2016 Stanley Cup playoffs
The 2016 Stanley Cup playoffs of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 13, 2016. The 2016 Stanley Cup Final, the fourth and final round, will be held in early June.
For only the second time in league history (after 1970), none of the NHL's Canadian teams, seven in total, qualified for the postseason.[1] The Washington Capitals made the playoffs as the Presidents' Trophy winners with the most points (i.e. best record) during the regular season. The Detroit Red Wings increased their consecutive post-season appearance streak to 25 seasons, the longest current streak and the third-longest streak in NHL history.[2] The Florida Panthers qualified for the playoffs for only the second time since the 1999–2000 season, both times winning their division, and fifth time in franchise history.[3] For the fourth time in six years, all three California-based teams made the playoffs in the same season. And, for only the second time ever, both Florida-based teams made the playoffs in the same season. In addition, for the second season in a row and only the fifth time since joining the league in 1979, all four former WHA teams missed the playoffs.
Playoff seeds
This will be the third 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:
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
- Florida Panthers, Atlantic Division champions – 103 points
- Tampa Bay Lightning – 97 points
- Detroit Red Wings – 93 points
Metropolitan Division
- Washington Capitals, Metropolitan Division champions, Eastern Conference regular season champions, Presidents' Trophy winners – 120 points
- Pittsburgh Penguins – 104 points
- New York Rangers – 101 points
Wild cards
- New York Islanders – 100 points
- Philadelphia Flyers – 96 points
Western Conference
Central Division
- Dallas Stars, Central Division champions, Western Conference regular season champions – 109 points
- St. Louis Blues – 107 points
- Chicago Blackhawks – 103 points
Pacific Division
- Anaheim Ducks, Pacific Division champions – 103 points
- Los Angeles Kings – 102 points
- San Jose Sharks – 98 points
Wild cards
- Nashville Predators – 96 points
- Minnesota Wild – 87 points
Playoff bracket
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; in the last two rounds, it is awarded to the team that had the better regular season record.
Conference Quarterfinals | Conference Semifinals | Conference Finals | Stanley Cup Finals | |||||||||||||||
A1 | Florida | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
WC | NY Islanders | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
WC | NY Islanders | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
A2 | Tampa Bay | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
A2 | Tampa Bay | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
A3 | Detroit | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
Eastern Conference | ||||||||||||||||||
M1 | Washington | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
WC | Philadelphia | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
M1 | Washington | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
M2 | Pittsburgh | 3 | ||||||||||||||||
M2 | Pittsburgh | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
M3 | NY Rangers | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
C1 | Dallas | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
WC | Minnesota | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
C1 | Dallas | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
C2 | St. Louis | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
C2 | St. Louis | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
C3 | Chicago | 3 | ||||||||||||||||
Western Conference | ||||||||||||||||||
P1 | Anaheim | 3 | ||||||||||||||||
WC | Nashville | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
WC | Nashville | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
P3 | San Jose | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
P2 | Los Angeles | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
P3 | San Jose | 4 |
- 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
Conference Quarterfinals
Eastern Conference Quarterfinals
(A1) Florida Panthers vs. (WC1) New York Islanders
The Florida Panthers finished first in the Atlantic Division, earning 103 points. The New York Islanders finished as the Eastern Conference's first wild-card, earning 100 points. This is the first meeting between these two teams. Florida won two of the three games during this year's regular season series. This is the first time that a Stanley Cup playoff series is played at the Barclays Center. The series contains the two teams with the longest playoff win drought in the league (the Islanders have not won a series since 1993, and the Panthers since 1996).[4]
The Islanders defeated the Panthers in six games and won a playoff series for the first time since 1993. John Tavares scored a goal and two assists for the Islanders in a 5–4 win in Game 1.[5] In Game 2, Roberto Luongo recorded 41 saves in a 3–1 win to help the Panthers tie the series.[6] The Islanders came back from a two-goal deficit in the second period to win Game 3 in overtime on Thomas Hickey's wrist shot.[7] In Game 4, Jaromir Jagr had an assist to reach 200 points overall in the playoffs. The Panthers won the game 2–1.[8] Games 5 and 6, both ended in double-overtime with identical scores of 2–1 and New York winning both games. In Game 5, Alan Quine scored the game-winner on a power play 16:00 into the second overtime. Thomas Greiss made 47 saves in the victory.[9] In Game 6, Tavares scored the first New York goal with 54 seconds left in the third period to send the game into overtime. In the second overtime, Tavares scored his second goal and the series winner.[10]
April 14 | New York Islanders | 5–4 | Florida Panthers | BB&T Center | Recap | |||
Brock Nelson (1) – 06:39 Frans Nielsen (1) – pp – 16:46 |
First period | 01:55 – Teddy Purcell (1) 13:51 – pp – Jussi Jokinen (1) | ||||||
John Tavares (1) – 19:38 | Second period | 01:31 – Reilly Smith (1) | ||||||
Kyle Okposo (1) – 02:33 Ryan Strome (1) – 06:01 |
Third period | 06:56 – Reilly Smith (2) | ||||||
Thomas Greiss 42 saves / 46 shots | Goalie stats | Roberto Luongo 21 saves / 26 shots |
April 15 | New York Islanders | 1–3 | Florida Panthers | BB&T Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 04:32 – Reilly Smith (3) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 06:17 – Nick Bjugstad (1) | ||||||
John Tavares (2) – 16:27 | Third period | 19:50 – en – Dmitry Kulikov (1) | ||||||
Thomas Greiss 28 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Roberto Luongo 41 saves / 42 shots |
April 17 | Florida Panthers | 3–4 | OT | New York Islanders | Barclays Center | Recap | ||
Reilly Smith (4) – 02:25 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Aleksander Barkov (1) – 01:11 Nick Bjugstad (2) – 07:23 |
Second period | 05:21 – pp – Ryan Pulock (1) 11:48 – Shane Prince (1) 16:55 – pp – Frans Nielsen (2) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 12:31 – Thomas Hickey (1) | ||||||
Roberto Luongo 35 saves / 39 shots | Goalie stats | Thomas Greiss 36 saves / 39 shots |
April 20 | Florida Panthers | 2–1 | New York Islanders | Barclays Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Teddy Purcell (2) – pp – 15:18 | Second period | 19:44 – pp – John Tavares (3) | ||||||
Alex Petrovic (1) – 09:25 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Roberto Luongo 26 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Thomas Greiss 27 saves / 29 shots |
April 22 | New York Islanders | 2–1 | 2OT | Florida Panthers | BB&T Center | Recap | ||
Frans Nielsen (3) – 13:31 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 01:59 – Aleksander Barkov (2) | ||||||
Alan Quine (1) – pp – 16:00 | Second overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Thomas Greiss 47 saves / 48 shots | Goalie stats | Roberto Luongo 40 saves / 42 shots |
April 24 | Florida Panthers | 1–2 | 2OT | New York Islanders | Barclays Center | Recap | ||
Jonathan Huberdeau (1) – 18:58 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 19:06 – John Tavares (4) | ||||||
No scoring | Second overtime period | 10:41 – John Tavares (5) | ||||||
Roberto Luongo 50 saves / 52 shots | Goalie stats | Thomas Greiss 41 saves / 42 shots |
New York won series 4–2 | |
(A2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (A3) Detroit Red Wings
The Tampa Bay Lightning finished second in the Atlantic Division, earning 97 points. The Detroit Red Wings earned 93 points to finish third in the Atlantic. This is the second meeting between these teams; their only previous meeting was in last year's Eastern Conference Quarterfinals which Tampa Bay won in seven games. The teams split their four game regular season series this year.
