2022 Stanley Cup playoffs

The 2022 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2021–22 season. The playoffs began on May 2, 2022, one day after the regular season ended, and concluded on June 26, 2022, with the Colorado Avalanche winning their third Stanley Cup in franchise history, defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning four games to two in the Stanley Cup Finals.[1]

2022 Stanley Cup playoffs
Tournament details
DatesMay 2 – June 26, 2022
Teams16
Defending championsTampa Bay Lightning
Final positions
ChampionsColorado Avalanche
Runner-upTampa Bay Lightning
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s)Connor McDavid (Oilers) (33 points)
MVPCale Makar (Avalanche)
← 2021
2023 →

With the Government of Canada allowing cross-border travel for fully vaccinated players and team personnel between Canada and the United States, the league was able to return to its usual two conference, four division alignment. As a result, the standard 16-team playoff format that was used before the COVID-19 pandemic from 20142019 was reinstated.[2]

The Florida Panthers made the playoffs as the Presidents' Trophy winners with the most points (i.e. best record) during the regular season. This was the final season of the Pittsburgh Penguins' 16-season playoff streak, the longest active streak in the four major North American professional sports leagues at the time.[3] Three of the semifinalists from the previous season (the Montreal Canadiens, New York Islanders and Vegas Golden Knights) failed to qualify for the playoffs. The Los Angeles Kings ended a two-year run in which no teams from California qualified for the playoffs. All eight playoff teams from the Eastern Conference finished the season with at least 100 points, marking the first playoffs in NHL history in which all eight teams in a single conference qualified with at least 100 points.[4]

Florida's opening round series victory over the Washington Capitals was their first series win since the 1996 Eastern Conference finals.[5] This postseason marked the third time that the league played 50 or more games in the opening round of the playoffs since this round was changed to a best-of-seven format in 1987.[6] The first round featured five game sevens, the most in a single playoff round since 1992, when there were six game sevens in the division semifinals.[7] On May 15, for the first time since 1997, and the second time in League history, both game sevens went into overtime.[8] With their conference final series victory, the Tampa Bay Lightning became the third team in league history to win at least eleven consecutive playoff series; joining the Montreal Canadiens (1976–1980) and New York Islanders (1980–1984) in accomplishing this feat.[9]

Playoff seeds edit

This was the seventh year and first since 2019, in which the top three teams in each division made the playoffs, along with two wild cards in each conference (for a total of eight playoff teams from each conference).

The following teams qualified for the playoffs:[10]

Eastern Conference edit

Atlantic Division edit

  1. Florida Panthers, Atlantic Division champions, Eastern Conference regular season champions, Presidents' Trophy winners – 122 points
  2. Toronto Maple Leafs – 115 points
  3. Tampa Bay Lightning – 110 points (39 RWs)

Metropolitan Division edit

  1. Carolina Hurricanes, Metropolitan Division champions – 116 points
  2. New York Rangers – 110 points (44 RWs)
  3. Pittsburgh Penguins – 103 points

Wild cards edit

  1. Boston Bruins – 107 points
  2. Washington Capitals – 100 points

Western Conference edit

Central Division edit

  1. Colorado Avalanche, Central Division champions, Western Conference regular season champions – 119 points
  2. Minnesota Wild – 113 points
  3. St. Louis Blues – 109 points

Pacific Division edit

  1. Calgary Flames, Pacific Division champions – 111 points
  2. Edmonton Oilers – 104 points
  3. Los Angeles Kings – 99 points

Wild cards edit

  1. Dallas Stars – 98 points
  2. Nashville Predators – 97 points

Playoff bracket edit

In each round, teams compete in a best-of-seven series following a 2–2–1–1–1 format (scores in the bracket indicate the number of games won in each best-of-seven series). The team with home ice advantage plays at home for games one and two (and games five and seven, if necessary), and the other team is at home for games three and four (and game six, if necessary). The top three teams in each division make the playoffs, along with two wild cards in each conference, for a total of eight teams from each conference.

In the first round, the lower seeded wild card in each conference played against the division winner with the best record while the other wild card played against the other division winner, and both wild cards were de facto #4 seeds. The other series matched the second and third place teams from the divisions. In the first two rounds, home ice advantage was awarded to the team with the better seed. In the conference finals and Stanley Cup Finals, home ice advantage was awarded to the team with the better regular season record.

First roundSecond roundConference finalsStanley Cup Finals
            
A1Florida4
WC2Washington2
A1Florida0
A3Tampa Bay4
A2Toronto3
A3Tampa Bay4
A3Tampa Bay4
Eastern Conference
M2NY Rangers2
M1Carolina4
WC1Boston3
M1Carolina3
M2NY Rangers4
M2NY Rangers4
M3Pittsburgh3
A3Tampa Bay2
C1Colorado4
C1Colorado4
WC2Nashville0
C1Colorado4
C3St. Louis2
C2Minnesota2
C3St. Louis4
C1Colorado4
Western Conference
P2Edmonton0
P1Calgary4
WC1Dallas3
P1Calgary1
P2Edmonton4
P2Edmonton4
P3Los Angeles3
Legend
  • A1, A2, A3 – The first, second, and third place teams from the Atlantic Division, respectively
  • M1, M2, M3 – The first, second, and third place teams from the Metropolitan Division, respectively
  • C1, C2, C3 – The first, second, and third place teams from the Central Division, respectively
  • P1, P2, P3 – The first, second, and third place teams from the Pacific Division, respectively
  • WC – Wild Card teams

First round edit

Eastern Conference first round edit

(A1) Florida Panthers vs. (WC2) Washington Capitals edit

The Florida Panthers earned the Presidents' Trophy as the NHL's best regular season team with 122 points. Washington finished as the Eastern Conference's second wild card, earning 100 points. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Florida won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Panthers defeated the Capitals in six games and won their first playoff series since 1996. In game one, the Capitals overcame a one-goal deficit in the third period and gained the lead at 10:37 on T. J. Oshie's goal to win 4–2.[11] Aleksander Barkov and Carter Verhaeghe both scored a goal and provided an assist in the Panthers' 5–1 victory in game two.[12] Ilya Samsonov made 29 saves for the Capitals in game three, outscoring the Panthers 6–1 and taking a 2–1 series lead.[13] Verhaeghe scored twice in game four, including the overtime-winning goal for the Panthers, tying the series up 2–2 in a 3–2 triumph.[14] In game five, Verhaeghe scored twice and assisted on the other three Panthers’ goals in Florida's three-goal comeback, taking the game 5–3 to lead the series 3–2.[15] In game six, Claude Giroux scored a goal and provided two assists and Verhaeghe scored the overtime goal in a 4–3 victory sending the Panthers to the second round for the first time in 26 years.[16]


May 3Washington Capitals4–2Florida PanthersFLA Live ArenaRecap 
Tom Wilson (1) – pp – 03:47First period17:55 – Sam Bennett (1)
No scoringSecond period00:43 – Claude Giroux (1)
Evgeny Kuznetsov (1) – 08:14
T. J. Oshie (1) – 10:37
Lars Eller (1) – en – 19:11
Third periodNo scoring
Vitek Vanecek 30 saves / 32 shotsGoalie statsSergei Bobrovsky 34 saves / 37 shots
May 5Washington Capitals1–5Florida PanthersFLA Live ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period16:20 – Aaron Ekblad (1)
17:58 – Aleksander Barkov (1)
Nicklas Backstrom (1) – pp – 02:44Second period03:11 – Mason Marchment (1)
15:24 – Anton Lundell (1)
17:32 – Carter Verhaeghe (1)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Vitek Vanecek 14 saves / 19 shots
Ilya Samsonov 17 saves / 17 shots
Goalie statsSergei Bobrovsky 26 saves / 27 shots
May 7Florida Panthers1–6Washington CapitalsCapital One ArenaRecap 
Jonathan Huberdeau (1) – 02:45First period19:34 – ppT. J. Oshie (2)
No scoringSecond period09:51 – Marcus Johansson (1)
18:49 – Trevor van Riemsdyk (1)
No scoringThird period10:25 – ppAlexander Ovechkin (1)
15:40 – enJohn Carlson (1)
19:18 – Garnet Hathaway (1)
Sergei Bobrovsky 25 saves / 30 shotsGoalie statsIlya Samsonov 29 saves / 30 shots
May 9Florida Panthers3–2OTWashington CapitalsCapital One ArenaRecap 
Carter Verhaeghe (2) – 14:08First period07:15 – ppT. J. Oshie (3)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Sam Reinhart (1) – 17:56Third period09:31 – Evgeny Kuznetsov (2)
Carter Verhaeghe (3) – 04:57First overtime periodNo scoring
Sergei Bobrovsky 14 saves / 16 shotsGoalie statsIlya Samsonov 29 saves / 32 shots
May 11Washington Capitals3–5Florida PanthersFLA Live ArenaRecap 
T. J. Oshie (4) – pp – 07:09First periodNo scoring
Justin Schultz (1) – 02:13
T. J. Oshie (5) – 03:38
Second period06:50 – Carter Verhaeghe (4)
12:27 – Patric Hornqvist (1)
14:44 – Sam Reinhart (2)
No scoringThird period03:04 – Carter Verhaeghe (5)
15:55 – Claude Giroux (2)
Ilya Samsonov 33 saves / 38 shotsGoalie statsSergei Bobrovsky 30 saves / 33 shots
May 13Florida Panthers4–3OTWashington CapitalsCapital One ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Ryan Lomberg (1) – 06:13Second period03:44 – Nic Dowd (1)
Claude Giroux (3) – 08:18
Aleksander Barkov (2) – 14:17
Third period01:37 – Nicklas Backstrom (2)
18:57 – ppT. J. Oshie (6)
Carter Verhaeghe (6) – 02:46First overtime periodNo scoring
Sergei Bobrovsky 34 saves / 37 shotsGoalie statsIlya Samsonov 27 saves / 31 shots
Florida won series 4–2


(A2) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (A3) Tampa Bay Lightning edit

The Toronto Maple Leafs finished second in the Atlantic Division, earning 115 points. The Tampa Bay Lightning earned 110 points to finish third in the Atlantic Division. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. These teams split their four-game regular season series.

