2002–03 Philadelphia Flyers
Division2nd Atlantic
Conference4th Eastern
2002–03 record45–20–13–4
Home record21–10–8–2
Road record24–10–5–2
Goals for211
Goals against166
Team information
PresidentBob Clarke
General managerBob Clarke
CoachKen Hitchcock
CaptainKeith Primeau
Alternate captainsJohn LeClair
Mark Recchi
ArenaFirst Union Center
Average attendance19,325[1]
Minor league affiliate(s)Philadelphia Phantoms
Trenton Titans
Team leaders
GoalsJeremy Roenick (27)
AssistsMark Recchi (32)
Jeremy Roenick (32)
PointsJeremy Roenick (59)
Penalty minutesDonald Brashear (161)
Plus/minusEric Desjardins (+30)
WinsRoman Cechmanek (33)
Goals against averageRoman Cechmanek (1.83)

The 2002–03 Philadelphia Flyers season was the Philadelphia Flyers' 36th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). Though they prevailed in a grueling and lengthy seven-game series against the Toronto Maple Leafs in the first round of the 2003 Stanley Cup playoffs for their first playoff series victory in three years, the Flyers lost in the second round to the Ottawa Senators in six games.

Off-season

Ken Hitchcock, seen here in 2013, was hired as the 15th head coach in team history.

On May 14, the Flyers hired Stanley Cup-winning head coach Ken Hitchcock to replace Bill Barber, who was fired on April 30.[2][3] Hitchcock, who had served as an assistant coach for the Flyers for three seasons from 1990 to 1993, had been fired three months earlier by the Dallas Stars midway through his seventh season as the team's head coach.[4][5]

The Flyers made three trades in the ten days leading up to the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. On June 12, goaltender Brian Boucher and a 2002 third-round pick was traded to the Phoenix Coyotes for centerman Michal Handzus and goaltender Robert Esche, a move that cemented Roman Cechmanek as the Flyers starting goaltender.[6] Made expendable by Handzus' acquisition, centerman Jiri Dopita was traded to the Edmonton Oilers six days later for a 2003 third-round pick and a conditional 2004 draft pick.[7]

A day before the draft the Flyers made a surprising trade that saw them acquire the fourth overall pick, which they used to select highly-touted Finnish defenseman Joni Pitkanen, from the Tampa Bay Lightning for third-line winger Ruslan Fedotenko and two 2002 second-round picks.[8][9] Though Tampa Bay received some criticism for what was seen as a light return for a high draft pick, the trade ultimately came back to haunt the Flyers two years later in the Eastern Conference Finals when Fedotenko scored six goals against Philadelphia as the Lightning advanced to the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals.[10][11]

Philadelphia stood pat when free agency opened on July 1 and opted not to re-sign trade deadline acquisition Adam Oates as well as veteran defenseman Luke Richardson, both Group III unrestricted free agents.[12][13] The Flyers received compensatory draft picks in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft from the league for both players after they signed with Anaheim and Columbus respectively, garnering a third-round pick for Oates and a fourth-round pick for Richardson.[14][15][16]

Regular season

The Flyers started the season strong amid a league-wide crackdown on obstruction, averaging four goals per game during October (including four six-goal games) and posting a 9–1–2–0 record in their first twelve games.[17][18][19] The stricter rules enforcement was short-lived, however, and Philadelphia in particular averaged only 2.4 goals per game from November through the end of the regular season.[20][19]

The team struggled throughout much of November, a 3–2 victory over Tampa Bay on November 19 being their only win in a ten-game stretch.[19] Veteran winger John LeClair, off to a strong start with 11 goals in his first 21 games, suffered a dislocated shoulder on November 27 against Pittsburgh that kept him out of the lineup until March.[21]

Early December saw the team swap defensemen with the San Jose Sharks, trading Dan McGillis for Marcus Ragnarsson.[22] In his sixth season with the Flyers, McGillis' offensive production had dropped considerably since his career best 49-point season during the 2000–01 season while Ragnarsson was viewed as a more steady, stay-at-home defenseman better suited to pair with rookie Dennis Seidenberg and later with the more offensively-inclined Kim Johnsson.[22][23] Ragnarsson signed a two-year contract extension with the club in February.[23]

