2020 Stanley Cup playoffs

The 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2019–20 season. The playoffs began on August 1, 2020, and concluded on September 28, 2020, with the Tampa Bay Lightning winning their second Stanley Cup in franchise history, defeating the Dallas Stars four games to two in the Stanley Cup Finals. The playoffs were originally scheduled to begin in April, a few days after the regular season, and end in June. However, on March 12, the regular season was suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

2020 Stanley Cup playoffs
Tournament details
Venue(s)Rogers Place, Edmonton
Scotiabank Arena, Toronto
DatesAugust 1–September 28, 2020
Teams24
Defending championsSt. Louis Blues
Final positions
ChampionsTampa Bay Lightning
Runner-upDallas Stars
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s)Nikita Kucherov (Lightning) (34 points)
MVPVictor Hedman (Lightning)
← 2019
2021 →

On May 26, commissioner Gary Bettman confirmed that the league was going to use a 24-team playoff format to finish the season, conducted in two or more host cities as "hubs" with players placed under strict health protocols, quarantined from the general public, and all games played behind closed doors with no fans admitted. On July 10, the league ratified an agreement for its protocols with the NHL Players Association (NHLPA). The Eastern Conference played its early-round games at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, while the early rounds for the Western Conference, as well as the conference finals and Stanley Cup Finals, were played at Rogers Place in Edmonton.[2] This was the first Stanley Cup playoffs to be contested entirely in Canada since 1925, as well as the first time that the Stanley Cup was awarded on Canadian ice since 2011.[3]

The Boston Bruins made the playoffs as the Presidents' Trophy winners with the most points (i.e. best record) during the regular season. The Pittsburgh Penguins increased their postseason appearance streak to fourteen seasons, the longest active streak. For the first time since 1996, all California-based teams, the Anaheim Ducks, Los Angeles Kings, and San Jose Sharks, missed the playoffs. Six Canadian-based teams made the postseason this year, the most since 1993. It also marked the first time since 1986 that all four teams in cities based in Western Canada made the playoffs. In addition, it marked the only time to date that both the Winnipeg Jets and Arizona Coyotes (previously the original Jets, before relocation) qualified for the playoffs in the same season, as well as the only time that the Coyotes made the playoffs since 2012. This was the last playoff appearance for the Coyotes before suspending operations four years later. For the first time since 1999, all former World Hockey Association teams (Edmonton Oilers, Arizona Coyotes, Carolina Hurricanes, and Colorado Avalanche) made the playoffs.

Game two of the second round series between the Vancouver Canucks and Vegas Golden Knights was the 94th game of the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs, surpassing the previous single-year record of 93 established in 2014. On September 17, the Tampa Bay Lightning became the first team in NHL history to win the clinching game of their first three series in overtime.[4] The Dallas Stars set the record for the most games played in one playoff year (27) in game six of the Stanley Cup Finals; the previous record (26) was shared by the 1987 Philadelphia Flyers, 2004 Calgary Flames, 2014 Los Angeles Kings, 2015 Tampa Bay Lightning and 2019 St. Louis Blues. Game six of the Stanley Cup Finals was also the 130th game of the playoffs, setting the all-time record for most games played in one playoff year.

All games that were originally scheduled on August 27 and 28 were postponed due to a wildcat strike, in response to the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin.[5]

Playoff format

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On May 26, the league announced that 24 teams (12 per conference) advanced to this special conference-based playoff tournament with teams being seeded based on their points percentage at the time the regular season was suspended on March 12. The top four teams in each conference played in a separate seeding round-robin, with regular season overtime and shootout rules, with the clubs accumulating points like the regular season, to determine the seeding in the first round. In addition, any ties in the round-robin standings were broken by the regular season points percentage. The eight lower seeded teams in each conference played in the qualifying round, a best-of-five series with playoff overtime rules. The winners of these series advanced to face one of the round-robin teams in the first round.[6]

On May 28, the NHL stated that both the round-robin and the qualifying round were to be counted under playoff records, on the same day that the league declared the winners of the stats-based regular season NHL awards.[7] The league then announced on June 4 that all series after the qualifying round would remain a best-of-seven series but were re-seeded after each round.[8] With the ratification of an extension to the collective bargaining agreement on July 10, the league also announced that all teams participating in the qualifying round are considered to have made the playoffs and have participated in a playoff series.[9]

Host cities

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The playoffs were held in two "hub" cities both in Canada; Edmonton, Alberta at Rogers Place, and Toronto, Ontario at Scotiabank Arena. They were announced as host cities on July 10 with the NHLPA's ratification of the Return to Play plan, and an extension to its collective bargaining agreement with the NHLPA through the 2025–26 season. From the start of the playoffs through to the end of the second round, each city hosted all of the games for one conference: the Eastern Conference teams played in Toronto, and the Western Conference teams played in Edmonton. All games in the conference finals and Stanley Cup Finals were played in Edmonton.[3]

Edmonton and Toronto were among a shortlist of ten host cities announced on May 26, along with Chicago, Columbus, Dallas, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Saint Paul, and Vancouver.[6] After the league cut the shortlist down to six cities on June 22, Las Vegas and Vancouver were considered to be the frontrunners to host games.[10] Shortly after this, Vancouver dropped out of consideration on June 25, after health officials in British Columbia were unable to agree with the league on a protocol in the event that a player tested positive for COVID-19.[11] Las Vegas and the other U.S. cities were passed over after Nevada and other U.S. states began to experience a spike in COVID-19 cases in late June; it was reported that the NHL originally intended to have one host city in Canada and one in the United States.[12][13]

With the New York Rangers playing designated home games in the hub cities instead of in Madison Square Garden, the team's home arena was able to keep its tax exemptions by executing an act of God clause in its agreement with New York City.[14] Under normal circumstances, like the 2014 NHL Stadium Series and 2018 NHL Winter Classic games played at other New York City venues, the Rangers would have always been designated as the visiting team to avoid breaking Madison Square Garden's tax-exempt status.[15]

Each group of teams played inside what was called a "bubble".[16][17] A secure perimeter was constructed around both venues with various amenities, with Edmonton's covering four hotels in the Ice District and Rogers Place's existing practice facilities, and Toronto's split between Exhibition Place (Hotel X, BMO Field, & Coca-Cola Coliseum) and the Fairmont Royal York hotel (which is connected to Scotiabank Arena). Both sites included fitness, dining and recreation areas. Restaurants were operating within the secure zones, and players were able to order outside food via concierge and local food delivery services. The games were held behind closed doors, but non-participating players were allowed to watch games.[18] A large "stage" with multiple video screens was constructed to cover the empty stands for both teams in each end of the arena, and in-arena presentation was customized for each team when they were the designated home team (including use of their goal music, among other features).[19][18] The league implemented a compressed playoff schedule with more back-to-back games than usual to help address "bubble fatigue" among the players, who had to live with monotonous daily routines away from their families for several weeks.[20]

Although the general public was not permitted within the direct vicinity of the arena or inside, Oilers Entertainment Group announced plans to set up an outdoor "FanFest" at the site of a former casino near Rogers Place with approval of municipal and provincial health officials, including a "drive-in" screening games and a beer garden.[21]

Medical protocols

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Under the Return to Play plan that was ratified on July 10, any player could opt out of the restart without providing a reason and without any penalty, provided that they had informed their team by July 13, when formal training camps opened.[3] COVID-19 tests were then to be administered to players and staff every other day. On July 19, testing increased to three times 48 hours apart. The identities of those who tested positive were not released to the public, they would then be isolated and designated with the generic description "unfit for play" until they were medically cleared, and all injury updates were handled by the league instead of the teams.[22][23]

Teams arrived at their hub city on July 26; they were isolated in a "secure zone" consisting of their hotels, restaurants, practice facilities, and the arena. Testing was done every day,[22] as well as daily temperature and symptom checks. Individuals had to wear masks outside their hotel rooms except when eating, exercising, or while on the ice or bench. Other exceptions included during interviews with appropriate social distancing.[24]

Under the Quarantine Act, all travellers entering Canada at the time were required to self-isolate for 14 days on arrival. The NHL received an exception to this policy for its players and staff, as long as they remained within the secure zone and were restricted from access to or by the general public.[25][26] Anybody who left the bubble without prior approval could have faced a mandatory 14-day quarantine or been barred from returning. Teams could have also faced fines or loss of draft picks.[23][24]

During the conclusions of each qualifying round series, teams exchanged fist bumps instead of the traditional handshakes.[27] As players and coaches continued to test negative for COVID-19, the traditional handshake lines returned at the end of each first-round series.[28] After entering the bubble, the league had no personnel test positive for the virus during the playoffs.[29]

Playoff teams

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The following teams qualified for the playoffs:[30]

Eastern Conference

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Seeding round-robin
  1. Boston Bruins, Atlantic Division champions, Eastern Conference regular season champions, Presidents' Trophy winners – .714
  2. Tampa Bay Lightning – .657
  3. Washington Capitals, Metropolitan Division champions – .652
  4. Philadelphia Flyers – .645
Qualifying round
  1. Pittsburgh Penguins – .623
  2. Carolina Hurricanes – .596
  3. New York Islanders – .588
  4. Toronto Maple Leafs – .579 (28 RWs)
  5. Columbus Blue Jackets – .579 (25 RWs)
  6. Florida Panthers – .565
  7. New York Rangers – .564
  8. Montreal Canadiens – .500

Western Conference

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Seeding round-robin
  1. St. Louis Blues, Central Division champions, Western Conference regular season champions – .662
  2. Colorado Avalanche – .657
  3. Vegas Golden Knights, Pacific Division champions – .606
  4. Dallas Stars – .594
Qualifying round
  1. Edmonton Oilers – .585
  2. Nashville Predators – .565 (28 RWs)
  3. Vancouver Canucks – .565 (27 RWs)
  4. Calgary Flames – .564
  5. Winnipeg Jets – .563
  6. Minnesota Wild – .558
  7. Arizona Coyotes – .529
  8. Chicago Blackhawks – .514

Playoff bracket

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In each round, the highest remaining seed in each conference is matched against the lowest remaining seed. The higher-seeded team is awarded home ice advantage. In the Stanley Cup Finals, home ice was determined based on regular season points percentage. Each best-of-five series followed a 2–2–1 format: the higher-seeded team was the designated as the host for games one and two (and game five, if necessary), and the lower-seeded team was the host for games three (and game four, if necessary). Each best-of-seven series followed a 2–2–1–1–1 format: the higher-seeded team was the host for games one and two (and games five and seven, if necessary), and the lower-seeded team was the host for games three and four (and game six, if necessary). In the first round, the top four teams in each conference were seeded one through four based on their final standings from the round-robin. The teams that advanced from the qualifying round were re-seeded five through eight based on their regular season points percentage.

Qualifying round First round Second round Conference finals Stanley Cup Finals
               
1 Philadelphia 4
8 Montreal 2
1 Philadelphia 3
6 NY Islanders 4
5 Pittsburgh 1
12 Montreal 3
2 Tampa Bay 4
7 Columbus 1
6 Carolina 3
11 NY Rangers 0
6 NY Islanders 2
Eastern Conference
2 Tampa Bay 4
7 NY Islanders 3
10 Florida 1
3 Washington 1
6 NY Islanders 4
8 Toronto 2
9 Columbus 3
2 Tampa Bay 4
4 Boston 1
4 Boston 4
5 Carolina 1
E2 Tampa Bay 4
W3 Dallas 2
1 Vegas 4
8 Chicago 1
1 Vegas 4
5 Vancouver 3
5 Edmonton 1
12 Chicago 3
2 Colorado 4
7 Arizona 1
6 Nashville 1
11 Arizona 3
1 Vegas 1
Western Conference
3 Dallas 4
7 Vancouver 3
10 Minnesota 1
3 Dallas 4
6 Calgary 2
8 Calgary 3
9 Winnipeg 1
2 Colorado 3
3 Dallas 4
4 St. Louis 2
5 Vancouver 4

Exhibition games

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Prior to the start of the playoffs, all 24 qualified teams played one exhibition game.[31]

July 28

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Pittsburgh Penguins 2–3 OT Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap
Toronto Maple Leafs 4–2 Montreal Canadiens Scotiabank Arena Recap
Edmonton Oilers 4–1 Calgary Flames Rogers Place Recap

July 29

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Tampa Bay Lightning 5–0 Florida Panthers Scotiabank Arena Recap
Colorado Avalanche 3–2 Minnesota Wild Rogers Place Recap
Carolina Hurricanes 2–3 Washington Capitals Scotiabank Arena Recap
St. Louis Blues 0–4 Chicago Blackhawks Rogers Place Recap
New York Islanders 2–1 New York Rangers Scotiabank Arena Recap
Vancouver Canucks 1–4 Winnipeg Jets Rogers Place Recap

July 30

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Nashville Predators 2–0 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap
Boston Bruins 1–4 Columbus Blue Jackets Scotiabank Arena Recap
Vegas Golden Knights 4–1 Arizona Coyotes Rogers Place Recap


Stanley Cup qualifiers

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The top four playoff teams in each conference played in a round-robin tournament against each other to determine the final playoff seeding. The round-robin games were played with regular season overtime and shootout rules, with the teams accumulating points like the regular season, and any ties in the round-robin standings were broken by the regular season points percentage instead of regulation wins.

The bottom eight playoff teams in each conference played in a best-of-five series to determine which four teams advanced to the first round. The qualifying round games were played with Stanley Cup playoff overtime rules. Seeding was determined by regular season points percentage.

