Tournament details | |
---|---|
Dates | April 10–June 12, 2019 |
Teams | 16 |
Defending champions | Washington Capitals |
Final positions | |
Champions | St. Louis Blues |
Runner-up | Boston Bruins |
Conference runners-up | |
Tournament statistics | |
Scoring leader(s) | Brad Marchand (Bruins) (23 points) |
MVP | Ryan O'Reilly (Blues) |
← 2018 |
The 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL). The playoffs began on April 10, 2019, after the 2018–19 NHL season, and concluded on June 12, 2019, with the St. Louis Blues winning their first Stanley Cup in franchise history defeating the Boston Bruins four games to three in the Stanley Cup Finals.
Kelly Sutherland is refereeing his 6th Stanley Cup Final (2010, 2011, 2015, 2016, 2018), while Steve Kozari is working his 2nd (2014). Sutherland and Kozari refereed Western Conference Final Game 1 (STL L 3-6) and Game 5 (STL W 5-0). The duo also handled Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Final between the Bruins and Hurricanes (BOS W 2-1). May 27, 2019 The 2019 NHL Stanley Cup Finals begin tonight with Game 1 of the Boston Bruins vs. Louis Blues series. Get ready for the action with this preview, which includes the full schedule, start time. It's all come down to Game 7 in the Stanley Cup Final between the Boston Bruins and St. It's time to debate all the hot topics heading into the final showdown, including keys to.
The Tampa Bay Lightning 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 post-season appearance streak to thirteen seasons, the current longest streak. The Carolina Hurricanes made the playoffs for the first time since 2009, ending a nine-year playoff drought. For the second season in a row, the Boston Bruins and Toronto Maple Leafs were the only Original Six teams to make the playoffs, marking the fifth time in league history (2000, 2001, 2007, 2018) that only two Original Six teams clinched a playoff berth. For the first time since 2004, both Southern California teams, the Anaheim Ducks and Los Angeles Kings, missed the playoffs. For the second time in League history (2018), both the Detroit Red Wings and Montreal Canadiens missed the playoffs.
For the first time in NHL history, all division winners were eliminated in the first round as all the wild-cards advanced to the second round.[1] The Columbus Blue Jackets won a playoff series for the first time, defeating the first-place Lightning in four games, and marking the first time in Stanley Cup playoff history that the Presidents' Trophy winners were swept in the opening round, and the first time since 2012 that the Presidents' Trophy winners were defeated in the opening round. They were soon followed by the Calgary Flames, who with their five-game loss to the Colorado Avalanche, ensured that for the first time in NHL history,[2] neither of the conference number one seeds advanced to the second round. After that, the two remaining division winners, the Nashville Predators and Washington Capitals, were each eliminated in an overtime game, the Predators in six and the Capitals in seven. Also for the first time since 2012, none of the previous year's Conference finalists (the Capitals, the Lightning, the Golden Knights, and the Jets) made it to the second round. For the first time in League history, three series were decided in game seven overtime.
The Blues tied the 1987Philadelphia Flyers, 2004Calgary Flames, 2014Los Angeles Kings and 2015Tampa Bay Lightning for playing the most playoff games (26) in a post season, and joined the 2013–14 Kings as the most games played by a team who would go on to win the Stanley Cup.
- 1Playoff seeds
- 1.1Eastern Conference
- 1.2Western Conference
- 3First Round
- 3.1Eastern Conference First Round
- 3.2Western Conference First Round
- 4Second Round
- 4.1Eastern Conference Second Round
- 4.2Western Conference Second Round
- 5Conference Finals
- 5.1Eastern Conference Final
- 5.2Western Conference Final
- 7Player statistics
Playoff seeds[edit]
This was the sixth year in which the top three teams in each division make 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:[3]
Eastern Conference[edit]
Atlantic Division[edit]
- Tampa Bay Lightning, Atlantic Division champions, Eastern Conference regular season champions, Presidents' Trophy winners – 128 points
- Boston Bruins – 107 points
- Toronto Maple Leafs – 100 points
Metropolitan Division[edit]
- Washington Capitals, Metropolitan Division champions – 104 points
- New York Islanders – 103 points
- Pittsburgh Penguins – 100 points
Wild Cards[edit]
- Carolina Hurricanes – 99 points
- Columbus Blue Jackets – 98 points
Western Conference[edit]
Central Division[edit]
- Nashville Predators, Central Division champions – 100 points
- Winnipeg Jets – 99 points (45 ROWs)
- St. Louis Blues – 99 points (42 ROWs)
Pacific Division[edit]
- Calgary Flames, Pacific Division champions, Western Conference regular season champions – 107 points
- San Jose Sharks – 101 points
- Vegas Golden Knights – 93 points
Wild Cards[edit]
- Dallas Stars – 93 points
- Colorado Avalanche – 90 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 the conference plays against the division winner with the best record while the other wild card plays against the other division winner, and both wild cards are de facto #4 seeds. The other series match the second and third place teams from the divisions. In the first two rounds, home ice advantage is awarded to the team with the better seed. Thereafter, it is awarded to the team that had more points in the regular season followed by the tie breakers, if necessary.
First Round | Second Round | Conference Finals | Stanley Cup Finals | ||||||||
A1 | Tampa Bay | 0 | |||||||||
WC | Columbus | 4 | |||||||||
WC | Columbus | 2 | |||||||||
A2 | Boston | 4 | |||||||||
A2 | Boston | 4 | |||||||||
A3 | Toronto | 3 | |||||||||
A2 | Boston | 4 | |||||||||
Eastern Conference | |||||||||||
WC | Carolina | 0 | |||||||||
M1 | Washington | 3 | |||||||||
WC | Carolina | 4 | |||||||||
WC | Carolina | 4 | |||||||||
M2 | NY Islanders | 0 | |||||||||
M2 | NY Islanders | 4 | |||||||||
M3 | Pittsburgh | 0 | |||||||||
A2 | Boston | 3 | |||||||||
C3 | St. Louis | 4 | |||||||||
C1 | Nashville | 2 | |||||||||
WC | Dallas | 4 | |||||||||
WC | Dallas | 3 | |||||||||
C3 | St. Louis | 4 | |||||||||
C2 | Winnipeg | 2 | |||||||||
C3 | St. Louis | 4 | |||||||||
C3 | St. Louis | 4 | |||||||||
Western Conference | |||||||||||
P2 | San Jose | 2 | |||||||||
P1 | Calgary | 1 | |||||||||
WC | Colorado | 4 | |||||||||
WC | Colorado | 3 | |||||||||
P2 | San Jose | 4 | |||||||||
P2 | San Jose | 4 | |||||||||
P3 | Vegas | 3 |
- 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) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (WC2) Columbus Blue Jackets[edit]
The Tampa Bay Lightning earned the Presidents' Trophy as the NHL's best regular season team with 128 points. Columbus finished as the Eastern Conference's second wild card, earning 98 points. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Tampa Bay won all three games in this year's regular season series.
