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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Hockey League team in San Jose, California
^ "NHL teams in new divisions for 2020-21 season" . NHL.com . December 20, 2020 . Retrieved December 24, 2020 .
^ "Media Resources" (PDF) . 2019β20 San Jose Sharks Media Guide . NHL Enterprises, L.P . Retrieved October 7, 2020 .
^ "Sharks Unveil New Home and Road Sweaters" . SJSharks.com . NHL Enterprises, LP. September 17, 2007 . Retrieved April 6, 2018 . The newly designed sweater incorporates the updated Sharks logo and the team's primary colors of Deep Pacific Teal, Burnt Orange and Black.
^ "Sharks Sports & 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 .
^ Cameron, Steve (1994). Feeding Frenzy! The Wild New World of the San Jose Sharks . Taylor Publishing Co. pp.Β 29β38.
^ 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 & Basketball How Your Favorite Sports Teams Were Named . Toronto : Warwick Publishing. ISBN Β 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 β NHL Team Named" . The San Francisco Chronicle . The Chronicle Publishing Co. p.Β D1 . Retrieved April 21, 2007 .
^ Jump up to: 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.Β 105.
^ Weaver, Mike (September 30, 1993). "Sharks Make Debut at S.J. Arena Tonight: Players Eager to Get Feel of Their New Home". San Jose Mercury News . San Jose, California. p.Β 1F.
^ Meacham, Jody (April 14, 1994). "Despite Success, San Jose Still Fighting for NHL Respect". San Jose Mercury News . San Jose, California. p.Β 1E.
^ Killion, Ann (May 1, 1994). "YES! Amazing Upset Complete β Sharks Head for Toronto". San Jose Mercury News . San Jose, California. p.Β 1A.
^ "San Jose Sharks β Seagate Technology's "In the Crease": The Weird Factor β 16 October 2007" . National Hockey League. October 16, 2007. Archived from the original on May 29, 2010 . Retrieved May 5, 2010 .
^ "Bell booked on drunk driving, hit-and-run suspicion" . ESPN . September 7, 2006 . Retrieved October 26, 2012 .
^ "San Jose Sharks β News: Sharks Unveil New Home and Road Sweaters β 17 September 2007" . National Hockey League. September 17, 2007 . Retrieved November 11, 2008 .
^ San Jose Sharks β News: Wilson Relieved of Head Coaching Duties β 05/12/08
^ 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 β 2010 Trade Deadline" . National Hockey League . Retrieved October 26, 2012 .
^ David Pollak, San Jose Mercury News. " Sharks sign goalie Antero Niittymaki to two-year contract ." July 1, 2010.
^ "Sharks Add Niemi" . San Jose Sharks . September 2, 2010 . Retrieved May 26, 2016 .
^ Jump up to: a b "Antti Niemi signs four-year contract extension" . ESPN. March 1, 2011.
^ Pierre LeBrun. "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 4β3 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 β 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 .
^ http://sharks.nhl.com/club/news.htm?id=764206&navid=TW
^ "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" . Retrieved July 4, 2015 .
^ Pashelka, Curtis. "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, $9.825Β 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 .
^ https://www.cbssports.com/nhl/news/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" . NHL.com . Retrieved December 21, 2020 .
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g "Jerseys Through the Years" . San Jose Sharks . Retrieved September 7, 2019 .
^ "Sharks Unveil Stealth Design, Announce Third Jersey & Stealth Nights" . San Jose Sharks . Retrieved September 7, 2019 .
^ "Sharks bring back Heritage jerseys for 30th anniversary celebration" . National Hockey League. December 17, 2020 . Retrieved January 19, 2021 .
^ "Reverse Retro alternate jerseys for all 31 teams unveiled by NHL, adidas" . National Hockey League. December 1, 2020 . Retrieved December 5, 2020 .
^ Jump up to: a b c d http://sharks.nhl.com/club/news.htm?id=729139
^ https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/09/05/sharks-add-kendall-coyne-schofield-to-tv-broadcasts/
^ Purdy, Mark (October 14, 1993). "Perfect World: Sharks Supply Glitz and Win". San Jose Mercury News . San Jose, California. p.Β 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 β Vegas Golden Knights Rivalry Continues to Intensify" .
^ "San Jose Sharks Roster" . National Hockey League . Retrieved February 7, 2021 .
^ "San Jose Sharks Hockey Transactions" . The Sports Network . Retrieved December 13, 2019 .
^ "Former Sharks star inducted into Hall of Fame" . San Jose Mercury News . November 10, 2008 . Retrieved November 11, 2008 .
^ "Legends of Hockey β The Legends β Players By Team β San Jose Sharks" . Retrieved February 22, 2009 .
^ "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 .
Founded in 1991
Based in San Jose, California
Sports teams based in the San Francisco Bay Area
CRL
Los Angeles Mongrels
Oakland Originals
Sacramento Immortals
San Francisco Savage
Founded in 1967
Based in Oakland, California
Relocated as the Cleveland Barons in 1976
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 West Division . The franchise is owned by San Jose Sports & Entertainment Enterprises . Beginning play in the 1991β92 season , the Sharks initially played their home games at the Cow Palace , before they moved to their present home, now named SAP Center at San Jose , in 1993. The SAP Center is known locally as the Shark Tank. [5]
The Sharks were founded in 1991 and were 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 2008β09 season . They have also won six division titles as a member of the Pacific Division since 1993.
The club is affiliated with the San Jose Barracuda of the American Hockey League .
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 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 be 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 1991β92 season and being allowed to take a certain number of players from the North Stars to their new club. [6] 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$45Β million [7] and the new franchise was approved on May 9. [8]
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." [9] [10] 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 Levineβthe team's first marketing headβsaid of the new name, "Sharks are relentless, determined, swift, agile, bright and fearless. We plan to build an organization that has all those qualities." [11]
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. [12] Though the 1991β92 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 1992β93 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 1992β93 season. [12]
Despite the Sharks' futility in the standings, the team led the NHL's merchandise sales with $150Β million, accounting for 27% of the NHL's total and behind only National Basketball Association champions Chicago Bulls among all North American leagues. [13] Several team "firsts" happened in the 1992β93 season. On November 17, 1992, San Jose goaltender Arturs Irbe recorded the first shutout in team history, defeating the Los Angeles Kings 6β0. 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. [14]
For their third season, 1993β94 , the Sharks moved to their new home, the San Jose Arena , and were placed in the Western Conference's Pacific Division . [15] Under head coach Kevin Constantine , the Sharks pulled off the biggest turnaround in NHL history, finishing with a 33β35β16 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. [16] 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 3β2. [17] In the second round, the Sharks had a 3β2 series lead over the Toronto Maple Leafs , but lost the final two games in Toronto , including an overtime loss in Game 6.
In 1994β95 , 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. [18]
In 1995β96 , 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 . 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 1997β98 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 1999β2000 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 2000β01 , 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 2001β02 . 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 2001β02 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 ge
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