2002–03 Calgary Flames
Division5th Northwest
Conference12th Western
2002–03 record29–36–13–4
Home record14–16–10–1
Road record15–20–3–3
Goals for186 (27th)
Goals against228 (18th)
Team information
General managerCraig Button
CoachGreg Gilbert (Oct-Dec)
Darryl Sutter (Dec-Apr)
CaptainCraig Conroy
Alternate captainsBob Boughner
Jarome Iginla
ArenaPengrowth Saddledome
Average attendance16,239
Minor league affiliate(s)Saint John Flames
Johnstown Chiefs
Team leaders
GoalsJarome Iginla (35)
AssistsCraig Conroy (37)
PointsJarome Iginla (67)
Penalty minutesScott Nichol (149)
Plus/minusBob Boughner (+5)
Denis Gauthier (+5)
Oleg Saprykin (+5)
WinsRoman Turek (27)
Goals against averageRoman Turek (2.57)

The 2002–03 Calgary Flames season was the 23rd National Hockey League season in Calgary. A relatively successful start to the season quickly gave way to disaster as the Flames lost 11 of 12 games in a November stretch dropping the Flames out of contention, ultimately failing to qualify for the playoffs for the seventh consecutive season.

The season began as the last had ended: with forward Marc Savard and head coach Greg Gilbert in bitter, public feud. After arguing in the media for nearly a year, the Flames finally granted the disgruntled players request, trading Savard to the Atlanta Thrashers.[1] Gilbert himself would not last much longer with the Flames, as he would be fired by the club barely two weeks after Savard was dealt.[2]

The Flames would quickly find a replacement for Gilbert, announcing they had hired Darryl Sutter shortly before the new year.[3] Sutter immediately began shaping the Flames to his own style, and the Flames finished 19–16–8–1 under their new bench boss.

Following the season, the Flames announced that they would not renew General Manager Craig Button's contract. Sutter took over as GM, carrying the dual roles until the end of the 2005–06 season.[4]

Flames mascot, Harvey the Hound, gained widespread publicity in January 2003 following an incident with Edmonton Oilers head coach, Craig MacTavish. With the Flames leading 4–0, Harvey was taunting the Oilers behind their bench. The frustrated coach reached up and ripped Harvey's signature red tongue out of his mouth, tossing it into the crowd. The incident would seem to spark the Oilers, who scored three goals shortly after. The Flames would hold on to win 4–3, however.[5] The incident made headlines throughout North America, and led to many jokes, including having many other NHL team mascots arrive at the 2003 All-Star Game with their tongues hanging out.[6]

Regular season

The Flames struggled offensively and were shut out a league-high 10 times, tied with the Minnesota Wild, Nashville Predators and Pittsburgh Penguins.[7]

Calgary finished 12th in the Western Conference, 17 points behind the 8th place Edmonton Oilers.

Final standings

Northwest Division
No. CR GP W L T OTL GF GA Pts
13Colorado Avalanche824219138251194105
24Vancouver Canucks824523131264208104
36Minnesota Wild82422910119817895
48Edmonton Oilers82362611923123092
512Calgary Flames82293613418622875

[8]

Note: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points
         Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.

Western Conference
R Div GP W L T OTL GF GA Pts
1 Z- Dallas StarsPA824617154245169111
2 Y- Detroit Red WingsCE824820104269203110
3 Y- Colorado AvalancheNW824219138251194105
4 X- Vancouver CanucksNW824523131264208104
5 X- St. Louis BluesCE82412411625322299
6 X- Minnesota WildNW82422910119817895
7 X- Mighty Ducks of AnaheimPA8240279620319395
8 X- Edmonton OilersNW82362611923123092
8.5
9 Chicago BlackhawksCE82303313620722679
10 Los Angeles KingsPA8233376620322178
11 Phoenix CoyotesPA82313511520423078
12 Calgary FlamesNW82293613418622875
13 Nashville PredatorsCE82273513718320674
14 San Jose SharksPA8228379821423973
15 Columbus Blue JacketsCE8229428321326369

