2015–16 AHL season


The 2015–16 AHL season was the 80th season of the American Hockey League. The regular season began on October 9, 2015, and ended on April 17, 2016. The 2016 Calder Cup playoffs follow the conclusion of the regular season. An attendance record was set with a league average of 5,982 spectators per game, surpassing the record set in 2004–05.

Regular season

On May 12, 2015, the AHL unveiled a new, major realignment of its conferences and divisions for the 2015–16 season, a move made as a result of the relocations of seven franchises, including five teams moving to California, one to Manitoba, and one to Newfoundland and Labrador. Mirroring a change the National Hockey League had taken prior to its 2013–14 season, the AHL moved back to having four divisions of seven or eight teams. The Eastern Conference consists of the Atlantic and North Divisions, while the Western Conference consists of the Central and Pacific Divisions.
On June 13, the league commissioner, David Andrews, disclosed that the five California teams would each play 68-game schedule; the other 25 teams would play 76 games apiece. The implementation of an unbalanced format was seen as a way to ease the California teams' travel costs as well as reducing stretches of 3 games in 3 nights, which can impede player development and hamper attractive forms of play.
To alleviate the 68/76-game imbalance, the AHL began using an alternative method of ranking its teams and determining playoff seeds. As before, standings points are still awarded but rather than ranking teams by the total number of points earned, they are positioned by their points percentage, determined as the number of points earned divided by points available to them. For example, a team earning one win and one overtime loss after two games would have a.750 points percentage.
In support of the new division, the AHL played an outdoor game called the Golden State Hockey Rush at Raley Field in West Sacramento, California on December 18, 2015. The Stockton Heat defeated the Bakersfield Condors 3–2 in front of 9,357 fans.

Team and NHL affiliation changes

Relocations

Under a plan approved by the league on January 29, 2015, the league established a Pacific Division, with five teams based in the state of California. All five teams are affiliated with NHL franchises based in western North America. In the season prior to the realignment, the league had no teams west of Texas, causing call-up issues for western NHL teams. In return, the three ECHL franchises already based in the cities where the AHL franchises were relocated, went east and took the place of AHL teams that had left those cities.
On March 12, 2015, the AHL announced that the True North Sports & Entertainment-owned franchise, the St. John's IceCaps, was relocating back to Winnipeg, Manitoba, to make it easier for their NHL team, the Winnipeg Jets, to call-up players. In order to fulfill their arena contact in St. John's, they negotiated with the Montreal Canadiens to move the Hamilton Bulldogs to St. John's and take on the IceCaps identity; in turn, the Bulldogs fulfilled their arena obligation by transferring their lease and intellectual property rights to the former Belleville Bulls, a junior hockey team.
The franchise changes for the 2015–16 season are listed as follows:

Rule changes

Overtime

During the regular season, the sudden-death overtime period is reduced to five minutes in length but full playing strength is 3-on-3 for the entire period. Overtime will be preceded by a "dry scrape" of the entire ice surface. Teams will change ends at the start of overtime. If the game is still tied following overtime, a winner will be determined by a three-player shootout.
This change mimics the change made in the National Hockey League for the 2015–16 season. In the previous season, the AHL first experimented with 3-on-3 overtime but had three minutes of 4-on-4 play before reducing the number of players on the ice. This change caused 75 percent of games tied at the end of regulation to end in overtime in the 2014–15 season. This was reduced from just 35 percent in the 2013–14 season, decreasing the number of games decided by shootout.

Video Review

A team may use a "coach's challenge" to initiate an official video review; only those situations which are subject to review by rule may be challenged. A team may only request a coach's challenge if it has its timeout available, and the coach's challenge must be effectively initiated prior to the resumption of play. If the coach's challenge does not result in the original call on the ice being overturned, the team exercising such challenge will be charged with a timeout. This change is identical to the rule change implemented by the NHL for its 2015–16 season.

