It’s business as usual in the NHL

With the St. Louis Blues edging the Boston Bruins in seven games on June 12th the 2018/19 NHL season went the distance. The Blues hoisted the cup for the first time since 1967/68 when they entered the league as they rode the hot hand of center Ryan O’Reilly and the goaltending of Jordan Binnington. O’Reilly netted eight goals and 15 assists for 23 points in the playoffs to tie Brad Marchand of the Bruins for the scoring lead.

O’Reilly also took home the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player of the postseason for his efforts and put together a six-game streak in the series against Boston with five goals and four assists, including goals in four straight games. As for Binnington, the 25-year-old rookie who was called up mid-season from the minors, set a new NHL record for first-year goaltenders by winning 16 games in a playoff season. He’s could also win the Calder Trophy this year as the league’s rookie of the year as he’s one of three finalists for the award.

And speaking of the annual NHL Awards, they are next up on the league’s agenda as they take place in Las Vegas, Nevada  this Thursday, June 20th.  In fact, even though the on-ice action has come to a conclusion, the NHL is entering one of the busiest times of the year. The NHL Draft will be held on Friday, June 21st to Saturday, June 22nd at Rogers Arena in Vancouver with the New Jersey Devils selecting first overall. Shortly after that, the league’s free agency market opens and this is often a frenzied time of the calendar with numerous players switching uniforms for enormous amounts of money.

Unrestricted free agents have the power to sign with whoever they choose while restricted free agents are open game for offer sheets from pother teams with their own club having the right to match.

Offer sheets are quite rare in the NHL these days, but that could change this year with restricted free agents such as Mitch Marner of the Toronto Maple Leafs and Brayden Point of the Tampa Bay Lightning being possible targets for competing teams. And with the draft and free agency heading our way shortly fans should expect to see several trades made over the summer.

General managers typically fine tune their squads during the offseason to prepare themselves for the next gruelling campaign. The Los Angeles Kings have wasted no time in trying to rebuild as GM Rob Blake got the ball rolling just after the season ended by buying out the contract of 34-year-old veteran defenceman Dion Phaneuf. Blake triggered the Kings’ option and bought out the remaining two years of the blue liner’s deal which was a mammoth contract worth $49 million over seven years.

Phaneuf signed the deal while a member of the Toronto Maple Leafs, but has been traded to the Ottawa Senators and the Kings since then. Los Angeles acquired him in February of 2018 and he played 93 regular-season games with the club. However, he managed to post just 16 points on the west coast and occasionally found himself watching his teammates from the press box as a healthy scratch. The Kings finished in eighth place in the Pacific Division this season with the league’s worst record and Blake is trying to turn his side into a playoff contender as quickly as possible.

 

Stanley Cup Final goes to the wire

The Boston Bruins will host the St. Louis Blues in game seven of the Stanley Cup Final on Wed., June 12th in a winner-take-all battle to be crowned 2018/19 NHL champions. The Bruins forced a seventh and deciding contest with a 5-1 triumph at the Enterprise Center in St. Louis on June 9th. The Bruins are seeking their seventh cup win in club history while St. Louis is hunting for their first since making their NHL debut back in 1967/68. That was the year the the league originally doubled in size from six to 12 franchises.

This is the 17th time in history that a Stanley Cup Final series has gone the full seven games. The Bruins earned home-ice advantage after finishing with the second-best record in the Atlantic Division, Eastern Conference and the league this season behind the Tampa Bay Lightning. The last time Boston went the full seven games in a Stanley Cup final was in the 2010/11 season when they downed the Vancouver Canucks 4-0 on the road at Rogers Arena. This is the first time a seventh game of a final series will take place in Boston in the 95 years since the club was formed.

Overall, the home team has won 12 times in the seventh game of a final while the visitors have been successful on four occasions. However, the last two game sevens were won by the road team as the Bruins beat the Canucks in 2010/11 and the Pittsburgh Penguins took care of the Detroit Red Wings in the 2008/09 campaign. The Bruins own the league record for the most game-sevens in history with 27 as well as wins at 15 and have gone 14-8 in Boston. The Blues have played 17 game-sevens with a record of 9-8 including 4-6 as the away team.

Both clubs have won a seventh game in the playoffs this season as the Bruins beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-1 in the first round after trailing 3-2 in the series and The Blues also fought back from 3-2 down to squeak past the Dallas Stars 2-1 in double overtime at home in the second round. Boston captain Zdeno Chara is expected to make NHL history on Wednesday night when he skates in his 14th game-seven. The game will feature a goaltending battle between the Bruins’ 32-year old veteran Tuukka Rask and the Blues’ Jordan Binnington, who’s a 25-year-old rookie.

Rask’s record in this year’s postseason is 3-0 when facing elimination with a 95.3 save percentage and a  1.34 goals-against average. He also leads the league in the playoffs with a 93.8 save percentage. The Blues will need to stay out of the penalty box if possible since the Bruins possess the best power-play in the league in the playoffs with a success rate of 32.9 per cent. Meanwhile, the Blues have killed off just 75 per cent of their penalties while their power-play is struggling at 16.3 per cent with just one goal in the series while having the man advantage.

On paper, it looks like all of the advantages are leaning Boston’s way but anything can happen in a game seven. History also points to the home team having the upper hand but St. Louis have been warriors on the road during this year’s playoffs with an excellent record of 9-3.

Stanley Cup Final now a two out of three series

The St. Louis Blues are halfway to winning the first Stanley Cup in franchise history but the Boston Bruins are also just two games away from winning their seventh. The teams are tied at two games apiece with the series heading back to Boston for game five on June 6th. It’s now a two-out-of-three series with Boston having home ice in games five and seven if necessary and the Blues hosting game six. This may not faze the Blues since they have fared much better away from home during the postseason at 8-3 while they are just 6-6 at the Enterprise Center.

The Bruins opened the series with a 4-2 home win but the Blues bounced back in game two with a 3-2 overtime victory. Boston then hammered the home side 7-2 in game three with St. Louis rebounding once again with a 4-2 triumph in game four. The Blues have won their first home and away Stanley Cup Final game in franchise history so far this year after losing their 12 previous Final contests. They were swept in four straight games in their three other Finals in 1967/68, 68/69 and 69/70. The Montreal Canadiens downed them the first two times with the Bruins sweeping them in 69/70.

Boston’s special teams have run rampant in the first four games with six power-play markers on 16 chances as well as a shorthanded goal. They went four-for-four with the man advantage in game three in St. Louis by scoring four times on four shots. It’s no surprise the Blues cut down on their penalty minutes in game four with just two minors. It was the only game Boston hasn’t scored on the power-play but St. Louis gave up the shorthanded goal in that outing. Blues’ rookie goaltender Jordan Binnington was pulled in game three after conceding five goals and then rebounded with the win in game four. He now owns a 7-2 record in this year’s playoffs after a loss along with a save percentage of 93.3 and a 1.86 goals-against average.

Forward Oskar Sundqvist of St. Louis was suspended for game three of the series after boarding Boston defenceman Matt Grzelcyk in the second game. Grzelcyk missed games three and four with a concussion and his roster spot was taken over by John Moore. Grzelcyk’s status for the rest of the series is unclear at the moment and the same goes for fellow rearguard Zdeno Chara. The Bruins’ 42-year-old veteran captain was struck in the face with the puck in game four and may be sidelined. If he’s unable to play and Grzelcyk doesn’t return the Bruins may dress Steven Kampfer, Jeremy Lauzon or Urho Vaakanainen in his place.

St. Louis is proving to be a physical match for Boston and have outhit the Big Bad Bruins in all four contests. With the series tied 2-2 it means the Stanley Cup Final will go to at least six games for the 10th time in the past dozen seasons. It’s also the 26th time to go at least six since 1939 when the best-of-seven format was introduced by the NHL. The team that won game four to tie the series has won on three of the last five occasions but just 10 out of 25 times overall. The game four win was huge for the Blues as teams that have trailed 3-1 in a Stanley Cup Final have lost 33 of 34 series. The Toronto Maple Leafs were the only team to fight back and they did if after falling behind 3-0 to the Detroit Red Wings in 1941/42.

Boston Bruins and St. Louis Blues face off for the Stanley Cup

The Stanley Cup Final faces off May 27th and the St. Louis Blues have been waiting patiently for 49 years to exact some revenge on the Boston Bruins. The teams met in the Final back in 1969/70 when the Bruins swept the Blues quite easily in four contests. The fourth game was the closest with Boston’s Hall of Fame blue liner Bobby Orr scoring the winning goal and then celebrating by sailing through the air. The teams met two years after that historic moment with Boston once again winning in four games in the semifinals on their way to another Stanley Cup.

It’s taken the Blues 49 years to reach the Final again after making it in the franchise’s first three seasons from 1967/68 to 1969/70. They are still waiting to hoist their first Stanley Cup and are 0 for 12 in Final series games as they were swept in all three previous appearances. Boston has won two more Stanley Cups since 1970 as they also lifted the trophy in the 1971/72 and 2010/2011 seasons. The Bruins will be hunting their seventh championship overall in their 20th Final appearance.

The Bruins went 49-24-9 during the regular season for 107 points and earned home ice advantage by posting the second-best record in the league, the Eastern Conference and the Atlantic Division. They have beaten the Toronto Maple Leafs, Columbus Blue Jackets and Carolina Hurricanes in this year’s playoffs in seven, six and four games respectively. They enter the Final with seven straight postseason victories to their name and have gone 8-0 in history against the Blues in the playoffs while outscoring them 48-15. The teams split the season series this year as Boston won at home 5-2 in January and the Blues were 2-1 winners in a shootout in February.

St. Louis earned 99 points in the regular season with a record of 45-28-9 and finished in third place in the Central Division and were the fifth seed in the Western Conference. They had the worst record in the league on January 3rd but then caught fire the rest of the way. Head coach Mike Yeo was relieved of his duties on November 21st and the team’s fortunes started to change about five weeks later under new bench boss Craig Berube, who has been nominated as a finalist for coach of the year this season. The Blues then beat the Winnipeg Jets, Dallas Stars and San Jose Sharks in the playoffs in six, seven and six games.

The Bruins have the edge in net, at least on paper as Tuukka Rask leads the league in the postseason in shutouts with two, goals-against average at 1.84 and save percentage at 94.2. The Blues will reply with Jordan Binnington, a 25-year-old rookie who was called up to the team midway through the regular season. His record stood at 24-5-1 in the regular season and he was named one of three finalists as the NHL’s rookie of then year. His numbers are still impressive in the playoffs but not quite as good as the regular season with a GAA of 2.36 to accompany a 91.4 save percentage and a shutout.

The Bruins home record in the postseason is 6-3 and they’re 6-2 on the road. The Blues are 5-5 at home and 7-2 on their travels. Boston’s goals-per game average stands at 3.35 in the postseason with a GAA of 1.94. St. Louis is scoring 3.00 goals per game on average with a 2.52 GAA. The Bruins’ power-play has been the best in the postseason at 34 per cent with an 86.3 per cent penalty-killing efficiency. The Blues are 19.3 per cent with the man advantage and have killed off 78 per cent of their penalties.

Individually, the Bruins’ top performers have been Brad Marchand (7 goals, 11 assists), David Pastrnak (7 goals, 8 assists), David Krejci (4 goals, 10 assists), Patrice Bergeron (5 goals, 8 assists), Charlie Coyle (6 goals, 6 assists) and defenseman Torey Krug (1 goal, 11 assists). Over in St. Louis, the top scorers are Jaden Schwartz (12 goals and 4 assists), Ryan O’Reilly (3 goals, 11 assists), Vladimir Tarasenko (8 goals, 5 assists), David Perron (six goals, 7 assists) and defensemen Alex Pietrangelo (2 goals, 11 assists) and Colton Parayko (1 goal, 10 assists).

Boston Bruins aiming for their seventh Stanley Cup

They still don’t know who they’re going to play yet, either the St. Louis Blues or the San Jose Sharks, and it doesn’t really matter to the Boston Bruins as they aim for their seventh Stanley Cup this season. The Bruins have made it to the final series for the 20th time after disposing of the Toronto Maple Leafs in seven games in the opening series followed by a six-game victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets and a four-game sweep over the Carolina Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference final.

Boston won the Prince of Wales Trophy as Eastern Conference champions but won’t be satisfied unless they hoist Lord Stanley’s cup. Whoever the Bruins end up playing they will have home ice advantage in the series due to finishing second overall in the NHL standings this season. This will be Boston’s third appearance in the Stanley Cup final in the past nine seasons. The last time they played for all the marbles was in the 2012/13 campaign when they lost in six outings to the Chicago Blackhawks. The last time they won the cup was 2010/11 when they beat the Vancouver Canucks in the seventh and deciding game.

