Anaheim Ducks
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The Anaheim Ducks are a professional ice hockey team based in Anaheim, California. The Ducks compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Pacific Division in the Western Conference. The team plays its home games at Honda Center, and is owned by Henry and Susan Samueli.
The Ducks were founded as an expansion team for the 1993–94 season by the Walt Disney Company. In 2005, Disney sold the team to the Samuelis, who changed the team's name to the Anaheim Ducks before the 2006–07 season.
The Ducks have won six Pacific Division championships and have advanced to the Stanley Cup Final twice. They lost once but won the Stanley Cup in 2007 against the Ottawa Senators. The team has also produced two winners of the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player of the playoffs.
History
Start of a franchise (1993–1994)
The Mighty Ducks of Anaheim began in 1993, founded by The Walt Disney Company. The team joined the NHL in December 1992. On March 1, 1993, the team’s name was announced at the Anaheim Arena. Inspired by a Disney film, the name came from a youth hockey team that became champions. Tony Tavares became the team president, and Jack Ferreira the general manager. Ron Wilson was chosen as the first head coach. The team’s first players were chosen in the 1993 NHL expansion draft and entry draft. Paul Kariya, selected in the entry draft, became a key player for many years. The team finished their first season with a lot of wins for a new team.
Paul Kariya era (1994–2003)
Paul Kariya started in the 1994–95 season and quickly became a star. He played in the NHL All-Star Game and helped the team get better players. The team reached the postseason in the 1996–97 season but lost in the second round to the Detroit Red Wings. Kariya had injuries and contract problems, which affected the team. The Ducks struggled in the next years and missed the playoffs.
Western Conference champions (2002–2003)
In the 2002–03 season, the Mighty Ducks made the postseason and faced the Detroit Red Wings. They upset the defending champions and reached the Western Conference finals for the first time. There, they faced the Minnesota Wild and won. The team reached the Stanley Cup Final but lost to the New Jersey Devils.
New ownership, Selanne's return and franchise rebrand (2003–2008)
After the 2002–03 season, Paul Kariya left the team. In 2005, Henry and Susan Samueli bought the Mighty Ducks from Disney. Brian Burke became the new general manager, and Randy Carlyle was hired as head coach. Teemu Selanne returned to the team. The team was renamed the Anaheim Ducks and got new colors and a logo.
Stanley Cup champions (2006–2007)
The Ducks started the 2006–07 season with a new look. They traded for Chris Pronger and began the season undefeated for the first 16 games. The Ducks won their first division title and reached the Stanley Cup Final. There, they faced the Ottawa Senators and won, claiming their first Stanley Cup. Scott Niedermayer won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the best playoff player.
Post-Stanley Cup (2007–2008)
The Ducks started the 2007–08 season without Scott Niedermayer and Teemu Selanne. The team finished strong and made the playoffs but lost in the first round to the Dallas Stars. General manager Brian Burke bought out Todd Bertuzzi’s contract and traded Mathieu Schneider.
Bob Murray era (2008–2021)
The Ducks struggled at the start of the 2008–09 season, and Brian Burke left to join the Toronto Maple Leafs. Bob Murray became the new general manager. The team made the playoffs but lost. In the next seasons, the Ducks had injuries and changes in players, leading to uneven performance. They missed the playoffs in the 2009–10 season. The team had several coaching changes and struggled to stay in the playoffs.
Rebuild (2021–present)
In 2019, Dallas Eakins became the new head coach. The team missed the playoffs for several years. In 2021, an investigation led to Bob Murray resigning. Pat Verbeek was named the new general manager. The Ducks continued to struggle, finishing last in the league in the 2022–23 season. Greg Cronin was hired as head coach but was later fired. Joel Quenneville was hired as the new head coach.
Team information
Name
The Anaheim Ducks started in 1993 as the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, named after The Mighty Ducks movies. After the Walt Disney Company sold the team in 2005, the name changed to Anaheim Ducks.
Uniforms
1993–2006
The original Mighty Ducks jerseys had special colors and designs. The road jersey had eggplant and jade colors with silver, purple, and white stripes. The home jersey was white and jade with purple, white, and silver stripes.