Face-offs

For face-offs conducted on any of the 8 face-off dots outside center ice, the defending team's player shall place his stick on the ice first, followed immediately by the attacking team's player. For face-offs at the center ice dot, the order of stick placement shall proceed as before, with the player from the visiting team placing his stick on the ice first, followed immediately by the home team's player. This rule change mirrors one the NHL also implemented for 2015–16; previously in both leagues, the visiting team's player placed his stick on the ice first regardless of the face-off location.

Playoff format

The 2016 playoff format changed as a result of the realignment and unbalanced regular season schedules. The new playoff format was finalized at the Annual Board of Governors meeting that took place July 6–9, 2015. During the regular season, teams receive two points for a win and one point for an overtime or shootout loss. The top four teams in each division ranked by points percentage qualify for the 2016 Calder Cup Playoffs, with one exception in each conference: if the fifth-place team in the Atlantic or Central Division finishes with a better points percentage than the fourth-place team in the North or Pacific Division, it would cross over and compete in the other division's bracket.
The 2016 Calder Cup Playoffs will feature a divisional playoff format, leading to conference finals and ultimately the Calder Cup Finals. The division semifinals are best-of-five series; all subsequent rounds are best-of-seven.

Standings

indicates team has clinched division and a playoff spot

indicates team has clinched a playoff spot

indicates team has been eliminated from playoff contention

Eastern Conference

Updated as of April 17, 2016
Atlantic Division
y–Hershey Bears 7643215798.645259220
x–Providence Bruins 7641229495.625238198
x–Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 7643274292.605230203
x–Portland Pirates 7641276290.592215207
x–Bridgeport Sound Tigers 7640294387.572209220
e–Hartford Wolf Pack 7641323085.559202199
e–Lehigh Valley Phantoms 7634354375.493215222
e–Springfield Falcons 7626423560.395194265

Western Conference

Updated as of April 17, 2016
Central Division
y–Milwaukee Admirals 76482332101.664224193
x–Lake Erie Monsters 7643226597.638211188
x–Rockford IceHogs 76402210494.618214205
x–Grand Rapids Griffins 7644301190.592238195
e–Charlotte Checkers 7636323580.526214229
e–Chicago Wolves 7633355374.487194228
e–Manitoba Moose 7626414561.401180250
e–Iowa Wild 7624415659.388169225

Pacific Division
y–Ontario Reign 6844194193.684192138
x–San Diego Gulls 6839234284.618208200
x–Texas Stars 7640258391.599277246
x–San Jose Barracuda 6831268373.537198193
e–Bakersfield Condors 6831287271.522212222
e–Stockton Heat 6832322268.500194224
e–San Antonio Rampage 7633358074.487213240

Statistical leaders

Leading skaters

The following players are sorted by points, then goals. Updated as of April 17, 2016.
GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/– = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes
PlayerTeamGPGAPtsPIM
Chris BourqueHershey Bears7230508056
Seth GriffithProvidence Bruins5724537732
T. J. BrennanToronto Marlies6925436853
Alexander KhokhlachevProvidence Bruins6023456812
Dustin JeffreySpringfield/W-B/Scranton6420446420
Andy MieleGrand Rapids Griffins7518446277
Austin CzarnikProvidence Bruins6820416124
Bud HollowaySt. John's IceCaps7019426114
Mikko RantanenSan Antonio Rampage5224366042
Mark ArcobelloToronto Marlies4925345922

Leading goaltenders

The following goaltenders with a minimum 1500 minutes played lead the league in goals against average. Updated as of April 16, 2016.
GP = Games played; TOI = Time on ice ; SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average; SV% = Save percentage; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout loss
PlayerTeamGPTOISAGASOGAASV%WLOT
Peter BudajOntario Reign603574:33153510491.75.93242144
Matt MurrayWilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins311827:169326442.10.9312091
Yann DanisAlbany Devils472681:1610819982.22.90828125
Juuse SarosMilwaukee Admirals382247:5310528442.24.9202980
Dan EllisHershey Bears432440:2810519742.38.90825125

Calder Cup playoffs

AHL awards

All-Star Teams

First All-Star Team
Second All-Star Team
All-Rookie Team