2008 Stanley Cup playoffs

Last updated

2008 Stanley Cup playoffs
2008StanleyCupPlayoffs.png
Tournament details
DatesApril 9 –
June 4, 2008
Teams16
Defending champions Anaheim Ducks
Final positions
Champions Detroit Red Wings
Runner-up Pittsburgh Penguins
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s) Henrik Zetterberg (Red Wings) (27 points)
MVP Henrik Zetterberg (Red Wings)
  2007
2009  

The 2008 Stanley Cup playoffs of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 9, 2008, after the 2007–08 regular season. The 16 teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played best-of-seven series for conference quarterfinals, semifinals and championships, then the conference champions played a best-of-seven series for the Stanley Cup.

Contents

The Buffalo Sabres became the second team to miss the playoffs after winning the Presidents' Trophy in the prior season. This would not happen again until 2015.

The Finals ended on June 4, 2008, with the Detroit Red Wings defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins four games to two to win their eleventh championship and their fourth in eleven seasons. Red Wings winger Henrik Zetterberg was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playoffs' Most Valuable Player. Sidney Crosby and Zetterberg led the tournament with 27 points.

Highlights

The San Jose Sharks were the media's favorite to win the Cup going into the playoffs, having gone the entire month of March without a regulation loss and nearly finishing first overall during the regular season.

Milestones

In game one of the Western Conference quarterfinals against the Minnesota Wild, captain Joe Sakic of the Colorado Avalanche extended his record for playoff overtime goals to eight, with a goal 11:11 into overtime. Chris Chelios appeared in his 248th career playoff game surpassing Patrick Roy for most career playoff games of all time.

In game one of the Western Conference semifinals in San Jose, Dallas Stars center Brad Richards tied an NHL record for most points in one period of a playoff game, when he recorded one goal and three assists in the third period.

In the Western Conference semifinals against the Avalanche, Johan Franzen became the first player to score multiple hat tricks in a series since Jari Kurri tallied three in 1985. In the process, he set an NHL record for most goals in a four-game sweep and the Red Wings' record for most goals in a playoff series with nine, beating the previous record of eight set by Gordie Howe in 1949. [1] Franzen achieved this feat in only four games, moreover, while Howe achieved it in seven. [1]

Game six of the Western Conference semifinals between the Sharks and Stars was the eighth-longest game in the history of the NHL, lasting 129:03. Stars captain Brenden Morrow ended the game at 9:03 of the fourth overtime, tapping in a power-play goal. Goaltenders Marty Turco and Evgeni Nabokov set team records for saves in a game with 61 and 53, respectively. The final score was 2–1.

Detroit captain Nicklas Lidstrom became the first European (and Swedish) born and trained player to lead an NHL team to the Stanley Cup. Charlie Gardiner (born in the United Kingdom) and Johnny Gottselig (born in Russia) both won the Stanley Cup as captains of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1934 and 1938 respectively, but they were both raised in Canada.

New interpretation of NHL rule

In game three of their Eastern Conference Quarterfinal series, while on a five-on-three power play, the New York Rangers' Sean Avery tried to screen the New Jersey Devils' goaltender Martin Brodeur by waving his hands and stick while facing Brodeur. This prompted the NHL to issue an interpretation of the league's rules, stating that an unsportsmanlike conduct minor penalty will be called on actions such as the one used by Avery. [2]

Playoff seeds

The Stanley Cup Hhof stanley cup.jpg
The Stanley Cup

Eastern Conference

  1. Montreal Canadiens, Northeast Division champions, Eastern Conference regular season champions – 104 points
  2. Pittsburgh Penguins, Atlantic Division champions – 102 points
  3. Washington Capitals, Southeast Division champions – 94 points
  4. New Jersey Devils – 99 points
  5. New York Rangers – 97 points
  6. Philadelphia Flyers – 95 points
  7. Ottawa Senators – 94 points (43 wins)
  8. Boston Bruins – 94 points (41 wins)

Western Conference

  1. Detroit Red Wings, Central Division champions, Western Conference regular season champions, President's Trophy winners – 115 points
  2. San Jose Sharks, Pacific Division champions – 108 points
  3. Minnesota Wild, Northwest Division champions – 98 points
  4. Anaheim Ducks – 102 points
  5. Dallas Stars – 97 points
  6. Colorado Avalanche – 95 points
  7. Calgary Flames – 94 points
  8. Nashville Predators – 91 points

Playoff bracket

In each round, the highest remaining seed in each conference was matched against the lowest remaining seed. The higher-seeded team is awarded home ice advantage, which gave them a possible maximum of four games on their home ice, with the lower-seeded team getting a possible maximum of three. In the Stanley Cup Finals, home ice is determined based on regular season points. Each best-of-seven series followed a 2–2–1–1–1 format. This meant that the higher-seeded team had home ice for games one and two, and if necessary, five and seven, while the lower-seeded team had home ice for games three, four and, if necessary, six.

Conference quarterfinals Conference semifinals Conference finals Stanley Cup Finals
            
1 Montreal4
8 Boston 3
1 Montreal 1
6 Philadelphia4
2 Pittsburgh4
7 Ottawa 0
6 Philadelphia 1
Eastern Conference
2 Pittsburgh4
3 Washington 3
6 Philadelphia4
2 Pittsburgh4
5 NY Rangers 1
4 New Jersey 1
5 NY Rangers4
E2 Pittsburgh 2
W1 Detroit4
1 Detroit4
8 Nashville 2
1 Detroit4
6 Colorado 0
2 San Jose4
7 Calgary 3
1 Detroit4
Western Conference
5 Dallas 2
3 Minnesota 2
6 Colorado4
2 San Jose 2
5 Dallas4
4 Anaheim 2
5 Dallas4

Conference quarterfinals

Eastern Conference quarterfinals

(1) Montreal Canadiens vs. (8) Boston Bruins

The Montreal Canadiens entered the playoffs as the Eastern Conference regular season and Northeast Division champions with 104 points. Boston qualified as the eighth seed earning 94 points (losing the tie-breaker in total wins with Ottawa) during the regular season. This was the 31st playoff meeting between these two Original Six rivals, with Montreal winning twenty-three of the thirty previous series. They last met in the 2004 Eastern Conference quarterfinals where Montreal won in seven games. Montreal won all eight games during this year's regular season series.

The Canadiens held off Boston winning the series in seven games. Montreal took the lead early in game one and never looked back in a 4–1 victory. The Bruins forced overtime in game two by scoring two third period goals before coming up short in the first overtime as Alexei Kovalev ended the game with a power-play goal at 2:30 for Montreal. Boston forward Marc Savard scored the overtime winner in a 2–1 game three victory; the win ended a 13-game losing streak against Montreal by the Bruins. Patrice Brisebois scored the only goal of game four for the Canadiens and Carey Price made 27 saves for his first career playoff shutout in a 1–0 win. Boston scored five unanswered goals in game five, including four goals in the third period as they extended the series with a 5–1 win. For the second game in a row the Bruins scored four times in the third period as they tied the series with a 5–4 victory. In game seven Montreal rebounded from the lackluster performances of their previous two games and eliminated Boston with a 5–0 win.

April 10Boston Bruins1–4Montreal Canadiens Bell Centre Recap  
Shane Hnidy (1) – 08:34First period00:34 – Sergei Kostitsyn (1)
02:02 – Andrei Kostitsyn (1)
No scoringSecond period05:16 – Bryan Smolinski (1)
No scoringThird period07:24 – Tom Kostopoulos (1)
Tim Thomas 28 saves / 32 shotsGoalie stats Carey Price 17 saves / 18 shots
April 12Boston Bruins2–3OTMontreal Canadiens Bell Centre Recap  
No scoringFirst period18:30 – Roman Hamrlik (1)
No scoringSecond period01:50 – Sergei Kostitsyn (2)
Peter Schaefer (1) – 03:58
David Krejci (1) – pp – 09:34
Third periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period02:30 – ppAlexei Kovalev (1)
Tim Thomas 28 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Carey Price 37 saves / 39 shots
April 13Montreal Canadiens1–2OTBoston Bruins TD Banknorth Garden Recap  
No scoringFirst period06:30 – Milan Lucic (1)
Tom Kostopoulos (2) – 04:26Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period09:25 – Marc Savard (1)
Carey Price 29 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Tim Thomas 27 saves / 28 shots
April 15Montreal Canadiens1–0Boston Bruins TD Banknorth Garden Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Patrice Brisebois (1) – pp – 19:18Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Carey Price 27 saves / 27 shotsGoalie stats Tim Thomas 27 saves / 28 shots
April 17Boston Bruins5–1Montreal Canadiens Bell Centre Recap  
No scoringFirst period09:47 – Alexei Kovalev (2)
Phil Kessel (1) – pp – 07:45Second periodNo scoring
Glen Metropolit (1) – 03:31
Zdeno Chara (1) – pp – 05:49
Marco Sturm (1) – sh – 15:13
Vladimir Sobotka (1) – 17:48
Third periodNo scoring
Tim Thomas 31 saves / 32 shotsGoalie stats Carey Price 19 saves / 24 shots
April 19Montreal Canadiens4–5Boston Bruins TD Banknorth Garden Recap  
Chris Higgins (1) – 09:44First periodNo scoring
Tomas Plekanec (1) – 07:43Second period01:54 – Phil Kessel (2)
Francis Bouillon (1) – 10:04
Chris Higgins (2) – 15:56
Third period03:13 – Vladimir Sobotka (3)
12:13 – Milan Lucic (2)
15:45 – Phil Kessel (3)
17:23 – Marco Sturm (2)
Carey Price 31 saves / 36 shotsGoalie stats Tim Thomas 31 saves / 35 shots
April 21Boston Bruins0–5Montreal Canadiens Bell Centre Recap  
No scoringFirst period03:31 – Mike Komisarek (1)
No scoringSecond period10:45 – Mark Streit (1)
15:13 – Andrei Kostitsyn (2)
No scoringThird period17:58 – pp – Andrei Kostitsyn (3)
19:52 – Sergei Kostitsyn (3)
Tim Thomas 30 saves / 35 shotsGoalie stats Carey Price 25 saves / 25 shots
Montreal won series 4–3

