winning Games 4 and 5 before ultimately being ousted by the Red Wings in six games 24 Transition Seasons 2008 2011 edit nbsp Brad Richards shoots the puck in pregame warm up during the 2008 09 season Injuries to Richards and other teammates during the course of the 2008 09 season led the Stars to miss their first playoffs since 2002 The 2008 09 season saw the early loss for the season of captain Brenden Morrow to an ACL tear Off season free agent acquisition Sean Avery caused a media uproar over comments he made to a Canadian reporter about ex girlfriend Elisha Cuthbert and her relationship with Calgary Flames defenseman Dion Phaneuf before a game in Calgary The incident forced the team to suspend Avery for the season he was later waived by the Stars That incident plus injuries to key players Brad Richards and Sergei Zubov caused the Stars to tailspin to a 12th place finish and the first missed playoffs for Dallas since 2002 In the wake of the season the Stars hired a new general manager former player and alternate captain Joe Nieuwendyk Hull and Jackson remained with the Stars but were reassigned to new roles within the organization Less than a week after he was hired Nieuwendyk fired six season head coach Dave Tippett on June 10 2009 and hired Marc Crawford the next day as his replacement Other off season moves included the addition of Charlie Huddy as assistant coach in charge of defense and the promotions of Stu Barnes and Andy Moog to assistant coaches The Stars 2009 10 season was similar to the previous one Inconsistent play and defensive struggles plagued the team throughout the season as they failed to adjust to Marc Crawford s new offensively minded system and owner Tom Hicks financial troubles prevented the team from spending more than 45 million on payroll over 11 million beneath the league salary cap 25 The Stars failed to win more than three games in a row all season finished in last in the Pacific Division and repeated their 12th place conference finish from the year before with a record of 37 31 14 for 88 points 26 This was the first time that they would miss the playoffs two seasons in a row since the Stars moved to Texas In the off season long time goaltender Marty Turco was let go in favor of Kari Lehtonen to become the team s number one goaltender for the future 27 In the Star s last game of the season away against the Minnesota Wild Mike Modano was named the game s first star and skated around the rink after the game wearing his North Stars uniform receiving a rousing ovation 28 nbsp Kari Lehtonen during the 2010 11 season He was named the team s number one goaltender after they let go of longtime goaltender Marty Turco In the 2010 off season the Stars released Marty Turco and Mike Modano the face of the franchise for the past two decades Modano subsequently signed with the Detroit Red Wings while Turco joined the Chicago Blackhawks Winger Jere Lehtinen who played his entire career with the Stars announced his retirement in December 2010 The team also made key acquisitions such as winger Adam Burish who was on the 2010 Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks and goaltender Andrew Raycroft They also gave Jonathan Cheechoo a try out but he was cut and later signed with division rivals San Jose Sharks To begin the 2010 11 season the Stars won their first three games in a row going on a three game win streak for the first time since the 2008 09 season by beating the New Jersey Devils in overtime in the season opener New York Islanders in a shootout and against the Red Wings in the Stars home opener that featured an emotional return for Mike Modano as the Stars crowd gave Modano a standing ovation as he was shown on the American Airlines Center jumbotron during a timeout in the game After a hot start to the new season the Stars would dominate the first half of the season staying in both the Pacific Division lead and within the top three spots of the Western Conference Through the first half of the season they compiled a 30 15 6 record However after the All Star Break the Stars went into a slump going on numerous losing streaks which included one goal losses and blowing late leads in numerous games Through this though the Stars still remained in the playoff picture On the day of the trade deadline the Stars traded up and comer James Neal and Matt Niskanen to the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for defenseman Alex Goligoski After struggling much of the second half of the season the Stars still had a chance to make the playoffs by winning all their games in the month of April They managed to win all of them except for their season finale as they lost on the road at the Minnesota Wild 5 3 costing them a playoff spot After missing the playoffs for the third consecutive season Dallas fired coach Marc Crawford on April 12 2011 29 In the spring of 2011 according to Darren Dreger of TSN the team had been financially managed by the league for over a year On June 16 2011 Dallas hired Glen Gulutzan to be head coach making him the sixth coach since the franchise s move from Minnesota 30 On September 13 2011 lenders voted to agree to have the Stars file for bankruptcy and sold at auction 31 On September 21 2011 Mike Modano announced his retirement from the league By October 22 2011 competing bids to buy the club were due Vancouver businessman and Kamloops Blazers owner Tom Gaglardi s bid was the only one submitted clearing the way for him to enter the final stages of taking over ownership of the team Gaglardi s purchase was approved by the NHL Board of Governors on November 18 2011 31 A bankruptcy court judge approved the bid for an enterprise value of 240 million First lien creditors got about 75 cents on the dollar The Stars lost 38 million during their last fiscal year and 92 million over the last three seasons 32 Arrival of Tom Gaglardi and Victory Green Era 2011 present edit As the new owner Gaglardi s first move was bringing back former Stars President Jim Lites to once again take the reins as team president and CEO To begin the 2011 12 season the Stars once again jumped out to a fast start going 22 15 1 through the first 38 games of the season However when the second half of the season began the Stars slumped through the months of January and February before getting hot again in late February Throughout March the Stars regained the lead of the Pacific Division Beginning on March 26 2012 the