Approaching the season's midway point, the Flyers started January with six straight wins as well as ten wins in their first eleven games of 2003 before losing four straight heading into the All-Star break.[19] Key injuries to young wingers Simon Gagne (groin strain) and Justin Williams (torn ligaments in his left knee) in January that caused both to miss significant time led to the team acquiring winger Sami Kapanen from the Carolina Hurricanes on February 7.[21][24]

Three more trades followed in the days leading up to March 11 trading deadline. On March 1, veteran defenseman and former Flyer Dmitri Yushkevich was acquired from the Los Angeles Kings for two draft picks.[25] A week later, a fifth-round draft pick was sent to the New York Islanders for fourth-line centerman Claude Lapointe.[26] The Flyers made their biggest move on the eve of the deadline, acquiring former 40-goal scorer Tony Amonte from Phoenix for prospect Guillaume Lefebvre, a 2003 third-round pick, and a 2004 second-round pick.[27] These moves plus LeClair's return to the lineup spurred a 10–2–2–0 run that saw Philadelphia finish one point behind the New Jersey Devils for the division title.[21]

The Flyers goaltending tandem of starter Roman Cechmanek and backup Robert Esche proved reliable during the regular season, combining for eight shutouts.[21][28] Cechmanek, who had a club single season record 1.83 goals against average, was voted the team's most valuable player. The team tied New Jersey for the fewest goals allowed with just 166, earning Cechmanek and Esche a share of the William M. Jennings Trophy with Martin Brodeur.[28][29] Philadelphia also boasted the league's best road record (24–10–5–2).[30]

Jeremy Roenick led the team in scoring for the second consecutive season and reached two major career milestones, recording his 600th assist and becoming the first of three Flyers players to play in their 1,000th NHL game during the season. The others were defensemen Eric Desjardins and Eric Weinrich. In what was regarded as a return to form after a disappointing 2001–02 season, Desjardins was the team's plus-minus leader and voted best defenseman for the seventh time.[21]

Season standings

Atlantic Division
No. CR GP W L T OTL GF GA Pts
12New Jersey Devils824620106216166108
24Philadelphia Flyers824520134211166107
38New York Islanders82353411222423183
49New York Rangers82323610421023178
514Pittsburgh Penguins8227446518925565

[31]

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.

Eastern Conference[32]
R Div GP W L T OTL GF GA Pts
1 P- Ottawa SenatorsNE82522181263182113
2 Y- New Jersey DevilsAT824620106216166108
3 Y- Tampa Bay LightningSE82362516521921093
4 X- Philadelphia FlyersAT824520134211166107
5 X- Toronto Maple LeafsNE8244287323620898
6 X- Washington CapitalsSE8239298622422092
7 X- Boston BruinsNE82363111424523787
8 X- New York IslandersAT82353411222423183
8.5
9 New York RangersAT82323610421023178
10 Montreal CanadiensNE8230358920623477
11 Atlanta ThrashersSE8231397522628474
12 Buffalo SabresNE82273710819021972
13 Florida PanthersSE82243613917623770
14 Pittsburgh PenguinsAT8227446518925565
15 Carolina HurricanesSE82224311617124061

Divisions: AT – Atlantic, NE – Northeast, SE – Southeast

P – Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y – Clinched Division; X – Clinched Playoff spot

Playoffs

Eastern Conference Quarterfinals

Despite recording their most points (107) since the 1985–86 season, the Flyers finished second in their division and were seeded fourth in the playoffs, drawing a tough first-round matchup against the Toronto Maple Leafs. They would do so with home ice advantage and a healthy roster, Simon Gagne and Justin Williams having both returned to the lineup in the final week of the regular season.[33]

Philadelphia outplayed the Maple Leafs in game one, limiting the opposition to 15 shots. But Toronto was opportunistic with their scoring chances and won 5–3, Alexander Mogilny sealing the game with an empty-net goal for his third of the game.[34] The Flyers dominated again in game two, this time winning 4–1 to tie the series.[35]

