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The 1993–94 New York Rangers season was the 68th season for the franchise. The highlight of the season was winning the Stanley Cup and hosting the NHL All-Star Game. The Rangers clinched the Presidents' Trophy by finishing with the best record in the NHL at 52–24–8, setting a franchise record with 112 points. This marked the last season in which the Rangers (and all other MSG properties) were owned by Paramount Communications (formerly Gulf+Western), which was sold near the end of the season to Viacom, which in turn sold them to ITT Corporation and Cablevision. A couple of years later, ITT would sell their share to Cablevision, who still owns the Rangers today.
[edit] Regular seasonThe 1993–94 season was a magical one for Rangers fans, as Coach Mike Keenan led the Rangers to their first Stanley Cup championship in 54 years. Two years prior, they picked up center Mark Messier, who was an integral part of the Edmonton Oilers' Cup-winning teams. Adam Graves, who also defected from the Oilers, joined the Rangers as well. Other ex-Oilers on the Blueshirts included trade deadline acquisitions Craig MacTavish (now Oilers head coach) and Glenn Anderson. Brian Leetch and Sergei Zubov were a solid 1–2 punch on defence. In fact, Zubov led the team in scoring that season with 89 points, and continued to be an all-star defenceman throughout his career. Graves would set a team record with 52 goals, breaking the old record of 50 held by Vic Hadfield. This record would later be broken by Jaromir Jagr on April 8, 2006, against the Boston Bruins. [edit] Season standings
[edit] Scoring leaders
[edit] Game log[edit] Player stats[edit] ForwardsNote: GP= Games played; G= Goals; A= Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties In Minutes
[edit] DefencemenNote: GP= Games played; G= Goals; A= Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties In Minutes
[edit] GoaltendingNote: GP= Games played; W= Wins; L= Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals Against Average
[edit] Transactions
[edit] New York Rangers 1994 Stanley Cup championsRoster
Stanley Cup engraving
[edit] PlayoffsMain article: 1994 Stanley Cup playoffs [edit] Stanley Cup FinalsMain article: 1994 Stanley Cup Finals
During the finals, Coach Mike Keenan made history by becoming the first head coach in a Game 7 Stanley Cup Finals on two different teams, having been with the Philadelphia Flyers in 1987 when they lost to the Oilers. Mike Babcock would join him in that distinction in 2009 while with the Detroit Red Wings[2] With the Rangers winning Game 7, Keenan avoided becoming the first coach in NHL history to lose a Game 7 Stanley Cup Finals on two different teams, but this unfortunate fate would meet Babcock in 2009 when the Red Wings lost to Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins.[2] [edit] Impact on the NBA FinalsFurther information: 1994 NBA Finals The New York Knicks, co-captained by Patrick Ewing and Charles Oakley and coached by Pat Riley, were in the NBA Finals when the Rangers won the Stanley Cup, which made their first Stanley Cup championship in 54 years a great part of a great chapter in New York City sports history, according to Chicago Bulls Coach Phil Jackson (himself a former Knick and now coach of the Los Angeles Lakers)[3] because Keenan had been part of a concurrent finals series in basketball and hockey in the same city before. In 1992, he coached the Blackhawks to the Stanley Cup Finals, though they got swept by the Pittsburgh Penguins, as Jackson coached the Bulls, led by Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, to the second of their first three straight NBA titles. However, like in Chicago, Keenan would not see New York City have the distinction of having both NBA and NHL championships in the same year, as the Knicks fell to the Houston Rockets, led by Ewing's rival, Hakeem Olajuwon, in seven games. Nevertheless, this great chapter helped him draw many parallels between the two dramas, according to Jackson.[3] Among them were the Rangers' win, because they had many characteristics that were there in his 1992 Bulls, and a second round playoff series between the Knicks and the Bulls that went the full seven games.[3] [edit] Awards and records
[edit] Offseason[edit] Draft picks
[edit] References
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