The Bruins have captured the title six times in club history to rank in a fourth-place tie with Chicago for the most cups. They are also level with the Blackhawks for the most cups won by an American franchise, but quite a way behind the record of 11 which belongs to the Detroit Red Wings. However, the Bruins haven’t really had much luck in Stanley Cup final series as they have won six and lost 13. This translates into a winning percentage of just 31.6. They’ll now try to improve on that stat starting on May 27th when the final series gets underway in Boston.

The Bruins have reached this year’s final mainly due to the depth of their squad as well as their successful power-play and the fine work of 32-year-old goaltender Tuukka Rask of Finland. Boston’s power play operated at a clip of 46.7 per cent in the Eastern Conference final against Carolina as they were seven for 15 and their penalty killing unit killed off 92.9 per cent of their penalties by going 13 for 14. The Bruins’ power-play has been successful a league-best 34 per cent of the time in the postseason while their penalty killing is an impressive 86.3 per cent.

In between the posts, Rask’s record is 12-5 with two shutouts, a 1.84 goals-against average and a league-leading 94.2 save percentage. He’s been getting plenty of scoring help as the Bruins have received at least one goal in the playoffs from 19 different players to set a new league record. Brad Marchand leads the way with seven goals and 11 assists in 17 games followed by David Pastrnak with seven goals and eight assists, David Krejci at four goals and 10 helpers, Patrice Bergeron with eight goals and five assists. Charlie Coyle at six goals and six assists and defenceman Torey Krug with a goal and 11 assists.

That’s half a dozen players who have reached double digits in points so far and Marcus Johansson has nine points in 15 games on three goals and nine assists. General manager Don Sweeney deserves credit for the contributions of Coyle and Johansson as he acquired both players at the trade deadline in February. Coyle came over from the Minnesota Wild in exchange for for Ryan Donato and a conditional fifth-round draft choice while Johansson was landed from the New Jersey Devils in exchange for a second and fourth-rounder.

Coyle and Johansson took some time to get used to their new surroundings in Boston as Coyle chipped in with just a pair of goals and six points in 21 regular-season contests and Johansson contributed a goal and three points in 10 games. However, they have both brought experience and size to the Bruins in the postseason as well as some much appreciated secondary scoring. Coyle is centering Johansson and Danton Heinen and Heinen has also helped the team out with two goals and five assists during the postseason. If Boston can continue to light up the lamp on the power-play, get good goaltending from Rask and receive contributions from the third and fourth line they should have a good shot at adding a seventh Stanley Cup banner to their rink.

St. Louis Blues still looking for first Stanley Cup

The St. Louis Blues have been working towards winning a Stanley Cup ever since joining the NHL as an expansion team back in 1967/68. However, they have yet to realize their goal as their Stanley Cup drought is tied with the Toronto Maple Leafs for the longest in the league. The Leafs last hoisted the silverware in the spring of 1967 just months before the Blues played their first ever NHL game.

The Blues have made it as far as the Western Conference Final against the San Jose Sharks this season after downing the Winnipeg Jets in six games in the opening round and then going the full seven to take care of the pesky Dallas Stars. In fact, they didn’t eliminate Dallas until scoring in double overtime of the deciding contest at home to win the game 2-1. It was the first time the Blues have fought back to win a seven-game series after trailing 3-2 in games in 1998/99 when they beat the Phoenix Coyotes after trailing 3-1.

St. Louis has now gone 9-8 in their history in game-sevens in the playoffs. Their final game against Dallas also set a new NHL record as three series have been decided in overtime of game seven so far this season. The Washington Capitals and Carolina Hurricanes went to a seventh-game overtime in the first round of the postseason as did the Vegas Golden Knights vs San Jose Sharks series. The Blues still have a lot of hard work ahead of them if they hope to snap their cup drought though since they lost the first game of the conference Final 6-3 in San Jose and the Sharks have home-ice advantage in the series.

The two teams also met in the 2015/16 Western Conference Final with San Jose winning in six games and in the five previous series between them the Sharks have a 3-2 edge. St. Louis may not be too concerned about where game seven will be played if the series against San Jose goes that far though since their playoff record on the road this year is an impressive 5-2. on the other hand, they need to improve at home as they are just 3-4 so far in St. Louis.

Even though the Blues and Leafs have gone without a Stanley Cup since 1967 the Leafs have never made it as far as the Stanley Cup Final since then while the Blues have reached three cup finals. In fact, the Blues made it to the Final the first three seasons they were in the league when the NHL expanded to 12 clubs from six. The expansion franchise didn’t fare too well however as they were swept in four straight games in all three final series. The Montreal Canadiens beat them in 1967/68 and 1968/69 while the Boston Bruins shut them out in the 1969/70 campaign.

The St. Louis franchise has been quite consistent since joining the NHL as they have missed the playoffs just eight times in their 51-year history. They have also been crowned division champions on nine occasions and in 1999/2000 they had the league’s best regular-season record and took home the President’s Trophy for their efforts. For the Blues to finally win the Stanley Cup they’ll need 25-year-old rookie goaltender Jordan Binnington to continue his sharp play. He’s gone 8-6 in the playoffs with a goals-against average of 2.57 and a 90.8 save percentage. He may be tiring though since his GAA was 1.89 in the regular season while his save percentage was 92.7.

Jaden Schwartz is leading the offence with eight goals and four assists after scoring just 11 times in 69 regular-season contests. Captain Alex Pietrangelo is helping out from the blue line with two goals and nine assists while centre Ryan O’Reilly has three goals and 10 points. The team needs more production from winger Vladimir Tarasenko however as he’s chipped in with five goals and one assist but he’s a minus-8 and just one of his goals have come at even strength. St. Louis currently has a one-in-four chance of winning the Stanley Cup this season and those odds could be good enough to snap their half-century drought.

Carolina Hurricanes make the most of their playoff opportunities

The Carolina Hurricanes don’t participate in the Stanley Cup playoffs that often, but when they do manage to reach the postseason they definitely make the best of the situation. The Hurricanes fought back from a 3-2 deficit to the Stanley Cup champion Washington Capitals in the first round this season to win the series in seven games and then used the momentum to steamroll the New York Islanders in four straight in the second round. It was the first time the Carolina franchise had won a four-game series in four straight.

This is the club’s first playoff appearance since 2008/09 and just the fourth time they’ve played in the spring since 2001. However, in the previous three playoff appearances they managed to reach the Eastern Conference Final each time and in 2005/06 captured the Stanley Cup. The sweep over the Islanders puts them back in the Eastern Final for the fourth consecutive time when making the playoffs. Carolina outscored  The Islanders 13-5 in their series even though starting goaltender Petr Mrazek was injured during the second game.

With Mrazek on the sidelines head coach Rod Brind’Amour replaced him in the crease with 35-year-old journeyman Curtis McElhinney. When the veteran started game three of the series he became the oldest goalie to start his first playoff game. Les Binkley of the Pittsburgh Penguins set the previous record back in 1970, but McElhinney was 37 days older than Binkley when he got the nod for his first playoff start.

The Hurricanes didn’t lose a beat without Mrazek as McElhinney went 3-0 in the series and posted a goals-against average of 1.56 along with a save percentage of 94.7. Carolina will play the winner of the Columbus Blue Jackets vs Boston Bruins series for the Eastern Conference title and there’s a good chance Mrazek will be ready to return in that series. Carolina has been red hot at home in the postseason with a record of 5-0 and they’re getting some timely scoring from youngsters and veterans alike.

Nineteen-year-old rookie Andrei Svechnikov is back in the squad after suffering a concussion in the Washington series and has four points in five playoff games. Thirty-year-old Jordan Staal has chipped in with four goals and five assists and 37-year-old Justin Williams has three goals and three assists in 11 games each. Twenty-one-year-old year-old Sebastian Aho has four goals and five helpers and 24-year-old year-old Teuvo Teravainen has chipped in with six goals and three assists.

In addition, the Hurricanes are getting plenty of offence from their blue liners as Dougie Hamilton has three goals and seven points while Jaccob Slavin leads the team in assists and points with 11. Brett Pesce and Justin Faulk also have six points each. One of the biggest surprises though has been the play 23-year-old rookie Warren Foegele who has contributed five goals and four assists and is a plus-7. His nine playoff points place him in a tie with Erik Cole as the most in a postseason by a Carolina rookie. Cole set the original record in 2001/02 and also holds the rookie record for playoff goals in a season with six.

Foegele was chosen by Carolina in the third round of the 2014 draft with the 67th overall pick and the 6-foot-2-inch, 190 lb power forward scored 10 goals and five assists in the regular season with a minus-17 rating. Foegele, of Markham, Ontario, is no stranger to playoff hockey though as he was named the most valuable player in the postseason for 2016/17 as a member of the Ontario Hockey League’s Erie Otters when he scored 13 goals and 26 points in 22 games.