The series shifted to Toronto and the Flyers jumped out to a 2–0 lead early in game three, but the game wasn't settled until the second overtime period when Tomas Kaberle scored for the Maple Leafs to end it at 4–3.[36] Philadelphia was once again dominant in game four, limiting Toronto to only 10 shots in regulation time, but the game wasn't decided until Mark Recchi scored the game-winner for the Flyers at 13:54 of the third overtime period to tie the series again.[37]

Back at home for game five, Sami Kapanen scored two power play goals in a 4–1 win to give the Flyers a 3–2 series lead.[38] Defenseman Eric Desjardins suffered a broken right foot in the third period that kept him out for 2-to-4 weeks.[39] He was replaced in the lineup by rookie Jim Vandermeer, who made his playoff debut in game six.[39]

For the third time in the series, game six in Toronto was decided in overtime, Travis Green scoring the game-winner for the Maple Leafs in the second overtime period to force a game seven.[40] Less than 24 hours later in Philadelphia, the Flyers blew out the Maple Leafs 6–1 to take the marathon series and secure their first playoff series victory in three years.[41][42]

Eastern Conference Semifinals

Despite out-dueling Toronto's Ed Belfour in the first round, starting goaltender Roman Cechmanek was traded less than a month after the team's second-round playoff exit.

The Flyers opponent in the second round was the Presidents' Trophy-winning Ottawa Senators in a rematch of their 2002 five-game quarterfinal series loss.[43] Though Philadelphia's offense scored more than the record low two goals they managed during that series, Ottawa held them to two goals or less in all six games of the rematch.[44][45]

The Flyers matched their goal total from the 2002 series by scoring on their first two shots against Ottawa goaltender Patrick Lalime to go up 2–0 after one period, but Ottawa scored four unanswered goals to win game one.[46] After being criticized by Hitchcock after his game one performance, Roman Cechmanek responded in game two with a 33-save shutout in a 2–0 win to tie the series.[47]

The series shifted to Philadelphia for game three. Though the Flyers had a 2–1 lead after two periods, Ottawa scored the tying goal in the opening minute of the third period and won the game on Wade Redden's game-winning goal 6:43 into overtime.[48] Cechmanek responded with another shutout in game four, stopping all 28 shots Ottawa fired his way, and Michal Handzus scored the lone goal in a 1–0 win to tie the series at two games apiece.[49]

In a 5–2 game five loss in Ottawa, Cechmanek allowed four goals on 16 shots before being pulled midway through the second period in favor of backup Robert Esche.[50] In game six in Philadelphia, Ottawa scored the game's first four goals en route to a 5–1 series clinching win.[51]

A factor in the series loss was Cechmanek's inconsistency.[52][53] Though he recorded shutouts in games two and four, his performance was considered poor in games one, five, and six.[54] In the final two games, he allowed nine goals in two losses that ended the Flyers season.[54] A week after game six, general manager Bob Clarke indicated the Flyers would move on from Cechmanek.[52] He was traded to the Los Angeles Kings three weeks after the deciding game, ending a three-year run with the team that saw him rank second in the entire NHL in goals against average (1.96) and save percentage (.923), and third in shutouts (20).[53][55][56]

Schedule and results

Preseason

2002 preseason[57]
Preseason: 5–4–0 (home: 2–1–0; road: 3–3–0)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordRef
1September 19@ Washington Capitals4–11–0–0[58]
2September 21New Jersey Devils1–51–1–0[59]
3September 22@ New York Rangers4–61–2–0[60]
4September 24New York Islanders4–22–2–0[61]
5September 26@ New Jersey Devils0–42–3–0[62]
6September 27@ Carolina Hurricanes5–13–3–0[63]
7October 1New York Rangers5–34–3–0[64]
8October 2@ New York Islanders1–44–4–0[65]
9October 5Washington Capitals3–25–4–0[66]
Legend:

  Win   Loss   Tie

Regular season

2002–03 regular season[45]
October: 7–1–2–0, 16 points (home: 4–0–1–0; road: 3–1–1–0)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordPointsRecap
1October 10@ Edmonton Oilers2–2 OT0–0–1–01Recap
2October 12@ Calgary Flames5–41–0–1–03Recap
3October 15@ Montreal Canadiens6–22–0–1–05Recap
4October 17New York Islanders3–3 OT2–0–2–06Recap
5October 19Washington Capitals3–13–0–2–08Recap
6October 22@ Buffalo Sabres1–23–1–2–08Recap
7October 24Montreal Canadiens6–24–1–2–010Recap
8October 26@ New York Islanders6–25–1–2–012Recap
9October 29Ottawa Senators2–16–1–2–014Recap
10October 31Phoenix Coyotes6–27–1–2–016Recap
November: 4–5–4–0, 12 points (home: 1–2–3–0; road: 3–3–1–0)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordPointsRecap
11November 2Washington Capitals2–18–1–2–018Recap
12November 5@ Carolina Hurricanes2–1 OT9–1–2–020Recap
13November 7New Jersey Devils0–19–2–2–020Recap
14November 9@ Washington Capitals1–49–3–2–020Recap
15November 13Florida Panthers1–1 OT9–3–3–021Recap
16November 15@ Carolina Hurricanes1–1 OT9–3–4–022Recap
17November 16Boston Bruins2–2 OT9–3–5–023Recap
18November 19@ Tampa Bay Lightning3–210–3–5–025Recap
19November 21San Jose Sharks2–2 OT10–3–6–026Recap
20November 23@ Toronto Maple Leafs0–610–4–6–026Recap
21November 27@ Pittsburgh Penguins2–710–5–6–026Recap
22November 29Toronto Maple Leafs0–310–6–6–026Recap
23November 30@ Montreal Canadiens2–1 OT11–6–6–028Recap
December: 6–4–2–1, 15 points (home: 3–2–1–1; road: 3–2–1–0)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordPointsRecap
24December 2New Jersey Devils0–1 OT11–6–6–129Recap
25December 5New York Rangers3–2 OT12–6–6–131Recap
26December 7St. Louis Blues1–312–7–6–131Recap
27December 10@ Florida Panthers5–213–7–6–133Recap
28December 12Toronto Maple Leafs2–114–7–6–135Recap
29December 14Buffalo Sabres2–015–7–6–137Recap
30December 17Dallas Stars2–2 OT15–7–7–138Recap
31December 18@ Atlanta Thrashers3–116–7–7–140Recap
32December 21Ottawa Senators1–316–8–7–140Recap
33December 23@ Ottawa Senators2–2 OT16–8–8–141Recap
34December 27@ Colorado Avalanche2–1 OT17–8–8–143Recap
35December 28@ Phoenix Coyotes0–417–9–8–143Recap
36December 30@ San Jose Sharks1–217–10–8–143Recap
January: 10–4–0–1, 21 points (home: 4–3–0–0; road: 6–1–0–1)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordPointsRecap
37January 2@ Los Angeles Kings4–118–10–8–145Recap
38January 3@ Mighty Ducks of Anaheim1–019–10–8–147Recap
39January 5@ Atlanta Thrashers5–420–10–8–149Recap
40January 7Buffalo Sabres3–221–10–8–151Recap
41January 9@ New York Islanders4–022–10–8–153Recap
42January 11Detroit Red Wings3–223–10–8–155Recap
43January 13Atlanta Thrashers4–723–11–8–155Recap
44January 16Montreal Canadiens4–124–11–8–157Recap
45January 18Tampa Bay Lightning3–225–11–8–159Recap
46January 19@ New York Rangers4–226–11–8–161Recap
47January 21@ Toronto Maple Leafs3–127–11–8–163Recap
48January 24New York Islanders1–327–12–8–163Recap
49January 25@ Boston Bruins0–1 OT27–12–8–264Recap
50January 28Tampa Bay Lightning0–327–13–8–264Recap
51January 30@ New Jersey Devils1–527–14–8–264Recap
February: 6–3–3–0, 15 points (home: 3–2–2–0; road: 3–1–1–0)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordPointsRecap
52February 4@ New York Islanders2–128–14–8–266Recap
53February 6@ Ottawa Senators2–2 OT28–14–9–267Recap
54February 8New York Rangers2–129–14–9–269Recap
55February 10Minnesota Wild0–129–15–9–269Recap
56February 12@ Minnesota Wild0–229–16–9–269Recap
57February 13@ St. Louis Blues4–3 OT30–16–9–271Recap
58February 15Carolina Hurricanes2–2 OT30–16–10–272Recap
59February 18New Jersey Devils2–2 OT30–16–11–273Recap
60February 20Los Angeles Kings5–031–16–11–275Recap
61February 22Florida Panthers2–431–17–11–275Recap
62February 25@ Chicago Blackhawks2–032–17–11–277Recap
63February 27Chicago Blackhawks5–233–17–11–279Recap
March: 9–3–2–2, 22 points (home: 5–1–1–1; road: 4–2–1–1)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordPointsRecap
64March 1@ Boston Bruins3–2 OT34–17–11–281Recap
65March 4Vancouver Canucks3–035–17–11–283Recap
66March 7@ New York Rangers1–535–18–11–283Recap
67March 8Colorado Avalanche1–2 OT35–18–11–384Recap
68March 10@ Washington Capitals1–2 OT35–18–11–485Recap
69March 13Carolina Hurricanes5–336–18–11–487Recap
70March 15@ Pittsburgh Penguins4–137–18–11–489Recap
71March 17@ New Jersey Devils4–238–18–11–491Recap
72March 18@ Buffalo Sabres2–538–19–11–491Recap
73March 20Pittsburgh Penguins4–239–19–11–493Recap
74March 22New York Rangers1–239–20–11–493Recap
75March 24Atlanta Thrashers6–240–20–11–495Recap
76March 25@ Nashville Predators1–1 OT40–20–12–496Recap
77March 27Boston Bruins2–2 OT40–20–13–497Recap
78March 29Pittsburgh Penguins3–041–20–13–499Recap
79March 31@ Pittsburgh Penguins6–142–20–13–4101Recap
April: 3–0–0–0, 6 points (home: 1–0–0–0; road: 2–0–0–0)
GameDateOpponentScoreRecordPointsRecap
80April 1Columbus Blue Jackets4–043–20–13–4103Recap
81April 4@ Tampa Bay Lightning4–144–20–13–4105Recap
82April 6@ Florida Panthers6–245–20–13–4107Recap
Legend:

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

Playoffs

2003 Stanley Cup playoffs[45]
Eastern Conference Quarterfinals vs. Toronto Maple Leafs - Flyers win 4–3
GameDateOpponentScoreAttendanceSeriesRecap
1April 9Toronto Maple Leafs3–518,937Maple Leafs lead 1–0Recap
2April 11Toronto Maple Leafs4–119,597Series tied 1–1Recap
3April 14@ Toronto Maple Leafs3–4 2OT19,533Maple Leafs lead 2–1Recap
4April 16@ Toronto Maple Leafs3–2 3OT19,574Series tied 2–2Recap
5April 19Toronto Maple Leafs4–119,828Flyers lead 3–2Recap
6April 21@ Toronto Maple Leafs1–2 2OT19,573Series tied 3–3Recap
7April 22Toronto Maple Leafs6–119,870Flyers win 4–3Recap
Eastern Conference Semifinals vs. Ottawa Senators - Senators win 4–2
GameDateOpponentScoreAttendanceSeriesRecap
1April 25@ Ottawa Senators2–418,197Senators lead 1–0Recap
2April 27@ Ottawa Senators2–018,500Series tied 1–1Recap
3April 29Ottawa Senators2–3 OT19,680Senators lead 2–1Recap
4May 1Ottawa Senators1–019,842Series tied 2–2Recap
5May 3@ Ottawa Senators2–518,500Senators lead 3–2Recap
6May 5Ottawa Senators1–519,454Senators win 4–2Recap
Legend:

  Win   Loss

Player statistics

Scoring

  • Position abbreviations: C = Center; D = Defense; 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 Flyers only.
  • = Left team via a transaction (e.g., trade, waivers, release) during the season. Stats reflect time with the Flyers only.
Regular season Playoffs
No. Player Pos GP G A Pts +/- PIM GP G A Pts +/- PIM
97Jeremy RoenickC7927325920751335818
8Mark RecchiRW7920325203513731042
25Keith PrimeauC8019274649313112−214
26Michal HandzusC8223214413461326836
5Kim JohnssonD82102939113813033−18
37Eric DesjardinsD79824323035521320
10John LeClairLW35181028101613235510
12Simon GagneLW469182720161341516
39Marty MurrayC76111526−1134000−24
87Donald BrashearLW8081725516113123−121
14Justin WilliamsRW418162415221215628
2Eric WeinrichD8121820164013235−212
20Radovan SomikLW6081018910511206
11Tony AmonteRW1378151221316724
24Sami KapanenRW284913−161343726
36Dennis SeidenbergD584913820
55Pavel BrendlRW42571284
19Eric ChouinardC2844822
28Marcus RagnarssonD432685321301146
6Chris TherienD6716710361302202
15Joe SaccoRW341560204000−20
29Todd FedorukLW631561105100000
18Todd WarrinerLW1323526
13Claude LapointeC1422451613235014
22Dmitri YushkevichD18224781314572
19Paul RanheimRW28044−46
27Andre SavageC1621324
23Jim VandermeerD24213927801119
3Dan McGillisD24033720
18Tomi KallioRW7101−12
9Mark GreigRW501112
21Mike SiklenkaRW100000
47Kirby LawRW200002
34Ian MacNeilC200010
18[lower-alpha 1]Patrick SharpC300002
18Jamie WrightLW4000−14
22Bruno St. JacquesD6000−12
17Guillaume LefebvreLW1400014
24Chris McAllisterD19000−221
42Robert EscheG30000610000
32Roman CechmanekG580008130000

Goaltending

Regular season Playoffs
No. Player GP GS W L T SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI GP GS W L SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI
32Roman Cechmanek585733151013681021.83.92563,350:22131367339312.14.9092867:11
42Robert Esche30251293647602.20.90721,638:2510001412.00.929030:03

Awards and records

Awards

Type Award/honor Recipient Ref
League
(annual)
William M. Jennings Trophy Roman Cechmanek[lower-alpha 2] [29]
Robert Esche[lower-alpha 2]
League
(in-season)
NHL All-Star Game selection Ken Hitchcock (coach) [67]
Jeremy Roenick
NHL YoungStars Game selection Pavel Brendl [68]
Dennis Seidenberg
Team Barry Ashbee Trophy Eric Desjardins [69]
Bobby Clarke Trophy Roman Cechmanek [69]
Pelle Lindbergh Memorial Trophy Donald Brashear [69]
Toyota Cup Keith Primeau [69]
Yanick Dupre Memorial Class Guy Award Robert Esche [69]

Records

Among the team records set during the 2002–03 season was John LeClair scoring four goals against the Montreal Canadiens on October 15, tying the team record for most goals in a single game.[70] On October 26, the Flyers set the team record for fastest two goals from the start of a game (31 seconds), also tying the same mark from the start of a period.[71][72] Goaltender Roman Cechmanek's 1.83 goals against average on the season is a team record.[73] During game four of their conference quarterfinal playoff series against the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Flyers set team records for most shots on goal (75) and most shots on goal during a single overtime period (15).[74][75] Three games during the series were decided in overtime, setting a team record for a single playoff series that was later tied during the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs.[76]

Milestones

Milestone Player Date Ref
1,000th game played Jeremy Roenick November 16, 2002 [77]
1,000th game played Eric Desjardins December 18, 2002 [78]
600th assist Jeremy Roenick January 9, 2003 [79]
1,000th game played Eric Weinrich March 31, 2003 [80]

Transactions

The Flyers 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.[81]

