Western Conference (NHL)
one of two conferences in the National Hockey League
The Western Conference (French: Conférence de l'Ouest) is one of two conferences in the National Hockey League (NHL) used to divide teams. Its counterpart is the Eastern Conference.
Divisions
changeChampions
changeStanley Cup champions produced
change- 1974–75 - Philadelphia Flyers†
- 1979–80 - New York Islanders†
- 1980–81 - New York Islanders†
- 1983–84 - Edmonton Oilers
- 1984–85 - Edmonton Oilers
- 1986–87 - Edmonton Oilers
- 1987–88 - Edmonton Oilers
- 1988–89 - Calgary Flames
- 1989–90 - Edmonton Oilers
- 1995–96 - Colorado Avalanche
- 1996–97 - Detroit Red Wings†
- 1997–98 - Detroit Red Wings†
- 1998–99 - Dallas Stars
- 2000–01 - Colorado Avalanche
- 2001–02 - Detroit Red Wings†
- 2006–07 - Anaheim Ducks
- 2007–08 – Detroit Red Wings†
- 2009–10 – Chicago Blackhawks
- 2011–12 – Los Angeles Kings
- 2012–13 – Chicago Blackhawks
- 2013–14 – Los Angeles Kings
- 2014–15 – Chicago Blackhawks
- 2022-23 - Vegas Golden Knights
† - The Philadelphia Flyers, New York Islanders, and Detroit Red Wings are no longer members of the Campbell/Western Conference. The Flyers and Islanders moved to the Wales/Eastern Conference prior to the 1981–82 NHL season, and the Red Wings moved to the Eastern Conference prior to the 2013–14 season.