(2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (7) Ottawa Senators

The Pittsburgh Penguins entered the playoffs as the Atlantic Division champions, earning the second seed in the Eastern Conference with 102 points. Ottawa qualified as the seventh seed earning 94 points (winning the tie-breaker in total wins with Boston) during the regular season. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with Ottawa winning the only previous series. They last met in the previous year's Eastern Conference quarterfinals where Ottawa won in five games. Ottawa won three of the four games during this year's regular season series.

The Penguins swept the Senators in four games. Marc-Andre Fleury made 26 saves and Gary Roberts scored twice as the Penguins won game one by a score of 4–0. Penguins forward Ryan Malone put Pittsburgh ahead again in game two after they blew a three-goal lead earlier in the game with a power-play goal at 18:58 of the third period; the Penguins held on for a 5–3 victory. Sidney Crosby's goal in the opening seconds of the third period of game three broke a 1–1 tie as Pittsburgh eventually won 4–1. Pittsburgh completed the series sweep in game four with a 3–1 win.

April 9Ottawa Senators0–4Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period01:08 – Gary Roberts (1)
12:28 – Petr Sykora (1)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period13:58 – Evgeni Malkin (1)
18:25 – pp – Gary Roberts (2)
Martin Gerber 31 saves / 35 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 26 saves / 26 shots
April 11Ottawa Senators3–5Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period16:10 – ppSergei Gonchar (1)
Shean Donovan (1) – 11:25
Cory Stillman (1) – pp – 16:11
Second period05:22 – ppPetr Sykora (2)
10:52 – Petr Sykora (3)
Cody Bass (1) – 08:51Third period18:58 – ppRyan Malone (1)
19:53 – en – Ryan Malone (2)
Martin Gerber 49 saves / 53 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 27 saves / 30 shots
April 14Pittsburgh Penguins4–1Ottawa Senators Scotiabank Place Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Max Talbot (1) – 05:39Second period01:11 – Nick Foligno (1)
Sidney Crosby (1) – 00:12
Jordan Staal (1) – 01:30
Marian Hossa (1) – pp – 08:55
Third periodNo scoring
Marc-Andre Fleury 33 saves / 34 shotsGoalie stats Martin Gerber 34 saves / 38 shots
April 16Pittsburgh Penguins3–1Ottawa Senators Scotiabank Place Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Evgeni Malkin (2) – pp – 01:40
Jarkko Ruutu (1) – 15:28
Second period10:31 – Cory Stillman (2)
Sidney Crosby (2) – en – 19:52Third periodNo scoring
Marc-Andre Fleury 21 saves / 22 shotsGoalie stats Martin Gerber 31 saves / 33 shots
Pittsburgh won series 4–0

(3) Washington Capitals vs. (6) Philadelphia Flyers

The Washington Capitals entered the playoffs as the Southeast Division champions, earning the third seed in the Eastern Conference with 94 points. Philadelphia qualified as the sixth seed earning 95 points during the regular season. This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Washington winning the two of the three previous series. They last met in the 1989 Patrick Division semifinals where Philadelphia won in six games. Philadelphia won this year's four-game regular season series earning five of eight points.

The Flyers held off the Capitals in a seven-game series. Washington scored three times in the third period of game one as they overcame a two-goal deficit before Alexander Ovechkin scored the game-winner for the Capitals with just over four and a half minutes remaining in regulation time. Martin Biron made 24 saves as the Flyers won game two 2–0. The Flyers broke game three open with two goals just 17 seconds apart in the first period as they went on to win by a final score of 6–3. Philadelphia forward Mike Knuble ended game four at 6:40 of the second overtime period as the Flyers took a 3–1 series lead. Sergei Fedorov and Mike Green each recorded two points for Washington as they extended the series with a 3–2 victory. The Flyers took a two-goal lead early in the second period of game six before the Capitals responded with four unanswered goals to force a seventh and deciding game. Flyers goaltender Martin Biron made 39 saves in game seven and Joffrey Lupul scored a power-play goal in the first overtime as the Flyers advanced to the conference semifinals.

April 11Philadelphia Flyers4–5Washington Capitals Verizon Center Recap  
Vaclav Prospal (1) – 08:17First period03:16 – Donald Brashear (1)
Daniel Briere (1) – 11:46
Vaclav Prospal (2) – 12:19
Daniel Briere (2) – pp – 15:22
Second period04:08 – Dave Steckel (1)
No scoringThird period01:50 – Mike Green (1)
06:26 – pp – Mike Green (2)
15:28 – Alexander Ovechkin (1)
Martin Biron 22 saves / 27 shotsGoalie stats Cristobal Huet 18 saves / 22 shots
April 13Philadelphia Flyers2–0Washington Capitals Verizon Center Recap  
R. J. Umberger (1) – 05:53
Jeff Carter (1) – 15:17
First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Martin Biron 24 saves / 24 shotsGoalie stats Cristobal Huet 39 saves / 41 shots
April 15Washington Capitals3–6Philadelphia Flyers Wachovia Center Recap  
Eric Fehr (1) – 17:21First period16:10 – Daniel Briere (3)
18:26 – Scott Hartnell (1)
18:43 – Sami Kapanen (1)
Mike Green (3) – pp – 07:28Second period19:50 – pp – Daniel Briere (4)
Brooks Laich (1) – 15:26Third period17:01 – psMike Richards (1)
18:55 – enMike Knuble (1)
Cristobal Huet 27 saves / 32 shotsGoalie stats Martin Biron 16 saves / 19 shots
April 17Washington Capitals3–42OTPhiladelphia Flyers Wachovia Center Recap  
Nicklas Backstrom (1) – pp – 02:41
Alexander Semin (1) – pp – 12:59
First period00:42 – Jeff Carter (2)
18:33 – Jeff Carter (3)
Steve Eminger (1) – 05:56Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period10:01 – ppDaniel Briere (5)
No scoringSecond overtime period06:40 – Mike Knuble (2)
Cristobal Huet 42 saves / 46 shotsGoalie stats Martin Biron 38 saves / 41 shots
April 19Philadelphia Flyers2–3Washington Capitals Verizon Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period07:31 – ppNicklas Backstrom (2)
Vaclav Prospal (3) – pp – 12:35Second period01:25 – Sergei Fedorov (1)
Derian Hatcher (1) – 15:17Third period14:33 – ppAlexander Semin (2)
Martin Biron 23 saves / 26 shotsGoalie stats Cristobal Huet 30 saves / 32 shots
April 21Washington Capitals4–2Philadelphia Flyers Wachovia Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period03:49 – ppMike Richards (2)
Nicklas Backstrom (3) – 09:34
Alexander Semin (3) – 18:03
Second period01:18 – ppDaniel Briere (6)
Alexander Ovechkin (2) – 02:46
Alexander Ovechkin (3) – pp – 10:41
Third periodNo scoring
Cristobal Huet 33 saves / 35 shotsGoalie stats Martin Biron 36 saves / 40 shots
April 22Philadelphia Flyers3–2OTWashington Capitals Verizon Center Recap  
Scottie Upshall (1) – pp – 15:38First period05:42 – ppNicklas Backstrom (4)
Sami Kapanen (2) – 09:47Second period15:29 – Alexander Ovechkin (4)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Joffrey Lupul (1) – pp – 06:06First overtime periodNo scoring
Martin Biron 39 saves / 41 shotsGoalie stats Cristobal Huet 31 saves / 34 shots
Philadelphia won series 4–3

(4) New Jersey Devils vs. (5) New York Rangers

The New Jersey Devils entered the playoffs as the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference with 99 points. New York qualified as the fifth seed earning 97 points during the regular season. This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Rangers winning three of the four previous series. They last met in the 2006 Eastern Conference quarterfinals where New Jersey won in four games. New York won seven of the eight games during this year's regular season series.