Stars embarked on a western road trip that saw them visit the Calgary Flames Edmonton Oilers Vancouver Canucks and San Jose Sharks Going into the road trip the Stars were in control of their own destiny having to gain four points on the road trip to win their first Pacific Division title since the 2005 06 season After the Stars lost 5 4 in Calgary to the Flames the Stars beat the Oilers two nights later 3 1 This would be their last win of the season as the Stars were rolled over by the Canucks and Sharks Even though they had lost the division crown the Stars still had a chance to clinch a playoff spot However the Stars were eliminated from playoff contention on April 5 in a 2 0 loss to the playoff bound Nashville Predators The team failed to qualify for the playoffs for the fourth consecutive year setting a franchise record for consecutive seasons without a playoff appearance 33 34 nbsp Tyler Seguin with the Stars in the 2013 14 season The Stars acquired Seguin as a part of a seven player trade with the Boston Bruins during the 2013 off season On July 1 2012 the team signed free agent veterans Jaromir Jagr Ray Whitney and Aaron Rome The next day the Stars traded fan favorite Steve Ott and Adam Pardy to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for center Derek Roy When 2012 13 NHL lockout ended in January 2013 and a 48 game season began the Stars embarked on an up and down season though staying in the race for one of the eight Western Conference playoff spots most of the shortened season In mid season forward Michael Ryder was traded to his former team the Montreal Canadiens for Erik Cole This shocked many as Ryder has become an almost overnight fan favorite to Stars fans in his time with Dallas thanks to his stellar 35 goal campaign the previous season in 2011 12 35 Before the trade deadline in early April the Stars began to falter and team captain Brenden Morrow was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins Roy was traded to the Vancouver Canucks Jagr to the Boston Bruins and Tomas Vincour to the Colorado Avalanche to close out the NHL trade deadline all in exchange for draft picks and prospects 36 After all of the trades at the trade deadline the Stars remaining young players pulled together to win six of their next eight games thus propelling the Stars back into the 2013 playoff race However the Stars would drop their final five games losing all of them while gaining only one point eliminating them from playoff contention The Stars had now missed the playoffs in five straight seasons continuing to set the all time record for the franchise dating back to the franchise s history in Minnesota for most consecutive seasons without a playoff appearance 2013 2019 Emergence of Jamie Benn and Arrival of Tyler Seguin edit The day after their final regular season game of the 2012 13 season a 3 0 loss to the Detroit Red Wings the Stars fired general manager Joe Nieuwendyk The next day the Stars introduced their 11th all time general manager Jim Nill the former assistant general manager of the Red Wings On May 14 2013 the coaching staff was also fired 37 and on May 31 2013 Scott White was re introduced as the director of hockey operations 38 Nill made his first big trade as general manager when he acquired the former second overall draft pick from the 2010 NHL Entry Draft in Tyler Seguin as well as Rich Peverley and Ryan Button from the Boston Bruins in exchange for Loui Eriksson Reilly Smith Matt Fraser and Joe Morrow During the 2013 off season the league underwent a major realignment Dallas returned to a revamped Central Division bringing them a much more broadcast friendly schedule for divisional away games The Stars had long lobbied for this as they were unhappy with the large number of games they had to play on the road in the Pacific Time Zone as a member of the Pacific Division since the 1998 99 season Under new head coach Lindy Ruff and led by 84 point and 79 point campaigns from Seguin and newly minted captain Jamie Benn respectively 39 the Stars made it to the 2014 playoffs returning to the Playoffs for the first time since 2008 with a successful 40 31 11 record finishing with 91 points and fifth in the Central Division during the 2013 14 season They lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Anaheim Ducks in six games with a 5 4 overtime loss in Game 6 nbsp Leading the league in points Stars captain Jamie Benn won the Art Ross Trophy for the 2014 15 season Benn was also named captain of the Stars prior to the 2013 14 season Nill made another big trade as general manager when he acquired Jason Spezza and Ludwig Karlsson from the Ottawa Senators in exchange for Alex Chiasson Nick Paul Alex Guptill and a second round pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft He also signed Senators player Ales Hemsky as a free agent on a three year 12 million contract on July 1 2014 Despite these moves and a 92 point 41 31 10 campaign the Stars finished with the second lowest goaltender save percentage in the league during the 2014 15 season which resulted in them failing to qualify for the 2015 playoffs due to their sixth place finish in the Central Division The lone bright spot of the 2014 15 season was Jamie Benn winning the Art Ross Trophy On April 11 2015 Benn scored four points in the Stars last regular season game to finish with 87 points on the season and win the Art Ross Trophy His final point a secondary assist with 8 5 seconds left in regulation in the game allowed him to overtake John Tavares for the award 40 In the 2015 off season the Stars made a couple additions to the team first trading with the Chicago Blackhawks for three time Stanley Cup champion Patrick Sharp as well as defenseman Stephen Johns in exchange for Trevor Daley and Ryan Garbutt 41 The Stars also signed via free agency Sharp s teammate from the Blackhawks Johnny Oduya to a two year contract 42 In the 2015 16 season the Stars won their first Central Division title since 1998 and posted the best regular season record in the Western Conference with a 50 23 9 record good enough for 109 points In the first round of the playoffs they defeated the Minnesota Wild in six games In the second round they faced the St Louis Blues in the playoffs for the first time since 2001 but lost the series in seven games The Stars finished with a 34 37 11 record in an injury plagued 2016 17 season missing the playoffs for the seventh time in the