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Wikipedia

San Jose Sharks

The San Jose Sharks are a professional ice hockey team based in San Jose, California. They compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Pacific Division in the Western Conference, and are owned by San Jose Sports & Entertainment Enterprises. Beginning play in the 1991–92 season, the Sharks initially played their home games at the Cow Palace, before moving to their present home, now named SAP Center at San Jose, in 1993; the SAP Center is known locally as "the Shark Tank".[6] The Sharks are affiliated with the San Jose Barracuda of the American Hockey League (AHL) and the Wichita Thunder of the ECHL.[7]

San Jose Sharks
2022–23 San Jose Sharks season
ConferenceWestern
DivisionPacific
Founded1991
HistorySan Jose Sharks
1991–present
Home arenaSAP Center
CitySan Jose, California
ColorsDeep Pacific teal, black, burnt orange[1][2][3]
     
MediaNBC Sports California
Sharks Audio Network[4]
Owner(s)San Jose Sports & Entertainment Enterprises
(Hasso Plattner, governor)[5]
General managerMike Grier
Head coachDavid Quinn
CaptainLogan Couture
Minor league affiliatesSan Jose Barracuda (AHL)
Wichita Thunder (ECHL)
Stanley Cups0
Conference championships1 (2015–16)
Presidents' Trophy1 (2008–09)
Division championships6 (2001–02, 2003–04, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11)
Official websitenhl.com/sharks

The Sharks were founded in 1991 as the first NHL franchise based in the San Francisco Bay Area since the California Golden Seals relocated to Cleveland in 1976. The Sharks have advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals once, losing to the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2016. They have won the Presidents' Trophy once, as the team with the league's best regular season record in the 2008–09 season. They have also won six division titles as a member of the Pacific Division since 1993.

History

Formation

Professional hockey in the Bay Area can be traced to the San Francisco Shamrocks of the Pacific Coast Hockey League from 1944 to 1950. The Sharks origins began with the San Francisco Seals of the Western Hockey League (WHL) when they were awarded an expansion franchise for San Francisco on April 23, 1961, to former Vancouver Canucks owner Coleman (Coley) Hall, on the condition that an ice surface is installed in the Cow Palace. The Seals won three WHL championships and renamed to the California Seals in 1966, playing their games at the Oakland Coliseum Arena.

The following season, the California Golden Seals joined the NHL, played their seasons from 1967 to 1976, who were neither successful on the ice nor at the box office. Gordon and George Gund III became minority owners of the Seals in 1974, and were instrumental in their move to Cleveland in 1976 and a 1978 merger with the Minnesota North Stars, which they purchased that year. They had long wanted to bring hockey back to the Bay Area, and asked the NHL for permission to move the North Stars there in the late 1980s, but the league vetoed the proposed move. Meanwhile, a group led by former Hartford Whalers owner Howard Baldwin was pushing the NHL to bring a team to San Jose, where a new arena was being built. Eventually, the League struck a compromise: the Gunds would sell their share of the North Stars to Baldwin's group, with the Gunds receiving an expansion team in the Bay Area to begin play in the 1991–92 season and being allowed to take a certain number of players from the North Stars to their new club.[8] In return, the North Stars would be allowed to participate as an equal partner in an expansion draft with the new Bay Area team. On May 5, 1990, the Gunds officially sold their share of the North Stars to Baldwin and were awarded a new team for the Bay Area, based in San Jose. The owners paid to the league an expansion fee of US$45 million[9] and the new franchise was approved on May 9.[10]

Over 5,000 potential names were submitted by mail for the new team. While the first-place finisher was "Blades", the Gunds were concerned about the name's potentially negative association with weapons, and went with the runner-up, "Sharks."[11][12] The name was said to have been inspired by the large number of sharks living in the Pacific Ocean. Seven varieties live there, and one area of water near the Bay Area is known as the "red triangle" (hence the triangle in the team's logo) because of its shark population.

Matt Levine—the team's first marketing head—said of the new name, "Sharks are relentless, determined, swift, agile, bright and fearless. We plan to build an organization that has all those qualities."[13]

Cow Palace years (1991–1993)

 
S. J. Sharkie, the Sharks' mascot, made his debut during the 1991–92 season.

For their first two seasons, the Sharks played at the Cow Palace in Daly City, just outside San Francisco, a facility the NHL and the Seals had rejected in 1967. Pat Falloon was their first draft choice and led the team in points during their first season. The team was placed in the Campbell Conference's Smythe Division. George Kingston was their first head coach during their first two seasons.[14] Though the 1991–92 roster consisted primarily of NHL journeymen, minor leaguers and rookies, the Sharks had at least one notable player when they acquired 14-year veteran and former Norris Trophy-winning defenseman Doug Wilson from the Chicago Blackhawks on September 6, 1991. Wilson was named the team's first captain and All-Star representative in the inaugural season. However, the Sharks' first two seasons saw the typical struggles for an expansion team. The 71 losses in 1992–93 is an NHL record, and they also suffered a 17-game losing streak, while winning just 11 games and earning a mere 24 points in the standings. Kingston was fired following the end of the 1992–93 season.[14]

Despite the Sharks' futility in the standings, the team led the NHL's merchandise sales with $150 million, accounting for 27% of the NHL's total and behind only National Basketball Association champions Chicago Bulls among all North American leagues.[15] Several team "firsts" happened in the 1992–93 season. On November 17, 1992, San Jose goaltender Arturs Irbe recorded the first shutout in team history, defeating the Los Angeles Kings 6–0. On December 3, against the Hartford Whalers at the Cow Palace, right winger Rob Gaudreau scored the first hat-trick in franchise history; he also scored the team's second-ever hat-trick nine days later against the Quebec Nordiques.

The inaugural year also saw the introduction of the San Jose Sharks mascot, "S. J. Sharkie". On January 28, 1992, at a game against the New York Rangers, the then-unnamed mascot emerged from a Zamboni during an intermission. A "Name the Mascot" contest began that night, with the winning name of "S. J. Sharkie" being announced on April 15, 1992.[16]

Early success and rebuilding (1993–1997)

 
The Sharks moved into their new home, the San Jose Arena (now the SAP Center) in 1993.

For their third season, 1993–94, the Sharks moved to their new home, the San Jose Arena, and were placed in the Western Conference's Pacific Division.[17] Under head coach Kevin Constantine, the Sharks pulled off the biggest turnaround in NHL history, finishing with a 33–35–16 record and making the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in team history with 82 points, an NHL record 58-point jump from the previous season.[18] They were seeded eighth in the Western Conference playoffs and faced the Detroit Red Wings, the top-seeded Western Conference team and a favorite to win the Stanley Cup. In one of the biggest upsets in Stanley Cup playoff history, the underdog Sharks shocked the Red Wings in seven games. In Game 7 at Joe Louis Arena, Jamie Baker scored the game-winning goal in the third period after goaltender Chris Osgood was out of position and the Sharks won 3–2.[19] In the second round, the Sharks had a 3–2 series lead over the Toronto Maple Leafs, but lost the final two games in Toronto, including an overtime loss in Game 6.

In 1994–95, the Sharks earned their second-straight playoff berth and again reached the second round. Ray Whitney scored a goal in double overtime of Game 7 of the Conference Quarter-finals against the Calgary Flames. Key Sharks players included goaltender Arturs Irbe, defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh and forwards Igor Larionov and Sergei Makarov. Despite their success against Calgary, round two would prove to be a disaster for the Sharks, when they lost in a four-game sweep to Detroit (in a rematch of the previous year) without even holding a single lead in all four games. However, the 1995 season also saw the only rainout in the history of the NHL, when the Guadalupe River flooded its banks in March 1995, making it impossible for anyone to get into the San Jose Arena for a game between the Sharks and the Detroit Red Wings.[20]

In 1995–96, the Sharks finished last in the Pacific Division and failed to make the playoffs. The team also underwent major changes: during the season, they traded Ozolinsh and Larionov, and Irbe, who had suffered an off-ice injury, was released at the end of the season. The team began rebuilding, acquiring forward Owen Nolan from the Colorado Avalanche, as well as several other players. Constantine was fired midway through the season and replaced by interim coach Jim Wiley.

Dean Lombardi era (1996–2003)

During the 1996 off-season, Dean Lombardi was hired as general manager. The next season was no better under Al Sims, with the Sharks again finishing last and winning only 27 games. Their standing would help them draft Patrick Marleau in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft. The Sharks returned to the playoffs in 1997–98 with goaltender Mike Vernon, whom they acquired from the Red Wings, and new head coach Darryl Sutter. For the next two years, the Sharks made the playoffs, yet never advanced past the first round. In 1999, San Jose acquired former Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens star Vincent Damphousse. San Jose's luck changed in the 1999–2000 season, when the Sharks finished with their first-ever winning record. In an upset on par with the one they had pulled on Detroit six years earlier, the Sharks managed to eliminate the St. Louis Blues, who had finished first overall in the league that year, in seven games. However, the Sharks were defeated in the second round of the playoffs by the Dallas Stars. It was their second time losing to Dallas.

In 2000–01, Kazakh goaltender Evgeni Nabokov won the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL's best rookie. The team also acquired Finnish star forward Teemu Selanne from the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. In the 2001 playoffs, the St. Louis Blues eliminated the Sharks in six games in the first round, avenging their 2000 defeat by San Jose. The team's breakout year was 2001–02. Veteran Adam Graves was acquired for Mikael Samuelsson, and the Sharks won their first Pacific Division title. They then defeated the Phoenix Coyotes in the first round of the 2002 playoffs, but fell to the Colorado Avalanche in the second round.

Following the 2001–02 season, the Gunds sold the Sharks to a group of local investors headed by team president Greg Jamison. With starting goaltender Nabokov and defenseman Mike Rathje in contract disputes with general manager Dean Lombardi and the retirement of veteran defenseman Gary Suter, the team got off to a terrible start. Kyle McLaren was acquired in a three-way trade with the Montreal Canadiens and Boston Bruins. Dan McGillis was acquired in exchange for long-time Shark Marcus Ragnarsson, but the team could not turn itself around. Sutter was fired and replaced by Ron Wilson midway through that season.

Near the 2003 NHL trade deadline, captain Owen Nolan was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs, signaling a new era in Sharks history. In addition, the newly acquired McGillis was traded to Boston, Bryan Marchment went to Colorado, and American Hockey League (AHL) star Shawn Heins and forward Matt Bradley were moved to the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Sharks acquired Alyn McCauley and Wayne Primeau during this season. Reportedly, due to having just acquired the team as well as the team's bad start, the ownership group wanted general manager Dean Lombardi to move high-priced players on the roster. Lombardi failed to do so and consequently lost his job. During that debacle year for San Jose, there were some bright spots. Jim Fahey led all rookie defensemen in the NHL in points, despite playing in only 43 games.

Lombardi's tenure with the team ended with his dismissal on March 18, 2003.[21] Doug Wilson was named to the role on May 13.[22]

Doug Wilson era (2003–2022)

Resurgence

The 2003–04 season, under new general manager Doug Wilson and head coach Ron Wilson saw another turnaround for the team, resulting in the team's best season to that point. An injection of youth, with players like Christian Ehrhoff and out-of-college signing Tom Preissing, and the influx of energy from Alexander Korolyuk jump-started San Jose. Doug Wilson acquired Nils Ekman, and a line of Ekman, McCauley and Korolyuk provided strong play for San Jose, with all three players enjoying career years. Midway through the season, key forward Marco Sturm suffered a broken leg/ankle injury. In response, San Jose acquired Curtis Brown. They posted the third-best record in the NHL with 104 points (31 more than the previous season, and the first time the team had earned 100 points), won the Pacific Division championship and were seeded second in the Western Conference.