If Foegele can keep it up, the rest of the Hurricanes continue to play determined, physical hockey and the team’s goaltending holds out there’s a chance the team returns to the Stanley Cup final in just their second playoff appearance since winning the cup 13 years ago.

 

NHL announces three Hart Trophy finalists

The NHL has released the list of award finalists for the 2018/19 season and it’s safe to say there aren’t really any surprises. Each annual trophy has been narrowed down to three finalists with the big prize being the Hart Memorial Trophy for the player voted as the most valuable to his team. This year’s Hart finalists are centre Sidney Crosby of the Pittsburgh Penguins, right-winger Nikita Kucherov of the Tampa Bay Lightning and centre Connor McDavid of the Edmonton Oilers.

Professional Hockey Writers Association members voted on the trophy winners when the regular season ended and the league announces the three finalists. The winners are then announced at the league’s annual awards show in Las Vegas, which will be held on June 19th this year. The Hart Trophy was introduced in 1924 and let’s take a quick look at this year’s three finalists.

The 22-year-old McDavid of Edmonton racked up 116 points in 78 games this season on 41 goals and 75 assists and finished second in league scoring behind Kucherov. He also registered a point on 50.7 per cent of his team’s total of 229 goals. The Oilers’ captain just finished his fourth NHL season and his point total has risen every year. McDavid never went two games in a row without scoring a points this year becoming just the eighth NHL’er to achieve the feat while playing a minimum of 50 games. The others were Steve Yzerman, Darryl Sittler, Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Elmer Lach, Paul Kariya and Jari Kurri.

McDavid played an average of 22:50 minutes per game in 2018/19 to lead all NHL forwards. He finished in a second-place tie for game-winning goals with nine and three of those came in overtime. McDavid took the Hart Trophy home for his play in 2016/17 and he’s trying to become just the second player ever to win the silverware more than once before turning 23 years old.

The 25-year-old Kucherov of Tampa Bay already has one award under his belt this season as he captured the Art Ross Trophy for leading the NHL in scoring. He notched 41 goals and 87 assists for 128 points in 82 contests this year. The 128 points were the most in the league since the 1995/96 campaign and his 87 helpers were the most since 2006/07. Kucherov’s scoring expertise helped Tampa to win 62 games in 2018/19 to tie  league record. The Russian forward also led the league in power-play points at 48 with 15 goals and 33 assists.

Kucherov picked up at least a point in 62 games this season and posted a league-high 38 games of two or more points, including two five-point performances. His assist and point totals this season set new Tampa Bay franchise records for one season. He also becomes the highest-scoring Russian player in the league for his 128 points. Alexander Mogilny set the previous mark of 127 points with 76 goals and 51 assists in 1992/93 when he was with the Buffalo Sabres. Only one other Tampa Bay player has won the Hart Trophy as Martin St. Louis took the honours for 2003/04.

The 31-year-old year-old Crosby scored 35 goals and 65 assists for an even 100 points in 79 games for Pittsburgh this season. It was the sixth time the team captain has reached the 100-point barrier in 14 seasons. He helped his team reach the playoffs for the 13th straight year, but they were bounced in four straight games by the New York Islanders in the very first round. Just five players have posted more 100-point seasons than Crosby in NHL history. These are Peter Stastny and Mike Bossy with seven each as well as Marcel Dionne with eight, Mario Lemieux with 10 and Wayne Gretzky at 15.

Crosby finished sixth in league scoring this season and reached at least 30 goals for the ninth time and 60 assists for the sixth time. He also reached 1,200 career points in 2018/19, becoming the 11th-fastest player to achieve the feat in 927 games. Crosby has already won two Hart Trophies as he took the award home for the 2006/07 and the 2013/14 seasons. He also led his team’s forwards in plus/minus this year at plus-18 as well as ice time. This is the seventh time Crosby has been named a finalist for the Hart Trophy in his career and if he wins it he will become the ninth player in history to capture the trophy three times.

Upsets galore in first round of NHL playoffs

Finishing as high as they could in the NHL standings this season didn’t help several clubs in the playoffs this season as there were a number of upsets in the first round. For the first time in league history all four division champions were knocked out in the opening round by the four wildcard teams. In addition, four of the last nine Stanley Cup champions have now been sent packing in the first round the following season with each of them bowing out in seven games.

