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As we begin the third-last week of the regular season, the top of the bracket is becoming more and more clear. In the Metro Division, the Carolina Hurricanes and New Jersey Devils have already clinched, and the Canes still have a three-point edge (with one game in hand) for home-ice advantage through at least two rounds.
The New York Rangers are likely to follow and clinch their own spot sometime this week. They are idle Monday but could wake up Tuesday morning with an “x” next to their name in the standings anyway if the Buffalo Sabres lose to the Montreal Canadiens in any fashion and the Florida Panthers lose to the Ottawa Senators in regulation.
In the Atlantic, the Boston Bruins have been running away from the pack all year and clinched their spot a while ago, while the Toronto Maple Leafs and Tampa Bay Lightning have been locked into a first-round playoff series for weeks. The Maple Leafs will probably clinch their berth this week, and can even do so on an idle Monday if Florida loses to Ottawa.
In the West, we still have two heated division titles up for grabs, with five (or six) teams all still in the mix. It’s so tight out there that no one has officially clinched a playoff spot yet, and though no one can do it Monday, the Vegas Golden Knights and Los Angeles Kings could do it later this week.
Those top-of-the-table seedings will be discussed deeper in the later stages of our playoff pushes but for now, our focus remains on those in the hunt just to get in at the bottom of the table. What are the key questions facing those teams and what are their matchups this week? Here’s our look at the week ahead …
If the playoffs started today, these would be our Eastern Conference first-round matchups:
(A1) Bruins vs. (WC2) Penguins
(A2) Maple Leafs vs. (A3) Lightning
(M1) Hurricanes vs. (WC1) Islanders
(M2) Devils vs. (M3) Rangers
NY Islanders: Can they withstand a difficult stretch of opponents upcoming?
New York had been better of late. From the all-star break until last Thursday, the Islanders were 12-5-3 (ninth in the NHL by points percentage) and, crucially, had an improving offence. The team ranks 22nd on the season on goals per game (2.96), but since all-star has been 14th (3.35). But the last weekend saw the Islanders drop two games (one in OT) to Columbus and Buffalo and start this week just four points clear of ninth in the conference. Now they’re about to face two weeks’ worth of tough opponents: can they get back on track and win enough to stay ahead?
Islanders games this week: vs. NJD Monday, at Washington Wednesday, at Tampa Saturday, at Carolina Sunday
Pittsburgh Penguins: Can they get enough goals down the stretch to outlast the competition?
In our piece last week pointing out some “
The New York Rangers are likely to follow and clinch their own spot sometime this week. They are idle Monday but could wake up Tuesday morning with an “x” next to their name in the standings anyway if the Buffalo Sabres lose to the Montreal Canadiens in any fashion and the Florida Panthers lose to the Ottawa Senators in regulation.
In the Atlantic, the Boston Bruins have been running away from the pack all year and clinched their spot a while ago, while the Toronto Maple Leafs and Tampa Bay Lightning have been locked into a first-round playoff series for weeks. The Maple Leafs will probably clinch their berth this week, and can even do so on an idle Monday if Florida loses to Ottawa.
In the West, we still have two heated division titles up for grabs, with five (or six) teams all still in the mix. It’s so tight out there that no one has officially clinched a playoff spot yet, and though no one can do it Monday, the Vegas Golden Knights and Los Angeles Kings could do it later this week.
Those top-of-the-table seedings will be discussed deeper in the later stages of our playoff pushes but for now, our focus remains on those in the hunt just to get in at the bottom of the table. What are the key questions facing those teams and what are their matchups this week? Here’s our look at the week ahead …



If the playoffs started today, these would be our Eastern Conference first-round matchups:
(A1) Bruins vs. (WC2) Penguins
(A2) Maple Leafs vs. (A3) Lightning
(M1) Hurricanes vs. (WC1) Islanders
(M2) Devils vs. (M3) Rangers
NY Islanders: Can they withstand a difficult stretch of opponents upcoming?
New York had been better of late. From the all-star break until last Thursday, the Islanders were 12-5-3 (ninth in the NHL by points percentage) and, crucially, had an improving offence. The team ranks 22nd on the season on goals per game (2.96), but since all-star has been 14th (3.35). But the last weekend saw the Islanders drop two games (one in OT) to Columbus and Buffalo and start this week just four points clear of ninth in the conference. Now they’re about to face two weeks’ worth of tough opponents: can they get back on track and win enough to stay ahead?
Islanders games this week: vs. NJD Monday, at Washington Wednesday, at Tampa Saturday, at Carolina Sunday
Pittsburgh Penguins: Can they get enough goals down the stretch to outlast the competition?
In our piece last week pointing out some “
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,” we showed some of the wonky weirdness around the Pittsburgh Penguins. Draw that window back even more and you’ll see while the Penguins have generated tons of shots and great opportunities since Feb. 1, they have a bottom-third offence in the league. Compared to the rest of the Eastern Conference’s wild-card contenders, the Penguins’ offence trails with some horrible shooting percentages since Feb. 1 (league rank in parenthesis).TEAM | SHOTS/60 | xGF/60 | GF/60 | SH% |
NY Islanders | 29.88 (21) |