From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1989–90 AHL season
League American Hockey League
Sport Ice hockey
Regular season
F. G. "Teddy" Oke Trophy Sherbrooke Canadiens
Season MVP Paul Ysebaert
Top scorer Paul Ysebaert
MVP Jeff Hackett
Playoffs
Champions Springfield Indians
  Runners-up Rochester Americans
AHL seasons
←  1988–89
1990–91 →

The 1989–90 AHL season was the 54th season of the American Hockey League.

Fourteen teams played 80 games each in the schedule. The Sherbrooke Canadiens repeated finishing first overall in the regular season. The Springfield Indians won their sixth Calder Cup championship.

Final standings

North Division South Division

Note: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points;

North GP W L T Pts GF GA
Sherbrooke Canadiens ( MTL) 80 45 23 12 102 301 247
Cape Breton Oilers ( EDM) 80 39 34 7 85 317 306
Springfield Indians ( NYI) 80 38 38 4 80 317 310
Halifax Citadels ( QUE) 80 37 37 6 80 317 300
Maine Mariners ( BOS) 80 31 38 11 73 294 317
Moncton Hawks ( WIN) 80 33 42 5 71 265 303
New Haven Nighthawks ( LAK) 80 32 41 7 71 283 316
South GP W L T PTS GF GA
Rochester Americans ( BUF) 80 43 28 9 95 337 286
Adirondack Red Wings ( DET) 80 42 27 11 95 330 304
Baltimore Skipjacks ( WSH) 80 43 30 7 93 302 265
Utica Devils ( NJD) 80 44 32 4 92 354 315
Newmarket Saints ( TOR) 80 31 33 16 78 305 318
Hershey Bears ( PHI) 80 32 38 10 74 298 296
Binghamton Whalers ( HFD) 80 11 60 9 31 229 366

Scoring leaders

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes

Player Team GP G A Pts PIM
Paul Ysebaert Utica Devils 74 53 52 105 61
Ross Fitzpatrick Hershey Bears 74 45 58 103 26
Mike Donnelly Rochester Americans 68 43 55 98 71
Mark Pederson Sherbrooke Canadiens 72 53 42 95 60
Don Biggs Hershey Bears 66 39 53 92 125
Claude Vilgrain Utica Devils 73 37 52 89 32
Murray Eaves Adirondack Red Wings 78 40 49 89 35
Dale Krentz Adirondack Red Wings 74 38 50 88 36
Donald Audette Rochester Americans 70 42 46 88 78
John LeBlanc Cape Breton Oilers 77 54 34 88 50

Calder Cup playoffs

The league instituted trophies for division champions in the playoffs; the Richard F. Canning Trophy in the North Division, and the Robert W. Clarke Trophy in the South Division.

Division semifinals Division finals Calder Cup final
         
1 Sherbrooke 4
4 Halifax 2
1 Sherbrooke 2
North Division
3 Springfield 4
2 Cape Breton 2
3 Springfield 4
N3 Springfield 4
S1 Rochester 2
1 Rochester 4
4 Utica 1
1 Rochester 4
South Division
3 Baltimore 2
2 Adirondack 2
3 Baltimore 4

Trophy and award winners

Team awards
Calder Cup
Playoff champions:
Springfield Indians
Richard F. Canning Trophy
North division playoff champions:
Springfield Indians
Robert W. Clarke Trophy
South division playoff champions:
Rochester Americans
F. G. "Teddy" Oke Trophy
Regular season champions, North Division:
Sherbrooke Canadiens
John D. Chick Trophy
Regular season champions, South Division:
Rochester Americans
Individual awards
Les Cunningham Award
Most valuable player:
Paul YsebaertUtica Devils
John B. Sollenberger Trophy
Top point scorer:
Paul YsebaertUtica Devils
Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award
Rookie of the year:
Donald AudetteRochester Americans
Eddie Shore Award
Defenceman of the year:
Eric WeinrichUtica Devils
Aldege "Baz" Bastien Memorial Award
Best goaltender:
Jean-Claude BergeronSherbrooke Canadiens
Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award
Lowest goals against average:
Jean-Claude Bergeron and Andre RacicotSherbrooke Canadiens
Louis A. R. Pieri Memorial Award
Coach of the year:
Jim RobertsSpringfield Indians
Fred T. Hunt Memorial Award
Sportsmanship / Perseverance:
Murray EavesAdirondack Red Wings
Jack A. Butterfield Trophy
MVP of the playoffs:
Jeff HackettSpringfield Indians
Other awards
James C. Hendy Memorial Award
Most outstanding executive:
David Andrews
James H. Ellery Memorial Awards
Outstanding media coverage:
Mike Kane, Adirondack (newspaper)
Ron Rohmer, New Haven (radio)
Pyman Productions (television)
Ken McKenzie Award
Outstanding marketing executive:
Don Ostrom, Adirondack Red Wings

See also

References

Preceded by AHL seasons Succeeded by