The biggest surprise was seeing the Tampa Bay Lightning swept in four games by the Columbus Blue Jackets. Tampa led the league in points this season as they topped the Eastern Conference and the Atlantic Division. Their 62 season wins also tied a league record. On the other hand, Columbus made the playoffs on the last weekend of the season as the second wildcard team in the East. Columbus came back from a 3-0 deficit in game one in Tampa to win 4-3 and won the second game 5-1. They then took care of business at home by scores of 3-2 and 7-3.

The Calgary Flames, who won the Western Conference and Pacific Division, were eliminated in five games by the Colorado Avalanche, who also made the postseason in the last week of the campaign and finished as the second wildcard club in the West. Calgary shut Colorado out 4-0 at home in game one, but were then beaten 3-2 in overtime in the second game in Calgary. The Avalanche then won 6-2 and 3-2 in overtime at home and 5-1 in Calgary to end the series in just five contests.

The Nashville Predators managed to win a close battle to top the Central Division this year by edging out the Winnipeg Jets and St. Louis Blues. However, they dropped their series in six games to the Dallas Stars who were the first wildcard team in the West. Dallas edged Nashville 3-2  on the road in the first game with the Predators bouncing back for a 2-1 overtime victory in game two. Back in Dallas, Nashville won 3-2, but then lost the next three games by scores of 5-1 in Dallas, 5-3 in Nashville and 2-1 in overtime in game six in Dallas.

The Washington Capitals, who were the reigning Stanley Cup champions and winners of the Metropolitan division, went the full seven games against the Carolina Hurricanes who were the first wildcard team in the East. The first six games were all won by the home team as Washington won the first two games 4-2 and 4-3. Carolina were 5-0 and 2-1 victors in games three and four with Washington winning game five 6-0. They had a chance to win the series but Carolina bounced back with a 5-2 win to force game seven. The Capitals blew leads of 2-0 and 3-1 in the decider and were eventually beaten 4-3 in double overtime.

The St. Louis Blues finished the season in third place in the Central Division with the same points as the second-place Winnipeg Jets and therefore gave up home-ice advantage. There wasn’t much of an advantage in this series though as the first five games were all won by the visiting team. St. Louis then broke the trend by winning game six at home. The Blues won 2-1 and 4-3 in Winnipeg and then dropped a 6-3 and 2-1 decision in overtime at home. St. Louis won 3-2 in Winnipeg and at home in game six to take the series with all three of their wins and one of their losses being by just one goal.

The New York Islanders may have finished above the Pittsburgh Penguins by a few points in the Metropolitan Division, but considering the Penguins won the Stanley Cup in 2016 and 2017 their four-game sweep was generally considered and upset. The Islanders were making their first postseason in three years and won the first game at home 4-3 in overtime. They followed up with wins of 3-1, 4-1 and 3-1 to knock out Sidney Crosby and company in the minimum games needed and allowed just six goals against.

The other two series also went seven games and almost produced upsets, but the higher seeds ultimately prevailed. The Boston Bruins finished second in the Atlantic Division this year with the Toronto Maple Leafs coming third. They were meeting for the second consecutive season in the playoffs and for the third time since 2012/13. Like their last two clashes, this series also went the full seven games with Boston emerging victorious at home.

Boston lost home ice advantage in the very first game by losing 4-1 but then rebounded with their own 4-1 triumph in game two. The Leafs won 3-2 at home but gave home ice back to Boston by losing  game four 6-4 at home. The teams took turns winning though so Toronto retook home-ice advantage with a 2-1 win in the fifth game. They had two chances to eliminate Boston but couldn’t do it as they were downed 4-2 at home in game six and 5-1 in game seven with the Bruins scoring two empty-net goals.

The San Jose Sharks and Vegas Golden Knights finished in second and third place respectively in the Pacific Division and this series proved to be the most dramatic. The teams split the first two games in San Jose with the Sharks winning 5-2 and Vegas 5-3. Vegas then took a stranglehold on the series by winning 6-3 and 5-0 at home for a 3-1 series lead. The Sharks bounced back with a 5-2 home win and a  2-1 double overtime win in Vegas in game six via a shorthanded goal. The Golden Knights held a 3-0 lead in the third period of game seven when they received a controversial five-minute major penalty with just over 10 minutes to play.

