2006–07 Columbus Blue Jackets | |
---|---|
Division | 4th Central |
Conference | 11th Western |
2006–07 record | 33–42–7 |
Home record | 18–19–4 |
Road record | 15–23–3 |
Goals for | 201 |
Goals against | 249 |
Team information | |
General Manager | Doug MacLean |
Coach |
Gerard Gallant (Oct/Nov) Gary Agnew (interim)(Nov 13–22) Ken Hitchcock (Nov-Apr) |
Captain | Adam Foote |
Alternate captains |
Sergei Fedorov Rick Nash David Vyborny |
Arena | Nationwide Arena |
Average attendance | 16,401 (90.43%) |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Rick Nash (27) |
Assists | David Vyborny (48) |
Points | David Vyborny (64) |
Penalties in minutes | Alexander Svitov (145) |
Wins | Fredrik Norrena (24) |
Goals against average | Fredrik Norrena (2.78) |
The 2006–07 Columbus Blue Jackets season was the seventh National Hockey League season in Columbus, Ohio.
The off-season was dominated by a contract dispute with top forward Nikolay Zherdev, who had threatened to return to Russia to play if Columbus did not meet his demands. Zherdev remained a holdout for much of the preseason. However, the two parties were able to come to an agreement approximately a week before the season began.
The Blue Jackets, hoping to qualify for the playoffs for the first time in franchise history, got off to a disastrous start, falling as low as 6–16–2 into December, briefly holding the worst record in the NHL. The Jackets' poor start led General Manager Doug MacLean to fire Head Coach Gerard Gallant on November 13. Gallant would be replaced a week later by veteran coach Ken Hitchcock. Coincidentally, Hitchcock's first game as Jackets head coach was against the Philadelphia Flyers, the team that fired him as head coach earlier in the season.
The Blue Jackets once again failed to qualify for the postseason. As the Atlanta Thrashers qualified for the playoffs in the East, the Blue Jackets were, until the 2008–09 season, the only NHL team to have never played a post-season game.
The Blue Jackets were shut out a League-high 16 times during the regular season. Along with the four shutouts Blue Jackets goaltenders recorded, 20 of the Blue Jackets' 82 regular-season games ended in a shutout. They were also the most penalized team in the League, with 453 power-play opportunities against.