Eastern Conference seeding round-robin

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Pos Team GP W L OTL PCT GF GA GD Pts
1 Philadelphia Flyers 3 3 0 0 0.645 11 3 +8 6
2 Tampa Bay Lightning 3 2 1 0 0.657 7 8 −1 4
3 Washington Capitals 3 1 1 1 0.652 5 7 −2 3
4 Boston Bruins 3 0 3 0 0.714 4 9 −5 0
Source: National Hockey League[32]

During the first game of round-robin play, the Flyers' Carter Hart made 34 saves against the Bruins in a 4–1 victory.[33] In the game between Washington and Tampa Bay, with the game forced to go to a shootout (the first in Stanley Cup playoff history), Nikita Kucherov's shot got past Braden Holtby for the winning goal in a 3–2 triumph.[34] The Lightning then faced the Bruins, and Tyler Johnson's goal at 18:33 of the third period won the game for Tampa Bay 3–2.[35] In the Flyers' match-up against the Capitals, Scott Laughton's two goals assisted Philadelphia's 3–1 victory.[36] Between the top two seeds, the Flyers defeated the Lightning 4–1 to take the first seed riding on Nicolas Aube-Kubel's two goals in the first period.[37] Battling out for the third spot, Holtby made 30 saves for Washington in their victory, defeating the Presidents' Trophy-winning Boston Bruins 2–1.[38]

August 2 Philadelphia Flyers 4–1 Boston Bruins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Michael Raffl (1) – 05:33
Nate Thompson (1) – 09:31
Philippe Myers (1) – 18:59
Second period 18:51 – Chris Wagner (1)
Scott Laughton (1) – 04:07 Third period No scoring
Carter Hart 34 saves / 35 shots Goalie stats Jaroslav Halak 25 saves / 29 shots
August 3 Washington Capitals 2–3 SO Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 12:53 – Nikita Kucherov (1)
Richard Panik (1) – 17:24
Evgeny Kuznetsov (1) – pp – 19:32
Second period 07:48 – Mitchell Stephens (1)
No scoring Third period No scoring
T. J. Oshie  
Evgeny Kuznetsov  
Nicklas Backstrom  
Shootout   Victor Hedman
  Brayden Point
  Nikita Kucherov
Braden Holtby 26 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 31 saves / 33 shots
August 5 Tampa Bay Lightning 3–2 Boston Bruins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Brayden Point (1) – 07:33
Alex Killorn (1) – pp – 10:32
First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 16:43 – Charlie McAvoy (1)
Tyler Johnson (1) – 18:33 Third period 01:47 – Chris Wagner (2)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 25 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Tuukka Rask 32 saves / 35 shots
August 6 Washington Capitals 1–3 Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 13:03 – Scott Laughton (2)
No scoring Second period 11:30 – Travis Sanheim (1)
Travis Boyd (1) – 08:49 Third period 08:37 – Scott Laughton (3)
Braden Holtby 18 saves / 21 shots Goalie stats Brian Elliott 16 saves / 17 shots
August 8 Philadelphia Flyers 4–1 Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Nicolas Aube-Kubel (1) – 07:40
Nicolas Aube-Kubel (2) – 14:00
First period No scoring
Joel Farabee (1) – 14:22 Second period 05:21 – ppTyler Johnson (2)
Tyler Pitlick (1) – en – 18:40 Third period No scoring
Carter Hart 23 saves / 24 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 26 saves / 29 shots
August 9 Boston Bruins 1–2 Washington Capitals Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 19:44 – T. J. Oshie (1)
No scoring Second period No scoring
Jake DeBrusk (1) – 10:30 Third period 02:49 – Tom Wilson (1)
Tuukka Rask 23 saves / 25 shots Goalie stats Braden Holtby 30 saves / 31 shots


Western Conference seeding round-robin

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Pos Team GP W L OTL PCT GF GA GD Pts
1 Vegas Golden Knights 3 3 0 0 0.606 15 10 +5 6
2 Colorado Avalanche 3 2 0 1 0.657 9 5 +4 5
3 Dallas Stars 3 1 2 0 0.594 5 10 −5 2
4 St. Louis Blues 3 0 2 1 0.662 6 10 −4 1
Source: National Hockey League[32]

During the first game between Colorado and St. Louis, Nazem Kadri scored with 0.1 remaining on the clock for the Avalanche emerging victorious 2–1.[39][40] Vegas staged a two-goal comeback in their game against Dallas, coming back from 3–1 down to win 5–3.[41] Avalanche goaltender Pavel Francouz shut out the Stars 4–0 taking a 2–0 record in the round-robin.[42] Vegas forward Alex Tuch and defenceman Shea Theodore both scored twice in their game against St. Louis, emerging victorious 6–4.[43] Battling out for the first seed, the Avalanche and Golden Knights held a back-and-forth affair until Alex Tuch scored in overtime to give Vegas a 4–3 victory, emerging as the top seed in the Western Conference.[44] The round-robin finale between the Stars and Blues was to determine the third seed. Joe Pavelski tied the game at one for the Stars with only 32 seconds remaining in regulation, then Denis Gurianov scored the only goal of the shootout to give Dallas the third seed with the 2–1 victory.[45]

August 2 St. Louis Blues 1–2 Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
David Perron (1) – pp – 16:46 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 05:33 – Ryan Graves (1)
19:59 – ppNazem Kadri (1)
Jordan Binnington 36 saves / 38 shots Goalie stats Philipp Grubauer 31 saves / 32 shots
August 3 Dallas Stars 3–5 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 01:04 – Chandler Stephenson (1)
Joe Pavelski (1) – 07:50
Jamie Oleksiak (1) – 08:32
Corey Perry (1) – pp – 12:42
Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 09:46 – Mark Stone (1)
11:15 – Nate Schmidt (1)
14:47 – William Carrier (1)
19:39 – enWilliam Karlsson (1)
Ben Bishop 28 saves / 32 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 24 saves / 27 shots
August 5 Colorado Avalanche 4–0 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Cale Makar (1) – pp – 03:19
Joonas Donskoi (1) – 15:29
First period No scoring
Vladislav Namestnikov (1) – 17:30 Second period No scoring
Andre Burakovsky (1) – pp – 01:31 Third period No scoring
Pavel Francouz 27 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 36 saves / 40 shots
August 6 Vegas Golden Knights 6–4 St. Louis Blues Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 04:02 – David Perron (2)
Shea Theodore (1) – pp – 06:50
Alex Tuch (1) – 10:47
Alex Tuch (2) – pp – 13:13
Second period 01:45 – Colton Parayko (1)
14:07 – Colton Parayko (2)
14:28 – Troy Brouwer (1)
Zach Whitecloud (1) – 02:01
Mark Stone (2) – 12:31
Shea Theodore (2) – 14:49
Third period No scoring
Marc-Andre Fleury 13 saves / 17 shots Goalie stats Jordan Binnington 32 saves / 38 shots
August 8 Vegas Golden Knights 4–3 OT Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Jonathan Marchessault (1) – pp – 01:34
Nicolas Roy (1) – 12:55
Second period 06:46 – ppNathan MacKinnon (1)
14:51 – Joonas Donskoi (2)
Jonathan Marchessault (2) – ps – 03:02 Third period 18:58 – J. T. Compher (1)
Alex Tuch (3) – 04:44 First overtime period No scoring
Robin Lehner 32 saves / 35 shots Goalie stats Philipp Grubauer 22 saves / 26 shots
August 9 Dallas Stars 2–1 SO St. Louis Blues Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 03:43 – Robert Thomas (1)
No scoring Second period No scoring
Joe Pavelski (2) – 19:28 Third period No scoring
Joe Pavelski  
Denis Gurianov  
Shootout   David Perron
  Vladimir Tarasenko
  Ryan O'Reilly
Anton Khudobin 21 saves / 22 shots Goalie stats Jake Allen 37 saves / 38 shots


Eastern Conference qualifying round

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(5) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (12) Montreal Canadiens

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Pittsburgh finished fifth in the Eastern Conference with 86 points in 69 games for a points percentage of .623. Montreal gained 71 points in 71 games for a points percentage of .500 to finish twelfth in the Eastern Conference. This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with Montreal winning both previous series. They last met in the 2010 Eastern Conference semifinals, which Montreal won in seven games. Pittsburgh won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Canadiens upset the Penguins in four games. With game one remaining tied 2–2 after the third period, Jeff Petry scored in overtime to give the Canadiens the victory.[46] Among the 38 shots the Penguins forced on Carey Price in game two, Pittsburgh forward Jason Zucker's goal in the third period was the game-winner in their 3–1 triumph.[47] In game three, Jeff Petry's goal in the third period capped a two-goal comeback for Montreal winning the affair 4–3 and taking the series lead.[48] In game four, Carey Price shut the Penguins out 2–0 advancing the team to the first round of the playoffs.[49]


August 1 Montreal Canadiens 3–2 OT Pittsburgh Penguins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Jesperi Kotkaniemi (1) – 11:27 First period No scoring
Nick Suzuki (1) – 06:53 Second period 09:55 – Sidney Crosby (1)
12:34 – ppBryan Rust (1)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Jeff Petry (1) – 13:57 First overtime period No scoring
Carey Price 39 saves / 41 shots Goalie stats Matt Murray 32 saves / 35 shots
August 3 Montreal Canadiens 1–3 Pittsburgh Penguins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 04:25 – Sidney Crosby (2)
No scoring Second period No scoring
Jesperi Kotkaniemi (2) – 17:50 Third period 14:41 – Jason Zucker (1)
19:50 – enJake Guentzel (1)
Carey Price 35 saves / 37 shots Goalie stats Matt Murray 26 saves / 27 shots
August 5 Pittsburgh Penguins 3–4 Montreal Canadiens Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Patric Hornqvist (1) – pp – 08:40
Jason Zucker (2) – pp – 09:39
First period 04:57 – Shea Weber (1)
Teddy Blueger (1) – 05:34 Second period 10:13 – Jonathan Drouin (1)
15:50 – Paul Byron (1)
No scoring Third period 05:33 – Jeff Petry (2)
Matt Murray 27 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Carey Price 30 saves / 33 shots
August 7 Pittsburgh Penguins 0–2 Montreal Canadiens Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 15:49 – Artturi Lehkonen (1)
19:28 – enShea Weber (2)
Tristan Jarry 20 saves / 21 shots Goalie stats Carey Price 22 saves / 22 shots
Montreal won series 3–1


(6) Carolina Hurricanes vs. (11) New York Rangers

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Carolina finished sixth in the Eastern Conference with 81 points in 68 games for a points percentage of .596. New York gained 79 points in 70 games for a points percentage of .564 to finish eleventh in the Eastern Conference. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. New York won all four games in this year's regular season series.

The Hurricanes defeated the Rangers in a three-game sweep. In game one, Sebastian Aho and Jaccob Slavin both recorded a goal and an assist in the Hurricanes 3–2 victory.[50] Andrei Svechnikov scored the Hurricanes' first playoff hat trick during game two in a 4–1 victory, giving Carolina the chance to clinch in game three.[51] Aho provided two goals and an assist in game three giving Carolina a 4–1 victory and advancing the team to the first round of the playoffs.[52]


August 1 New York Rangers 2–3 Carolina Hurricanes Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 01:01 – Jaccob Slavin (1)
Mika Zibanejad (1) – 14:26 Second period 06:29 – ppSebastian Aho (1)
Marc Staal (1) – sh – 18:05 Third period 10:51 – Martin Necas (1)
Henrik Lundqvist 34 saves / 37 shots Goalie stats Petr Mrazek 24 saves / 26 shots
August 3 New York Rangers 1–4 Carolina Hurricanes Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Artemi Panarin (1) – pp – 12:05 First period 04:32 – Andrei Svechnikov (1)
No scoring Second period 01:11 – pp – Andrei Svechnikov (2)
02:22 – Jordan Martinook (1)
No scoring Third period 14:02 – Andrei Svechnikov (3)
Henrik Lundqvist 30 saves / 34 shots Goalie stats Petr Mrazek 23 saves / 24 shots
August 4 Carolina Hurricanes 4–1 New York Rangers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Teuvo Teravainen (1) – 03:18 Second period 00:12 – Chris Kreider (1)
Warren Foegele (1) – 05:07
Sebastian Aho (2) – 10:26
Sebastian Aho (3) – sh-en – 19:29
Third period No scoring
James Reimer 37 saves / 38 shots Goalie stats Igor Shesterkin 27 saves / 30 shots
Carolina won series 3–0


(7) New York Islanders vs. (10) Florida Panthers

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New York finished seventh in the Eastern Conference with 80 points in 68 games for a points percentage of .588. Florida gained 78 points in 69 games for a points percentage of .565 to finish tenth in the Eastern Conference. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2016 Eastern Conference first round, which New York won in six games. New York won all three games in this year's regular season series.

The Islanders defeated the Panthers in four games. In game one, a 27-save performance by New York goaltender Semyon Varlamov gave the Islanders a 2–1 victory.[53] Game two had Jordan Eberle score two goals for the Islanders, leading the team to a 4–2 victory.[54] The Panthers, in danger of elimination in game three, scored two power-play goals en route to a 3–2 victory to force a fourth game.[55] In the fourth game, Anthony Beauvillier scored twice for New York to send the Islanders to the first round of the playoffs in a 5–1 victory.[56]


August 1 Florida Panthers 1–2 New York Islanders Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 12:00 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (1)
No scoring Second period 03:39 – ppAnthony Beauvillier (1)
Jonathan Huberdeau (1) – 00:23 Third period No scoring
Sergei Bobrovsky 26 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 27 saves / 28 shots
August 4 Florida Panthers 2–4 New York Islanders Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Mike Hoffman (1) – 11:16 First period No scoring
Aleksander Barkov (1) – pp – 07:54 Second period 06:12 – Matt Martin (1)
13:48 – ppRyan Pulock (1)
16:27 – Jordan Eberle (1)
No scoring Third period 10:29 – pp – Jordan Eberle (2)
Sergei Bobrovsky 30 saves / 34 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 26 saves / 28 shots
August 5 New York Islanders 2–3 Florida Panthers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (2) – 16:26 Second period 04:02 – ppErik Haula (1)
Brock Nelson (1) – 18:33 Third period 00:41 – ppMike Hoffman (2)
02:48 – Brian Boyle (1)
Semyon Varlamov 19 saves / 22 shots Goalie stats Sergei Bobrovsky 20 saves / 22 shots
August 7 New York Islanders 5–1 Florida Panthers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Anthony Beauvillier (2) – 11:32
Anthony Beauvillier (3) – 15:10
First period 18:41 – ppMike Hoffman (3)
Brock Nelson (2) – pp – 08:01 Second period No scoring
Mathew Barzal (1) – 10:34
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (3) – en – 17:17
Third period No scoring
Semyon Varlamov 24 saves / 25 shots Goalie stats Sergei Bobrovsky 33 saves / 37 shots
New York won series 3–1


(8) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (9) Columbus Blue Jackets

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Toronto finished eighth in the Eastern Conference with 81 points in 70 games for a points percentage of .579 and 28 RWs. Columbus had the same points percentage, but with 25 RWs they finished ninth. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. These teams split their two-game regular season series.