2006–2014
After becoming the Anaheim Ducks, the team changed to black and white jerseys with gold and orange stripes. In 2010, they added a black alternate jersey with orange stripes.
2014–2024
In 2014, the Ducks changed to new jerseys with orange accents. They also brought back some designs from their early years for special occasions.
2024–present
In 2024, the Ducks introduced new jerseys made by Fanatics. The home jersey is orange with black, gold, and white stripes, and the away jersey is white with orange details.
Colors and logos
The team's original colors were eggplant and jade. After 2006, they changed to orange, black, and gold. The original logo showed a duck mask, and the current logo features a webbed foot forming a "D".
Mascot
The team's mascot is a cartoon duck named Wild Wing, who has been with the team since it began. He wears a Ducks jersey with the number 93, for the year the team started. Wild Wing often comes down from the arena ceiling during games.
Season-by-season record
This is a list of the last five seasons for the Ducks. For the full history, see List of Anaheim Ducks seasons.
| Season | GP | W | L | OTL | Pts | GF | GA | Finish | Playoffs |
| 2021–22 | 82 | 31 | 37 | 14 | 76 | 232 | 271 | 7th, Pacific | Did not qualify |
| 2022–23 | 82 | 23 | 47 | 12 | 58 | 209 | 338 | 8th, Pacific | Did not qualify |
| 2023–24 | 82 | 27 | 50 | 5 | 59 | 204 | 295 | 7th, Pacific | Did not qualify |
| 2024–25 | 82 | 35 | 37 | 10 | 80 | 221 | 263 | 6th, Pacific | Did not qualify |
| 2025–26 | 82 | 43 | 33 | 6 | 92 | 273 | 288 | 3rd, Pacific | Lost in second round, 2–4 (Golden Knights) |
Players and personnel
Current roster
Updated May 15, 2026
Team captains
Reference:
- Troy Loney, 1993–1994
- Randy Ladouceur, 1994–1996
- Paul Kariya, 1996–2003
- Teemu Selanne, 1998 (interim)
- Steve Rucchin, 2003–2004
- Scott Niedermayer, 2005–2007, 2008–2010
- Chris Pronger, 2007–2008
- Ryan Getzlaf, 2010–2022
- Radko Gudas, 2024–present
Coaches
Main article: List of Anaheim Ducks head coaches
- Ron Wilson, 1993–1997
- Pierre Page, 1997–1998
- Craig Hartsburg, 1998–2000
- Guy Charron, 2000–2001
- Bryan Murray, 2001–2002
- Mike Babcock, 2002–2004
- Randy Carlyle, 2005–2011, 2016–2019
- Bruce Boudreau, 2011–2016
- Bob Murray, 2019 (interim)
- Dallas Eakins, 2019–2023
- Greg Cronin, 2023–2025
- Joel Quenneville, 2025–present
General managers
Main article: List of Anaheim Ducks general managers
- Jack Ferreira, 1993–1998
- Pierre Gauthier, 1998–2002
- Bryan Murray, 2002–2004
- Al Coates, 2004–2005 (interim)
- Brian Burke, 2005–2008
- Bob Murray, 2008–2021
- Jeff Solomon, 2021–2022 (interim)
- Pat Verbeek, 2022–present
First-round draft picks
See also: List of Anaheim Ducks draft picks
- (/wiki/1993_NHL_entry_draft): Paul Kariya (4th overall)
- (/wiki/1994_NHL_entry_draft): Oleg Tverdovsky (2nd overall)
- (/wiki/1995_NHL_entry_draft): Chad Kilger (4th overall)
- (/wiki/1996_NHL_entry_draft): Ruslan Salei (9th overall)
- (/wiki/1997_NHL_entry_draft): Michael Holmqvist (18th overall)
- (/wiki/1998_NHL_entry_draft): Vitaly Vishnevskiy (5th overall)
- (/wiki/2000_NHL_entry_draft): Alexei Smirnov (12th overall)
