New York Post

PLAYOFF PREVIEW

- BY LARRY BROOKS

MONTREAL — The league that promotes its hard cap as the mechanism that enforces unparallel­ed parity is also the one that has produced the fewest number of champions over the past eight seasons.

That’s right, while four franchises have won the Stanley Cup over the past eight years, with Chicago a three-time winner, Pittsburgh and Los Angeles twotime winners and Boston having snuck in there once, the NFL has produced seven Super Bowl champions, with only New England a two-timer; the NBA over the same span has produced six titlists, the Lakers and Miami each winning twice; and no-cap baseball has produced six World Series winners, with only the three-time champ Giants coming out on top more than once.

Though Connor McDavid and Auston Matthews have crashed the party for the first time and should maintain the overarchin­g profile they earned as teammates in the World Cup, this shapes up as a tournament of, by and for chalk, even if it is important for the league to have its five Canadian participan­ts and important for Edmonton and Toronto to be in the mix.

It is a year of change in qualifiers — seven new ones — but if you were a betting man and were given the choice of Washington-Pittsburgh-Chicago or the field to emerge with the Stanley Cup, which way would you go?

THE FAVORITES

Listen, if the CAPITALS are unable to get out of the second round this time, if they are unable to get out of the East this time, if they aren’t going to win to the Cup for the first time in their 45-year history, then when, if ever? If Alex Ovechkin, who never seems to be on a team that wins a championsh­ip, isn’t hoisting the chalice in June, then exactly when and how will it happen? The Washington management­s responsibl­e for building this team have methodical­ly constructe­d a deep, versatile club filled with myriad weapons that go 12 deep up front and six deep on the back end. They can outskate you and they can pound you. They make you pay on the power play. And Braden Holtby is as good as there’s been over the last two seasons. The question is whether the goaltender can consistent­ly hit the high notes in the playoffs. If not now, when, and that applies to all of them?

If it is possible for a team with the résumé of the BLACK

HAWKS to surprise, then that is what they did this season, surging to the top of the West with a largely unknown supporting cast following yet another cap-induced remodeling job. While McDavid, Matthews, Sidney Crosby and perhaps Patrik Laine were stealing the 2016-17 spotlight, Patrick Kane remained high on the marquee. Artemi Panarin and Artem Anisimov are the top-end support guys behind Kane, Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa while Duncan Keith fronts a defense that’s always significan­tly more than the sum of its parts.

THE CONTENDERS

The defending Cup champion PENGUINS, who a month ago seemed in perfect position for a repeat behind Crosby and an abundance of speed and skill, suffered a grievous wound when Kris Letang was ruled out of the playoffs because of a neck injury. The last couple of weeks weren’t especially good, but it would be a mistake to overlook the BLUE JACKETS and goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky, at least through the first two rounds. Yes, we know this is the new John Tortorella, but will the coach be able to resist slashing his bench to a debilitati­ng for the long-run 10 forwards and five defensemen, as has been his MO through his playoff career? How many last rides will this make for the SHARKS, Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau, each of whom are pending free agents? And similarly, how many for the DUCKS and the Ryan Getzlaf-Corey Perry partnershi­p that’s been buttressed by Ryan Kesler and a cast of a hundred defensemen?

 ??  ?? Patrick Kane
Patrick Kane
 ??  ?? Alex Ovechkin
Alex Ovechkin
 ??  ?? Getty Images Sidney Crosby
Getty Images Sidney Crosby
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