The Blue Jackets defeated the Lightning in a four-game sweep. In Game One, the Blue Jackets scored four unanswered goals to overcome a three-goal deficit, winning 4–3.[4]Matt Duchene scored a goal and two assists for Columbus in Game Two, granting the Blue Jackets a 5–1 victory and a 2–0 series lead.[5] During the game Nikita Kucherov hit Markus Nutivaara to the head prompting NHL Player Safety to suspend the Lightning forward for Game Three.[6] During said game, Sergei Bobrovsky made 30 saves, giving the Blue Jackets a 3–1 victory and their first 3–0 series lead in franchise history.[7] In Game Four, the Lightning desperate for a victory could not overcome the early two-goal deficit they faced in the first period, allowing Columbus to score three empty-net goals late into the third period and win 7–3, sweeping Tampa Bay 4–0 and earning their first playoff series victory in franchise history. The Lightning became the first Presidents' Trophy winners to be swept in the opening round.[8]
April 10 | Columbus Blue Jackets | 4–3 | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 04:12 – sh – Alex Killorn (1) 11:01 – Anthony Cirelli (1) 17:50 – Yanni Gourde (1) | |||||
Nick Foligno (1) – 09:15 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
David Savard (1) – 07:56 Josh Anderson (1) – sh – 11:54 Seth Jones (1) – pp – 14:05 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Sergei Bobrovsky 26 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Andrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 26 shots |
April 12 | Columbus Blue Jackets | 5–1 | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | Recap | ||
Cam Atkinson (1) – 05:15 Zach Werenski (1) – pp – 11:44 | First period | No scoring | |||||
Matt Duchene (1) – pp – 01:28 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Riley Nash (1) – 09:06 Artemi Panarin (1) – 12:15 | Third period | 05:00 – Mikhail Sergachev (1) | |||||
Sergei Bobrovsky 23 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Andrei Vasilevskiy 22 saves / 27 shots |
April 14 | Tampa Bay Lightning | 1–3 | Columbus Blue Jackets | Nationwide Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 01:44 – Matt Duchene (2) 08:25 – pp – Oliver Bjorkstrand (1) | |||||
Ondrej Palat (1) – 04:40 | Third period | 19:00 – en – Cam Atkinson (2) | |||||
Andrei Vasilevskiy 27 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Sergei Bobrovsky 30 saves / 31 shots |
April 16 | Tampa Bay Lightning | 3–7 | Columbus Blue Jackets | Nationwide Arena | Recap | ||
Steven Stamkos (1) – 08:44 | First period | 02:26 – pp – Alexandre Texier (1) 03:48 – Pierre-Luc Dubois (1) | |||||
Cedric Paquette (1) – 13:03 Brayden Point (1) – pp – 17:52 | Second period | 06:28 – Seth Jones (2) 18:46 – Oliver Bjorkstrand (2) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 18:07 – en – Artemi Panarin (2) 18:26 – en – Alexandre Texier (2) 19:51 – en – Matt Duchene (3) | |||||
Andrei Vasilevskiy 18 saves / 22 shots | Goalie stats | Sergei Bobrovsky 30 saves / 33 shots |
Columbus won series 4–0 |
(A2) Boston Bruins vs. (A3) Toronto Maple Leafs[edit]
The Boston Bruins finished second in the Atlantic Division earning 107 points. The Toronto Maple Leafs earned 100 points to finish third in the Atlantic Division. This was the sixteenth and second consecutive meeting between these two teams with Toronto winning eight of the fifteen previous series. They last met in the previous year's Eastern Conference First Round which Boston won in seven games. Boston won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.
The Bruins defeated the Maple Leafs in seven games. Mitch Marner scored twice in Toronto's Game One victory, who outscored Boston 4–1.[9] Game Two saw controversy in officiating with Bruins players becoming more physical including to the point where Boston forward Jake DeBrusk collided with Toronto forward Nazem Kadri who was skating hard out of the penalty box, resulting in a knee-on-knee collision injuring the Maple Leafs forward.[10] No penalty was called on the play. Kadri would return to the game, but retaliated against DeBrusk later cross-checking the forward in the head resulting in a major penalty for the Toronto forward.[11] Kadri was suspended for the remainder of the series.[12] The Bruins ended the game 4–1.[13] In Game Three, both Auston Matthews and Andreas Johnsson scored a goal and notched an assist, leading the Maple Leafs to a 3–2 victory.[14] In Game Four, the Bruins held onto a 6–4 victory keeping the Maple Leafs from tying in the dying minutes after leading by three goals in the third period.[15] The Maple Leafs scored twice in the third period of Game Five and held onto a one-goal lead late in the game to give Toronto a 2–1 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[16] In Game Six, Brad Marchand had two goals and an assist in a 4–2 Bruins victory to push the series to a seventh game.[17] In the seventh game, Boston goalie Tuukka Rask made 32 saves to defeat the Maple Leafs 5–1 and advance to the second round.[18]
April 11 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 4–1 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
Mitch Marner (1) – 16:44 | First period | 09:31 – pp – Patrice Bergeron (1) | |||||
Mitch Marner (2) – sh-ps – 02:47 William Nylander (1) – 18:25 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
John Tavares (1) – en – 18:41 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Frederik Andersen 37 saves / 38 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 29 saves / 32 shots |
April 13 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 1–4 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 04:44 – Charlie Coyle (1) 16:04 – Brad Marchand (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 10:39 – Danton Heinen (1) | |||||
Nazem Kadri (1) – 10:44 | Third period | 15:03 – pp – Patrice Bergeron (2) | |||||
Frederik Andersen 37 saves / 41 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 30 saves / 31 shots |
April 15 | Boston Bruins | 2–3 | Toronto Maple Leafs | Scotiabank Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
David Krejci (1) – 03:30 Charlie Coyle (2) – pp – 19:22 | Second period | 02:38 – Trevor Moore (1) 10:12 – pp – Auston Matthews (1) 17:12 – pp – Andreas Johnsson (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Tuukka Rask 31 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Frederik Andersen 34 saves / 36 shots |
April 17 | Boston Bruins | 6–4 | Toronto Maple Leafs | Scotiabank Arena | Recap | ||
Charlie McAvoy (1) – pp – 03:03 Brad Marchand (2) – 06:38 | First period | 17:55 – Zach Hyman (1) | |||||
David Pastrnak (1) – 03:16 David Pastrnak (2) – pp – 04:51 | Second period | 01:07 – Auston Matthews (2) | |||||
Zdeno Chara (1) – 05:39 Joakim Nordstrom (1) – en – 19:58 | Third period | 11:52 – pp – Auston Matthews (3) 13:27 – Travis Dermott (1) | |||||
Tuukka Rask 38 saves / 42 shots | Goalie stats | Frederik Andersen 25 saves / 30 shots |
April 19 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 2–1 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Auston Matthews (4) – 11:33 Kasperi Kapanen (1) – 13:45 | Third period | 19:16 – David Krejci (2) | |||||
Frederik Andersen 28 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 25 saves / 27 shots |
April 21 | Boston Bruins | 4–2 | Toronto Maple Leafs | Scotiabank Arena | Recap | ||
Brad Marchand (3) – pp – 11:23 Torey Krug (1) – pp – 17:02 | First period | 09:42 – Morgan Rielly (1) | |||||
Jake DeBrusk (1) – 07:57 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Brad Marchand (4) – en – 18:06 | Third period | 04:15 – Auston Matthews (5) | |||||
Tuukka Rask 22 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Frederik Andersen 37 saves / 40 shots |
April 23 | Toronto Maple Leafs | 1–5 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 14:29 – Joakim Nordstrom (2) 17:46 – Marcus Johansson (1) | |||||
John Tavares (2) – 03:54 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 02:40 – Sean Kuraly (1) 17:26 – en – Charlie Coyle (3) 19:59 – en – Patrice Bergeron (3) | |||||
Frederik Andersen 27 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 32 saves / 33 shots |
Boston won series 4–3 |
(M1) Washington Capitals vs. (WC1) Carolina Hurricanes[edit]
The Washington Capitals finished first in the Metropolitan Division earning 104 points. Carolina finished as the Eastern Conference's first wild card earning 99 points. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Washington won all four games in this year's regular season series.
