

Note: CR = Conference rank GP = Games played W = Wins L = Losses T = Ties GF = Goals for GA = Goals against Pts = Pointsīolded teams qualified for the playoffs. Louis Blues and San Jose Sharks for fewest short-handed goals allowed, with 4. The Stars finished the regular season with the NHL's best record and first overall in goals against, with just 168. The Stars would eventually return to the Central Division after the NHL returned to a four division alignment in 2013. This would temporarily change when the Dallas Burn of the then-new Major League Soccer were placed in a newly-formed Central Division in 2000, but MLS reverted to an Eastern and Western Conference format without additional divisions after only two seasons. This resulted in the oddity of Dallas, a city near the longitudinal center of the contiguous of the United States and in the Central Time Zone, having none of its major professional sports teams in a "Central Division" despite the fact that all of the then-established major leagues at this time had divisions with some form of that name. Under a league-wide realignment from four to six divisions, the NHL moved the Stars from the Central to the Pacific Division. They would defeat the Buffalo Sabres in the Stanley Cup finals to win the first Stanley Cup for the Stars in franchise history. Officially announced his retirement, October 15, 2005.The 1998–99 Dallas Stars season was the Stars' sixth season in Dallas, Texas, and the thirty-second of the franchise.

Signed as a free agent by Phoenix, August 6, 2004.Signed as a free agent by Detroit, August 22, 2001. Jby Andy Doorty In Game 6 of the 1999 Stanley Cup Final, Dallas Stars winger Brett Hull had the puck on his stick in triple overtime.Signed as a free agent by Dallas, July 3, 1998.Louis by Calgary with Steve Bozek for Rob Ramage and Rick Wamsley, March 7, 1988. Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award (Rookie of the Year - AHL) (1987).BCJHL Interior Division First All-Star Team (1983, 1984).

No player in NHL history was able to hide in plain sight like Hull.įor more of Brett Hull's 100 Greatest Players bio, please click here. Brett Hull's magic act as a NHL goal-scorer included a nifty trick: He could make himself disappear in the offensive zone when everyone in the building was looking at him.