The Rangers defeated the Devils in five games. Scott Gomez had three assists in game one as the Rangers won 4–1. New York scored twice in 23 seconds to break a scoreless tie in the third period of game two and Henrik Lundqvist allowed one goal against for the second consecutive game as the Rangers took a 2–0 series lead. During the second period of game three while on a two-man advantage, the Rangers' Sean Avery tried to screen New Jersey goaltender Martin Brodeur by waving his hands and stick while facing Brodeur. Devils forward John Madden ended the game at 6:01 of the first overtime in a 4–3 New Jersey victory. After the game the NHL issued an interpretation of the League's rules, stating that an unsportsmanlike conduct minor penalty would be called on actions such as the one used by Avery. [2] Marc Staal broke a 3–3 tie for the Rangers late in third period of game four as New York took a 3–1 series lead. Rangers forward Jaromir Jagr had a goal and two assists as New York finished off the Devils in game five with a 5–3 win.

April 9New York Rangers4–1New Jersey Devils Prudential Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Brendan Shanahan (1) – 01:45Second period14:14 – ppPaul Martin (1)
Ryan Callahan (1) – sh – 07:23
Sean Avery (1) – 17:07
Nigel Dawes (1) – en – 19:55
Third periodNo scoring
Henrik Lundqvist 26 saves / 27 shotsGoalie stats Martin Brodeur 24 saves / 27 shots
April 11New York Rangers2–1New Jersey Devils Prudential Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Jaromir Jagr (1) – 04:26
Sean Avery (2) – 04:49
Third period18:37 – John Madden (1)
Henrik Lundqvist 26 saves / 27 shotsGoalie stats Martin Brodeur 28 saves / 30 shots
April 13New Jersey Devils4–3OTNew York Rangers Madison Square Garden Recap  
Sergei Brylin (1) – 03:01First period12:17 – Brandon Dubinsky (1)
Patrik Elias (1) – pp – 12:56
Zach Parise (1) – pp – 15:19
Second period06:50 – ppSean Avery (3)
No scoringThird period00:55 – pp – Brandon Dubinsky (2)
John Madden (2) – 06:01First overtime periodNo scoring
Martin Brodeur 27 saves / 30 shotsGoalie stats Henrik Lundqvist 29 saves / 33 shots
April 16New Jersey Devils3–5New York Rangers Madison Square Garden Recap  
No scoringFirst period12:37 – ppScott Gomez (1)
Patrik Elias (2) – 00:31
Patrik Elias (3) – pp – 06:58
Second period02:53 – Martin Straka (1)
12:39 – Chris Drury (1)
Mike Mottau (1) – 04:37Third period16:47 – Marc Staal (1)
19:47 – en – Scott Gomez (2)
Martin Brodeur 34 saves / 38 shotsGoalie stats Henrik Lundqvist 28 saves / 31 shots
April 18New York Rangers5–3New Jersey Devils Prudential Center Recap  
Michal Rozsival (1) – 04:58
Jaromir Jagr (2) – pp – 06:38
Scott Gomez (3) – 18:01
First period04:40 – Brian Gionta (1)
Chris Drury (2) – 05:35Second period09:26 – Bryce Salvador (1)
13:50 – ppPatrik Elias (4)
Brandon Dubinsky (3) – en – 19:00Third periodNo scoring
Henrik Lundqvist 23 saves / 26 shotsGoalie stats Martin Brodeur 18 saves / 22 shots
New York won series 4–1

Western Conference quarterfinals

(1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (8) Nashville Predators

The Detroit Red Wings entered the playoffs as the Presidents' Trophy winners, the Western Conference regular season and Central Division champions with 115 points. Nashville qualified as the eighth seed earning 91 points during the regular season. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with Detroit winning the only previous series. They last met in the 2004 Western Conference quarterfinals where Detroit won in six games. Detroit won five of the eight games during this year's regular season series.

The Red Wings defeated Nashville in six games, with the home team winning the first five games. Nashville goaltender Dan Ellis made 37 saves in a losing effort and Henrik Zetterberg scored twice in the third period for the Red Wings as Detroit took game one by a final score of 3–1. Detroit forward Kris Draper broke the tie early in the second period of game two as the Red Wings won 4–2. Nashville scored two goals just nine seconds apart late in game three as Jason Arnott scored the game-winning goal in a 5–3 Predators victory. Red Wings goaltender Dominik Hasek was pulled in the second period of game four after allowing three goals; he was replaced by Chris Osgood for the remainder of the series, the Predators evened the series with a 3–2 win. Johan Franzen ended game five 1:48 into the first overtime as the Red Wings took a 2–1 victory. Detroit eliminated the Predators with a 20-save shutout from Chris Osgood in a 3–0 win in game six.

April 10Nashville Predators1–3Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period05:58 – Johan Franzen (1)
Jordin Tootoo (1) – 17:47Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period06:54 – Henrik Zetterberg (1)
19:41 – en – Henrik Zetterberg (2)
Dan Ellis 37 saves / 39 shotsGoalie stats Dominik Hasek 19 saves / 20 shots
April 12Nashville Predators2–4Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period02:26 – Darren McCarty (1)
Alexander Radulov (1) – pp – 02:19
Jordin Tootoo (2) – 02:30
Second period00:39 – ppNicklas Lidstrom (1)
05:00 – Kris Draper (1)
No scoringThird period10:03 – Tomas Holmstrom (1)
Dan Ellis 34 saves / 38 shotsGoalie stats Dominik Hašek 25 saves / 27 shots
April 14Detroit Red Wings3–5Nashville Predators Sommet Center Recap  
Kris Draper (2) – 08:56First periodNo scoring
Jiri Hudler (1) – pp – 09:12Second period12:53 – Alexander Radulov (2)
15:01 – David Legwand (1)
Pavel Datsyuk (1) – 00:40Third period16:03 – Ryan Suter (1)
16:12 – Jason Arnott (1)
19:39 – enMartin Erat (1)
Dominik Hasek 24 saves / 28 shotsGoalie stats Dan Ellis 23 saves / 26 shots
April 16Detroit Red Wings2–3Nashville Predators Sommet Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period05:18 – ppDan Hamhuis (1)
05:50 – Shea Weber (1)
Pavel Datsyuk (2) – pp – 06:24Second period06:35 – Greg de Vries (1)
Pavel Datsyuk (3) – 03:23Third periodNo scoring
Dominik Hasek 11 saves / 14 shots
Chris Osgood 13 saves / 13 shots
Goalie stats Dan Ellis 39 saves / 41 shots
April 18Nashville Predators1–2OTDetroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period04:20 – Valtteri Filppula (1)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Radek Bonk (1) – 19:16Third periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period01:48 – Johan Franzen (2)
Dan Ellis 52 saves / 54 shotsGoalie stats Chris Osgood 20 saves / 21 shots
April 20Detroit Red Wings3–0Nashville Predators Sommet Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Nicklas Lidstrom (2) – sh – 13:44Second periodNo scoring
Jiri Hudler (2) – 03:52
Brian Rafalski (1) – en – 19:55
Third periodNo scoring
Chris Osgood 20 saves / 20 shotsGoalie stats Dan Ellis 40 saves / 42 shots
Detroit won series 4–2

(2) San Jose Sharks vs. (7) Calgary Flames

The San Jose Sharks entered the playoffs as the Pacific Division champions, earning the second seed in the Western Conference with 108 points. Calgary qualified as the seventh seed earning 94 points during the regular season. This was the third and most recent playoff meeting between these two teams, with the teams splitting the two previous series. They last met in the 2004 Western Conference Final where Calgary won in six games. Calgary won three of the four games during this year's regular season series.

San Jose eliminated the Flames in seven games. Stephane Yelle's second goal of the game was the game-winner as Calgary took the opening game of the series 3–2. San Jose goaltender Evgeni Nabokov recorded a shutout making 21 saves in game two to help the Sharks tie the series. The Flames rallied from a three-goal deficit to win game three 4–3 as backup goaltender Curtis Joseph relieved Miikka Kiprusoff after he was pulled just three and a half minutes into the game. San Jose scored two goals late in the third period of game four to win the game 3–2. San Jose had a three-goal lead in game five and held off a Calgary comeback in a 4–3 victory. Miikka Kiprusoff recorded a shutout in game six to force a deciding game seven as the Flames won 2–0. After being held pointless in the first six games of the series San Jose forward Jeremy Roenick scored two goals and two assists in game seven as the Sharks won 5–3.