The Hurricanes defeated the Capitals in seven games. In game one, Nicklas Backstrom scored twice and teammate John Carlson had three assists in Washington's 4–2 victory.[19] During a tight back-and-forth game two, Brooks Orpik scored the overtime winner for the Capitals, giving Washington a 4–3 victory.[20] In game three, Carolina forward Warren Foegele scored twice and assisted once as the Hurricanes limited the Capitals to 18 shots in a 5–0 blowout victory.[21] During the game rookie Andrei Svechnikov was challenged by Alexander Ovechkin to a fight during which the young Hurricane forward was knocked out and removed from the game due to concussion protocol.[22] The Capitals increased their shot count in game four, but Hurricanes goalie Petr Mrazek stopped 30 of those 31 shots, evening the series in a 2–1 victory.[23] In game five, the Capitals blew out the Hurricanes 6–0 with Backstrom scoring two goals and adding two assists, as goaltender Braden Holtby stopped all 30 shots he faced.[24] Carolina broke the tie in game six as they scored three goals in the third period to force a seventh game.[25] The Hurricanes rallied from two separate two goal deficits to tie game seven forcing overtime. In double overtime, Carolina forward Brock McGinn ended the third longest game seven in NHL history at 11:05 by tipping in Justin Williams' shot to send the Hurricanes to the second round of the playoffs for the first time since 2009; with the victory Carolina has won five consecutive game sevens dating back to 2006.[26]
April 11 | Carolina Hurricanes | 2–4 | Washington Capitals | Capital One Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 09:58 – Nicklas Backstrom (1) 13:10 – pp – Nicklas Backstrom (2) 18:05 – pp – Alexander Ovechkin (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Andrei Svechnikov (1) – 05:07 Andrei Svechnikov (2) – 07:26 | Third period | 19:23 – en – Lars Eller (1) | |||||
Petr Mrazek 14 saves / 17 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 27 saves / 29 shots |
April 13 | Carolina Hurricanes | 3–4 | OT | Washington Capitals | Capital One Arena | Recap | |
Lucas Wallmark (1) – 15:54 | First period | 03:37 – Nicklas Backstrom (3) 09:26 – T. J. Oshie (1) | |||||
Sebastian Aho (1) – 16:49 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Staal (1) – pp – 15:00 | Third period | 08:55 – Tom Wilson (1) | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 01:48 – Brooks Orpik (1) | |||||
Petr Mrazek 29 saves / 33 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 25 saves / 28 shots |
April 15 | Washington Capitals | 0–5 | Carolina Hurricanes | PNC Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 09:43 – Warren Foegele (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 06:09 – Warren Foegele (2) 11:40 – pp – Dougie Hamilton (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 09:47 – pp – Dougie Hamilton (2) 15:35 – Brock McGinn (1) | |||||
Braden Holtby 40 saves / 45 shots | Goalie stats | Petr Mrazek 18 saves / 18 shots |
April 18 | Washington Capitals | 1–2 | Carolina Hurricanes | PNC Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 00:17 – Warren Foegele (3) | |||||
Alexander Ovechkin (2) – pp – 10:35 | Second period | 19:32 – Teuvo Teravainen (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Braden Holtby 22 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Petr Mrazek 30 saves / 31 shots |
April 20 | Carolina Hurricanes | 0–6 | Washington Capitals | Capital One Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 07:33 – pp – Nicklas Backstrom (4) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 14:21 – Nicklas Backstrom (5) 16:11 – Brett Connolly (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 01:04 – pp – Tom Wilson (2) 08:57 – ps – Nic Dowd (1) 10:14 – pp – Alexander Ovechkin (3) | |||||
Petr Mrazek 22 saves / 28 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 30 saves / 30 shots |
April 22 | Washington Capitals | 2–5 | Carolina Hurricanes | PNC Arena | Recap | ||
Brett Connolly (2) – 05:06 Alexander Ovechkin (4) – 15:12 | First period | 10:35 – Warren Foegele (4) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 01:56 – Teuvo Teravainen (2) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 03:51 – Jordan Staal (2) 11:58 – Justin Williams (1) 16:54 – en – Dougie Hamilton (3) | |||||
Braden Holtby 31 saves / 35 shots | Goalie stats | Petr Mrazek 23 saves / 25 shots |
April 24 | Carolina Hurricanes | 4–3 | 2OT | Washington Capitals | Capital One Arena | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | 02:13 – Andre Burakovsky (1) 06:23 – Tom Wilson (3) | |||||
Sebastian Aho (2) – sh – 09:51 Teuvo Teravainen (3) – 16:37 | Second period | 13:22 – Evgeny Kuznetsov (1) | |||||
Jordan Staal (3) – 02:56 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Brock McGinn (2) – 11:05 | Second overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Petr Mrazek 34 saves / 37 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 38 saves / 42 shots |
Carolina won series 4–3 |
(M2) New York Islanders vs. (M3) Pittsburgh Penguins[edit]
The New York Islanders finished second in the Metropolitan Division with 103 points. The Pittsburgh Penguins earned 100 points to finish third in the Metropolitan Division. This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams with New York winning three of the four previous series. They last met in the 2013 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, which Pittsburgh won in six games. These teams split their four-game regular season series.
The Islanders defeated the Penguins in a four-game sweep. This was the first Islanders sweep since 1983. In Game One, New York goalie Robin Lehner made 41 saves and Josh Bailey scored 4:39 into overtime to give the Islanders a 4–3 victory.[27]Jordan Eberle had a goal and an assist in Game Two, leading the Islanders to a 3–1 victory.[28] In Game Three, Lehner stopped 25 of 26 shots helping the Islanders win 4–1.[29] Game Four was a tight-checking, defensive affair as the Islanders kept a one-goal lead over the Penguins for two periods until an empty-net goal by Bailey sealed the victory for New York defeating Pittsburgh 3–1 and advancing to the second round in a 4–0 sweep.[30]
April 10 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 3–4 | OT | New York Islanders | Nassau Coliseum | Recap | |
Phil Kessel (1) – 05:42 | First period | 01:40 – Jordan Eberle (1) 15:46 – pp – Brock Nelson (1) | |||||
Evgeni Malkin (1) – pp – 13:41 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Justin Schultz (1) – 18:31 | Third period | 12:35 – Nick Leddy (1) | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 04:39 – Josh Bailey (1) | |||||
Matt Murray 29 saves / 33 shots | Goalie stats | Robin Lehner 41 saves / 44 shots |
April 12 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 1–3 | New York Islanders | Nassau Coliseum | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Erik Gudbranson (1) – 10:36 | Second period | 13:25 – Anthony Beauvillier (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 07:54 – Jordan Eberle (2) 11:38 – pp – Josh Bailey (2) | |||||
Matt Murray 31 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Robin Lehner 32 saves / 33 shots |
April 14 | New York Islanders | 4–1 | Pittsburgh Penguins | PPG Paints Arena | Recap | ||
Jordan Eberle (3) – 13:22 Brock Nelson (2) – 14:24 | First period | 12:54 – Garrett Wilson (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Leo Komarov (1) – 10:27 Anders Lee (1) – en – 18:32 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Robin Lehner 25 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Matt Murray 32 saves / 35 shots |
April 16 | New York Islanders | 3–1 | Pittsburgh Penguins | PPG Paints Arena | Recap | ||
Jordan Eberle (4) – 02:09 Brock Nelson (3) – 18:06 | First period | 00:35 – Jake Guentzel (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Josh Bailey (3) – en – 19:22 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Robin Lehner 32 saves / 33 shots | Goalie stats | Matt Murray 23 saves / 25 shots |
New York won series 4–0 |
Western Conference First Round[edit]
(C1) Nashville Predators vs. (WC1) Dallas Stars[edit]
The Nashville Predators finished first in the Central Division earning 100 points. Dallas finished as the Western Conference's first wild card earning 93 points. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Nashville won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.
The Stars defeated the Predators in six games. Dallas rookie Miro Heiskanen scored a goal and an assist to help the Stars achieve a 3–2 victory in Game One.[31] In Game Two, both teams played defensively forcing an overtime period in which Nashville forward Craig Smith scored to give the Predators a 2–1 victory.[32]Pekka Rinne stopped 40 shots in Game Three, ensuring a 3–2 Predators win.[33] In another goalie performance for Game Four, Dallas' own Ben Bishop made 34 saves shutting down the Predators in a 5–1 victory.[34] In Game Five, Alexander Radulov scored twice with captain Jamie Benn assisting thrice for the Stars taking the series lead in a 5–3 victory.[35] During a defensive Game Six, both teams fired more than 35 shots apiece in regulation time with each team scoring once. In the resulting overtime period John Klingberg put away the series-winning goal at 17:02 for Dallas, winning the series 4–2 and the game 2–1.
April 10 | Dallas Stars | 3–2 | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 12:12 – Roman Josi (1) | |||||
Miro Heiskanen (1) – pp – 12:37 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Alexander Radulov (1) – 06:10 Mats Zuccarello (1) – 10:39 | Third period | 13:24 – P. K. Subban (1) | |||||
Ben Bishop 30 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 26 saves / 29 shots |
April 13 | Dallas Stars | 1–2 | OT | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Jamie Benn (1) – 01:59 | Second period | 03:56 – Rocco Grimaldi (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 05:00 – Craig Smith (1) | |||||
Ben Bishop 40 saves / 42 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 22 saves / 23 shots |
April 15 | Nashville Predators | 3–2 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Rocco Grimaldi (2) – 03:29 Filip Forsberg (1) – 14:35 | Second period | 17:11 – Mats Zuccarello (2) | |||||
Mikael Granlund (1) – 11:41 | Third period | 08:15 – Tyler Seguin (1) | |||||
Pekka Rinne 40 saves / 42 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 25 saves / 28 shots |
April 17 | Nashville Predators | 1–5 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 03:42 – pp – Roope Hintz (1) 04:58 – pp – Alexander Radulov (2) 08:24 – Andrew Cogliano (1) 13:45 – pp – Mats Zuccarello (3) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 10:09 – Roope Hintz (2) | |||||
Roman Josi (2) – 08:11 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Pekka Rinne 4 saves / 8 shots Juuse Saros 20 saves / 21 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 34 saves / 35 shots |
April 20 | Dallas Stars | 5–3 | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | ||
Jason Dickinson (1) – 13:08 | First period | 06:25 – Rocco Grimaldi (3) | |||||
Alexander Radulov (3) – 00:40 Alexander Radulov (4) – 07:41 Tyler Seguin (2) – 15:54 | Second period | 09:18 – Ryan Johansen (1) | |||||
Jason Dickinson (2) – 01:57 | Third period | 02:25 – Kyle Turris (1) | |||||
Ben Bishop 30 saves / 33 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 21 saves / 26 shots |
April 22 | Nashville Predators | 1–2 | OT | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | |
Austin Watson (1) – 05:47 | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 05:20 – Blake Comeau (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 17:02 – John Klingberg (1) | |||||
Pekka Rinne 49 saves / 51 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 47 saves / 48 shots |
Dallas won series 4–2 |
(C2) Winnipeg Jets vs. (C3) St. Louis Blues[edit]
The Winnipeg Jets finished second in the Central Division, earning 99 points. The St. Louis Blues also earned 99 points, but they finished third in the Central Division as Winnipeg won the first tie-breaker of combined regulation and overtime wins. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Winnipeg won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.
