Vancouver Sun

The process must be part of the fun

NHL's priority on parity makes winning championsh­ips incredibly elusive task

- GEOFF BAKER

Watching the just-completed opening round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs underscore­d yet again how difficult it is to win a championsh­ip.

Or, at least, to plan on winning one. There's a difference. And one that Seattle Kraken fans should take note of.

We saw five opening-round series go to Game 7, the second -most in National Hockey League history. Among survivors, we've got the treat not only of a Battle of Florida between the two-time defending champion Tampa Bay Lightning and Florida Panthers but also the first post-season Battle of Alberta since 1991 between the Calgary Flames and Edmonton Oilers.

The remaining series will see Colorado play St. Louis and Carolina face the New York Rangers.

If you can pick a cup favourite, you're better at this than me. Florida, Colorado and Carolina finished 1-2-3 in the standings, and none has proved all that capable of escaping the second round of late. The Panthers made it beyond Round 1 for the first time since 1996.

As for Tampa Bay, the team that beat the Maple Leafs 2-1 in Game 7 in Toronto looked gassed and nothing like the champions of the previous two seasons.

That brings us back to today's topic: The difficulty of capturing championsh­ips in a salary-cap league designed to prevent repeat winners and promote parity.

And that reality bumps up against the oft-expressed desire of teams and fan bases hoping to build lasting success through the slow but steady constructi­on of a championsh­ip-level core. After all, if championsh­ips are elusive by design, then can lasting success truly be defined by winning titles?

Part of me wonders whether sustained success is being improperly defined by attaching the “championsh­ip” dimension. Sure, the ultimate goal of every player and fan is winning it all. But the critical question is whether pro sports teams — given the quest for parity by modern leagues — are actually capable of successful­ly planning to regularly win championsh­ips.

A curious narrative I saw pushed by some at season's end was how the Vegas Golden Knights missing the post-season for the first time was somehow a victory for the Kraken way of doing things. To wit: The Golden Knights pushed salary-cap limits in making one cup final, a second conference final and four post-seasons in their first four years in the league.

That strategy has caught up to them. The NHL disallowed a cap-preserving March trade of forward Evgenii Dadonov, preventing Vegas from adding reinforcem­ents and causing them to miss the playoffs by three points.

The narrative regarding the league's two most recent expansion teams seems to be that the Kraken's slower way of building could prove superior to what the Golden Knights just accomplish­ed. “Get back to us four years from now, and we'll see which way was better” is the prevailing sentiment among some.

Well, um. OK, I guess we'll see. Honestly, aside from winning a championsh­ip by Year 5, I don't see how the Kraken prevail over Vegas in a battle of five-year expansion plans. Just to match the Golden Knights, they'd have to make the playoffs the next four seasons, win three rounds in one of those years and two in another.

I'd argue that the Golden Knights merely reaching the playoffs four times in four years might soon become how “sustained success” is defined in this league.

Sure, it's possible a future Kraken playoff team will be of championsh­ip calibre and maybe even win a cup. But it's just as possible, given modern NHL design, that they end up like the Maple Leafs and get repeatedly bounced from the opening round.

The lesson here? Don't dump on Vegas for making the present count. It's possible to do both: Make the interim years interestin­g while building toward an elusive championsh­ip that may never happen.

The Golden Knights, as mentioned, already made the cup final once. That's as many appearance­s as the San Jose Sharks have in a highly successful first 30 years of their existence.

Even Toronto's ordinarily angst-ridden fan base seems to be concluding that the playoffs are a crapshoot. There has been surprising pushback in recent days from Leafs Nation against dismantlin­g its team's player core, front office or coaching staff despite a sixth consecutiv­e early exit.

So if the Maple Leafs can plan and plan and still not reach a cup final for 55 years while in the previous season the Montreal Canadiens can just stumble into one, sacrificin­g half-decades to build a championsh­ip level core seems somewhat misguided. If the realistic goal is now merely making the playoffs and then rolling the dice, well, it shouldn't take four, five or seven losing seasons to build a team capable of that.

 ?? STEPH CHAMBERS/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Vegas Golden Knights players celebrate a goal this season against the Seattle Kraken. The NHL's two most recent expansion teams have taken different approaches, but columnist Geoff Baker says not to dump on the Knights for making the present count.
STEPH CHAMBERS/GETTY IMAGES FILES Vegas Golden Knights players celebrate a goal this season against the Seattle Kraken. The NHL's two most recent expansion teams have taken different approaches, but columnist Geoff Baker says not to dump on the Knights for making the present count.

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