past nine seasons As a result the team announced that head coach Lindy Ruff s contract would not be renewed Ken Hitchcock returned as head coach for the following season however once again the Stars missed the playoffs Hitchcock retired after the season and was succeeded at the head coaching spot by Jim Montgomery Montgomery s first season as the Stars coach saw the team finish with a 43 32 7 record good enough to return to the playoffs as the first wild card team in the Western Conference The Stars defeated the Central Division champion Nashville Predators in a six game series the first round but fell to the eventual Stanley Cup champion St Louis Blues in seven games losing Game 7 on the road in double overtime by a score of 2 1 despite a 52 save performance by goaltender Ben Bishop 2019 2020 NHL Winter Classic hosts and 2020 Western Conference Championship edit Going into the 2019 20 season the Stars added veteran forwards Joe Pavelski from the San Jose Sharks and Corey Perry of the Anaheim Ducks in free agency To start the 2019 20 season the Stars sputtered to a 1 7 1 start through their first nine games However the Stars soon rallied and rattled off a 14 1 1 record between October 19 and November 25 of 2019 which catapulted the Stars to an eventual season record of 37 24 8 through 69 games as the regular season was suspended in March 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic Barely two full months into his second season as Stars head coach on December 10 2019 the Stars fired head coach Jim Montgomery for unprofessional conduct inconsistent with the core values and beliefs of the Dallas Stars and the National Hockey League 43 General manager Jim Nill said the situation had come to light the previous weekend and involved a material act of unprofessionalism egregious enough to demand Montgomery s immediate firing He did not offer specifics out of respect for everyone involved only saying that it did not involve abuse of players or criminal conduct 44 Rick Bowness who joined the team a month after Montgomery s hiring in May 2018 was named interim coach while Derek Laxdal who was the head coach of the Stars AHL affiliate Texas Stars at the time would be promoted to the assistant coaching position that was vacated by Bowness 45 On January 1 2020 the Stars hosted the Nashville Predators in the 2020 NHL Winter Classic at the Cotton Bowl in a rematch of the previous seasons first round playoff series where the Stars prevailed with a 4 2 victory This was the first NHL outdoor game for both teams 46 and with a sold out crowd of 85 630 at the Cotton Bowl it was the second most attended game in NHL history 47 The NHL returned from the March 2020 regular season pause due to the COVID 19 Pandemic a little under six months later in August 2020 where the Stars advanced to the playoffs By virtue of having one of the top four highest point percentages in the Western Conference at the time the season was suspended the Stars played in a round robin tournament against three of the other top four teams in the Western Conference Vegas Golden Knights Colorado Avalanche and St Louis Blues in order to determine the team s seed for the playoffs 48 Dallas was ultimately seeded as the No 3 seed in the Western Conference 49 entering them into a first round series against the Calgary Flames The Stars defeated the Flames in six games in the first round and then defeated the Colorado Avalanche in a seven game series that ended with a Joel Kiviranta hat trick performance in Game 7 which included his series winning OT goal The Stars would defeat the Vegas Golden Knights in five games in the Western Conference Finals to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since 2000 50 as the Stars would end a second consecutive series of the playoffs with a series winning OT goal when Denis Gurianov scored 3 36 into the first overtime period of Game 5 winning the game 3 2 for the Stars The Stars would go on to face the Eastern Conference champion Tampa Bay Lightning in the Stanley Cup Finals the Stars won Game 1 of the series by a 4 1 score but would eventually fall to the Lightning in six games 51 2020 present edit Coming off the Stars run to the 2020 Stanley Cup Finals interim head coach Rick Bowness was named full time head coach on October 29 2020 52 In the following season an injury plagued campaign caused the Stars to finish the COVID shortened 56 game schedule with a 23 19 14 record finishing fifth in the Central Division with 60 points and missing the playoffs for the first time since 2018 The Stars would rebound in the 2021 22 season with a 98 point 46 30 6 record good enough for the first wild card spot in the Western Conference playoffs where they played the Pacific Division champion Calgary Flames in the first round They were defeated by the Flames in seven games losing 3 2 in overtime of Game 7 in Calgary In Game 7 the Stars took the game to overtime despite the Flames making twice as many shots and attempts as the Stars with the Stars young starting netminder Jake Oettinger recording 64 saves the second highest in playoff history behind only Kelly Hrudey s 73 during the 1987 Easter Epic 53 The Stars were eliminated when Flames forward Johnny Gaudreau finally scored 15 09 into the first overtime period to end the game 3 2 After the team s playoff elimination head coach Rick Bowness announced that he would be leaving the team 54 On June 21 2022 the Stars hired Peter DeBoer as their head coach the 10th in franchise history since the team moved to Dallas 55 In the 2022 off season the Stars added in free agency both forward Mason Marchment 56 and defenseman Colin Miller 57 however lost veteran defenseman John Klingberg to the Anaheim Ducks via free agency after eight seasons with the Stars 58 Led by their trio of veterans Tyler Seguin Joe Pavelski and captain Jamie Benn as well as the emergence of a young core of players including netminder Jake Oettinger forwards Jason Robertson Roope Hintz and Wyatt Johnston and defenseman Miro Heiskanen the Stars completed their first season under Peter DeBoer with a 108 point 47 21 14 regular season record just barely being beat out by the Colorado Avalanche by one point for the 2022 23 Central Division title 59 In only his second full season with the Stars Jason Robertson set a new Dallas Stars record for total points in a season with 109 points surpassing the previous record of 93 points set by Mike Modano