The Blues defeated the Jets in six games. For the first time since the 2004 Western Conference Finals, the away team won the first five games in the series. In game one, rookie goaltender Jordan Binnington made 24 saves to give St. Louis a 2–1 victory.[36]Oskar Sundqvist scored twice for the Blues in game two taking the triumph 4–3.[37] In game three, Winnipeg forward Kyle Connor scored twice in a 6–3 victory.[38] Game four remained scoreless until the third period in which both teams notched a goal; however, in overtime Connor scored the winning-goal for the Jets tying the series 2–2 in a 2–1 affair. His goal also Winnipeg's first playoff overtime goal in franchise history.[39] Winnipeg took a two-goal lead in game five, but St. Louis tied the game in the third period and with 15 seconds left, Jaden Schwartz scored to give St. Louis a 3–2 victory.[40] Schwartz scored a natural hat trick in game six as the Blues hung on to a 3–2 series clinching victory.[41]
April 10 | St. Louis Blues | 2–1 | Winnipeg Jets | Bell MTS Place | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 13:28 – Patrik Laine (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
David Perron (1) – 04:05 Tyler Bozak (1) – 17:55 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 24 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Connor Hellebuyck 24 saves / 26 shots |
April 12 | St. Louis Blues | 4–3 | Winnipeg Jets | Bell MTS Place | Recap | ||
Oskar Sundqvist (1) – 05:23 | First period | 12:01 – Blake Wheeler (1) | |||||
Patrick Maroon (1) – 06:42 Oskar Sundqvist (2) – 09:50 | Second period | 02:49 – pp – Patrik Laine (2) 18:55 – pp – Mark Scheifele (1) | |||||
Ryan O'Reilly (1) – 03:46 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 26 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Connor Hellebuyck 28 saves / 32 shots |
April 14 | Winnipeg Jets | 6–3 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 19:12 – pp – David Perron (2) | |||||
Kevin Hayes (1) – 04:57 Patrik Laine (3) – 07:47 Kyle Connor (1) – pp – 08:58 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Brandon Tanev (1) – 04:25 Dustin Byfuglien (1) – 08:06 Kyle Connor (2) – 14:44 | Third period | 01:51 – pp – Vladimir Tarasenko (1) 13:42 – Alexander Steen (1) | |||||
Connor Hellebuyck 26 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 23 saves / 29 shots |
April 16 | Winnipeg Jets | 2–1 | OT | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Mark Scheifele (2) – 07:33 | Third period | 00:35 – pp – Vladimir Tarasenko (2) | |||||
Kyle Connor (3) – 06:02 | First overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Connor Hellebuyck 31 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 37 saves / 39 shots |
April 18 | St. Louis Blues | 3–2 | Winnipeg Jets | Bell MTS Place | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 00:12 – Adam Lowry (1) 13:35 – Kevin Hayes (2) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Ryan O'Reilly (2) – pp – 01:29 Brayden Schenn (1) – 13:52 Jaden Schwartz (1) – 19:45 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 29 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Connor Hellebuyck 26 saves / 29 shots |
April 20 | Winnipeg Jets | 2–3 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 00:23 – Jaden Schwartz (2) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 12:36 – pp – Jaden Schwartz (3) | |||||
Dustin Byfuglien (2) – 12:17 Bryan Little (1) – sh – 19:22 | Third period | 03:55 – Jaden Schwartz (4) | |||||
Connor Hellebuyck 33 saves / 36 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 18 saves / 20 shots |
St. Louis won series 4–2 |
(P1) Calgary Flames vs. (WC2) Colorado Avalanche[edit]
The Calgary Flames finished first in the Pacific Division earning 107 points. The Colorado Avalanche earned 90 points to finish as the Western Conference's second wild card. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Calgary won all three games in this year's regular season series.
The Avalanche defeated the Flames in five games. In Game One, goalie Mike Smith stopped all 26 shots he faced and assisted on one of Calgary's four goals in the Flames 4–0 victory.[42] Game 2 necessitated overtime, and in said period Nathan MacKinnon scored to give the Avalanche a 3–2 victory.[43] The Avalanche scored six goals in Game Three, one of which included the first goal of Cale Makar in his NHL debut; Colorado won the game 6–2.[44] In Game Four, Colorado came back from a two-goal deficit to force overtime and Mikko Rantanen scored his second of the night to give the Avalanche a 3–2 victory and a 3–1 series lead.[45] Game Five saw Colin Wilson and Rantanen both score twice, giving Colorado a 5–1 victory and advancing to the second round for the first time since 2008.[46]
April 11 | Colorado Avalanche | 0–4 | Calgary Flames | Scotiabank Saddledome | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 14:25 – Andrew Mangiapane (1) 18:58 – pp – Matthew Tkachuk (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 17:01 – pp – Mikael Backlund (1) 17:15 – en – Matthew Tkachuk (2) | |||||
Philipp Grubauer 28 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Mike Smith 26 saves / 26 shots |
April 13 | Colorado Avalanche | 3–2 | OT | Calgary Flames | Scotiabank Saddledome | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Matt Nieto (1) – sh – 07:16 | Second period | 12:26 – pp – Rasmus Andersson (1) | |||||
J. T. Compher (1) – 17:21 | Third period | 12:27 – Sean Monahan (1) | |||||
Nathan MacKinnon (1) – 08:27 | First overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Philipp Grubauer 35 saves / 37 shots | Goalie stats | Mike Smith 36 saves / 39 shots |
April 15 | Calgary Flames | 2–6 | Colorado Avalanche | Pepsi Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 08:26 – pp – Nathan MacKinnon (2) 13:34 – pp – Nathan MacKinnon (3) 16:02 – Cale Makar (1) | |||||
Sam Bennett (1) – pp – 08:34 | Second period | 07:51 – sh – Matt Nieto (2) 12:58 – Mikko Rantanen (1) | |||||
T. J. Brodie (1) – 01:09 | Third period | 00:54 – Erik Johnson (1) | |||||
Mike Smith 50 saves / 56 shots | Goalie stats | Philipp Grubauer 27 saves / 29 shots |
April 17 | Calgary Flames | 2–3 | OT | Colorado Avalanche | Pepsi Center | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Elias Lindholm (1) – pp – 03:25 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Derek Ryan (1) – 06:58 | Third period | 08:10 – J. T. Compher (2) 17:10 – pp – Mikko Rantanen (2) | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 10:23 – Mikko Rantanen (3) | |||||
Mike Smith 49 saves / 52 shots | Goalie stats | Philipp Grubauer 35 saves / 37 shots |
April 19 | Colorado Avalanche | 5–1 | Calgary Flames | Scotiabank Saddledome | Recap | ||
Gabriel Landeskog (1) – 09:40 Mikko Rantanen (4) – 15:38 | First period | 19:54 – T. J. Brodie (2) | |||||
Colin Wilson (1) – 06:52 Colin Wilson (2) – pp – 14:47 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Mikko Rantanen (5) – pp – 00:57 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Philipp Grubauer 28 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Mike Smith 27 saves / 32 shots |
Colorado won series 4–1 |
(P2) San Jose Sharks vs. (P3) Vegas Golden Knights[edit]
The San Jose Sharks finished second in the Pacific Division earning 101 points. The Vegas Golden Knights earned 93 points to finish third in Pacific Division. This was the second playoff meeting between these teams. They last met in the previous year's Western Conference Second Round which Vegas won in six games. These teams split their four-game regular season series.
