St. Louis Blues

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St. Louis Blues
First Season
1967-68
Team History
St. Louis Blues (1967-present)
Conference/Division
National Hockey League (1967-present)
  • Western Conference (1993-present)
    • Central Division (1993-present)
  • Campbell Conference (1974-93)
    • Norris Division (1981-93)
    • Smythe Division (1974-81)
  • West Division (1967-74)
Venue
Enterprise Center (1995-present)
St. Louis Arena (1967-95)
AHL Affiliate
Springfield Thunderbirds
Key People
Players • Head Coaches • Executives


The St. Louis Blues are a professional ice hockey team based in St. Louis, Missouri. The Blues compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Central Division of the Western Conference. The franchise was founded as one of the six teams from the 1967 NHL expansion and is named after the W.C. Handy song "Saint Louis Blues."

Publications

Home programs by season

Season/Date Type Opponent Venue
1960s
October 11, 1967 Regular Season Minnesota North Stars St. Louis Arena
1967-68 Postseason Minnesota North Stars St. Louis Arena
Stanley Cup Finals Montreal Canadiens St. Louis Arena
1968-69 Stanley Cup Finals Montreal Canadiens St. Louis Arena
1970s
1972-73 Postseason Chicago Black Hawks St. Louis Arena
1980s
1986-87 Regular Season n/a St. Louis Arena
1990s
1991-92 Regular Season n/a St. Louis Arena
1999-2000 Regular Season n/a Enterprise Center
2010s
2016-17 Winter Classic Chicago Blackhawks Busch Stadium
2018-19 Stanley Cup Finals Boston Bruins Enterprise Center, TD Garden

Media guides and yearbooks by season

Media guides

1960s 1967-68 • 1969-70
1970s 1970-71 • 1972-73 • 1975-76 • 1976-77 • 1977-78 • 1979-80
1980s 1980-81 • 1981-82 • 1982-83 • 1983-84 • 1984-85 • 1987-88 • 1988-89 • 1989-90
1990s 1990-91 • 1992-93 • 1994-95 • 1995-96
2000s 2000-01 • 2001-02 • 2002-03
2010s 2016-17 • 2017-18 • 2018-19 • 2019-20
2020s 2020-21 • 2021-22

Yearbooks

1960s 1968-69 • 1969-70
1970s 1970-71
1990s 1998-99
2010s 2015-16 • 2019-20

Seasons

St. Louis Blues publications by season
1967-68 • 1968-69 • 1969-70 • 1970-71 • 1971-72 • 1972-73 • 1973-74 • 1974-75 • 1975-76 • 1976-77 • 1977-78 • 1978-79 • 1979-80 • 1980-81 • 1981-82 • 1982-83 • 1983-84 • 1984-85 • 1985-86 • 1986-87 • 1987-88 •  1988-89 • 1989-90 • 1990-91 • 1991-92 • 1992-93 • 1993-94 • 1994-95 • 1995-96 • 1996-97 • 1997-98 • 1998-99 • 1999-2000 • 2000-01 • 2001-02 • 2002-03 • 2003-04 • 2004-05 • 2005-06 • 2006-07 • 2007-08 • 2008-09 •  2009-10 • 2010-11 • 2011-12 • 2012-13 • 2013-14 • 2014-15 • 2015-16 • 2016-17 • 2017-18 • 2018-19 • 2019-20 • 2020-21 • 2021-22 • 2022-23


Head Coaches

St. Louis Blues head coaches
Lynn Patrick (1967) • Scotty Bowman (1967-70) • Al Arbour (1970-71) • Scotty Bowman (1971) • Sid Abel (1971) • Bill McCreary, Sr. (1971) • Al Arbour (1971-72) • Jean-Guy Talbot (1972-74) • Lou Angotti (1974) • Lynn Patrick (1974) • Garry Young (1974-75) • Lynn Patrick (1975-76) • Leo Boivin (1976) • Emile Francis (1976-77) • Leo Boivin (1977-78) • Barclay Plager (1978-79) • Red Berenson (1979-82) • Emile Francis (1982-82) • Barclay Plager (1982-83) • Jacques Demers (1983-86) • Jacques Martin (1986-88) • Brian Sutter (1988-92) • Bob Plager (1992) • Bob Berry (1992-94) • Mike Keenan (1994-96) • Jim Roberts (1996-97) • Joel Quenneville (1997-04) • Mike Kitchen (2004-06) • Andy Murray (2006-10) • Davis Payne (2010-11) • Ken Hitchcock (2011-17) • Mike Yeo (2017-18) • Craig Berube (2018-23) • Drew Bannister (2023-present)


National Hockey League
Eastern Conference Atlantic Metropolitan
Boston Bruins (TD Garden)
Buffalo Sabres (KeyBank Center)
Detroit Red Wings (Little Caesars Arena)
Florida Panthers (Amerant Bank Arena)
Montreal Canadiens (Bell Centre)
Ottawa Senators (Canadian Tire Centre)
Tampa Bay Lightning (Amalie Arena)
Toronto Maple Leafs (Scotiabank Arena)
Carolina Hurricanes (PNC Arena)
Columbus Blue Jackets (Nationwide Arena)
New Jersey Devils (Prudential Center)
New York Islanders (Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum)
New York Rangers (Madison Square Garden)
Philadelphia Flyers (Wells Fargo Center)
Pittsburgh Penguins (PPG Paints Arena)
Washington Capitals (Capital One Arena)
Western Conference Central Pacific
Chicago Blackhawks (United Center)
Colorado Avalanche (Ball Arena)
Dallas Stars (American Airlines Center)
Minnesota Wild (Xcel Energy Center)
Nashville Predators (Bridgestone Arena)
St. Louis Blues (Enterprise Center)
Utah Hockey Club (Delta Center)
Winnipeg Jets (Canada Life Centre)
Anaheim Ducks (Honda Center)
Calgary Flames (Scotiabank Saddledome)
Edmonton Oilers (Rogers Place)
Los Angeles Kings (Crypto.com Arena)
San Jose Sharks (SAP Center at San Jose)
Seattle Kraken (Climate Pledge Arena)
Vancouver Canucks (Rogers Arena)
Vegas Golden Knights (T-Mobile Arena)
Defunct Franchises Arizona Coyotes • Cleveland Barons • Hamilton Tigers • Montreal Maroons • New York Americans • Ottawa Senators
Related League publications • All-Star Games • Goal Magazine • League records • Seasons • Venues


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