in the Stars first season in Dallas back in 1993 94 Robertson accomplished this feat in a game at the Arizona Coyotes on March 31 2023 when he scored a goal as part of a Stars 5 2 win over the Coyotes his goal was his record breaking 94th point of the season and 100th goal of his career 60 Captain Jamie Benn also had a resurgent regular season finishing with a 78 point season that included 33 goals scored for a season nicknamed by both Stars fans and pundits alike as the Bennaissance 61 for his first 75 plus point season since 2017 18 62 Along with trade deadline acquisitions Max Domi 63 and Evgenii Dadonov 64 the Stars entered the 2023 playoffs as the number two seed in the Central Division matching them up in a first round series against the Minnesota Wild for their first playoff series versus one another since 2016 The Stars opened the playoffs at home with an double overtime loss in Game 1 as nearly midway through regulation of Game 1 Joe Pavelski was knocked out with a concussion for the remainder of the first round series on a hit by Wild defenseman Matt Dumba 65 The Stars responded with a win in Game 2 fueled by a Roope Hintz hat trick performance 66 winning four of the next five games in the series after Game 1 to eliminate the Wild in six games The Stars then faced the Seattle Kraken in the second round of the playoffs The Kraken in only their second season of existence had upset the defending Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche in the first round Pavelski returned to the Stars for Game 1 of the series scoring all four of the Stars goals in the game however the Stars lost by a score of 5 4 in overtime 67 The Stars would go on to win the series winning Game 7 at home by a score of 2 1 68 sending the Stars to the Western Conference Finals and setting up a rematch of the 2020 Western Conference Finals versus the Vegas Golden Knights The Stars would immediately go down 3 0 in the series versus Vegas after dropping the first two games in overtime on the road and a 4 0 loss at home in Game 3 in Game 3 captain Jamie Benn was suspended for two games for an illegal cross check on Vegas captain Mark Stone 69 Though the Stars would win Games 4 and 5 without Benn and extend the series the Golden Knights would ultimately defeat the Stars in six games with a 6 0 win in Game 6 70 Team information editArena edit nbsp The American Airlines Center is the second and current home arena used by the Dallas Stars When the Stars first moved from Minnesota they played in Reunion Arena which they shared with the National Basketball Association s Dallas Mavericks For hockey Reunion Arena held 17 001 for NHL games Throughout the hockey history of Reunion Arena the arena was known for having one of the worst ice surfaces in the league especially in its final days hosting the Stars The Stars played at Reunion for eight years from 1993 2001 Before the 2001 02 NHL season both the Stars and the Mavericks moved into the new American Airlines Center which is in the Victory Park neighborhood of Dallas just north of Reunion Arena The American Airlines Center holds 18 584 for Stars and NHL games On January 24 2007 the AAC hosted the 2007 National Hockey League All Star Game The AAC and the Dallas Stars have won several local and NHL awards for the Best Fan Experience 71 Broadcast edit All Dallas Stars games are broadcast on radio on KTCK under a five year deal announced in January 2009 72 KTCK replaced WBAP which had broadcast games since the beginning of the 1994 season after KLIF has broadcast the first season in Dallas in 1993 Television coverage occurs primarily on Bally Sports Southwest with KTXA Channel 21 or BSSW broadcasting games when BSSW has a conflict The Stars along with the Buffalo Sabres and Carolina Hurricanes are one of only three NHL teams to simulcast the entirety of their games on TV and radio which the team has done since their 1993 arrival in Dallas The original broadcast team from 1993 to 1996 was Mike Fornes play by play and Ralph Strangis color Fornes left the broadcast team after the 1995 96 season Strangis moved to the play by play role and color commentator Daryl Razor Reaugh was added Although both the DFW area s large media market and the team s fan base could theoretically support separate television and radio broadcast teams the Stars have continued simulcasting due to the popularity of Ralph and Razor as they are known among local listeners and viewers Like other NHL teams the Stars now have a live radio broadcast transmitted inside American Airlines Center on 97 5 FM This is done because AM radio signals often cannot penetrate concrete and steel building exteriors Strangis retired from the booth after the 2014 15 season and was replaced by Dave Strader In June 2016 Strader was diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma a fairly rare and aggressive form of cancer of the bile duct To begin the 2016 17 season Reaugh assumed play by play duties while Strader underwent treatment Studio analyst and former Stars defenseman Craig Ludwig took over as color commentator During a break in Strader s treatment he returned to the broadcast booth on February 18 2017 a 4 3 overtime home win against the Tampa Bay Lightning After the game the Stars saluted Strader at center ice On October 1 2017 Strader died of cancer at age 62 leaving Reaugh and Ludwig to call the 2017 18 season In July 2018 the Stars announced that Reaugh would return to color commentary for the 2018 19 season with former studio host Josh Bogorad taking over the play by play 73 Logo and jersey design edit When they debuted in Dallas for the 1993 94 season they kept the same uniform design from their later Minnesota days except for the addition of the Texas logo patch on the shoulders Away uniforms were black and home uniforms were white With minor trim changes a darker shade of green and the word Dallas added in the 1994 95 season they kept this original design until after their 1999 Stanley Cup winning campaign During this time the black pants included the word Dallas in gold run through the sides with green stripes In the 1997 98 season the Stars introduced an alternate uniform that partly resembled those worn during the NHL All Star Game at the time The uniform was mostly green on top and black at the bottom in a star shaped design For the 1999 2000 season it became the primary away uniform and was paired with a new home uniform featuring