Divisions: PA – Pacific, CE – Central, NW – Northwest

Z – Clinched Conference; Y – Clinched Division; X – Clinched Playoff spot

Schedule and results

2002–03 regular season[9]
October: 3–3–2–2 (home: 1–2–2–1; road: 2–1–0–1)
GameDateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceRecordPtsRecap
1October 10Vancouver3 – 0CalgaryTurek17,4090–1–0–00Recap
2October 12Philadelphia5 – 4CalgaryTurek16,7500–2–0–00Recap
3October 14Calgary3 – 2VancouverTurek18,0161–2–0–02Recap
4October 17Boston3 – 3CalgaryOTTurek15,3461–2–1–03Recap
5October 19Calgary5 – 2ChicagoTurek14,0342–2–1–05Recap
6October 21Calgary0 – 4DetroitMcLennan20,0582–3–1–05Recap
7October 22Calgary3 – 4MinnesotaOTTurek18,0642–3–1–16Recap
8October 24Dallas3 – 3CalgaryOTTurek14,6252–3–2–17Recap
9October 26St. Louis4 – 3CalgaryOTTurek14,5382–3–2–28Recap
10October 31Buffalo0 – 3CalgaryTurek14,8223–3–2–210Recap
November: 3–9–1–1 (home: 1–4–1–0; road: 2–5–0–1)
GameDateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceRecordPtsRecap
11November 2Colorado4 – 4CalgaryOTMcLennan17,4483–3–3–211Recap
12November 4Calgary4 – 2NY IslandersMcLennan12,3164–3–3–213Recap
13November 5Calgary3 – 2New JerseyMcLennan12,3155–3–3–215Recap
14November 7Calgary0 – 1NY RangersOTMcLennan18,2005–3–3–316Recap
15November 9Calgary0 – 3FloridaMcLennan14,7945–4–3–316Recap
16November 11Calgary1 – 2AtlantaMcLennan10,5015–5–3–316Recap
17November 14NY Rangers2 – 1CalgaryMcLennan16,3865–6–3–316Recap
18November 16St. Louis1 – 0CalgaryMcLennan15,5055–7–3–316Recap
19November 19Detroit5 – 0CalgaryMcLennan10,0615–8–3–316Recap
20November 21Edmonton3 – 1CalgaryMcLennan17,6605–9–3–316Recap
21November 23Chicago1 – 3CalgaryTurek15,8266–9–3–318Recap
22November 26Calgary2 – 7BostonTurek13,5826–10–3–318Recap
23November 27Calgary2 – 4WashingtonTurek13,5326–11–3–318Recap
24November 29Calgary2 – 7St. LouisTurek19,3266–12–3–318Recap
December: 5–6–3–0 (home: 1–3–2–0; road: 4–3–1–0)
GameDateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceRecordPtsRecap
25December 1Calgary2 – 4DetroitTurek20,0586–13–3–318Recap
26December 3Calgary2 – 1ColoradoTurek18,0077–13–3–320Recap
27December 5Minnesota1 – 1CalgaryOTTurek14,1187–13–4–321Recap
28December 9Calgary2 – 1VancouverTurek18,4228–13–4–323Recap
29December 12Carolina4 – 3CalgaryTurek14,5288–14–4–323Recap
30December 14Colorado3 – 1CalgaryTurek17,1928–15–4–323Recap
31December 15Calgary3 – 3VancouverOTTurek18,4228–15–5–324Recap
32December 17Calgary3 – 0NashvilleTurek10,2169–15–5–326Recap
33December 19Calgary0 – 3ColumbusTurek17,2309–16–5–326Recap
34December 21Calgary0 – 2PittsburghTurek12,5719–17–5–326Recap
35December 23Calgary3 – 2MinnesotaTurek18,56810–17–5–328Recap
36December 27Toronto4 – 3CalgaryTurek18,01410–18–5–328Recap
37December 29Anaheim2 – 4CalgaryTurek16,92211–18–5–330Recap
38December 31Montreal1 – 1CalgaryOTTurek18,15911–18–6–331Recap
January: 6–7–1–0 (home: 5–3–1–0; road: 1–4–0–0)
GameDateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceRecordPtsRecap
39January 2Tampa Bay1 – 4CalgaryTurek14,88112–18–6–333Recap