The Lightning defeated the Red Wings in five games. Lightning forward Nikita Kucherov scored twice and goalie Ben Bishop made 34 saves in a 3–2 win in Game 1.[11] Tyler Johnson recorded two goals in Game 2 in a 5–2 win for the Lightning.[12] In Game 3, Detroit goalie Jimmy Howard was replaced with Petr Mrazek who stopped all 16 shots in a 2–0 win.[13] In Game 4, Kucherov had two goals and an assist and Jonathan Drouin assisted on all 3 goals scored by Tampa Bay in a 3–2 win.[14] In the final game of the series, Alex Killorn scored with 1:43 left in the third period to give the Lightning a 1–0 lead and the series win.[15]
April 13 | Detroit Red Wings | 2–3 | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 06:23 – Nikita Kucherov (1) | ||||||
Mike Green (1) – 02:11 Justin Abdelkader (1) – 04:07 |
Second period | 09:29 – Nikita Kucherov (2) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 08:52 – Alex Killorn (1) | ||||||
Jimmy Howard 31 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 34 saves / 36 shots |
April 15 | Detroit Red Wings | 2–5 | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 15:17 – pp – Nikita Kucherov (3) | ||||||
Dylan Larkin (1) – 03:30 | Second period | 06:46 – Brian Boyle (1) | ||||||
Brad Richards (1) – pp – 04:27 | Third period | 06:32 – Tyler Johnson (1) 14:48 – Tyler Johnson (2) 17:16 – en – Alex Killorn (2) | ||||||
Jimmy Howard 26 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 30 saves / 32 shots |
April 17 | Tampa Bay Lightning | 0–2 | Detroit Red Wings | Joe Louis Arena | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 12:42 – Andreas Athanasiou (1) 17:22 – Henrik Zetterberg (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Ben Bishop 28 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Petr Mrazek 16 saves / 16 shots |
April 19 | Tampa Bay Lightning | 3–2 | Detroit Red Wings | Joe Louis Arena | Recap | |||
Nikita Kucherov (4) – pp – 05:41 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Nikita Kucherov (5) – pp – 10:31 | Second period | 14:53 – Darren Helm (1) 19:50 – Gustav Nyquist (1) | ||||||
Ondrej Palat (1) – pp – 17:01 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Ben Bishop 26 saves / 28 shots | Goalie stats | Petr Mrazek 30 saves / 33 shots |
April 21 | Detroit Red Wings | 0–1 | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 18:17 – Alex Killorn (3) | ||||||
Petr Mrazek 23 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 34 saves / 34 shots |
Tampa Bay won series 4–1 | |
(M1) Washington Capitals vs. (WC2) Philadelphia Flyers
The Washington Capitals earned the Presidents' Trophy as the NHL's best regular season team with 120 points. The Philadelphia Flyers finished as the Eastern Conference's second wild-card. This is the fifth meeting between these teams; with both teams splitting the four previous series. They last met in the 2008 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, which Philadelphia won in seven games. These teams split this year's four-game regular season series.
The Capitals defeated the Flyers in six games. Capitals goalie Braden Holtby shut out the Flyers in Game 1, stopping all 19 shots he faced in a 2–0 win.[16] In Game 2, Holtby made 41 saves and a fluke goal[17] by Capitals forward Jason Chimera turned to be the game-winning goal in a 4–1 win.[18] The Capitals scored a franchise record five power play goals to rout the Flyers 6–1 in Game 3.[19] In Game 4, Philadelphia avoided elimination by switching goaltender Steve Mason, who gave up six goals in the previous game, to Michal Neuvirth who made 31 saves in a 2–1 win.[20] The Flyers forced a sixth game after Neuvirth made 44 saves in a 2–0 win in Game 5; the Flyers were out shot 44 to 11.[21] Nicklas Backstrom scored the only goal for the Capitals in Game 6 for his team to move onto the second round.[22]
April 14 | Philadelphia Flyers | 0–2 | Washington Capitals | Verizon Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 16:21 – pp – John Carlson (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 16:36 – Jay Beagle (1) | ||||||
Steve Mason 29 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 19 saves / 19 shots |
April 16 | Philadelphia Flyers | 1–4 | Washington Capitals | Verizon Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 14:09 – pp – John Carlson (2) | ||||||
Jakub Voracek (1) – 09:37 | Second period | 02:26 – Jason Chimera (1) 17:21 – pp – Alexander Ovechkin (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 17:47 – Nicklas Backstrom (1) | ||||||
Steve Mason 19 saves / 23 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 41 saves / 42 shots |
April 18 | Washington Capitals | 6–1 | Philadelphia Flyers | Wells Fargo Center | Recap | |||
Marcus Johansson (1) – pp – 04:43 | First period | 00:57 – Michael Raffl (1) | ||||||
Alexander Ovechkin (2) – 08:50 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Evgeny Kuznetsov (1) – pp – 01:58 John Carlson (3) – pp – 07:37 Alexander Ovechkin (3) – pp – 14:58 Jay Beagle (2) – pp – 18:20 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Braden Holtby 31 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Steve Mason 21 saves / 27 shots |
April 20 | Washington Capitals | 1–2 | Philadelphia Flyers | Wells Fargo Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 05:51 – pp – Shayne Gostisbehere (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 03:51 – Andrew MacDonald (1) | ||||||
T. J. Oshie (1) – 02:38 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Braden Holtby 23 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Michal Neuvirth 31 saves / 32 shots |
April 22 | Philadelphia Flyers | 2–0 | Washington Capitals | Verizon Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Ryan White (1) – 07:52 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Chris VandeVelde (1) – en – 19:29 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Michal Neuvirth 44 saves / 44 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 9 saves / 10 shots |
April 24 | Washington Capitals | 1–0 | Philadelphia Flyers | Wells Fargo Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Nicklas Backstrom (2) – 08:59 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Braden Holtby 26 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Michal Neuvirth 28 saves / 29 shots |
Washington won series 4–2 | |
(M2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (M3) New York Rangers
The Pittsburgh Penguins finished second in the Metropolitan Division, earning 104 points. The New York Rangers earned 101 points in the regular season to finish third in the Metropolitan. This is the seventh meeting between these teams, and the third meeting in three consecutive seasons, with Pittsburgh losing the last two but winning four of the six overall. They last met in last year's Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, which the Rangers won in five games. Pittsburgh won three of the four games during this year's regular season series.
