2011–12 AHL season explained

2011–12 AHL season
League:American Hockey League
Sport:Ice hockey
Duration:October 7, 2011 - April 15, 2012
Season:Regular season
Season Champ Name:Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy
Season Champs:Norfolk Admirals
Mvp:Cory Conacher
Mvp Link:Les Cunningham Award
Top Scorer:Chris Bourque
Top Scorer Link:John B. Sollenberger Trophy
Playoffs:Playoffs
Playoffs Link:2012 Calder Cup playoffs
Finals:Calder Cup
Finals Champ:Norfolk Admirals
Finals Runner-Up:Toronto Marlies
Playoffs Mvp:Alexandre Picard
Playoffs Mvp Link:Jack A. Butterfield Trophy
Seasonslistnames:AHL

The 2011–12 AHL season was the 76th season of the American Hockey League. The regular season began on October 7, 2011, and concluded on April 15, 2012. The 2012 Calder Cup playoffs follows the conclusion of the regular season.[1]

Regular season

The 2011–12 season will feature scheduling changes in the regular season and post season. The major change will be the elimination of four games and extending the season by a week. The reasoning behind the change is to eliminate teams having to play four games in five nights. This will bring the total number of games for each team to 76. To accomplish that, the league has decided to add an additional week to the season.[2]

On July 5, 2011, the league's new realignment was revealed. The league moved from having four divisions of seven/eight teams to six even divisions of five teams, similar to that of the NHL. The Western Conference consists of the West, Midwest, and North divisions; the Eastern Conference consists of the Atlantic, Northeast, and East divisions. As a result of the Manitoba Moose relocating to St. John's, they have switched to the Eastern Conference, while the Charlotte Checkers have moved to the Western Conference.

The third installment of the AHL Outdoor Classic took place in Canada, with the Hamilton Bulldogs hosting the Toronto Marlies in a regional rivalry game at Ivor Wynne Stadium on January 21. The Marlies won the game 7–2 in front of a crowd of 20,565 spectators. This marks the first time the event has been played in Canada, and the event was moved up to the third weekend in January, instead of the third weekend in February as it has been in previous years. In addition to this game, another outdoor AHL game, between the Hershey Bears and the Adirondack Phantoms, took place as part of the 2012 NHL Winter Classic festivities on January 6, 2012. The Phantoms won that game 4–3 in overtime, and an AHL attendance record was set as the game drew a crowd of 45,653 fans.[3]

The Norfolk Admirals set a professional hockey record with 28 consecutive wins.[4]

Playoff format

The 2011–12 playoff format will change as a result of the scheduling changes. The first round of the playoffs will now be a best of five series and the following rounds will continue to be best of seven game series'.

Eight teams per conference will qualify for the playoffs. The three division winners will earn the top three seeds. Seeds four through eight will be determined by regular season points out of the remaining teams in the division. Team will be re-seeded after the first round so that the highest remaining seed plays the lowest remaining seed.

Team and NHL affiliation changes

Team changes

Affiliation changes

AHL teamNew affiliateOld affiliate
St. John's IceCaps (formerly Manitoba)Winnipeg (formerly Atlanta)
Atlanta (now Winnipeg)
Florida
Phoenix
Buffalo

Final standings

indicates team clinched division and a playoff spot
indicates team clinched a playoff spot
indicates team was eliminated from playoff contention

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division
y–St. John's IceCaps (WPG) 76 43 25 5 3 94 240 216
x–Manchester Monarchs (LAK) 76 39 32 2 3 83 207 208
e–Portland Pirates (PHX) 76 36 31 4 5 81 223 254
e–Providence Bruins (BOS) 76 35 34 3 4 77 193 214
e–Worcester Sharks (SJS) 76 31 33 4 8 74 199 218
Northeast Division
y–Bridgeport Sound Tigers (NYI) 76 41 26 3 6 91 233 219
x–Connecticut Whale (NYR) 76 36 26 7 7 86 210 208
e–Adirondack Phantoms (PHI) 76 37 35 2 2 78 204 217
e–Springfield Falcons (CBJ) 76 36 34 3 3 78 217 231
e–Albany Devils (NJD) 76 31 34 6 5 73 190 226
East Division
y–Norfolk Admirals (TBL) 76 55 18 1 2 113 273 180
x–Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (PIT) 76 44 25 2 5 95 235 215
x–Hershey Bears (WSH) 76 38 26 4 8 88 244 225
x–Syracuse Crunch (ANA) 76 37 29 5 5 84 238 234
e–Binghamton Senators (OTT) 76 29 40 5 2 65 201 243