The Sharks came back from a 3–1 series deficit to defeat the Golden Knights in seven games. Four Sharks players scored a goal and assisted on another goal in Game One giving San Jose a 5–2 victory.[47] In Game Two, after a wild first period in which Vegas took a three-goal lead only for San Jose to tie before the period ended, Mark Stone's power-play goal in the second period would be the game-winner for the Golden Knights, defeating the Sharks 5–3.[48] Stone continued his scoring into Game Three, adding a hat trick into Vegas' 6–3 victory.[49] In Game Four, Max Pacioretty had two goals and two assists while goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury stopped all 28 shots granting Vegas a 5–0 victory and a 3–1 series lead.[50] The Sharks avoided elimination in Game Five, outscoring the Golden Knights 5–2 to force a sixth game.[51] In Game Six, the Sharks evened the series with a double-overtime goal by Tomas Hertl, backstopped by Martin Jones who made 58 saves in a 2–1 victory.[52] In the seventh game, after taking a three-goal lead, Vegas' Cody Eakin cross-checked Joe Pavelski up high injuring the Sharks forward; Eakin was assessed a controversial major penalty and game misconduct as a result.[53] On the ensuing power play, the Sharks scored four times to take the lead 4–3, but with 47 seconds left the Golden Knights tied the game sending it to overtime. At 18:19 of the first overtime, Barclay Goodrow scored the series-winning goal for the Sharks, coming back from a 3–1 series deficit and defeating the Golden Knights 5–4.[54] The Sharks became just the second team in NHL history, along with the 2013 Boston Bruins, to overcome a three-goal deficit in the third period of a Game 7.
April 10 | Vegas Golden Knights | 2–5 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 14:42 – pp – Joe Pavelski (1) | |||||
Mark Stone (1) – 08:32 | Second period | 06:59 – Brent Burns (1) 07:44 – Marc-Edouard Vlasic (1) 19:42 – Evander Kane (1) | |||||
Mark Stone (2) – pp – 15:26 | Third period | 18:11 – en – Tomas Hertl (1) | |||||
Marc-Andre Fleury 28 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 24 saves / 26 shots |
April 12 | Vegas Golden Knights | 5–3 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Cody Eakin (1) – 00:58 Colin Miller (1) – sh – 04:37 Max Pacioretty (1) – 06:11 | First period | 16:59 – Logan Couture (1) 17:38 – pp – Tomas Hertl (2) 19:08 – Joe Thornton (1) | |||||
Mark Stone (3) – pp – 01:31 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
William Karlsson (1) – sh – 07:35 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Marc-Andre Fleury 34 saves / 37 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 4 saves / 7 shots Aaron Dell 14 saves / 16 shots |
April 14 | San Jose Sharks | 3–6 | Vegas Golden Knights | T-Mobile Arena | Recap | ||
Kevin Labanc (1) – 15:26 | First period | 00:16 – Mark Stone (4) 12:16 – pp – Max Pacioretty (2) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 00:21 – Paul Stastny (1) 16:04 – pp – Paul Stastny (2) | |||||
Logan Couture (2) – pp – 04:57 Timo Meier (1) – 05:51 | Third period | 00:36 – Mark Stone (5) 13:57 – Mark Stone (6) | |||||
Martin Jones 34 saves / 40 shots | Goalie stats | Marc-Andre Fleury 25 saves / 28 shots |
April 16 | San Jose Sharks | 0–5 | Vegas Golden Knights | T-Mobile Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 01:11 – Max Pacioretty (3) 19:13 – Shea Theodore (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 12:33 – pp – Max Pacioretty (4) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 06:37 – Alex Tuch (1) 16:24 – pp – Jonathan Marchessault (1) | |||||
Martin Jones 5 saves / 7 shots Aaron Dell 17 saves / 20 shots | Goalie stats | Marc-Andre Fleury 28 saves / 28 shots |
April 18 | Vegas Golden Knights | 2–5 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Reilly Smith (1) – pp – 19:30 | First period | 01:16 – Tomas Hertl (3) 11:00 – Logan Couture (3) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 12:22 – Barclay Goodrow (1) | |||||
Jonathan Marchessault (2) – pp – 11:36 | Third period | 14:45 – pp – Tomas Hertl (4) 18:14 – en – Joe Pavelski (2) | |||||
Marc-Andre Fleury 24 saves / 28 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 30 saves / 32 shots |
April 21 | San Jose Sharks | 2–1 | 2OT | Vegas Golden Knights | T-Mobile Arena | Recap | |
Logan Couture (4) – 19:51 | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 11:20 – Jonathan Marchessault (3) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Tomas Hertl (5) – sh – 11:17 | Second overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Martin Jones 58 saves / 59 shots | Goalie stats | Marc-Andre Fleury 27 saves / 29 shots |
April 23 | Vegas Golden Knights | 4–5 | OT | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | |
William Karlsson (2) – 10:10 | First period | No scoring | |||||
Cody Eakin (2) – 10:00 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Max Pacioretty (5) – 03:36 Jonathan Marchessault (4) – 19:13 | Third period | 09:20 – pp – Logan Couture (5) 10:09 – pp – Tomas Hertl (6) 12:53 – pp – Logan Couture (6) 13:21 – pp – Kevin Labanc (2) | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 18:19 – Barclay Goodrow (2) | |||||
Marc-Andre Fleury 43 saves / 48 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 34 saves / 38 shots |
San Jose won series 4–3 |
Second Round[edit]
Eastern Conference Second Round[edit]
(A2) Boston Bruins vs. (WC2) Columbus Blue Jackets[edit]
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Boston won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.
The Bruins defeated the Blue Jackets in six games. In game one, Charlie Coyle scored his second goal of the game in the first overtime at 5:15 to give the Bruins a 3–2 victory.[55] Game two required overtime again with both teams tied 2–2 in regulation, and in double-overtime Matt Duchene scored on the power-play at 3:42 to give Columbus the victory.[56]Sergei Bobrovsky made 36 saves in game three backstopping the Blue Jackets to a 2–1 victory.[57] In game four, Patrice Bergeron scored twice and goaltender Tuukka Rask made 39 saves to edge Columbus 4–1 and tie the series 2–2.[58] The Bruins held off the Blue Jackets two-goal rally in game five with David Pastrnak scoring with 1:28 left in the third period to give Boston a 4–3 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[59] In game six, Rask shut the door on the Blue Jackets, stopping all 39 shots he faced in a 3–0 victory and winning the series 4–2.[60]
April 25 | Columbus Blue Jackets | 2–3 | OT | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | 10:34 – sh – Noel Acciari (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Brandon Dubinsky (1) – 07:39 Pierre-Luc Dubois (2) – 07:52 | Third period | 15:25 – Charlie Coyle (4) | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 05:15 – Charlie Coyle (5) | |||||
Sergei Bobrovsky 34 saves / 37 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 20 saves / 22 shots |
Game 2 Nhl Finals
April 27 | Columbus Blue Jackets | 3–2 | 2OT | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | 07:50 – pp – Matt Grzelcyk (1) | |||||
Artemi Panarin (3) – pp – 01:03 Artemi Panarin (4) – 08:01 | Second period | 02:01 – David Pastrnak (3) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Matt Duchene (4) – pp – 03:42 | Second overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Sergei Bobrovsky 29 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 38 saves / 41 shots |
April 30 | Boston Bruins | 1–2 | Columbus Blue Jackets | Nationwide Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 18:37 – Boone Jenner (1) | |||||
Jake DeBrusk (2) – 19:20 | Second period | 12:42 – pp – Matt Duchene (5) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Tuukka Rask 32 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Sergei Bobrovsky 36 saves / 37 shots |
May 2 | Boston Bruins | 4–1 | Columbus Blue Jackets | Nationwide Arena | Recap | ||
David Pastrnak (4) – 03:33 Patrice Bergeron (4) – pp – 07:18 | First period | 08:46 – Artemi Panarin (5) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Sean Kuraly (2) – 08:40 Patrice Bergeron (5) – pp – 17:30 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Tuukka Rask 39 saves / 40 shots | Goalie stats | Sergei Bobrovsky 42 saves / 46 shots |
May 4 | Columbus Blue Jackets | 3–4 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 01:39 – David Krejci (3) | |||||
Seth Jones (3) – 10:33 Ryan Dzingel (1) – 12:07 Dean Kukan (1) – 13:58 | Third period | 04:51 – Brad Marchand (5) 11:16 – David Pastrnak (5) 18:32 – David Pastrnak (6) | |||||
Sergei Bobrovsky 32 saves / 36 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 33 saves / 36 shots |
May 6 | Boston Bruins | 3–0 | Columbus Blue Jackets | Nationwide Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
David Krejci (4) – 12:13 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Marcus Johansson (2) – 08:58 David Backes (1) – 10:39 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Tuukka Rask 39 saves / 39 shots | Goalie stats | Sergei Bobrovsky 26 saves / 29 shots |
Boston won series 4–2 |
(M2) New York Islanders vs. (WC1) Carolina Hurricanes[edit]
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. New York won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.