The Penguins defeated the Rangers in five games. Penguins forward Patric Hornqvist scored a hat trick in a 5–2 win in Game 1.[23] J. T. Miller had 3 assists to help the Rangers win 4–2 in Game 2.[24] In Game 3, Pittsburgh scored three times after New York took a 1–0 lead to win 3–1.[25] Evgeni Malkin scored two power play goals and Matt Murray made 31 saves in Game 4 for the Penguins in a 5–0 win.[26] In Game 5, after the Penguins' four-goal second period, of which Bryan Rust had two goals and an assist, Rangers head coach Alain Vigneault pulled Henrik Lundqvist, who had given up six goals on 23 shots. The Penguins ended the series with a 6–3 victory. It was the first time the Rangers were eliminated in the opening round since 2011, snapping a five-year advancement streak. This was also the first playoff series in which two goaltenders on the same team played in and subsequently won their playoff debut, with Jeff Zatkoff winning Game 1 and Matt Murray winning Game 3.[27]
April 13 | New York Rangers | 2–5 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Consol Energy Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 19:42 – Patric Hornqvist (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 18:56 – Sidney Crosby (1) | ||||||
Derek Stepan (1) – pp – 03:10 Derek Stepan (2) – 10:11 |
Third period | 05:31 – sh – Tom Kuhnhackl (1) 08:02 – pp – Patric Hornqvist (2) 17:10 – en – Patric Hornqvist (3) | ||||||
Henrik Lundqvist 10 saves / 11 shots Antti Raanta 16 saves / 19 shots |
Goalie stats | Jeff Zatkoff 35 saves / 37 shots |
April 16 | New York Rangers | 4–2 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Consol Energy Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Keith Yandle (1) – 12:38 Derick Brassard (1) – 12:56 Mats Zuccarello (1) – 16:52 |
Second period | 03:21 – pp – Phil Kessel (1) | ||||||
Chris Kreider (1) – 00:39 | Third period | 05:42 – pp – Phil Kessel (2) | ||||||
Henrik Lundqvist 29 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Jeff Zatkoff 24 saves / 28 shots |
April 19 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 3–1 | New York Rangers | Madison Square Garden | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Sidney Crosby (2) – pp – 19:18 | Second period | 00:39 – sh – Rick Nash (1) | ||||||
Matt Cullen (1) – 04:16 Kris Letang (1) – en – 19:47 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Matt Murray 16 saves / 17 shots | Goalie stats | Henrik Lundqvist 28 saves / 30 shots |
April 21 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 5–0 | New York Rangers | Madison Square Garden | Recap | |||
Eric Fehr (1) – 01:09 Patric Hornqvist (4) – pp – 07:11 Conor Sheary (1) – 16:12 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
Evgeni Malkin (1) – pp – 04:00 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Evgeni Malkin (2) – pp – 03:28 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Matt Murray 31 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Henrik Lundqvist 14 saves / 18 shots Antti Raanta 13 saves / 14 shots |
April 23 | New York Rangers | 3–6 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Consol Energy Center | Recap | |||
Rick Nash (2) – 01:02 Dominic Moore (1) – 10:35 |
First period | 09:50 – Carl Hagelin (1) 11:39 – pp – Phil Kessel (3) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 05:21 – Bryan Rust (1) 09:26 – Matt Cullen (2) 16:18 – Conor Sheary (2) 19:01 – Bryan Rust (2) | ||||||
Chris Kreider (2) – pp – 05:38 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Henrik Lundqvist 17 saves / 23 shots Antti Raanta 5 saves / 5 shots |
Goalie stats | Matt Murray 38 saves / 41 shots |
Pittsburgh won series 4–1 | |
Western Conference Quarterfinals
(C1) Dallas Stars vs. (WC2) Minnesota Wild
The Dallas Stars finished first in the Central Division, earning 109 points. The Minnesota Wild finished as the Western Conference's second wild-card, earning 87 points. This is the first meeting in the playoffs between Minnesota's current NHL franchise and its former NHL franchise (then known as the North Stars). Dallas won four of the five games during this year's regular season series.
The Stars defeated the Wild in six games. Jamie Benn scored a goal and two assists and goalie Kari Lehtonen made 22 saves for the Stars in Game 1 in a 4–0 victory.[28] Jamie Benn scored the game winner in Game 2 in a 2–1 win for the Stars to take a 2–0 lead in the series.[29] In Game 3, after Patrick Sharp scored two goals in the first period for the Stars, the Wild scored four consecutive goals to take the lead. Jason Pominville scored two of the Wild goals in a 5–3 win.[30] Antti Niemi made 28 saves to help the Stars take a 3–1 series lead in a 3–2 win in Game 4.[31] The Wild avoided elimination in Game 5 when forward Mikko Koivu scored his second goal of the game at 4:55 of the first overtime period, in a 5–4 win.[32] In Game 6, the Stars took a four-goal lead before the Wild attempted a late comeback by scoring three goals in under five minutes during the third period. Alex Goligoski scored the eventual series-winner for Dallas halfway through the third period as the Stars hung on for a 5–4 victory.[33]
April 14 | Minnesota Wild | 0–4 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 03:53 – Radek Faksa (1) 12:17 – Jason Spezza (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 14:16 – pp – Patrick Eaves (1) 16:00 – en – Jamie Benn (1) | ||||||
Devan Dubnyk 28 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Kari Lehtonen 22 saves / 22 shots |
April 16 | Minnesota Wild | 1–2 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 03:54 – Antoine Roussel (1) | ||||||
Marco Scandella (1) – pp – 12:42 | Third period | 10:23 – Jamie Benn (2) | ||||||
Devan Dubnyk 26 saves / 28 shots | Goalie stats | Kari Lehtonen 25 saves / 26 shots |
April 18 | Dallas Stars | 3–5 | Minnesota Wild | Xcel Energy Center | Recap | |||
Patrick Sharp (1) – 00:26 Patrick Sharp (2) – 04:10 |
First period | 19:10 – Chris Porter (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 06:04 – Erik Haula (1) 19:13 – Jason Pominville (1) | ||||||
Colton Sceviour (1) – 13:45 | Third period | 06:26 – pp – Mikko Koivu (1) 18:46 – en – Jason Pominville (2) | ||||||
Kari Lehtonen 20 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Devan Dubnyk 14 saves / 17 shots |
April 20 | Dallas Stars | 3–2 | Minnesota Wild | Xcel Energy Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Ales Hemsky (1) – pp – 09:11 Patrick Eaves (2) – pp – 13:24 Jason Spezza (2) – 18:51 |
Second period | 05:01 – Jason Pominville (3) 10:14 – Charlie Coyle (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Antti Niemi 28 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Devan Dubnyk 19 saves / 22 shots |
April 22 | Minnesota Wild | 5–4 | OT | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | ||
Mikael Granlund (1) – 03:32 Jordan Schroeder (1) – 05:16 |
First period | 17:18 – Johnny Oduya (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Nino Niederreiter (1) – 01:50 Mikko Koivu (2) – 16:51 |
Third period | 01:00 – Jamie Benn (3) 08:28 – Jason Spezza (3) 08:56 – Alex Goligoski (1) | ||||||
Mikko Koivu (3) – 04:55 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Devan Dubnyk 37 saves / 41 shots | Goalie stats | Antti Niemi 19 saves / 24 shots |
April 24 | Dallas Stars | 5–4 | Minnesota Wild | Xcel Energy Center | Recap | |||
John Klingberg (1) – pp – 05:56 Jason Spezza (4) – 09:07 Patrick Sharp (3) – 18:11 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
Jamie Benn (4) – 19:36 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Alex Goligoski (2) – 10:28 | Third period | 03:48 – pp – Jared Spurgeon (1) 04:04 – Jonas Brodin (1) 08:39 – pp – Jared Spurgeon (2) 15:13 – Jason Pominville (4) | ||||||
Kari Lehtonen 25 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Devan Dubnyk 19 saves / 24 shots |
Dallas won series 4–2 | |
(C2) St. Louis Blues vs. (C3) Chicago Blackhawks
The St. Louis Blues finished second in the Central Division earning 107 points. The Chicago Blackhawks earned 103 points to finish third in the Central. This is the twelfth playoff meeting between these two rivals with Chicago winning eight of the eleven previous series. Their most recent meeting was the 2014 Western Conference Quarterfinals, which Chicago won in six games. St. Louis won three of the five games during this year's regular season series.