40January 4Minnesota2 – 3CalgaryTurek15,97413–18–6–335Recap
41January 7Calgary4 – 2ColoradoTurek18,00714–18–6–337Recap
42January 9Ottawa1 – 0CalgaryTurek16,05814–19–6–337Recap
43January 11Columbus7 – 2CalgaryTurek14,82714–20–6–337Recap
44January 13Calgary2 – 4MontrealTurek20,63014–21–6–337Recap
45January 14Calgary2 – 3TorontoTurek19,29014–22–6–337Recap
46January 16Nashville2 – 2CalgaryOTMcLennan14,62114–22–7–338Recap
47January 18Los Angeles1 – 2CalgaryOTTurek16,67515–22–7–340Recap
48January 20Edmonton3 – 4CalgaryTurek17,83216–22–7–342Recap
49January 23Phoenix7 – 1CalgaryTurek14,86516–23–7–342Recap
50January 25Detroit1 – 4CalgaryTurek18,02817–23–7–344Recap
51January 28Calgary3 – 4PhoenixTurek14,61917–24–7–344Recap
52January 29Calgary1 – 4DallasTurek18,53217–25–7–344Recap
February: 2–6–3–1 (home: 0–1–2–0; road: 2–5–1–1)
GameDateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceRecordPtsRecap
53February 4Anaheim3 – 2CalgaryTurek14,11017–26–7–344Recap
54February 6Chicago2 – 2CalgaryOTMcLennan16,02717–26–8–345Recap
55February 7Calgary4 – 3EdmontonTurek16,83918–26–8–347Recap
56February 9Calgary2 – 4ColoradoTurek18,00718–27–8–347Recap
57February 12Calgary3 – 4AnaheimOTMcLennan11,61218–27–8–448Recap
58February 13Calgary2 – 4Los AngelesTurek17,53918–28–8–448Recap
59February 15Vancouver2 – 2CalgaryOTTurek18,25218–28–9–449Recap
60February 17Calgary3 – 5St. LouisTurek19,52218–29–9–449Recap
61February 19Calgary1 – 1DallasOTTurek18,53218–29–10–450Recap
62February 20Calgary1 – 4NashvilleMcLennan10,84218–30–10–450Recap
63February 23Calgary4 – 2PhoenixTurek14,24119–30–10–452Recap
64February 24Calgary2 – 5San JoseTurek17,31119–31–10–452Recap
March: 8–5–2–0 (home: 5–3–1–0; road: 3–2–1–0)
GameDateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceRecordPtsRecap
65March 1San Jose3 – 4CalgaryTurek17,57520–31–10–454Recap
66March 5New Jersey4 – 5CalgaryOTTurek16,10621–31–10–456Recap
67March 7Calgary2 – 0ChicagoTurek14,70222–31–10–458Recap
68March 8Calgary3 – 2ColumbusOTTurek18,13623–31–10–460Recap
69March 11Edmonton5 – 2CalgaryTurek17,71423–32–10–460Recap
70March 13Toronto3 – 4CalgaryOTTurek18,06424–32–10–462Recap
71March 15Calgary2 – 3San JoseTurek17,49624–33–10–462Recap
72March 16Calgary2 – 2AnaheimOTMcLennan16,72624–33–11–463Recap
73March 18Calgary4 – 1Los AngelesTurek17,47025–33–11–465Recap
74March 20Washington4 – 1CalgaryTurek15,82725–34–11–465Recap
75March 22Nashville1 – 1CalgaryOTTurek16,62825–34–12–466Recap
76March 24Phoenix0 – 2CalgaryTurek16,68526–34–12–468Recap
77March 27Dallas1 – 2CalgaryOTTurek16,53327–34–12–470Recap
78March 29Columbus6 – 4CalgaryTurek16,00727–35–12–470Recap
79March 31Calgary0 – 3MinnesotaMcLennan18,56827–36–12–470Recap
April: 2–0–1–0 (home: 1–0–1–0; road: 1–0–0–0)
GameDateVisitorScoreHomeOTDecisionAttendanceRecordPtsRecap
80April 2San Jose2 – 2CalgaryOTTurek14,20727–36–13–471Recap
81April 4Los Angeles1 – 2CalgaryOTTurek17,00328–36–13–473Recap
82April 5Calgary4 – 1EdmontonTurek16,83929–36–13–475Recap
Legend:

  Win (2 points)   Loss (0 points)   Tie (1 point)   Overtime loss (1 point)

Player statistics

Scoring

  • Position abbreviations: C = Centre; D = Defence; G = Goaltender; LW = Left wing; RW = Right wing
  • = Joined team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, signing) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flames only.
  • = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flames only.
Regular season
No. Player Pos GP G A Pts +/- PIM
12Jarome IginlaRW75353267−1049
22Craig ConroyC79223759−436
18[lower-alpha 1]Chris DruryLW80233053−933
23Martin GelinasLW81213152−351
32Toni LydmanD8162026−728
11Stephane YelleC82101525−1050
19Oleg SaprykinLW5281523546
17Chris ClarkRW81101222−11126
10Dave LowryLW3451419422
44Rob NiedermayerLW5481018−1342
6Bob BoughnerD69314175126
4Jordan LeopoldD5841014−1512
3Denis GauthierD7211112599
28Robyn RegehrD7601212−987
40Scott NicholC685510−7149
24Blake SloanRW672810−528
20Mathias JohanssonC46459−1512
8Petr BuzekD44358−614
7Chuck KobasewRW23426−38
27[lower-alpha 2]Craig BerubeLW55246−6100
26Steve BeginC50314−751
18Jamie WrightLW19224112
15Blair BettsC913430
21Andrew FerenceD1604416
1Roman TurekG6504414
16Shean DonovanRW13123−27
42Micki DuPontD16123−54
27Marc SavardC10123−38
5Steve MontadorD50112−9114
2Mike CommodoreD6011219
43Ladislav KohnRW301112
33Jamie McLennanG2200014
36Mike MottauD4000−10
51Rick MrozikD200000
38Robert DomeRW100000

Goaltending

Regular season
No. Player GP W L T SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI
1Roman Turek652729916791642.54.90243822
33Jamie McLennan222114537582.99.89201165

Awards and records

Awards

Type Award/honour Recipient Ref
League
(in-season)
NHL All-Star Game selection Jarome Iginla [10]
NHL YoungStars Game selection Jordan Leopold [11]
Team Molson Cup Jarome Iginla [12]
Ralph T. Scurfield Humanitarian Award Denis Gauthier [13]

Milestones

Milestone Player Date Ref
1,000th game played Craig Berube October 12, 2002 [14]

Transactions

The Flames were involved in the following transactions from June 14, 2002, the day after the deciding game of the 2002 Stanley Cup Finals, through June 9, 2003, the day of the deciding game of the 2003 Stanley Cup Finals.[15]