The Hurricanes defeated the Islanders in a four-game sweep. In game one, Islanders goaltender Robin Lehner and Hurricanes goaltender Petr Mrazek stayed stout in regulation with Lehner stopping 29 shots and Mrazek stopping 30. During the ensuing overtime, Jordan Staal scored to give Carolina 1–0 victory.[61] In game two, Warren Foegele and Nino Niederreiter scored 48 seconds apart in the third period to take the lead 2–1 giving Carolina the victory.[62] In the second period of game two, Petr Mrazek was injured, leading to Curtis McElhinney replacing him in net for the remainder of the series; as a result McElhinney, at 35 years old, became the oldest goaltender in NHL history to make his first career playoff start in game three. Teuvo Teravainen scored twice in game three to give the Hurricanes a 5–2 victory and a 3–0 series lead.[63] Teravainen continued his scoring into game four, notching a goal and an assist in Carolina's 5–2 victory. This was the Hurricanes' first four-game series sweep in franchise history and the franchise's first sweep since the Hartford Whalers swept the Quebec Nordiques in three games during the 1986 Adams Division Semifinals. In addition, the Islanders were swept in a playoff series for the first time since the 1994 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals against the New York Rangers. This was the first time since the 1993Buffalo Sabres that a team who swept a first round playoff series got swept in the second round.
April 26 | Carolina Hurricanes | 1–0 | OT | New York Islanders | Barclays Center | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Staal (4) – 04:04 | First overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Petr Mrazek 31 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Robin Lehner 31 saves / 32 shots |
April 28 | Carolina Hurricanes | 2–1 | New York Islanders | Barclays Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 13:17 – pp – Mathew Barzal (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Warren Foegele (5) – 00:17 Nino Niederreiter (1) – 01:05 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Petr Mrazek 9 saves / 10 shots Curtis McElhinney 17 saves / 17 shots | Goalie stats | Robin Lehner 16 saves / 18 shots |
May 1 | New York Islanders | 2–5 | Carolina Hurricanes | PNC Arena | Recap | ||
Devon Toews (1) – pp – 08:20 | First period | 06:41 – Teuvo Teravainen (4) | |||||
Josh Bailey (4) – 14:13 | Second period | 11:58 – Justin Faulk (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 10:15 – Justin Williams (2) 19:02 – en – Teuvo Teravainen (5) 19:55 – en – Sebastian Aho (3) | |||||
Robin Lehner 33 saves / 36 shots | Goalie stats | Curtis McElhinney 28 saves / 30 shots |
May 3 | New York Islanders | 2–5 | Carolina Hurricanes | PNC Arena | Recap | ||
Mathew Barzal (2) – pp – 02:30 | First period | 04:44 – pp – Sebastian Aho (4) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 02:11 – Teuvo Teravainen (6) 03:17 – Greg McKegg (1) 08:51 – Justin Williams (3) | |||||
Brock Nelson (4) – 18:51 | Third period | 15:13 – Andrei Svechnikov (3) | |||||
Robin Lehner 8 saves / 11 shots Thomas Greiss 8 saves / 10 shots | Goalie stats | Curtis McElhinney 26 saves / 28 shots |
Carolina won series 4–0 |
Western Conference Second Round[edit]
(C3) St. Louis Blues vs. (WC1) Dallas Stars[edit]
This was the fourteenth playoff meeting between these two teams with St. Louis winning seven of the thirteen previous series. They last met in the 2016 Western Conference Second Round, which St. Louis won in seven games. Dallas won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.
The Blues defeated the Stars in seven games. Vladimir Tarasenko scored twice for the Blues in game one, holding the Stars to a close 3–2 victory.[64] In game two, the Stars bounced back with rookie Roope Hintz scoring two goals and adding an assist in a 4–2 win.[65] With 1:38 left in the third period of game three, Patrick Maroon put the Blues ahead 4–3 holding on the lead for the victory.[66]Ben Bishop held the fort for the Stars, making 27 saves in game four for a 4–2 triumph.[67] Bishop continued his goal-tending prowess into game five, stopping 38 shots for the Stars in a 2–1 victory.[68] The Blues scored 33 seconds apart in the third period of game six to force a seventh game winning 4–1.[69] In game seven, although Stars goaltender Ben Bishop made a valiant effort stopping 52 shots, Patrick Maroon's goal at 5:50 of double-overtime sent the Blues to the Western Conference Finals defeating Dallas 2–1.[70]
April 25 | Dallas Stars | 2–3 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 05:57 – Robby Fabbri (1) | |||||
Jason Spezza (1) – 10:25 | Second period | 18:03 – pp – Vladimir Tarasenko (3) | |||||
Jamie Benn (2) – pp – 17:43 | Third period | 03:51 – Vladimir Tarasenko (4) | |||||
Ben Bishop 17 saves / 20 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 27 saves / 29 shots |
April 27 | Dallas Stars | 4–2 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
Roope Hintz (3) – 07:11 Miro Heiskanen (2) – 13:39 Mattias Janmark (1) – 14:51 | First period | 14:25 – Colton Parayko (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Roope Hintz (4) – en – 19:57 | Third period | 01:48 – Jaden Schwartz (5) | |||||
Ben Bishop 32 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 31 saves / 34 shots |
April 29 | St. Louis Blues | 4–3 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | ||
Jaden Schwartz (6) – 01:27 | First period | 17:12 – pp – Alexander Radulov (5) | |||||
Tyler Bozak (2) – 08:30 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Alex Pietrangelo (1) – 14:24 Patrick Maroon (2) – 18:22 | Third period | 13:06 – sh – Andrew Cogliano (2) 15:52 – Tyler Seguin (3) | |||||
Jordan Binnington 28 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 30 saves / 34 shots |
May 1 | St. Louis Blues | 2–4 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | ||
Vladimir Tarasenko (5) – pp – 05:02 | First period | 11:23 – Jason Dickinson (3) 19:08 – pp – Jason Spezza (2) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 09:26 – John Klingberg (2) 17:28 – Roope Hintz (5) | |||||
Robert Thomas (1) – 13:44 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 27 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 27 saves / 29 shots |
May 3 | Dallas Stars | 2–1 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
Jason Spezza (3) – 02:42 | First period | No scoring | |||||
Esa Lindell (1) – 06:13 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 08:26 – Jaden Schwartz (7) | |||||
Ben Bishop 38 saves / 39 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 25 saves / 27 shots |
May 5 | St. Louis Blues | 4–1 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | ||
Alex Pietrangelo (2) – 01:03 | First period | 11:35 – pp – Tyler Seguin (4) | |||||
David Perron (3) – 15:24 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Jaden Schwartz (8) – 07:37 Sammy Blais (1) – 08:10 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 22 saves / 23 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 16 saves / 20 shots Anton Khudobin 5 saves / 5 shots |
May 7 | Dallas Stars | 1–2 | 2OT | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | |
Mats Zuccarello (4) – 15:55 | First period | 13:30 – Vince Dunn (1) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second overtime period | 05:50 – Patrick Maroon (3) | |||||
Ben Bishop 52 saves / 54 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 29 saves / 30 shots |
St. Louis won series 4–3 |
(P2) San Jose Sharks vs. (WC2) Colorado Avalanche[edit]
This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams with both teams splitting the four previous series. They last met in the 2010 Western Conference Quarterfinals which San Jose won in six games. San Jose won all three games in this year's regular season series.