Trades

Date Details Ref
June 18, 2002 To Philadelphia Flyers
3rd-round pick in 2003
Conditional 5th-round pick in 2004[lower-alpha 3]
To Edmonton Oilers
Jiri Dopita
[7]
June 21, 2002 To Philadelphia Flyers
1st-round pick in 2002
To Tampa Bay Lightning
Ruslan Fedotenko
Tampa Bay's 2nd-round pick in 2002
Phoenix's 2nd-round pick in 2002
[8]
June 22, 2002 To Philadelphia Flyers
6th-round pick in 2002
3rd-round pick in 2003
To Carolina Hurricanes
Carolina's 3rd-round pick in 2002
[84]
June 23, 2002 To Philadelphia Flyers
5th-round pick in 2003
To Columbus Blue Jackets
Vancouver's 6th-round pick in 2002
7th-round pick in 2002
[85]
December 6, 2002 To Philadelphia Flyers
Marcus Ragnarsson
To San Jose Sharks
Dan McGillis
[22]
December 19, 2002 To Philadelphia Flyers
Conditional draft pick in 2004[lower-alpha 4]
To Phoenix Coyotes
Paul Ranheim
[87]
January 22, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Jamie Wright
To Calgary Flames
Future considerations
[88]
January 29, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Eric Chouinard
To Montreal Canadiens
2nd-round pick in 2003
[89]
February 5, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
6th-round pick in 2003
To Colorado Avalanche
Chris McAllister
[90]
February 5, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Todd Warriner
To Vancouver Canucks
Conditional draft pick[lower-alpha 5]
[91]
February 7, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Ryan Bast
Sami Kapanen
To Carolina Hurricanes
Pavel Brendl
Bruno St. Jacques
[24]
March 1, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Dmitri Yushkevich
To Los Angeles Kings
4th-round pick in 2003
7th-round pick in 2004
[25]
March 9, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Claude Lapointe
To New York Islanders
5th-round pick in 2003
[26]
March 10, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Tony Amonte
To Phoenix Coyotes
Guillaume Lefebvre
Atlanta's 3rd-round pick in 2003
2nd-round pick in 2004
[92][27]
March 11, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
Peter White
To Chicago Blackhawks
Future considerations
[93]
May 28, 2003 To Philadelphia Flyers
2nd-round pick in 2004
To Los Angeles Kings
Roman Cechmanek
[55]

Players acquired

DatePlayerFormer teamTermViaRef
July 2, 2002Ian MacNeilCarolina HurricanesFree agency[94]
July 4, 2002Andre SavageVancouver CanucksFree agency[95]
August 20, 2002Jeff SmithRed Deer Rebels (WHL)3-yearFree agency[96][97]
January 1, 2003Tomi KallioColumbus Blue JacketsWaivers[98]
January 15, 2003Joe SaccoPhiladelphia Phantoms (AHL)1-yearFree agency[99]
January 27, 2003Mike SiklenkaPhiladelphia Phantoms (AHL)1-yearFree agency[100]
May 21, 2003Nick DeschenesYale University (ECAC)Free agency[101]
Freddy MeyerBoston University (HE)Free agency[101]

Players lost

DatePlayerNew teamVia[lower-alpha 6]Ref
July 1, 2002James Chalmers[lower-alpha 7]Contract expiration (UFA)[13]
Adam OatesMighty Ducks of AnaheimFree agency (III)[14]
July 4, 2002Luke RichardsonColumbus Blue JacketsFree agency (III)[15]
July 15, 2002Greg KoehlerNashville PredatorsFree agency (VI)[103]
July 21, 2002Tomas DivisekHC Pardubice (ELH)Free agency (II)[lower-alpha 8][105]
July 30, 2002Vaclav PletkaHC Ocelari Trinec (ELH)Free agency[lower-alpha 9][107]
August 9, 2002Mike WattCarolina HurricanesFree agency (II)[108]
October 2002Yves SaraultSpringfield Falcons (AHL)Free agency (V)[109]
January 15, 2003Rick TocchetRetirement (III)[lower-alpha 10][110]
January 16, 2003Tomi KallioFrolunda HC (SHL)[lower-alpha 11]Release[99]
March 11, 2003Todd WarrinerNashville PredatorsWaivers[112]
May 28, 2003Mark GreigHamburg Freezers (DEL)Free agency[113]