the same basic design with white on top and green at the bottom They kept this design until the 2006 07 season during which the league switched color designations on home and away jerseys in the 2003 04 season The striping was also eliminated on the black pants The Stars introduced an alternate jersey for the 2003 04 season that proved both embarrassing and unpopular to critics and fans The uniform which introduced a red as a new trim color was black with a green bottom and featured a modern representation of the constellation Taurus topped by a trailing green star with red trail marks However fans and critics derided the uniform crest for its resemblance to a uterus nicknaming it the Mooterus The uniform was used until the 2005 06 season With the switch to the Reebok Edge uniform system the jerseys underwent a complete redesign The home black jersey introduced for the 2007 08 season features the player s number on the chest and an arched Dallas in white with gold trim with the primary logo on the shoulders The primary away jerseys which were used from 2007 to 2010 and was used as an alternate for its final season had the Stars logo crest in front and the uniform number on the top right with the Texas alternate logo on the shoulders An alternate white jersey based on the home black jersey was introduced for the 2008 09 season they became the regular away uniforms for the 2010 11 season The lettering is in green with gold and black trim Both uniforms were used until the 2012 13 season A new logo and uniforms were introduced for the 2013 14 season Silver replaced gold as the tertiary color while green in a new shade called Victory Green similar to the old North Stars shade of green was reintroduced as a primary uniform color The new logo features the letter D centering a star symbolizing Dallas nickname as The Big D The home uniforms are in green with black and white striping while the away uniforms are in white with a green shoulder yoke and black and green striping The inner collar features the team name on the home uniforms and the city name on the away uniforms The secondary logo with the primary inside a roundel with the team name is featured in the shoulders This design was retained once Adidas took over as uniform supplier prior to the 2017 18 season the only exception being Victory Green replacing both Stars and Dallas on the inner collar of the home and away uniforms respectively The Stars unveiled a special edition uniform for the 2020 NHL Winter Classic featuring a design inspired from the defunct USHL Dallas Texans hockey club The uniform features the word Stars with the star substituting for the letter A in the middle of the big letter D Both are in white with silver trim A silhouette of the state of Texas in silver and green trim with the letter D inside adorns the left sleeve For the 2020 21 season the Stars added a black alternate uniform with neon green accents presumably in honor of the Bank of America Plaza tower in downtown Dallas featuring the alternate Texas D logo in front A neon green star is added on the left side of the collar symbolizing Texas Lone Star State nickname Numbers are in 3D accented black with neon green accents The Stars also released a Reverse Retro alternate uniform for the 2020 21 season in collaboration with Adidas bringing back the 1999 2007 uniform design but with the current color scheme in place of the original green gold and black colors The design also featured white pants A second Reverse Retro alternate was released in the 2022 23 season using the 1993 94 black uniform but with the current Victory Green and silver stripes Minor league affiliates edit nbsp The Texas Stars based in Cedar Park are the Stars current American Hockey League affiliate The Dallas Stars are presently affiliated with two minor league teams The Texas Stars are the American Hockey League AHL affiliate of the Dallas Stars who after becoming unaffiliated with the Iowa Stars in 2008 did not have an AHL affiliate for the 2008 09 season The Texas Stars began play in the AHL in the 2009 10 season as an affiliate for Dallas They are located in Cedar Park Texas northwest of Austin In addition to their AHL affiliate the Dallas Stars are also affiliated with the Idaho Steelheads of the ECHL Based in Boise the Steelheads play home games at the Idaho Central Arena since 2003 Traditions edit Since the 2005 06 season national anthems are performed by Celena Rae a Fort Worth native and a former semi finalist on American Idol During The Star Spangled Banner the fans yell the team name stars in the lines whose broad stripes and bright stars and O say does that star spangled banner yet wave 74 At games as part of the entertainment a Kahlenberg KDT 123 fog horn sounds after every Stars goal 75 When the Stars take the ice at the beginning of each game the song Puck Off also referred to as the Dallas Stars Fight Song by Pantera is played in the arena Members of the Dallas Fort Worth Arlington metropolitan area band had become friends with members of the Stars in the 1990s especially following the team s Stanley Cup win in 1999 76 Puck Off later also became the team s goal celebration song During the song fans chant the only lyrics in the song Dallas Stars Dallas Stars while pumping their fists in the air After a penalty on the opposing team is announced Stars public address announcer shouts Your Dallas Stars are on the with the fans finishing power play immediately after which a clip of the Muse song Knights of Cydonia is played After each Stars win the Stevie Ray Vaughan a Dallas native and Double Trouble song The House is a Rockin is played A song of unknown origin called The Darkness Music is played after nearly every away goal 77 In recent years fans have usually yelled Who cares after away team goals are announced by the public address announcer 78 The Stars have hosted a home game on New Year s Eve every year since 1997 except in 2004 2012 2019 2020 and 2021 the first two being due to lockouts the third being due to their participation in the 2020 NHL Winter Classic the fourth being due to the delayed off season caused by the COVID 19 pandemic and the fifth was postponed to February 13 due to a team wide COVID 19 outbreak For a period of time the game coincided with the Big D NYE celebration now on hiatus on the south side of the arena in AT amp T Plaza 79 Season by season record editThis is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Stars