Western Conference

North Division
y–Toronto Marlies (TOR) 76 44 24 5 3 96 217 175
x–Rochester Americans (BUF) 76 36 26 10 4 86 224 221
e–Lake Erie Monsters (COL) 76 37 29 3 7 84 189 210
e–Grand Rapids Griffins (DET) 76 33 32 7 4 77 245 249
e–Hamilton Bulldogs (MTL) 76 34 35 2 5 75 185 226
Midwest Division
y–Chicago Wolves (VAN) 76 42 27 4 3 91 213 193
x–Milwaukee Admirals (NSH) 76 40 29 2 5 87 210 190
e–Charlotte Checkers (CAR) 76 38 29 3 6 85 209 214
e–Peoria Rivermen (STL) 76 39 33 2 2 82 217 207
e–Rockford IceHogs (CHI) 76 35 32 2 7 79 207 228
West Division
y–Oklahoma City Barons (EDM) 76 45 22 4 5 99 213 176
x–Abbotsford Heat (CGY) 76 42 26 3 5 92 200 201
x–San Antonio Rampage (FLA) 76 41 30 3 2 87 197 204
x–Houston Aeros (MIN) 76 35 25 5 11 86 202 206
e–Texas Stars (DAL) 76 31 40 3 2 67 224 251

Statistical leaders

Leading skaters

The following players are sorted by points, then goals.[5]

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/– = P Plus–minus; PIM = Penalty minutes

PlayerTeamGPGAPtsPIM
Hershey Bears73 27 66 93 42
Norfolk Admirals75 39 41 80 114
Syracuse Crunch75 32 42 74 120
Peoria Rivermen66 21 49 70 20
Hershey Bears43 11 59 70 34
Norfolk Admirals75 31 37 68 28
Norfolk Admirals64 25 42 67 70
Texas Stars76 13 53 66 46
Hershey Bears61 33 32 65 32
Connecticut Whale65 25 39 64 130

Leading goaltenders

The following goaltenders with a minimum 1500 minutes played led the league in goals against average.[6]

GP = Games played; TOI = Time on ice (in minutes); SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average; SV% = Save percentage; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout loss

PlayerTeamGP TOI SA GA SO GAA SV% W L OT
Toronto Marlies39 2292 1052 78 4 2.04 0.926 22 15 1
Oklahoma City Barons43 2544 1165 88 5 2.07 0.924 26 14 2
Lake Erie Monsters32 1935 997 68 3 2.11 0.932 16 11 5
Milwaukee Admirals56 3283 1525 119 5 2.17 0.922 31 19 2
Norfolk Admirals45 2582 1109 96 5 2.23 0.913 32 11 0

Calder Cup playoffs

See main article: 2012 Calder Cup playoffs.

AHL awards

Calder Cup : Norfolk Admirals
Les Cunningham Award : Cory Conacher, Norfolk
John B. Sollenberger Trophy : Chris Bourque, Hershey
Willie Marshall Award : Cory Conacher, Norfolk
Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award : Cory Conacher, Norfolk
Eddie Shore Award : Mark Barberio, Norfolk
Aldege "Baz" Bastien Memorial Award : Yann Danis, Oklahoma City
Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award : Ben Scrivens, Toronto
Louis A. R. Pieri Memorial Award : Jon Cooper, Norfolk
Fred T. Hunt Memorial Award : Chris Minard, Grand Rapids
Yanick Dupre Memorial Award : Nick Petrecki, Worcester
Jack A. Butterfield Trophy : Alexandre Picard, Norfolk
Richard F. Canning Trophy : Norfolk Admirals
Robert W. Clarke Trophy : Toronto Marlies
Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy

Norfolk Admirals

Frank Mathers Trophy

Norfolk Admirals

Norman R. "Bud" Poile Trophy

Chicago Wolves

Emile Francis Trophy : St. John's IceCaps
F. G. "Teddy" Oke Trophy

Bridgeport Sound Tigers

Sam Pollock Trophy

Toronto Marlies

John D. Chick Trophy

Oklahoma City Barons

James C. Hendy Memorial Award

Glenn Stanford, St. John's

Thomas Ebright Memorial Award

Lyman G Bullard, Jr.

James H. Ellery Memorial Awards

Dave Eminian, Peoria (Newspaper), Pete Michaud, Norfolk (Radio), Aaron LaFontaine, Toronto (TV)

Ken McKenzie Award

Mike Lappan, Charlotte

Michael Condon Memorial Award

Bob Paquette

Milestones

See also

References

  1. Web site: The American Hockey League . TheAHL.com . 2019-09-03 . 2021-11-20.
  2. Web site: TheAHL.com The American Hockey League AHL announces schedule modification plan . 2011-04-14 . 2011-04-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110416063404/http://theahl.com/ahl-announces-schedule-modification-plan-p170643 . dead .
  3. News: Record crowd watches AHL outdoor game . January 7, 2012. January 6, 2012. The Globe and Mail.
  4. Web site: Admirals close regular season with 28th straight win - The Virginian-Pilot.
  5. Web site: Top Scorers - 2011-12 Regular Season - All Players. AHL.
  6. Web site: Top Goalies - 2011-12 Regular Season - Goals Against Average . AHL.
  7. Web site: Norfolk Admirals Official Website . 2012-03-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120625233606/http://www.norfolkadmirals.com/release_story1.php?id=2520 . 2012-06-25 . dead .
  8. Web site: Admirals close regular season with 28th straight win HamptonRoads.com PilotOnline.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120418110144/http://hamptonroads.com/2012/04/admirals-close-regular-season-28th-straight-win. 2012-04-18.

External links