Trades

Date Details Ref
June 22, 2002 To Calgary Flames
NY Rangers’ 1st-round pick in 2002
4th-round pick in 2002
To Florida Panthers
1st-round pick in 2002
[16]
June 22, 2002 To Calgary Flames
3rd-round pick in 2002
5th-round pick in 2002
To Toronto Maple Leafs
3rd-round pick in 2002
[16]
June 22, 2002 To Calgary Flames
Jamie McLennan
To Minnesota Wild
9th-round pick in 2002
[17]
June 23, 2002 To Calgary Flames
4th-round pick in 2002
Minnesota’s 5th-round pick in 2002
To Montreal Canadiens
Florida’s 4th-round pick in 2002
[16]
June 30, 2002 To Calgary Flames
Rights to Curtis Joseph
To Toronto Maple Leafs
Conditional 8th-round pick in 2003
[18]
September 11, 2002 To Calgary Flames
Ladislav Kohn
To Detroit Red Wings
Future considerations
[19]
October 1, 2002 To Calgary Flames
Chris Drury
Stephane Yelle
To Colorado Avalanche
Dean McAmmond
Derek Morris
Jeff Shantz
[20]
November 15, 2002 To Calgary Flames
Rights to Ruslan Zainullin
To Atlanta Thrashers
Marc Savard
[21]
January 22, 2003 To Calgary Flames
Future considerations
To Philadelphia Flyers
Jamie Wright
[22]
January 22, 2003 To Calgary Flames
Mike Mottau
To New York Rangers
6th-round pick in 2003 or 2004
[22]
February 10, 2003 To Calgary Flames
Andrew Ference
To Pittsburgh Penguins
Conditional draft pick in 2003 or 2004
[23]
March 11, 2003 To Calgary Flames
Mike Commodore
Jean-Francois Damphousse
To Anaheim Mighty Ducks
Rob Niedermayer
[24]
March 11, 2003 To Calgary Flames
Dean McAmmond
To Colorado Avalanche
5th-round pick in 2003 or 2004
[24]
March 11, 2003 To Calgary Flames
Shean Donovan
To Pittsburgh Penguins
Micki DuPont
Mattias Johansson
[24]

Players acquired

DatePlayerFormer teamTermViaRef
July 2, 2002Martin GelinasCarolina HurricanesFree agency[25]
July 9, 2002Martin SonnenbergPittsburgh PenguinsFree agency[26]
Darcy VerotPittsburgh PenguinsFree agency[26]
July 11, 2002Mike MartinSaint John Flames (AHL)Free agency[27]
Jason MorganSaint John Flames (AHL)Free agency[27]
July 17, 2002Robert DomePittsburgh PenguinsFree agency[28]
September 9, 2002Jan VodrazkaLowell Lock Monsters (AHL)Free agency[29]
September 27, 2002Darren LynchVancouver Giants (WHL)Free agency[30]

Players lost

DatePlayerNew teamVia[lower-alpha 3]Ref
July 2, 2002Curtis JosephDetroit Red WingsFree agency (III)[32]
July 11, 2002Clarke WilmNashville PredatorsFree agency (UFA)[33]
July 18, 2002Alan LetangNew York IslandersFree agency (VI)[34]
July 23, 2002Dallas EakinsAtlanta ThrashersFree agency (UFA)[35]
August 1, 2002Rob MurraySpringfield Falcons (AHL)Free agency (UFA)[36]
August 12, 2002Jason BotterillBuffalo SabresFree agency (VI)[37]
September 13, 2002Mike VernonRetirement (III)[38]
Kay WhitmoreRetirement (III)[39]
October 4, 2002Ronald PetrovickyNew York RangersWaiver draft[40]
October 9, 2002Burke HenryNorfolk Admirals (AHL)Free agency (UFA)[41]
November 27, 2002Dwayne HaySt. John's Maple Leafs (AHL)Free agency[42]
March 11, 2003Igor KravchukFlorida PanthersFree agency (III)[43]