For the full season by season history see List of Dallas Stars seasons Note GP Games played W Wins L Losses OTL Overtime losses Pts Points GF Goals for GA Goals against Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs2018 19 82 43 32 7 93 210 202 4th Central Lost in Second Round 3 4 Blues 2019 20 69 37 24 8 82 180 177 3rd Central Lost in Stanley Cup Finals 2 4 Lightning 2020 21 56 23 19 14 60 158 154 5th Central Did not qualify2021 22 82 46 30 6 98 238 246 4th Central Lost in First Round 3 4 Flames 2022 23 82 47 21 14 108 285 218 2nd Central Lost in Conference Finals 2 4 Golden Knights Players editCurrent roster edit viewtalkedit Updated February 14 2024 80 81 No Nat Player Pos S G Age Acquired Birthplace14 nbsp Jamie Benn C LW L 34 2007 Victoria British Columbia63 nbsp Evgenii Dadonov nbsp RW L 34 2023 Chelyabinsk Soviet Union10 nbsp Ty Dellandrea C R 23 2018 Port Perry Ontario95 nbsp Matt Duchene C L 33 2023 Haliburton Ontario12 nbsp Radek Faksa C L 30 2012 Vitkov Czech Republic2 nbsp Jani Hakanpaa D R 31 2021 Kirkkonummi Finland44 nbsp Joel Hanley D L 32 2018 Keswick Ontario55 nbsp Thomas Harley D L 22 2019 Syracuse New York4 nbsp Miro Heiskanen A D L 24 2017 Espoo Finland24 nbsp Roope Hintz C LW L 27 2015 Tampere Finland53 nbsp Wyatt Johnston C R 20 2021 Toronto Ontario23 nbsp Esa Lindell A D L 29 2012 Helsinki Finland5 nbsp Nils Lundkvist D R 23 2022 Pitea Sweden27 nbsp Mason Marchment LW L 28 2022 Uxbridge Ontario29 nbsp Jake Oettinger G L 25 2017 Lakeville Minnesota16 nbsp Joe Pavelski A RW C R 39 2019 Plover Wisconsin21 nbsp Jason Robertson LW L 24 2017 Arcadia California91 nbsp Tyler Seguin A C R 32 2013 Brampton Ontario15 nbsp Craig Smith RW R 34 2023 Madison Wisconsin18 nbsp Sam Steel C L 26 2023 Ardrossan Alberta20 nbsp Ryan Suter D L 39 2021 Madison Wisconsin41 nbsp Scott Wedgewood G L 31 2022 Brampton Ontario Team captains edit Note This list does not include former captains of the Minnesota North Stars and Oakland Seals Mark Tinordi 1993 1995 Neal Broten 1995 Derian Hatcher 1995 2003 Mike Modano 2003 2006 Brenden Morrow 2006 2013 Jamie Benn 2013 presentLeague and team honors editAwards and trophies edit Main article List of Dallas Stars award winners Stanley Cup 1998 99Presidents Trophy 1997 98 1998 99Clarence S Campbell Bowl 1998 99 1999 2000 2019 20Art Ross Trophy Jamie Benn 2014 15Conn Smythe Trophy Joe Nieuwendyk 1998 99Frank J Selke Trophy Jere Lehtinen 1997 98 1998 99 2002 03Lester Patrick Trophy Neal Broten 1997 98Roger Crozier Saving Grace Award Ed Belfour 1999 2000 Marty Turco 2000 01 2002 03William M Jennings Trophy Ed Belfour and Roman Turek 1998 99 First round draft picks edit See also List of Dallas Stars draft picks Note This list does not include selections of the Minnesota North Stars 1993 Todd Harvey 9th overall 1994 Jason Botterill 20th overall 1995 Jarome Iginla 11th overall 1996 Ric Jackman 5th overall 1997 Brenden Morrow 25th overall 2000 Steve Ott 25th overall 2001 Jason Bacashihua 26th overall 2002 Martin Vagner 26th overall 2004 Mark Fistric 28th overall 2005 Matt Niskanen 28th overall 2006 Ivan Vishnevskiy 27th overall 2009 Scott Glennie 8th overall 2010 Jack Campbell 11th overall 2011 Jamie Oleksiak 14th overall 2012 Radek Faksa 13th overall 2013 Valeri Nichushkin 10th overall 2013 Jason Dickinson 29th overall 2014 Julius Honka 14th overall 2015 Denis Guryanov 12th overall 2016 Riley Tufte 25th overall 2017 Miro Heiskanen 3rd overall and Jake Oettinger 26th overall 2018 Ty Dellandrea 13th overall 2019 Thomas Harley 18th overall 2020 Mavrik Bourque 30th overall 2021 Wyatt Johnston 23rd overall 2022 Lian Bichsel 18th overall Hall of Famers edit The Dallas Stars presently acknowledge an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame Hall of Fame inductees acknowledged by the Stars include 13 former players and three builders of the sport 82 The three individuals recognized as builders by the Hall of Fame includes former Stars executives and head coaches The tenure of five player inductees and the three builders acknowledged by the Stars occurred when the franchise was based in Minnesota 1967 1993 Mike Modano is the only Hall of Fame inductee that played with the franchise before and after its relocation to Dallas In addition to players and builders the Stars also acknowledge an affiliation Hockey Hall of Fame inductee Dave Strader Providing play by play for the Stars he was a recipient of the Hall of Fame s Foster Hewitt Memorial Award for his contributions in hockey broadcasting 82 83 Dallas Stars Hall of FamersAffiliation with inductees based on team acknowledgementHall of Fame players 82 Ed BelfourLeo Boivin a Guy Carbonneau Dino Ciccarelli a Mike Gartner a Brett HullEric Lindros Sergei MakarovMike Modano b Larry Murphy a Joe NieuwendykPierre Turgeon Gump Worsley a Sergei ZubovHall of Fame builders 82 Herb Brooks a Walter Bush a John Mariucci a Retired numbers edit Dallas Stars retired numbers No Player Position Career Date of retirement7 Neal Broten b C 1981 1995 1997 February 7 19988 Bill Goldsworthy a RW 1967 1977 February 15 19929 Mike Modano b C 1989 2010 March 8 201419 Bill Masterton a C 1967 1968 January 17 198726 Jere Lehtinen RW 1995 2010 November 24 2017 84 56 Sergei Zubov D 1996 2009 January 28 2022 85 Notes The NHL retired Wayne Gretzky s No 99 for all its member teams at the 2000 NHL All Star Game 86 Franchise scoring leaders edit nbsp Brenden Morrow is the Stars tenth all time points leader He recorded 528 points playing with the Stars These are the top ten point scorers in franchise Minnesota and Dallas history 87 Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season current Stars playerNote Pos Position GP Games played G Goals A Assists Pts Points P G Points per game Points Player Pos GP G A Pts P GMike Modano C 1 459 557 802 1 359 93Neal Broten C 992 274 593 867 87Jamie Benn LW 1 030 362 485 847 82Brian Bellows LW 753 342 380 722 96Dino Ciccarelli RW 602 332 319 651 1 08Tyler Seguin C 698 270 345 615 88Bobby Smith C 572 185 369 554 97Sergei Zubov D 839 111 438 549 65Dave Gagner C 609 247 287 534 88Brenden Morrow LW 835 243 285 528 63 Goals Player Pos GMike Modano C 557Jamie Benn LW 362Brian Bellows LW 342Dino Ciccarelli RW 332Neal Broten C 274Tyler Seguin C 270Bill Goldsworthy RW 267Dave Gagner C 247Brenden Morrow LW 243Jere Lehtinen RW 243 Assists Player Pos AMike Modano C 802Neal Broten C 593Jamie Benn LW 485Sergei Zubov D 438Brian