The National Hockey League's Patrick Division was formed in 1974 as part of the Clarence Campbell Conference. The division moved to the Prince of Wales Conference in 1981. The division existed for 19 seasons until 1993. It was named after Lester Patrick, player and longtime coach of the New York Rangers, who was a developer of ice hockey. It is the forerunner of the original Atlantic Division, which later became the Metropolitan Division in 2013.
| Conference | Campbell Conference (1974–1981) Wales Conference (1981–1993) |
|---|---|
| League | National Hockey League |
| Sport | Ice hockey |
| Founded | 1974 |
| Ceased | 1993 |
| Replaced by | 1993–2013 Atlantic Division |
| Most titles | Philadelphia Flyers (8) |
Division lineups
edit1974–1979
editChanges from the 1973–74 season
edit- The Patrick Division is formed as a result of NHL realignment
- The New York Islanders and New York Rangers come from the East Division
- The Atlanta Flames and Philadelphia Flyers come from the West Division
1979–1980
edit- Atlanta Flames
- New York Islanders
- New York Rangers
- Philadelphia Flyers
- Washington Capitals
Changes from the 1978–79 season
edit- The Washington Capitals come from the Norris Division
1980–1981
edit- Calgary Flames
- New York Islanders
- New York Rangers
- Philadelphia Flyers
- Washington Capitals
Changes from the 1979–80 season
edit- The Atlanta Flames move to Calgary, Alberta, to become the Calgary Flames
1981–1982
edit- New York Islanders
- New York Rangers
- Philadelphia Flyers
- Pittsburgh Penguins
- Washington Capitals
Changes from the 1980–81 season
edit- The Patrick Division switches from the Clarence Campbell Conference to the Prince of Wales Conference
- The Calgary Flames move to the Smythe Division
- The Pittsburgh Penguins come from the Norris Division
1982–1993
edit- New Jersey Devils
- New York Islanders
- New York Rangers
- Philadelphia Flyers
- Pittsburgh Penguins
- Washington Capitals
Changes from the 1981–82 season
edit- The Colorado Rockies move to East Rutherford, New Jersey, to become the New Jersey Devils
- The New Jersey Devils come from the Smythe Division
After the 1992–93 season
editThe league was reformatted into two conferences with two divisions each:
- Eastern Conference
- Western Conference
Regular season Division champions
edit- 1975 – Philadelphia Flyers (51–18–11, 113 pts)
- 1976 – Philadelphia Flyers (51–13–16, 118 pts)
- 1977 – Philadelphia Flyers (48–16–16, 112 pts)
- 1978 – New York Islanders (48–17–15, 111 pts)
- 1979 – New York Islanders (51–15–14, 116 pts)
- 1980 – Philadelphia Flyers (48–12–20, 116 pts)
- 1981 – New York Islanders (48–18–14, 110 pts)
- 1982 – New York Islanders (54–16–10, 118 pts)
- 1983 – Philadelphia Flyers (49–23–8, 106 pts)
- 1984 – New York Islanders (50–26–4, 104 pts)
- 1985 – Philadelphia Flyers (53–20–7, 113 pts)
- 1986 – Philadelphia Flyers (53–23–4, 110 pts)
- 1987 – Philadelphia Flyers (46–26–8, 100 pts)
- 1988 – New York Islanders (39–31–10, 88 pts)
- 1989 – Washington Capitals (41–29–10, 92 pts)
- 1990 – New York Rangers (36–31–13, 85 pts)
- 1991 – Pittsburgh Penguins (41–33–6, 88 pts)
- 1992 – New York Rangers (50–25–5, 105 pts)
- 1993 – Pittsburgh Penguins (56–21–7, 119 pts)
Season results
edit| (#) | Denotes team that won the Stanley Cup |