The Sharks defeated the Avalanche in seven games. In game one, Brent Burns had a goal and three assists in the Sharks' convincing 5–2 victory.[71]Tyson Barrie scored a goal and assisted on two more in game two, giving the Avalanche a 4–3 win.[72] In game three, Sharks forward Logan Couture scored his first playoff hat trick en route to a 4–2 victory.[73] The Avalanche shut out the Sharks 3–0 in game four as goaltender Philipp Grubauer stopped all 32 shots he faced.[74] In game five, the Sharks put up 39 shots against the Avalanche with two goals coming from forward Tomas Hertl in a 2–1 victory.[75]J. T. Compher scored twice and Gabriel Landeskog scored at 2:32 of the first overtime to force a seventh game defeating the Sharks 4–3.[76] In game seven, Burns had two assists, including one on Joonas Donskoi's series-winning goal, that helped the Sharks win 3–2 and advance to the Conference Finals.[77]
April 26 | Colorado Avalanche | 2–5 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Gabriel Bourque (1) – 02:10 | First period | 14:44 – Gustav Nyquist (1) | |||||
Colin Wilson (3) – pp – 03:56 | Second period | 10:05 – Joe Thornton (2) 16:02 – Kevin Labanc (3) 19:00 – Brent Burns (2) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 19:31 – en – Timo Meier (2) | |||||
Philipp Grubauer 22 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 26 saves / 28 shots |
April 28 | Colorado Avalanche | 4–3 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 07:57 – Evander Kane (2) | |||||
Gabriel Landeskog (2) – 08:21 Tyson Barrie (1) – 16:31 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Matt Nieto (3) – 10:10 Nathan MacKinnon (4) – en – 18:58 | Third period | 15:26 – Brent Burns (3) 19:49 – pp – Brent Burns (4) | |||||
Philipp Grubauer 31 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 28 saves / 31 shots |
April 30 | San Jose Sharks | 4–2 | Colorado Avalanche | Pepsi Center | Recap | ||
Logan Couture (7) – 15:24 Timo Meier (3) – 18:42 | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 15:51 – Nathan MacKinnon (5) | |||||
Logan Couture (8) – 12:50 Logan Couture (9) – en – 19:30 | Third period | 11:45 – Matt Nieto (4) | |||||
Martin Jones 25 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Philipp Grubauer 27 saves / 30 shots |
May 2 | San Jose Sharks | 0–3 | Colorado Avalanche | Pepsi Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 10:34 – Nathan MacKinnon (6) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 03:11 – Colin Wilson (4) 18:51 – en – Erik Johnson (2) | |||||
Martin Jones 25 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Philipp Grubauer 32 saves / 32 shots |
May 4 | Colorado Avalanche | 1–2 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Tyson Jost (1) – 17:01 | Second period | 19:40 – pp – Tomas Hertl (7) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 06:26 – Tomas Hertl (8) | |||||
Philipp Grubauer 37 saves / 39 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 21 saves / 22 shots |
May 6 | San Jose Sharks | 3–4 | OT | Colorado Avalanche | Pepsi Center | Recap | |
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Marc-Edouard Vlasic (2) – 14:36 Brent Burns (5) – 19:50 | Second period | 04:05 – Tyson Jost (2) 18:44 – J. T. Compher (3) | |||||
Marc-Edouard Vlasic (3) – 17:32 | Third period | 04:00 – J. T. Compher (4) | |||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 02:32 – Gabriel Landeskog (3) | |||||
Martin Jones 22 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Philipp Grubauer 19 saves / 22 shots |
May 8 | Colorado Avalanche | 2–3 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Mikko Rantanen (6) – 19:53 | First period | 05:57 – Joe Pavelski (3) 11:35 – Tomas Hertl (9) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 12:37 – Joonas Donskoi (1) | |||||
Tyson Jost (3) – 00:51 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Philipp Grubauer 24 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 27 saves / 29 shots |
San Jose won series 4–3 |
Conference Finals[edit]
Eastern Conference Final[edit]
(A2) Boston Bruins vs. (WC1) Carolina Hurricanes[edit]
This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams with Boston winning three of the four previous series. They last met in the 2009 Eastern Conference Semifinals which Carolina won in seven games. This was Boston's eighth appearance in the Conference Finals. They last went to the Conference Finals in 2013, which they won against the Pittsburgh Penguins in a four-game sweep. This was Carolina's fourth Conference Finals appearance. They last went to the Conference Finals in 2009; they lost in a four-game sweep to Pittsburgh. Boston won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.
The Bruins defeated the Hurricanes in a four-game sweep. In game one, the Bruins scored two power-play goals 28 seconds apart in the third period to win 5–2.[78]Charlie Coyle and Torey Krug both had three assists in the Bruins 6–2 victory in game two.[79] In game three, Bruins goalie Tuukka Rask made 35 saves in Boston's close 2–1 victory, taking a 3–0 series lead.[80]Patrice Bergeron scored twice and notched an assist, David Pastrnak had a goal and two assists, and Rask stopped all 24 shots he faced in the Bruins 4–0 game four victory, sending the Bruins to the Stanley Cup Finals.[81]
May 9 | Carolina Hurricanes | 2–5 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
Sebastian Aho (5) – pp – 03:42 | First period | 02:55 – Steven Kampfer (1) | |||||
Greg McKegg (2) – 09:18 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 02:26 – pp – Marcus Johansson (3) 02:54 – pp – Patrice Bergeron (6) 17:47 – en – Charlie Coyle (6) 17:58 – Chris Wagner (1) | |||||
Petr Mrazek 23 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 29 saves / 31 shots |
Nhl Stanley Cup Game 1 3 Stars
May 12 | Carolina Hurricanes | 2–6 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 15:22 – Matt Grzelcyk (2) 18:32 – pp – Jake DeBrusk (3) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | 03:46 – Connor Clifton (1) 17:56 – pp – Matt Grzelcyk (3) | |||||
Justin Williams (4) – 11:17 Teuvo Teravainen (7) – 17:32 | Third period | 01:10 – David Backes (2) 04:32 – Danton Heinen (2) | |||||
Petr Mrazek 19 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 21 saves / 23 shots |
May 14 | Boston Bruins | 2–1 | Carolina Hurricanes | PNC Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Chris Wagner (2) – 01:21 Brad Marchand (6) – pp – 06:28 | Second period | 13:48 – Calvin de Haan (1) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Tuukka Rask 35 saves / 36 shots | Goalie stats | Curtis McElhinney 29 saves / 31 shots |
May 16 | Boston Bruins | 4–0 | Carolina Hurricanes | PNC Arena | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
David Pastrnak (7) – pp – 04:46 Patrice Bergeron (7) – pp – 18:34 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Patrice Bergeron (8) – 10:32 Brad Marchand (7) – en – 17:43 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Tuukka Rask 24 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Curtis McElhinney 19 saves / 22 shots |
Boston won series 4–0 |
Western Conference Final[edit]
Nhl Stanley Cup Winners
(P2) San Jose Sharks vs. (C3) St. Louis Blues[edit]
This was the sixth playoff meeting between these two teams with San Jose winning three of the five previous series. This was St. Louis' fourth Conference Finals appearance and San Jose's fifth appearance in the Conference Finals. The teams' last appearance in the Conference Finals was against each other in 2016, which San Jose won in six games. San Jose won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.
The Blues defeated the Sharks in six games. In game one, Logan Couture and Timo Meier both scored twice in the Sharks' 6–3 victory.[82] Although Couture scored twice in game two, the Blues edged the Sharks 4–2.[83] In game three, controversy struck in overtime as Meier swatted at the puck with this glove towards Erik Karlsson who scored in overtime.[84] The NHL later admitted the refs missed the hand pass Meier committed.[85] The Blues were undeterred by this blatant non-call as goalie Jordan Binnington made 29 saves in game four en route to a 2–1 victory.[86] In game five, Jaden Schwartz scored a hat trick and Binnington stopped all 21 shots he faced for the Blues in a 5–0 victory.[87] The Blues shut down the Sharks in game six, scoring five goals in a 5–1 victory and advancing to the Stanley Cup Finals and ending its 49-year appearance drought.[88]
May 11 | St. Louis Blues | 3–6 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Joel Edmundson (1) – 09:13 | First period | 03:31 – Logan Couture (10) 11:24 – pp – Joe Pavelski (4) | |||||
Ryan O'Reilly (3) – 08:58 | Second period | 07:41 – Kevin Labanc (4) 10:24 – Timo Meier (4) 17:34 – Timo Meier (5) | |||||
Tyler Bozak (3) – 13:01 | Third period | 17:39 – en – Logan Couture (11) | |||||
Jordan Binnington 19 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 28 saves / 31 shots |
May 13 | St. Louis Blues | 4–2 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Jaden Schwartz (9) – 02:34 | First period | No scoring | |||||
Vince Dunn (2) – 04:16 Robert Bortuzzo (1) – 16:34 | Second period | 04:55 – sh – Logan Couture (12) 06:54 – Logan Couture (13) | |||||
Oskar Sundqvist (3) – 16:52 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 24 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 21 saves / 25 shots |
May 15 | San Jose Sharks | 5–4 | OT | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | |
Erik Karlsson (1) – 13:37 Joe Thornton (3) – 16:58 | First period | No scoring | |||||
Joe Thornton (4) – 01:36 | Second period | 01:18 – Alexander Steen (2) 04:05 – Vladimir Tarasenko (6) 16:03 – David Perron (4) 18:42 – pp – David Perron (5) | |||||
Logan Couture (14) – 18:59 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Erik Karlsson (2) – 05:23 | First overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Martin Jones 28 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 27 saves / 32 shots |
May 17 | San Jose Sharks | 1–2 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 00:35 – Ivan Barbashev (1) 17:53 – pp – Tyler Bozak (4) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Tomas Hertl (10) – pp – 06:48 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Martin Jones 20 saves / 22 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 29 saves / 30 shots |
May 19 | St. Louis Blues | 5–0 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Oskar Sundqvist (4) – 05:50 | First period | No scoring | |||||
Jaden Schwartz (10) – 03:05 Vladimir Tarasenko (7) – ps – 06:53 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Jaden Schwartz (11) – pp – 02:19 Jaden Schwartz (12) – 16:02 | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 21 saves / 21 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 35 saves / 40 shots |
May 21 | San Jose Sharks | 1–5 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 01:32 – David Perron (6) 16:16 – pp – Vladimir Tarasenko (8) | |||||
Dylan Gambrell (1) – 06:40 | Second period | 12:47 – pp – Brayden Schenn (2) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 13:05 – Tyler Bozak (5) 17:45 – en – Ivan Barbashev (2) | |||||
Martin Jones 14 saves / 18 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 25 saves / 26 shots |
St. Louis won series 4–2 |
Stanley Cup Finals[edit]
This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with Boston winning both previous series. They last met in the 1972 Stanley Cup Semifinals which Boston won in a four-game sweep. St. Louis made their fourth appearance in the Finals. They last advanced to the Finals in 1970, which they lost in four games to the Boston Bruins. Boston made their twentieth Finals appearance. They last advanced to the Finals in 2013, which they lost in six games to the Chicago Blackhawks. These teams split the two games in this year's regular season series.