Bellows LW 380Bobby Smith C 369Tyler Seguin C 345Dino Ciccarelli RW 319Tim Young C 316Craig Hartsburg D 315 Franchise individual records edit Most goals in a season Dino Ciccarelli Brian Bellows 55 1981 82 1989 90 Most assists in a season Neal Broten 76 1985 86 Most points in a season Bobby Smith 114 1981 82 Most penalty minutes in a season Basil McRae 378 1987 88 Most points in a season defenseman Craig Hartsburg 77 1981 82 Most points in a season rookie Neal Broten 98 1981 82 Most goals in a season rookie Neal Broten 38 1981 82 Most wins in a season Marty Turco 41 2005 06 Most shutouts in a season Marty Turco 9 2003 04 See also editList of Dallas Stars head coaches List of Dallas Stars players List of Minnesota North Stars Dallas Stars general managersNotes edit a b c d e f g h i j Entire tenure with the franchise occurred when the team was based in Minnesota a b c A portion of their tenure with the franchise occurred when the team was based in MinnesotaReferences edit Heika Mike October 20 2022 Stars unveil adidas Reverse Retro 2022 jerseys DallasStars com Press release NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved November 27 2023 Returning to roots Stars unveil Blackout alternate jersey DallasStars com Press release NHL Enterprises L P October 28 2020 Retrieved November 27 2023 Brand Assets DallasStars com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved November 27 2023 Cameron Steve 1994 Feeding Frenzy The Wild New World of the San Jose Sharks Taylor Publishing Co pp 29 38 a b c The 35 Biggest Moments in Modern Dallas History Dmagazine com Archived from the original on May 20 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Dillman Lisa Stephens Eric Cooper Josh How the Mighty Ducks took flight an oral history The Athletic Archived from the original on May 2 2022 Retrieved May 2 2022 Patrick Plus Thanks Norm Green Star Tribune Archived from the original on April 19 2016 Retrieved April 14 2016 Dallas Stars First Game October 5 1993 Broten Goal St Cloud Times October 6 1993 p 19 Archived from the original on August 27 2022 Retrieved August 27 2022 Dallas Stars Franchise Index Hockey Reference com Archived from the original on May 19 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Dallas Stars Franchise Index Hockey Reference com Archived from the original on September 15 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 1996 97 NHL Season Summary Hockey Reference com Archived from the original on October 20 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Ed Belfour Hockeygoalies org Archived from the original on September 3 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 St Louis Blues Legends Brett Hull Stlouisblueslegends blogspot com January 9 2011 Archived from the original on August 28 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 1998 99 NHL Season Summary Hockey Reference com Archived from the original on May 3 2018 Retrieved September 16 2011 1999 NHL Playoffs Summary Hockey Reference com Archived from the original on August 7 2008 Retrieved September 16 2011 1999 00 NHL Season Summary Hockey Reference com Archived from the original on September 14 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Morrow replaces Modano as Stars captain NHL ESPN September 29 2006 Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved September 16 2011 Armstrong fired after 7 7 3 start Hull Jackson named interim GMs NHL ESPN November 14 2007 Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved September 16 2011 Modano sets scoring mark in Dallas victory Los Angeles Times November 8 2007 Archived from the original on February 12 2012 Retrieved May 2 2010 Richards gets new start goes to Dallas in 5 player deal NHL ESPN February 27 2008 Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved September 16 2011 2007 08 NHL Preseason Conference Standings National Hockey League ESPN Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Playoff Records Individual The Sports Network Archived from the original on September 10 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 San Jose Sharks vs Dallas Stars Recap May 04 2008 ESPN May 4 2008 Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved September 16 2011 Detroit Red Wings vs Dallas Stars Recap May 19 2008 ESPN May 19 2008 Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved September 16 2011 President Stars will stay in Dallas but budget tight February 12 2010 Archived from the original on February 12 2010 2011 12 NHL Preseason Conference Standings National Hockey League ESPN Archived from the original on April 25 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Marty Turco Will Not Be Re Signed By Dallas Stars Will Become A Free Agent SBNation com April 13 2010 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved September 16 2011 Dallas Stars vs Minnesota Wild Recap April 10 2010 ESPN April 10 2010 Archived from the original on August 18 2010 Retrieved September 16 2011 Stars fire coach Crawford after missing playoffs April 12 2011 Archived from the original on January 30 2016 Retrieved August 24 2022 AP Source Stars to hire Gulutzan as coach Archived from the original on August 24 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 a b Report Stars bankruptcy filing will lead to auction Archived from the original on August 27 2022 Retrieved August 27 2022 Dallas Stars Sale to Tom Gaglardi for 240 Million Pummels Team s Creditors Forbes Archived from the original on August 4 2017 Retrieved August 26 2017 Dallas Stars Statistics and History Internet Hockey Database Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved November 14 2012 Minnesota North Stars Statistics and History Internet Hockey Database Archived from the original on October 9 2012 Retrieved November 14 2012 Michael Ryder hockey reference com June 6 2023 Retrieved June 6 2023 Many Questions Posed Important Answers to Come and I Have a Dream A Mishmash Love Story Archived from the original on August 24 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Dallas Stars relieve Glen Gulutzan and Paul Jerrard of coaching duties Archived from the original on August 24 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Stars Announce Scott White Director of Hockey Ops May 31 2013 Archived from the original on March 29 2019 Retrieved August 24 2022 2013 14 Dallas Stars Roster and Statistics hockey reference com June 6 2023 Retrieved June 6 2023 Jamie