April 9Calgary Flames3–2San Jose Sharks HP Pavilion Recap  
Stephane Yelle (1) – 02:47
Dion Phaneuf (1) – pp – 05:17
First period06:06 – Ryane Clowe (1)
Stephane Yelle (2) – 16:21Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period19:03 – Ryane Clowe (2)
Miikka Kiprusoff 37 saves / 39 shotsGoalie stats Evgeni Nabokov 20 saves / 23 shots
April 10Calgary Flames0–2San Jose Sharks HP Pavilion Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period04:56 – Joe Pavelski (1)
18:09 – ppTorrey Mitchell (1)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Miikka Kiprusoff 41 saves / 43 shotsGoalie stats Evgeni Nabokov 21 saves / 21 shots
April 13San Jose Sharks3–4Calgary Flames Pengrowth Saddledome Recap  
Ryane Clowe (3) – pp – 01:31
Patrick Marleau (1) – 03:19
Douglas Murray (1) – 03:33
First period13:22 – ppJarome Iginla (1)
No scoringSecond period10:14 – ppDaymond Langkow (1)
No scoringThird period01:18 – Dion Phaneuf (2)
16:15 – Owen Nolan (1)
Evgeni Nabokov 21 saves / 25 shotsGoalie stats Miikka Kiprusoff 2 saves / 5 shots
Curtis Joseph 22 saves / 22 shots
April 15San Jose Sharks3–2Calgary Flames Pengrowth Saddledome Recap  
No scoringFirst period03:19 – Jarome Iginla (2)
Ryane Clowe (4) – pp – 10:56Second period18:29 – Dion Phaneuf (3)
Jonathan Cheechoo (1) – 15:06
Joe Thornton (1) – 19:50
Third periodNo scoring
Evgeni Nabokov 8 saves / 10 shotsGoalie stats Miikka Kiprusoff 29 saves / 32 shots
April 17Calgary Flames3–4San Jose Sharks HP Pavilion Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Jarome Iginla (3) – pp – 04:03Second period11:32 – ppJoe Pavelski (2)
18:07 – Patrick Marleau (2)
Daymond Langkow (2) – pp – 09:06
David Moss (1) – 18:43
Third period04:52 – Jonathan Cheechoo (2)
08:22 – Jonathan Cheechoo (3)
Miikka Kiprusoff 22 saves / 26 shotsGoalie stats Evgeni Nabokov 33 saves / 36 shots
April 20San Jose Sharks0–2Calgary Flames Pengrowth Saddledome Recap  
No scoringFirst period11:33 – Owen Nolan (2)
No scoringSecond period19:03 – Daymond Langkow (3)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Evgeni Nabokov 23 saves / 25 shotsGoalie stats Miikka Kiprusoff 21 saves / 21 shots
April 22Calgary Flames3–5San Jose Sharks HP Pavilion Recap  
Jarome Iginla (4) – pp – 12:23First period10:57 – ppJoe Thornton (2)
Owen Nolan (3) – 03:33Second period06:04 – Jeremy Roenick (1)
09:04 – pp – Jeremy Roenick (2)
14:01 – Joe Pavelski (3)
14:53 – Devin Setoguchi (2)
Wayne Primeau (1) – 05:18Third periodNo scoring
Miikka Kiprusoff 26 saves / 30 shots
Curtis Joseph 10 saves / 11 shots
Goalie stats Evgeni Nabokov 19 saves / 22 shots
San Jose won series 4–3

(3) Minnesota Wild vs. (6) Colorado Avalanche

The Minnesota Wild entered the playoffs as the Northwest Division champions, earning the third seed in the Western Conference with 98 points. Colorado qualified as the sixth seed earning 95 points during the regular season. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with Minnesota winning the only previous series. They last met in the 2003 Western Conference quarterfinals where Minnesota won in seven games. Minnesota won five of the eight games during this year's regular season series.

The Avalanche eliminated the Wild in six games. Colorado captain Joe Sakic added to his own league record in game one as he scored his eighth and final career playoff overtime goal in a 3–2 victory. The teams traded goals in the final two minutes of regulation in game two before Keith Carney ended the game 1:14 into the first overtime period, as the Wild evened the series with a 3–2 win. Pierre-Marc Bouchard scored the overtime winner in game three for Minnesota at 11:58 in the third consecutive overtime game of this series. Five different Colorado players scored in game four as the Avalanche forced Wild goaltender Niklas Backstrom from the game, winning 5–1. Colorado goaltender Jose Theodore made 38 saves in a 3–2 game five win. Theodore continued his strong play in game six as he made 34 saves from 35 shots against as Colorado closed out the series with a 2–1 victory.

April 9Colorado Avalanche3–2OTMinnesota Wild Xcel Energy Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Kurt Sauer (1) – 01:29
Ryan Smyth (1) – pp – 13:08
Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period03:02 – Mikko Koivu (1)
06:13 – Todd Fedoruk (1)
Joe Sakic (1) – 11:11First overtime periodNo scoring
Jose Theodore 28 saves / 30 shotsGoalie stats Niklas Backstrom 19 saves / 22 shots
April 11Colorado Avalanche2–3OTMinnesota Wild Xcel Energy Center Recap  
Peter Forsberg (1) – 17:06First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Milan Hejduk (1) – pp – 19:16Third period01:37 – ppPavol Demitra (1)
18:09 – Mikko Koivu (2)
No scoringFirst overtime period01:14 – Keith Carney (1)
Jose Theodore 28 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Niklas Backstrom 24 saves / 26 shots
April 14Minnesota Wild3–2OTColorado Avalanche Pepsi Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period15:19 – Andrew Brunette (1)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Mikko Koivu (3) – 07:13
Brian Rolston (1) – sh – 11:32
Third period14:56 – Joe Sakic (2)
Pierre-Marc Bouchard (1) – 11:58First overtime periodNo scoring
Niklas Backstrom 44 saves / 46 shotsGoalie stats Jose Theodore 36 saves / 39 shots
April 15Minnesota Wild1–5Colorado Avalanche Pepsi Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period04:01 – Andrew Brunette (2)
05:37 – Wojtek Wolski (1)
11:08 – Tyler Arnason (1)
No scoringSecond period07:42 – ppRuslan Salei (1)
16:14 – ppMilan Hejduk (2)
Mikko Koivu (4) – sh – 03:11Third periodNo scoring
Niklas Backstrom 24 saves / 29 shots
Josh Harding 11 saves / 11 shots
Goalie stats Jose Theodore 24 saves / 25 shots
April 17Colorado Avalanche3–2Minnesota Wild Xcel Energy Center Recap  
Andrew Brunette (3) – pp – 12:24First period19:20 – ppPierre-Marc Bouchard (2)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Wojtek Wolski (2) – pp – 05:06
Paul Stastny (1) – 06:25
Third period19:57 – Brian Rolston (2)
Jose Theodore 38 saves / 40 shotsGoalie stats Niklas Backstrom 14 saves / 17 shots
April 19Minnesota Wild1–2Colorado Avalanche Pepsi Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period08:02 – shBen Guite (1)
Aaron Voros (1) – 00:36Second period12:20 – Ryan Smyth (2)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Niklas Backstrom 28 saves / 30 shotsGoalie stats Jose Theodore 34 saves / 35 shots
Colorado won series 4–2

(4) Anaheim Ducks vs. (5) Dallas Stars

The Anaheim Ducks entered the playoffs as the fourth seed in the Western Conference with 102 points. Dallas qualified as the fifth seed earning 97 points during the regular season. This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with Anaheim winning the only previous series. They last met in the 2003 Western Conference semifinals where Anaheim won in six games. Dallas won five of the eight games during this year's regular season series.

The Stars defeated the Ducks in six games. Dallas took advantage of the undisciplined play of the Ducks in game one as they scored four goals on the power-play and Marty Turco made 23 saves in a 4–0 victory. The Stars broke open game two by scoring three times in the third period as they won 5–2. In game three the Ducks jumped out to an early 4–0 lead, Anaheim held on to win the game 4–2. Stars goaltender Marty Turco came eight seconds short of posting a shutout in game four as he made 28 saves in a 3–1 Dallas victory. The Ducks avoided elimination in game five as their special teams contributed two power-play goals in a 5–2 win. Corey Perry gave Anaheim a one-goal lead after two periods of play in game six before the Stars scored four unanswered goals in the third period and ended the series with a 4–1 victory.