May 27 | St. Louis Blues | 2–4 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
Brayden Schenn (3) – 07:23 | First period | No scoring | |||||
Vladimir Tarasenko (9) – 01:00 | Second period | 02:16 – Connor Clifton (2) 12:41 – pp – Charlie McAvoy (2) | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 05:21 – Sean Kuraly (3) 18:11 – en – Brad Marchand (8) | |||||
Jordan Binnington 34 saves / 37 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 18 saves / 20 shots |
May 29 | St. Louis Blues | 3–2 | OT | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | |
Robert Bortuzzo (2) – 09:37 Vladimir Tarasenko (10) – 14:55 | First period | 04:44 – pp – Charlie Coyle (7) 10:17 – Joakim Nordstrom (3) | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | |||||
Carl Gunnarsson (1) – 03:51 | First overtime period | No scoring | |||||
Jordan Binnington 21 saves / 23 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 34 saves / 37 shots |
June 1 | Boston Bruins | 7–2 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
Patrice Bergeron (9) – pp – 10:47 Charlie Coyle (8) – 17:40 Sean Kuraly (4) – 19:50 | First period | No scoring | |||||
David Pastrnak (8) – pp – 00:41 Torey Krug (2) – pp – 12:12 | Second period | 11:05 – Ivan Barbashev (3) | |||||
Noel Acciari (2) – en – 18:12 Marcus Johansson (4) – pp – 18:35 | Third period | 05:24 – pp – Colton Parayko (2) | |||||
Tuukka Rask 27 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 14 saves / 19 shots Jake Allen 3 saves / 4 shots |
June 3 | Boston Bruins | 2–4 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
Charlie Coyle (9) – 13:14 | First period | 00:43 – Ryan O'Reilly (4) 15:30 – Vladimir Tarasenko (11) | |||||
Brandon Carlo (1) – sh – 14:19 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Third period | 10:38 – Ryan O'Reilly (5) 18:31 – en – Brayden Schenn (4) | |||||
Tuukka Rask 34 saves / 37 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 21 saves / 23 shots |
June 6 | St. Louis Blues | 2–1 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | |||||
Ryan O'Reilly (6) – 00:55 | Second period | No scoring | |||||
David Perron (7) – 10:36 | Third period | 13:32 – Jake DeBrusk (4) | |||||
Jordan Binnington 38 saves / 39 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 19 saves / 21 shots |
June 9 | Boston Bruins | 5–1 | St. Louis Blues | Enterprise Center | Recap | ||
Brad Marchand (9) – pp – 08:40 | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Brandon Carlo (2) – 02:31 Karson Kuhlman (1) – 10:15 David Pastrnak (9) – 14:06 Zdeno Chara (2) – en – 17:41 | Third period | 12:01 – Ryan O'Reilly (7) | |||||
Tuukka Rask 28 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Jordan Binnington 27 saves / 31 shots |
June 12 | St. Louis Blues | 4–1 | Boston Bruins | TD Garden | Recap | ||
Ryan O'Reilly (8) – 16:47 Alex Pietrangelo (3) – 19:52 | First period | No scoring | |||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | |||||
Brayden Schenn (5) – 11:25 Zach Sanford (1) – 15:22 | Third period | 17:50 – Matt Grzelcyk (4) | |||||
Jordan Binnington 32 saves / 33 shots | Goalie stats | Tuukka Rask 16 saves / 20 shots |
St. Louis won series 4–3 |
Player statistics[edit]
Skaters[edit]
These are the top ten skaters based on points.[89]
Player | Team | GP | G | A | Pts | +/– | PIM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brad Marchand | Boston Bruins | 24 | 9 | 14 | 23 | +4 | 14 |
Ryan O'Reilly | St. Louis Blues | 26 | 8 | 15 | 23 | +2 | 4 |
Logan Couture | San Jose Sharks | 20 | 14 | 6 | 20 | +3 | 6 |
Jaden Schwartz | St. Louis Blues | 26 | 12 | 8 | 20 | +9 | 2 |
David Pastrnak | Boston Bruins | 24 | 9 | 10 | 19 | 0 | 4 |
Alex Pietrangelo | St. Louis Blues | 26 | 3 | 16 | 19 | +5 | 12 |
Torey Krug | Boston Bruins | 24 | 2 | 16 | 18 | +4 | 10 |
Vladimir Tarasenko | St. Louis Blues | 26 | 11 | 6 | 17 | –5 | 4 |
Patrice Bergeron | Boston Bruins | 24 | 9 | 8 | 17 | +4 | 12 |
Charlie Coyle | Boston Bruins | 24 | 9 | 7 | 16 | +8 | 12 |
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.[90]
Player | Team | GP | W | L | SA | GA | GAA | SV% | SO | TOI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robin Lehner | New York Islanders | 8 | 4 | 4 | 233 | 15 | 2.00 | .936 | 0 | 449:00 |
Tuukka Rask | Boston Bruins | 24 | 15 | 9 | 742 | 49 | 2.02 | .934 | 2 | 1,458:50 |
Ben Bishop | Dallas Stars | 13 | 7 | 6 | 448 | 30 | 2.22 | .933 | 0 | 810:59 |
Philipp Grubauer | Colorado Avalanche | 12 | 7 | 5 | 373 | 28 | 2.30 | .925 | 1 | 731:47 |
Sergei Bobrovsky | Columbus Blue Jackets | 10 | 6 | 4 | 333 | 25 | 2.41 | .925 | 0 | 622:56 |
Television[edit]
This was the eighth postseason under NBC Sports' current 10-year contract for American television rights to the NHL. All national coverage of games are being aired on either NBCSN, the NBC broadcast network, NHL Network, USA Network, or CNBC. During the first round, excluding games exclusively broadcast on NBC, the regional rights holders of each participating U.S. team will produce local telecasts of their respective games. For the third year, the first round national broadcasts were not blacked out on television in the markets of participating teams, and could co-exist with the local broadcasts (however, NBC-provided coverage was restricted in Pittsburgh and Las Vegas, where AT&T SportsNet held the regional rights to the Penguins and the Golden Knights respectively).
In Canada, for the fifth postseason under Rogers Media's current 12-year contract, coverage was broadcast in English 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 Rogers NHL Live.
In French, all games were aired by TVA Sports. Availability of the games were initially hampered by a major carriage dispute between Bell TV and the channel's owner, Quebecor Media, over a proposed increase in carriage fees which Bell considered poorly-justified. On April 10, 2019, Quebecor pulled TVA Sports from Bell TV, despite it being illegal in Canada for channels to be pulled by their owners at a 'standstill' in carriage negotiations. Bell publicly condemned the action, and stated it would offer the Sportsnet networks as a free preview to affected subscribers for the duration of the dispute, so that viewers still have access to the English-language broadcasts.[91][92][93] On April 12, 2019, the channels were restored per a court injunction granted to Bell.[94][95] The CRTC has since warned that any attempt to pull the channel again would result in a suspension of its license until access is restored.[96]
In the United States, NBC reported that the first round saw its highest cable viewership since 1994, and the highest overall ratings since 2012. Game seven of the Capitals/Hurricanes series was the most-watched first round game on cable since 2000.[97]
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