The Lightning defeated the Maple Leafs in seven games. In game one, Maple Leaf's forward Auston Matthews provided two goals and an assist in Jack Campbell's 24-save 5–0 shutout.[17] Victor Hedman had a goal and three assists for the Lightning in game two, giving Tampa Bay a 5–3 victory.[18] In game three, Pierre Engvall provided three assists for the Maple Leafs, staving off a potential comeback from Tampa Bay and winning 5–2.[19] In game four, the Lightning got off to a quick start, scoring three goals within the first eight minutes of the game en route to a 7–3 victory.[20] The Maple Leafs came back from a 2–0 deficit in Game 5 with William Nylander providing a goal and two assists in a 4–3 victory.[21] In game 6, although the Maple Leafs came back from a two-goal deficit, the Lightning's Brayden Point scored in overtime to extend the series to a seventh game in a 4–3 affair.[22] In game 7, Nick Paul scored twice while the Lightning defended their 2–1 lead onto the victory and a second round advancement.[23] With their game seven loss, the Maple Leafs lost eight consecutive playoff series and ten potential series-clinching games.[24] After Florida won a playoff series for the first time since 1996, Toronto held the NHL's longest active playoff series win drought, as they last won a playoff series in 2004.[25]


May 2Tampa Bay Lightning0–5Toronto Maple LeafsScotiabank ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period18:19 – Jake Muzzin (1)
No scoringSecond period06:18 – ppAuston Matthews (1)
09:27 – shDavid Kampf (1)
16:39 – Mitch Marner (1)
No scoringThird period08:16 – Auston Matthews (2)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 27 saves / 32 shotsGoalie statsJack Campbell 24 saves / 24 shots
May 4Tampa Bay Lightning5–3Toronto Maple LeafsScotiabank ArenaRecap 
Victor Hedman (1) – pp – 19:57First periodNo scoring
Corey Perry (1) – 02:21
Nikita Kucherov (1) – pp – 09:57
Second period07:47 – Michael Bunting (1)
Brandon Hagel (1) – 01:33
Brayden Point (1) – pp – 05:38
Third period11:53 – Mitch Marner (2)
15:43 – shAlexander Kerfoot (1)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 31 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsJack Campbell 29 saves / 34 shots
May 6Toronto Maple Leafs5–2Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
Morgan Rielly (1) – pp – 04:54
Colin Blackwell (1) – 09:44
First periodNo scoring
David Kampf (2) – 05:52Second period11:03 – ppRoss Colton (1)
Ilya Mikheyev (1) – en – 18:20
Ilya Mikheyev (2) – en – 19:55
Third period05:43 – Ondrej Palat (1)
Jack Campbell 32 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 31 saves / 34 shots
May 8Toronto Maple Leafs3–7Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period01:00 – Steven Stamkos (1)
05:20 – Pierre-Edouard Bellemare (1)
07:58 – Patrick Maroon (1)
No scoringSecond period03:17 – Ross Colton (2)
05:25 – ppCorey Perry (2)
William Nylander (1) – pp – 02:27
William Nylander (2) – 12:01
Jake Muzzin (2) – 15:41
Third period14:40 – enOndrej Palat (2)
17:44 – en – Ross Colton (3)
Jack Campbell 11 saves / 16 shots
Erik Kallgren 10 saves / 10 shots
Goalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 25 shots
May 10Tampa Bay Lightning3–4Toronto Maple LeafsScotiabank ArenaRecap 
Steven Stamkos (2) – 05:19
Victor Hedman (2) – pp – 06:11
First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period03:35 – ppJohn Tavares (1)
Ryan McDonagh (1) – 08:17Third period03:01 – Morgan Rielly (2)
04:14 – William Nylander (3)
13:54 – Auston Matthews (3)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 21 saves / 25 shotsGoalie statsJack Campbell 32 saves / 35 shots
May 12Toronto Maple Leafs3–4OTTampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period17:38 – Ondrej Palat (3)
Auston Matthews (4) – 11:40
John Tavares (2) – 19:26
John Tavares (3) – 19:52
Second period10:46 – shAnthony Cirelli (1)
No scoringThird period09:20 – ppNikita Kucherov (2)
No scoringFirst overtime period18:04 – Brayden Point (2)
Jack Campbell 31 saves / 35 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 30 saves / 33 shots
May 14Tampa Bay Lightning2–1Toronto Maple LeafsScotiabank ArenaRecap 
Nick Paul (1) – 18:24First periodNo scoring
Nick Paul (2) – 16:32Second period13:25 – Morgan Rielly (3)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 30 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsJack Campbell 23 saves / 25 shots
Tampa Bay won series 4–3


(M1) Carolina Hurricanes vs. (WC1) Boston Bruins edit

The Carolina Hurricanes finished first in the Metropolitan Division earning 116 points. Boston finished as the Eastern Conference's first wild card earning 107 points. This was the seventh playoff meeting between these two teams, with Boston winning five of the six previous series. They last met in the 2020 Eastern Conference first round, which Boston won in five games. Carolina won all three games in this year's regular season series.

The Hurricanes defeated the Bruins in seven games, with the home team victorious in every game. Antti Raanta made 35 saves in game one, backstopping the Hurricanes in a 5–1 victory.[26] Upon Hurricanes forward Nino Niederreiter's two goals and Pyotr Kochetkov's 30 saves in relief of Raanta in game two, Carolina gained 2–0 series lead by defeating Boston 5–2.[27] In game three, Brad Marchand scored a goal and provided two assists in the Bruins' 4–2 victory.[28] In game four, Marchand scored or provided an assist on every Bruins goal in Boston's 5–2 victory, tying the series 2–2.[29] In game five, Seth Jarvis scored twice and Teuvo Teravainen assisted thrice in the Hurricanes 5–1 victory, taking a 3–2 series lead in the process.[30] In game six, Charlie Coyle and Marchand each scored a goal and provided an assist in the Bruins' 5–2 victory tying the series 3–3.[31] Max Domi scored twice and added an assist in game seven, granting Carolina a 3–2 victory and an advancement to the second round.[32]


May 2Boston Bruins1–5Carolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period16:28 – Seth Jarvis (1)
18:38 – Nino Niederreiter (1)
Taylor Hall (1) – 02:53Third period07:02 – Teuvo Teravainen (1)
16:59 – Vincent Trocheck (1)
17:59 – enAndrei Svechnikov (1)
Linus Ullmark 20 saves / 24 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 35 saves / 36 shots
May 4Boston Bruins2–5Carolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period13:03 – Jesper Fast (1)
15:30 – Sebastian Aho (1)
Patrice Bergeron (1) – pp – 14:57Second period01:10 – pp – Sebastian Aho (2)
18:52 – ppNino Niederreiter (2)
Patrice Bergeron (2) – 12:21Third period19:19 – en – Nino Niederreiter (3)
Linus Ullmark 29 saves / 33 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 6 saves / 6 shots
Pyotr Kochetkov 30 saves / 32 shots
May 6Carolina Hurricanes2–4Boston BruinsTD GardenRecap 
Vincent Trocheck (2) – 09:17First period17:16 – shCharlie Coyle (1)
No scoringSecond period05:41 – Brad Marchand (1)
14:53 – ppDavid Pastrnak (1)
Jaccob Slavin (1) – 11:30Third period04:08 – ppTaylor Hall (2)
Pyotr Kochetkov 24 saves / 28 shotsGoalie statsJeremy Swayman 25 saves / 27 shots
May 8Carolina Hurricanes2–5Boston BruinsTD GardenRecap 
Brett Pesce (1) – 14:06First period16:09 – Patrice Bergeron (3)
Jordan Staal (1) – 00:33Second period18:44 – ppJake DeBrusk (1)
No scoringThird period00:43 – ppBrad Marchand (2)
05:41 – David Pastrnak (2)
19:25 – en – Brad Marchand (3)
Antti Raanta 23 saves / 27 shotsGoalie statsJeremy Swayman 24 saves / 26 shots
May 10Boston Bruins1–5Carolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period06:11 – Jaccob Slavin (2)
12:17 – ppTony DeAngelo (1)
No scoringSecond period15:52 – Seth Jarvis (2)
Connor Clifton (1) – 10:09Third period03:31 – pp – Seth Jarvis (3)
16:20 – enVincent Trocheck (3)
Jeremy Swayman 33 saves / 37 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 33 saves / 34 shots
May 12Carolina Hurricanes2–5Boston BruinsTD GardenRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period00:46 – Brad Marchand (4)
18:04 – ppCharlie Coyle (2)
Andrei Svechnikov (2) – 03:24
Andrei Svechnikov (3) – pp – 17:30
Third period07:08 – Erik Haula (1)
10:43 – Derek Forbort (1)
15:43 – enCurtis Lazar (1)
Antti Raanta 29 saves / 33 shotsGoalie statsJeremy Swayman 23 saves / 25 shots
May 14Boston Bruins2–3Carolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period18:36 – Teuvo Teravainen (2)
Jake DeBrusk (2) – 05:04Second period03:14 – Max Domi (1)
10:33 – Max Domi (2)
David Pastrnak (3) – 19:38Third periodNo scoring
Jeremy Swayman 28 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 27 saves / 29 shots
Carolina won series 4–3