- (/wiki/2001_NHL_entry_draft): Stanislav Chistov (5th overall)
- (/wiki/2002_NHL_entry_draft): Joffrey Lupul (7th overall)
- (/wiki/2003_NHL_entry_draft): Ryan Getzlaf (19th overall), Corey Perry (28th overall)
- (/wiki/2004_NHL_entry_draft): Ladislav Smid (9th overall)
- (/wiki/2005_NHL_entry_draft): Bobby Ryan (2nd overall)
- (/wiki/2006_NHL_entry_draft): Mark Mitera (19th overall)
- (/wiki/2007_NHL_entry_draft): Logan MacMillan (19th overall)
- (/wiki/2008_NHL_entry_draft): Jake Gardiner (17th overall)
- (/wiki/2009_NHL_entry_draft): Peter Holland (15th overall), Kyle Palmieri (26th overall)
- (/wiki/2010_NHL_entry_draft): Cam Fowler (12th overall), Emerson Etem (29th overall)
- (/wiki/2011_NHL_entry_draft): Rickard Rakell (30th overall)
- (/wiki/2012_NHL_entry_draft): Hampus Lindholm (6th overall)
- (/wiki/2013_NHL_entry_draft): Shea Theodore (26th overall)
- (/wiki/2014_NHL_entry_draft): Nick Ritchie (10th overall)
- (/wiki/2015_NHL_entry_draft): Jacob Larsson (27th overall)
- (/wiki/2016_NHL_entry_draft): Max Jones (24th overall), Sam Steel (30th overall)
- (/wiki/2018_NHL_entry_draft): Isac Lundestrom (23rd overall)
- (/wiki/2019_NHL_entry_draft): Trevor Zegras (9th overall), Brayden Tracey (29th overall)
- (/wiki/2020_NHL_entry_draft): Jamie Drysdale (6th overall), Jacob Perreault (27th overall)
- (/wiki/2021_NHL_entry_draft): Mason McTavish (3rd overall)
- (/wiki/2022_NHL_entry_draft): Pavel Mintyukov (10th overall), Nathan Gaucher (22nd overall)
- (/wiki/2023_NHL_entry_draft): Leo Carlsson (2nd overall)
- (/wiki/2024_NHL_entry_draft): Beckett Sennecke (3rd overall), Stian Solberg (23rd overall)
- (/wiki/2025_NHL_entry_draft): Roger McQueen (10th overall)
League and team honors
See also: List of Anaheim Ducks award winners
NHL awards and trophies
Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy
Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy
NHL General Manager of the Year Award
- Paul Kariya: 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99
- Teemu Selanne: 1996–97
- Scott Niedermayer: 2005–06, 2006–07
- Corey Perry: 2010–11, 2013–14
- Teemu Selanne: 1997–98, 1998–99
- Paul Kariya: 1999–2000, 2002–03
- Chris Pronger: 2006–07
- Lubomir Visnovsky: 2010–11
- Francois Beauchemin: 2012–13
- Ryan Getzlaf: 2013–14
- Paul Kariya: 1994–95
- Bobby Ryan: 2008–09
- Hampus Lindholm: 2013–14
- Frederik Andersen: 2013–14
- John Gibson: 2015–16
- Trevor Zegras: 2021–22
- Cutter Gauthier: 2024–25
Retired numbers
The Anaheim Ducks have three retired numbers: Teemu Selanne’s number 8, retired on January 11, 2015, Paul Kariya’s number 9, retired on October 21, 2018, and Scott Niedermayer’s number 27, retired on February 17, 2019.
The NHL retired Wayne Gretzky’s number 99 for all teams at the 2000 NHL All-Star Game.
Hall of Fame
The Anaheim Ducks are connected to several players in the Hockey Hall of Fame. Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanne are two of the most famous players who helped the team win many games.
Franchise scoring leaders
These are the top point-scorers in the Ducks' history.
Franchise goaltending leaders
These are the top goaltenders in the Ducks' history by wins.
