- 1993-94: 14 wins, 61 losses, 9 ties, 37 pts
- 1994-95: 9 wins, 34 losses, 5 ties, 23 pts
- 1995-96: 18 wins, 59 losses, 5 ties, 41 pts
- 1996-97: 31 wins, 36 losses, 15 ties, 77 pts (team clinches playoff spot for first time)
- 1997-98: 34 wins, 33 losses, 15 ties, 83 pts
- 1998-99: 44 wins, 23 losses, 15 ties, 103 pts
- 2000-01: 48 wins, 21 losses, 9 ties, 109 pts
- 2002-03: 52 wins, 21 losses, 8 ties, 1 OTL, 113 pts
- 2003-04: 43 wins, 23 losses, 10 ties, 6 OTL, 102 pts
- 2005-06: 52 wins, 21 losses, 9 ties, 113 pts
- 2006-07: 48 wins, 25 losses, 9 ties, 105 pts (Stanley Cup finals appearance)
- 2007-08: 43 wins, 31 losses, 8 OTL, 94 pts
- 2008-09: 36 wins, 35 losses, 11 OTL, 83 pts
- 2009-10: 44 wins, 32 losses, 6 OTL, 94 pts
According to legend, on February 26th, 1996, Detroit’s VP and GM, Jimmy Devellano and Ottawa’s GM, Pierre Gauthier agreed in principle to a trade that would have seen Chris Osgood and Steve Yzerman dealt to the Senators in exchange for Alexei Yashin, Damian Rhodes and Ottawa’s first round picks in 1996 and 1997.
Over the years, there’s been a lot of speculation as to why Devellano backed out on the trade. Some theorize that owner, Mike Illitch, vetoed the deal because Yzerman was one of his favorites. Another theory is that Devellano backed out because he only wanted to put a scare into Yzerman using the threat of a trade. At the time, it was well publicized that Head Coach Scotty Bowman was having issues getting Stevie Y to commit to the defensive side of the game. By publicly displaying the possibility that he could be moved, the threat of a trade left Yzerman quite impressionable. Imagine having to be faced with the daunting task of turning a his hometown team, a perennial losing franchise, into a contender.
However, the question remains…what if the Yzerman deal actually occurred?
On the surface, the Jason Spezza, Zdeno Chara and Bill Muckalt for Alexei Yashin fleacejob never happened. Without the 1996 and 1997 first rounders, Marian Hossa and Chris Phillips never would have played for the Senators either. No Hossa. No Heatley. No Milan Michalek. No Jonathan Cheechoo. (Huzzah!) And no 2010 second round pick.
In other words, without Chara and Phillips, the conversation concerning the best Senators defenceman ever would have been limited to Wade Redden, Norm MacIver and Steve Duchesne. Yikes. If that wasn’t bad enough, imagine having to go through the rest of your existence as a Sens fan without being able to reference Bill Muckalt’s goalless 2001-02 season?
Conversely, had Steve Yzerman been dealt to Ottawa, maybe he never would have made the team sacrifice and developed a solid two-way game. More importantly, without Jason Spezza, fans never would have heard their peers draw parallels between their respective careers.
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