 
Patrick Marleau was named the Sharks' team captain in the second half of the 2003–04 season, maintaining the position until 2009.

In the 2004 playoffs, the Sharks defeated the St. Louis Blues in the Western Conference Quarter-finals and the Colorado Avalanche in the Conference Semi-finals. The San Jose Sharks, for the first time, progressed to the Conference Finals. However, they fell to the Calgary Flames, with ex-coach Daryl Sutter behind the Flames' bench and former Sharks goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff in net. During that season, San Jose, without a captain following Nolan's trade, utilized a rotating captaincy. When the job eventually fell to Patrick Marleau, he kept the captaincy. During the off-season, forward Vincent Damphousse was lost to the Colorado Avalanche (but never played a game for them, as he announced his retirement during the 2004–05 lockout).

Arrival of Joe Thornton

The Sharks started the 2005–06 season slowly, dropping to last place in the Pacific Division. The team lost Alexander Korolyuk. After a ten-game losing streak, the Sharks traded Brad Stuart, Wayne Primeau and Marco Sturm to the Boston Bruins in exchange for star player Joe Thornton. The trade re-energized the team, and with Nabokov sharing starting duties with backup goaltender Vesa Toskala, the Sharks rallied back from their early-season slump to clinch the fifth seed in the Western Conference. In the playoffs, the Sharks defeated the Nashville Predators in the Conference Quarter-finals before falling to the Edmonton Oilers in the Conference Semi-finals. Joe Thornton was awarded the Hart Memorial Trophy as the NHL's Most Valuable Player, as well as the Art Ross Trophy for leading the League in points, with 125. Jonathan Cheechoo was awarded the Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy for scoring the most goals during the regular season, with a total of 56.

The Sharks entered the 2006–07 season as the youngest team in average age, as well as the biggest team in average weight, and they raced out to a 20–7–0 start, the best in franchise history. A concern made by fans and members of the media was the lack of a left winger to play on a line with the duo of Thornton and Cheechoo. Wilson seemingly addressed this issue by acquiring 25-year-old 20-goal-scorer Mark Bell from the Chicago Blackhawks. Despite scoring a goal in his first two games with San Jose, Bell was widely considered a flop in San Jose. Off-ice issues, including being cited for drunk driving and an alleged hit-and-run[23] contributed to his on-ice play. By the end of the season, Bell was consistently either a healthy scratch or a fourth-liner.

 
In an effort to bolster their team for the 2008 playoffs, the Sharks acquired Brian Campbell prior to the League's trade deadline.

Two significant trades were made at the trade deadline for defenseman Craig Rivet and winger Bill Guerin. The trades coincided with Nabokov putting together a string of outstanding performances. The Sharks finished the regular season with the best record in franchise history at 51–26–5. In the Conference Quarter-finals, the Sharks defeated the Nashville Predators for the second year in a row. In the Western Conference Semi-finals, the Sharks were defeated for the second time by the Detroit Red Wings.

In advance of the 2007–08 season, the Sharks updated their logos and jerseys to adjust to the new Rbk EDGE jersey.[24] The Sharks rode on a very hot streak in the month of March. They were aided by the trade-deadline acquisition of Brian Campbell, for whom they gave up Steve Bernier. Going the entire month without a regulation loss, the Sharks captured their third Pacific Division title with a franchise-record 108 points. San Jose started the 2008 playoffs beating the Calgary Flames four games to three in San Jose's first-ever Game 7 on home ice. San Jose eventually lost to the Dallas Stars in the Western Conference Semi-finals. Game 6 required four overtime periods, and was the longest game in the team's history. This was the Sharks' third playoff loss to Dallas.

The Ron Wilson era officially came to an end on May 12 when the Sharks fired him, citing San Jose's disappointing second-round losses in the previous three seasons.[25] Wilson ended his tenure in San Jose with 206 wins, 122 losses, 19 ties, and 48 losses in overtime or in the shootout in 385 regular season games and a 28–24 record in 52 postseason games. He moved on to be hired as head coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs, along with assistant coaches who were also two former Sharks, Tim Hunter and Rob Zettler, to make up the Toronto coaching staff.

Playoff contention, falling short

On June 11, 2008, the San Jose Sharks named former Detroit Red Wings assistant coach Todd McLellan as their new head coach for the 2008–09 season.[26] Todd Richards, Trent Yawney and Jay Woodcroft were named assistant coaches, while Brett Heimlich was named staff assistant. During the off-season, San Jose's major headlines included signing defenseman Rob Blake, acquiring defensemen Dan Boyle and Brad Lukowich, as well as trading defenseman Craig Rivet to the Buffalo Sabres. Midway through the season, San Jose added playoff warrior Claude Lemieux to their roster. Lemieux, 43 years old, was rejoining the NHL after a five-year absence. At the trade deadline, San Jose acquired checking-line winger Travis Moen and the injured defenseman Kent Huskins from the Anaheim Ducks.

The Sharks finished the regular season as presidents' Trophy champions with 53 wins and 117 points, both franchise records. Despite their successful regular season, the Sharks were eliminated by the eighth-seeded Anaheim Ducks in six games in the first round of the playoffs. The team was heavily criticized[by whom?] for once again failing to succeed in the postseason. General manager Doug Wilson promised the team would undergo significant changes in the off-season.

 
Dany Heatley was acquired by the Sharks during the 2009 off-season. The Sharks sent Milan Michalek and Jonathan Cheechoo to the Ottawa Senators in return for Heatley.

In the 2009 off-season, Wilson held to his word with many major moves. The first was Christian Ehrhoff and Brad Lukowich to the Vancouver Canucks. It was widely believed[by whom?] that San Jose made this trade so it could free up salary cap space to make a second trade: Milan Michalek and Jonathan Cheechoo were sent to the Ottawa Senators in exchange for Dany Heatley and a draft pick. Assistant coach Todd Richards left and was replaced by Matt Shaw. Aside from the trades, several contracts were not renewed, including those of Mike Grier, Marcel Goc, Tomas Plihal and Alexei Semenov.

San Jose also signed forward Scott Nichol and added grit to the team by signing Joe Callahan, Jed Ortmeyer and Manny Malhotra, plus Benn Ferriero. Jeremy Roenick and Claude Lemieux both announced their retirements from the NHL. Another major move by San Jose was stripping Patrick Marleau of the captaincy and assigning it to the newly re-signed Rob Blake. One reason for the move was that Marleau was named captain by Wilson and McLellan wanted to name his own. Dan Boyle and Joe Thornton were named the alternates. On February 7, 2010, San Jose acquired Niclas Wallin from the Carolina Hurricanes. On February 12, 2010, San Jose traded Jody Shelley to the New York Rangers for a draft pick.[27]

The Sharks finished the regular season leading the Western Conference with 113 points and being the second team in the NHL after the Washington Capitals. In the Western Conference Quarter-finals, the Sharks eliminated the Colorado Avalanche. In the Conference Semi-finals, the Sharks defeated the Detroit Red Wings. The eventual Stanley Cup champions, the Chicago Blackhawks, beat the Sharks in the Conference Finals with a four-game sweep.

On June 23, 2010, Wilson announced that they would not offer an unrestricted free agent contract to long-time goaltender Evgeni Nabokov after playing ten seasons with the team. Due to the cap issue, the Sharks had to choose between former captain Patrick Marleau and Nabokov. On July 1, 2010, the Sharks signed goalie Antero Niittymaki from the Tampa Bay Lightning.[28] On September 2, 2010, the Sharks signed former member of the Chicago Blackhawks and Stanley Cup-winning goaltender Antti Niemi to a one-year contract.[29] Niemi was the goaltender who helped the Blackhawks defeat the Sharks in the Western Conference Finals the season before.[30] On March 1, 2011, Niemi signed a four-year contract extension with San Jose worth $15.2 million.[30]

 
The Sharks faced the Vancouver Canucks during the 2011 Western Conference Finals. The Sharks would lose the series 4–1.

On March 31, 2011, the Sharks clinched their 13th (and seventh consecutive) playoff berth in franchise history with a 6–0 victory over the Dallas Stars. Five days later, they clinched their sixth Pacific Division championship. Entering the 2011 playoffs as the second seed in the Western Conference, the Sharks opened their playoff run with the franchise's first-ever playoff series against division and state rivals, the Los Angeles Kings. After winning Game 1, 3–2 in overtime on a Joe Pavelski goal, the Sharks dropped the second game of the series 4–0, heading to Staples Center with the series tied at one apiece. The Kings took another 4–0 lead in Game 3 but five-second-period goals by the Sharks capped with a Devin Setoguchi overtime winner gave the Sharks a 6–5 victory and tied them for the second-biggest comeback in Stanley Cup playoff history. They would go on to win Game 4, lose Game 5 and finally win the series in its sixth game, with captain Joe Thornton scoring the series winner in the third overtime game of the series.

The Sharks advanced to the Western Conference Semi-finals to face the third-seed Detroit Red Wings, whom they had defeated in five games during the previous postseason's second round. Just like the year prior, the Sharks won the first three games of the series and lost the fourth but instead of replicating the previous year's success in Game 5, the Sharks dropped two more games as the Red Wings became the eighth team in NHL history to force a Game 7 after losing the first three games of a series. However, they would not become the fourth team in history to pull off the comeback as the Sharks prevailed, 3–2, with the game-winning goal scored by former captain Patrick Marleau who had endured media criticism from former teammate and now NBC Sports Network television personality Jeremy Roenick for his lackluster play in Game 5 of the series against the Red Wings. The Sharks advanced to their third Western Conference Finals series, their first playoff meeting with the Vancouver Canucks. San Jose dropped the first two games of the series at Rogers Arena in Vancouver but rebounded with a 4–3 victory thanks to two first-period goals by Marleau in Game 3. However, they lost the fourth game of the series and eventually were eliminated from the playoffs after a Game 5 in Vancouver that featured a game-tying goal by the Canucks' Ryan Kesler with 18.3 seconds remaining in the third period as well as a quirky bounce off a side stanchion that allowed Kevin Bieksa to score the overtime goal that advanced Vancouver to their third Stanley Cup Finals and left the Sharks eliminated in Round 3 for the second consecutive postseason.

 
During the 2011 NHL Entry Draft the Sharks acquired Brent Burns through a trade with the Minnesota Wild.

The first major move made by San Jose in the 2011 off-season was to trade popular winger (and former first-round pick) Devin Setoguchi, the Sharks' 2010 first-round pick Charlie Coyle and a first-round pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft to the Minnesota Wild for All-Star defenseman Brent Burns and a second-round pick in the 2012 Draft.[31][32] This came after Setoguchi had signed a three-year, $9 million contract extension with the Sharks. The Sharks continued their off-season retool by orchestrating a second transaction with the Wild, shipping Dany Heatley to Minnesota in exchange for Martin Havlat,[33] both to relieve cap space as Heatley was slated to carry a cap hit $2.5 million greater than Havlat's for the duration of their respective contracts and to acquire a player in Havlat with a history of playoff production at the expense of Heatley, whose postseason numbers with the Sharks had been far less than stellar – the forward had managed to score just five goals in 32 playoff games in two years with San Jose.