April 10Dallas Stars4–0Anaheim Ducks Honda Center Recap  
Steve Ott (1) – pp – 11:25
Loui Eriksson (1) – pp – 17:34
First periodNo scoring
Jere Lehtinen (1) – pp – 03:58
Brenden Morrow (1) – pp – 17:22
Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Marty Turco 23 saves / 23 shotsGoalie stats Jean-Sebastien Giguere 33 saves / 37 shots
April 12Dallas Stars5–2Anaheim Ducks Honda Center Recap  
Mike Ribeiro (1) – 06:28First periodNo scoring
Jere Lehtinen (2) – pp – 01:28Second period03:41 – ppTeemu Selanne (1)
16:19 – Travis Moen (1)
Mike Modano (1) – pp – 05:47
Brad Richards (1) – 06:42
Loui Eriksson (2) – 14:36
Third periodNo scoring
Marty Turco 20 saves / 22 shotsGoalie stats Jean-Sebastien Giguere 25 saves / 30 shots
April 15Anaheim Ducks4–2Dallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
Todd Marchant (1) – 06:39
Ryan Getzlaf (1) – 10:09
Chris Pronger (1) – pp – 14:31
First periodNo scoring
Chris Pronger (2) – pp – 05:34Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period05:43 – ppBrenden Morrow (2)
07:22 – pp – Brenden Morrow (3)
Jean-Sebastien Giguere 31 saves / 33 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 11 saves / 15 shots
April 17Anaheim Ducks1–3Dallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period16:39 – Joel Lundqvist (1)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Mathieu Schneider (1) – 19:52Third period09:01 – Stu Barnes (1)
17:17 – Steve Ott (2)
Jean-Sebastien Giguere 17 saves / 20 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 28 saves / 29 shots
April 18Dallas Stars2–5Anaheim Ducks Honda Center Recap  
Mattias Norstrom (1) – 18:27First period08:25 – Corey Perry (1)
No scoringSecond period11:03 – ppRyan Getzlaf (2)
Mike Ribeiro (2) – 04:41Third period00:48 – ppTeemu Selanne (2)
12:05 – Sean O'Donnell (1)
18:36 – enTodd Marchant (2)
Marty Turco 27 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Jean-Sebastien Giguere 40 saves / 42 shots
April 20Anaheim Ducks1–4Dallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Corey Perry (2) – 02:11Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period01:18 – ppStephane Robidas (1)
02:10 – Stu Barnes (2)
17:42 – Loui Eriksson (3)
19:56 – pp-enMike Modano (2)
Jean-Sebastien Giguere 22 saves / 25 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 17 saves / 18 shots
Dallas won series 4–2

Conference semifinals

Eastern Conference semifinals

(1) Montreal Canadiens vs. (6) Philadelphia Flyers

This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Montreal winning three of the four previous series. They last met in the 1989 Prince of Wales Conference Final where Montreal won in six games. Montreal swept this year's four game regular season series.

The Flyers eliminated the Canadiens in five games. Montreal fought back from a two-goal deficit early in game one as Alexei Kovalev forced overtime with his second goal of the game in the final minute of regulation time. In the first overtime period Canadiens forward Tom Kostopoulos scored the game-winner 48 seconds into the period, in a 4–3 Montreal victory. R. J. Umberger scored twice for the Flyers in game two as Philadelphia evened the series with a 4–2 win. Philadelphia scored three times in the second period of game three and hung on to win 3–2 despite allowing two power-play goals in the third period after Derian Hatcher was ejected from the game for boarding Francis Bouillon. Flyers goaltender Martin Biron made 36 saves as the Flyers won game four 4–2. Flyers forward Scottie Upshall broke the tie in game five as he scored the series-clinching goal with just over three minutes remaining in regulation time as Philadelphia earned a 6–4 victory.

April 24Philadelphia Flyers3–4OTMontreal Canadiens Bell Centre Recap  
R. J. Umberger (2) – 13:15
Jim Dowd (1) – 16:49
First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period09:44 – Andrei Kostitsyn (4)
16:03 – shAlexei Kovalev (3)
Joffrey Lupul (2) – pp – 00:19Third period19:31 – pp – Alexei Kovalev (4)
No scoringFirst overtime period00:48 – Tom Kostopoulos (3)
Martin Biron 30 saves / 34 shotsGoalie stats Carey Price 30 saves / 33 shots
April 26Philadelphia Flyers4–2Montreal Canadiens Bell Centre Recap  
R. J. Umberger (3) – 05:53
Jeff Carter (4) – pp – 08:39
First period16:18 – ppSaku Koivu (1)
Daniel Briere (7) – 13:33Second periodNo scoring
R. J. Umberger (4) – 17:39Third period01:26 – Andrei Markov (1)
Martin Biron 34 saves / 36 shotsGoalie stats Carey Price 19 saves / 23 shots
April 28Montreal Canadiens2–3Philadelphia Flyers Wachovia Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period07:04 – Scottie Upshall (2)
15:12 – shMike Richards (3)
18:19 – R. J. Umberger (5)
Tomas Plekanec (2) – pp – 07:29
Saku Koivu (2) – pp – 08:41
Third periodNo scoring
Carey Price 9 saves / 12 shots
Jaroslav Halak 2 saves / 2 shots
Goalie stats Martin Biron 32 saves / 34 shots
April 30Montreal Canadiens2–4Philadelphia Flyers Wachovia Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period07:47 – ppR. J. Umberger (6)
Tomas Plekanec (3) – 12:59
Saku Koivu (3) – 13:36
Third period06:47 – Scott Hartnell (2)
16:22 – ppDaniel Briere (8)
19:58 – en – R. J. Umberger (7)
Jaroslav Halak 22 saves / 25 shotsGoalie stats Martin Biron 36 saves / 38 shots
May 3Philadelphia Flyers6–4Montreal Canadiens Bell Centre Recap  
R. J. Umberger (8) – 10:20First period04:29 – ppTomas Plekanec (4)
11:28 – Alexei Kovalev (5)
Mike Richards (4) – 14:02
R. J. Umberger (9) – 15:44
Scott Hartnell (3) – 17:00
Second period08:15 – Chris Higgins (3)
Scottie Upshall (3) – 16:56
Mike Knuble (3) – en – 19:10
Third period02:13 – Andrei Kostitsyn (5)
Martin Biron 31 saves / 35 shotsGoalie stats Carey Price 31 saves / 36 shots
Philadelphia won series 4–1

(2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (5) New York Rangers

This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Pittsburgh winning all three of the previous series. They last met in the 1996 Eastern Conference semifinals where Pittsburgh won in five games. New York won five of the eight games during this year's regular season series.

The Penguins defeated the Rangers in five games. The Penguins scored two goals 14 and 20 seconds apart in both the second and third periods of game one as they overcame a 3–0 deficit early in the second period. Evgeni Malkin scored a late power-play goal for the Penguins as they held on to win the game 5–4. Pittsburgh goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury made 26 saves to earn his second shutout of the playoffs in game two as the Penguins won 2–0. Evgeni Malkin's second power-play goal of the game scored late in the second period of game three held up as the game-winning goal as the Penguins won 5–3. Henrik Lundqvist made 29 saves in a shutout performance as the Rangers avoided elimination with a 3–0 victory in game four. The Rangers battled back to tie the game early in the third period of game five, however they came up short in overtime as Pittsburgh's Marian Hossa scored the series-winner at 7:10 of the first overtime period to win the series for the Penguins.

April 25New York Rangers4–5Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
Martin Straka (2) – pp – 13:40First periodNo scoring
Chris Drury (3) – 01:52
Sean Avery (4) – 03:37
Second period08:13 – Jarkko Ruutu (2)
08:27 – Pascal Dupuis (1)
Scott Gomez (4) – 10:04Third period04:40 – Marian Hossa (2)
05:00 – Petr Sykora (4)
18:19 – ppEvgeni Malkin (3)
Henrik Lundqvist 21 saves / 26 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 20 saves / 24 shots
April 27New York Rangers0–2Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period13:55 – ppJordan Staal (2)
No scoringThird period19:43 – enAdam Hall (1)
Henrik Lundqvist 30 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 26 saves / 26 shots
April 29Pittsburgh Penguins5–3New York Rangers Madison Square Garden Recap  
Marian Hossa (3) – 01:02
Georges Laraque (1) – 16:17
Evgeni Malkin (4) – pp – 17:41
First period14:32 – Martin Straka (3)
Evgeni Malkin (5) – pp – 17:53Second period12:07 – Ryan Callahan (2)
13:11 – Jaromir Jagr (3)
Ryan Malone (3) – 02:30Third periodNo scoring
Marc-Andre Fleury 36 saves / 39 shotsGoalie stats Henrik Lundqvist 12 saves / 17 shots
May 1Pittsburgh Penguins0–3New York Rangers Madison Square Garden Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period12:45 – Jaromir Jagr (4)
No scoringThird period00:44 – ppBrandon Dubinsky (4)
19:46 – pp-en – Jaromir Jagr (5)
Marc-Andre Fleury 20 saves / 22 shotsGoalie stats Henrik Lundqvist 29 saves / 29 shots
May 4New York Rangers2–3OTPittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period08:45 – ppMarian Hossa (4)
12:40 – Evgeni Malkin (6)
Lauri Korpikoski (1) – 02:03
Nigel Dawes (2) – 03:25
Third periodNo scoring
No scoringFirst overtime period07:10 – Marian Hossa (5)
Henrik Lundqvist 37 saves / 40 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 20 saves / 22 shots
Pittsburgh won series 4–1

Western Conference semifinals

(1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (6) Colorado Avalanche

This was the sixth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Colorado winning three of the five previous series. They last met in the 2002 Western Conference Final where Detroit won in seven games. Detroit swept this year's four game regular season series.