The Blue Jackets defeated the Maple Leafs in five games. Joonas Korpisalo shut out the Maple Leafs in game one, stopping all 28 shots in a 2–0 victory.[57] Maple Leafs goaltender Frederik Andersen responded with his own shut out in game two, stopping 20 shots in the process of a 3–0 victory.[58] Pierre-Luc Dubois's hat-trick, three-goal comeback-fulfilling, overtime goal spurred Columbus' game three victory, winning by a score of 4–3.[59] The Maple Leafs then responded with their own three-goal comeback, all while sporting an extra attacker with the goaltender pulled. Auston Matthews then scored the overtime game-winner, the Leafs were victorious by a score of 4–3.[60] In game five, Korpisalo shut the door on the Leafs, stopping all 33 shots in a 3–0 victory to advance to the first round of the playoffs.[61]


August 2 Columbus Blue Jackets 2–0 Toronto Maple Leafs Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
Cam Atkinson (1) – 01:05
Alexander Wennberg (1) – en – 19:41
Third period No scoring
Joonas Korpisalo 28 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Frederik Andersen 33 saves / 34 shots
August 4 Columbus Blue Jackets 0–3 Toronto Maple Leafs Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 16:00 – Auston Matthews (1)
No scoring Third period 04:56 – John Tavares (1)
19:17 – enMorgan Rielly (1)
Joonas Korpisalo 36 saves / 38 shots Goalie stats Frederik Andersen 20 saves / 20 shots
August 6 Toronto Maple Leafs 3–4 OT Columbus Blue Jackets Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Cody Ceci (1) – sh – 18:52 First period No scoring
William Nylander (1) – pp – 07:08
Nicholas Robertson (1) – 08:48
Second period 11:39 – Pierre-Luc Dubois (1)
No scoring Third period 07:27 – Seth Jones (1)
10:49 – Pierre-Luc Dubois (2)
No scoring First overtime period 18:24 – Pierre-Luc Dubois (3)
Frederik Andersen 39 saves / 43 shots Goalie stats Joonas Korpisalo 12 saves / 15 shots
Elvis Merzlikins 21 saves / 21 shots
August 7 Toronto Maple Leafs 4–3 OT Columbus Blue Jackets Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 03:58 – Cam Atkinson (2)
No scoring Second period 04:40 – Vladislav Gavrikov (1)
William Nylander (2) – 16:03
John Tavares (2) – 16:54
Zach Hyman (1) – 19:37
Third period 14:18 – Boone Jenner (1)
Auston Matthews (2) – pp – 13:10 First overtime period No scoring
Frederik Andersen 36 saves / 39 shots Goalie stats Elvis Merzlikins 49 saves / 53 shots
August 9 Columbus Blue Jackets 3–0 Toronto Maple Leafs Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Zach Werenski (1) – 06:29 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
Liam Foudy (1) – 11:40
Nick Foligno (1) – en – 19:37
Third period No scoring
Joonas Korpisalo 33 saves / 33 shots Goalie stats Frederik Andersen 19 saves / 21 shots
Columbus won series 3–2


Western Conference qualifying round

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(5) Edmonton Oilers vs. (12) Chicago Blackhawks

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Edmonton finished fifth in the Western Conference with 83 points in 71 games for a points percentage of .585. Chicago gained 72 points in 70 games for a points percentage of .514 to finish twelfth in the Western Conference. This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Edmonton winning three of the four previous series. They last met in the 1992 Western Conference finals, which Chicago won in a four-game sweep. Chicago won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Blackhawks upset the Oilers in four games. Blackhawks rookie forward Dominik Kubalik scored two goals and assisted three times in game one, resulting in Chicago's 6–4 victory.[62] In game two, Oilers captain Connor McDavid recorded a hat-trick assisted thrice by Ryan Nugent-Hopkins tying the series 1–1 in a 6–3 triumph.[63] In game three, Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews scored twice, including the game-winner with 1:16 remaining in the game, capping off a 4–3 victory.[64] In game four, Kubalik's goal at 8:30 of the third period proved to be the series-winner, defeating the Oilers 3–2.[65]


August 1 Chicago Blackhawks 6–4 Edmonton Oilers Rogers Place Recap  
Dylan Strome (1) – 05:51
Jonathan Toews (1) – pp – 07:56
Brandon Saad (1) – 09:17
Jonathan Toews (2) – 12:57
First period 02:34 – ppConnor McDavid (1)
Dominik Kubalik (1) – pp – 06:32
Dominik Kubalik (2) – pp – 17:35
Second period 04:13 – ppLeon Draisaitl (1)
No scoring Third period 16:07 – ppJames Neal (1)
16:43 – Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (1)
Corey Crawford 25 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Mike Smith 18 saves / 23 shots
Mikko Koskinen 18 saves / 19 shots
August 3 Chicago Blackhawks 3–6 Edmonton Oilers Rogers Place Recap  
Patrick Kane (1) – 09:06 First period 00:19 – Connor McDavid (2)
04:05 – Connor McDavid (3)
Slater Koekkoek (1) – 04:22
Olli Maatta (1) – 15:13
Second period 01:44 – Tyler Ennis (1)
17:10 – pp – Connor McDavid (4)
No scoring Third period 07:25 – James Neal (2)
08:05 – Alex Chiasson (1)
Corey Crawford 29 saves / 35 shots Goalie stats Mikko Koskinen 23 saves / 26 shots
August 5 Edmonton Oilers 3–4 Chicago Blackhawks Rogers Place Recap  
Leon Draisaitl (2) – 09:42 First period 09:14 – Olli Maatta (2)
19:55 – ppJonathan Toews (3)
Leon Draisaitl (3) – 04:07
Connor McDavid (5) – pp – 19:52
Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 14:13 – Matthew Highmore (1)
18:44 – Jonathan Toews (4)
Mikko Koskinen 21 saves / 25 shots Goalie stats Corey Crawford 25 saves / 28 shots
August 7 Edmonton Oilers 2–3 Chicago Blackhawks Rogers Place Recap  
Josh Archibald (1) – 00:45 First period 05:16 – Brandon Saad (2)
07:56 – Matthew Highmore (2)
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (2) – 02:02 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 08:30 – Dominik Kubalik (3)
Mikko Koskinen 26 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Corey Crawford 43 saves / 45 shots
Chicago won series 3–1


(6) Nashville Predators vs. (11) Arizona Coyotes

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Nashville finished sixth in the Western Conference with 78 points in 69 games for a points percentage of .565, winning the tiebreaker against Vancouver with 28 RWs. Arizona gained 74 points in 70 games for a points percentage of .529 to finish eleventh in the Western Conference. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2012 Western Conference semifinals, which Arizona won in five games. These teams split their two-game regular season series.

The Coyotes defeated the Predators in four games. In game one, the Coyotes jumped out to a 4–1 lead, scoring a power play and a shorthanded goal, and held off a Predators third period rally for the victory.[66] Although the Coyotes had two goals in the final minute of game two, the Predators successfully kept the lead winning 4–2.[67] In game three, Darcy Kuemper stopped 39 of 40 shots and his teammates exploded for three goals in the third period, leading to a 4–1 victory.[68] The Coyotes clinched in game four after much drama; they blew a 2–0 second period lead and allowed Filip Forsberg's tying goal with only 32 seconds left in regulation, but Brad Richardson scored the series-winner 5:27 into overtime.[69]


August 2 Arizona Coyotes 4–3 Nashville Predators Rogers Place Recap  
Oliver Ekman-Larsson (1) – 07:59
Christian Dvorak (1) – 10:52
Clayton Keller (1) – pp – 15:42
First period 19:57 – ppFilip Forsberg (1)
Michael Grabner (1) – sh – 16:25 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 00:30 – Ryan Ellis (1)
08:56 – pp – Filip Forsberg (2)
Darcy Kuemper 40 saves / 43 shots Goalie stats Juuse Saros 33 saves / 37 shots
August 4 Arizona Coyotes 2–4 Nashville Predators Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 07:50 – Nick Bonino (1)
10:27 – Ryan Johansen (1)
No scoring Second period 06:02 – Calle Jarnkrok (1)
Clayton Keller (2) – 19:03
Lawson Crouse (1) – 19:12
Third period 13:49 – ppViktor Arvidsson (1)
Darcy Kuemper 24 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Juuse Saros 24 saves / 26 shots
August 5 Nashville Predators 1–4 Arizona Coyotes Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 05:09 – Christian Dvorak (2)
Viktor Arvidsson (2) – 07:31 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 07:08 – Conor Garland (1)
15:38 – ppTaylor Hall (1)
18:06 – enCarl Soderberg (1)
Juuse Saros 24 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Darcy Kuemper 39 saves / 40 shots
August 7 Nashville Predators 3–4 OT Arizona Coyotes Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 17:27 – Michael Grabner (2)
Matt Duchene (1) – pp – 04:29
Viktor Arvidsson (3) – 08:26
Second period 01:37 – Phil Kessel (1)
Filip Forsberg (3) – 19:28 Third period 04:21 – Jordan Oesterle (1)
No scoring First overtime period 05:27 – Brad Richardson (1)
Juuse Saros 30 saves / 34 shots Goalie stats Darcy Kuemper 49 saves / 52 shots
Arizona won series 3–1


(7) Vancouver Canucks vs. (10) Minnesota Wild

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Vancouver finished seventh in the Western Conference with 78 points in 69 games for a points percentage of .565, losing the tiebreaker against Nashville with 27 RWs. Minnesota gained 77 points in 69 games for a points percentage of .558 to finish tenth in the Western Conference. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2003 Western Conference semifinals, which Minnesota came back from a 3–1 series deficit to win in seven games. Minnesota won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Canucks defeated the Wild in four games. Alex Stalock stopped all 28 shots he faced in Minnesota's game one victory; the Wild won 3–0.[70] In game two, Bo Horvat and Alexander Edler both had a goal and an assist to help Vancouver even the series 1–1 winning the contest 4–3.[71] Quinn Hughes assisted on all three goals and Jacob Markstrom stopped all 27 shots for Vancouver's game three victory.[72] In game four, the Canucks' Christopher Tanev provided two assists and the series-winning overtime goal to send Vancouver to the first round of the playoffs. Tanev's goal at eleven seconds into overtime tied the second fastest playoff overtime goal.[73]


August 2 Minnesota Wild 3–0 Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
Kevin Fiala (1) – pp – 02:50 First period No scoring
Jared Spurgeon (1) – pp – 10:24 Second period No scoring
Jared Spurgeon (2) – en – 19:13 Third period No scoring
Alex Stalock 28 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Jacob Markstrom 28 saves / 30 shots
August 4 Minnesota Wild 3–4 Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
Luke Kunin (1) – sh – 17:16 First period 00:24 – Tanner Pearson (1)
No scoring Second period 03:01 – J. T. Miller (1)
08:42 – Brock Boeser (1)
Kevin Fiala (2) – 17:31
Kevin Fiala (3) – 19:51
Third period 06:22 – ppBo Horvat (1)
Alex Stalock 24 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Jacob Markstrom 32 saves / 35 shots
August 6 Vancouver Canucks 3–0 Minnesota Wild Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Brock Boeser (2) – pp – 13:49 Second period No scoring
Antoine Roussel (1) – 02:18
Elias Pettersson (1) – pp – 18:38
Third period No scoring
Jacob Markstrom 27 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Alex Stalock 26 saves / 29 shots
August 7 Vancouver Canucks 5–4 OT Minnesota Wild Rogers Place Recap  
Tanner Pearson (2) – 12:52 First period 02:58 – ppLuke Kunin (2)
13:32 – Eric Staal (1)
Brandon Sutter (1) – 07:20
Quinn Hughes (1) – pp – 08:44
Second period 05:39 – Joel Eriksson Ek (1)
19:08 – Nico Sturm (1)
Bo Horvat (2) – 14:14 Third period No scoring
Christopher Tanev (1) – 00:11 First overtime period No scoring
Jacob Markstrom 25 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Alex Stalock 26 saves / 31 shots
Vancouver won series 3–1


(8) Calgary Flames vs. (9) Winnipeg Jets

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Calgary finished eighth in the Western Conference with 79 points in 70 games for a points percentage of .564. Winnipeg gained 80 points in 71 games for a points percentage of .563 to finish ninth in the Western Conference. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. This was also the first Stanley Cup playoff meeting between these two cities since the 1987 Smythe Division semifinals. Winnipeg won the only game in this year's regular season series, which was played outdoors.

The Flames defeated the Jets in four games. In game one, the Flames scored a power-play goal, then a short-handed goal, followed by another power-play goal in the second period to take a 4–1 victory.[74] The Jets tied the series 1–1 on Connor Hellebuyck's 28-save performance in a 3–2 victory.[75] In game three, Sean Monahan scored a goal and assisted twice in the Flames' 6–2 victory, giving his team a chance to advance in game four.[76] Cam Talbot led the Flames to the series victory in game four, shutting the Jets out by a score of 4–0, stopping all 31 shots in the process.[77]


August 1 Winnipeg Jets 1–4 Calgary Flames Rogers Place Recap  
Andrew Copp (1) – 08:51 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 07:06 – ppJohnny Gaudreau (1)
12:51 – shTobias Rieder (1)
18:14 – ppMikael Backlund (1)
No scoring Third period 18:19 – enAndrew Mangiapane (1)
Connor Hellebuyck 30 saves / 33 shots Goalie stats Cam Talbot 17 saves / 18 shots
August 3 Winnipeg Jets 3–2 Calgary Flames Rogers Place Recap  
Jansen Harkins (1) – 07:18 First period No scoring
Adam Lowry (1) – 05:43 Second period 11:29 – Elias Lindholm (1)
17:29 – Sam Bennett (1)
Nikolaj Ehlers (1) – pp – 10:24 Third period No scoring
Connor Hellebuyck 28 saves / 30 shots Goalie stats Cam Talbot 23 saves / 26 shots
August 4 Calgary Flames 6–2 Winnipeg Jets Rogers Place Recap  
Elias Lindholm (2) – pp – 10:22 First period 10:04 – Nikolaj Ehlers (2)
Mikael Backlund (2) – 05:37
Sean Monahan (1) – pp – 07:49
Matthew Tkachuk (1) – 12:48
Second period 08:09 – ppAndrew Copp (2)
Milan Lucic (1) – pp – 08:28
Johnny Gaudreau (2) – en – 17:41
Third period No scoring
Cam Talbot 33 saves / 35 shots Goalie stats Connor Hellebuyck 26 saves / 31 shots
August 6 Calgary Flames 4–0 Winnipeg Jets Rogers Place Recap  
Dillon Dube (1) – 03:21
Sam Bennett (2) – 19:59
First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
Sean Monahan (2) – en – 16:59
Rasmus Andersson (1) – en – 17:18
Third period No scoring
Cam Talbot 31 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Connor Hellebuyck 30 saves / 32 shots
Calgary won series 3–1


First round

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Note: Teams seeded 1–4 in each conference were based on their final standings from the round-robin. All teams advancing from the qualifying round were re-seeded 5–8 based on their regular season points percentage.

Eastern Conference first round

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(1) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (8) Montreal Canadiens

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Philadelphia earned the first seed in the Eastern Conference after finishing 3–0 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 89 points in 69 games for a .645 points percentage. Montreal earned the eighth seed in the Eastern Conference as the lowest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating Pittsburgh. This was the seventh playoff meeting between these two teams with both teams splitting the six previous series. They last met in the 2010 Eastern Conference Final, which Philadelphia won in five games. Philadelphia won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Flyers eliminated the Canadiens in six games. In game one, Carter Hart made 27 saves against the Canadiens, defeating Montreal 2–1.[78] Prior to game two, Canadiens head coach Claude Julien left the bubble due to an emergency stent being placed in his coronary artery. Kirk Muller was named interim head coach for the remainder of the series while Julien recovered in Montreal.[79] Montreal tied the series after game two on Tomas Tatar and Jesperi Kotkaniemi two goals and Carey Price's 30-save 5–0 shut out victory.[80] In game three, Flyers forward Jakub Voracek scored the only goal of the game and Hart turned away all 23 shots in a 1–0 shutout.[81] Hart continued his shutout into game four, stopping all 29 shots in a 2–0 victory.[82] In game five, Joel Armia scored twice for the Canadiens forcing a sixth game after 5–3 victory.[83] Kevin Hayes had a goal and an assist in game six for the Flyers who defeated the Canadiens 3–2 and advanced to the second round.[84]


August 12 Montreal Canadiens 1–2 Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 08:54 – ppJakub Voracek (1)
Shea Weber (3) – pp – 14:38 Second period 14:54 – Joel Farabee (2)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Carey Price 29 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Carter Hart 27 saves / 28 shots
August 14 Montreal Canadiens 5–0 Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Tomas Tatar (1) – 01:02
Jesperi Kotkaniemi (3) – 12:36
First period No scoring
Tomáš Tatar (2) – pp – 01:25
Joel Armia (1) – 17:57
Second period No scoring
Jesperi Kotkaniemi (4) – pp – 10:35 Third period No scoring
Carey Price 30 saves / 30 shots Goalie stats Carter Hart 22 saves / 26 shots
Brian Elliott 5 saves / 6 shots
August 16 Philadelphia Flyers 1–0 Montreal Canadiens Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Jakub Voracek (2) – 05:21 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period No scoring
Carter Hart 23 saves / 23 shots Goalie stats Carey Price 19 saves / 20 shots
August 18 Philadelphia Flyers 2–0 Montreal Canadiens Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Michael Raffl (2) – 06:32 First period No scoring
Philippe Myers (2) – 17:04 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period No scoring
Carter Hart 29 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Carey Price 20 saves / 22 shots
August 19 Montreal Canadiens 5–3 Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Joel Armia (2) – sh – 02:53 First period No scoring
Joel Armia (3) – 10:12
Brendan Gallagher (1) – pp – 11:30
Second period 02:35 – ppJakub Voracek (3)
06:37 – pp – Jakub Voracek (4)
Nick Suzuki (2) – 10:59
Phillip Danault (1) – en – 19:42
Third period 10:37 – ppJoel Farabee (3)
Carey Price 26 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Carter Hart 28 saves / 32 shots
August 21 Philadelphia Flyers 3–2 Montreal Canadiens Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Ivan Provorov (1) – 00:28
Kevin Hayes (1) – 05:23
First period 10:03 – ppNick Suzuki (3)
Michael Raffl (3) – 04:26 Second period 06:05 – Nick Suzuki (4)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Carter Hart 31 saves / 33 shots Goalie stats Carey Price 14 saves / 17 shots
Philadelphia won series 4–2


(2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (7) Columbus Blue Jackets

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Tampa Bay earned the second seed in the Eastern Conference after finishing 2–1 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 92 points in 70 games for a .657 points percentage. Columbus earned the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference as the second lowest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating Toronto. This was the second consecutive playoff meeting and second postseason match-up between these two teams. Columbus won last year's Eastern Conference first round playoff meeting in a four-game sweep. Tampa Bay won the only game in this year's regular season series.

The Lightning defeated the Blue Jackets in five games. In game one, with the match tied at two, the teams headed into overtime. At 10:27 of the fifth overtime, Lightning forward Brayden Point ended the 3–2 marathon nearly six hours after its start. It was the fourth-longest game in NHL history.[85] Columbus goaltender Joonas Korpisalo made 85 saves during the affair, the most in a playoff overtime game since 1955–56 when league started keeping saves as a statistic.[86] Normie Smith is considered to have the all-time record for saves in a playoff game when he made 92 saves in a sextuple overtime game in 1936.[87] The Blue Jackets tied the series on Pierre-Luc Dubois's two assists and Korpisalo's 36 saves in game two, winning 3–1.[88] In game three, Point continued his point streak scoring the second goal of a 3–2 Lightning victory.[89] Barclay Goodrow and Yanni Gourde both scored and provided an assist for the Lightning in game four, who defeated the Blue Jackets 2–1 and took a 3–1 series lead.[90] In game five, the Blue Jackets overcame a two-goal deficit to take the lead 4–2, however the Lightning were able to tie the score with 1:38 remaining in the game, which required overtime again. At 5:12 of the first overtime, Point's backhanded shot over Korpisalo ended the series, avenging last year's series for the Lightning, and sending them to the second round.[91]


August 11 Columbus Blue Jackets 2–3 5OT Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Pierre-Luc Dubois (4) – pp – 02:39 First period 06:27 – Brayden Point (2)
Oliver Bjorkstrand (1) – 19:12 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 00:23 – Yanni Gourde (1)
No scoring Fifth overtime period 10:27 – Brayden Point (3)
Joonas Korpisalo 85 saves / 88 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 61 saves / 63 shots
August 13 Columbus Blue Jackets 3–1 Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Ryan Murray (1) – 12:52
Oliver Bjorkstrand (2) – pp – 18:35
First period 05:24 – Nikita Kucherov (2)
No scoring Second period No scoring
Alexander Wennberg (2) – 11:27 Third period No scoring
Joonas Korpisalo 36 saves / 37 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 19 saves / 22 shots
August 15 Tampa Bay Lightning 3–2 Columbus Blue Jackets Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Alex Killorn (2) – 15:48 First period No scoring
Brayden Point (4) – 14:16
Victor Hedman (1) – 18:53
Second period 01:49 – Riley Nash (1)
No scoring Third period 01:37 – Eric Robinson (1)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 15 saves / 17 shots Goalie stats Joonas Korpisalo 31 saves / 34 shots
August 17 Tampa Bay Lightning 2–1 Columbus Blue Jackets Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Barclay Goodrow (1) – 00:16
Yanni Gourde (2) – 04:09
Second period 05:48 – Cam Atkinson (3)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 28 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Joonas Korpisalo 20 saves / 22 shots
August 19 Columbus Blue Jackets 4–5 OT Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Nick Foligno (2) – 11:51 First period 05:38 – Tyler Johnson (3)
06:39 – Blake Coleman (1)
Kevin Stenlund (1) – pp – 09:35
Alexander Wennberg (3) – 19:44
Second period No scoring
Oliver Bjorkstrand (3) – 09:33 Third period 12:01 – Kevin Shattenkirk (1)
18:22 – Anthony Cirelli (1)
No scoring First overtime period 05:12 – Brayden Point (5)
Joonas Korpisalo 20 saves / 25 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 37 saves / 41 shots
Tampa Bay won series 4–1


(3) Washington Capitals vs. (6) New York Islanders

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Washington earned the third seed in the Eastern Conference after finishing 1–2 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 90 points in 69 games for a .652 points percentage. New York earned the sixth seed in the Eastern Conference as the second highest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating Florida. This was the eighth playoff meeting between these two teams with New York winning five of the seven previous series. They last met in the 2015 Eastern Conference first round, which Washington won in seven games. These teams split the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Islanders defeated the Capitals in five games. In game one, Josh Bailey's short-handed goal at 6:52 of the third period put the Islanders ahead 3–2 and with Anthony Beauvillier's goal to make it 4–2 New York held onto their lead to take the victory.[92] Jean-Gabriel Pageau's two assists helped the Islanders take game two 5–2 taking a 2–0 series lead.[93] The Islanders took a 3–0 series lead after game three ended in overtime on Mathew Barzal's goal, giving New York a 2–1 victory.[94] In game four, Alexander Ovechkin's two goals extended the series for the Capitals in a 3–2 victory.[95] Beauvillier's two goals helped shut the door against the Capitals, defeating them 4–0 and advancing to second round.[96]


August 12 New York Islanders 4–2 Washington Capitals Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Jordan Eberle (3) – 18:57 Second period 05:27 – ppT. J. Oshie (2)
11:18 – pp – T. J. Oshie (3)
Anders Lee (1) – 00:51
Josh Bailey (1) – sh – 06:52
Anthony Beauvillier (4) – 11:55
Third period No scoring
Semyon Varlamov 24 saves / 26 shots Goalie stats Braden Holtby 23 saves / 27 shots
August 14 New York Islanders 5–2 Washington Capitals Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 00:56 – Alexander Ovechkin (1)
Nick Leddy (1) – pp – 02:56
Matt Martin (2) – 05:01
Brock Nelson (3) – 06:54
Second period 06:39 – Alexander Ovechkin (2)
Cal Clutterbuck (1) – 17:14
Anders Lee (2) – en – 18:21
Third period No scoring
Semyon Varlamov 23 saves / 25 shots Goalie stats Braden Holtby 27 saves / 31 shots
August 16 Washington Capitals 1–2 OT New York Islanders Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 14:50 – Anders Lee (3)
Evgeny Kuznetsov (2) – pp – 05:50 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period No scoring
No scoring First overtime period 04:28 – Mathew Barzal (2)
Braden Holtby 32 saves / 34 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 22 saves / 23 shots
August 18 Washington Capitals 3–2 New York Islanders Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 03:50 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (4)
09:16 – Mathew Barzal (3)
Evgeny Kuznetsov (3) – 03:35
Alexander Ovechkin (3) – pp – 05:29
Second period No scoring
Alexander Ovechkin (4) – 03:40 Third period No scoring
Braden Holtby 24 saves / 26 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 26 saves / 29 shots
August 20 New York Islanders 4–0 Washington Capitals Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Anthony Beauvillier (5) – pp – 10:19 First period No scoring
Anthony Beauvillier (6) – 09:33 Second period No scoring
Nick Leddy (2) – en – 17:47
Josh Bailey (2) – en – 18:31
Third period No scoring
Semyon Varlamov 21 saves / 21 shots Goalie stats Braden Holtby 13 saves / 15 shots
New York won series 4–1


(4) Boston Bruins vs. (5) Carolina Hurricanes

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Boston earned the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference after finishing 0–3 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 100 points in 70 games for a .714 points percentage. Carolina earned the fifth seed in the Eastern Conference as the highest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating the New York Rangers. This was the second consecutive postseason match-up and sixth playoff meeting overall between these two teams; with Boston winning four of the five previous series. Boston won last year's Eastern Conference Final series in a four-game sweep. Boston won the only game in this year's regular season series.

The Bruins defeated the Hurricanes in five games. Due to game one of the Blue Jackets–Lightning series extending to the fifth overtime, game one of this series was postponed to the next day.[97] The Bruins and Hurricanes had their own overtime marathon in game one with the game tied at three, but the game ended at 1:13 of the second overtime with Patrice Bergeron's goal.[98] In game two, Martin Necas assisted twice for the Hurricanes who defeated the Bruins 3–2.[99] With Tuukka Rask opting to leave the bubble, Jaroslav Halak started game three for the Bruins during which he made 29 saves, defeating the Hurricanes for a 3–1 victory.[100][101] In game four, the Bruins came back from a 2–0 deficit, scoring four goals in the third period to overtake the Hurricanes by a final score of 4–3.[102] In game five, David Pastrnak assisted twice in a defensive match defeating the Hurricanes 2–1 and advancing to the second round.[103]


August 12 Carolina Hurricanes 3–4 2OT Boston Bruins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Joel Edmundson (1) – 13:02 First period 17:45 – David Pastrnak (1)
Brock McGinn (1) – sh – 04:59 Second period 04:38 – Charlie Coyle (1)
Haydn Fleury (1) – 09:49 Third period 00:59 – David Krejci (1)
No scoring Second overtime period 01:13 – Patrice Bergeron (1)
Petr Mrazek 36 saves / 40 shots Goalie stats Tuukka Rask 25 saves / 28 shots
August 13 Carolina Hurricanes 3–2 Boston Bruins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 15:41 – ppDavid Krejci (2)
Teuvo Teravainen (2) – pp – 15:13
Andrei Svechnikov (4) – 16:41
Second period 19:55 – ppBrad Marchand (1)
Dougie Hamilton (1) – 08:30 Third period No scoring
James Reimer 33 saves / 35 shots Goalie stats Tuukka Rask 23 saves / 26 shots
August 15 Boston Bruins 3–1 Carolina Hurricanes Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Charlie Coyle (2) – pp – 00:14 Second period No scoring
Sean Kuraly (1) – sh – 01:16
Brad Marchand (2) – en – 19:29
Third period 06:30 – ppNino Niederreiter (1)
Jaroslav Halak 29 saves / 30 shots Goalie stats Petr Mrazek 36 saves / 38 shots
August 17 Boston Bruins 4–3 Carolina Hurricanes Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 09:17 – Justin Williams (1)
No scoring Second period 12:08 – Jordan Martinook (2)
Jake DeBrusk (2) – 07:26
Connor Clifton (1) – 10:10
Brad Marchand (3) – 11:40
Jake DeBrusk (3) – 14:17
Third period 18:33 – Teuvo Teravainen (3)
Jaroslav Halak 16 saves / 19 shots Goalie stats James Reimer 29 saves / 33 shots
August 19 Carolina Hurricanes 1–2 Boston Bruins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Haydn Fleury (2) – 09:35 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 15:20 – ppDavid Krejci (3)
19:56 – ppPatrice Bergeron (2)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Petr Mrazek 25 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Jaroslav Halak 23 saves / 24 shots
Boston won series 4–1


Western Conference first round

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(1) Vegas Golden Knights vs. (8) Chicago Blackhawks

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Vegas earned the first seed in the Western Conference after finishing 3–0 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 86 points in 71 games for a .606 points percentage. Chicago earned the eighth seed in the Western Conference as the lowest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating Edmonton. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Vegas won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Golden Knights defeated the Blackhawks in five games. In game one, Reilly Smith scored twice and provided an assist for the Golden Knights' 4–1 victory.[104] Smith then ended game two at 7:13 of the first overtime; his team was victorious by a score of 4–3.[105] In game three, the Golden Knights continued their win streak, defeating the Blackhawks 2–1 on Marc-Andre Fleury's 26 saves.[106] Chicago ended Vegas' win streak in game four, riding on Corey Crawford's 48 saves performance to defeat the Golden Knights 3–1.[107] In game five, Alex Tuch scored the go-ahead goal to put Vegas ahead in the third period. From there, they played defensively, turning away seven shots to win 4–3 and advance to the second round of the playoffs.[108]


August 11 Chicago Blackhawks 1–4 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
David Kampf (1) – sh – 10:51 Second period 07:22 – Shea Theodore (3)
09:39 – William Carrier (2)
No scoring Third period 03:32 – Reilly Smith (1)
08:14 – Reilly Smith (2)
Corey Crawford 30 saves / 34 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 19 saves / 20 shots
August 13 Chicago Blackhawks 3–4 OT Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 10:44 – Paul Stastny (1)
15:35 – Tomas Nosek (1)
Kirby Dach (1) – 03:17
Dominik Kubalik (4) – pp – 12:07
Dylan Strome (2) – 19:46
Second period 17:20 – Mark Stone (3)
No scoring Third period No scoring
No scoring First overtime period 07:13 – Reilly Smith (3)
Corey Crawford 35 saves / 39 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 22 saves / 25 shots
August 15 Vegas Golden Knights 2–1 Chicago Blackhawks Rogers Place Recap  
William Karlsson (2) – sh – 04:12 First period No scoring
Patrick Brown (1) – 15:23 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 06:21 – Olli Maatta (3)
Marc-Andre Fleury 26 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Corey Crawford 24 saves / 26 shots
August 16 Vegas Golden Knights 1–3 Chicago Blackhawks Rogers Place Recap  
Shea Theodore (4) – 13:58 First period 04:08 – Drake Caggiula (1)
13:40 – Matthew Highmore (3)
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 19:49 – enAlex DeBrincat (1)
Robin Lehner 22 saves / 24 shots Goalie stats Corey Crawford 48 saves / 49 shots
August 18 Chicago Blackhawks 3–4 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
Jonathan Toews (5) – 10:32
Alex DeBrincat (2) – 18:19
First period 19:29 – Max Pacioretty (1)
Patrick Kane (2) – 04:02 Second period 00:57 – Mark Stone (4)
07:28 – ppAlec Martinez (1)
No scoring Third period 01:34 – Alex Tuch (4)
Corey Crawford 35 saves / 39 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 23 saves / 26 shots
Vegas won series 4–1


(2) Colorado Avalanche vs. (7) Arizona Coyotes

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Colorado earned the second seed in the Western Conference after finishing 2–1 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 92 points in 70 games for a .657 points percentage. Arizona earned the seventh seed in the Western Conference as the second lowest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating Nashville. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2000 Western Conference quarterfinals, which Colorado won in five games. These teams split their two-game regular season series.

The Avalanche defeated the Coyotes in five games. The Avalanche limited the Coyotes to fourteen shots in game one and Philipp Grubauer stopped all of them in their 3–0 victory.[109] In game two, Avalanche right wing Andre Burakovsky scored the game-winning goal with 2:53 remaining in the third period to defeat the Coyotes 3–2.[110] Darcy Kuemper made 49 saves in game three, giving the Coyotes a 4–2 victory and their first win of the series.[111] The Avalanche provided a defensive and offensive approach to game four routing out the Coyotes 7–1 and limiting their shots to 15 giving them a chance to clinch in game five.[112] In game five, the Avalanche continued their dominance in a 7–1 victory, advancing to the second round on Nathan MacKinnon's two goals and two assists.[113] This would later become the Arizona Coyotes' final playoff appearance during the franchise's existence, as by the end of the 2023–24 NHL season, the Coyotes would initially be considered a suspended operations team, with many of the franchise's assets (but not the team name and its history itself) going to what's considered a newly formed Utah Hockey Club. However, the suspension status would only last for a couple of months before team owner Alex Meruelo gave up the team's rights to the NHL after failing to acquire land from a planned auction in June 2024.


August 12 Arizona Coyotes 0–3 Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 13:05 – ppNazem Kadri (2)
13:15 – J. T. Compher (2)
14:28 – Mikko Rantanen (1)
Darcy Kuemper 37 saves / 40 shots Goalie stats Philipp Grubauer 14 saves / 14 shots
August 14 Arizona Coyotes 2–3 Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
Clayton Keller (3) – 16:49 First period 03:40 – Nathan MacKinnon (2)
Michael Grabner (3) – 05:06 Second period 03:37 – Tyson Jost (1)
No scoring Third period 17:07 – Andre Burakovsky (2)
Darcy Kuemper 25 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Philipp Grubauer 30 saves / 32 shots
August 15 Colorado Avalanche 2–4 Arizona Coyotes Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 06:29 – Derek Stepan (1)
Andre Burakovsky (3) – 13:12 Second period 19:26 – Brad Richardson (2)
Mikko Rantanen (2) – 19:03 Third period 18:40 – enTaylor Hall (2)
19:55 – enLawson Crouse (2)
Pavel Francouz 19 saves / 21 shots Goalie stats Darcy Kuemper 49 saves / 51 shots
August 17 Colorado Avalanche 7–1 Arizona Coyotes Rogers Place Recap  
Matt Nieto (1) – 14:07
Nazem Kadri (3) – pp – 16:07
Nazem Kadri (4) – pp – 19:39
First period No scoring
Joonas Donskoi (3) – 11:37 Second period 13:31 – ppJakob Chychrun (1)
Cale Makar (2) – 00:19
Matt Calvert (1) – 02:57
Mikko Rantanen (3) – pp – 16:24
Third period No scoring
Philipp Grubauer 14 saves / 15 shots Goalie stats Darcy Kuemper 18 saves / 22 shots
Antti Raanta 5 saves / 8 shots
August 19 Arizona Coyotes 1–7 Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 04:39 – ppNazem Kadri (5)
08:29 – ppSam Girard (1)
18:32 – Nazem Kadri (6)
No scoring Second period 09:51 – Nathan MacKinnon (3)
10:49 – pp – Nathan MacKinnon (4)
18:16 – Nikita Zadorov (1)
Clayton Keller (4) – 06:51 Third period 15:19 – J. T. Compher (3)
Darcy Kuemper 24 saves / 30 shots
Antti Raanta 5 saves / 6 shots
Goalie stats Philipp Grubauer 23 saves / 24 shots
Colorado won series 4–1


(3) Dallas Stars vs. (6) Calgary Flames

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Dallas earned the third seed in the Western Conference after finishing 1–2 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 82 points in 69 games for a .594 points percentage. Calgary earned the sixth seed in the Western Conference as the second highest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating Winnipeg. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 1981 Stanley Cup Semifinals, which the then-Minnesota North Stars won in six games. Calgary won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Stars eliminated the Flames in six games. Dillon Dube scored twice for Calgary in game one as the Flames took the victory 3–2.[114] In game two, with forty seconds remaining, Jamie Oleksiak scored the game-winning goal for Dallas defeating Calgary 5–4.[115] Cam Talbot stopped all 35 shots he faced in game three defeating the Stars 2–0 and taking a 2–1 series lead.[116] In game four, Stars forward Joe Pavelski scored a hat trick and Alexander Radulov's overtime-game winner tied the series 2–2, defeating the Flames 5–4.[117] Anton Khudobin made 28 saves for the Stars in game five, defeating the Flames 2–1 and taking a 3–2 series lead.[118] In game six, the Stars recovered from a 3–0 deficit led by Denis Gurianov's four goals, completing the series with a 7–3 victory.[119]


August 11 Calgary Flames 3–2 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Dillon Dube (2) – pp – 10:54
Dillon Dube (3) – 18:02
First period No scoring
Rasmus Andersson (2) – 16:01 Second period 10:52 – Denis Gurianov (1)
11:01 – Jamie Benn (1)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Cam Talbot 24 saves / 26 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 23 saves / 26 shots
August 13 Calgary Flames 4–5 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Dillon Dube (4) – 00:19 First period 02:42 – Alexander Radulov (1)
11:14 – Miro Heiskanen (1)
Derek Forbort (1) – 13:00 Second period 04:50 – Miro Heiskanen (2)
15:05 – ppCorey Perry (2)
Tobias Rieder (2) – sh – 12:24
Sam Bennett (3) – pp – 17:11
Third period 19:20 – Jamie Oleksiak (2)
Cam Talbot 31 saves / 36 shots Goalie stats Ben Bishop 22 saves / 26 shots
August 14 Dallas Stars 0–2 Calgary Flames Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 05:58 – shMikael Backlund (3)
No scoring Third period 10:36 – T. J. Brodie (1)
Anton Khudobin 21 saves / 23 shots Goalie stats Cam Talbot 35 saves / 35 shots
August 16 Dallas Stars 5–4 OT Calgary Flames Rogers Place Recap  
Joe Pavelski (3) – pp – 18:11 First period No scoring
Joe Pavelski (4) – 03:14
Denis Gurianov (2) – pp – 19:23
Second period 01:54 – ppJohnny Gaudreau (3)
03:57 – ppSam Bennett (4)
14:50 – Sam Bennett (5)
Joe Pavelski (5) – 19:48 Third period 03:11 – shTobias Rieder (3)
Alexander Radulov (2) – 16:05 First overtime period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 36 saves / 40 shots Goalie stats Cam Talbot 57 saves / 62 shots
August 18 Calgary Flames 1–2 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Mikael Backlund (4) – 19:14 First period 10:13 – shJamie Benn (2)
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 01:12 – John Klingberg (1)
Cam Talbot 30 saves / 32 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 28 saves / 29 shots
August 20 Dallas Stars 7–3 Calgary Flames Rogers Place Recap  
Miro Heiskanen (3) – pp – 09:36 First period 03:42 – Andrew Mangiapane (2)
05:38 – ppJohnny Gaudreau (4)
06:34 – Rasmus Andersson (3)
Denis Gurianov (3) – 00:59
Denis Gurianov (4) – 03:25
Radek Faksa (1) – pp – 05:47
Joe Pavelski (6) – 07:22
Denis Gurianov (5) – 15:30
Second period No scoring
Denis Gurianov (6) – 09:02 Third period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 38 saves / 41 shots Goalie stats Cam Talbot 11 saves / 15 shots
David Rittich 6 saves / 9 shots
Dallas won series 4–2


(4) St. Louis Blues vs. (5) Vancouver Canucks

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St. Louis earned the fourth seed in the Western Conference after finishing 0–3 in the round-robin; during the regular season they finished with 94 points in 71 games for a .662 points percentage. Vancouver earned the fifth seed in the Western Conference as the highest advancing seed from the qualifying round by defeating Minnesota. This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Vancouver winning all three previous series. They last met in the 2009 Western Conference quarterfinals, which Vancouver won in a four-game sweep. Vancouver won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Canucks defeated the Blues in six games. Canucks captain Bo Horvat scored twice in game one, defeating the Blues 5–2.[120] Although Blues forward Samuel Blais tied game two with seven seconds remaining, Horvat's second goal of the game at 5:55 of overtime gave the Canucks a 4–3 victory and a 2–0 series lead.[121] In game three, Jake Allen made 39 saves and Brayden Schenn scored the overtime-game winning goal, defeating the Canucks 3–2.[122] The Blues evened up the series in game four, with Ryan O'Reilly scoring twice in a 3–1 victory.[123] Vancouver came back from a two-goal deficit in game five to defeat St. Louis 4–3 and take a 3–2 series lead.[124] Tyler Motte scored twice in game six, sending the Canucks to the second round and handily defeating the Blues 6–2.[125]


August 12 Vancouver Canucks 5–2 St. Louis Blues Rogers Place Recap  
Bo Horvat (3) – pp – 04:29 First period 16:37 – ppDavid Perron (3)
Elias Pettersson (2) – pp – 08:37 Second period 09:49 – Jaden Schwartz (1)
Troy Stecher (1) – 05:37
Bo Horvat (4) – 08:01
J. T. Miller (2) – pp – 19:21
Third period No scoring
Jacob Markstrom 29 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Jordan Binnington 17 saves / 22 shots
August 14 Vancouver Canucks 4–3 OT St. Louis Blues Rogers Place Recap  
Bo Horvat (5) – sh – 07:23 First period No scoring
Tanner Pearson (3) – pp – 13:01 Second period 18:56 – ppRyan O'Reilly (1)
Elias Pettersson (3) – pp – 05:36 Third period 09:02 – Samuel Blais (1)
19:53 – Jaden Schwartz (2)
Bo Horvat (6) – 05:55 First overtime period No scoring
Jacob Markstrom 34 saves / 37 shots Goalie stats Jordan Binnington 21 saves / 25 shots
August 16 St. Louis Blues 3–2 OT Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Justin Faulk (1) – 08:16
David Perron (4) – 18:02
Second period 01:19 – ppJ. T. Miller (3)
18:39 – Elias Pettersson (4)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Brayden Schenn (1) – 15:06 First overtime period No scoring
Jake Allen 39 saves / 41 shots Goalie stats Jacob Markstrom 46 saves / 49 shots
August 17 St. Louis Blues 3–1 Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
Ryan O'Reilly (2) – pp – 16:43 First period No scoring
Ryan O'Reilly (3) – 06:52
Alex Pietrangelo (1) – pp – 15:47
Second period 00:40 – J. T. Miller (4)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Jake Allen 22 saves / 23 shots Goalie stats Jacob Markstrom 34 saves / 37 shots
August 19 Vancouver Canucks 4–3 St. Louis Blues Rogers Place Recap  
Tyler Motte (1) – sh – 13:15 First period 15:41 – Brayden Schenn (2)
19:31 – Ryan O'Reilly (4)
J. T. Miller (5) – 11:54
Jake Virtanen (1) – 16:08
Tyler Motte (2) – 18:17
Second period 05:51 – ppZach Sanford (1)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Jacob Markstrom 36 saves / 39 shots Goalie stats Jake Allen 26 saves / 30 shots
August 21 St. Louis Blues 2–6 Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 03:45 – Jay Beagle (1)
No scoring Second period 02:09 – Antoine Roussel (2)
06:49 – Troy Stecher (2)
08:06 – ppBrock Boeser (3)
Jaden Schwartz (3) – 06:32
Jaden Schwartz (4) – 18:38
Third period 13:19 – Tyler Motte (3)
19:10 – en – Tyler Motte (4)
Jordan Binnington 14 saves / 18 shots
Jake Allen 5 saves / 6 shots
Goalie stats Jacob Markstrom 34 saves / 36 shots
Vancouver won series 4–2


Second round

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Eastern Conference second round

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(1) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (6) New York Islanders

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This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Philadelphia winning three of the four previous series. They last met in the 1987 Patrick Division finals, which Philadelphia won in seven games. New York won all three games in this year's regular season series.

The Islanders upset the Flyers in seven games after giving up a 3–1 series lead. Semyon Varlamov posted his second consecutive shutout in game one, stopping all 29 shots for 4–0 Islanders victory.[126] The Flyers prevented a three-goal comeback from the Islanders in game two with Philippe Myers' goal at 2:41 of overtime to defeat New York 4–3.[127] Varlamov made 26 saves for the Islanders in game three, emerging victorious 3–1.[128] In game four, Brock Nelson scored twice and Thomas Greiss made 36 saves for the Islanders in a 3–2 victory.[129] Although the Flyers dropped a 3–1 lead in the third period of game five, they forced a sixth game on Scott Laughton's overtime goal to win 4–3.[130] In game six, the Flyers held a back-and-forth affair reaching the second overtime where Ivan Provorov's goal at 15:03 kept Philadelphia's season alive, defeating New York 5–4.[131] In game seven, Brock Nelson had a goal and two assists and Greiss stopped all sixteen shots he faced in a 4–0 shutout to send the Islanders to the Eastern Conference Final for the first time in 27 years.[132]


August 24 New York Islanders 4–0 Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Andy Greene (1) – 06:06 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (5) – 02:54
Anders Lee (4) – 08:50
Devon Toews (1) – en – 12:21
Third period No scoring
Semyon Varlamov 29 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Carter Hart 25 saves / 28 shots
August 26 New York Islanders 3–4 OT Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period 01:57 – Kevin Hayes (2)
09:43 – Kevin Hayes (3)
15:09 – Sean Couturier (1)
Anders Lee (5) – pp – 11:45 Second period No scoring
Anthony Beauvillier (7) – 11:11
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (6) – 17:51
Third period No scoring
No scoring First overtime period 02:41 – Philippe Myers (3)
Semyon Varlamov 7 saves / 10 shots
Thomas Greiss 20 saves / 21 shots
Goalie stats Carter Hart 31 saves / 34 shots
August 29 Philadelphia Flyers 1–3 New York Islanders Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Tyler Pitlick (2) – 14:18 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 07:12 – Matt Martin (3)
19:54 – Leo Komarov (1)
No scoring Third period 03:41 – ppAnders Lee (6)
Carter Hart 26 saves / 29 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 26 saves / 27 shots
August 30 Philadelphia Flyers 2–3 New York Islanders Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Sean Couturier (2) – 15:19 Second period 06:52 – Brock Nelson (4)
Ivan Provorov (2) – 18:55 Third period 07:18 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (7)
11:12 – Brock Nelson (5)
Brian Elliott 30 saves / 33 shots Goalie stats Thomas Greiss 36 saves / 38 shots
September 1 New York Islanders 3–4 OT Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Mathew Barzal (4) – pp – 01:20 Second period 15:45 – Claude Giroux (1)
18:18 – James van Riemsdyk (1)
Brock Nelson (6) – 15:46
Derick Brassard (1) – 17:19
Third period 04:32 – Matt Niskanen (1)
No scoring First overtime period 12:20 – Scott Laughton (4)
Semyon Varlamov 28 saves / 32 shots Goalie stats Carter Hart 29 saves / 32 shots
September 3 Philadelphia Flyers 5–4 2OT New York Islanders Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Kevin Hayes (4) – 10:16
James van Riemsdyk (2) – 11:52
First period 16:33 – Derick Brassard (2)
Michael Raffl (4) – 13:21 Second period 01:24 – Matt Martin (4)
03:06 – ppAnders Lee (7)
19:30 – Mathew Barzal (5)
Scott Laughton (5) – 09:53 Third period No scoring
Ivan Provorov (3) – 15:03 Second overtime period No scoring
Carter Hart 49 saves / 53 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 26 saves / 31 shots
September 5 New York Islanders 4–0 Philadelphia Flyers Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Scott Mayfield (1) – 09:27
Andy Greene (2) – 13:12
First period No scoring
Brock Nelson (7) – 11:26 Second period No scoring
Anthony Beauvillier (8) – en – 13:42 Third period No scoring
Thomas Greiss 16 saves / 16 shots Goalie stats Carter Hart 22 saves / 25 shots
New York won series 4–3


(2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (4) Boston Bruins

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This was the third playoff series between these two teams with both teams splitting the two previous series. They last met in the 2018 Eastern Conference second round, which Tampa Bay won in five games. Tampa Bay won the round-robin game between these two teams earlier in this year's playoffs 3–2. Tampa Bay won three of four games in this year's regular season series.

The Lightning defeated the Bruins in five games. Jaroslav Halak made 35 saves for the Bruins in game one who defeated the Lightning 3–2.[133] In game two, Ondrej Palat scored the overtime-winning goal for Tampa Bay, tying the series 1–1 in a 4–3. victory.[134] The Lightning had an offensive outburst in game three, scoring seven goals against Boston in a 7–1 rout.[135] Palat scored twice for the Lightning in game four, defeating the Bruins 3–1 and taking a 3–1 series lead.[136] In game five, Victor Hedman ended the series 14:10 into double-overtime for the Lightning, defeating the Bruins 3–2 and advancing to the Eastern Conference Final.[137]


August 23 Boston Bruins 3–2 Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Charlie Coyle (3) – 18:52 First period No scoring
David Pastrnak (2) – pp – 04:34 Second period No scoring
Brad Marchand (4) – 01:17 Third period 08:50 – Victor Hedman (2)
18:46 – Victor Hedman (3)
Jaroslav Halak 35 saves / 37 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 28 saves / 31 shots
August 25 Boston Bruins 3–4 OT Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Nick Ritchie (1) – 03:14 First period 12:42 – Blake Coleman (2)
Brad Marchand (5) – pp – 14:33 Second period 15:28 – Nikita Kucherov (3)
Brad Marchand (6) – 16:02 Third period 10:40 – Blake Coleman (3)
No scoring First overtime period 04:40 – Ondrej Palat (1)
Jaroslav Halak 36 saves / 40 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 25 shots
August 26 Tampa Bay Lightning 7–1 Boston Bruins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Ondrej Palat (2) – pp – 12:46
Yanni Gourde (3) – 13:01
First period No scoring
Mikhail Sergachev (1) – pp – 02:14
Alex Killorn (3) – pp – 08:35
Brayden Point (6) – 15:23
Alex Killorn (4) – 18:01
Second period 04:56 – ppBrad Marchand (7)
Nikita Kucherov (4) – 03:58 Third period No scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 23 saves / 24 shots Goalie stats Jaroslav Halak 12 saves / 16 shots
Dan Vladar 12 saves / 15 shots
August 29 Tampa Bay Lightning 3–1 Boston Bruins Scotiabank Arena Recap  
Ondrej Palat (3) – 08:59 First period No scoring
Ondrej Palat (4) – 12:29
Victor Hedman (4) – pp – 18:04
Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 07:04 – ppJake DeBrusk (4)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 29 saves / 30 shots Goalie stats Jaroslav Halak 23 saves / 26 shots
August 31 Boston Bruins 2–3 2OT Tampa Bay Lightning Scotiabank Arena Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
David Pastrnak (3) – pp – 12:38 Second period 04:21 – Ondrej Palat (5)
David Krejci (4) – 17:27 Third period 12:03 – Anthony Cirelli (2)
No scoring Second overtime period 14:10 – Victor Hedman (5)
Jaroslav Halak 32 saves / 35 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 45 saves / 47 shots
Tampa Bay won series 4–1


Western Conference second round

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(1) Vegas Golden Knights vs. (5) Vancouver Canucks

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This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. These two teams split their two-game regular season series.

The Golden Knights defeated the Canucks in seven games after giving up a 3–1 series lead. In game one, Robin Lehner stopped all 26 shots he faced as the Golden Knights defeated the Canucks 5–0.[138] Jacob Markstrom made 38 saves for the Canucks in game two, tying the series 1–1 and defeating the Golden Knights 5–2.[139] Lehner posted his second shutout of the series, stopping all 31 shots in game three, defeating the Canucks 3–0.[140] Max Pacioretty scored twice and provided an assist for the Golden Knights in game four, who defeated the Canucks 5–3 to take a 3–1 series lead.[141] In game five, rookie goaltender Thatcher Demko made 42 saves for the Canucks, defeating the Golden Knights 2–1 to force a sixth game.[142] Demko shut out the Golden Knights in game six, stopping all 48 shots he faced in a 4–0 victory.[143] In game seven, the Golden Knights limited the Canucks' shots to fourteen throughout three periods, shutting out Vancouver 3–0 and advancing to the Western Conference Final.[144]


August 23 Vancouver Canucks 0–5 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 11:37 – Jonathan Marchessault (3)
No scoring Second period 02:13 – ppReilly Smith (4)
11:35 – Mark Stone (5)
16:34 – Alex Tuch (5)
No scoring Third period 10:47 – Max Pacioretty (2)
Jacob Markstrom 29 saves / 34 shots
Thatcher Demko 5 saves / 5 shots
Goalie stats Robin Lehner 26 saves / 26 shots
August 25 Vancouver Canucks 5–2 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
Tyler Toffoli (1) – 01:29
Bo Horvat (7) – pp – 10:59
First period No scoring
Elias Pettersson (5) – 18:35 Second period 06:34 – Alex Tuch (6)
Bo Horvat (8) – 00:18
Tanner Pearson (4) – en – 19:30
Third period 18:34 – ppMax Pacioretty (3)
Jacob Markstrom 38 saves / 40 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 22 saves / 26 shots
August 29 Vegas Golden Knights 3–0 Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
Alex Tuch (7) – 04:05
Zach Whitecloud (2) – 05:28
First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
Mark Stone (6) – pp – 02:19 Third period No scoring
Robin Lehner 31 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Jacob Markstrom 31 saves / 34 shots
August 30 Vegas Golden Knights 5–3 Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
Max Pacioretty (4) – pp – 09:28
Chandler Stephenson (2) – 13:19
First period 11:15 – ppElias Pettersson (6)
No scoring Second period 04:07 – Bo Horvat (9)
11:26 – ppTyler Toffoli (2)
Nate Schmidt (2) – 02:52
Max Pacioretty (5) – 07:02
William Karlsson (3) – 08:29
Third period No scoring
Marc-Andre Fleury 28 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Jacob Markstrom 28 saves / 33 shots
September 1 Vancouver Canucks 2–1 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Brock Boeser (4) – 15:36 Second period 15:12 – Shea Theodore (5)
Elias Pettersson (7) – 03:19 Third period No scoring
Thatcher Demko 42 saves / 43 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 15 saves / 17 shots
September 3 Vegas Golden Knights 0–4 Vancouver Canucks Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 02:50 – Jake Virtanen (2)
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 01:03 – J. T. Miller (6)
08:16 – Quinn Hughes (2)
15:22 – enBo Horvat (10)
Robin Lehner 19 saves / 22 shots Goalie stats Thatcher Demko 48 saves / 48 shots
September 4 Vancouver Canucks 0–3 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 13:52 – ppShea Theodore (6)
17:54 – enAlex Tuch (8)
19:54 – enPaul Stastny (2)
Thatcher Demko 33 saves / 34 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 14 saves / 14 shots
Vegas won series 4–3


(2) Colorado Avalanche vs. (3) Dallas Stars

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This was the fifth playoff series between these two teams, with both teams splitting the four previous series. They last met in the 2006 Western Conference quarterfinals, which Colorado won in five games. Colorado won the round-robin game between these two teams earlier in this year's playoffs 4–0. Dallas won all four games in this year's regular season series.

The Stars defeated the Avalanche in seven games after giving up a 3–1 series lead. In game one, Alexander Radulov scored twice, also providing an assist, in a 5–3 victory for the Stars.[145] After falling behind 2–0 in game two, the Stars rallied past the Avalanche, scoring four goals in the second period and defeating Colorado 5–2.[146] In game three, the Avalanche spoiled a two-goal comeback by the Stars, scoring three straight in the third period with 7:58 remaining to defeat Dallas 6–4.[147] The Stars held off a late rally by the Avalanche in game four, keeping the score at 5–4 and taking a 3–1 series lead with the victory.[148] In game five, the Avalanche had a first period offensive outburst, scoring five goals, including four within a span of 2:36 (one second from equalling the league record for the fastest four goals by one team in a game in playoff history) to win 6–3.[149] Nathan MacKinnon extended his point streak to fourteen games, scoring a goal and recording an assist in game six to defeat the Stars 4–1 and force a seventh game.[150] In game seven, the two teams battled it throughout three periods scoring four against each other, but 7:24 into overtime Joel Kiviranta's hat trick goal gave the Stars the victory, advancing to the Western Conference Final with a 5–4 victory.[151]


August 22 Dallas Stars 5–3 Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
Tyler Seguin (1) – 04:00
Blake Comeau (1) – 09:51
Alexander Radulov (3) – 16:28
First period 05:04 – Nathan MacKinnon (5)
Alexander Radulov (4) – 09:09 Second period 04:36 – Gabriel Landeskog (1)
18:29 – Nathan MacKinnon (6)
Roope Hintz (1) – 08:47 Third period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 28 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Philipp Grubauer 7 saves / 10 shots
Pavel Francouz 18 saves / 20 shots
August 24 Dallas Stars 5–2 Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 06:08 – ppNathan MacKinnon (7)
Joe Pavelski (7) – pp – 09:54
Radek Faksa (2) – pp – 10:37
Alexander Radulov (5) – 15:34
Esa Lindell (1) – 19:14
Second period 08:44 – ppMikko Rantanen (4)
Jamie Oleksiak (3) – en – 19:50 Third period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 38 saves / 40 shots Goalie stats Pavel Francouz 22 saves / 26 shots
August 26 Colorado Avalanche 6–4 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 11:12 – Tyler Seguin (2)
Nikita Zadorov (2) – 01:00
Andre Burakovsky (4) – 04:41
Gabriel Landeskog (2) – 11:00
Second period No scoring
Mikko Rantanen (5) – 12:02
Nazem Kadri (7) – 13:54
Pierre-Edouard Bellemare (1) – en – 18:26
Third period 04:42 – Denis Gurianov (7)
09:02 – Blake Comeau (2)
10:47 – Jamie Benn (3)
Pavel Francouz 33 saves / 37 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 26 saves / 31 shots
August 30 Colorado Avalanche 4–5 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 06:18 – John Klingberg (2)
08:33 – ppRadek Faksa (3)
10:45 – ppJamie Benn (4)
Valeri Nichushkin (1) – 13:24
Cale Makar (3) – pp – 19:34
Second period No scoring
Valeri Nichushkin (2) – 11:24
Vladislav Namestnikov (2) – 19:56
Third period 07:30 – ppRoope Hintz (2)
08:02 – Denis Gurianov (8)
Pavel Francouz 21 saves / 26 shots
Michael Hutchinson 3 saves / 3 shots
Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 33 saves / 37 shots
August 31 Dallas Stars 3–6 Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 04:37 – Pierre-Edouard Bellemare (2)
11:51 – Andre Burakovsky (5)
12:32 – Nathan MacKinnon (8)
13:43 – Nazem Kadri (8)
14:27 – Mikko Rantanen (6)
Joe Pavelski (8) – 07:50
Miro Heiskanen (4) – pp – 17:31
Second period 18:04 – Andre Burakovsky (6)
Jamie Benn (5) – pp – 14:12 Third period No scoring
Ben Bishop 15 saves / 19 shots
Anton Khudobin 20 saves / 22 shots
Goalie stats Michael Hutchinson 31 saves / 34 shots
September 2 Colorado Avalanche 4–1 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Nikita Zadorov (3) – 19:28 First period 17:35 – Miro Heiskanen (5)
Cale Makar (4) – 07:48 Second period No scoring
Mikko Rantanen (7) – 03:21
Nathan MacKinnon (9) – en – 17:14
Third period No scoring
Michael Hutchinson 27 saves / 28 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 20 saves / 23 shots
September 4 Dallas Stars 5–4 OT Colorado Avalanche Rogers Place Recap  
Alexander Radulov (6) – pp – 02:39 First period 03:48 – Vladislav Namestnikov (3)
09:43 – Andre Burakovsky (7)
Joel Kiviranta (1) – 03:06 Second period 05:45 – ppNazem Kadri (9)
Alexander Radulov (7) – pp – 11:28
Joel Kiviranta (2) – 16:30
Third period 16:20 – Vladislav Namestnikov (4)
Joel Kiviranta (3) – 07:24 First overtime period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 40 saves / 44 shots Goalie stats Michael Hutchinson 30 saves / 35 shots
Dallas won series 4–3


Conference finals

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Eastern Conference final

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(2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (6) New York Islanders

edit

This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams with Tampa Bay winning both previous series. They last met in the 2016 Eastern Conference second round, which Tampa Bay won in five games. This was Tampa Bay's sixth conference finals appearance. They last went to the conference finals in 2018, which they lost to the Washington Capitals in seven games. This was New York's fifth appearance in the conference finals. They last went to the conference finals in 1993, which they lost against the Montreal Canadiens in five games. New York won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Lightning defeated the Islanders in six games. In game one, Lightning forwards Brayden Point and Nikita Kucherov both had five points in an 8–2 rout: Point had two goals and three assists and Kucherov scored a goal and assisted four times.[152] Kucherov scored the game-winning goal with nine seconds remaining in game two to give the Lightning a 2–1 victory.[153] After giving up a 3–1 lead in game three, Brock Nelson's goal with 3:25 left put the Islanders ahead, emerging victorious 5–3.[154] In game four, three Lightning players had two points and goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy provided an assist in Tampa Bay's 4–1 victory to take a 3–1 series lead.[155] In game five, Islanders forward Jordan Eberle scored at 12:30 of double overtime to win the game 2–1 and extend the series to a sixth game.[156] Anthony Cirelli's goal at 13:18 of the first overtime period in game six gave the Lightning a 2–1 victory sending Tampa Bay to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since 2015.[4]


September 7 New York Islanders 2–8 Tampa Bay Lightning Rogers Place Recap  
Jordan Eberle (4) – pp – 04:33 First period 01:14 – Brayden Point (7)
08:12 – ppVictor Hedman (6)
10:46 – Ryan McDonagh (1)
No scoring Second period 04:03 – Yanni Gourde (4)
13:18 – pp – Brayden Point (8)
Nick Leddy (3) – 08:46 Third period 05:51 – Nikita Kucherov (5)
09:31 – Ondrej Palat (6)
13:15 – pp – Yanni Gourde (5)
Thomas Greiss 6 saves / 9 shots
Semyon Varlamov 20 saves / 25 shots
Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 24 shots
September 9 New York Islanders 1–2 Tampa Bay Lightning Rogers Place Recap  
Matt Martin (5) – 01:24 First period 18:25 – Victor Hedman (7)
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 19:51 – Nikita Kucherov (6)
Semyon Varlamov 19 saves / 21 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 27 saves / 28 shots
September 11 Tampa Bay Lightning 3–5 New York Islanders Rogers Place Recap  
Mikhail Sergachev (2) – 16:31 First period 12:58 – Cal Clutterbuck (2)
No scoring Second period 11:50 – Adam Pelech (1)
13:50 – Anthony Beauvillier (9)
Ondrej Palat (7) – pp – 02:32
Tyler Johnson (4) – 12:04
Third period 16:35 – Brock Nelson (8)
19:24 – enJean-Gabriel Pageau (8)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 31 saves / 35 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 34 saves / 37 shots
September 13 Tampa Bay Lightning 4–1 New York Islanders Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Blake Coleman (4) – 11:42
Ondrej Palat (8) – 11:54
Second period 11:27 – Brock Nelson (9)
Brayden Point (9) – 03:33
Patrick Maroon (1) – en – 17:36
Third period No scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 26 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 32 saves / 35 shots
September 15 New York Islanders 2–1 2OT Tampa Bay Lightning Rogers Place Recap  
Ryan Pulock (2) – pp – 15:41 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 04:00 – Victor Hedman (8)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Jordan Eberle (5) – 12:30 Second overtime period No scoring
Semyon Varlamov 36 saves / 37 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 24 shots
September 17 Tampa Bay Lightning 2–1 OT New York Islanders Rogers Place Recap  
Victor Hedman (9) – 06:28 First period 04:15 – Devon Toews (2)
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period No scoring
Anthony Cirelli (3) – 13:18 First overtime period No scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 26 saves / 27 shots Goalie stats Semyon Varlamov 46 saves / 48 shots
Tampa Bay won series 4–2


Western Conference final

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(1) Vegas Golden Knights vs. (3) Dallas Stars

edit

This was the first playoff series between these two teams. Vegas won their round-robin game between these two teams earlier in this year's playoffs 5–3. This was Vegas' second appearance in the conference finals. Their only previous conference finals was in 2018, which they won against the Winnipeg Jets in five games. This was Dallas's seventh conference finals appearance. They last went to the conference finals in 2008, which they lost to the Detroit Red Wings in six games. These teams split their two games in this year's regular season series.

The Stars defeated the Golden Knights in five games. Anton Khudobin made 25 saves and John Klingberg scored the only goal of game one for the Stars, shutting out Vegas 1–0.[157] Robin Lehner posted his own shutout in game two, stopping all 24 shots in the Golden Knights' 3–0 victory.[158] In game three, Alexander Radulov gave the Stars a 2–1 series lead after his goal 31 seconds into overtime ensured Dallas a 3–2 victory.[159] Khudobin made 32 saves in game four, leading the Stars to a 2–1 win.[160] In game five, the Stars came back from a 2–0 deficit in the third period to force overtime and at 3:36 of the first overtime, Denis Gurianov scored to send the Stars to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in 20 years with a 3–2 victory.[161]


September 6 Dallas Stars 1–0 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
John Klingberg (3) – 02:36 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 25 saves / 25 shots Goalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 24 saves / 25 shots
September 8 Dallas Stars 0–3 Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 04:53 – Paul Stastny (3)
08:24 – ppWilliam Karlsson (4)
14:32 – Tomas Nosek (2)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 24 saves / 27 shots
Jake Oettinger 5 saves / 5 shots
Goalie stats Robin Lehner 24 saves / 24 shots
September 10 Vegas Golden Knights 2–3 OT Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 19:43 – Jamie Oleksiak (4)
Shea Theodore (7) – pp – 03:49
Mark Stone (7) – 12:46
Third period 07:35 – Jamie Benn (6)
No scoring First overtime period 00:31 – Alexander Radulov (8)
Robin Lehner 20 saves / 23 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 38 saves / 40 shots
September 12 Vegas Golden Knights 1–2 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period No scoring
Alec Martinez (2) – pp – 07:44 Second period 11:34 – Joe Pavelski (9)
19:01 – ppJamie Benn (7)
No scoring Third period No scoring
Robin Lehner 18 saves / 20 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 32 saves / 33 shots
September 14 Dallas Stars 3–2 OT Vegas Golden Knights Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 08:14 – Chandler Stephenson (3)
No scoring Second period No scoring
Jamie Benn (8) – 09:54
Joel Kiviranta (4) – pp – 16:13
Third period 00:15 – Reilly Smith (5)
Denis Gurianov (9) – pp – 03:36 First overtime period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 34 saves / 36 shots Goalie stats Robin Lehner 23 saves / 26 shots
Dallas won series 4–1


Stanley Cup Finals

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This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Tampa Bay made their third Finals appearance. They last went to the Finals in 2015, which they lost to the Chicago Blackhawks in six games. Dallas made their fifth appearance in the Finals. They last went to the Finals in 2000, which they lost to the New Jersey Devils in six games. Dallas won both games in this year's regular season series.