(M2) New York Rangers vs. (M3) Pittsburgh Penguins edit

The New York Rangers finished second in the Metropolitan Division with 110 points. The Pittsburgh Penguins earned 103 points to finish third in the Metropolitan Division. This was the eighth playoff meeting between these two teams with Pittsburgh winning five of the seven previous series. They last met in the 2016 Eastern Conference first round, which Pittsburgh won in five games. New York won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Rangers came back from a 3–1 series deficit to defeat the Penguins in seven games. In game one, although Igor Shesterkin made 79 saves for the Rangers, Penguins forward Evgeni Malkin scored for Pittsburgh at 5:58 of triple overtime to win 4–3.[33] In game two, Artemi Panarin and Frank Vatrano both scored a goal and provided two assists in the Rangers' 5–2 victory.[34] In game three, although the Rangers tied the game after being down 4–1, Penguins forward Danton Heinen's goal proved to be the game-winning goal at 11:02 of the third period giving Pittsburgh a 7–4 victory.[35] The Penguins scored five times in the second period of game four, chasing goalie Shesterkin in a 7–2 rout. [36] In game five, the Rangers successfully came back from a two-goal deficit to win 5–3, forcing a sixth game.[37] Chris Kreider gave the Rangers a lead late in the third period of game six, giving his team a 5–3 victory and tying the series 3–3.[38] In game seven and the subsequent overtime, Panarin scored for New York sending the Rangers to the second round with a 4–3 victory.[39] This marked the first time the Penguins lost a game seven on the road in franchise history after winning the previous six instances. The Rangers equalled both the Montreal Canadiens and Vancouver Canucks for most comebacks from a 3–1 series deficit with three. The Rangers also became the first team in Stanley Cup playoff history to record three consecutive comeback wins in elimination games within the same series.[40]


May 3Pittsburgh Penguins4–33OTNew York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
No scoringFirst period09:19 – ppAdam Fox (1)
Jake Guentzel (1) – 04:32
Jake Guentzel (2) – 11:47
Bryan Rust (1) – pp – 18:30
Second period03:08 – Andrew Copp (1)
17:07 – shChris Kreider (1)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Evgeni Malkin (1) – 05:58Third overtime periodNo scoring
Casey DeSmith 48 saves / 51 shots
Louis Domingue 17 saves / 17 shots
Goalie statsIgor Shesterkin 79 saves / 83 shots
May 5Pittsburgh Penguins2–5New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
Jake Guentzel (3) – 08:52First period06:50 – Andrew Copp (2)
Sidney Crosby (1) – 18:34Second period02:59 – ppRyan Strome (1)
12:06 – Chris Kreider (2)
No scoringThird period08:02 – Artemi Panarin (1)
09:49 – Frank Vatrano (1)
Louis Domingue 35 saves / 40 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 39 saves / 41 shots
May 7New York Rangers4–7Pittsburgh PenguinsPPG Paints ArenaRecap 
Kaapo Kakko (1) – 05:08First period01:57 – Brock McGinn (1)
08:18 – ppJeff Carter (1)
10:31 – ppEvan Rodrigues (1)
15:15 – Evan Rodrigues (2)
Frank Vatrano (2) – 06:51
Artemi Panarin (2) – 07:58
Andrew Copp (3) – sh – 15:59
Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period11:02 – Danton Heinen (1)
17:46 – enJake Guentzel (4)
18:53 – en – Jeff Carter (2)
Igor Shesterkin 11 saves / 15 shots
Alexandar Georgiev 19 saves / 20 shots
Goalie statsLouis Domingue 32 saves / 36 shots
May 9New York Rangers2–7Pittsburgh PenguinsPPG Paints ArenaRecap 
Alexis Lafreniere (1) – 02:06First period11:17 – ppSidney Crosby (2)
Adam Fox (2) – 14:04Second period03:14 – Mike Matheson (1)
03:38 – Jake Guentzel (5)
11:22 – Mark Friedman (1)
18:53 – Danton Heinen (2)
19:28 – Jeff Carter (3)
No scoringThird period12:22 – Evgeni Malkin (2)
Igor Shesterkin 24 saves / 30 shots
Alexandar Georgiev 10 saves / 11 shots
Goalie statsLouis Domingue 22 saves / 24 shots
May 11Pittsburgh Penguins3–5New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
Jake Guentzel (6) – 10:28First periodNo scoring
Kris Letang (1) – 07:58
Jake Guentzel (7) – 18:06
Second period15:11 – Adam Fox (3)
16:41 – Alexis Lafreniere (2)
17:53 – Jacob Trouba (1)
No scoringThird period02:53 – ppFilip Chytil (1)
19:44 – enRyan Lindgren (1)
Louis Domingue 29 saves / 33 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 29 saves / 32 shots
May 13New York Rangers5–3Pittsburgh PenguinsPPG Paints ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period14:12 – Jeff Carter (4)
15:48 – Bryan Rust (2)
Mika Zibanejad (1) – pp – 05:05
Mika Zibanejad (2) – 06:21
Chris Kreider (3) – pp – 13:48
Second period16:36 – Evgeni Malkin (3)
Chris Kreider (4) – 18:32
Andrew Copp (4) – en – 19:33
Third periodNo scoring
Igor Shesterkin 31 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsLouis Domingue 33 saves / 37 shots
May 15Pittsburgh Penguins3–4OTNew York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
Danton Heinen (3) – pp – 18:51First period07:36 – Chris Kreider (5)
Jake Guentzel (8) – pp – 10:18
Evan Rodrigues (3) – sh – 17:24
Second period11:23 – K'Andre Miller (1)
No scoringThird period14:15 – Mika Zibanejad (3)
No scoringFirst overtime period04:46 – ppArtemi Panarin (3)
Tristan Jarry 26 saves / 30 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 39 saves / 42 shots
New York won series 4–3


Western Conference first round edit

(C1) Colorado Avalanche vs. (WC2) Nashville Predators edit

The Colorado Avalanche finished first in the Central Division and Western Conference earning 119 points. The Nashville Predators earned 97 points to finish as the Western Conference's second wild card. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2018 Western Conference first round, which Nashville won in six games. Nashville won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Avalanche defeated the Predators in a four-game sweep. Colorado scored five times in the first period of game one, forcing Nashville to switch goalies in a 7–2 affair.[41] In game two, the Avalanche shot 51 times at Predators' goalie Connor Ingram and at 8:31 of overtime, Cale Makar scored to give Colorado a 2–1 victory.[42] Gabriel Landeskog scored and assisted twice in game three, helping the Avalanche obtain both a 7–3 victory and 3–0 series lead.[43] In game four, Andre Burakovsky's goal and two assists helped lift the Avalanche to a 5–3 victory, advancing to the second round.[44]


May 3Nashville Predators2–7Colorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period02:20 – ppNathan MacKinnon (1)
02:42 – Devon Toews (1)
08:30 – shAndrew Cogliano (1)
12:15 – Cale Makar (1)
15:04 – Artturi Lehkonen (1)
Matt Duchene (1) – pp – 18:40Second period14:44 – ppGabriel Landeskog (1)
Matt Duchene (2) – 12:26Third period06:03 – Nathan MacKinnon (2)
David Rittich 8 saves / 13 shots
Connor Ingram 30 saves / 32 shots
Goalie statsDarcy Kuemper 23 saves / 25 shots
May 5Nashville Predators1–2OTColorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
Yakov Trenin (1) – 15:19First period05:25 – Nathan MacKinnon (3)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period08:31 – Cale Makar (2)
Connor Ingram 49 saves / 51 shotsGoalie statsDarcy Kuemper 25 saves / 26 shots
May 7Colorado Avalanche7–3Nashville PredatorsBridgestone ArenaRecap 
Artturi Lehkonen (2) – pp – 10:45
Nathan MacKinnon (4) – pp – 16:08
First period17:37 – Matt Duchene (3)
Gabriel Landeskog (2) – pp – 10:58
Gabriel Landeskog (3) – 14:02
Nazem Kadri (1) – pp – 14:41
Second period05:41 – ppEeli Tolvanen (1)
12:54 – ppRoman Josi (1)
Devon Toews (2) – 09:33
Valeri Nichushkin (1) – en – 17:14
Third periodNo scoring
Darcy Kuemper 9 saves / 10 shots
Pavel Francouz 18 saves / 20 shots
Goalie statsConnor Ingram 35 saves / 41 shots
May 9Colorado Avalanche5–3Nashville PredatorsBridgestone ArenaRecap 
Andre Burakovsky (1) – 01:56First period18:59 – Yakov Trenin (2)
Cale Makar (3) – 13:33Second period16:49 – Yakov Trenin (3)
Devon Toews (3) – 08:55
Valeri Nichushkin (2) – 12:02
Nathan MacKinnon (5) – pp-en – 19:04
Third period03:58 – Filip Forsberg (1)
Pavel Francouz 28 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsConnor Ingram 33 saves / 37 shots
Colorado won series 4–0