Signings

DatePlayerTermContract typeRef
June 25, 2002Jeff Woywitka3-yearEntry-level[114]
July 12, 2002Donald Brashear4-yearRe-signing[115]
Todd Fedoruk3-yearRe-signing[115][116]
July 17, 2002David HarlockRe-signing[117]
Kirby LawRe-signing[118]
August 8, 2002Neil Littlemulti-yearRe-signing[119]
John Slaneymulti-yearRe-signing[119]
September 11, 2002Simon Gagne2-yearRe-signing[120]
February 15, 2003Marcus Ragnarsson2-yearExtension[23]

Draft picks

Philadelphia's picks at the 2002 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, on June 22–23, 2002.[121] The Flyers traded their original first, 26th overall, second, 59th overall, and third-round picks, 92nd overall, and Maxime Ouellet to the Washington Capitals for Adam Oates on March 19, 2002.[122] They also traded the Canucks' sixth-round pick, 184th overall, and their seventh-round pick, 225th overall, to the Columbus Blue Jackets for the Blue Jackets' 2003 fifth-round pick on June 23, 2002, and their eighth-round pick, 256th overall, to the Carolina Hurricanes for Paul Ranheim on May 31, 2000.[122]

Round Pick Player Position Nationality Team (league) Notes
1 4 Joni Pitkanen Defense  Finland Oulun Kärpät (SM-liiga) [lower-alpha 12]
4 105 Rosario Ruggeri Defense  Canada Chicoutimi Saguenéens (QMJHL) [lower-alpha 13]
4 126 Konstantin Baranov Forward  Russia Mechel Chelyabinsk (Russia)
5 161 Dov Grumet-Morris Goaltender  United States Harvard University (ECAC)
6 192 Nikita Korovkin Defense  Russia Kamloops Blazers (WHL) [lower-alpha 14]
6 193 Joey Mormina Defense  Canada Colgate University (ECAC)
7 201 Mathieu Brunelle Left wing  Canada Victoriaville Tigres (QMJHL) [lower-alpha 15]

Farm teams

The Flyers were affiliated with the Philadelphia Phantoms of the American Hockey League and the Trenton Titans of the ECHL.[123][124] The Phantoms missed the Calder Cup playoffs for the first time in their seven year existence.[125] Trenton made the Kelly Cup playoffs but were swept in the first round by the Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies.[126]

Notes

  1. Sharp wore number 51 in the season opener and number 11 in his second game.
  2. 1 2 Co-winners with Martin Brodeur of the New Jersey Devils.
  3. Condition not met. The Flyers would have received the Oilers' 2004 fifth-round pick if Dopita re-signed with Edmonton for the 2003–04 season.[82] Dopita returned to Europe after being released by Edmonton on December 28.[83]
  4. Condition not met. The Flyers would have received a late round draft pick (sixth-to-eighth-round pick) if the Coyotes re-signed Ranheim for the 2003–04 season.[86]
  5. Condition not met.
  6. In parentheses is the player's free agency group on July 1 if applicable.[13]
  7. Chalmers retired.[102]
  8. The Flyers retained Divisek's NHL rights through the 2007–08 season.[104]
  9. The Flyers retained Pletka's NHL rights until trading them to Chicago on August 2, 2006.[106]
  10. Tocchet was named an assistant coach of the Colorado Avalanche.
  11. Kallio signed with Frolunda on January 21.[111]
  12. The Flyers acquired the 4th overall pick from the Tampa Bay Lightning for Ruslan Fedotenko, the Lightning's second-round pick and the Phoenix Coyotes' second-round pick on June 21, 2002.[122]
  13. The Flyers traded Dean McAmmond to the Calgary Flames for the Flames' fourth-round pick, 105th overall, on June 24, 2001.[122]
  14. The Flyers traded their 2001 fourth-round pick to the Carolina Hurricanes for the Hurricanes' third-round pick, 91st overall, on June 24, 2001. The Flyers traded the Hurricanes' pick back to Carolina for the Hurricanes' sixth-round pick, 192nd overall, and the Hurricanes' 2003 third-round pick on June 22, 2002.[122]
  15. The Flyers traded their ninth-round pick, 287th overall, and their 2001 eighth-round pick to the Tampa Bay Lightning for the Lightning's seventh-round pick, 201st overall, on June 24, 2001.[122]

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