The Blues defeated the Blackhawks in seven games after giving up a 3–1 series lead. In Game 1, neither team scored in regulation; David Backes scored 9:04 into the first overtime for the Blues as goalie Brian Elliott made 35 saves in the win.[34] In Game 2, Patrick Kane had two assists to help the Blackhawks win 3–2.[35] The Blues recovered in Game 3, as Elliot made 44 saves in a 3–2 win.[36] Game 4 saw Blackhawks goalie Corey Crawford go after Blues rookie forward Robby Fabbri after the forward was bumped into the goaltender by Chicago captain Jonathan Toews. Five penalties were assessed and the Blackhawks scored on the power play that followed.[37] Vladimir Tarasenko scored twice for the Blues as they won the game 4–3.[38] Blackhawks forward Andrew Shaw was given a one-game suspension and a $5,000 fine after he used a homophobic slur.[39][40] In Game 5, the Blues overcame a 3–1 deficit in the third period to send the game to overtime. In double-overtime, Patrick Kane scored the game-winner for the Blackhawks who avoided elimination with a 4–3 win.[41] The Blackhawks came back from a 3–1 deficit in Game 6, scoring five goals in a 6–3 victory to force a seventh game.[42] In Game 7, the Blues took a two-goal lead in the first period before the Blackhawks tied the game on goals by Marian Hossa and Andrew Shaw. In the third period, Troy Brouwer scored the series-winner as the Blues advanced past the opening round of the playoffs for the first time since 2012 with a 3–2 win.[43]
April 13 | Chicago Blackhawks | 0–1 | OT | St. Louis Blues | Scottrade Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 09:04 – David Backes (1) | ||||||
Corey Crawford 17 saves / 18 shots | Goalie stats | Brian Elliott 35 saves / 35 shots |
April 15 | Chicago Blackhawks | 3–2 | St. Louis Blues | Scottrade Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Duncan Keith (1) – 19:55 | Second period | 15:20 – Vladimir Tarasenko (1) | ||||||
Andrew Shaw (1) – pp – 15:41 Artemi Panarin (1) – en – 18:34 |
Third period | 19:58 – Kevin Shattenkirk (1) | ||||||
Corey Crawford 29 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Brian Elliott 26 saves / 28 shots |
April 17 | St. Louis Blues | 3–2 | Chicago Blackhawks | United Center | Recap | |||
Colton Parayko (1) – pp – 12:11 | First period | 02:18 – pp – Brent Seabrook (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 01:04 – Artem Anisimov (1) | ||||||
Patrik Berglund (1) – 05:15 Jaden Schwartz (1) – pp – 13:22 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Brian Elliott 44 saves / 46 shots | Goalie stats | Corey Crawford 33 saves / 36 shots |
April 19 | St. Louis Blues | 4–3 | Chicago Blackhawks | United Center | Recap | |||
Vladimir Tarasenko (2) – 14:02 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Vladimir Tarasenko (3) – pp – 17:31 | Second period | 09:12 – Andrew Shaw (2) 13:09 – pp – Duncan Keith (2) | ||||||
Jaden Schwartz (2) – pp – 01:36 Alexander Steen (1) – 04:46 |
Third period | 14:40 – Duncan Keith (3) | ||||||
Brian Elliott 39 saves / 42 shots | Goalie stats | Corey Crawford 16 saves / 20 shots |
April 21 | Chicago Blackhawks | 4–3 | 2OT | St. Louis Blues | Scottrade Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Marian Hossa (1) – sh – 11:32 Artem Anisimov (2) – 15:24 Artemi Panarin (2) – 19:59 |
Second period | 12:29 – pp – Jaden Schwartz (3) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 06:57 – Robby Fabbri (1) 14:50 – David Backes (2) | ||||||
Patrick Kane (1) – 03:07 | Second overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Corey Crawford 43 saves / 46 shots | Goalie stats | Brian Elliott 31 saves / 35 shots |
April 23 | St. Louis Blues | 3–6 | Chicago Blackhawks | United Center | Recap | |||
Scottie Upshall (1) – 06:18 Alex Pietrangelo (1) – 08:51 Vladimir Tarasenko (4) – 11:00 |
First period | 03:47 – Andrew Ladd (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 04:13 – pp – Artem Anisimov (3) 12:21 – Trevor van Riemsdyk (1) 16:18 – Dale Weise (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 16:53 – pp – Andrew Shaw (3) 17:40 – en – Marian Hossa (2) | ||||||
Brian Elliott 30 saves / 35 shots | Goalie stats | Corey Crawford 24 saves / 27 shots |
April 25 | Chicago Blackhawks | 2–3 | St. Louis Blues | Scottrade Center | Recap | |||
Marian Hossa (3) – 18:30 | First period | 01:00 – Jori Lehtera (1) 13:43 – Colton Parayko (2) | ||||||
Andrew Shaw (4) – pp – 03:20 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 08:31 – Troy Brouwer (1) | ||||||
Corey Crawford 23 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Brian Elliott 31 saves / 33 shots |
St. Louis won series 4–3 | |
(P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (WC1) Nashville Predators
The Anaheim Ducks finished first in the Pacific Division, earning 103 points. The Nashville Predators finished as the Western Conference's first wild-card, earning 96 points. This is the second meeting between these teams in the playoffs; their only previous series was the 2011 Western Conference Quarterfinals, which Nashville won in six games. Nashville won two of the three games during this year's regular season series.