(C2) Minnesota Wild vs. (C3) St. Louis Blues edit

The Minnesota Wild finished second in the Central Division earning 113 points. The St. Louis Blues earned 109 points to finish third in the Central Division. This was the third playoff meeting between these teams with the teams splitting the two previous series. They last met in the 2017 Western Conference first round, which St. Louis won in five games. St. Louis won all three games in this year's regular season series.

The Blues defeated the Wild in six games. In game one, Ville Husso made 37 saves for the Blues and David Perron scored a hat trick in St. Louis' 4–0 victory.[45] The Wild returned with a hat trick of their own in game two when Kirill Kaprizov scored Minnesota's first playoff hat trick in a 6–2 victory.[46] Marc-Andre Fleury made 29 saves for the Wild in game three, backstopping Minnesota into a 5–1 victory.[47] Blues captain Ryan O'Reilly scored a goal and two assists in game four, leading St. Louis to a 5–2 victory.[48] Vladimir Tarasenko scored a hat trick in game five spearheading his team to another 5–2 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[49] In game six, Jordan Binnington made 25 saves for the Blues, defeating the Wild 5–1 and advancing to the second round.[50]


May 2St. Louis Blues4–0Minnesota WildXcel Energy CenterRecap 
David Perron (1) – pp – 06:15
Ryan O'Reilly (1) – 15:56
First periodNo scoring
David Perron (2) – pp – 16:30Second periodNo scoring
David Perron (3) – 12:34Third periodNo scoring
Ville Husso 37 saves / 37 shotsGoalie statsMarc-Andre Fleury 27 saves / 31 shots
May 4St. Louis Blues2–6Minnesota WildXcel Energy CenterRecap 
No scoringFirst period09:33 – Joel Eriksson Ek (1)
13:04 – ppFrederick Gaudreau (1)
19:06 – ppKirill Kaprizov (1)
Jordan Kyrou (1) – pp – 12:34Second period00:51 – Joel Eriksson Ek (2)
Vladimir Tarasenko (1) – 04:14Third period11:47 – Kirill Kaprizov (2)
12:52 – en – Kirill Kaprizov (3)
Ville Husso 22 saves / 27 shotsGoalie statsMarc-Andre Fleury 32 saves / 34 shots
May 6Minnesota Wild5–1St. Louis BluesEnterprise CenterRecap 
Jordan Greenway (1) – 00:39
Kirill Kaprizov (4) – 02:18
First periodNo scoring
Mats Zuccarello (1) – 07:44Second periodNo scoring
Joel Eriksson Ek (3) – 00:22
Jonas Brodin (1) – en – 12:31
Third period02:17 – ppRyan O'Reilly (2)
Marc-Andre Fleury 29 saves / 30 shotsGoalie statsVille Husso 28 saves / 32 shots
May 8Minnesota Wild2–5St. Louis BluesEnterprise CenterRecap 
Kirill Kaprizov (5) – 14:06First period04:19 – Jordan Kyrou (2)
No scoringSecond period10:30 – David Perron (4)
11:24 – Jordan Kyrou (3)
Matthew Boldy (1) – 02:39Third period18:02 – en – David Perron (5)
19:00 – ppRyan O'Reilly (3)
Marc-Andre Fleury 29 saves / 33 shotsGoalie statsJordan Binnington 28 saves / 30 shots
May 10St. Louis Blues5–2Minnesota WildXcel Energy CenterRecap 
Ryan O'Reilly (4) – pp – 04:53First period13:15 – ppKirill Kaprizov (6)
17:07 – pp – Kirill Kaprizov (7)
Brandon Saad (1) – 15:28Second periodNo scoring
Vladimir Tarasenko (2) – 01:03
Vladimir Tarasenko (3) – 02:31
Vladimir Tarasenko (4) – en – 18:27
Third periodNo scoring
Jordan Binnington 30 saves / 32 shotsGoalie statsMarc-Andre Fleury 27 saves / 31 shots
May 12Minnesota Wild1–5St. Louis BluesEnterprise CenterRecap 
No scoringFirst period14:59 – Nick Leddy (1)
No scoringSecond period09:26 – ppRyan O'Reilly (5)
13:25 – Tyler Bozak (1)
18:36 – ppVladimir Tarasenko (5)
Matt Dumba (1) – 06:25Third period18:19 – enColton Parayko (1)
Cam Talbot 22 saves / 26 shotsGoalie statsJordan Binnington 25 saves / 26 shots
St. Louis won series 4–2


(P1) Calgary Flames vs. (WC1) Dallas Stars edit

The Calgary Flames finished first in the Pacific Division earning 111 points. The Dallas Stars finished as the Western Conference's first wild card earning 98 points. This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams with Dallas winning both previous series. They last met in the 2020 Western Conference first round, which Dallas won in six games. Calgary won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Flames defeated the Stars in seven games. In game one, Calgary's defence limited the Stars' offence to 16 shots as goalie Jacob Markstrom claimed a 1–0 victory.[51] The Stars responded with their own shutout victory in game two, scoring twice in a 2–0 affair with Jake Oettinger making 29 saves in the process.[52] Joe Pavelski lead the Stars with two goals in game three, giving Dallas a 4–2 victory and a 2–1 series lead.[53] The Flames put 54 shots on the Stars goaltender, and with four shots turning into goals, Calgary won game four, 4–1.[54] In game five, Mikael Backlund and Andrew Mangiapane each scored a goal and provided an assist in Calgary's 3–1 comeback victory.[55] In game six, Oettinger made 36 saves for the Stars leading his team to a 4–2 victory and forcing a seventh game.[56] The Flames put on 67 shots in game seven, but with two finding the back of the net on both sides, the game went into overtime. In the extra period, Calgary forward Johnny Gaudreau scored to give the Flames a 3–2 victory and a second round advancement.[57] In the loss, Oettinger became the second goalie since 1955 to post 60 or more saves in a seventh game.[57]


May 3Dallas Stars0–1Calgary FlamesScotiabank SaddledomeRecap 
No scoringFirst period05:01 – ppElias Lindholm (1)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Jake Oettinger 25 saves / 26 shotsGoalie statsJacob Markstrom 16 saves / 16 shots
May 5Dallas Stars2–0Calgary FlamesScotiabank SaddledomeRecap 
Joe Pavelski (1) – 07:47First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Michael Raffl (1) – en – 18:51Third periodNo scoring
Jake Oettinger 29 saves / 29 shotsGoalie statsJacob Markstrom 21 saves / 22 shots
May 7Calgary Flames2–4Dallas StarsAmerican Airlines CenterRecap 
Trevor Lewis (1) – 13:45First period08:21 – Radek Faksa (1)
Elias Lindholm (2) – 03:40Second period11:41 – Joe Pavelski (2)
No scoringThird period10:05 – pp – Joe Pavelski (3)
19:59 – enRoope Hintz (1)
Jacob Markstrom 28 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsJake Oettinger 39 saves / 41 shots
May 9Calgary Flames4–1Dallas StarsAmerican Airlines CenterRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Rasmus Andersson (1) – pp – 10:03Second periodNo scoring
Johnny Gaudreau (1) – ps – 07:47
Elias Lindholm (3) – 11:53
Mikael Backlund (1) – en – 19:38
Third period15:03 – ppTyler Seguin (1)
Jacob Markstrom 34 saves / 35 shotsGoalie statsJake Oettinger 50 saves / 53 shots
May 11Dallas Stars1–3Calgary FlamesScotiabank SaddledomeRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Jason Robertson (1) – 13:21Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period06:49 – Mikael Backlund (2)
10:38 – Andrew Mangiapane (1)
19:02 – enTrevor Lewis (2)
Jake Oettinger 29 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsJacob Markstrom 20 saves / 21 shots
May 13Calgary Flames2–4Dallas StarsAmerican Airlines CenterRecap 
No scoringFirst period14:52 – Roope Hintz (2)
Michael Stone (1) – 08:09
Mikael Backlund (3) – 11:59
Second period06:04 – Michael Raffl (2)
17:32 – Miro Heiskanen (1)
No scoringThird period19:18 – enTyler Seguin (2)
Jacob Markstrom 36 saves / 39 shotsGoalie statsJake Oettinger 36 saves / 38 shots
May 15Dallas Stars2–3OTCalgary FlamesScotiabank SaddledomeRecap 
Jamie Benn (1) – 00:40First periodNo scoring
Vladislav Namestnikov (1) – 02:17Second period01:46 – Tyler Toffoli (1)
08:44 – Matthew Tkachuk (1)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period15:09 – Johnny Gaudreau (2)
Jake Oettinger 64 saves / 67 shotsGoalie statsJacob Markstrom 26 saves / 28 shots
Calgary won series 4–3


(P2) Edmonton Oilers vs. (P3) Los Angeles Kings edit

The Edmonton Oilers finished second in the Pacific Division with 104 points. The Los Angeles Kings earned 99 points to finish third in the Pacific Division. This was the eighth playoff meeting between these two teams with Edmonton winning five of the seven previous series. They last met in the 1992 Smythe Division Semifinals, which Edmonton won in six games. Edmonton won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Oilers defeated the Kings in seven games. In game one, Phillip Danault's goal with 5:14 left in the third period proved to be the game-winning goal for the Kings who edged the Oilers 4–3.[58] Mike Smith stopped all 30 shots in game two, ending his ten-game playoff losing streak with a 6–0 shutout victory.[59] The Oilers dominated game three, forcing Los Angeles to switch goalies and giving Evander Kane a hat trick in the process of an 8–2 rout.[60] Jonathan Quick claimed a 31-save shutout in game four, backstopping the Kings to a 4–0 victory. In the process, he became the leading United States-born goalie in playoff shutouts with 10.[61] In game five, the Oilers came back from a two-goal deficit to tie the match; however, Kings forward Adrian Kempe's overtime goal, his second score of the affair, gave Los Angeles the 5–4 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[62] In game six, Connor McDavid scored a goal and provided two assists in the Oilers' 4–2 victory, forcing a seventh game in Edmonton.[63] In game seven, McDavid scored and assisted in a 2–0 victory as they advanced to the second round.[64]


May 2Los Angeles Kings4–3Edmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
Trevor Moore (1) – 11:00
Alex Iafallo (1) – 16:48
First period19:17 – Connor McDavid (1)
Brendan Lemieux (1) – 03:50Second period02:39 – ppKailer Yamamoto (1)
09:56 – ppLeon Draisaitl (1)
Phillip Danault (1) – 14:46Third periodNo scoring
Jonathan Quick 36 saves / 39 shotsGoalie statsMike Smith 31 saves / 35 shots
May 4Los Angeles Kings0–6Edmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period01:22 – ppLeon Draisaitl (2)
06:03 – shDarnell Nurse (1)
16:05 – Ryan McLeod (1)
No scoringThird period03:02 – Evander Kane (1)
03:23 – Jesse Puljujarvi (1)
11:55 – pp – Evander Kane (2)
Jonathan Quick 30 saves / 36 shotsGoalie statsMike Smith 30 saves / 30 shots
May 6Edmonton Oilers8–2Los Angeles KingsCrypto.com ArenaRecap 
Leon Draisaitl (3) – 03:50
Zach Hyman (1) – pp – 06:07
First periodNo scoring
Evander Kane (3) – 06:27
Zach Hyman (2) – 07:42
Evander Kane (4) – 09:51
Second period10:07 – Anze Kopitar (1)
17:29 – ppPhillip Danault (2)
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (1) – 14:19
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (2) – 15:40
Evander Kane (5) – 19:40
Third periodNo scoring
Mike Smith 44 saves / 46 shotsGoalie statsJonathan Quick 13 saves / 17 shots
Cal Petersen 16 saves / 20 shots
May 8Edmonton Oilers0–4Los Angeles KingsCrypto.com ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period08:03 – Trevor Moore (2)
14:03 – Troy Stecher (1)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period15:06 – Carl Grundstrom (1)
18:29 – en – Carl Grundstrom (2)
Mike Smith 42 saves / 45 shotsGoalie statsJonathan Quick 31 saves / 31 shots
May 10Los Angeles Kings5–4OTEdmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
Troy Stecher (2) – 03:53First periodNo scoring
Adrian Kempe (1) – 09:29
Andreas Athanasiou (1) – 13:34
Second period02:32 – Zack Kassian (1)
Phillip Danault (3) – pp – 11:06Third period02:50 – ppConnor McDavid (2)
12:33 – shLeon Draisaitl (4)
15:08 – pp – Leon Draisaitl (5)
Adrian Kempe (2) – 01:12First overtime periodNo scoring
Jonathan Quick 24 saves / 28 shotsGoalie statsMike Smith 38 saves / 43 shots
May 12Edmonton Oilers4–2Los Angeles KingsCrypto.com ArenaRecap 
Connor McDavid (3) – 01:40First periodNo scoring
Evander Kane (6) – 01:50Second period13:59 – ppSean Durzi (1)
Tyson Barrie (1) – 14:50
Evander Kane (7) – en – 19:00
Third period00:29 – Carl Grundstrom (3)
Mike Smith 30 saves / 32 shotsGoalie statsJonathan Quick 33 saves / 36 shots
May 14Los Angeles Kings0–2Edmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period13:15 – Cody Ceci (1)
No scoringThird period16:07 – Connor McDavid (4)
Jonathan Quick 39 saves / 41 shotsGoalie statsMike Smith 29 saves / 29 shots
Edmonton won series 4–3


Second round edit

Eastern Conference second round edit

(A1) Florida Panthers vs. (A3) Tampa Bay Lightning edit

This was the second consecutive and the second overall playoff meeting between these two rivals. Tampa Bay won the previous year's Stanley Cup first round series in six games. These teams split their four-game regular season series.

The Lightning defeated the Panthers in a four-game sweep. In game one, Corey Perry and Nikita Kucherov both scored a goal and assisted in Tampa Bay's 4–1 victory.[65] Ross Colton's goal with 3.8 seconds left in game two provided Tampa Bay with a 2–1 victory and a 2–0 series lead.[66] Kucherov scored a goal and assisted three times in the Lightning's 5–1 victory of game three, who took a 3–0 series lead in the process.[67] In game four, Andrei Vasilevskiy made 49 saves in a 2–0 shutout, advancing the Lightning to the Conference finals for the third consecutive season.[68] With their victory, they became the first team since the 1980–1984 New York Islanders dynasty to win ten consecutive playoff series and they equalled the 1956–1960 Montreal Canadiens in consecutive series victories.[68]


May 17Tampa Bay Lightning4–1Florida PanthersFLA Live ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period14:01 – Anthony Duclair (1)
Corey Perry (3) – pp – 16:22Second periodNo scoring
Pierre-Edouard Bellemare (2) – 03:35
Nikita Kucherov (3) – pp – 15:54
Ross Colton (4) – pp – 17:44
Third periodNo scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 33 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsSergei Bobrovsky 32 saves / 36 shots
May 19Tampa Bay Lightning2–1Florida PanthersFLA Live ArenaRecap 
Corey Perry (4) – pp – 12:06First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period18:07 – Eetu Luostarinen (1)
Ross Colton (5) – 19:56Third periodNo scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 35 saves / 36 shotsGoalie statsSergei Bobrovsky 26 saves / 28 shots
May 22Florida Panthers1–5Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
Sam Reinhart (3) – pp – 16:07First period13:21 – Corey Perry (5)
No scoringSecond period02:54 – Erik Cernak (1)
10:23 – Steven Stamkos (3)
No scoringThird period16:06 – enNikita Kucherov (4)
17:51 – en – Steven Stamkos (4)
Sergei Bobrovsky 31 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 34 saves / 35 shots
May 23Florida Panthers0–2Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period06:16 – Patrick Maroon (2)
19:37 – enOndrej Palat (4)
Sergei Bobrovsky 24 saves / 25 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 49 saves / 49 shots
Tampa Bay won series 4–0


(M1) Carolina Hurricanes vs. (M2) New York Rangers edit

This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2020 Eastern Conference qualifying round, which Carolina won in a three-game sweep. Carolina won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Rangers defeated the Hurricanes in seven games. After Sebastian Aho tied the game late for Carolina in game one, Ian Cole scored in overtime to give the Hurricanes a 2–1 victory.[69] In game two, Aho scored a goal and provided an assist in Antti Raanta's 21 save shutout for the Hurricanes' 2–0 victory.[70] The Rangers rebounded in game three; aided by Igor Shesterkin's 43 saves, New York defeated Carolina 3–1.[71] In game four, Andrew Copp notched a goal and two assists in the Rangers 4–1 victory, evening the series 2–2.[72] The Hurricanes shot 34 times at Shesterkin in game five, banking in three goals for a 3–1 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[73] In game six, Shesterkin made 37 saves and Filip Chytil scored twice for the Rangers who defeated Carolina 5–2 to force a seventh game.[74] New York shut the door on Carolina in game seven, outscoring the Hurricanes 6–2 to advance to the conference final for the first time since 2015.[75]


May 18New York Rangers1–2OTCarolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
Filip Chytil (2) – 07:07First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period17:37 – Sebastian Aho (3)
No scoringFirst overtime period03:12 – Ian Cole (1)
Igor Shesterkin 24 saves / 26 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 27 saves / 28 shots
May 20New York Rangers0–2Carolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period15:54 – shBrendan Smith (1)
No scoringThird period19:58 – enSebastian Aho (4)
Igor Shesterkin 20 saves / 21 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 21 saves / 21 shots
May 22Carolina Hurricanes1–3New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
No scoringFirst period11:54 – ppMika Zibanejad (4)
Nino Niederreiter (4) – 08:18Second period05:55 – Chris Kreider (6)
No scoringThird period18:37 – enTyler Motte (1)
Antti Raanta 30 saves / 32 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 43 saves / 44 shots
May 24Carolina Hurricanes1–4New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
No scoringFirst period13:31 – ppFrank Vatrano (3)
15:42 – Adam Fox (4)
No scoringSecond period16:48 – Mika Zibanejad (5)
Teuvo Teravainen (3) – 06:33Third period11:10 – Andrew Copp (5)
Antti Raanta 24 saves / 28 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 30 saves / 31 shots
May 26New York Rangers1–3Carolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
Mika Zibanejad (6) – pp – 17:06First period12:57 – shVincent Trocheck (4)
No scoringSecond period09:47 – ppTeuvo Teravainen (4)
No scoringThird period13:01 – Andrei Svechnikov (4)
Igor Shesterkin 31 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 16 saves / 17 shots
May 28Carolina Hurricanes2–5New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
No scoringFirst period07:22 – Tyler Motte (2)
09:51 – ppMika Zibanejad (7)
Brady Skjei (1) – 05:05
Vincent Trocheck (5) – 12:47
Second period03:24 – Filip Chytil (3)
06:47 – Filip Chytil (4)
No scoringThird period07:43 – ppArtemi Panarin (4)
Antti Raanta 10 saves / 13 shots
Pyotr Kochetkov 10 saves / 12 shots
Goalie statsIgor Shesterkin 37 saves / 39 shots
May 30New York Rangers6–2Carolina HurricanesPNC ArenaRecap 
Adam Fox (5) – pp – 03:40
Chris Kreider (7) – pp – 08:00
First periodNo scoring
Ryan Strome (2) – 16:19Second periodNo scoring
Chris Kreider (8) – 03:59
Filip Chytil (5) – 08:51
Andrew Copp (6) – en – 17:08
Third period08:11 – ppVincent Trocheck (6)
16:13 – Max Domi (3)
Igor Shesterkin 37 saves / 39 shotsGoalie statsAntti Raanta 16 saves / 18 shots
Pyotr Kochetkov 9 saves / 12 shots
New York won series 4–3


Western Conference second round edit

(C1) Colorado Avalanche vs. (C3) St. Louis Blues edit

This was the second consecutive playoff meeting and the third overall between these two teams with Colorado winning both previous series. Colorado won the previous year's Stanley Cup first round series in a four-game sweep. Colorado won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Avalanche defeated the Blues in six games. In game one, the Avalanche poured 51 shots at Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington, however, the final shot in overtime by defenceman Josh Manson gave Colorado a 3–2 victory.[76] David Perron scored twice in game two and with Binnington stopping 30 shots, St. Louis won 4–1.[77] Binnington was injured and knocked out of the remainder of the series in the first period of game three, and Artturi Lehkonen scored twice for the Avalanche, as Colorado downed the Blues 5–2 for a 2–1 series lead.[78] In game four, Nazem Kadri scored a hat trick and provided an assist in the Avalanche's 6–3 victory.[79] Game 5 featured a wild scoring affair as the Avalanche had gained a three-goal lead and lost it, but banking off Nathan MacKinnon's hat trick goal with 2:46 remaining in the third period, Colorado retrieved a one-goal lead. St. Louis managed to tie the game again, and in the subsequent overtime period, Tyler Bozak scored to give the Blues a 5–4 victory.[80] In game six, Darren Helm's goal with 5.6 seconds remaining proved to be the series-winning goal for Colorado, who advanced to the Conference final for the first time since 2002.[81]


May 17St. Louis Blues2–3OTColorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
Ryan O'Reilly (6) – 06:25First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period03:14 – Valeri Nichushkin (3)
11:32 – Sam Girard (1)
Jordan Kyrou (4) – pp – 16:46Third periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period08:02 – Josh Manson (1)
Jordan Binnington 51 saves / 54 shotsGoalie statsDarcy Kuemper 23 saves / 25 shots
May 19St. Louis Blues4–1Colorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Jordan Kyrou (5) – 05:45
David Perron (6) – pp – 19:26
Second periodNo scoring
David Perron (7) – 10:31
Brandon Saad (2) – en – 18:10
Third period01:49 – ppGabriel Landeskog (4)
Jordan Binnington 30 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsDarcy Kuemper 28 saves / 31 shots
May 21Colorado Avalanche5–2St. Louis BluesEnterprise CenterRecap 
Logan O'Connor (1) – 10:57First period03:55 – Colton Parayko (2)
Nazem Kadri (2) – 13:38
Artturi Lehkonen (3) – 17:15
Second period19:30 – Ryan O'Reilly (7)
Gabriel Landeskog (5) – 17:52
Artturi Lehkonen (4) – en – 19:02
Third periodNo scoring
Darcy Kuemper 29 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsJordan Binnington 3 saves / 3 shots
Ville Husso 19 saves / 23 shots
May 23Colorado Avalanche6–3St. Louis BluesEnterprise CenterRecap 
No scoringFirst period05:07 – David Perron (8)
Erik Johnson (1) – 02:44
Nazem Kadri (3) – 04:07
Devon Toews (4) – 04:26
Nazem Kadri (4) – 07:37
Second period17:02 – pp – David Perron (9)
19:27 – ppPavel Buchnevich (1)
Nazem Kadri (5) – 09:38
Mikko Rantanen (1) – en – 19:58
Third periodNo scoring
Darcy Kuemper 17 saves / 20 shotsGoalie statsVille Husso 31 saves / 36 shots
May 25St. Louis Blues5–4OTColorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period03:51 – Nathan MacKinnon (6)
18:23 – pp – Nathan MacKinnon (7)
Vladimir Tarasenko (6) – 14:42Second period04:02 – Gabriel Landeskog (6)
Robert Thomas (1) – 09:57
Jordan Kyrou (6) – 15:14
Robert Thomas (2) – 19:04
Third period17:14 – Nathan MacKinnon (8)
Tyler Bozak (2) – 03:38First overtime periodNo scoring
Ville Husso 30 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsDarcy Kuemper 25 saves / 30 shots
May 27Colorado Avalanche3–2St. Louis BluesEnterprise CenterRecap 
No scoringFirst period19:00 – Justin Faulk (1)
J. T. Compher (1) – 05:19Second period09:34 – Jordan Kyrou (7)
J. T. Compher (2) – pp – 10:18
Darren Helm (1) – 19:54
Third periodNo scoring
Darcy Kuemper 18 saves / 20 shotsGoalie statsVille Husso 36 saves / 39 shots
Colorado won series 4–2


(P1) Calgary Flames vs. (P2) Edmonton Oilers edit

This was the sixth playoff meeting between these two rivals with Edmonton winning four of the five previous series. They last met in the 1991 Smythe Division semifinals, which Edmonton won in seven games. These teams split their four-game regular season series.

The Oilers defeated the Flames in five games. Game one was an offensive outburst on both sides with a total of fifteen goals, the most in a playoff game within the Battle of Alberta. The Flames who reached a 6–2 lead had that advantage disappear as the Oilers tied the game; however, two of Matthew Tkachuk's hat trick goals sealed the victory for Calgary in a 9–6 affair.[82] The Oilers successively overcame a two-goal deficit in game two with Leon Draisaitl providing a goal and two assists in a 5–3 victory.[83] The Oilers line of Evander Kane, Connor McDavid, and Draisaitl dominated the second period of game three with Kane scoring a natural hat-trick, Draisaitl assisting four times, an NHL playoff record, and McDavid assisting three times, leading to an eventual 4–1 victory.[84] In game four, the Flames tied the game after being down by three goals; however, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins's second goal broke the tie for Edmonton, scoring with 3:37 left in the game to lead the Oilers to a 5–3 victory and a 3–1 series lead.[85] Game five was mainly a back-and-forth affair, with exception to the two-goal comeback by the Oilers. During the second period, Calgary and Edmonton combined to score four goals in 1:11, setting an NHL record for the fastest four goals in a playoff game.[86] During the third period, Calgary had a late goal by Blake Coleman disallowed after video review determined that the puck was kicked into the net.[87] With the game tied at the end of the third period, both teams headed to overtime where McDavid scored to send Edmonton to the Conference final for the first time since 2006.[86]


May 18Edmonton Oilers6–9Calgary FlamesScotiabank SaddledomeRecap 
Connor McDavid (5) – 07:41First period00:26 – Elias Lindholm (4)
00:51 – Andrew Mangiapane (2)
06:05 – Brett Ritchie (1)
Evan Bouchard (1) – 07:10
Zach Hyman (3) – 09:38
Zach Hyman (4) – 14:06
Leon Draisaitl (6) – 19:21
Second period00:45 – Blake Coleman (1)
06:10 – Blake Coleman (2)
08:24 – ppMatthew Tkachuk (2)
Kailer Yamamoto (2) – 01:28Third period02:57 – Rasmus Andersson (2)
08:55 – Matthew Tkachuk (3)
17:49 – en – Matthew Tkachuk (4)
Mike Smith 7 saves / 10 shots
Mikko Koskinen 32 saves / 37 shots
Goalie statsJacob Markstrom 22 saves / 28 shots
May 20Edmonton Oilers5–3Calgary FlamesScotiabank SaddledomeRecap 
Duncan Keith (1) – 13:38First period03:02 – Michael Stone (2)
06:02 – Brett Ritchie (2)
Connor McDavid (6) – 03:05
Evan Bouchard (2) – pp – 15:03
Second period02:04 – ppTyler Toffoli (2)
Zach Hyman (5) – sh – 10:14
Leon Draisaitl (7) – 12:36
Third periodNo scoring
Mike Smith 37 saves / 40 shotsGoalie statsJacob Markstrom 35 saves / 40 shots
May 22Calgary Flames1–4Edmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period00:52 – Zach Hyman (6)
06:58 – Evander Kane (8)
07:51 – Evander Kane (9)
12:58 – Evander Kane (10)
Oliver Kylington (1) – 15:09Third periodNo scoring
Jacob Markstrom 30 saves / 34 shots
Daniel Vladar 7 saves / 7 shots
Goalie statsMike Smith 32 saves / 33 shots
Mikko Koskinen 0 saves / 0 shots
May 24Calgary Flames3–5Edmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
No scoringFirst period00:21 – Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (3)
09:53 – ppZach Hyman (7)
18:54 – Evander Kane (11)
Elias Lindholm (5) – pp – 09:04
Mikael Backlund (4) – 09:40
Second periodNo scoring
Rasmus Andersson (3) – sh – 10:56Third period16:33 – Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (4)
19:35 – pp-en – Evander Kane (12)
Jacob Markstrom 21 saves / 25 shotsGoalie statsMike Smith 29 saves / 32 shots
May 26Edmonton Oilers5–4OTCalgary FlamesScotiabank SaddledomeRecap 
No scoringFirst period10:13 – Andrew Mangiapane (3)
Darnell Nurse (2) – 07:40
Jesse Puljujarvi (2) – 09:56
Zach Hyman (8) – pp – 14:57
Evan Bouchard (3) – 16:08
Second period05:41 – Mikael Backlund (5)
15:12 – Johnny Gaudreau (3)
15:28 – Calle Jarnkrok (1)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Connor McDavid (7) – 05:03First overtime periodNo scoring
Mike Smith 32 saves / 36 shotsGoalie statsJacob Markstrom 30 saves / 35 shots
Edmonton won series 4–1


Conference finals edit

Eastern Conference final edit

(M2) New York Rangers vs. (A3) Tampa Bay Lightning edit

This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams. The Rangers made their seventh semifinals/conference final appearance since the league began using a 16-team or greater playoff format in 1980. They lost their most recent appearance in the 2015 Eastern Conference final, also the most recent playoff meeting between these two teams, in seven games to Tampa Bay. This was Tampa Bay's third consecutive and eighth overall semifinals/conference final since entering the league; they're the first team to accomplish this feat since the 2015 Chicago Blackhawks. They won the previous year's semifinals against the New York Islanders in seven games. New York won all three games in this year's regular season series.

The Lightning defeated the Rangers in six games. Filip Chytil scored twice for the Rangers in game one, who defeated Tampa Bay 6–2.[88] In game two, Igor Shesterkin made 29 saves for the Rangers in a 3–2 affair which ended the Lightning's 18-game win streak after losing the prior game.[89] The Lightning recovered in game three, coming back from a 2–0 deficit, and with Ondrej Palat's goal with 42 seconds left in the game, Tampa Bay defeated New York 3–2.[90] In game four, Palat scored a goal and provided two assists in goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy's 34 save performance to defeat New York 4–1 and tie the series 2–2.[91] Palat continued his late-goal antics into game five, scoring with 1:50 left in the third period to lead the Lightning to a 3–1 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[92] In game six, the captain Steven Stamkos scored twice to give the Lightning a 2–1 victory and a trip to the Stanley Cup Finals for the third consecutive season.[9]


June 1Tampa Bay Lightning2–6New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
Steven Stamkos (5) – 07:18First period01:11 – Chris Kreider (9)
Ondrej Palat (5) – 08:32Second period07:50 – Frank Vatrano (4)
10:09 – Filip Chytil (6)
15:43 – Filip Chytil (7)
No scoringThird period00:30 – Artemi Panarin (5)
06:06 – ppMika Zibanejad (8)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 28 saves / 34 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 37 saves / 39 shots
June 3Tampa Bay Lightning2–3New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
Nikita Kucherov (5) – pp – 02:41First period05:59 – K'Andre Miller (2)
17:32 – Kaapo Kakko (2)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Nick Paul (3) – 17:58Third period01:21 – Mika Zibanejad (9)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 25 saves / 28 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 29 saves / 31 shots
June 5New York Rangers2–3Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Mika Zibanejad (10) – pp – 07:37
Chris Kreider (10) – pp – 09:44
Second period10:50 – ppNikita Kucherov (6)
No scoringThird period01:22 – ppSteven Stamkos (6)
19:18 – Ondrej Palat (6)
Igor Shesterkin 49 saves / 52 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 28 saves / 30 shots
June 7New York Rangers1–4Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period02:38 – Patrick Maroon (3)
No scoringSecond period13:07 – Nikita Kucherov (7)
Artemi Panarin (6) – pp – 16:27Third period04:56 – Steven Stamkos (7)
19:51 – enOndrej Palat (7)
Igor Shesterkin 27 saves / 30 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 34 saves / 35 shots
June 9Tampa Bay Lightning3–1New York RangersMadison Square GardenRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Mikhail Sergachev (1) – 17:34Second period10:29 – Ryan Lindgren (2)
Ondrej Palat (8) – 18:10
Brandon Hagel (2) – en – 19:01
Third periodNo scoring
Andrei Vasilevskiy 24 saves / 25 shotsGoalie statsIgor Shesterkin 24 saves / 26 shots
June 11New York Rangers1–2Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period10:43 – Steven Stamkos (8)
Frank Vatrano (5) – pp – 13:07Third period13:28 – Steven Stamkos (9)
Igor Shesterkin 29 saves / 31 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 20 saves / 21 shots
Tampa Bay won series 4–2


Western Conference final edit

(C1) Colorado Avalanche vs. (P2) Edmonton Oilers edit

This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams with both teams splitting the two previous series. They last met in the 1998 Western Conference quarterfinals, which Edmonton came back from a 3–1 series deficit to win in seven games. This was Colorado's ninth appearance in the Conference Final. They were defeated in seven games by the Detroit Red Wings in their most recent conference finals appearance in 2002. Edmonton made their tenth appearance in the conference finals. Their most recent appearance was in the 2006 Western Conference final, which Edmonton won against the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim in five games. Colorado won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Avalanche defeated the Oilers in a four-game sweep. In game one, the Avalanche held off a potential four-goal comeback with an empty net goal to win 8–6.[93] During the game, Cale Makar's goal appeared to be offside due to Valeri Nichushkin still needing to exit the offensive zone, however, the goal was deemed onside with Makar pushing the puck across the blue line and not in possession until Nichushkin became onside.[94] Pavel Francouz stopped all 24 shots he faced in game two and with Nazem Kadri's three assists, Colorado won 4–0.[95] In game three, Nichushkin's two goals helped Colorado obtain a 4–2 victory and a 3–0 series lead.[96] In game four, the Avalanche came back from a two-goal deficit to take the lead, but the Oilers tied the game and it went to overtime. In overtime, Artturi Lehkonen scored to send Colorado to the Finals for the first time since 2001.[97]