September 19 Dallas Stars 4–1 Tampa Bay Lightning Rogers Place Recap  
Joel Hanley (1) – 05:40 First period 12:32 – Yanni Gourde (6)
Jamie Oleksiak (5) – 12:30
Joel Kiviranta (5) – 19:32
Second period No scoring
Jason Dickinson (1) – en – 18:42 Third period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 35 saves / 36 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 16 saves / 19 shots
September 21 Dallas Stars 2–3 Tampa Bay Lightning Rogers Place Recap  
No scoring First period 11:23 – ppBrayden Point (10)
14:22 – ppOndrej Palat (9)
15:16 – Kevin Shattenkirk (2)
Joe Pavelski (10) – pp – 14:43 Second period No scoring
Mattias Janmark (1) – 05:27 Third period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 28 saves / 31 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 27 saves / 29 shots
September 23 Tampa Bay Lightning 5–2 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Nikita Kucherov (7) – 05:33
Steven Stamkos (1) – 06:58
First period 11:19 – shJason Dickinson (2)
Victor Hedman (10) – pp – 00:54
Brayden Point (11) – 12:02
Ondrej Palat (10) – 18:55
Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period 06:49 – Miro Heiskanen (6)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 24 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 24 saves / 29 shots
Jake Oettinger 3 saves / 3 shots
September 25 Tampa Bay Lightning 5–4 OT Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Brayden Point (12) – 19:27 First period 07:17 – John Klingberg (4)
18:28 – Joe Pavelski (11)
Brayden Point (13) – pp – 02:08
Yanni Gourde (7) – pp – 18:54
Second period 08:26 – Corey Perry (3)
Alex Killorn (5) – 06:41 Third period 11:35 – Joe Pavelski (12)
Kevin Shattenkirk (3) – pp – 06:34 First overtime period No scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 26 saves / 30 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 30 saves / 35 shots
September 26 Dallas Stars 3–2 2OT Tampa Bay Lightning Rogers Place Recap  
Corey Perry (4) – 17:52 First period No scoring
No scoring Second period 04:37 – Ondrej Palat (11)
Joe Pavelski (13) – 13:15 Third period 03:38 – Mikhail Sergachev (3)
Corey Perry (5) – 09:23 Second overtime period No scoring
Anton Khudobin 39 saves / 41 shots Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 30 saves / 33 shots
September 28 Tampa Bay Lightning 2–0 Dallas Stars Rogers Place Recap  
Brayden Point (14) – pp – 12:23 First period No scoring
Blake Coleman (5) – 07:01 Second period No scoring
No scoring Third period No scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 22 shots Goalie stats Anton Khudobin 27 saves / 29 shots
Tampa Bay won series 4–2


Player statistics

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Skaters

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These are the top ten skaters based on points, following the conclusion of the playoffs.[162]

Player Team GP G A Pts +/– PIM
Nikita Kucherov Tampa Bay Lightning 25 7 27 34 +15 22
Brayden Point Tampa Bay Lightning 23 14 19 33 +12 10
Miro Heiskanen Dallas Stars 27 6 20 26 +8 2
Nathan MacKinnon Colorado Avalanche 15 9 16 25 +13 12
Victor Hedman Tampa Bay Lightning 25 10 12 22 +13 24
Mikko Rantanen Colorado Avalanche 15 7 14 21 +11 6
John Klingberg Dallas Stars 26 4 17 21 –5 14
Josh Bailey New York Islanders 22 2 18 20 +8 0
Joe Pavelski Dallas Stars 27 13 6 19 +6 30
Jamie Benn Dallas Stars 27 8 11 19 +2 32

Goaltenders

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This is a combined table of the top five goaltenders based on goals against average and the top five goaltenders based on save percentage, with at least 420 minutes played. The table is sorted by GAA, and the criteria for inclusion are bolded.[163]

Player Team GP W L SA GA GAA SV% SO TOI
Carey Price Montreal Canadiens 10 5 5 282 18 1.78 .936 2 605:32
Joonas Korpisalo Columbus Blue Jackets 9 3 5 320 19 1.90 .941 2 599:00
Andrei Vasilevskiy Tampa Bay Lightning 25 18 7 740 54 1.90 .927 1 1,708:12
Robin Lehner Vegas Golden Knights 16 9 7 386 32 1.99 .917 4 965:52
Semyon Varlamov New York Islanders 20 11 7 559 44 2.14 .921 2 1,232:44
Carter Hart Philadelphia Flyers 14 9 5 431 32 2.23 .926 2 859:38
Cam Talbot Calgary Flames 10 5 4 316 24 2.42 .924 2 595:33

Activism

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On August 26, 2020, various professional athletes in the U.S began to go on strike from their respective sports contests in response to the August 23 police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin, and the protests which followed. These strikes began with the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association (NBA).[164] Other players in the NBA, Major League Baseball, Major League Soccer and Women's National Basketball Association soon followed suit and also decided not to play their August 26 games.[165]

When these cancellations south of the border began, NHL players were still isolated in the Edmonton and Toronto bubbles, with game two of the Islanders–Flyers series already in progress when the Bucks first announced their decision to not play. The NHL then continued to play the remaining August 26 games, as NHL players did not take a strong stand for the rest of the day. After pressure brought by the postponement of games by the other leagues, and discussions by players of the Hockey Diversity Alliance such as Evander Kane and Mathew Dumba, the NHLPA announced that they would not play their games on August 27 and August 28. The affected games involved all eight teams remaining: game three between the Flyers and Islanders, game three between the Golden Knights and Canucks, game four between the Lightning and Bruins, and game four between the Avalanche and Stars. The NHL fully supported their decision to postpone the games.[5] On September 1, Dallas Stars president Brad Alberts reported that his team had lost some corporate and personal season ticket holders as a result of the protest.[166]

Media

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This marked the sixth postseason under Rogers Media's 12-year contract for Canadian television rights to the NHL. All games were exclusively broadcast by Sportsnet and CBC under the Hockey Night in Canada brand, and streamed on Sportsnet Now, CBCSports.ca (for games televised by CBC), or the subscription service Rogers NHL Live.[167][168]

This also marked the ninth postseason under NBC Sports' current 10-year contract for American rights. All national coverage of games were aired on either NBCSN, the NBC broadcast network, CNBC, NHL Network, or USA Network. During the round-robins, qualifying round, and first round, excluding games exclusively broadcast on NBC, the regional rightsholders of each participating U.S. team produced local telecasts of their respective games.[169][170]

Only technical staff such as cameramen and producers were present inside the "bubble". A clean host feed was then sent to media partners to add commentary and surrounding coverage, and interviews with players had to be conducted via videoconferencing.[171] Commentators called the games remotely off of monitors from either their respective studios or from their home arena press boxes. This same arrangement was also done for the radio networks of every team.[172][173]

While it was initially stated that all commentators would broadcast remotely, the league eventually allowed a handful of both Sportsnet and NBC commentators and reporters into the hubs to call select games.[23] Chris Cuthbert, who jumped from TSN to Sportsnet during the break in June, and Louie DeBrusk were on-site in Edmonton;[174] and Jim Hughson and Craig Simpson were on-site in Toronto during the qualifying, first, and second rounds; they later moved to the Edmonton hub.[175] For NBC, John Forslund, Mike Milbury, and Brian Boucher were initially sent to Toronto; and Pierre McGuire to Edmonton. Milbury was later removed from commentary for the remainder of NBC Sports' coverage after making insensitive comments following the fifth game of the Islanders–Capitals first round series.[176] Gord Miller later joined Forslund, Milbury, and Boucher at the Toronto bubble and alternated with Forslund on a handful of broadcasts.[177] Most of NBC's other commentators began working games remotely from NBC Sports' studios in Stamford, Connecticut, with NBC planning for "the majority of calls" to eventually be conducted on-site, including the last two rounds of the playoffs in Edmonton.[178][179] Kenny Albert, who worked for both NBC and the New York Rangers radio broadcasts, traveled to the Edmonton bubble after the Rangers were eliminated in the qualifying round. Albert called play-by-play of every game of the Western Conference second round and the first three games of the Western Conference finals before leaving the Edmonton bubble to join the NFL on Fox broadcast team. Forslund, Boucher, and Eddie Olczyk later flew to the Edmonton bubble to call the conference finals.[180][181] In the case of NBC lead play-by-play commentator Mike "Doc" Emrick, he was working games from his home studio in Metro Detroit because he is a cancer survivor over the age of 70, and therefore at increased risk of severe illness from COVID-19.[182][181]

Additional cameras were used to provide new angles not usually possible when a crowd is present,[182] and de-emphasize views of the arenas' stands. The telecasts used simulated crowd noise provided by Electronic Arts, combined with recordings of team-specific chants by season ticketholders of participating teams (the latter of which will also be played in-arena). All games carried a five second broadcast delay in order to censor offensive language.[19][18][183][184]

NBC staff were working on the Toronto broadcasts, while Sportsnet staff did the same with the Edmonton broadcasts.[23][185] Steve Simmons of the Toronto Sun reported that Canadian freelance broadcast workers were upset that NBC personnel were being allowed into Canada to work in Toronto instead of them.[185] The NHL's EVP of communications Gary Meagher stated that splitting production in this manner had been intended "from the onset". Premier of Ontario Doug Ford admitted that plans of NBC's involvement were not part of the early negotiations with the league.[186]

Viewership

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Average U.S. viewership of the playoff rounds were down by 28% compared to 2019, the lowest to-date over the course of NBC's current broadcast rights contract. Amid expanded competition due to the difference in scheduling, game one of the Stanley Cup Finals was seen by only 2.12 million viewers;[187][188] with an average of 2.15 million across the entire series, it was the least-watched Stanley Cup Finals since 2007, and down 61% over 2019. Airing opposite a Monday Night Football contest between the Kansas City Chiefs and Baltimore Ravens, Game six was seen by 2.88 million viewers, the least-watched series-clinching game since at least 2000.[189]

References

edit
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  2. ^ Gulitti, Tom (July 10, 2020). "NHL, NHLPA ratify CBA extension through 2025-26 season". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved July 11, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Johnston, Chris (July 10, 2020). "NHL is back in business with ratification of CBA, return-to-play plan". Sportsnet.ca. Rogers Sports & Media. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Crosby, Wes (September 17, 2020). "Lightning defeat Islanders in OT in Game 6, advance to Cup Final". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L. P. Retrieved September 17, 2020.
  5. ^ a b Bengel, Chris (August 27, 2020). "NHLPA announces they will not play in Thursday or Friday's Stanley Cup Playoff games". CBSSports.com. CBS Interactive. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  6. ^ a b Gulitti, Tom (June 9, 2020). "NHL plans to return with 24 teams competing for Stanley Cup". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L. P. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  7. ^ Wyshynski, Greg (May 28, 2020). "From the Dept. of "Is The Qualification Round a Playoff Round?"". ESPN.com. ESPN Inc. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  8. ^ "NHL playoffs will re-seed after each round, qualifying to be best-of-five". Sportsnet.ca. Rogers Media. June 4, 2020. Retrieved June 4, 2020.
  9. ^ "NHL, NHLPA ratify four-year CBA extension, Return to Play Plan". nhl.com. NHL Public Relations. July 10, 2020. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  10. ^ Duncan, Josh (June 23, 2020). "NHL down to 6 potential hub cities and Vancouver is reportedly a front runner". KelownaNow.com. Now Media Inc. Retrieved July 26, 2020.
  11. ^ MacIntyre, Iain (June 25, 2020). "Breakdown in talks leaves Vancouver out of running as NHL hub city". Sportsnet.ca. Rogers Sports & Media. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  12. ^ Kaplan, Emily (July 1, 2020). "NHL eyeing Toronto, Edmonton as hub cities for season restart". ESPN.com. ESPN Inc. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
  13. ^ Feschuk, Dave (July 1, 2020). "How did Toronto and Edmonton beat out Las Vegas as NHL hub cities? It's all about the odds". Toronto Star. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
  14. ^ Brooks, Larry (July 15, 2020). "Igor Shesterkin 'outstanding' in first bid to keep Rangers' starting job". The New York Post. Retrieved January 1, 2024.
  15. ^ Benjamin, Cody (May 12, 2017). "Sabres 'hosting' 2018 Winter Classic vs. Rangers reportedly saves MSG $40M". CBSSports.com. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
  16. ^ Benz, Tim (July 15, 2020). "A look at how Toronto 'hockey bubble' will be set up for Penguins". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Retrieved August 1, 2020.
  17. ^ Romero, Diego (July 24, 2020). "This is what life will be like inside the Edmonton NHL bubble". CFRN-DT. Retrieved August 1, 2020.
  18. ^ a b c "NHL releases details about life in hub cities, in-game presentation". Sportsnet.ca. Rogers Sports & Media. July 23, 2020. Retrieved July 23, 2020.
  19. ^ a b Wyshynski, Greg (July 24, 2020). "NHL games to have 5-second delay, EA cheering". ESPN.com. ESPN Inc. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
  20. ^ Wawrow, John (August 24, 2020). "Bubble fatigue cited as mental challenge during NHL playoffs". CBC News. CBC/Radio-Canada. Retrieved August 24, 2020.
  21. ^ Riebe, Natasha (July 22, 2020). "Hockey drive-in and beer garden planned for downtown Edmonton". CBC News. CBC/Radio-Canada. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  22. ^ a b Gulitti, Tom (July 11, 2020). "NHL health, safety protocols approved by CDC". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L. P. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  23. ^ a b c d "Return to Play FAQ". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L. P. July 10, 2020. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  24. ^ a b "Return to Sport Protocol: Phase 4" (PDF). NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L. P. July 5, 2020. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  25. ^ "Federal government approves NHL cohort quarantine proposal for hub city in Canada". CBC.ca. Canadian Press. June 19, 2020. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  26. ^ "Cohorts and quarantine: How Edmonton's hub city plans would work for NHL families". Edmonton.CTVnews.ca. Bell Media. June 24, 2020. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
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  189. ^ "Stanley Cup ends with series-highs, but historic lows". Sports Media Watch. September 30, 2020. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
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Preceded by Stanley Cup playoffs
2020
Succeeded by
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