For the fourth straight year, the Ducks were eliminated in a seventh game at home after having a 3–2 series lead. James Neal scored 35 seconds into Game 1 and Pekka Rinne made 27 saves for the Predators' 3–2 win.[44] In Game 2, Rinne again made 27 saves in another 3–2 win to take their first ever 2–0 series lead.[45] Before Game 3 Anaheim replaced goaltender John Gibson with Frederik Andersen as he stopped all 27 shots in a 3–0 Ducks victory.[46] Andersen made 30 saves in a 4–1 victory in Game 4 to tie the series.[47] Three players for the Ducks, Ryan Getzlaf, David Perron, and Sami Vatanen, had two points in a 5–2 win in Game 5 to take a 3–2 series lead.[48] The Predators forced their first ever seventh game after Rinne made 26 saves in a 3–1 win.[49] In Game 7, Rinne stopped 36 shots for the Predators in a 2–1 win to advance to the second round.[50]
April 15 | Nashville Predators | 3–2 | Anaheim Ducks | Honda Center | Recap | |||
James Neal (1) – 00:35 | First period | 17:39 – pp – Ryan Getzlaf (1) | ||||||
Colin Wilson (1) – 07:55 | Second period | 00:48 – Ryan Kesler (1) | ||||||
Filip Forsberg (1) – 10:25 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Pekka Rinne 27 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | John Gibson 30 saves / 33 shots |
April 17 | Nashville Predators | 3–2 | Anaheim Ducks | Honda Center | Recap | |||
Mattias Ekholm (1) – 19:04 | First period | 14:20 – Andrew Cogliano (1) | ||||||
Craig Smith (1) – 09:55 Shea Weber (1) – pp – 19:21 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 17:18 – Nate Thompson (1) | ||||||
Pekka Rinne 27 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | John Gibson 24 saves / 27 shots |
April 19 | Anaheim Ducks | 3–0 | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | |||
Jamie McGinn (1) – 10:05 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Rickard Rakell (1) – 11:33 Chris Stewart (1) – 17:06 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Frederik Andersen 27 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 18 saves / 21 shots |
April 21 | Anaheim Ducks | 4–1 | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | |||
Ryan Getzlaf (2) – 01:02 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Nate Thompson (2) – 17:04 Jamie McGinn (2) – 18:56 |
Second period | 11:26 – Mike Fisher (1) | ||||||
Andrew Cogliano (2) – 16:52 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Frederik Andersen 30 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 21 saves / 25 shots |
April 23 | Nashville Predators | 2–5 | Anaheim Ducks | Honda Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Ryan Johansen (1) – 14:13 | Second period | 14:35 – David Perron (1) 16:23 – Ryan Garbutt (1) | ||||||
Miikka Salomaki (1) – 13:29 | Third period | 08:34 – Sami Vatanen (1) 16:37 – pp – Cam Fowler (1) 18:14 – en – Ryan Kesler (2) | ||||||
Pekka Rinne 27 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Frederik Andersen 27 saves / 29 shots |
April 25 | Anaheim Ducks | 1–3 | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Ryan Kesler (3) – pp – 19:46 | Second period | 08:10 – Mattias Ekholm (2) 17:45 – James Neal (2) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 19:50 – en – Shea Weber (2) | ||||||
Frederik Andersen 23 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 26 saves / 27 shots |
April 27 | Nashville Predators | 2–1 | Anaheim Ducks | Honda Center | Recap | |||
Colin Wilson (2) – 06:19 Paul Gaustad (1) – 15:53 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 01:45 – pp – Ryan Kesler (4) | ||||||
Pekka Rinne 36 saves / 37 shots | Goalie stats | Frederik Andersen 18 saves / 20 shots |
Nashville won series 4–3 | |
(P2) Los Angeles Kings vs. (P3) San Jose Sharks
The Los Angeles Kings finished second in the Pacific Division, earning 102 points. The San Jose Sharks earned 98 points to finish third in the Pacific. This is the fourth meeting between these two teams, with Los Angeles winning two of the three previous meetings. They last met in the 2014 Western Conference Quarterfinals, which Los Angeles came back from a 3–0 deficit to defeat the Sharks in seven games. San Jose won three of the five games during this year's regular season series.
The Sharks defeated the Kings in five games. In Game 1, Joe Pavelski scored twice including the game winner to help the Sharks win 4–3.[51] Sharks goalie, and former Kings backup goalie, Martin Jones allowed one goal on 27 shots in Game 2 in a 2–1 win.[52] Game 3 in San Jose required overtime with the game tied 1–1 after regulation time, before Tanner Pearson scored the game winner for the Kings at 3:47 of the first overtime.[53] In Game 4, all three Sharks goals came on the power play before the Kings tried to make a comeback cutting the deficit to 3–2, but that was the final score of the game.[54] In Game 5, the Sharks took a 3–0 lead until the Kings scored three goals to tie the game in the second period. Early in the third period, San Jose rookie Joonas Donskoi's second goal of the game, broke the tie to give the Sharks a 4–3 lead; Joe Pavelski and Melker Karlsson provided insurance goals as the Sharks ended the series with a 6–3 victory.[55]
April 14 | San Jose Sharks | 4–3 | Los Angeles Kings | Staples Center | Recap | |||
Joe Pavelski (1) – pp – 06:25 | First period | 02:53 – Jake Muzzin (1) | ||||||
Brent Burns (1) – 06:50 Tomas Hertl (1) – 17:48 |
Second period | 07:30 – pp – Jeff Carter (1) 17:18 – sh – Trevor Lewis (1) | ||||||
Joe Pavelski (2) – 00:17 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Martin Jones 21 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Jonathan Quick 19 saves / 23 shots |
April 16 | San Jose Sharks | 2–1 | Los Angeles Kings | Staples Center | Recap | |||
Joe Pavelski (3) – 03:37 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Logan Couture (1) – pp – 08:44 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 14:59 – pp – Vincent Lecavalier (1) | ||||||
Martin Jones 26 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Jonathan Quick 21 saves / 23 shots |
April 18 | Los Angeles Kings | 2–1 | OT | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | ||
Anze Kopitar (1) – pp – 08:10 | First period | 00:30 – Joe Thornton (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Tanner Pearson (1) – 03:47 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Jonathan Quick 29 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 22 saves / 24 shots |
April 20 | Los Angeles Kings | 2–3 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 02:09 – pp – Brent Burns (2) 09:21 – pp – Joe Pavelski (4) | ||||||
Trevor Lewis (2) – 02:49 Luke Schenn (1) – 06:44 |
Third period | 01:40 – pp – Patrick Marleau (1) | ||||||
Jonathan Quick 26 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 26 saves / 28 shots |
April 22 | San Jose Sharks | 6–3 | Los Angeles Kings | Staples Center | Recap | |||
Joonas Donskoi (1) – 01:08 Chris Tierney (1) – 11:21 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
Matt Nieto (1) – 04:05 | Second period | 07:44 – Anze Kopitar (2) 11:26 – Jeff Carter (2) 16:36 – Kris Versteeg (1) | ||||||
Joonas Donskoi (2) – 03:58 Joe Pavelski (5) – 12:24 Melker Karlsson (1) – en – 19:38 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Martin Jones 19 saves / 22 shots | Goalie stats | Jonathan Quick 22 saves / 27 shots |
San Jose won series 4–1 | |
Conference Semifinals
Eastern Conference Semifinals
(A2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (WC1) New York Islanders
This is the second playoff meeting for these teams; their only previous series was in the 2004 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, which Tampa Bay won in five games. New York won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.