The Red Wings swept the Avalanche in four games. Avalanche goaltender Jose Theodore was pulled early in the second period of game one after allowing four goals on 16 shots; the Red Wings held on to win 4–3. Detroit forward Johan Franzen's hat trick in game two helped the Red Wings to a 5–1 victory. Henrik Zetterberg's power-play goal just past the midway mark of the second period held up as the game-winner for Detroit in game three. After allowing the tying goal early in the first period of game four, the Red Wings scored the next seven goals and easily eliminated the Avalanche with an 8–2 win.

April 24Colorado Avalanche3–4Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
Paul Stastny (2) – 08:53First period09:46 – Henrik Zetterberg (3)
13:48 – Daniel Cleary (1)
17:23 – ppJohan Franzen (3)
John-Michael Liles (1) – 05:17
Milan Hejduk (3) – 16:29
Second period01:13 – Johan Franzen (4)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Jose Theodore 12 saves / 16 shots
Peter Budaj 20 saves / 20 shots
Goalie stats Chris Osgood 18 saves / 21 shots
April 26Colorado Avalanche1–5Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period04:22 – ppJohan Franzen (5)
No scoringSecond period04:04 – pp – Johan Franzen (6)
05:42 – Valtteri Filppula (2)
10:11 – Henrik Zetterberg (4)
Ian Laperriere (1) – 02:38Third period08:47 – sh – Johan Franzen (7)
Jose Theodore 16 saves / 20 shots
Peter Budaj 19 saves / 20 shots
Goalie stats Chris Osgood 19 saves / 20 shots
April 29Detroit Red Wings4–3Colorado Avalanche Pepsi Center Recap  
Pavel Datsyuk (4) – pp – 12:14
Johan Franzen (8) – 13:12
First period05:17 – Cody McLeod (1)
Pavel Datsyuk (5) – 06:36
Henrik Zetterberg (5) – pp – 12:24
Second period08:08 – ppAndrew Brunette (4)
No scoringThird period05:19 – pp – Andrew Brunette (5)
Chris Osgood 30 saves / 33 shotsGoalie stats Jose Theodore 31 saves / 35 shots
May 1Detroit Red Wings8–2Colorado Avalanche Pepsi Center Recap  
Mikael Samuelsson (1) – 04:33
Tomas Holmstrom (2) – 18:34
Johan Franzen (9) – 19:21
First period06:51 – ppTyler Arnason (2)
Henrik Zetterberg (6) – pp – 02:15
Henrik Zetterberg (7) – 05:45
Johan Franzen (10) – sh – 11:37
Johan Franzen (11) – pp – 17:15
Second periodNo scoring
Mikael Samuelsson (2) – 08:02Third period10:26 – ppJohn-Michael Liles 2
Chris Osgood 29 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Jose Theodore 12 saves / 15 shots
Peter Budaj 20 saves / 25 shots
Detroit won series 4–0

(2) San Jose Sharks vs. (5) Dallas Stars

This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with Dallas winning both of the previous series. They last met in the 2000 Western Conference semifinals where Dallas won in five games. Dallas won this year's eight-game regular season series earning ten of sixteen points.

The Stars held on to defeat the Sharks in six games. Jonathan Cheechoo tied game one late in the third period for San Jose, but Dallas captain Brenden Morrow scored 4:39 into the first overtime to give Dallas a 3–2 victory. Dallas forward Brad Richards keyed a four-goal outburst in the third period of game two by scoring a goal and three assists to lead the Stars to a 5–2 win. In game three the Stars overcame a one-goal deficit in the third period as they won in the first overtime on a goal from defenceman Mattias Norstrom at 4:37. Milan Michalek broke the tie for San Jose in game four with his power-play goal at 3:26 of the third period as the Sharks avoided elimination with a 2–1 victory. Dallas took a two-goal lead into the third period of game five, however the Sharks tied the game with goals by Milan Michalek and Brian Campbell. Overtime was needed for the third time in five games and just 1:05 into the first overtime San Jose forward Joe Pavelski converted on a turnover to keep the Sharks alive with a 3–2 win. After trading goals in regulation time, game six became the eighth-longest game in NHL history as Brenden Morrow tipped home a pass on the power-play from defenceman Stephane Robidas to end the game 9:03 into the fourth overtime period and win the series for the Stars 4–2.

April 25Dallas Stars3–2OTSan Jose Sharks HP Pavilion Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Mike Modano (3) – pp – 06:06
Brenden Morrow (4) – 09:09
Second period04:50 – Milan Michalek (1)
No scoringThird period16:58 – Jonathan Cheechoo (4)
Brenden Morrow (5) – 04:39First overtime periodNo scoring
Marty Turco 25 saves / 27 shotsGoalie stats Evgeni Nabokov 15 saves / 18 shots
April 27Dallas Stars5–2San Jose Sharks HP Pavilion Recap  
Mike Ribeiro (3) – 15:37First period10:13 – ppJoe Pavelski (4)
No scoringSecond period14:54 – Milan Michalek (2)
Brad Richards (2) – 00:32
Mike Modano (4) – pp – 03:39
Niklas Hagman (1) – 13:55
Niklas Hagman (2) – en – 18:45
Third periodNo scoring
Marty Turco 29 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Evgeni Nabokov 21 saves / 25 shots
April 29San Jose Sharks1–2OTDallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
Patrick Marleau (3) – sh – 19:25First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period00:47 – ppSergei Zubov (1)
No scoringFirst overtime period04:37 – Mattias Norstrom (2)
Evgeni Nabokov 27 saves / 29 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 19 saves / 20 shots
April 30San Jose Sharks2–1Dallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Patrick Marleau (4) – sh – 09:19Second period05:25 – Jere Lehtinen (3)
Milan Michalek (3) – pp – 03:26Third periodNo scoring
Evgeni Nabokov 17 saves / 18 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 22 saves / 24 shots
May 2Dallas Stars2–3OTSan Jose Sharks HP Pavilion Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
Jere Lehtinen (4) – pp – 06:14
Brenden Morrow (6) – 19:04
Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period06:20 – Milan Michalek (4)
11:07 – Brian Campbell (1)
No scoringFirst overtime period01:05 – Joe Pavelski (5)
Marty Turco 19 saves / 22 shotsGoalie stats Evgeni Nabokov 24 saves / 26 shots
May 4San Jose Sharks1–24OTDallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period04:49 – Antti Miettinen (1)
Ryan Clowe (5) – 01:39Third periodNo scoring
No scoringFourth overtime period09:03 – ppBrenden Morrow (7)
Evgeni Nabokov 53 saves / 55 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 61 saves / 62 shots
Dallas won series 4–2

Conference finals

Eastern Conference final

(2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (6) Philadelphia Flyers

This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Philadelphia winning all three of the previous series. They last met in the 2000 Eastern Conference semifinals where Philadelphia won in six games. Pittsburgh most recently made it to the conference finals in 2001, when they lost to the New Jersey Devils in five games. Philadelphia last made the conference finals in 2004, where they lost in seven games to the Tampa Bay Lightning. Philadelphia won five of the eight games during this year's regular season series.

The Penguins eliminated their cross-state rivals the Flyers in five games. Evgeni Malkin's seventh goal of the playoffs held up as the game-winner for Pittsburgh in game one as the Penguins earned a 4–2 win. Pittsburgh forward Maxime Talbot broke the tie in game two just before the midway mark of the third period and Jordan Staal added an empty-net goal for the Penguins to give them their second consecutive 4–2 victory. Marian Hossa scored twice in game three for the Penguins as they won the game 4–1 to take a commanding 3–0 series lead. The Flyers jumped out to a 3–0 lead in the first period of game four and held on to win the game 4–2. Marian Hossa recorded four points for Pittsburgh in game five as the Penguins won their eighth consecutive home game to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals by a decisive final score of 6–0.