| (#) | Denotes team that lost Stanley Cup Final (and since 1981–82 won the Prince of Wales Trophy) |
| (#) | Denotes team that qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs |
| ‡ | Denotes team with most points in the regular season (winner of the Presidents' Trophy since 1985–86) |
| Season | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1974–75 | (DC) Philadelphia (113)‡ | (4) NY Rangers (88) | (5) NY Islanders (88) | Atlanta (83) | ||
| 1975–76 | (DC) Philadelphia (118) | (2) NY Islanders (101) | (6) Atlanta (82) | NY Rangers (67) | ||
| 1976–77 | (DC) Philadelphia (112) | (1) NY Islanders (106) | (6) Atlanta (80) | NY Rangers (72) | ||
| 1977–78 | (DC) NY Islanders (111) | (1) Philadelphia (105) | (4) Atlanta (87) | (7) NY Rangers (73) | ||
| 1978–79 | (DC) NY Islanders (116)‡ | (1) Philadelphia (95) | (2) NY Rangers (91) | (3) Atlanta (90) | ||
| 1979–80 | (1) Philadelphia (116)‡ | (5) NY Islanders (91) | (8) NY Rangers (86) | (9) Atlanta (83) | Washington (67) | |
| 1980–81 | (1) NY Islanders (110)‡ | (6) Philadelphia (97) | (7) Calgary (92) | (13) NY Rangers (74) | Washington (70) | |
| 1981–82 | NY Islanders (118)‡ | NY Rangers (92) | Philadelphia (87) | Pittsburgh (75) | Washington (65) | |
| 1982–83 | Philadelphia (106) | NY Islanders (96) | Washington (94) | NY Rangers (80) | New Jersey (48) | Pittsburgh (45) |
| 1983–84 | NY Islanders (104) | Washington (101) | Philadelphia (98) | NY Rangers (93) | New Jersey (41) | Pittsburgh (38) |
| 1984–85 | Philadelphia (113)‡ | Washington (101) | NY Islanders (86) | NY Rangers (62) | New Jersey (54) | Pittsburgh (53) |
| 1985–86 | Philadelphia (110) | Washington (107) | NY Islanders (90) | NY Rangers (78) | Pittsburgh (76) | New Jersey (59) |
| 1986–87 | Philadelphia (100) | Washington (86) | NY Islanders (82) | NY Rangers (76) | Pittsburgh (72) | New Jersey (64) |
| 1987–88 | NY Islanders (88) | Philadelphia (85) | Washington (85) | New Jersey (82) | NY Rangers (82) | Pittsburgh (81) |
| 1988–89 | Washington (92) | Pittsburgh (87) | NY Rangers (82) | Philadelphia (80) | New Jersey (66) | NY Islanders (61) |
| 1989–90 | NY Rangers (85) | New Jersey (83) | Washington (78) | NY Islanders (73) | Pittsburgh (72) | Philadelphia (71) |
| 1990–91 | Pittsburgh (88) | NY Rangers (85) | Washington (81) | New Jersey (79) | Philadelphia (76) | NY Islanders (60) |
| 1991–92 | NY Rangers (105)‡ | Washington (98) | Pittsburgh (87) | New Jersey (87) | NY Islanders (79) | Philadelphia (75) |
| 1992–93 | Pittsburgh (119)‡ | Washington (93) | NY Islanders (87) | New Jersey (87) | Philadelphia (83) | NY Rangers (79) |
Playoff Division champions
edit- 1982 – New York Islanders
- 1983 – New York Islanders
- 1984 – New York Islanders
- 1985 – Philadelphia Flyers
- 1986 – New York Rangers
- 1987 – Philadelphia Flyers
- 1988 – New Jersey Devils
- 1989 – Philadelphia Flyers
- 1990 – Washington Capitals
- 1991 – Pittsburgh Penguins
- 1992 – Pittsburgh Penguins
- 1993 – New York Islanders
Stanley Cup winners produced
edit- 1975 – Philadelphia Flyers
- 1980 – New York Islanders
- 1981 – New York Islanders
- 1982 – New York Islanders
- 1983 – New York Islanders
- 1991 – Pittsburgh Penguins
- 1992 – Pittsburgh Penguins
Presidents' Trophy winners produced
edit- 1992 – New York Rangers
- 1993 – Pittsburgh Penguins