In less than three weeks, the NHL regular season will come to a close.
But there’s a lot that could go down before that time.
In the Eastern Conference, it’s a fight to the finish as seven points separate 4th place Ottawa and 9th place Washington. Realistically, the Capitals are the only team currently out of the postseason picture with a realistic shot of grabbing the 8th and final playoff spot. But there will be plenty of jockeying for position during the last five or six games of the season. Washington trails Boston by two points, and Boston’s mediocre play couldn’t come at a worse time. The Capitals could conceivably still steal the Southeast division from the Carolina Hurricanes, but making up four points in five games against a Carolina team that is arguably the hottest squad in the entire league at the moment will be a daunting task. But with Alex Ovechkin leading the league with 61 goals (the first player to reach the 60 mark since Lemieux and Jagr for the 1996-97 Penguins) and 106 points, and newly acquired goaltender Cristobal Huet playing solidly in rotation with Olaf Kolzig, the Caps can’t be counted out at all.
Montreal and Pittsburgh are duking it out at the top of the standings in the East, meanwhile, and Carolina sits in third due to their lead in the Southeast (the top three seeds are granted to the division leaders, even if those teams have fewer points than other teams in the playoffs. That’s a system that needs to change.) The Penguins, even without the aid of phenom Sidney Crosby, whose ankle injury has kept him out of over 20 games in the past 8 weeks, have managed to go on a rampage, thanks to the offensive prowess of Evgeni Malkin. If you don’t know the name Malkin now, you will in five years. Pittsburgh’s only questionable characteristic is a lack of playoff experience and a disturbing inconsistency in net.
In the West, Detroit and San Jose make the rest of the league pretty much look like a joke. The Red Wings haven’t played a meaningful game in weeks, and with 108 points have a nearly double-digit lead on the second place Sharks, who still look phenomenal. Goalie Evgeni Nabokov could win the Vezina Trophy as the league’s best goalie, and the Sharks are indeed a sexy pick for Western Conference Champs.
The bottom half of the playoff seeding in the West is even more wide open than the East. Not even the once-mighty Dallas Stars can rest on their laurels quite yet, as Edmonton, Nashville, Vancouver and Colorado also all need points to lock up a spot in the postseason. The Oilers have been an interesting team to watch lately, and a timely 7-3-0 run has catapulted the once listless Edmonton team to within 3 points of a playoff spot. But the team has only four games remaining, least out of any team in the league other than Colorado and Minnesota, which will make the trek all the more difficult.
But if everything plays out like I think it will, you’ll see Montreal, Pittsburgh, Carolina, and Ottawa in the second round of the playoffs in the East, eventually resulting in an all-Canadian Montreal/Ottawa Eastern Finals matchup, with Montreal coming out on top. Meanwhile, in the West, it’s hard to pick against San Jose, who should beat out a feisty Calgary team for the Western crown. With so little time left to go, though, so much can happen.