The Sharks finished the 2011–12 season with a 43–29–10 record, good for 96 points and the seventh seed in the Stanley Cup playoffs. However, after winning Game 1 of their first-round series with the St. Louis Blues in overtime, they lost the final four games of the series, marking the second time they lost in the Quarter-finals under Todd McLellan. Despite the underachievement[according to whom?] of the previous year, it was announced that McLellan would remain on the bench for a fifth season.

Prior to the lockout-shortened 2012–13 season, Hockey Hall of Fame player and coach Larry Robinson was added to McLellan's coaching staff to assist with San Jose's penalty-killing unit, which was 29th in the NHL during the previous season. Assistant coach Jim Johnson was also added to bring a defensive style to the play of the Sharks. Brett Heimlich was also promoted to the role of video coordinator to assist the new coaching staff. Along with the two coaches, veteran defenseman Brad Stuart was re-acquired in order to bolster the Sharks' blue line, and on January 12, he played in his first game at HP Pavilion in over seven years. In the first round of the 2013 playoffs, the Sharks swept the Vancouver Canucks, their first series-sweep in franchise history.[34] The Sharks would subsequently fall 4–3 to the defending Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings in the second round of the playoffs.

Prior to the 2013–14 season, the Sharks unveiled new uniforms, which included less orange, along with adding a lace-up collar.[35] In addition to the new uniforms, prior to the start of the season, Brett Heimlich took on the additional role of statistical analyst for the coaching staff. The Sharks started the season 8–0–1, and were the last team in the NHL to stay undefeated in regulation[36] until October 25, when the Sharks lost to the Boston Bruins.[37] In the first round of the 2014 playoffs, the Sharks were matched with rivals and eventual Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings. Although the Sharks took a 3–0 series lead, the Kings came back to tie the series before advancing with a 5–1 win in game seven (only the fourth time in the 97-year history of the NHL where a team lost a best-of-seven series after winning their first three games). After the loss, general manager Doug Wilson described the Sharks' playoff failures "like Charlie Brown trying to kick a football".

On August 20, 2014, head coach Todd McLellan announced the team would go into training camp for the 2014–15 season without a captain, and that all players (including former captains Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau) would have the opportunity to compete for the captaincy.[38] No captain was named during the season. The Sharks hosted the 2015 NHL Stadium Series against the Kings at Levi's Stadium in February 2015, losing 2–1. Earlier in the season, the Sharks were in playoff contention, but they would ultimately lose games to key Western Conference opponents as the season went on. Despite posting a record of 40–33–9, the Sharks finished fifth in the Pacific Division and missed the playoffs for the first time in ten years. On April 20, 2015, the team announced that they had agreed to "part ways" with McLellan, Johnson and Woodcroft, as well as Video Coordinator Heimlich.[39]

First Stanley Cup Finals

 
Logan Couture lead the Sharks in scoring during their run to the 2016 Stanley Cup Finals.

On May 28, 2015, the team named Peter DeBoer as their head coach.[40] During the off-season, the Sharks let John Scott and Scott Hannan leave as free agents.[41] They traded goalie Antti Niemi to the Dallas Stars for a seventh-round draft pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft.[42] Then, they acquired forward Joel Ward,[43] goaltender Martin Jones,[44] and defenseman Paul Martin.[45] They also named forward Joe Pavelski the team's captain.

Nearly one year after Peter DeBoer's arrival and a shaky start, the Sharks surged in the second half of the season to return to the playoffs, finishing with 98 points and third in the Pacific Division. They defeated the Los Angeles Kings in five games, the Nashville Predators in seven games, and the St. Louis Blues in six games to win the Western Conference championship. This marked the first time in franchise history that the Sharks advanced to play in the Stanley Cup Final.[46][47] The Sharks ultimately lost the Stanley Cup Finals in the best-of-seven series against the Pittsburgh Penguins in six games.[48]

Continuing contention

In the following season, the Sharks finished in third place in the Pacific Division, but were defeated by the Edmonton Oilers in six games in the first round of the 2017 playoffs. Following the season, long-time stalwart Patrick Marleau left the team to sign with the Toronto Maple Leafs, ending his 20-year tenure with the team. He left holding almost every offensive record in team history, such as power-play goals, goals, short-handed goals and games played.[49][50]

In the 2017–18 season, the Sharks once again finished in third place in the Pacific Division. They swept the Anaheim Ducks in the first round of the 2018 playoffs, but lost to the expansion Vegas Golden Knights in six games in the second round.

The 2018–19 season saw another playoff berth for the Sharks, overcoming a three games to one lead, once again by the Vegas Golden Knights, and in a dramatic comeback in the third period of game 7, and the team would make it into the Western Conference Finals, falling to the eventual Stanley Cup champion St. Louis Blues in six games. On October 8, 2019, after two seasons in Toronto, Patrick Marleau was re-acquired by the Sharks.[51]

Missing the playoffs

On December 11, 2019, with the Sharks at 15–16–2 and failing to win a game during their five-game away game stretch, DeBoer and his staff were fired.[52] After DeBoer's firing, assistant coach Bob Boughner was named interim head coach.[53] In March 2020, four months after Boughner became interim coach, the league was forced to suspend operations as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. When the 2019–20 season resumed in June with the playoffs, the Sharks were not included.[54] Boughner's interim label was removed on September 22, 2020.[55]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the divisions for the 2020–21 season were realigned. The Sharks played in the West Division.[56] The Sharks missed the playoffs for the second year in a row.

General manager Doug Wilson took medical leave beginning November 26, 2021, and resigned while away from the team on April 7, 2022.[22] Assistant general manager Joe Will was elevated to interim general manager while the team sought a permanent candidate for the role.[22]

The team missed the playoffs for the third straight season, and head coach Bob Boughner and other members of the coaching staff were relieved of duties in the summer in advance of the Sharks naming a new general manager.

Mike Grier era (2022–present)

On July 5, the Sharks hired former player Mike Grier to serve as their new general manager, becoming the first black general manager in NHL history and fifth general manager in franchise history.[57] Grier, who played in 221 games with the Sharks from 2006 to 2009 and was a member of the Sharks 2008-09 Presidents Trophy-winning team, immediately began reshaping the team.

On July 13, 2022, the Sharks traded longtime defenseman Brent Burns to the Carolina Hurricanes[58] and signed forwards Oskar Lindblom,[59] Nico Sturm,[60] and defenseman Matt Benning.[61] On July 26, Grier named former Rangers coach David Quinn as the team's new head coach[62] before later hiring Scott Gordon and Ryan Warsofsky as assistants.[63]

Team information

Logo and jerseys

 
The current wordmark logo for the San Jose Sharks, introduced in the 2020–21 NHL season.

The Sharks' iconic logo of a shark chomping on a hockey stick has been in use since their inaugural 1991–92 season, with slight modifications prior to the 2007–08 season. The triangle on the logo references the Bay Area's Red Triangle near the Pacific Ocean. The Sharks also use various partial and alternate logos based on the primary logo.

The original Sharks' road jerseys were teal with white, gray and black striping and featured white block lettering with black trim. Home uniforms were white with teal, gray and black striping and featured teal block lettering with black trim. Both jerseys included the team's "fin" logo on either shoulder and were used until the 1997–98 season.[64]

The Sharks introduced their future road (later home) jersey as an alternate during the 1997–98 season, featuring a darker teal base, wide gray sleeve and shoulder striping and modernized lettering. A white home (later road) counterpart was introduced the following season and featured teal and gray shoulder and sleeve stripes. In the 2001–02 season, the Sharks began wearing a black third jersey, featuring the return of the "fin" logo and minimalist teal and white sleeve stripes.[64]

Upon switching to the Reebok Edge template in 2007, the Sharks introduced new home and away jerseys. The teal home jersey featured a black shoulder yoke while the white road jersey used a teal shoulder yoke. Both jerseys replaced gray with orange trim on the stripes and lettering, featured the "jumping shark" logo on the shoulders, and added numbers on the right chest.[64][65]

Before the 2008–09 season, the Sharks introduced a new black alternate jersey, minus the contrasting shoulder yoke, tail stripes and orange trim. It also featured the "jumping shark" logo in front and the "SJ" alternate logo on the shoulders. The jersey served as the basis of their new set introduced before the 2013–14 season, which eliminated the shoulder yoke and tail stripes, added neckline laces and eliminated the orange accents. The front numbers were replaced with the Sharks' 25th-anniversary logo prior to the 2015–16 season.[64]

Following the switch to Adidas' AdiZero template in 2017, the Sharks kept much of their basic look save for the replacement of the "jumping shark" logo in favor of the "screaming shark" logo (home jersey) and "SJ" logo (road jersey) on the shoulder. The slogan "This Is Sharks Territory" was added inside the neckline.[64] The black alternates were retired prior to the season, but in 2018, a new black jersey was introduced. Known as the "Stealth" jersey, it featured a slightly different rendition of the primary Sharks logo, an updated version of the original "fin" logo on the shoulders and stylized circuit board sleeve striping.[66] The "Stealth" uniforms were not used in the 2020–21 season as the Sharks opted to wear their "Reverse Retro" and "Heritage" alternate uniforms in the shortened season (see descriptions below).

The Sharks participated in the 2015 NHL Stadium Series by wearing a tricolor jersey of teal, white and black accented by the primary Sharks logo in front and a new "Northern California" alternate logo on the shoulders. The back of the jersey remained teal and featured larger lettering.[64]

During the 2015–16 season, as part of their 25th anniversary, the Sharks wore a slightly modified version of their original teal jerseys for a few home games. These uniforms were brought back in 2021 for the Sharks' 30th anniversary, albeit modified to the AdiZero cut.[64][67]

The Sharks wore "Reverse Retro" alternate uniforms for the 2020–21 season. The design used was similar to the teal uniforms they wore from 1997 to 2007, but with a gray base and black stripes.[68]

The Sharks released new uniforms in 2022, featuring elements inspired from the team's original 1991–1998 uniform set. In addition, the Sharks changed its pants, gloves and home helmet to teal.[2][3] The Sharks also unveiled a second "Reverse Retro" uniform based on the last uniforms worn by their Bay Area predecessors, the California Golden Seals. The design replaced the "Seals" wordmark with "Sharks" in teal and gold trim.[69]

Broadcasters

Television

Radio

One of the first group of broadcasters for the Sharks was Joe Starkey, who did play-by-play alongside Pete Stemkowski (both 1991–92) and 1992–93) and Brian Hayward (1991–92 when sidelined with injuries) on color commentary. CSN Bay Area (now NBC Sports Bay Area) was the television home of San Jose Sharks until the end of the 2008–09 NHL season, when their games moved to Comcast SportsNet California (now NBC Sports California). Over-the-air telecasts aired on KGO 7 from 19911994 and on KICU 36 from 19951999. Other television color commentators include Chris Collins (1996–97), Steve Konroyd (19972000), Drew Remenda (200006; 200714), Marty McSorley (2006–07), Jamie Baker (201420), and Kendall Coyne Schofield (2019–20).