May 31Edmonton Oilers6–8Colorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
Evander Kane (13) – 05:04
Zach Hyman (9) – 19:37
First period05:40 – J. T. Compher (3)
15:10 – Nathan MacKinnon (9)
19:46 – Cale Makar (4)
Ryan McLeod (2) – 02:59
Connor McDavid (8) – 16:51
Second period00:32 – ppNazem Kadri (6)
04:38 – Mikko Rantanen (2)
06:20 – J. T. Compher (4)
16:20 – Andrew Cogliano (2)
Derek Ryan (1) – 03:28
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (5) – pp – 12:36
Third period19:38 – enGabriel Landeskog (7)
Mike Smith 19 saves / 25 shots
Mikko Koskinen 20 saves / 21 shots
Goalie statsDarcy Kuemper 13 saves / 16 shots
Pavel Francouz 18 saves / 21 shots
June 2Edmonton Oilers0–4Colorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period03:58 – Artturi Lehkonen (5)
04:13 – Josh Manson (2)
06:02 – Mikko Rantanen (3)
No scoringThird period15:20 – ppNathan MacKinnon (10)
Mike Smith 36 saves / 40 shotsGoalie statsPavel Francouz 24 saves / 24 shots
June 4Colorado Avalanche4–2Edmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
Valeri Nichushkin (4) – 16:12First period00:38 – Connor McDavid (9)
Valeri Nichushkin (5) – 04:37Second periodNo scoring
J. T. Compher (5) – 12:42
Mikko Rantanen (4) – en – 19:30
Third period07:34 – Ryan McLeod (3)
Pavel Francouz 27 saves / 29 shotsGoalie statsMike Smith 39 saves / 42 shots
June 6Colorado Avalanche6–5OTEdmonton OilersRogers PlaceRecap 
Cale Makar (5) – pp – 03:46First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period07:39 – Zach Hyman (10)
16:57 – Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (6)
18:54 – ppConnor McDavid (10)
Devon Toews (5) – 00:31
Gabriel Landeskog (8) – 08:58
Nathan MacKinnon (11) – 13:30
Mikko Rantanen (5) – pp – 14:47
Third period03:55 – Zach Hyman (11)
16:38 – Zack Kassian (2)
Artturi Lehkonen (6) – 01:19First overtime periodNo scoring
Pavel Francouz 30 saves / 35 shotsGoalie statsMike Smith 36 saves / 42 shots
Colorado won series 4–0


Stanley Cup Finals edit

This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Colorado made their third Finals appearance. They last appeared in the Finals in 2001, which Colorado won against the New Jersey Devils in seven games. This was Tampa Bay's third consecutive Finals appearance and fifth overall; they were the first team to appear in three consecutive Finals since the 1985 Edmonton Oilers. They won the previous year's finals against the Montreal Canadiens in five games. Colorado won both games in this year's regular season series.


June 15Tampa Bay Lightning3–4OTColorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
Nick Paul (4) 12:26First period07:47 – Gabriel Landeskog (9)
09:23 – Valeri Nichushkin (6)
17:31 – ppArtturi Lehkonen (7)
Ondrej Palat (9) – 12:51
Mikhail Sergachev (2) – 13:39
Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period01:23 – Andre Burakovsky (2)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 34 saves / 38 shotsGoalie statsDarcy Kuemper 20 saves / 23 shots
June 18Tampa Bay Lightning0–7Colorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period02:54 – ppValeri Nichushkin (7)
07:55 – Josh Manson (3)
13:52 – Andre Burakovsky (3)
No scoringSecond period04:51 – Valeri Nichushkin (8)
16:26 – Darren Helm (2)
No scoringThird period02:04 – shCale Makar (6)
09:49 – pp – Cale Makar (7)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 23 saves / 30 shotsGoalie statsDarcy Kuemper 16 saves / 16 shots
June 20Colorado Avalanche2–6Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
Gabriel Landeskog (10) – pp – 08:19First period13:03 – Anthony Cirelli (2)
14:54 – Ondrej Palat (10)
Gabriel Landeskog (11) – pp – 04:43Second period01:26 – Nick Paul (5)
07:52 – Steven Stamkos (10)
11:15 – Patrick Maroon (4)
14:58 – ppCorey Perry (6)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Darcy Kuemper 17 saves / 22 shots
Pavel Francouz 10 saves / 11 shots
Goalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 37 saves / 39 shots
June 22Colorado Avalanche3–2OTTampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period00:36 – Anthony Cirelli (3)
Nathan MacKinnon (12) – pp – 05:17Second period10:42 – Victor Hedman (3)
Andrew Cogliano (3) – 02:53Third periodNo scoring
Nazem Kadri (7) – 12:02First overtime periodNo scoring
Darcy Kuemper 37 saves / 39 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 34 saves / 37 shots
June 24Tampa Bay Lightning3–2Colorado AvalancheBall ArenaRecap 
Jan Rutta (1) – 15:23First periodNo scoring
Nikita Kucherov (8) – pp – 08:10Second period05:07 – Valeri Nichushkin (9)
Ondrej Palat (11) – 13:38Third period02:31 – Cale Makar (8)
Andrei Vasilevskiy 35 saves / 37 shotsGoalie statsDarcy Kuemper 26 saves / 29 shots
June 26Colorado Avalanche2–1Tampa Bay LightningAmalie ArenaRecap 
No scoringFirst period03:48 – Steven Stamkos (11)
Nathan MacKinnon (13) – 01:54
Artturi Lehkonen (8) – 12:28
Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Darcy Kuemper 22 saves / 23 shotsGoalie statsAndrei Vasilevskiy 28 saves / 30 shots
Colorado won series 4–2


Player statistics edit

Skaters edit

These are the top ten skaters based on points, following the conclusion of the playoffs.[98]

PlayerTeamGPGAPts+/–PIM
Connor McDavidEdmonton Oilers16102333+1510
Leon DraisaitlEdmonton Oilers1672532+46
Cale MakarColorado Avalanche2082129+710
Nikita KucherovTampa Bay Lightning2381927+714
Mikko RantanenColorado Avalanche2052025+34
Nathan MacKinnonColorado Avalanche20131124+118
Mika ZibanejadNew York Rangers2010142404
Adam FoxNew York Rangers205182302
Gabriel LandeskogColorado Avalanche20111122+156
Ondrej PalatTampa Bay Lightning23111021+1010

Goaltenders edit

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.[99]

PlayerTeamGPWLSAGAGAASV%SOTOI
Jake OettingerDallas Stars734285131.81.9541 429:49
Antti RaantaCarolina Hurricanes1365322252.26.9221 663:25
Andrei VasilevskiyTampa Bay Lightning23149752592.52.9221 1,402:42
Darcy KuemperColorado Avalanche16104386382.57.9021 886:53
Igor ShesterkinNew York Rangers20109719512.59.9290 1,181:24
Mike SmithEdmonton Oilers1686560493.37.9132 872:15

Media edit

In Canada, for the eighth postseason under Rogers Media's 12-year contract, coverage was broadcast by Sportsnet networks and CBC Television under the Hockey Night in Canada brand, and streamed on Sportsnet Now, CBCSports.ca (for games televised by CBC), or the subscription service NHL Live. For first and second round U.S. vs. U.S. games not on CBC, Sportsnet generally simulcasted the U.S. feed instead of producing their own telecast.[100]

In the U.S., this marked the first Stanley Cup playoffs under the NHL's 7-year broadcast rights deals with ESPN and TNT; during the first round, games aired across ESPN, ESPN2, TBS, and TNT. For the second round onward, the games aired on either ESPN or TNT (except for one second-round game which aired on ESPN2 due to Sunday Night Baseball airing on ESPN). Other ESPN and Turner channels (such as ESPNU, ESPNews, and TruTV) continued to be used in the event of overflow situations.[101] As before, each U.S. team's regional broadcaster televised local coverage of games during the first round,[102][103] after which all other games were exclusive to the ESPN networks and TNT.[104][105]

In assigning broadcasters for each game, the NHL had to work around the 2022 NBA playoffs (which share ESPN and TNT as rightsholders, and started ahead of the Stanley Cup playoffs), ESPN's Sunday Night Baseball, and other such conflicts.[101] In general during the first round, ESPN or ESPN2 aired games on Tuesdays and Wednesdays (including all Game 5's), and TNT or TBS broadcast games on Thursdays and Fridays (including all Game 6's). Monday and weekend first round games were split between ESPN/ESPN2 and TNT/TBS, ensuring that both broadcasters televised two of the first four games in each series, and at least two of the five Game 7's.[106][107] With the NBA Conference Finals occurring at the same time with the Stanley Cup second round this year, ESPN ended up being the de facto exclusive broadcaster for the Carolina–NY Rangers and Calgary–Edmonton series, and TNT doing the same for the Florida–Tampa Bay and Colorado–St. Louis series.[108][109] Both conference finals also aired exclusively on ESPN and TNT; under the new contracts, ESPN held the first choice of which conference final to air, opting for the Eastern Conference this postseason. As per the new alternating rotation, ABC exclusively aired the Stanley Cup Finals.[104][105][110]

Unlike past seasons, there was no coverage of playoff games on U.S. broadcast television until the Stanley Cup Finals (previous rightsholders such as NBC had traditionally offered weekend games on broadcast television during the early rounds), as ESPN had prioritized the carriage of NBA playoff games on broadcast television via ABC instead. Conversely, the Finals were carried in their entirety on broadcast television for the first time since 1980 (which was aired primarily by the Hughes Television Network, but with CBS acquiring the rights to the series-deciding Game 6 as a one-off CBS Sports Spectacular broadcast);[111][112] Since then, the Finals were either partially or exclusively carried on cable. There were no live games on over-the-top streaming services until the third round, as ESPN+ only streamed simulcasts of the Eastern Conference finals and Stanley Cup Finals, and Turner Sports did not invoke its option to carry or simulcast games on HBO Max.[104][105][106][113]

American national radio rights to select Stanley Cup playoff games, including the entire conference finals and Stanley Cup Finals, were broadcast on the Sports USA Radio Network via NHL Radio. This was the first of a four-year deal signed between the NHL and Sports USA to syndicate NHL games on U.S. national radio.[114]

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External links edit

Preceded by Stanley Cup playoffs
2022
Succeeded by