April 27 | New York Islanders | 5–3 | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | Recap | |||
Travis Hamonic (1) – 05:44 Shane Prince (2) – 17:28 Shane Prince (3) – 19:57 |
First period | 03:05 – Ondrej Palat (2) | ||||||
John Tavares (6) – pp – 08:59 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Cal Clutterbuck (1) – en – 19:05 | Third period | 07:41 – Nikita Kucherov (6) 17:28 – Valtteri Filppula (1) | ||||||
Thomas Greiss 33 saves / 36 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 9 saves / 13 shots Andrei Vasilevskiy 8 saves / 8 shots |
April 30 | New York Islanders | 1–4 | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | Recap | |||
Nikolay Kulemin (1) – pp – 15:15 | First period | 06:03 – Tyler Johnson (3) 11:55 – Jonathan Drouin (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 11:59 – pp – Victor Hedman (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 17:42 – en – Tyler Johnson (4) | ||||||
Thomas Greiss 27 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Ben Bishop 19 saves / 20 shots |
May 3 | Tampa Bay Lightning | 5–4 | OT | New York Islanders | Barclays Center | Recap | ||
Ryan Callahan (1) – pp – 19:47 | First period | 07:55 – Josh Bailey (1) | ||||||
Victor Hedman (2) – 08:10 | Second period | 14:50 – Nick Leddy (1) | ||||||
Vladislav Namestnikov (1) – 03:25 Nikita Kucherov (7) – 19:21 |
Third period | 02:27 – pp – Josh Bailey (2) 11:23 – Cal Clutterbuck (2) | ||||||
Brian Boyle (2) – 02:48 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Ben Bishop 35 saves / 39 shots | Goalie stats | Thomas Greiss 36 saves / 41 shots |
May 6 | Tampa Bay Lightning | 7:00 p.m. | New York Islanders | Barclays Center | NBCSN, CBC, TVA |
May 8 | New York Islanders | 3:00 p.m. | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena | NBC, SN, TVA |
May 10 | Tampa Bay Lightning | TBD | New York Islanders | Barclays Center |
May 12 | New York Islanders | TBD | Tampa Bay Lightning | Amalie Arena |
Tampa Bay leads series 2–1 | |
(M1) Washington Capitals vs. (M2) Pittsburgh Penguins
This is the ninth playoff meeting for these teams, with Pittsburgh winning seven of the eight previous series. Their most recent meeting was in the 2009 Eastern Conference Semifinals, which Pittsburgh won in seven games. Pittsburgh won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.
April 28 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 3–4 | OT | Washington Capitals | Verizon Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 10:13 – Andre Burakovsky (1) | ||||||
Ben Lovejoy (1) – 10:40 Evgeni Malkin (3) – 11:37 |
Second period | 12:10 – T. J. Oshie (2) | ||||||
Nick Bonino (1) – 08:42 | Third period | 03:23 – T. J. Oshie (3) | ||||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 09:33 – T. J. Oshie (4) | ||||||
Matt Murray 31 saves / 35 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 42 saves / 45 shots |
April 30 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 2–1 | Washington Capitals | Verizon Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Carl Hagelin (2) – 07:08 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Eric Fehr (2) – 15:32 | Third period | 04:08 – pp – Marcus Johansson (2) | ||||||
Matt Murray 23 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Braden Holtby 33 saves / 35 shots |
May 2 | Washington Capitals | 2–3 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Consol Energy Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 06:37 – Patric Hornqvist (4) 07:37 – Tom Kuhnhackl (2) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 15:03 – Carl Hagelin (3) | ||||||
Alexander Ovechkin (4) – 08:02 Justin Williams (1) – 19:04 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Braden Holtby 20 saves / 23 shots | Goalie stats | Matt Murray 47 saves / 49 shots |
May 4 | Washington Capitals | 2–3 | OT | Pittsburgh Penguins | Consol Energy Center | Recap | ||
Jay Beagle (3) – 02:58 | First period | 09:16 – Trevor Daley (1) | ||||||
John Carlson (4) – 16:19 | Second period | 03:07 – Matt Cullen (3) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 02:34 – Patric Hornqvist (5) | ||||||
Braden Holtby 30 saves / 33 shots | Goalie stats | Matt Murray 34 saves / 36 shots |
May 7 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 7:15 p.m. | Washington Capitals | Verizon Center | NBC, CBC, TVA |
May 10 | Washington Capitals | TBD | Pittsburgh Penguins | Consol Energy Center |
May 12 | Pittsburgh Penguins | TBD | Washington Capitals | Verizon Center |
Pittsburgh leads series 3–1 | |
Western Conference Semifinals
(C1) Dallas Stars vs. (C2) St. Louis Blues
This is the thirteenth playoff meeting for these teams; the two teams have split the twelve previous series. They last met in the 2001 Western Conference Semifinals, which St. Louis won in a four-game sweep. St. Louis won four of the five games in this year's regular season series.
April 29 | St. Louis Blues | 1–2 | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 09:36 – Antoine Roussel (2) | ||||||
Kevin Shattenkirk (2) – 11:32 | Third period | 15:16 – Radek Faksa (2) | ||||||
Brian Elliott 40 saves / 42 shots | Goalie stats | Kari Lehtonen 31 saves / 32 shots |
May 1 | St. Louis Blues | 4–3 | OT | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | Recap | ||
Patrik Berglund (2) – 04:11 Joel Edmundson (1) – 07:02 Troy Brouwer (2) – pp – 18:40 |
First period | 03:36 – Alex Goligoski (3) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 04:35 – Mattias Janmark (1) 17:24 – Jamie Benn (5) | ||||||
David Backes (3) – pp – 10:58 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Brian Elliott 31 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Kari Lehtonen 2 saves / 5 shots Antti Niemi 19 saves / 20 shots |
May 3 | Dallas Stars | 1–6 | St. Louis Blues | Scottrade Center | Recap | |||
Colton Sceviour (2) – 04:44 | First period | 05:41 – Alexander Steen (2) 16:10 – pp – David Backes (4) | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 02:34 – Troy Brouwer (3) 03:50 – Vladimir Tarasenko (5) 18:03 – pp – Alexander Steen (3) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 18:06 – David Backes (5) | ||||||
Antti Niemi 9 saves / 12 shots Kari Lehtonen 24 saves / 27 shots |
Goalie stats | Brian Elliott 25 saves / 26 shots |
May 5 | Dallas Stars | 3–2 | OT | St. Louis Blues | Scottrade Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 10:17 – Vladimir Tarasenko (6) | ||||||
Radek Faksa (3) – 04:05 Patrick Sharp (4) – pp – 05:14 |
Second period | 13:06 – pp – Paul Stastny (1) | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Cody Eakin (1) – 02:58 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Kari Lehtonen 24 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Brian Elliott 25 saves / 28 shots |
May 7 | St. Louis Blues | 1:00 p.m. | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center | NBC, SN, TVA |
May 9 | Dallas Stars | 8:00 p.m. | St. Louis Blues | Scottrade Center | NBCSN, CBC, TVA |
May 11 | St. Louis Blues | TBD | Dallas Stars | American Airlines Center |
Series tied 2–2 | |
(P3) San Jose Sharks vs. (WC1) Nashville Predators
This is the third playoff meeting for these teams, with San Jose winning both previous series. They last met in the 2007 Western Conference Quarterfinals, which San Jose won in five games. Nashville won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.