May 9Philadelphia Flyers2–4Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
Mike Richards (5) – 08:30
Mike Richards (6) – 12:50
First period06:19 – Petr Sykora (5)
14:11 – Sidney Crosby (3)
19:53 – Evgeni Malkin (7)
No scoringSecond period04:50 – sh – Evgeni Malkin (8)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Martin Biron 17 saves / 21 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 26 saves / 28 shots
May 11Philadelphia Flyers2–4Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period10:48 – ppSidney Crosby (4)
Jeff Carter (5) – pp – 05:46
Mike Richards (7) – sh – 19:36
Second period13:43 – ppMarian Hossa (6)
No scoringThird period08:51 – Maxime Talbot (2)
19:31 – enJordan Staal (3)
Martin Biron 34 saves / 37 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 30 saves / 32 shots
May 13Pittsburgh Penguins4–1Philadelphia Flyers Wachovia Center Recap  
Ryan Whitney (1) – pp – 05:03
Marian Hossa (7) – 07:41
First period10:59 – R. J. Umberger (10)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Ryan Malone (4) – 09:58
Marian Hossa (8) – en – 19:06
Third periodNo scoring
Marc-Andre Fleury 17 saves / 18 shotsGoalie stats Martin Biron 21 saves / 24 shots
May 15Pittsburgh Penguins2–4Philadelphia Flyers Wachovia Center Recap  
No scoringFirst period08:27 – Joffrey Lupul (3)
11:48 – ppDaniel Briere (9)
18:50 – ppJeff Carter (6)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Jordan Staal (4) – 03:16
Jordan Staal (5) – 14:11
Third period19:27 – en – Joffrey Lupul (4)
Marc-Andre Fleury 30 saves / 33 shotsGoalie stats Martin Biron 36 saves / 38 shots
May 18Philadelphia Flyers0–6Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period02:30 – ppRyan Malone (5)
09:50 – Evgeni Malkin (9)
No scoringSecond period08:24 – Marian Hossa (9)
11:42 – pp – Ryan Malone (6)
19:02 – Jordan Staal (6)
No scoringThird period04:03 – Pascal Dupuis (2)
Martin Biron 19 saves / 25 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 21 saves / 21 shots
Pittsburgh won series 4–1

Western Conference final

(1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (5) Dallas Stars

This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with Detroit winning all three of the previous series. They last met in the 1998 Western Conference Final where Detroit won in six games. This was Detroit's second consecutive Conference finals appearance; they lost to the Anaheim Ducks in six games in the previous year. Dallas last made the conference finals in 2000, where they defeated the Colorado Avalanche in seven games. Detroit won three of the four games during this year's regular season series.

The Red Wings defeated the Stars in six games. Detroit scored three power-play goals as they took game one 4–1. Red Wings' goaltender Chris Osgood made 17 saves in game two to give Detroit a 2–1 win. Stars' forward Mike Ribeiro was assessed a match penalty at the end of game two for retaliating to an earlier stick infraction with a two-handed slash to Chris Osgood's chest; neither players were suspended. Detroit forward Pavel Datsyuk scored a hat-trick in game three for the Red Wings; while Osgood stopped 16 shots for the 5–2 win. Marty Turco made 33 saves as the Stars avoided elimination in game four winning 3–1. Turco continued his strong play for Dallas in game five as he stopped 38 shots in a 2–1 victory. The Red Wings used the strength of a three-goal first period in game six to eliminate the Stars and return to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since 2002.

May 8Dallas Stars1–4Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period04:28 – ppBrian Rafalski (2)
15:34 – ppJohan Franzen (12)
Brenden Morrow (8) – 18:53Second period06:40 – ppTomas Holmstrom (3)
15:37 – Valtteri Filppula (3)
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Marty Turco 27 saves / 31 shotsGoalie stats Chris Osgood 20 saves / 21 shots
May 10Dallas Stars1–2Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
Stephane Robidas (2) – pp– 10:41First period05:56 – Darren Helm (1)
15:13 – ppHenrik Zetterberg (8)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Marty Turco 32 saves / 34 shotsGoalie stats Chris Osgood 17 saves / 18 shots
May 12Detroit Red Wings5–2Dallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
Pavel Datsyuk (6) – 09:27
Pavel Datsyuk (7) – 15:50
First period15:13 – Nicklas Grossmann (1)
Jiri Hudler (3) – 11:54Second period03:47 – Brad Richards (3)
Henrik Zetterberg (9) – sh – 01:38
Pavel Datsyuk (8) – 17:19
Third periodNo scoring
Chris Osgood 16 saves / 18 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 16 saves / 21 shots
May 14Detroit Red Wings1–3Dallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period19:37 – Loui Eriksson (4)
Henrik Zetterberg (10) – 00:49Third period05:35 – ppMike Modano (5)
14:34 – Brenden Morrow (9)
Chris Osgood 19 saves / 22 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 33 saves / 34 shots
May 17Dallas Stars2–1Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
Trevor Daley (1) – 09:21First period15:30 – ppJiri Hudler (4)
Joel Lundqvist (2) – 06:04Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird periodNo scoring
Marty Turco 38 saves / 39 shotsGoalie stats Chris Osgood 19 saves / 21 shots
May 19Detroit Red Wings4–1Dallas Stars American Airlines Center Recap  
Kris Draper (3) – 03:45
Pavel Datsyuk (9) – pp – 11:41
Dallas Drake (1) – 16:17
First periodNo scoring
Henrik Zetterberg (11) – sh – 03:11Second periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period02:27 – ppStephane Robidas (3)
Chris Osgood 28 saves / 29 shotsGoalie stats Marty Turco 25 saves / 29 shots
Detroit won series 4–2

Stanley Cup Finals

This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Both teams won their last appearance in the Finals; Detroit defeated Carolina in five games in 2002, while Pittsburgh swept Chicago in four games in 1992. The teams did not play each other during this year's regular season.

May 24Pittsburgh Penguins0–4Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period13:01 – Mikael Samuelsson (3)
No scoringThird period02:16 – Mikael Samuelsson (4)
17:18 – shDaniel Cleary (2)
19:47 – ppHenrik Zetterberg (12)
Marc-Andre Fleury 32 saves / 36 shotsGoalie stats Chris Osgood 19 saves / 19 shots
May 26Pittsburgh Penguins0–3Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period06:55 – Brad Stuart (1)
11:18 – Tomas Holmstrom (4)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
No scoringThird period08:48 – Valtteri Filppula (4)
Marc-Andre Fleury 31 saves / 34 shotsGoalie stats Chris Osgood 22 saves / 22 shots
May 28Detroit Red Wings2–3Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
No scoringFirst period17:25 – Sidney Crosby (5)
Johan Franzen (13) – pp – 14:48Second period02:34 – pp – Sidney Crosby (6)
Mikael Samuelsson (5) – 13:37Third period07:18 – Adam Hall (2)
Chris Osgood 21 saves / 24 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 32 saves / 34 shots
May 31Detroit Red Wings2–1Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
Nicklas Lidstrom (3) – 07:06First period02:51 – ppMarian Hossa (10)
No scoringSecond periodNo scoring
Jiri Hudler (5) – 02:26Third periodNo scoring
Chris Osgood 22 saves / 23 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 28 saves / 30 shots
June 2Pittsburgh Penguins4–33OTDetroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Recap  
Marian Hossa (11) – 08:37
Adam Hall (3) – 14:41
First periodNo scoring
No scoringSecond period02:54 – Darren Helm (2)
Maxime Talbot (3) – 19:25Third period06:43 – ppPavel Datsyuk (10)
09:23 – Brian Rafalski (3)
Petr Sykora (6) – pp – 09:57Third overtime periodNo scoring
Marc-Andre Fleury 55 saves / 58 shotsGoalie stats Chris Osgood 28 saves / 32 shots
June 4Detroit Red Wings3–2Pittsburgh Penguins Mellon Arena Recap  
Brian Rafalski (4) – pp – 05:03First periodNo scoring
Valtteri Filppula (5) – 08:07Second period15:26 – ppEvgeni Malkin (10)
Henrik Zetterberg (13) – 07:36Third period18:33 – ppMarian Hossa (12)
Chris Osgood 20 saves / 22 shotsGoalie stats Marc-Andre Fleury 27 saves / 30 shots
Detroit won series 4–2

Player statistics

Skaters

These are the top ten skaters based on points. If the list exceeds ten skaters because of a tie in points, all of the tied skaters are shown. [3]

PlayerTeamGPGAPts+/–PIM
Henrik Zetterberg Detroit Red Wings22131427+1616
Sidney Crosby Pittsburgh Penguins2062127+712
Marian Hossa Pittsburgh Penguins20121426+812
Pavel Datsyuk Detroit Red Wings22101323+136
Evgeni Malkin Pittsburgh Penguins20101222+324
Johan Franzen Detroit Red Wings1613518+1314
Mike Ribeiro Dallas Stars1831417016
Daniel Briere Philadelphia Flyers179716-320
Ryan Malone Pittsburgh Penguins2061016+425
R. J. Umberger Philadelphia Flyers1710515+710
Brenden Morrow Dallas Stars189615022
Jaromir Jagr New York Rangers1051015+312
Brad Richards Dallas Stars1831215+18
Niklas Kronwall Detroit Red Wings2201515+1618

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/– = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes

Goaltending

This is a combined table of the top five goaltenders based on goals against average and the top five goaltenders based on save percentage with at least 420 minutes played. The table is sorted by GAA, and the criteria for inclusion is bolded. [4] [5]

PlayerTeamGPWLSAGAGAASv%SOTOI
Chris Osgood Detroit Red Wings19144430301.55.93031159:57
Marc-Andre Fleury Pittsburgh Penguins20146610411.97.93331251:10
Marty Turco Dallas Stars18108511402.08.92211152:13
Evgeni Nabokov San Jose Sharks1367333312.18.9071852:52
Henrik Lundqvist New York Rangers1055287262.57.9091608:04
Tim Thomas Boston Bruins734221192.65.9140430:06

GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds)

Television

National Canadian English-language coverage of the playoffs were split between the CBC and TSN, with the CBC holding exclusive rights to the Stanley Cup Finals. French-language telecasts were broadcast on RDS and RDS2. This marked the last season that all playoff games involving Canadian teams had to air on the CBC instead of TSN, even if it mean they had to be broadcast regionally. Under new contracts that would take effect in 2009, the CBC and TSN would begin to select the rights to individual series using a draft-like setup, regardless if they involved Canadian teams. [6]

In the United States, coverage was split between NBC and Versus. During the first three rounds, NBC primarily televised weekend afternoon games and Versus aired evening games. During the first and second round, excluding games exclusively broadcast on NBC, the regional rights holders of each participating U.S. team produced local telecasts of their respective games. Not all first and second-round games were nationally televised, while the conference finals were exclusively broadcast on either NBC or Versus. Versus then aired games one and two of the Stanley Cup Finals while NBC televised the remainder of the series.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2006 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2006 Stanley Cup playoffs for the National Hockey League (NHL) championship began on April 21, 2006, following the 2005–06 regular season. This was the first playoffs since 2004 due to the 2004–05 NHL lockout that cancelled the previously scheduled season. The 16 teams that qualified, seeded one through eight from each conference, played best-of-seven series with re-seeding after the Conference quarterfinals. The conference champions played a best-of-seven series for the Stanley Cup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> American and Canadian hockey competition

The 2007 Stanley Cup playoffs of the National Hockey League began on April 11, 2007. The sixteen teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played best-of-seven series for conference quarterfinals, semifinals and championships, and then the conference champions played a best-of-seven series for the Stanley Cup. The series ended on June 6 with the Anaheim Ducks defeating the Ottawa Senators in five games to win their first ever championship.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2004 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2004 Stanley Cup playoffs for the National Hockey League began on April 7, 2004, following the 2003–04 regular season. The playoffs ended with the Tampa Bay Lightning winning the Stanley Cup with a seven-game series win over the Calgary Flames on June 7. It was Tampa Bay's first Stanley Cup championship. It was the Flames' third final appearance, losing to the Montreal Canadiens in 1986 and beating the Canadiens in the 1989 rematch. These playoffs ended up being the last playoff tournament until 2006 due to the 2004–05 NHL lockout that resulted in the cancellation of the following season. The 16 qualified teams, eight from each conference, played best-of-seven games for conference quarterfinals, semifinals and finals. The winner of each conference proceeded to the Stanley Cup Finals. The format was identical to the one introduced for the 1999 playoffs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2003 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2003 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL), began on April 9, 2003, following the 2002–03 regular season. The playoffs concluded on June 9, 2003, with the New Jersey Devils defeating the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim in seven games.

The 2001 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL), began on April 11, 2001, and ended on June 9, 2001, when the Western Conference champion Colorado Avalanche defeated the Eastern Conference champion New Jersey Devils to win their second Stanley Cup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1995 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 1995 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League was played between May 6 and June 24, 1995. The 1994–95 NHL regular season was shortened to 48 games, and the playoffs pushed to a later date, due to a lockout. The sixteen teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played best-of-seven series for the conference quarterfinals, semifinals and championships, and then the conference champions played a best-of-seven series for the Stanley Cup. In the Finals, the New Jersey Devils swept the favored Detroit Red Wings in four games to win their first championship.

The 1995–96 Florida Panthers season was the 3rd season of the franchise that was established in 1993 and their most successful season ever. In only their third season in the National Hockey League, the Panthers qualified for the playoffs, and won three playoff series to become Eastern Conference champions. In the 1996 Stanley Cup Finals, Florida lost to the Colorado Avalanche in four games. The Panthers would not win another playoff series until 2022.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1997 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> National Hockey League playoffs

The 1997 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL), began on April 16, 1997, following the completion of the 1996–97 NHL season. The sixteen teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played best-of-seven series for conference quarter-finals, semi-finals and championships, and then the conference champions played a best-of-seven series for the Stanley Cup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1996 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 1996 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL), began on April 16, 1996. The playoffs ended on June 10, 1996, with the Colorado Avalanche sweeping the Florida Panthers to win their first Stanley Cup in franchise history in both teams' first Finals appearance. Colorado became the first relocated team to win the Stanley Cup in their inaugural season after relocating from Quebec City prior to the start of the regular season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2009 Stanley Cup playoffs of the National Hockey League began on April 15, 2009, after the 2008–09 regular season. The sixteen teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played a best-of-seven series for the conference quarterfinals, semifinals, and championships, and then the conference champions played a best-of-seven series for the Stanley Cup. The Columbus Blue Jackets made their first appearance in the playoffs in their nine-year history. Previously they had been the only franchise never to have made the playoffs. Also, home teams set a record by going 13–2 in the openers of all the series combined. There were no playoff games played in the Province of Ontario as this was the first time that the modern Ottawa Senators and the Toronto Maple Leafs both missed the playoffs in the same year. This was the most recent time that the Carolina Hurricanes were in the playoffs until 2019.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1989 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> Ice hockey playoffs

The 1989 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 5, after the conclusion of the 1988–89 NHL season. This was the final year that all of the Division Semifinals began with teams playing the first four games in a span of five days. The playoffs concluded on May 25 with the champion Calgary Flames defeating the Montreal Canadiens 4–2 to win the Stanley Cup Finals four games to two.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1981 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> Game season

The 1981 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 8, after the conclusion of the 1980–81 NHL season. The playoffs concluded on May 21 with the champion New York Islanders defeating the Minnesota North Stars 5–1 to win the final series four games to one and win the Stanley Cup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2010 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2010 Stanley Cup playoffs of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 14, 2010, after the 2009–10 NHL regular season. The Finals ended on June 9, 2010, with the Chicago Blackhawks defeating the Philadelphia Flyers in six games to win their fourth championship and their first since 1961. Blackhawks center and team captain Jonathan Toews was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playoffs' most valuable player.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2011 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2010–11 season. It began on April 13, 2011, after the conclusion of the regular season. The first game of the Finals between the Vancouver Canucks and Boston Bruins was held on June 1, and Boston went on to capture their first Stanley Cup championship since 1972 in the deciding seventh game on June 15.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2012 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2012 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2011–12 season. It began on April 11, 2012, after the conclusion of the regular season, and ended on June 11, with the Los Angeles Kings defeating the New Jersey Devils in six games in the Stanley Cup Finals to win their first Stanley Cup championship. Kings goaltender Jonathan Quick, having recorded a 1.41 goals against average, was named the Conn Smythe Trophy winner as the playoffs' most valuable player.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 Stanley Cup playoffs</span>

The 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2012–13 season. They began on April 30, 2013, following the conclusion of the regular season. The regular season was shortened to 48 games and the playoffs were pushed to a later date due to a lockout. The playoffs ended on June 24, 2013, with the Chicago Blackhawks defeating the Boston Bruins in the Stanley Cup Finals in six games to win the Stanley Cup. Patrick Kane won the Conn Smythe trophy as the playoffs MVP, with 19 points.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> Sports competition

The 2014 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2013–14 season. They began on April 16, 2014, and ended June 13, 2014, when the Los Angeles Kings defeated the New York Rangers four games to one in the Stanley Cup Finals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2015 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> Playoff tournament of the NHL

The 2015 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2014–15 season. They began on April 15, 2015, and ended on June 15, 2015, with the Chicago Blackhawks defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning four games to two in the Stanley Cup Finals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> Playoff tournament of the NHL

The 2016 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2015–16 season. They began on April 13, 2016, and ended on June 12, 2016, with the Pittsburgh Penguins defeating the San Jose Sharks four games to two in the Stanley Cup Finals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 Stanley Cup playoffs</span> Playoff tournament of the NHL

The 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs was the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) for the 2017–18 season. The playoffs began on April 11, 2018, after the regular season, and they concluded on June 7, 2018, with the Washington Capitals winning their first Stanley Cup in franchise history by defeating the Vegas Golden Knights four games to one in the Stanley Cup Finals.

References

  1. 1 2 Game Recap of game four of the Detroit-Colorado Western Conference semi-final.
  2. 1 2 "NHL amends unsportsmanlike conduct rule in response to Avery's antics". ESPN.com . April 14, 2008. Archived from the original on April 16, 2008. Retrieved April 14, 2008.
  3. "2007–2008 - Playoffs - All Skaters - Summary - Total points". National Hockey League. Retrieved April 14, 2009.
  4. "2007–2008 - Playoffs - Goalie - Summary - Goals against average". National Hockey League. Retrieved April 18, 2009.
  5. "2007–2008 - Playoffs - Goalie - Summary - Save percentage". National Hockey League. Retrieved April 18, 2009.
  6. "TSN clinches landmark NHL deal". playbackonline.ca. June 3, 2008. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
Preceded by Stanley Cup playoffs
2008
Succeeded by