The 2016β17 Colorado Avalanche season was the
22nd operational season and 21st playing season for the
Colorado Avalanche since the franchise relocated from
Quebec prior to the start of the
1995β96 NHL season,[1] as well as the franchise's 38th season in the
National Hockey League and 45th season overall.
Under first-year head coach
Jared Bednar, the Avalanche got off to a respectable start, and were only two games below .500 by December 1. However, they only won a total of four games in December and January combined. By the All-Star Break, they were 13-31-2, and their season was all but finished. They would only win nine more games after that to finish 22-56-4, the worst record in the NHL. They missed the playoffs for the third consecutive year having missed the playoffs by 46 points in the standings. They finished the season with their fewest points since moving to Denver in 1995, and their fewest since
1990β91, which was also the last time the franchise finished in last place overall. The Avalanche's 48 points were among the fewest for a non-expansion team since 1967, and the second fewest for any team playing an 82-game season where one point is earned for losing in overtime or a shootout, only ahead of the
2023β24 San Jose Sharks (who finished with 47 points). As of the
2023β24 NHL season, this is the most recent time the Avalanche have missed the playoffs.
Off-season
On August 11, 2016,
Patrick Roy resigned as head coach and vice president of hockey operations.[2] On August 25, the Avalanche hired
Jared Bednar of the
American Hockey League's
Cleveland Monsters as Roy's replacement. He had led the Monsters to winning the
AHL championship in the
previous season.[3] Bednar was hired less than a month before the start of training camp. With nowhere near enough time to assemble his own staff, he was forced to retain Roy's assistants. He was also unable to install his own system.[4]
β Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Avalanche. Stats reflect time with the Avalanche only.
β‘Traded mid-season
Bold/italics denotes franchise record
Transactions
The Colorado Avalanche were involved in the following transactions during the 2016β17 NHL season.
[a] The
Colorado Avalanche's second-round pick was re-acquired as the result of a trade on June 27, 2015 that sent Buffalo's second-round pick in
2015 to San Jose in exchange for a second-round pick in 2015, Colorado's sixth-round pick in
2017 and this pick.[42]
San Jose previously acquired this pick as the result of a trade on July 1, 2014 that sent
Brad Stuart to Colorado in exchange for a sixth-round pick in
2017 and this pick.[43]
The 2016β17 Colorado Avalanche season was the
22nd operational season and 21st playing season for the
Colorado Avalanche since the franchise relocated from
Quebec prior to the start of the
1995β96 NHL season,[1] as well as the franchise's 38th season in the
National Hockey League and 45th season overall.
Under first-year head coach
Jared Bednar, the Avalanche got off to a respectable start, and were only two games below .500 by December 1. However, they only won a total of four games in December and January combined. By the All-Star Break, they were 13-31-2, and their season was all but finished. They would only win nine more games after that to finish 22-56-4, the worst record in the NHL. They missed the playoffs for the third consecutive year having missed the playoffs by 46 points in the standings. They finished the season with their fewest points since moving to Denver in 1995, and their fewest since
1990β91, which was also the last time the franchise finished in last place overall. The Avalanche's 48 points were among the fewest for a non-expansion team since 1967, and the second fewest for any team playing an 82-game season where one point is earned for losing in overtime or a shootout, only ahead of the
2023β24 San Jose Sharks (who finished with 47 points). As of the
2023β24 NHL season, this is the most recent time the Avalanche have missed the playoffs.
Off-season
On August 11, 2016,
Patrick Roy resigned as head coach and vice president of hockey operations.[2] On August 25, the Avalanche hired
Jared Bednar of the
American Hockey League's
Cleveland Monsters as Roy's replacement. He had led the Monsters to winning the
AHL championship in the
previous season.[3] Bednar was hired less than a month before the start of training camp. With nowhere near enough time to assemble his own staff, he was forced to retain Roy's assistants. He was also unable to install his own system.[4]
β Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Avalanche. Stats reflect time with the Avalanche only.
β‘Traded mid-season
Bold/italics denotes franchise record
Transactions
The Colorado Avalanche were involved in the following transactions during the 2016β17 NHL season.
[a] The
Colorado Avalanche's second-round pick was re-acquired as the result of a trade on June 27, 2015 that sent Buffalo's second-round pick in
2015 to San Jose in exchange for a second-round pick in 2015, Colorado's sixth-round pick in
2017 and this pick.[42]
San Jose previously acquired this pick as the result of a trade on July 1, 2014 that sent
Brad Stuart to Colorado in exchange for a sixth-round pick in
2017 and this pick.[43]