Game 4, which went into the third overtime, became the longest match ever contested by the Predators.[56]
April 29 | Nashville Predators | 2–5 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Mike Fisher (2) – pp – 04:33 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Ryan Johansen (2) – 18:11 | Third period | 02:37 – pp – Tomas Hertl (2) 11:49 – Joel Ward (1) 15:40 – pp – Logan Couture (2) 18:31 – en – Logan Couture (3) 19:10 – en – Tommy Wingels (1) | ||||||
Pekka Rinne 33 saves / 36 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 29 saves / 31 shots |
May 1 | Nashville Predators | 2–3 | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 18:36 – pp – Logan Couture (4) | ||||||
Mattias Ekholm (3) – 12:56 Ryan Johansen (3) – 19:55 |
Third period | 17:20 – Joe Pavelski (6) 19:04 – en – Joe Thornton (2) | ||||||
Pekka Rinne 22 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Jones 37 saves / 39 shots |
May 3 | San Jose Sharks | 1–4 | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | |||
Patrick Marleau (2) – 13:13 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 05:11 – pp – James Neal (3) 14:44 – Shea Weber (3) | ||||||
Third period | 06:55 – Colin Wilson (3) 15:49 – pp – Filip Forsberg (2) | |||||||
Martin Jones 21 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 26 saves / 27 shots |
May 5 | San Jose Sharks | 3–4 | 3OT | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | Recap | ||
Brent Burns (3) – 03:08 | First period | 00:41 – Colin Wilson (4) 09:50 – Mike Fisher (3) | ||||||
Joonas Donskoi (3) – 14:09 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Brent Burns (4) – pp – 06:48 | Third period | 15:39 – James Neal (4) | ||||||
No scoring | Third overtime period | 11:12 – Mike Fisher (4) | ||||||
Martin Jones 41 saves / 45 shots | Goalie stats | Pekka Rinne 44 saves / 47 shots |
May 7 | Nashville Predators | 10:00 p.m. | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center | NBCSN, CBC, TVA |
May 9 | San Jose Sharks | 9:00 p.m. | Nashville Predators | Bridgestone Arena | CNBC, SN, TVA |
May 12 | Nashville Predators | TBD | San Jose Sharks | SAP Center |
Series tied 2–2 | |
Player statistics
Skaters
These are the top ten skaters based on points. Players in bold are currently active.
Player | Team | GP | G | A | Pts | +/– | PIM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Benn, JamieJamie Benn | Dallas Stars | 10 | 5 | 9 | 14 | +6 | 10 |
Burns, BrentBrent Burns | San Jose Sharks | 9 | 4 | 9 | 13 | –1 | 6 |
Couture, LoganLogan Couture | San Jose Sharks | 9 | 4 | 8 | 12 | 0 | 0 |
Tavares, JohnJohn Tavares | New York Islanders | 9 | 6 | 5 | 11 | 0 | 2 |
Tarasenko, VladimirVladimir Tarasenko | St. Louis Blues | 11 | 6 | 5 | 11 | –1 | 2 |
Johnson, TylerTyler Johnson | Tampa Bay Lightning | 8 | 4 | 7 | 11 | +8 | 8 |
Spezza, JasonJason Spezza | Dallas Stars | 10 | 4 | 7 | 11 | +2 | 2 |
Wilson, ColinColin Wilson | Nashville Predators | 11 | 4 | 7 | 11 | +9 | 0 |
Kucherov, NikitaNikita Kucherov | Tampa Bay Lightning | 8 | 7 | 3 | 10 | +8 | 2 |
Pavelski, JoeJoe Pavelski | San Jose Sharks | 9 | 6 | 4 | 10 | +1 | 0 |
Goaltenders
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.
Player | Team | GP | W | L | SA | GA | GAA | SV% | SO | TOI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Holtby, BradenBraden Holtby | Washington Capitals | 10 | 5 | 5 | 290 | 16 | 1.59 | .945 | 2 | 605-00 605:00 |
Murray, MattMatt Murray | Pittsburgh Penguins | 7 | 6 | 1 | 233 | 13 | 1.81 | .944 | 1 | 432-06 432:06 |
Luongo, RobertoRoberto Luongo | Florida Panthers | 6 | 2 | 4 | 227 | 15 | 2.05 | .934 | 0 | 438-20 438:20 |
Rinne, PekkaPekka Rinne | Nashville Predators | 11 | 6 | 5 | 333 | 26 | 2.22 | .922 | 0 | 702-49 702:49 |
Bishop, BenBen Bishop | Tampa Bay Lightning | 8 | 6 | 2 | 232 | 17 | 2.27 | .927 | 1 | 448-28 448:28 |
Elliott, BrianBrian Elliott | St. Louis Blues | 11 | 6 | 5 | 384 | 27 | 2.31 | .930 | 1 | 702-05 702:05 |
Greiss, ThomasThomas Greiss | New York Islanders | 9 | 5 | 4 | 341 | 24 | 2.34 | .930 | 0 | 616-23 616:23 |
Television
This marks the fifth postseason under NBC Sports' current 10-year contract for American television rights. All playoff games will be nationally televised by either NBC, NBCSN, CNBC, USA Network, and NHL Network. During the first round, these national telecasts will co-exist with those of regional rightsholders, after which NBC will have exclusive rights to the remaining games.[57]
This will be the second postseason under Rogers Communications' 12-year contract for Canadian television rights. Under a time-brokerage agreement, playoff games and the Stanley Cup Finals will air on CBC, but Rogers will assume editorial control and the ownership of any advertising revenue from the telecasts.[58] English-language telecasts of playoff games will also air on the Sportsnet networks. In a separate sub-licensing agreement with Rogers, French-language coverage will be on TVA.
With all seven of the NHL's Canadian teams out of the playoffs, media sources have predicted that Rogers will take a massive hit in the ratings.[59][60][61] During the regular season, Sunday's Hometown Hockey saw ratings drop 34 percent, while the traditional Hockey Night in Canada on Saturday fell 18 per cent, culminating in the season closer on April 9 that attracted just 721,000 viewers.[62] Rogers has also implemented several cost-cutting measures, such as only employing three full-time play-by-play crews, and having a fourth one doing spot duty, during the first round.[63]
References
- ↑ Stubbs, Dave (March 31, 2016). "Woe Canada. No playoffs this year north of border". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
- ↑ "Stars secure No. 1 seed in West". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. April 10, 2016. Retrieved April 10, 2016.
- ↑ Fialkov, Harvey (April 3, 2016). "Florida Panthers clinch fifth playoff berth in franchise history". Sun-Sentinel (Tribune Publishing). Retrieved April 10, 2016.