Traditions

 
Sharks pre-game entrance through the Shark's mouth

The Sharks' best-known tradition is their pre-game entrance scene. At the beginning of each Sharks home game, the lights go down and a 17-foot open shark mouth is lowered from the rafters. As the mouth is lowered the eyes flash red and fog pours out. Then, a live view of the locker room tunnel with Sharks players is shown on the scoreboard and the goalie leads the team out of the locker room, through the mouth, and onto the ice.[72] The Sharks currently use "Seek & Destroy" by Metallica as their entrance song. Previous entrance songs include Metallica's version of "Breadfan" and "Get Ready for This" by 2 Unlimited. The latter song has been used as the team's goal song since 2016.[73]

Any time the Sharks go on the power play, the Jaws theme song is played while the fans do "The Chomp", extending their arms in front and moving them up and down to form a chomping jaw.

Since 2015, the fan-driven Supporters Club, Teal City Crew, has sit atop sections 217–218, organizing marches to the arena, charity drives, and creating tifo related to the games being played, most notably the "retirement" banner for NHL veteran, Mike Hoffman, for his temporary trade to the Sharks, before being later traded that same day to the Florida Panthers.

Rivalries

The Sharks have historically had rivalries with the two other California National Hockey League teams, the Anaheim Ducks and the Los Angeles Kings. They also share a developing rivalry with the Vegas Golden Knights.[74][75][76][77]

Season-by-season record

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

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

Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
2017–18 82 45 27 10 100 252 229 3rd, Pacific Lost in Second Round, 2–4 (Golden Knights)
2018–19 82 46 27 9 101 289 261 2nd, Pacific Lost in Conference Finals, 2–4 (Blues)
2019–20 70 29 36 5 63 182 226 8th, Pacific Did not qualify
2020–21 56 21 28 7 49 151 199 7th, West Did not qualify
2021–22 82 32 37 13 77 214 264 6th, Pacific Did not qualify

Players

Current roster

Updated January 18, 2023[78][79]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
94   Alexander Barabanov RW L 28 2021 Saint Petersburg, Russia
5   Matt Benning D R 28 2022 St. Albert, Alberta
13   Nick Bonino (A) C L 34 2021 Hartford, Connecticut
59   Nick Cicek D L 22 2022 Winnipeg, Manitoba
39   Logan Couture (C) C L 33 2007 Guelph, Ontario
21   Mikey Eyssimont LW L 26 2023 Littleton, Colorado
38   Mario Ferraro (A) D L 24 2017 King City, Ontario
42   Jonah Gadjovich LW L 24 2021 Whitby, Ontario
73   Noah Gregor C L 24 2016 Beaumont, Alberta
4   Scott Harrington D L 29 2022 Kingston, Ontario
48   Tomas Hertl (A) LW/C L 29 2012 Prague, Czech Republic
65   Erik Karlsson (A) D R 32 2018 Landsbro, Sweden
36   Kaapo Kahkonen G L 26 2022 Helsinki, Finland
71   Nikolai Knyzhov   D L 24 2019 Kemerovo, Russia
11   Luke Kunin   C R 25 2022 Chesterfield, Missouri
62   Kevin Labanc RW R 27 2014 Staten Island, New York
23   Oskar Lindblom LW L 26 2022 Gävle, Sweden
16   Steven Lorentz C L 26 2022 Waterloo, Ontario
24   Jaycob Megna D L 30 2021 Plantation, Florida
28   Timo Meier LW L 26 2015 Herisau, Switzerland
83   Matt Nieto LW L 30 2020 Long Beach, California
77   Markus Nutivaara   D L 28 2022 Oulu, Finland
47   James Reimer G L 34 2021 Morweena, Manitoba
51   Radim Simek   D L 30 2017 Mladá Boleslav, Czechoslovakia
7   Nico Sturm C L 27 2022 Augsburg, Germany
10   Evgeny Svechnikov RW L 26 2022 Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Russia
44   Marc-Edouard Vlasic D L 35 2005 Montreal, Quebec


Hall of Famers

The San Jose Sharks hold an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame. Six inductees from the players category of the Hall of Fame are affiliated with the Sharks.[80][81]

San Jose Sharks Hockey Hall of Fame inductees
Hall of Fame players
Ed Belfour Rob Blake Igor Larionov Sergei Makarov Teemu Selanne Doug Wilson

Retired numbers

The Sharks are scheduled to retire Patrick Marleau's No. 12 on February 25, 2023.[82] The team is unable to issue No. 99 to its players due to NHL retiring the number league-wide in honor of Wayne Gretzky at the 2000 NHL All-Star Game.[83]

Team captains

Franchise regular season scoring leaders

These are the top-ten-point-scorers in franchise regular season history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

 
Recording 804 regular season assists as a Shark, Joe Thornton holds the all-time record for assists recorded with the team.
  •  *  – current Sharks player

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

Franchise playoff scoring leaders

 
With 48 playoff points, Dan Boyle recorded the second-most playoff points by any Sharks defensemen.

These are the top-ten playoff point-scorers in franchise playoff history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL season.

NHL awards and trophies

 
Jonathan Cheechoo was awarded the Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy after scoring 56 goals in the 2005–06 season.

Clarence S. Campbell Bowl

Presidents' Trophy

Art Ross Trophy

Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy

Calder Memorial Trophy

Hart Memorial Trophy

James Norris Memorial Trophy

Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy

NHL Foundation Player Award

All-Star Game head coach

(* – traded from the Boston Bruins during the 2005–06 season)

See also

References

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External links

  • Official website  
  • "San Jose strengthens ties to China Sharks" nhl.com, August 20, 2008
  • "New-look Anyang Halla adds western flavor" nhl.com, July 31, 2008
  • "Former NHLers find hockey adventure in Japan" nhl.com, March 26, 2008
  • Dan Rosen. "Blake caps a likely Hall of Fame career". National Hockey League.

