Houston Chronicle

FLAWED SYSTEM?

League’s playoff format has critics among players.

- By Stephen Whyno

In a cruel twist of the NHL’s divisional playoff format, say goodbye to one of the three best teams in the league in the first round.

“I don’t think it was designed for this,” Columbus Blue Jackets general manager Jarmo Kekalainen said. “I don’t think it was intended for this to happen.”

The Washington Capitals, Pittsburgh Penguins and Blue Jackets could finish 1-2-3 in points, but because they all play in the Metropolit­an Division, the secondand third-place teams will face off in the first round. It’s not the first time a loaded division has caused consternat­ion about this playoff format — ask teams in the Central Division — but the groans are getting louder now with no end in sight.

“It’s stupid. It’s the stupidest thing ever,” forward Daniel Winnik of the league-leading Capitals said. “It doesn’t work. It doesn’t make sense.”

The NHL adopted this format four years ago where the top three teams make it in each division and two wild cards from each conference, a throwback to 1981-82 to 1992-93 when the playoffs included four teams from each division needing to go through each other to advance. From 1993-94 through 2013, the Eastern and Western Conference­s teams were ranked 1-8 and re-seeded each round to reward regular-season success.

The purpose of the change was to put more emphasis on intradivis­ion rivalries, and it has — like the Capitals and Penguins meeting in the second round last spring. But that series and others also generate criticism and questions, including: Why should the Presidents’ Trophy winners face the team with the second-most points in the East before the conference final?

“It’s something that’s so weird now with the playoff format, where you’ve got to play one of the best teams in the league in the first round,” Penguins goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury said. “But if you’re going to win in the end, you still need to play the best teams whether you face them in the first round or the third or fourth round. You’ve still got to beat them. There’s no easy way to win the Cup.”

Capitals winger T.J. Oshie feels the same way, but actually some paths to the Cup are easier than others. Consider that the Metropolit­an fourth-place New York Rangers will likely have more points than every team in the At- lantic Division and have an easier road to the East final because they would avoid the Capitals, Penguins and Blue Jackets.

“It’s not a good system when your one wild-card team can cross over and they have kind of, if they perform, a clear path to get to the final,” Washington GM Brian MacLellan said. “I think the incentive should be the higher team gets the easier path.”

While the Rangers could end up facing Atlantic Division foes with fewer points, the Capitals, Penguins and Blue Jackets will beat each other up on the other side of the bracket.

Capitals coach Barry Trotz believes “that 2 (versus) 3 matchup could take a pretty big piece out of a team.”

The Penguins took that path last year as the second seed in the Metropolit­an and won the Stanley Cup.

So Pittsburgh GM Jim Rutherford is fine with the format and isn’t even worried about his team winning the division to evade a brutal first-round matchup.

“I don’t think it’s critical,” Rutherford said. “Because you could end up playing another team that you don’t match up as well against or you could play another team that’s healthy and the team you avoided isn’t healthy.”

Columbus, in the playoffs for just the third time in franchise history, will take it no matter the format.

“I don’t think we are in a position to start picking and choosing right now,” Kekalainen said. “We’ll let the teams that have been making it 10 years in a row complain about it.”

T.J. Oshie (77) and the Capitals could face Matt Murray and the Penguins in the first or second round instead of the East final thanks to the current format. Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press

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