Division lineups
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1998–1999
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Changes from the 1997–98 season
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- The Southeast Division is formed as a result of NHL realignment
- The Florida Panthers, Tampa Bay Lightning, and Washington Capitals come from the original Atlantic Division
- The Carolina Hurricanes come from the Northeast Division
1999–2011
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- Atlanta Thrashers
- Carolina Hurricanes
- Florida Panthers
- Tampa Bay Lightning
- Washington Capitals
Changes from the 1998–99 season
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2011–2013
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- Carolina Hurricanes
- Florida Panthers
- Tampa Bay Lightning
- Washington Capitals
- Winnipeg Jets
Changes from the 2010–11 season
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- The Atlanta Thrashers relocate to Winnipeg, Manitoba, and become the new Winnipeg Jets
After the 2012–13 season
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The NHL dissolved the Southeast Division as the league realigned into two conferences with two divisions each. The Winnipeg Jets moved to the Western Conference and the Central Division. The Florida Panthers and Tampa Bay Lightning were placed into the new Atlantic Division. The Carolina Hurricanes and Washington Capitals were placed in the newly formed Metropolitan Division.
Division champions
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- 1999 – Carolina Hurricanes (34–30–18, 86 pts)
- 2000 – Washington Capitals (44–24–12–2, 102 pts)
- 2001 – Washington Capitals (41–27–10–4, 96 pts)
- 2002 – Carolina Hurricanes (35–26–16–5, 91 pts)
- 2003 – Tampa Bay Lightning (36–25–16–5, 93 pts)
- 2004 – Tampa Bay Lightning (46–22–8–6, 106 pts)
- 2005 – no season (NHL Lockout)
- 2006 – Carolina Hurricanes (52–22–8, 112 pts)
- 2007 – Atlanta Thrashers (43–28–11, 97 pts)
- 2008 – Washington Capitals (43–31–8, 94 pts)
- 2009 – Washington Capitals (50–24–8, 108 pts)
- 2010 – Washington Capitals (54–15–13, 121 pts)
- 2011 – Washington Capitals (48–23–11, 107 pts)
- 2012 – Florida Panthers (38–26–18, 94 pts)
- 2013 – Washington Capitals (26–18–2, 54 pts)
Season results
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Season
|
1st
|
2nd
|
3rd
|
4th
|
5th
|
---|
1998–99 |
(3) Carolina (86) |
Florida (78) |
Washington (68) |
Tampa Bay (47) |
|
1999–2000 |
(2) Washington (102) |
(5) Florida (98) |
Carolina (84) |
Tampa Bay (54) |
Atlanta (39)
|
2000–01 |
(3) Washington (96) |
(8) Carolina (88) |
Florida (66) |
Atlanta (60) |
Tampa Bay (59)
|
2001–02 |
(3) Carolina (91) |
Washington (85) |
Tampa Bay (69) |
Florida (60) |
Atlanta (54)
|
2002–03 |
(3) Tampa Bay (93) |
(6) Washington (92) |
Atlanta (74) |
Florida (70) |
Carolina (61)
|
2003–04 |
(1) Tampa Bay (106) |
Atlanta (78) |
Carolina (76) |
Florida (75) |
Washington (59)
|
2004–05 |
No season due to 2004–05 NHL lockout
|
2005–06 |
(2) Carolina (112) |
(8) Tampa Bay (92) |
Atlanta (90) |
Florida (85) |
Washington (70)
|
2006–07 |
(3) Atlanta (97) |
(7) Tampa Bay (93) |
Carolina (88) |
Florida (86) |
Washington (70)
|
2007–08 |
(3) Washington (94) |
Carolina (92) |
Florida (85) |
Atlanta (76) |
Tampa Bay (71)
|
2008–09 |
(2) Washington (108) |
(6) Carolina (97) |
Florida (93) |
Atlanta (76) |
Tampa Bay (66)
|
2009–10 |
(1) Washington (121)‡ |
Atlanta (83) |
Carolina (80) |
Tampa Bay (80) |
Florida (77)
|
2010–11 |
(1) Washington (107) |
(5) Tampa Bay (103) |
Carolina (91) |
Atlanta (80) |
Florida (72)
|
2011–12 |
(3) Florida (94) |
(7) Washington (92) |
Tampa Bay (84) |
Winnipeg (84) |
Carolina (82)
|
2012–13[a] |
(3) Washington (57) |
Winnipeg (51) |
Carolina (42) |
Tampa Bay (40) |
Florida (36)
|
- Notes
- a The 2012–13 NHL season was shortened to 48 games due to the lockout.
Stanley Cup winners produced
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Presidents' Trophy winners produced
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Southeast Division titles won by team
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References
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