jose, sharks, team, that, originally, named, francisco, sharks, quebec, nordiques, professional, hockey, team, based, jose, california, they, compete, national, hockey, league, member, pacific, division, western, conference, owned, jose, sports, entertainment,. For the team that is originally named San Francisco Sharks see Quebec Nordiques The San Jose Sharks are a professional ice hockey team based in San Jose California They compete in the National Hockey League NHL as a member of the Pacific Division in the Western Conference and are owned by San Jose Sports amp Entertainment Enterprises Beginning play in the 1991 92 season the Sharks initially played their home games at the Cow Palace before moving to their present home now named SAP Center at San Jose in 1993 the SAP Center is known locally as the Shark Tank 6 The Sharks are affiliated with the San Jose Barracuda of the American Hockey League AHL and the Wichita Thunder of the ECHL 7 San Jose Sharks2022 23 San Jose Sharks seasonConferenceWesternDivisionPacificFounded1991HistorySan Jose Sharks1991 presentHome arenaSAP CenterCitySan Jose CaliforniaColorsDeep Pacific teal black burnt orange 1 2 3 MediaNBC Sports CaliforniaSharks Audio Network 4 Owner s San Jose Sports amp Entertainment Enterprises Hasso Plattner governor 5 General managerMike GrierHead coachDavid QuinnCaptainLogan CoutureMinor league affiliatesSan Jose Barracuda AHL Wichita Thunder ECHL Stanley Cups0Conference championships1 2015 16 Presidents Trophy1 2008 09 Division championships6 2001 02 2003 04 2007 08 2008 09 2009 10 2010 11 Official websitenhl wbr com wbr sharksThe Sharks were founded in 1991 as the first NHL franchise based in the San Francisco Bay Area since the California Golden Seals relocated to Cleveland in 1976 The Sharks have advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals once losing to the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2016 They have won the Presidents Trophy once as the team with the league s best regular season record in the 2008 09 season They have also won six division titles as a member of the Pacific Division since 1993 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Cow Palace years 1991 1993 1 3 Early success and rebuilding 1993 1997 1 4 Dean Lombardi era 1996 2003 1 5 Doug Wilson era 2003 2022 1 5 1 Resurgence 1 5 2 Arrival of Joe Thornton 1 5 3 Playoff contention falling short 1 5 4 First Stanley Cup Finals 1 5 5 Continuing contention 1 5 6 Missing the playoffs 1 6 Mike Grier era 2022 present 2 Team information 2 1 Logo and jerseys 2 2 Broadcasters 3 Traditions 4 Rivalries 5 Season by season record 6 Players 6 1 Current roster 6 2 Hall of Famers 6 3 Retired numbers 6 4 Team captains 6 5 Franchise regular season scoring leaders 6 6 Franchise playoff scoring leaders 7 NHL awards and trophies 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit Professional hockey in the Bay Area can be traced to the San Francisco Shamrocks of the Pacific Coast Hockey League from 1944 to 1950 The Sharks origins began with the San Francisco Seals of the Western Hockey League WHL when they were awarded an expansion franchise for San Francisco on April 23 1961 to former Vancouver Canucks owner Coleman Coley Hall on the condition that an ice surface is installed in the Cow Palace The Seals won three WHL championships and renamed to the California Seals in 1966 playing their games at the Oakland Coliseum Arena The following season the California Golden Seals joined the NHL played their seasons from 1967 to 1976 who were neither successful on the ice nor at the box office Gordon and George Gund III became minority owners of the Seals in 1974 and were instrumental in their move to Cleveland in 1976 and a 1978 merger with the Minnesota North Stars which they purchased that year They had long wanted to bring hockey back to the Bay Area and asked the NHL for permission to move the North Stars there in the late 1980s but the league vetoed the proposed move Meanwhile a group led by former Hartford Whalers owner Howard Baldwin was pushing the NHL to bring a team to San Jose where a new arena was being built Eventually the League struck a compromise the Gunds would sell their share of the North Stars to Baldwin s group with the Gunds receiving an expansion team in the Bay Area to begin play in the 1991 92 season and being allowed to take a certain number of players from the North Stars to their new club 8 In return the North Stars would be allowed to participate as an equal partner in an expansion draft with the new Bay Area team On May 5 1990 the Gunds officially sold their share of the North Stars to Baldwin and were awarded a new team for the Bay Area based in San Jose The owners paid to the league an expansion fee of US 45 million 9 and the new franchise was approved on May 9 10 Over 5 000 potential names were submitted by mail for the new team While the first place finisher was Blades the Gunds were concerned about the name s potentially negative association with weapons and went with the runner up Sharks 11 12 The name was said to have been inspired by the large number of sharks living in the Pacific Ocean Seven varieties live there and one area of water near the Bay Area is known as the red triangle hence the triangle in the team s logo because of its shark population Matt Levine the team s first marketing head said of the new name Sharks are relentless determined swift agile bright and fearless We plan to build an organization that has all those qualities 13 Cow Palace years 1991 1993 Edit S J Sharkie the Sharks mascot made his debut during the 1991 92 season For their first two seasons the Sharks played at the Cow Palace in Daly City just outside San Francisco a facility the NHL and the Seals had rejected in 1967 Pat Falloon was their first draft choice and led the team in points during their first season The team was placed in the Campbell Conference s Smythe Division George Kingston was their first head coach during their first two seasons 14 Though the 1991 92 roster consisted primarily of NHL journeymen minor leaguers and rookies the Sharks had at least one notable player when they acquired 14 year veteran and former Norris Trophy winning defenseman Doug Wilson from the Chicago Blackhawks on September 6 1991 Wilson was named the team s first captain and All Star representative in the inaugural season However the Sharks first two seasons saw the typical struggles for an expansion team The 71 losses in 1992 93 is an NHL record and they also suffered a 17 game losing streak while winning just 11 games and earning a mere 24 points in the standings Kingston was fired following the end of the 1992 93 season 14 Despite the Sharks futility in the standings the team led the NHL s merchandise sales with 150 million accounting for 27 of the NHL s total and behind only National Basketball Association champions Chicago Bulls among all North American leagues 15 Several team firsts happened in the 1992 93 season On November 17 1992 San Jose goaltender Arturs Irbe recorded the first shutout in team history defeating the Los Angeles Kings 6 0 On December 3 against the Hartford Whalers at the Cow Palace right winger Rob Gaudreau scored the first hat trick in franchise history he also scored the team s second ever hat trick nine days later against the Quebec Nordiques The inaugural year also saw the introduction of the San Jose Sharks mascot S J Sharkie On January 28 1992 at a game against the New York Rangers the then unnamed mascot emerged from a Zamboni during an intermission A Name the Mascot contest began that night with the winning name of S J Sharkie being announced on April 15 1992 16 Early success and rebuilding 1993 1997 Edit The Sharks moved into their new home the San Jose Arena now the SAP Center in 1993 For their third season 1993 94 the Sharks moved to their new home the San Jose Arena and were placed in the Western Conference s Pacific Division 17 Under head coach Kevin Constantine the Sharks pulled off the biggest turnaround in NHL history finishing with a 33 35 16 record and making the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in team history with 82 points an NHL record 58 point jump from the previous season 18 They were seeded eighth in the Western Conference playoffs and faced the Detroit Red Wings the top seeded Western Conference team and a favorite to win the Stanley Cup In one of the biggest upsets in Stanley Cup playoff history the underdog Sharks shocked the Red Wings in seven games In Game 7 at Joe Louis Arena Jamie Baker scored the game winning goal in the third period after goaltender Chris Osgood was out of position and the Sharks won 3 2 19 In the second round the Sharks had a 3 2 series lead over the Toronto Maple Leafs but lost the final two games in Toronto including an overtime loss in Game 6 In 1994 95 the Sharks earned their second straight playoff berth and again reached the second round Ray Whitney scored a goal in double overtime of Game 7 of the Conference Quarter finals against the Calgary Flames Key Sharks players included goaltender Arturs Irbe defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh and forwards Igor Larionov and Sergei Makarov Despite their success against Calgary round two would prove to be a disaster for the Sharks when they lost in a four game sweep to Detroit in a rematch of the previous year without even holding a single lead in all four games However the 1995 season also saw the only rainout in the history of the NHL when the Guadalupe River flooded its banks in March 1995 making it impossible for anyone to get into the San Jose Arena for a game between the Sharks and the Detroit Red Wings 20 In 1995 96 the Sharks finished last in the Pacific Division and failed to make the playoffs The team also underwent major changes during the season they traded Ozolinsh and Larionov and Irbe who had suffered an off ice injury was released at the end of the season The team began rebuilding acquiring forward Owen Nolan from the Colorado Avalanche as well as several other players Constantine was fired midway through the season and replaced by interim coach Jim Wiley Dean Lombardi era 1996 2003 Edit During the 1996 off season Dean Lombardi was hired as general manager The next season was no better under Al Sims with the Sharks again finishing last and winning only 27 games Their standing would help them draft Patrick Marleau in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft The Sharks returned to the playoffs in 1997 98 with goaltender Mike Vernon whom they acquired from the Red Wings and new head coach Darryl Sutter For the next two years the Sharks made the playoffs yet never advanced past the first round In 1999 San Jose acquired former Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens star Vincent Damphousse San Jose s luck changed in the 1999 2000 season when the Sharks finished with their first ever winning record In an upset on par with the one they had pulled on Detroit six years earlier the Sharks managed to eliminate the St Louis Blues who had finished first overall in the league that year in seven games However the Sharks were defeated in the second round of the playoffs by the Dallas Stars It was their second time losing to Dallas Evgeni Nabokov was awarded the Calder Memorial Trophy in the 2000 01 season In 2000 01 Kazakh goaltender Evgeni Nabokov won the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL s best rookie The team also acquired Finnish star forward Teemu Selanne from the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim In the 2001 playoffs the St Louis Blues eliminated the Sharks in six games in the first round avenging their 2000 defeat by San Jose The team s breakout year was 2001 02 Veteran Adam Graves was acquired for Mikael Samuelsson and the Sharks won their first Pacific Division title They then defeated the Phoenix Coyotes in the first round of the 2002 playoffs but fell to the Colorado Avalanche in the second round Following the 2001 02 season the Gunds sold the Sharks to a group of local investors headed by team president Greg Jamison With starting goaltender Nabokov and defenseman Mike Rathje in contract disputes with general manager Dean Lombardi and the retirement of veteran defenseman Gary Suter the team got off to a terrible start Kyle McLaren was acquired in a three way trade with the Montreal Canadiens and Boston Bruins Dan McGillis was acquired in exchange for long time Shark Marcus Ragnarsson but the team could not turn itself around Sutter was fired and replaced by Ron Wilson midway through that season Near the 2003 NHL trade deadline captain Owen Nolan was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs signaling a new era in Sharks history In addition the newly acquired McGillis was traded to Boston Bryan Marchment went to Colorado and American Hockey League AHL star Shawn Heins and forward Matt Bradley were moved to the Pittsburgh Penguins The Sharks acquired Alyn McCauley and Wayne Primeau during this season Reportedly due to having just acquired the team as well as the team s bad start the ownership group wanted general manager Dean Lombardi to move high priced players on the roster Lombardi failed to do so and consequently lost his job During that debacle year for San Jose there were some bright spots Jim Fahey led all rookie defensemen in the NHL in points despite playing in only 43 games Lombardi s tenure with the team ended with his dismissal on March 18 2003 21 Doug Wilson was named to the role on May 13 22 Doug Wilson era 2003 2022 Edit Resurgence Edit The 2003 04 season under new general manager Doug Wilson and head coach Ron Wilson saw another turnaround for the team resulting in the team s best season to that point An injection of youth with players like Christian Ehrhoff and out of college signing Tom Preissing and the influx of energy from Alexander Korolyuk jump started San Jose Doug Wilson acquired Nils Ekman and a line of Ekman McCauley and Korolyuk provided strong play for San Jose with all three players enjoying career years Midway through the season key forward Marco Sturm suffered a broken leg ankle injury In response San Jose acquired Curtis Brown They posted the third best record in the NHL with 104 points 31 more than the previous season and the first time the team had