LIGHTNING CHASING
HISTORY
The Stanley Cup Playoffs begin one month from today, and
aside from the Tampa Bay Lightning clinching a berth in the postseason, nothing
has been decided. First place in three of the four divisions and the top spot
in the Western Conference are up for grabs as are the wild cards in each
conference. There will be plenty of intrigue throughout the League in the final
four weeks of the regular season.
Here are 12 storylines to watch in the countdown to the
Stanley Cup Playoffs:
PENGUINS LOOKING
FOR LUCKY 13
Pittsburgh is trying to reach the Stanley Cup Playoffs for
the 13th straight season but have plenty of work to do to get there. The
Penguins (37-23-9) hold the first wild card into the playoffs from the Eastern
Conference and have a four-point lead over the Blue Jackets and Canadiens.
BLUE JACKETS ALL
IN OR ALL OUT
The Columbus Blue Jackets went all in before the NHL Trade
Deadline, acquiring forwards Matt Duchene and Ryan Dzingel in
separate trades from the Ottawa Senators, while also holding on to
forward Artemi
Panarin and goalie Sergei
Bobrovsky. All four can become unrestricted free agents on July 1,
so the pressure is on for Columbus, which has never won a postseason series, to
make a deep playoff run. But getting to the playoffs is not a guarantee.
Columbus (38-28-3) is 3-5-0 since the deadline and holds the second wild card
into the playoffs from the Eastern Conference, tied in points with the Montreal
Canadiens (79). Duchene has four points (goal, three assists) in 10 games with
Columbus and Dzingel has three points, all assists, in eight games.
LIGHTNING CHASING
HISTORY
The Tampa Bay Lightning (53-13-4) have a 17-point lead over
the Boston Bruins for first place in the Eastern Conference and Atlantic
Division. They need nine wins in their final 12 games to tie the 1995-96
Detroit Red Wings for most victories (62) in one season. Forward Nikita
Kucherov, who has 111 points (33 goals, 78 assists) through 70
games, has a chance to do something done only once before in NHL history. He
could finish with 130 points on a team that finishes with 130 points. Hall of
Famer Guy Lafleur had 136 points on the 1976-77 Canadiens. The 1995-96 Red
Wings (131) are the only other team that finished with at least 130 points, but
Sergei Fedorov was their leader with 107 points.
BRUINS' TORRID
PACE
The Boston Bruins likely will not catch the Lightning for
first in the conference and division, but they have plenty to play for over the
next four weeks. Boston, which had a 19-game point streak (15-0-4) end with a
4-2 loss at the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday, leads the Toronto Maple Leafs by
four points for second place in the division. With the Bruins (42-18-9) and
Maple Leafs likely to face off in the Eastern Conference First Round for the
second straight season, the second-place team would get home ice. Boston won
Game 7 at home last season.
BINNINGTON'S
BREAKOUT SEASON
Jordan
Binnington is a big reason
why the St. Louis Blues (36-25-7) went from last place in the
Western Conference on Jan. 2 to third in the Central Division. The 25-year-old
rookie goalie is 16-3-1 with a 1.80 goals-against average and .929 save
percentage since his first start on Jan. 7, but a playoff push is unchartered
territory for Binnington, whose only other NHL start before this season came in
January 2016. Is he ready for the pressure that comes with the postseason? If
the calm he's displayed during the regular season continues, the Blues will be
in good hands.
ISLANDERS' RUN IN
METROPOLITAN DIVISION
There was a lot of uncertainty surrounding the New York
Islanders at the start of the season. Barry Trotz was named coach on June 21
and their longtime captain John Tavares signed
with the Toronto Maple Leafs as an unrestricted free agent on July 1. But the
Islanders (40-22-7) have been perhaps the biggest surprise in the NHL this
season. They are two points behind the defending Stanley Cup champion
Washington Capitals for first place in the Metropolitan. The Islanders and
Capitals play at Capital One Arena on April 6, the final day of the regular
season.
COYOTES MAKE
PLAYOFF PUSH
When you consider the Arizona Coyotes have 330 man games
lost to injury this season, it's impressive they are very much in the hunt for
a wild card in the West. The Coyotes (34-30-5) have won eight of their past 10
and are one point behind the Minnesota Wild for the second wild card in the
West. If the Coyotes can pull it off, it would be their first postseason appearance
since 2012, when they advanced to the Western Conference Final.
FLAMES GOALIE
SITUATION
The Calgary Flames have used Mike Smith and David Rittich on
an equal basis this season. Smith is 19-13-2 with 2.90 goals-against average
and .896 save percentage in 35 games; Rittich is 23-7-5 with a 2.65 GAA and
.911 save percentage in 39 games. It's worked well, with Calgary (42-20-7) one point
behind the San Jose Sharks for first place in the Western Conference and
Pacific Division. It will be interesting to see how Coach Bill Peters plays
this. Does he stay with the even split over the final 13 games of the regular
season or does Smith, who has played in 19 Stanley Cup Playoff games, or
Rittich, who has no postseason experience, get the bulk of the starts?
STARS PEAKING AT
RIGHT TIME
It's been an up and down season for the Dallas Stars. From
forwards Jamie Benn and Tyler Seguin being
called out by team president Jim Lites on Dec. 29, to newly acquired
forward Mats
Zuccarello breaking his arm a day after he was traded by the
New York Rangers, there has been plenty of drama in Dallas. But the Stars
(35-28-5), who had a four-game winning streak end on Saturday in a 2-1 loss to
the Chicago Blackhawks, hold the first wild card in the West and are four
points behind the third-place Blues in the Central Division.
HURRICANES' STORM
SURGE
The Carolina Hurricanes are in third place in the
Metropolitan Division, but if they're going to clinch a playoff berth for the
first time in 10 seasons, they'll have to finish strong. The Hurricanes
(38-24-7) play four teams that are currently in the playoffs over the final
month of the season: the Penguins (March 19), Lightning (March 21), Wild (March
23), and Capitals (March 26, 28). The postgame celebrations have been fun.
Imagine if they reach the playoffs.
AVALANCHE CHANCES
WITHOUT LANDESKOG
The Colorado Avalanche made a surprise run to the playoffs
last season, defeating the St. Louis Blues on the final day of the regular season
to get in. But they are struggling to get back this season and now will have to
do it without Captain Gabriel
Landeskog, who is out 4-6 weeks because
of an upper-body injury. The Avalanche (30-28-12), who were tied with the
Nashville Predators for first place in the Central Division on Dec. 10, are
13-20-7 since then and are two points behind the Wild for the second wild card
in the West.
CANADIENS' POWER
FAILURE
The Montreal Canadiens are tied in points with the Blue
Jackets (79). If they're going to finish strong, the Canadiens (36-26-7) need
to get their power play going. When Montreal scored a power-play goal in an 8-2
loss to the Anaheim Ducks on Friday, it was their first power-play goal since
Feb. 23. Of their remaining 13 games, six are on the road, and five are against
teams currently in postseason position (Islanders, Thursday; Hurricanes, March
24; Blue Jackets, March 28; Winnipeg Jets, March 30; Capitals, April 4).
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