Signings

DatePlayerTermContract typeRef
June 17, 2002Rob NiedermayerRe-signing[44]
June 22, 2002Jamie McLennanRe-signing[17]
June 28, 2002Chuck Kobasew3-yearEntry-level[45]
July 15, 2002Mathias JohanssonEntry-level[46]
July 16, 2002Jamie WrightRe-signing[47]
July 19, 2002Chris ClarkRe-signing[48]
August 1, 2002Toni LydmanRe-signing[49]
Robyn RegehrRe-signing[49]
August 3, 2002Denis Gauthier2-yearArbitration award[50]
August 9, 2002Steve BeginRe-signing[51]
August 21, 2002Matthew LombardiEntry-level[52]
September 6, 2002Jarome Iginla2-yearRe-signing[53]
September 9, 2002Craig BerubeRe-signing[29]
September 12, 2002Ladislav KohnRe-signing[54]
May 28, 2003Chris ClarkExtension[55]
Shean Donovan3-yearExtension[55]
June 5, 2003Robyn Regehr5-yearExtension[56]

Draft picks

Calgary's picks at the 2002 NHL Entry Draft in Toronto, Ontario.[57] The Flames had the 9th overall pick, however opted to drop down one spot to 10th via a trade with the Florida Panthers.

Rnd Pick Player Nationality Position Team (league) NHL statistics
GPGAPtsPIM
110Eric Nystrom United StatesLWUniversity of Michigan (CCHA)5937548123401
239Brian McConnell United StatesFBoston University (HE)
390Matthew Lombardi CanadaCVictoriaville Tigres (QMJHL)536101161262293
4112Yuri Artyomenkov RussiaRWKrylja
5141Jiri Cetkovsky Czech RepublicRWZlin (Czech Jr.)
5142Emanuel Peter  SwitzerlandCKloten (Swiss Jr.)
5146Viktor Bobrov RussiaFHC CSKA (RSL)
5159Kristofer Persson SwedenRWModo Jr.
6176Curtis McElhinney CanadaGColorado College (WCHA)24994–95–20, 2.83GAA
7202David Van der Gulik CanadaRWChilliwack Chiefs (BCHL)492111310
7203Pierre Johnsson SwedenRWFarjestad Jr.
8238Jyri Marttinen FinlandDJyvaskyla

Farm teams

Saint John Flames

The 2002–03 season would be the tenth, and last, season in New Brunswick, as the Flames bought out the local ownership's share of the team following the season and suspended operations. The "Baby Flames" finished 32–41–6–1, last in the Canadian Division, and out of the playoffs. Robert Dome led the team with 27 goals and 56 points. Dany Sabourin and Levente Szuper split goaltending duties for the Flames.

Johnstown Chiefs

The Chiefs finished the 2002–03 season with a record of 28–33–11, finishing fifth in the Northwest Division, failing to qualify for the playoffs.

Following the season, the Flames announced they were switching affiliations to a new expansion team, the Las Vegas Wranglers.

See also

Notes

  1. Drury wore number 37 through March 11.
  2. Berube wore number 16 in his first 14 games.
  3. In parentheses is the player's free agency group on July 1 if applicable.[31]