earned 100 points won the Pacific Division championship and were seeded second in the Western Conference Patrick Marleau was named the Sharks team captain in the second half of the 2003 04 season maintaining the position until 2009 In the 2004 playoffs the Sharks defeated the St Louis Blues in the Western Conference Quarter finals and the Colorado Avalanche in the Conference Semi finals The San Jose Sharks for the first time progressed to the Conference Finals However they fell to the Calgary Flames with ex coach Daryl Sutter behind the Flames bench and former Sharks goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff in net During that season San Jose without a captain following Nolan s trade utilized a rotating captaincy When the job eventually fell to Patrick Marleau he kept the captaincy During the off season forward Vincent Damphousse was lost to the Colorado Avalanche but never played a game for them as he announced his retirement during the 2004 05 lockout Arrival of Joe Thornton Edit The Sharks started the 2005 06 season slowly dropping to last place in the Pacific Division The team lost Alexander Korolyuk After a ten game losing streak the Sharks traded Brad Stuart Wayne Primeau and Marco Sturm to the Boston Bruins in exchange for star player Joe Thornton The trade re energized the team and with Nabokov sharing starting duties with backup goaltender Vesa Toskala the Sharks rallied back from their early season slump to clinch the fifth seed in the Western Conference In the playoffs the Sharks defeated the Nashville Predators in the Conference Quarter finals before falling to the Edmonton Oilers in the Conference Semi finals Joe Thornton was awarded the Hart Memorial Trophy as the NHL s Most Valuable Player as well as the Art Ross Trophy for leading the League in points with 125 Jonathan Cheechoo was awarded the Maurice Rocket Richard Trophy for scoring the most goals during the regular season with a total of 56 The Sharks entered the 2006 07 season as the youngest team in average age as well as the biggest team in average weight and they raced out to a 20 7 0 start the best in franchise history A concern made by fans and members of the media was the lack of a left winger to play on a line with the duo of Thornton and Cheechoo Wilson seemingly addressed this issue by acquiring 25 year old 20 goal scorer Mark Bell from the Chicago Blackhawks Despite scoring a goal in his first two games with San Jose Bell was widely considered a flop in San Jose Off ice issues including being cited for drunk driving and an alleged hit and run 23 contributed to his on ice play By the end of the season Bell was consistently either a healthy scratch or a fourth liner In an effort to bolster their team for the 2008 playoffs the Sharks acquired Brian Campbell prior to the League s trade deadline Two significant trades were made at the trade deadline for defenseman Craig Rivet and winger Bill Guerin The trades coincided with Nabokov putting together a string of outstanding performances The Sharks finished the regular season with the best record in franchise history at 51 26 5 In the Conference Quarter finals the Sharks defeated the Nashville Predators for the second year in a row In the Western Conference Semi finals the Sharks were defeated for the second time by the Detroit Red Wings In advance of the 2007 08 season the Sharks updated their logos and jerseys to adjust to the new Rbk EDGE jersey 24 The Sharks rode on a very hot streak in the month of March They were aided by the trade deadline acquisition of Brian Campbell for whom they gave up Steve Bernier Going the entire month without a regulation loss the Sharks captured their third Pacific Division title with a franchise record 108 points San Jose started the 2008 playoffs beating the Calgary Flames four games to three in San Jose s first ever Game 7 on home ice San Jose eventually lost to the Dallas Stars in the Western Conference Semi finals Game 6 required four overtime periods and was the longest game in the team s history This was the Sharks third playoff loss to Dallas The Ron Wilson era officially came to an end on May 12 when the Sharks fired him citing San Jose s disappointing second round losses in the previous three seasons 25 Wilson ended his tenure in San Jose with 206 wins 122 losses 19 ties and 48 losses in overtime or in the shootout in 385 regular season games and a 28 24 record in 52 postseason games He moved on to be hired as head coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs along with assistant coaches who were also two former Sharks Tim Hunter and Rob Zettler to make up the Toronto coaching staff Playoff contention falling short Edit On June 11 2008 the San Jose Sharks named former Detroit Red Wings assistant coach Todd McLellan as their new head coach for the 2008 09 season 26 Todd Richards Trent Yawney and Jay Woodcroft were named assistant coaches while Brett Heimlich was named staff assistant During the off season San Jose s major headlines included signing defenseman Rob Blake acquiring defensemen Dan Boyle and Brad Lukowich as well as trading defenseman Craig Rivet to the Buffalo Sabres Midway through the season San Jose added playoff warrior Claude Lemieux to their roster Lemieux 43 years old was rejoining the NHL after a five year absence At the trade deadline San Jose acquired checking line winger Travis Moen and the injured defenseman Kent Huskins from the Anaheim Ducks The Sharks finished the regular season as presidents Trophy champions with 53 wins and 117 points both franchise records Despite their successful regular season the Sharks were eliminated by the eighth seeded Anaheim Ducks in six games in the first round of the playoffs The team was heavily criticized by whom for once again failing to succeed in the postseason General manager Doug Wilson promised the team would undergo significant changes in the off season Dany Heatley was acquired by the Sharks during the 2009 off season The Sharks sent Milan Michalek and Jonathan Cheechoo to the Ottawa Senators in return for Heatley In the 2009 off season Wilson held to his word with many major moves The first was Christian Ehrhoff and Brad Lukowich to the Vancouver Canucks It was widely believed by whom that San Jose made this trade so it could free up salary cap space to make a second trade Milan Michalek and Jonathan Cheechoo were sent to the Ottawa Senators in exchange for Dany Heatley and a draft pick Assistant coach Todd Richards left and was replaced by Matt Shaw Aside from the trades several contracts were not renewed including those of Mike Grier Marcel Goc Tomas Plihal and Alexei Semenov San Jose also signed forward Scott Nichol and added grit to the team by signing Joe Callahan Jed Ortmeyer and Manny Malhotra plus Benn Ferriero Jeremy Roenick and Claude Lemieux both announced their retirements from the NHL Another major move by San Jose was stripping Patrick Marleau of the captaincy and assigning it to the newly re signed Rob Blake One reason for the move was that Marleau was named captain by Wilson and McLellan wanted to name his own Dan Boyle and Joe Thornton were named the alternates On February 7 2010 San Jose acquired Niclas Wallin from the Carolina Hurricanes On February 12 2010 San Jose traded Jody Shelley to the New York Rangers for a draft pick 27 The Sharks finished the regular season leading the Western Conference with 113 points and being the second team in the NHL after the Washington Capitals In the Western Conference Quarter finals the Sharks eliminated the Colorado Avalanche In the Conference Semi finals the Sharks defeated the Detroit Red Wings The eventual Stanley Cup champions the Chicago Blackhawks beat the Sharks in the Conference Finals with a four game sweep On June 23 2010 Wilson announced that they would not offer an unrestricted free agent contract to long time goaltender Evgeni Nabokov after playing ten seasons with the team Due to the cap issue the Sharks had to choose between former captain Patrick Marleau and Nabokov On July 1 2010 the Sharks signed goalie Antero Niittymaki from the Tampa Bay Lightning 28 On September 2 2010 the Sharks signed former member of the Chicago Blackhawks and Stanley Cup winning goaltender Antti Niemi to a one year contract 29 Niemi was the goaltender who helped the Blackhawks defeat the Sharks in the Western Conference Finals the season before 30 On March 1 2011 Niemi signed a four year contract extension with San Jose worth 15 2 million 30 The Sharks faced the Vancouver Canucks during the 2011 Western Conference Finals The Sharks would lose the series 4 1 On March 31 2011 the Sharks clinched their 13th and seventh consecutive playoff berth in franchise history with a 6 0 victory over the Dallas Stars Five days later they clinched their sixth Pacific Division championship Entering the 2011 playoffs as the second seed in the Western Conference the Sharks opened their playoff run with the franchise s first ever playoff series against division and state rivals the Los Angeles Kings After winning Game 1 3 2 in overtime on a Joe Pavelski goal the Sharks dropped the second game of the series 4 0 heading to Staples Center with the series tied at one apiece The Kings took another 4 0 lead in Game 3 but five second period goals by the Sharks capped with a Devin Setoguchi overtime winner gave the Sharks a 6 5 victory and tied them for the second biggest comeback in Stanley Cup playoff history They would go on to win Game 4 lose Game 5 and finally win the series in its sixth game with captain Joe Thornton scoring the series winner in the third overtime game of the series The Sharks advanced to the Western Conference Semi finals to face the third seed Detroit Red Wings whom they had defeated in five games during the previous postseason s second round Just like the year prior the Sharks won the first three games of the series and lost the fourth but instead of replicating the previous year s success in Game 5 the Sharks dropped two more games as the Red Wings became the eighth team in NHL history to force a Game 7 after losing the first three games of a series However they would not become the fourth team in history to pull off the comeback as the Sharks prevailed 3 2 with the game winning goal scored by former captain Patrick Marleau who had endured media criticism from former teammate and now NBC Sports Network television personality Jeremy Roenick for his lackluster play in Game 5 of the series against the Red Wings The Sharks advanced to their third Western Conference Finals series their first playoff meeting with the Vancouver Canucks San Jose dropped the first two games of the series at Rogers Arena in Vancouver but rebounded with a 4 3 victory thanks to two first period goals by Marleau in Game 3 However they lost the fourth game of the series and eventually were eliminated from the playoffs after a Game 5 in Vancouver that featured a game tying goal by the Canucks Ryan Kesler with 18 3 seconds remaining in the third period as well as a quirky bounce off a side stanchion that allowed Kevin Bieksa to score the overtime goal that advanced Vancouver to their third Stanley Cup Finals and left the Sharks eliminated in Round 3 for the second consecutive postseason During the 2011 NHL Entry Draft the Sharks acquired Brent Burns through a trade with the Minnesota Wild The first major move made by San Jose in the 2011 off season was to trade popular winger and former first round pick Devin Setoguchi the Sharks 2010 first round pick Charlie Coyle and a first round pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft to the Minnesota Wild for All Star defenseman Brent Burns and a second round pick in the 2012 Draft 31 32 This came after Setoguchi had signed a three year 9 million contract extension with the Sharks The Sharks continued their off season retool by orchestrating a second transaction with the Wild shipping Dany Heatley to Minnesota in exchange for Martin Havlat 33 both to relieve cap space as Heatley was slated to carry a cap hit 2 5 million greater than Havlat s for the duration of their respective contracts and to acquire a player in Havlat with a history of playoff production at the expense of Heatley whose postseason numbers with the Sharks had been far less than stellar the forward had managed to score just five goals in 32 playoff games in two years with San Jose The Sharks finished the 2011 12 season with a 43 29 10 record good for 96 points and the seventh seed in the Stanley Cup playoffs However after winning Game 1 of their first round series with the St Louis Blues in overtime they lost the final four games of the series marking the second time they lost in the Quarter finals under Todd McLellan Despite the underachievement according to whom of the previous year it was announced that McLellan would remain on the bench for a fifth season Prior to the lockout shortened 2012 13 season Hockey Hall of Fame player and coach Larry Robinson was added to McLellan s coaching staff to assist with San Jose s penalty killing unit which was 29th in the NHL during the previous season Assistant coach Jim Johnson was also added to bring a defensive style to the play of the Sharks Brett Heimlich was also promoted to the role of video coordinator to assist the new coaching staff Along with the two coaches veteran defenseman Brad Stuart was re acquired in order to bolster the Sharks blue line and on January 12 he played in his first game at HP Pavilion in over seven years In the first round of the 2013 playoffs the Sharks swept the Vancouver Canucks their first series sweep in franchise history 34 The Sharks would subsequently fall 4 3 to the defending Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings in the second round of the playoffs Prior to the 2013 14 season the Sharks unveiled new uniforms which included less orange along with adding a lace up collar 35 In addition to the new uniforms prior to the start of the season Brett Heimlich took on the additional role of statistical analyst for the coaching staff The Sharks started the season 8 0 1 and were the last team in the NHL to stay undefeated in regulation 36 until October 25 when the Sharks lost to the Boston Bruins 37 In the first round of the 2014 playoffs the Sharks were matched with rivals and