Benn records assist with 9 seconds to play to win Art Ross Trophy Archived from the original on March 23 2017 Retrieved March 22 2017 Lazerus Mark July 10 2015 Blackhawks trade Patrick Sharp to Dallas Stars Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on July 12 2015 Retrieved July 10 2015 Dallas Stars sign defenseman Johnny Oduya to a two year contract Dallas Stars July 15 2015 Retrieved July 15 2015 Jim Montgomery dismissed as head coach of Stars NHL com December 10 2019 Retrieved December 11 2019 DeFranks Matthew December 10 2019 Dallas Stars fire coach Jim Montgomery due to unprofessional conduct Dallas News Retrieved December 11 2019 Dallas Stars fire head coach Jim Montgomery for unprofessional conduct CBC ca Retrieved December 11 2019 Kaplan Emily January 25 2019 Nashville Predators to face Dallas Stars in 2020 Winter Classic ESPN Retrieved January 25 2019 Stars rally to beat Predators in Winter Classic at Cotton Bowl Sportsnet Associated Press January 1 2020 Stanley Cup Qualifiers schedule NHL com September 29 2020 Retrieved July 10 2020 Sadowski Rick August 9 2020 Stars defeat Blues in round robin decide No 3 seed in West NHL com Retrieved September 6 2020 DeFranks Matthews September 15 2020 Stars defeat Golden Knights in OT advance to Stanley Cup Final for first time in 20 years The Dallas Morning News Archived from the original on September 15 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Rosen Dan September 28 2020 Lightning win Stanley Cup defeat Stars in Game 6 of Final NHL com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved September 28 2020 Stars name Rick Bowness as head coach NHL com October 29 2020 Retrieved October 29 2020 Morassutti David May 16 2022 Oettinger following Game 7 loss I feel like I m just scratching the surface Sportsnet Retrieved May 19 2022 Stars Bowness steps down after three seasons ESPN com May 20 2022 Archived from the original on May 28 2022 Retrieved May 28 2022 Stars name Pete DeBoer as head coach NHL com June 21 2022 Retrieved June 21 2022 Stars sign forward Mason Marchment to four year contract NHL com Dallas Stars June 7 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Stars sign defenseman Colin Miller to two year contract NHL com Dallas Stars June 7 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Klingberg signs one year contract with Ducks NHL com June 7 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 2022 23 Dallas Stars Roster and Statistics hockey reference com June 7 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Robertson breaks Modano s record poses with Hockey Hall of Famer NHL com April 1 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Pete DeBoer Is Doing All the Little Things in the Stars Turnaround DMagazine com February 8 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Jamie Benn hockey reference com June 7 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Domi traded to Stars by Blackhawks NHL com March 3 2022 Retrieved June 7 2022 Dadonov traded to Stars by Canadiens NHL com February 26 2022 Retrieved June 7 2022 Stars uncertain about Pavelski after controversial hit from Wild s Dumba Sportsnet ca April 17 2022 Retrieved June 7 2022 Hintz hat trick helps Stars defeat Wild in Game 2 even Western 1st Round NHL com April 20 2022 Retrieved June 7 2022 Stars Pavelski returns scores four in epic Game 1 effort ESPN com May 3 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Stars edge Kraken in Game 7 advance to Western Conference Final NHL com May 15 2023 Retrieved June 7 2023 Benn of Stars suspended 2 games for actions in Game 3 of West Final NHL com May 24 2023 Retrieved June 14 2023 Baird Taylor May 29 2023 Golden Knights shut out Stars in Game 6 advance to Stanley Cup Final NHL com Retrieved June 16 2023 Stars earn highest grade for Fan Experience August 17 2017 Archived from the original on October 23 2018 Retrieved September 28 2017 Stars Sign Five Year Agreement with Sportsradio 1310 The Ticket January 18 2009 Archived from the original on January 18 2009 Stars announce broadcast team for 2018 19 season Archived from the original on August 7 2018 Retrieved August 6 2018 In Game Personalities Archived from the original on August 24 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Dallas Stars goalhorns frozenfaceoff net Archived from the original on January 16 2017 Retrieved January 15 2017 Carlton Brendon December 25 2013 The Dallas Stars and the Mystery Dent in the Stanley Cup hookedonhockeymagazine com Archived from the original on January 16 2017 Retrieved January 15 2017 Darkness music a big hit Even if you don t want to hear it National Hockey League June 4 2004 Archived from the original on January 4 2015 Retrieved December 2 2008 How To Be a Stars Fan Official Guide Updated Defending Big D January 12 2016 Archived from the original on September 29 2017 Retrieved May 11 2017 AT amp T Plaza Archived from the original on July 30 2008 Dallas Stars Roster National Hockey League Retrieved February 14 2024 Dallas Stars Hockey Transactions The Sports Network Retrieved February 14 2024 a b c d Fromstein Ben Holy Tom Calvillo Joe Berson Jared eds 2017 Hockey Hall of Fame 17 18 Dallas Stars Media Guide PDF Dallas Stars Hockey Club pp 245 246 Archived PDF from the original on May 22 2018 Retrieved May 20 2018 Foster Hewitt Memorial Award winners Hockey Hall of Fame and Museum 2018 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved April 12 2018 Shapiro Sean November 24 2017 Seguin hat trick boosts Stars past Flames National Hockey League Archived from the original on June 9 2022 Retrieved November 25 2017 Baird Taylor January 28 2022 Zubov has number retired by Stars NHL com Archived from the original on January 29 2022 Retrieved January 29 2022 Perfect setting Gretzky s number retired before All Star Game CNN Sports Illustrated Associated Press February 6 2000 Archived from the original on November 12 2013 Retrieved June 9 2014 Regular Season All Skaters Career for Franchise Career Points National Hockey League com Stats National Hockey League Archived from the original on May 24 2013 Retrieved March 24 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dallas Stars Official website Portals nbsp Ice hockey nbsp Texas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dallas Stars amp oldid 1207751552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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