The Sharks took advantage of the situation by scoring four power-play goals in the span of 241 seconds to take a 4-3 lead. However, Vegas fought back and forced overtime by scoring with 47 seconds remaining in the third period with their goaltender pulled for an extra attacker. The Sharks then won the game and series late in overtime to become just the second team in NHL history to erase a three-goal deficit in the third period of a game-seven playoff game and win it.

Ten games in the first round went to overtime while only seven contests needed an extra period last season. There are no Canadian-based teams left in the playoffs and three of the eight series went the full seven games. The Bruins, Islanders and Sharks are now the only top-10 teams from the regular-season remaining in the playoffs. The round two matchups will see the Boston take on Columbus and Carolina face the Islanders in the East. Over in the West we have Colorado facing San Jose and Dallas taking on St. Louis.

NHL playoffs not going to plan for some favourites

For some teams, the first round of the NHL playoffs isn’t likely to last very long at all. In fact, this appears to be the case for the Tampa Bay Lightning and Pittsburgh Penguins as they both trail their respective series 3-0.

This is likely to come as a surprise to many since Tampa tied an NHL record with 62 wins this season and finished first in the Atlantic Division, the Eastern Conference and the entire league. Things got off to a pretty healthy start for the team in their series against the Columbus Blue Jackets, who made the playoffs as the second wildcard team in the East.

Tampa stormed out to a 3-0 lead in the first period of game one at home, but were then completely stunned to see the Blue Jackets score four straight goals, including three in a six minute span in the third period to win the game 4-3.

Columbus proved that was no fluke as they completely dominated the Lightning in game two to the tune of 5-1 to take over home ice advantage with their pair of road wins. The two teams then headed to Columbus, but Tampa’s luck didn’t change as they fell short 3-1 in game three. Tampa has managed to score just two goals in the last eight periods of hockey against Blue Jackets’ goalie Sergei Bobrovsky.

To make matters worse, Tampa forward Nikita Kucherov, who led the NHL in scoring this season with 128 points, was suspended for game three for a dirty hit on Markus Nutivaara. Also, goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy who led the league with 39 wins this year has struggled mightily in net. Tampa entered the series after beating Columbus in all three regular-season games this year as well as outscoring them 17-3 in the process.

The Pittsburgh Penguins are facing the same fate as Tampa after they dropped the first three contests against the upstart New York Islanders. The Islanders won game one 4-3 at home in overtime and followed up with a 3-1 win in their second home outing. They then took care of business in game three in Pittsburgh with a convincing 4-1 win.

The big story in the Islanders vs Penguins series has been the lack of production from Pittsburgh centre Sidney Crosby. The team captain was held pointless in the first three games and had a minus-4 rating. He was also charged with committing a total of eight giveaways.

Tampa Bay and Pittsburgh could possibly come back to win their series, but just four teams have ever managed to come back from a 3-0 hole. The combined NHL playoff record for teams losing the first three games of a playoff series is 4-186.

As far as the rest of the series go, there hasn’t really been too much in the way of surprises. The Toronto Maple Leafs managed to wrangle home ice advantage away from the Boston Bruins by winning game one 4-1 in Boston. The Bruins then returned the favour with a 4-1 win in game two. It was a rather nasty contests and Toronto forward Nazem Kadri was suspended for the rest of the series after his vicious crosscheck to Jake DeBrusk. Kadri could possibly miss five games and he was also suspended for three playoff games last season when the two teams met.

Reigning Stanley Cup champions the Washington Capitals won their two home games against the Carolina Hurricanes by scores of 4-2 and 4-3 in overtime.

In the West, the Conference champion Calgary Flames beat the Colorado Avalanche 4-0 in game one, but then lost home ice advantage by dropping game two 3-2 in overtime. The Nashville Predators also failed to keep their home ice advantage after falling 3-2 to the Dallas Stars in game one of their tilt and then rebounding to win game two 2-1 in overtime.

The San Jose Sharks were the third Western Conference team to give up their home ice edge as they beat the Vegas Golden Knights 5-2 at home in game one, but were 5-3 losers in the second game. They were then doubled 6-3 in Vegas in game three to fall behind 2-1 in the series. San Jose veteran centre Joe Thornton has been suspended for game four after an illegal hit on Tomas Nosek.

The Winnipeg Jets followed the lead of the rest of the Western squads by giving up home ice advantage to the St. Louis Blues. The Blues edged Winnipeg 2-1 and 4-3 on the road, but then let the Jets back in the series by losing game three 6-3.