Stanley Cup Playoffs: Which 4 NHL teams have the best chances to win it all?
The Stanley Cup Playoffs kick off on Saturday, with 16 teams all vying for the chance to hoist the Cup at the end of it all. But which 4 teams have the best chance to do so?
It's that time of year again when play on the NHL ice heats up, and every hit, every save and every goal means so much more.
This Saturday marks the start of 16 teams vying for the ultimate honor of lifting Lord Stanley's Cup, and it's always a grueling process after an 82-game regular season.
And as the Stanley Cup Playoffs teach us every season, anyone that makes the playoffs has a chance to get hot and make a run to the Finals. Just take the Florida Panthers, the current No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference this year, taking down the President's Trophy-winning Boston Bruins in the first round last season before making it all the way to the Final.
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The Panthers would eventually lose to the Vegas Golden Knights, but it's a new year and a new chance to be named Stanley Cup champions.
But among the 16 teams, which ones have the best chances to win it all? When all three phases of the game need to click on all cylinders, four teams stand out in particular.
First, let's take a look at two dark horse candidates that could surprise some in these playoffs.
It's hard to have any dark horses given the rosters we're about to see on the ice, but the Avalanche are the toughest one to put in this category.
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First, they have the championship pedigree, having hoisted the Stanley Cup two seasons ago. And players like Nathan McKinnon, Mikko Rantanen, Cale Makar, Devon Toews and the list goes on, makes the Avalanche a true contender out of the west.
The only question mark, though, is goaltender Alexandar Georgiev. Yes, that’s a stretch, but his goals against average was 3.02 this season, which is 34th in the NHL and his save percentage of .897, the worst mark of his career and tied-39th in the league.
This is nit picking, but goaltending separates the good teams from the great.
The Jets don’t have that problem whatsoever, as Connor Hellebuyck is the frontrunner to win the Vezina Trophy for best goalie this year. He owns a .921 save percentage for the year and a 2.39 goals against average. Even when a team can’t get things going on offense, having a great goalie always keeps them in the series.
The Jets are hot, winning their last seven games, but they haven’t made the conference finals since 2017-18, losing in the first round last year and not making it past there just once since then.
The reigning East champions are no longer the Cinderella No. 8 seed this season. They won the Atlantic division with 110 points (52-24-6) and a plus-68 goal differential – the best in the conference.
When Matthew Tkachuk is on your second line, you likely have a strong offensive game. Right wing Sam Reinhart finished second in the league in goals this season with 57, and his 94 points leads the Panthers as he works well with Alexsander Barkov and Vladimir Tarasenko, who was traded for mid-season.
And of course, the Carter Verhaeghe line with Tkachuk and Sam Bennett is lethal on both ends of the ice, constantly bringing energy and peskiness on the forecheck. Finally, the goaltending tandem of Sergei Bobrovsky and Anthony Stolarz is what a Cup-winning team needs.
The roles are reversed this time for the Panthers, who will take on the always-tough Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round.
Rod Brind’Amour’s team finally made it past the second round last year, but the Panthers took care of them in the Eastern Conference Finals. Once again, though, the Hurricanes are a well-oiled machine that is itching to get their licks in the Stanley Cup Final.
Sebastian Aho has been stellar for this group with 89 points (36 goals, 53 assists), and the addition of Jake Guentzel has added solid wing presence that knows what it takes to win in the playoffs.
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But the Hurricanes are truly rock solid on the back end, with Brady Skjei, Brent Burns, Jaccob Slavin, and Dmitry Orlov. All of these veterans playing at the top of their game will be very hard for offenses to find rhythm on the forecheck. And, of course, Pyotr Kochetkov’s 2.33 goals against average was second in the league this season.
Carolina is also the second-best power play team in the league this season, and making the best of odd-man situations is a game changer in the playoffs. The New York Islanders will be their first-round opponent starting Saturday.
The best team in the West this season is simply a unit.
Jason Robertson, the team’s star left winger, leads the team in points with 80 (29 goals, 51 assists), which is only tied-27th in the league this season. But the Stars have a plus-64 goal differential, as they’ve gotten contributions from virtually everyone in the goal department.
Wyatt Johnston is the leader with 32, while Roope Hintz (30), Joe Paveleski (27), Matt Duchene (25), Jamie Benn (21) and Tyler Seguin (25) have all had offensive success.
This is a team that knows what it takes to make a run, and they’re hungry after losing in the conference finals last season. There’s also players on this squad like Benn and Seguin who still feel the sting of the 2019-20 Stanley Cup Final loss as well.
With Jake Oettinger playing well in net, the Stars get a favorable matchup against the Los Angeles Kings to start off their playoffs.
I know, how cliché to choose the President’s Trophy winners for the regular season, especially after what we saw with the Boston Bruins last season.
But everything is clicking at the perfect time for this Rangers squad that is loaded from top to bottom.
First, Igor Shesterkin has been a different animal since the All-Star break, showcasing those highlight-reel saves like the one he had against Islanders star Mat Barzal a few nights ago, while being a brick wall in his crease.
Then, there’s Artemi Panarin, the fourth-best in points this season with 120 (49 goals, 71 assists) and he’s been feasting on the league’s third-best power play unit. He had a career-high 11 goals and 33 assists for 44 power-play points this season, and the Rangers’ tough forecheck draws penalties.
Panarin is just one cog in Peter Laviolette’s machine, as Vincent Trocheck and veteran captain Chris Kreider racked up 77 and 75 points respectively. Mika Zibanejad had 72 points, while star defenseman Adam Fox thrived on the power play as well, finishing with 56 assists and 73 points.
With relentless forwards and a stellar defensive corps of Fox, K’Andre Miller, Jacob Trouba, Erik Gustafsson, and the possible addition of brawler Matt Rempe to add some enforcing to the likes of Tom Wilson and the Washington Capitals in the first round gives New York a chance to make the run they haven’t since 2013-14 when they lost in the finals.
It’s been exactly 30 years since the team’s last Stanley Cup championship, too. Could fate be on the side of the Blueshirts?