eventual Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings Although the Sharks took a 3 0 series lead the Kings came back to tie the series before advancing with a 5 1 win in game seven only the fourth time in the 97 year history of the NHL where a team lost a best of seven series after winning their first three games After the loss general manager Doug Wilson described the Sharks playoff failures like Charlie Brown trying to kick a football On August 20 2014 head coach Todd McLellan announced the team would go into training camp for the 2014 15 season without a captain and that all players including former captains Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau would have the opportunity to compete for the captaincy 38 No captain was named during the season The Sharks hosted the 2015 NHL Stadium Series against the Kings at Levi s Stadium in February 2015 losing 2 1 Earlier in the season the Sharks were in playoff contention but they would ultimately lose games to key Western Conference opponents as the season went on Despite posting a record of 40 33 9 the Sharks finished fifth in the Pacific Division and missed the playoffs for the first time in ten years On April 20 2015 the team announced that they had agreed to part ways with McLellan Johnson and Woodcroft as well as Video Coordinator Heimlich 39 First Stanley Cup Finals Edit Logan Couture lead the Sharks in scoring during their run to the 2016 Stanley Cup Finals On May 28 2015 the team named Peter DeBoer as their head coach 40 During the off season the Sharks let John Scott and Scott Hannan leave as free agents 41 They traded goalie Antti Niemi to the Dallas Stars for a seventh round draft pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft 42 Then they acquired forward Joel Ward 43 goaltender Martin Jones 44 and defenseman Paul Martin 45 They also named forward Joe Pavelski the team s captain Nearly one year after Peter DeBoer s arrival and a shaky start the Sharks surged in the second half of the season to return to the playoffs finishing with 98 points and third in the Pacific Division They defeated the Los Angeles Kings in five games the Nashville Predators in seven games and the St Louis Blues in six games to win the Western Conference championship This marked the first time in franchise history that the Sharks advanced to play in the Stanley Cup Final 46 47 The Sharks ultimately lost the Stanley Cup Finals in the best of seven series against the Pittsburgh Penguins in six games 48 Continuing contention Edit In the following season the Sharks finished in third place in the Pacific Division but were defeated by the Edmonton Oilers in six games in the first round of the 2017 playoffs Following the season long time stalwart Patrick Marleau left the team to sign with the Toronto Maple Leafs ending his 20 year tenure with the team He left holding almost every offensive record in team history such as power play goals goals short handed goals and games played 49 50 In the 2017 18 season the Sharks once again finished in third place in the Pacific Division They swept the Anaheim Ducks in the first round of the 2018 playoffs but lost to the expansion Vegas Golden Knights in six games in the second round The 2018 19 season saw another playoff berth for the Sharks overcoming a three games to one lead once again by the Vegas Golden Knights and in a dramatic comeback in the third period of game 7 and the team would make it into the Western Conference Finals falling to the eventual Stanley Cup champion St Louis Blues in six games On October 8 2019 after two seasons in Toronto Patrick Marleau was re acquired by the Sharks 51 Missing the playoffs Edit On December 11 2019 with the Sharks at 15 16 2 and failing to win a game during their five game away game stretch DeBoer and his staff were fired 52 After DeBoer s firing assistant coach Bob Boughner was named interim head coach 53 In March 2020 four months after Boughner became interim coach the league was forced to suspend operations as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic When the 2019 20 season resumed in June with the playoffs the Sharks were not included 54 Boughner s interim label was removed on September 22 2020 55 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic the divisions for the 2020 21 season were realigned The Sharks played in the West Division 56 The Sharks missed the playoffs for the second year in a row General manager Doug Wilson took medical leave beginning November 26 2021 and resigned while away from the team on April 7 2022 22 Assistant general manager Joe Will was elevated to interim general manager while the team sought a permanent candidate for the role 22 The team missed the playoffs for the third straight season and head coach Bob Boughner and other members of the coaching staff were relieved of duties in the summer in advance of the Sharks naming a new general manager Mike Grier era 2022 present Edit On July 5 the Sharks hired former player Mike Grier to serve as their new general manager becoming the first black general manager in NHL history and fifth general manager in franchise history 57 Grier who played in 221 games with the Sharks from 2006 to 2009 and was a member of the Sharks 2008 09 Presidents Trophy winning team immediately began reshaping the team On July 13 2022 the Sharks traded longtime defenseman Brent Burns to the Carolina Hurricanes 58 and signed forwards Oskar Lindblom 59 Nico Sturm 60 and defenseman Matt Benning 61 On July 26 Grier named former Rangers coach David Quinn as the team s new head coach 62 before later hiring Scott Gordon and Ryan Warsofsky as assistants 63 Team information EditLogo and jerseys Edit The current wordmark logo for the San Jose Sharks introduced in the 2020 21 NHL season The Sharks iconic logo of a shark chomping on a hockey stick has been in use since their inaugural 1991 92 season with slight modifications prior to the 2007 08 season The triangle on the logo references the Bay Area s Red Triangle near the Pacific Ocean The Sharks also use various partial and alternate logos based on the primary logo The original Sharks road jerseys were teal with white gray and black striping and featured white block lettering with black trim Home uniforms were white with teal gray and black striping and featured teal block lettering with black trim Both jerseys included the team s fin logo on either shoulder and were used until the 1997 98 season 64 The Sharks introduced their future road later home jersey as an alternate during the 1997 98 season featuring a darker teal base wide gray sleeve and shoulder striping and modernized lettering A white home later road counterpart was introduced the following season and featured teal and gray shoulder and sleeve stripes In the 2001 02 season the Sharks began wearing a black third jersey featuring the return of the fin logo and minimalist teal and white sleeve stripes 64 Upon switching to the Reebok Edge template in 2007 the Sharks introduced new home and away jerseys The teal home jersey featured a black shoulder yoke while the white road jersey used a teal shoulder yoke Both jerseys replaced gray with orange trim on the stripes and lettering featured the jumping shark logo on the shoulders and added numbers on the right chest 64 65 Before the 2008 09 season the Sharks introduced a new black alternate jersey minus the contrasting shoulder yoke tail stripes and orange trim It also featured the jumping shark logo in front and the SJ alternate logo on the shoulders The jersey served as the basis of their new set introduced before the 2013 14 season which eliminated the shoulder yoke and tail stripes added neckline laces and eliminated the orange accents The front numbers were replaced with the Sharks 25th anniversary logo prior to the 2015 16 season 64 Following the switch to Adidas AdiZero template in 2017 the Sharks kept much of their basic look save for the replacement of the jumping shark logo in favor of the screaming shark logo home jersey and SJ logo road jersey on the shoulder The slogan This Is Sharks Territory was added inside the neckline 64 The black alternates were retired prior to the season but in 2018 a new black jersey was introduced Known as the Stealth jersey it featured a slightly different rendition of the primary Sharks logo an updated version of the original fin logo on the shoulders and stylized circuit board sleeve striping 66 The Stealth uniforms were not used in the 2020 21 season as the Sharks opted to wear their Reverse Retro and Heritage alternate uniforms in the shortened season see descriptions below The Sharks participated in the 2015 NHL Stadium Series by wearing a tricolor jersey of teal white and black accented by the primary Sharks logo in front and a new Northern California alternate logo on the shoulders The back of the jersey remained teal and featured larger lettering 64 During the 2015 16 season as part of their 25th anniversary the Sharks wore a slightly modified version of their original teal jerseys for a few home games These uniforms were brought back in 2021 for the Sharks 30th anniversary albeit modified to the AdiZero cut 64 67 The Sharks wore Reverse Retro alternate uniforms for the 2020 21 season The design used was similar to the teal uniforms they wore from 1997 to 2007 but with a gray base and black stripes 68 The Sharks released new uniforms in 2022 featuring elements inspired from the team s original 1991 1998 uniform set In addition the Sharks changed its pants gloves and home helmet to teal 2 3 The Sharks also unveiled a second Reverse Retro uniform based on the last uniforms worn by their Bay Area predecessors the California Golden Seals The design replaced the Seals wordmark with Sharks in teal and gold trim 69 Broadcasters Edit See also List of San Jose Sharks broadcasters Television Randy Hahn play by play Bret Hedican color commentator 70 Drew Remenda color commentator studio analyst Brodie Brazil studio host Curtis Brown studio analyst 71 Radio Dan Rusanowsky play by play Scott Hannan color commentator for select games Drew Remenda color commentator Bret Hedican color commentatorOne of the first group of broadcasters for the Sharks was Joe Starkey who did play by play alongside Pete Stemkowski both 1991 92 and 1992 93 and Brian Hayward 1991 92 when sidelined with injuries on color commentary CSN Bay Area now NBC Sports Bay Area was the television home of San Jose Sharks until the end of the 2008 09 NHL season when their games moved to Comcast SportsNet California now NBC Sports California Over the air telecasts aired on KGO 7 from 1991 1994 and on KICU 36 from 1995 1999 Other television color commentators include Chris Collins 1996 97 Steve Konroyd 1997 2000 Drew Remenda 2000 06 2007 14 Marty McSorley 2006 07 Jamie Baker 2014 20 and Kendall Coyne Schofield 2019 20 Traditions Edit Sharks pre game entrance through the Shark s mouth The Sharks best known tradition is their pre game entrance scene At the beginning of each Sharks home game the lights go down and a 17 foot open shark mouth is lowered from the rafters As the mouth is lowered the eyes flash red and fog pours out Then a live view of the locker room tunnel with Sharks players is shown on the scoreboard and the goalie leads the team out of the locker room through the mouth and onto the ice 72 The Sharks currently use Seek amp Destroy by Metallica as their entrance song Previous entrance songs include Metallica s version of Breadfan and Get Ready for This by 2 Unlimited The latter song has been used as the team s goal song since 2016 73 Any time the Sharks go on the power play the Jaws theme song is played while the fans do The Chomp extending their arms in front and moving them up and down to form a chomping jaw Since 2015 the fan driven Supporters Club Teal City Crew has sit atop sections 217 218 organizing marches to the arena charity drives and creating tifo related to the games being played most notably the retirement banner for NHL veteran Mike Hoffman for his temporary trade to the Sharks before being later traded that same day to the Florida Panthers Rivalries EditThe Sharks have historically had rivalries with the two other California National Hockey League teams the Anaheim Ducks and the Los Angeles Kings They also share a developing rivalry with the Vegas Golden Knights 74 75 76 77 Season by season record EditThis is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Sharks For the full season by season history see List of San Jose Sharks seasonsNote GP Games played W Wins L Losses T Ties OTL Overtime Losses Pts Points GF Goals for GA Goals against Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs2017 18 82 45 27 10 100 252 229 3rd Pacific Lost in Second Round 2 4 Golden Knights 2018 19 82 46 27 9 101 289 261 2nd Pacific Lost in Conference Finals 2 4 Blues 2019 20 70 29 36 5 63 182 226 8th Pacific Did not qualify2020 21 56 21 28 7 49 151 199 7th West Did not qualify2021 22 82 32 37 13 77 214 264 6th Pacific Did not qualifyPlayers EditCurrent roster Edit viewtalkedit Updated January 18 2023 78 79 No Nat Player Pos S G Age Acquired Birthplace94 Alexander Barabanov RW L 28 2021 Saint Petersburg Russia5 Matt Benning D R 28 2022 St Albert Alberta13 Nick Bonino A C L 34 2021 Hartford Connecticut59 Nick Cicek D L 22 2022 Winnipeg Manitoba39 Logan Couture C C L 33 2007 Guelph Ontario21 Mikey Eyssimont LW L 26 2023 Littleton Colorado38 Mario Ferraro A D L 24 2017 King City Ontario42 Jonah Gadjovich LW L 24 2021 Whitby Ontario73 Noah Gregor C L 24 2016 Beaumont Alberta4 Scott Harrington D L 29 2022 Kingston Ontario48 Tomas Hertl A LW C L 29 2012 Prague Czech Republic65 Erik Karlsson A D R 32 2018 Landsbro Sweden36 Kaapo Kahkonen G L 26 2022 Helsinki Finland71 Nikolai Knyzhov D L 24 2019 Kemerovo Russia11 Luke Kunin C R 25 2022 Chesterfield Missouri62 Kevin Labanc RW R 27 2014 Staten Island New York23 Oskar Lindblom LW L 26 2022 Gavle Sweden16 Steven Lorentz C L 26 2022 Waterloo Ontario24 Jaycob Megna D L 30 2021 Plantation Florida28 Timo Meier LW L 26 2015 Herisau Switzerland83 Matt Nieto LW L 30 2020 Long Beach California77 Markus Nutivaara D L 28 2022 Oulu Finland47 James Reimer G L 34 2021 Morweena Manitoba51 Radim Simek D L 30 2017 Mlada Boleslav Czechoslovakia7 Nico Sturm C L 27 2022 Augsburg Germany10 Evgeny Svechnikov RW L 26 2022 Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Russia44 Marc Edouard Vlasic D L 35 2005 Montreal Quebec Hall of Famers Edit The San Jose Sharks hold an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame Six inductees from the players category of the Hall of Fame are affiliated with the Sharks 80 81 San Jose Sharks Hockey Hall of Fame inducteesHall of Fame playersEd Belfour Rob Blake Igor Larionov Sergei Makarov Teemu Selanne Doug WilsonRetired numbers Edit The Sharks are scheduled to retire Patrick Marleau s No 12 on February 25 2023 82 The team is unable to issue No 99 to its players due to NHL retiring the number league wide in honor of Wayne Gretzky at the 2000 NHL All Star Game 83 Team captains Edit Doug Wilson 1991 1993 Bob Errey 1993 1995 Jeff Odgers 1995 1996 Todd Gill 1996 1998 Owen Nolan 1998 2003 Rotating for first half of 2003 2004 season Mike Ricci first 10 games Vincent Damphousse next 20 games Alyn McCauley next 10 games Patrick Marleau 2004 2009 Rob Blake 2009 2010 Joe Thornton 2010 2014 Joe Pavelski 2015 2019 Logan Couture 2019 presentFranchise regular season scoring leaders Edit Main article List of San Jose Sharks players These are the top ten point scorers in franchise regular season history Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season Recording 804 regular season assists as a Shark Joe Thornton holds the all time record for assists recorded with the team current Sharks 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 GPatrick Marleau C 1 607 522 589 1 111 69Joe Thornton C 1 104 251 804 1 055 96Joe Pavelski C 963 355 406 761 79Logan Couture C 845 296 337 633 75Brent Burns D 798 172 422 594 74Owen Nolan RW 568 206 245 451 79Tomas Hertl C 585 181 206 387 66Jeff Friesen LW 516 149 201 350 68Marc Edouard Vlasic D 1 161 76 270 346 30Jonathan Cheechoo RW 440 165 126 291 66 Goals Player Pos GPatrick Marleau C 522Joe Pavelski C 355Logan Couture C 296Joe Thornton C 251Owen Nolan RW 206Tomas Hertl C 181Brent Burns D 172Jonathan Cheechoo RW 165Jeff Friesen LW 149Marco Sturm LW 128 Assists Player Pos AJoe Thornton C 804Patrick Marleau C 589Brent Burns D 422Joe Pavelski C 406Logan Couture C 337Marc Edouard Vlasic D 270Owen Nolan RW 245Tomas Hertl C 206Dan Boyle D 201Jeff Friesen LW 201 Franchise playoff scoring leaders Edit With 48 playoff points Dan Boyle recorded the second most playoff points by any Sharks defensemen These are the top ten playoff point scorers in franchise playoff history Figures are updated after each completed NHL season Points Player Pos GP G A Pts P GPatrick Marleau C 177 68 52 120 68Joe Thornton C 144 25 90 115 80Logan Couture C 116 48 53 101 87Joe Pavelski C 134 48 52 100 75Brent Burns D 83 20 39 59 71Dan Boyle D 62 11 37 48 77Ryane Clowe LW 68 18 27 45 66Tomas Hertl C 62 24 18 42 68Marc Edouard Vlasic D 142 6 33 39 28Vincent Damphousse C 53 15 23 38 72 Goals Player Pos GPatrick Marleau C 68Logan Couture C 48Joe Pavelski C 48Joe Thornton C 25Tomas Hertl C 24Brent Burns D 20Ryane Clowe LW 18Jonathan Cheechoo RW 16Owen Nolan RW 15Vincent Damphousse C 15 Assists Player Pos AJoe Thornton C 90Logan Couture C 53Joe Pavelski C 52Patrick Marleau C 52Brent Burns D 39Dan Boyle D 37Marc Edouard Vlasic D 33Ryane Clowe LW 27Vincent Damphousse C 23Igor Larionov C 21NHL awards and trophies EditMain article List of San Jose Sharks award winners Jonathan Cheechoo was awarded the Maurice Rocket Richard Trophy after scoring 56 goals in the 2005 06 season Clarence S Campbell Bowl 2015 16Presidents Trophy 2008 09Art Ross Trophy Joe Thornton 2005 06Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy Tony Granato 1996 97Calder Memorial Trophy Evgeni Nabokov 2000 01Hart Memorial Trophy Joe Thornton 2005 06James Norris Memorial Trophy Brent Burns 2016 17Maurice Rocket Richard Trophy Jonathan Cheechoo 2005 06NHL Foundation Player Award Brent Burns 2014 15All Star Game head coach Todd McLellan 2009 2012 traded from the Boston Bruins during the 2005 06 season See also Edit1991 NHL Dispersal and Expansion Drafts List of San Jose Sharks draft picks Strikeforce a mixed martial arts promotion with ties to the franchiseReferences Edit Media Resources PDF 2021 22 San Jose Sharks Media Guide PDF NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved June 27 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link a b San Jose Sharks Introduce New Evolve Uniform SJSharks com NHL Enterprises L P September 14 2022 Retrieved September 15 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link a b Kulesa Anna September 14 2022 Sharks reveal new Evolve uniforms for this season NHL com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved September 15 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link TV and Audio Broadcast Information SJSharks com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved July 20 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Sharks Sports amp Entertainment Announces Changes to Ownership Group SJSharks com NHL Enterprises L P January 30 2013 Retrieved May 20 2019 San Jose s Shark Tank gets new name USA Today July 10 2013 Retrieved May 12 2016 San Jose Sharks August 25 2022 Sharks Enter Affiliation Agreement With Wichita Thunder NHL com Retrieved August 25 2022 Cameron Steve 1994 Feeding Frenzy The Wild New World of the San Jose Sharks Taylor Publishing Co pp 29 38 Steve Carp June 22 2016 Cost of NHL expansion team goes from 2 million to 500 million Las Vegas Review Journal San Jose Sharks year by year records National Hockey League Retrieved January 30 2020 Donovan Michael Leo 1997 The Name Game Football Baseball Hockey amp Basketball How Your Favorite Sports Teams Were Named Toronto Warwick Publishing ISBN 1 895629 74 8 Ledra Cristina Pickens Pat November 23 2016 NHL team nicknames explained National Hockey League Retrieved November 30 2016 Gilmore Tom September 7 1990 Sharks Are Coming NHL Team Named The San Francisco Chronicle The Chronicle Publishing Co p D1 Retrieved April 21 2007 a b San Jose Sharks Hockey Team Retrieved August 13 2008 Sims Calvin December 14 1992 In Disney s Hockey Venture The Real Action Is Off the Ice The New York Times Decade of Teal 10 Years With the San Jose Sharks Woodford Publishing Inc 2001 p 105 Weaver Mike September 30 1993 Sharks Make Debut at S J Arena Tonight Players Eager to Get Feel of Their New Home Mercury News San Jose California p 1F Meacham Jody April 14 1994 Despite Success San Jose Still Fighting for NHL Respect Mercury News San Jose California p 1E Killion Ann May 1 1994 YES Amazing Upset Complete Sharks Head for Toronto Mercury News San Jose California p 1A San Jose Sharks Seagate Technology s In the Crease The Weird Factor 16 October 2007 National Hockey League October 16 2007 Archived from the original on May 29 2010 Retrieved May 5 2010 Sharks name Doug Wilson new GM CBC ca May 13 2003 Retrieved April 7 2022 a b c Gulitti Tom April 7 2022 Wilson steps down as Sharks general manager after 19 seasons NHL com Retrieved April 7 2022 Bell booked on drunk driving hit and run suspicion ESPN September 7 2006 Retrieved October 26 2012 San Jose Sharks News Sharks Unveil New Home and Road Sweaters 17 September 2007 National Hockey League September 17 2007 Retrieved November 11 2008 San Jose Sharks News Wilson Relieved of Head Coaching Duties 05 12 08 Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved May 13 2008 Carchidi Sam April 20 2015 McLellan out in San Jose becomes major Flyers coaching candidate The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved January 4 2017 2010 NHL Trade Deadline list of trades 2010 Trade Deadline National Hockey League Retrieved October 26 2012 Sharks sign goalie Antero Niittymaki to two year contract July 2010 Sharks Add Niemi San Jose Sharks September 2 2010 Retrieved May 26 2016 a b Antti Niemi signs four year contract extension ESPN March 1 2011 Pierre LeBrun June 25 2011 Burns Setoguchi trade good for both clubs ESPN Retrieved October 26 2012 PRESS RELEASE Burns Now With Sharks National Hockey League Retrieved October 26 2012 Sharks Get Havlat For Heatley National Hockey League Retrieved October 26 2012 Dubow Josh May 7 2013 Sharks sweep Canucks with 4 3 win in OT Yahoo Sports Retrieved May 8 2013 Stubits Brian August 20 2013 Sharks unveil new look jerseys with classic approach less orange CBS Sports Retrieved October 31 2013 Sharks Stay Undefeated The New York Times Associated Press October 22 2013 Retrieved October 31 2013 Ice Hockey Bruins end Sharks run Yahoo Sport Reuters October 25 2013 Retrieved October 31 2013 Pollak David August 20 2014 Sharks take away Thornton s captaincy Raffi Torres out indefinitely Contra Costa Times Retrieved August 20 2014 Sharks and McLellan Mutually Agree to Part Ways Sharks Name Peter DeBoer Head Coach San Jose Sharks May 28 2015 Retrieved May 31 2015 Sharks to let John Scott Scott Hannan leave as free agents USA Today Retrieved July 4 2015 Pashelka Curtis June 27 2015 Sharks trade goalie Antti Niemi to Dallas Stars Retrieved July 4 2015 Cooper Josh Joel Ward going to San Jose as identity player on three year 9 825 million deal Retrieved July 4 2015 Villanueva Nikko San Jose Sharks NHL 2015 trade news Obtain goalkeeper Martin Jones from Boston Bruins Retrieved July 4 2015 Sharks sign free agent defenseman Paul Martin Retrieved July 4 2015 Gilmore Eric May 25 2016 Sharks win Game 6 reach first Stanley Cup Final National Hockey League Retrieved May 26 2016 San Jose Sharks End 25 Years of Playoff Disappointments CBS SF Bay Area May 25 2016 Retrieved May 29 2016 Penguins win Stanley Cup defeat Sharks in Game 6 National Hockey League June 13 2016 Retrieved June 14 2016 Sharks GM Doug Wilson Statement on Patrick Marleau National Hockey League July 2 2017 Retrieved November 27 2018 San Jose Sharks Career Leaders Hockey Reference Retrieved November 25 2018 Patrick Marleau returns to Sharks on one year league minimum deal AP source San Jose Sharks fire coach Peter DeBoer USA Today Associated Press December 11 2019 Retrieved December 11 2019 Sharks Announce Changes to Coaching Staff San Jose Sharks December 11 2019 Retrieved December 11 2019 Reopening NHL Season Restart Will Not Include San Jose Sharks KPIX TV May 26 2020 Retrieved September 22 2020 San Jose Sharks Announce Organizational Coaching Staff San Jose Sharks National Hockey League September 22 2020 Retrieved September 22 2020 Sharks Hockey Returns in January National Hockey League Retrieved December 21 2020 Sharks Name Mike Grier as General Manager San Jose Sharks National Hockey League July 5 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 Sharks Make Deal with Hurricanes Trade Burns and Pederson San Jose Sharks National Hockey League July 13 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 Sharks Sign Forward Oskar Lindblom San Jose Sharks National Hockey League July 13 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 Sharks Sign Forward Nico Sturm San Jose Sharks National Hockey League July 13 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 Sharks Sign Defenseman Matt Benning San Jose Sharks National Hockey League July 13 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 Sharks Name David Quinn Head Coach San Jose Sharks National Hockey League July 26 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 San Jose Sharks Announce Coaching Staff San Jose Sharks National Hockey League August 12 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 a b c d e f g Jerseys Through the Years SJSharks com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved September 7 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Sharks Unveil New Home and Road Sweaters SJSharks com NHL Enterprises LP September 17 2007 Retrieved April 6 2018 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Sharks Unveil Stealth Design Announce Third Jersey amp Stealth Nights San Jose Sharks Retrieved September 7 2019 Sharks bring back Heritage jerseys for 30th anniversary celebration NHL com NHL Enterprises L P December 17 2020 Retrieved January 19 2021 Reverse Retro alternate jerseys for all 31 teams unveiled by NHL adidas NHL com NHL Enterprises L P December 1 2020 Retrieved December 5 2020 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link NHL Reverse Retro jerseys for all 32 teams unveiled by adidas NHL com October 20 2022 Retrieved October 20 2022 NBC SPORTS CALIFORNIA ANNOUNCES ITS SAN JOSE SHARKS 2020 21 NHL REGULAR SEASON COVERAGE DETAILS NBC Sports Pressbox January 11 2021 Retrieved March 23 2021 Sharks Announce TV amp Radio Broadcast Teams Purdy Mark October 14 1993 Perfect World Sharks Supply Glitz and Win Mercury News San Jose California p 1G Sharks Goal Song Fan Vote National Hockey League Retrieved August 16 2016 Ducks vs San Jose Sharks playoff showdown matches familiar rivals The Orange County Register April 8 2018 Boylen Rory November 28 2013 Five reasons why Kings Sharks is the best NHL rivalry today The Hockey News Retrieved December 21 2015 Kwong Jessica November 29 2013 Sharks Kings rivalry intensifies with each showdown The Examiner San Francisco Archived from the original on November 29 2013 Retrieved December 21 2015 Thorne Quentin June 24 2019 San Jose Sharks Vegas Golden Knights Rivalry Continues to Intensify San Jose Sharks Roster National Hockey League Retrieved January 18 2023 San Jose Sharks Hockey Transactions The Sports Network Retrieved January 18 2022 Former Sharks star inducted into Hall of Fame Mercury News November 10 2008 Retrieved November 11 2008 Legends of Hockey The Legends Players By Team San Jose Sharks Retrieved February 22 2009 Marleau to have No 12 retired by Sharks first to get honor from team nhl com July 28 2022 Retrieved July 30 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 October 9 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Jose Sharks Official website San Jose strengthens ties to China Sharks nhl com August 20 2008 New look Anyang Halla adds western flavor nhl com July 31 2008 Former NHLers find hockey adventure in Japan nhl com March 26 2008 Dan Rosen Blake caps a likely Hall of Fame career National Hockey League Portals Ice hockey San Francisco Bay Area California Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title San Jose Sharks amp oldid 1133060973, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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