Franchise single-season records
- Most goals: Teemu Selanne, 52 (1997–98)
- Most assists: Ryan Getzlaf, 66 (2008–09)
- Most points: Teemu Selanne, 109 (1996–97)
- Most penalty minutes: Todd Ewen, 285 (1995–96)
- Most goals, defenseman: Lubomir Visnovsky, 18 (2010–11)
- Most assists, defenseman: Scott Niedermayer, 54 (2006–07)
- Most points, defenseman: Scott Niedermayer, 69 (2006–07)
- Most goals, rookie: Bobby Ryan, 31 (2008–09)
- Most assists, rookie: Trevor Zegras, 38 (2021–22)
- Most points, rookie: Trevor Zegras, 61 (2021–22)
- Most wins: Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 36 (2006–07)
- Most shutouts: Jean-Sebastien Giguere, 8 (2002–03)
All-time franchise records
See also: List of Anaheim Ducks records
Regular season
- Most games: Ryan Getzlaf, 1,157
- Most goals: Teemu Selanne, 457
- Most assists: Ryan Getzlaf, 737
- Most points: Ryan Getzlaf, 1019
- Best plus/minus: Teemu Selanne, 120
- Most power-play goals: Teemu Selanne, 182
- Most game-winning goals: Teemu Selanne, 77
- Most overtime goals: Ryan Getzlaf, 11
- Most shots: Teemu Selanne, 2,964
Playoffs
- Most playoff games: Ryan Getzlaf, 121
- Most playoff goals: Ryan Getzlaf, 37
- Most playoff assists: Ryan Getzlaf, 81
- Most playoff points: Ryan Getzlaf, 118
- Most playoff power-play goals: Ryan Getzlaf and Teemu Selanne, 15
- Most playoff game-winning goals: Corey Perry and Teemu Selanne, 8
- Most playoff shots: Corey Perry, 328
| No. | Player | Position | Tenure | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | Teemu Selanne | RW | 1996–2001 2005–2014 | January 11, 2015 |
| 9 | Paul Kariya | LW | 1994–2003 | October 21, 2018 |
| 27 | Scott Niedermayer | D | 2005–2010 | February 17, 2019 |
| Player | GP | W | L | T/O | GA | GAA | SA | SV% | SO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jean-Sebastien Giguere | 447 | 206 | 163 | 59 | 1,057 | 2.47 | 12,347 | .914 | 32 |
| John Gibson | 506 | 204 | 217 | 63 | 1,387 | 2.89 | 15,420 | .910 | 24 |
| Guy Hebert | 441 | 173 | 202 | 52 | 1,155 | 2.75 | 12,968 | .911 | 27 |
| Jonas Hiller | 326 | 162 | 110 | 32 | 768 | 2.51 | 9,192 | .916 | 21 |
| Frederik Andersen | 125 | 77 | 26 | 12 | 271 | 2.33 | 3,305 | .918 | 6 |
| Lukas Dostal* | 177 | 72 | 78 | 17 | 533 | 3.23 | 5,235 | .898 | 2 |
| Mikhail Shtalenkov | 122 | 34 | 53 | 11 | 320 | 3.14 | 3,097 | .897 | 3 |
| Ryan Miller | 87 | 33 | 27 | 14 | 219 | 2.87 | 2,434 | .910 | 5 |
| Ilya Bryzgalov | 77 | 27 | 27 | 9 | 173 | 2.63 | 1,799 | .904 | 2 |
| Jonathan Bernier | 39 | 21 | 7 | 4 | 83 | 2.50 | 982 | .915 | 2 |
Broadcasters
The Anaheim Ducks have announcers who help fans enjoy the games. John Ahlers does the TV play-by-play, and Brian Hayward gives TV color analysis. For radio, Steve Carroll does the play-by-play and Emerson Etem gives color commentary.
In the past, other announcers like Matt McConnell, Charlie Simmer, Pat Conacher, Darren Eliot, Mike Greenlay, Brent Severyn have also worked with the team.
All games can be streamed on Victory+. Most games are shown on TV through Fox Television Stations' KCOP-TV or KTTV. Radio broadcasts are on Ducks Stream, an online station on TuneIn.
Images
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