References

  • Player stats: 2006–07 Calgary Flames Media Guide - 2002–03 stats, pg. 109.
  • "Calgary Flames 2002-03 roster and scoring statistics at hockeydb.com". www.hockeydb.com. Retrieved December 12, 2022.
  • "2002-03 Calgary Flames Roster and Statistics". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved December 12, 2022.
  1. Flames ship Savard to Thrashers, cbc sports, November 15, 2002, accessed December 7, 2006.
  2. Flames face Avs minus Gilbert, cbc sports, December 3, 2002, accessed December 7, 2006.
  3. Flames find their man, cbc sports, December 29, 2002, accessed December 7, 2006.
  4. Calgary Flames Executive Archived 2007-01-17 at the Wayback Machine, calgaryflames.com, accessed December 7, 2006.
  5. Pyette, Ryan, MacTavish leaves Harvey the Hound speechless Archived 2007-11-04 at archive.today, London Free Press, January 23, 2003.
  6. Francis, Eric, The uncivil war, Calgary Sun, September 21, 2003.
  7. "2002-03 NHL Schedule and Results".
  8. Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2009). The National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book/2010. Dan Diamond & Associates. p. 162.
  9. "2002-03 Calgary Flames Schedule". Hockey-Reference.com. Retrieved November 24, 2022.
  10. "NHL All-Star Game Historical Summaries - 2003". NHL.com. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  11. "NHL - 2003 YoungStars Rosters". ESPN.com. January 18, 2003. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  12. Hanlon, Peter; Kelso, Sean (eds.), 2010–11 Calgary Flames Media Guide, Calgary Flames Hockey Club, p. 143
  13. "GAUTHIER NAMED RECIPIENT OF THE 2002-03 RALPH SCURFIELD HUMANITARIAN AWARD". Calgary Flames. April 3, 2003. Archived from the original on April 17, 2003. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  14. "Berube reaches 1,000 NHL games". Calgary Flames. October 13, 2002. Archived from the original on December 5, 2002. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  15. "Hockey Transactions Search Results". www.prosportstransactions.com. Retrieved December 6, 2022.
  16. 1 2 3 "Draft Day Transactions". TSN.ca. Archived from the original on August 8, 2002. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
  17. 1 2 "FLAMES ACQUIRE GOALTENDER JAMIE McLENNAN FROM MINNESOTA". Calgary Flames. June 22, 2002. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  18. "Curtis Joseph traded to Flames". Toronto Maple Leafs. July 1, 2002. Archived from the original on August 5, 2002. Retrieved November 9, 2023.
  19. "CALGARY FLAMES ACQUIRE FORWARD LADISLAV KOHN FROM DETROIT". Calgary Flames. September 11, 2002. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  20. "FLAMES ACQUIRE FORWARDS CHRIS DRURY AND STEPHANE YELLE". Calgary Flames. October 1, 2002. Archived from the original on June 18, 2003. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  21. "FLAMES ACQUIRE FORWARD RUSLAN ZAINULLIN". Calgary Flames. November 15, 2002. Archived from the original on August 4, 2003. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  22. 1 2 "FLAMES MAKE TWO TRANSACTIONS - ACQUIRE MOTTAU FROM RANGERS & FUTURE CONSIDERATIONS". Calgary Flames. January 22, 2003. Archived from the original on April 6, 2003. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  23. "FLAMES ACQUIRE DEFENCEMAN ANDREW FERENCE FROM PITTSBURGH". Calgary Flames. February 10, 2003. Archived from the original on June 20, 2003. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  24. 1 2 3 "FLAMES MAKE THREE DEADLINE MOVES". Calgary Flames. March 11, 2003. Archived from the original on June 19, 2003. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  25. "CALGARY FLAMES SIGN FREE AGENT FORWARD MARTIN GELINAS". Calgary Flames. July 2, 2002. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  26. 1 2 "FLAMES SIGN FORWARDS MARTIN SONNENBERG & DARCY VEROT". Calgary Flames. July 9, 2002. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  27. 1 2 "Flames sign minor leaguers". TSN.ca. July 11, 2002. Archived from the original on August 7, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  28. "FLAMES SIGN FORWARD ROBERT DOME". Calgary Flames. July 17, 2002. Archived from the original on October 24, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  29. 1 2 "CALGARY FLAMES SIGN CRAIG BERUBE". Calgary Flames. September 9, 2002. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  30. "CALGARY FLAMES SIGN FORWARD DARREN LYNCH". Calgary Flames. September 27, 2002. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  31. "NHL FREE-AGENT LIST". Daily Herald. July 2, 2002. Retrieved December 1, 2022.
  32. "NHL - Red Wings sign goalie Joseph to three-year contract". ESPN.com. July 2, 2002. Retrieved December 5, 2022.
  33. "SPORTS TRANSACTIONS FOR THURSDAY, JULY 11+". UPI. July 11, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  34. Grossman, Evan (July 19, 2002). "ISLES INK DEFENDER AND LW". New York Post. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
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