CALGARY FLAMES
UNRELENTING OFFENSIVE DEPTH -- It is almost
impossible to neutralize these Flames. They have three players among the top 30
goal-scorers in the NHL this season; forwards Johnny
Gaudreau (36 goals), Sean Monahan (34)
and Matthew Tkachuk (34).
Forward Elias
Lindholm scored 27, forward Mikael
Backlund had 21 and defenseman Mark Giordano finished
with 17. Calgary scored at least six goals 15 times, including seven games
against playoff-bound teams.
COLORADO AVALANCHE
THEY HAVE A ROAD MAP TO THE CHAMPIONSHIP -- The
2012 Los Angeles Kings navigated from the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference
to a Stanley Cup championship. The 2006 Edmonton Oilers, also a No. 8 seed in
the West, reached Game 7 of the Cup Final before losing to the Carolina
Hurricanes. In this season's final month, the Avalanche went 9-4-2 to earn the
second wild card in the West, suggesting they have found a form that could get
them through four rounds of the playoffs.
DALLAS STARS
BEN BISHOP --
He is the goalie who has the best chance to steal headlines and games this
postseason. Since Feb. 1, Bishop is 10-3-0 and leads the NHL with a .959 save
percentage and 1.24 goals-against average. He also had four shutouts in his
final 14 appearances. He finished the season 27-15-2 with a .934 save
percentage, the best of any goalie to play at least half of his team's games
and .013 better than his NHL career average, a 1.98 GAA and seven shutouts.
NASHVILLE
PREDATORS
DEFENSE WINS CHAMPIONSHIPS -- This is so in
every sport and will be so this year in the playoffs. Nobody has a better
defense, top to bottom, than the Predators. P.K. Subban was a
finalist for the Norris Trophy as the best defenseman in the NHL last year, and
he won the won the award in 2013. On the Predators, Subban is fourth in ice
time among defenseman behind Roman Josi, Ryan Ellis and Mattias
Ekholm. None of the four are new to this playoff thing. Josi has
played in 65 postseason games, Ellis 58 and Ekholm 55. Subban is the newbie at
35 with the Predators but has 90 NHL postseason appearances.
ST. LOUIS BLUES
THEY'VE FORGOTTEN THE PAST -- The Blues were
awful for much of the first three months of the season. But as bad as they were
then, they are that good now. Since Jan. 1, the Blues had the most points in
the NHL (65), one more than the Presidents' Trophy-winning Tampa Bay Lightning
and allowed the third-fewest goals against (98). Goalie Jordan
Binnington had an NHL-best .817 winning percentage (24-5-1)
since Jan. 1 and his 1.83 goals-against average during that span was second to
Bishop (1.61). Simply, they were the West's best team since the New Year.
SAN JOSE SHARKS
JOE THORNTON --
The 39-year-old forward has played 1,566 NHL games in a career that started
with the Boston Bruins in 1997-98. He's done virtually all there is to do on
the ice and has overcome injuries that would spell the end for many players.
The one thing he hasn't done is win the Stanley Cup. Eleven players in NHL
history have played more regular-season games than Thornton, but Toronto Maple
Leafs forward Patrick
Marleau, a longtime teammate of Thornton, is the only other one who
hasn't won the Stanley Cup.
VEGAS GOLDEN
KNIGHTS
THEY LEARNED THEIR LESSONS WELL -- Virtually
every Stanley Cup champion has experienced heartbreak first. The Washington
Capitals lost in the second round for three straight seasons before winning it
all by defeating the Golden Knights last year. This Pittsburgh Penguins core
lost in the 2008 Cup Final before winning the next season. The Edmonton Oilers
were swept by the New York Islanders in the 1983 Final before winning four of
the next five Stanley Cup titles. Can the Golden Knights follow the same
formula after a five-game loss in the 2018 Final? Why not?
WINNIPEG JETS
THEY ARE BUILT FOR THE POSTSEASON -- It has been
a slow and steady roster build, but the Jets' trip to the Western Conference
Final last season showed they are ready for the biggest stage. They have an
elite goalie in Connor
Hellebuyck, a physically intimidating defenseman in Dustin
Byfuglien, a world-class playmaker in forward Blake Wheeler and
a pure scorer in forward Patrik Laine. The Jets
have speed and size throughout their lineup, and they may have the best
home-ice advantage of any team in the playoffs. That's not a bad combo.
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