- ↑ Compton, Brian; Poupart, Alain (April 11, 2016). "Islanders vs. Panthers First Round series preview". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
- ↑ Poupart, Alain (April 14, 2016). "Tavares, Islanders defeat Panthers in Game 1". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Poupart, Alain (April 15, 2016). "Luongo makes 41 saves, helps Panthers even series". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Satriano, David (April 17, 2016). "Hickey lifts Islanders by Panthers in overtime". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Kreiser, John (April 20, 2016). "Petrovic, Panthers top Islanders in Game 4". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ↑ Poupart, Alain (April 22, 2016). "Quine lifts Islanders to double-overtime Game 5 win". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Morreale, Mike G. (April 24, 2016). "Tavares scores in double overtime, Islanders advance". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Long, Corey (April 13, 2016). "Lightning strike first against Red Wings". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ Long, Corey (April 15, 2016). "Johnson leads Lightning to Game 2 win vs. Red Wings". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ Harris, Paul (April 17, 2016). "Red Wings stifle Lightning, get crucial win". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ Harris, Paul (April 19, 2016). "Palat gives Lightning Game 4 win". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ Long, Corey (April 21, 2016). "Lightning defeat Red Wings, advance to second round". NHl.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ↑ Brown, Katie (April 14, 2016). "Holtby shutout lifts Capitals past Flyers in Game 1". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Allen, Scott (April 16, 2016). "Jason Chimera scores fluke goal on Steve Mason with deflection from red line". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
- ↑ Brown, Katie (April 16, 2016). "Holtby makes 41 saves, Capitals defeat Flyers". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Kimelman, Adam (April 18, 2016). "Capitals ride power play to big win against Flyers". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Kimelman, Adam (April 20, 2016). "Neuvirth, Flyers avoid elimination in Game 4". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Brown, Katie (April 22, 2016). "Neuvirth, Flyers shut out Capitals in Game 5 win". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Kimelman, Adam (April 24, 2016). "Capitals defeat Flyers to advance to second round". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Crosby, Wes (April 13, 2016). "Zatkoff pushes Penguins past Rangers in Game 1". NHL.com. Pittsburgh: NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Crosby, Wes (April 16, 2016). "Second-period surge leads Rangers by Penguins". NHL.com. Pittsburgh: NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Lane, John (April 19, 2016). "Murray, Cullen lift Penguins by Rangers in Game 3". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Satriano, David (April 21, 2016). "Malkin, Murray propel Penguins in Game 4". NHL.com. New York City: NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Sparks, Sidney (April 22, 2016). "Pittsburgh Penguins’ Goaltending Future is Bright". Pens' Labyrinth. FanSided Inc. Retrieved April 23, 2016./
- ↑ Hunt, Steven (April 14, 2016). "Benn, Spezza lift Stars to Game 1 win against Wild". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Hunt, Steven (April 16, 2016). "Roussel's strange goal helps Stars defeat Wild again". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Myers, Dan (April 18, 2016). "Wild have offensive outburst in Game 3 win". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Myers, Dan (April 20, 2016). "Stars push Wild to brink with Game 4 win". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Hunt, Steven (April 22, 2016). "Wild stay alive with OT win against Stars". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Myers, Dan (April 24, 2016). "Stars survive rally to win Game 6, eliminate Wild". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
- ↑ Korac, Louie (April 13, 2016). "Backes' OT goal lifts Blues in Game 1". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ Korac, Louie (April 17, 2016). "Keith helps Blackhawks tie series with Blues". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ Hedger, Brian (April 17, 2016). "Blues score twice in 3rd, top Blackhawks in Game 3". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ HawksTalk (April 19, 2016). "Blackhawks: Corey Crawford goes after Robby Fabbri". CSN Chicago. Comcast Sportsnet: Chicago. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Hedger, Brian (April 20, 2016). "Tarasenko powers Blues to Game 4 victory". NHL.com. National Hockey League. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ "Blackhawks' Shaw suspended one game, fined $5,000". NHL.com. NHL Public Relations. April 20, 2016. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ↑ Fitzgerald, Matt (April 20, 2016). "Andrew Shaw Suspended for Using Homophobic Slur: Latest Details, Reaction". Bleacher Report. Associated Press. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Korac, Louie (April 21, 2016). "Blackhawks top Blues in 2 OTs, avoid elimination". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Hedger, Brian (April 23, 2016). "Blackhawks rally past Blues to win Game 6". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Korac, Louie (April 25, 2016). "Blues defeat Blackhawks in Game 7". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ↑ Mastracco, Abbey (April 16, 2016). "Forsberg lifts Predators to Game 1 win". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 24, 2016.
- ↑ Mastracco, Abbey (April 17, 2016). "Predators top Ducks, take first-ever 2-0 series lead". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ↑ Stanley, Robby (April 19, 2016). "Andersen, Ducks blank Predators in Game 3". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ↑ Stanley, Robby (April 21, 2016). "Andersen, Ducks even series against Predators". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ↑ Mastracco, Abbey (April 23, 2016). "Ducks grab series lead with Game 5 victory". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ↑ Stanley, Robby (April 25, 2016). "Rinne, Predators defeat Ducks to stay alive". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
- ↑ Mastracco, Abbey (April 27, 2016). "Predators hand Ducks fourth straight Game 7 loss". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
- ↑ Zupke, Curtis (April 14, 2016). "Pavelski powers Sharks past Kings in Game 1". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ↑ Mastracco, Abbey (April 16, 2016). "Sharks edge Kings, head home with 2-0 series lead". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ↑ Gilmore, Eric (April 19, 2016). "Pearson, Kings win in OT, avoid 3-0 hole". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ↑ Gilmore, Eric (April 21, 2016). "Sharks power past Kings in Game 4". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ↑ Mastracco, Abbey (April 22, 2016). "Sharks eliminate Kings with Game 5 victory". NHL.com. NHL Enterprise, L.P. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
- ↑ Stanley, Robby (May 6, 2016). "Predators win Game 4 in third overtime". NHL.com. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
- ↑ "NBC Sports Group to present every Stanley Cup playoff game for fifth consecutive year" (Press release). Stamford, Connecticut: NBC Sports. April 6, 2016. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
- ↑ Shoalts, David (October 10, 2014). "Hockey Night in Canada: How CBC lost it all". The Globe and Mail (Toronto: The Woodbridge Company). Retrieved April 10, 2016.
- ↑ Sagan, Aleksandra (February 24, 2016). "Canadian NHL playoff drought could be ‘massive hit’ to Rogers". Toronto Star (Toronto: Star Media Group). The Canadian Press. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
- ↑ Nugent-Bowman, Daniel (March 11, 2016). "The Seven: A season of infamy for Canada's NHL teams". sports.yahoo.com. Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
- ↑ Bonesteel, Matt (March 2, 2016). "Great White Nope: Canadian teams likely will be shut out of NHL playoffs". The Washington Post (Nash Holdings, LLC.). Retrieved March 2, 2016.
- ↑ Brioux, Bill (April 12, 2016). "Rogers feeling the sting of all seven Canadian teams missing NHL playoffs". The Province (Vancouver: Postmedia Network). The Canadian Press. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
- ↑ Shoalts, David (April 18, 2016). "Canadian viewers have an ironic aversion to Rogers hockey broadcasts". The Globe and Mail (The Woodbridge Company). Retrieved April 18, 2016.
Preceded by 2015 Stanley Cup playoffs |
Stanley Cup playoffs 2016 |
Succeeded by 2017 Stanley Cup playoffs |
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