Medicine Hat News

Format woes hit NHL playoffs

- STEPHEN WHYNO

Two of the top four teams in the NHL are guaranteed to be out the playoffs after the second round.

Goodbye Nashville or Winnipeg. Goodbye Boston or Tampa Bay. Thanks for playing.

That’s the reality under the divisional playoff format that could pit the top two teams in the Eastern and Western Conference­s against each other in round 2 after Pittsburgh and Washington were forced into that predicamen­t in back-toback playoffs.

“There’s not a whole lot of logic there,” Capitals defenceman Brooks Orpik said.

How’s this for logic? If ranking teams 1 through 8 in each conference like the old format that was in place from 1993-94 through 2013, the No. 2 seed is facing the No. 4 seed, 3 versus 7, and 5 versus 6 in the first round in the East and the West this year.

A Penguins-Capitals style repeat could happen this year with the Central’s Predators and Jets on a crash course for a second-round showdown and the Boston Bruins and Tampa Bay Lightning locked into a stacked Atlantic bracket with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

“You’d think that’d almost be a thirdround series kind of thing, but so be it,” Predators defenceman Ryan Ellis said. “It is what it is. You’re going to have to see a team like that eventually. There’s not much you can do to change it.”

Maybe this spring will be enough to spark a change in the oft-criticized format in its fifth season that is agreed to between the league and NHL Players’ Associatio­n through the 2019-20 season. The Capitals getting knocked out in the second round by the eventual Stanley Cup-champion Penguins didn’t lead to much debate.

“I would assume after his year there’d be a bigger appetite to do it,” Washington general manager Brian MacLellan said. “In the past it hasn’t affected as many teams as might be required to get that movement. It’s basically been us that’s been the team that’s not benefited from the 1 through 8. But we’ll see what happens this year with a couple more really good teams being beat out in the second round.”

Deputy Commission­er Bill Daly said the playoff format is not a burning issue for owners, wasn’t discussed by GMs and should be looked at over a long period of time instead of focusing on “anomalies.”

“It’s worked I think for the most part as we anticipate­d it would work,” Daly said. “I do believe in terms of the matchups in the first two rounds of the playoffs, they’re better with this format. They’re just more intense and more familiar with this format than they were in the old format.”

Reigniting and creating new rivalries was the goal of this playoff format, which mimics the one in place for most of the ‘80s and early ‘90s. Inequities have happened, but so has plenty of drama on Cup runs by the Los Angeles Kings, Chicago Blackhawks and the Penguins twice.

 ?? AP PHOTO / GENE J. PUSKA ?? Pittsburgh Penguins' Patric Hornqvist (72) digs the puck out of the corner with Washington Capitals' John Carlson (74) defending during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Sunday.
AP PHOTO / GENE J. PUSKA Pittsburgh Penguins' Patric Hornqvist (72) digs the puck out of the corner with Washington Capitals' John Carlson (74) defending during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Sunday.

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