| 1990–91 St. Louis Blues | |
|---|---|
| Division | 2nd Norris |
| Conference | 2nd Campbell |
| 1990–91 record | 47–22–11 |
| Home record | 24–9–7 |
| Road record | 23–13–4 |
| Goals for | 310 |
| Goals against | 250 |
| Team information | |
| General Manager | Ron Caron |
| Coach | Brian Sutter |
| Captain | Scott Stevens |
| Alternate captains |
Garth Butcher Adam Oates |
| Team leaders | |
| Goals | Brett Hull (86) |
| Assists | Adam Oates (90) |
| Points | Brett Hull (131) |
| Penalties in minutes | Glen Featherstone (204) |
| Wins | Vincent Riendeau (29) |
| Goals against average | Vincent Riendeau (3.01) |
The 1990–91 St. Louis Blues season was one in which Brett Hull scored 50 goals in 50 games. Hull finished with 86, the third-highest total in National Hockey League history. After finishing the regular season with the NHL's second highest point total (105), the Blues overcame a 3-games-to-1 series deficit against the Detroit Red Wings in the Norris Division semi-finals before losing the Minnesota North Stars in the Norris Division Final.
Newly acquired defenceman Scott Stevens is named team captain, replacing Rick Meagher.
The Blues allowed the most short-handed goals in the NHL, with 18.
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against
Note: Teams that qualified for the playoffs are highlighted in bold.
Divisions: NRS – Norris, SMY – Smythe
bold – Qualified for playoffs; p – Won Presidents' Trophy
Note: