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词条 2017 Stanley Cup playoffs
释义

  1. Playoff seeds

     Eastern Conference  Atlantic Division  Metropolitan Division  Wild Cards  Western Conference  Central Division  Pacific Division  Wild Cards 

  2. Playoff bracket

  3. First Round

     Eastern Conference First Round  (A1) Montreal Canadiens vs. (WC1) New York Rangers  (A2) Ottawa Senators vs. (A3) Boston Bruins  (M1) Washington Capitals vs. (WC2) Toronto Maple Leafs  (M2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (M3) Columbus Blue Jackets  Western Conference First Round  (C1) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (WC2) Nashville Predators  (C2) Minnesota Wild vs. (C3) St. Louis Blues  (P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (WC1) Calgary Flames  (P2) Edmonton Oilers vs. (P3) San Jose Sharks 

  4. Second Round

     Eastern Conference Second Round  (A2) Ottawa Senators vs. (WC1) New York Rangers  (M1) Washington Capitals vs. (M2) Pittsburgh Penguins  Western Conference Second Round  (C3) St. Louis Blues vs. (WC2) Nashville Predators  (P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (P2) Edmonton Oilers 

  5. Conference Finals

     Eastern Conference Final  (M2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (A2) Ottawa Senators  Western Conference Final  (P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (WC2) Nashville Predators 

  6. Stanley Cup Finals

  7. Player statistics

     Skaters  Goaltenders 

  8. Television

  9. References

  10. External links

{{Infobox hockey tournament season
|title=Stanley Cup playoffs
|image=2017 Stanley Cup playoffs logo.svg
|year=2017
|dates=April 12–June 11, 2017
|num_teams=16
|defending_champions=Pittsburgh Penguins
|winners=Pittsburgh Penguins
|second=Nashville Predators
|conf-runner-up1=Anaheim Ducks
|conf-runner-up2=Ottawa Senators
|scoring_leader=Evgeni Malkin (Penguins)
|points=28
|nhl_mvp=Sidney Crosby (Penguins)
|prevseason=2016
|nextseason=2018
}}

The 2017 Stanley Cup playoffs of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 12, 2017, after the 2016–17 regular season and concluded on June 11, 2017, with the Pittsburgh Penguins defeating the Nashville Predators four games to two in the Finals to win the Stanley Cup for the second consecutive year.

The Washington Capitals made the playoffs as the Presidents' Trophy winners for the second consecutive year with the most points (i.e. best record) during the regular season. The Detroit Red Wings failed to make the playoffs for the first time since the 1989–90 season, ending the NHL's longest active playoff streak at 25 consecutive seasons; the streak was also tied for the third-longest streak in NHL history.[1] The longest active playoff streak moved to the Pittsburgh Penguins with eleven consecutive appearances.[2] The Edmonton Oilers made the playoffs for the first time since 2006, ending a record-tying playoff drought for a team with ten years missed (the Florida Panthers also missed the playoffs between 2001 and 2011 inclusively).[3] For the first time since 2006, both Alberta teams, the Oilers and the Calgary Flames, qualified for the postseason in the same year. For the first time since 2013, and the fourth time since 2002, all three Eastern Canadian teams (Montreal Canadiens, Ottawa Senators, and Toronto Maple Leafs) qualified for the playoffs. In all, five Canadian-based teams made the playoffs, matching 2004 and 2015, after a season in which none of the seven teams in Canada contended. Five Original Six teams made the playoffs, with only the previously mentioned Red Wings failing to make it.

The first round saw eighteen overtime games, eclipsing the previous record of seventeen overtime games in the first round set in 2013.[4][5] There were 27 total overtime games in these playoffs, one short of the record set in 1993. It was also the first time since 2001 that no first round series went the full seven games.

For the eighth season in a row (and the twelfth time in the last fourteen seasons), a California-based team was in the Western Conference Final.[6]

Playoff seeds

{{Details|Stanley Cup playoffs#Current format}}

This was the fourth year in which the top three teams in each division make the playoffs, along with two wild cards in each conference (for a total of eight playoff teams from each conference).

The following teams qualified for the playoffs:[7]

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division

  1. Montreal Canadiens, Atlantic Division champions – 103 points
  2. Ottawa Senators – 98 points
  3. Boston Bruins – 95 points (42 {{abbr|ROWs|Regulation + Overtime Wins}})

Metropolitan Division

  1. Washington Capitals, Metropolitan Division champions, Eastern Conference regular season champions, Presidents' Trophy winners – 118 points
  2. Pittsburgh Penguins – 111 points
  3. Columbus Blue Jackets – 108 points

Wild Cards

  1. New York Rangers – 102 points
  2. Toronto Maple Leafs – 95 points (39 {{abbr|ROWs|Regulation + Overtime Wins}})

Western Conference

Central Division

  1. Chicago Blackhawks, Central Division champions, Western Conference regular season champions – 109 points
  2. Minnesota Wild – 106 points
  3. St. Louis Blues – 99 points

Pacific Division

  1. Anaheim Ducks, Pacific Division champions – 105 points
  2. Edmonton Oilers – 103 points
  3. San Jose Sharks – 99 points

Wild Cards

  1. Calgary Flames – 94 points (41 {{abbr|ROWs|Regulation + Overtime Wins}})
  2. Nashville Predators – 94 points (39 {{abbr|ROWs|Regulation + Overtime Wins}})

Playoff bracket

{{2017 Stanley Cup playoffs}}

First Round

Eastern Conference First Round

(A1) Montreal Canadiens vs. (WC1) New York Rangers

The Montreal Canadiens finished first in the Atlantic Division earning 103 points. The New York Rangers finished as the Eastern Conference's first wild-card, earning 102 points. This was the sixteenth playoff meeting between these two teams with New York winning eight of the fifteen previous series. They last met in the 2014 Eastern Conference Finals, which New York won in six games. Montreal won all three games in this year's regular season series.

The Rangers eliminated the Canadiens in six games. In the first game of the series, Tanner Glass and Michael Grabner scored the only goals of the games as the Rangers won the game 2–0 on Henrik Lundqvist's 31-save shutout.[8] In game two, the Canadiens tied the game with 18 seconds left, then in overtime, Alexander Radulov pushed it past the Rangers' goaltender to give Montreal a 4–3 victory.[9] Radulov continued his scoring into game three, getting a goal and an assist to help the Canadiens achieve a 3–1 victory.[10] The Rangers ended a six-game home-losing streak after game four, winning 2–1 over the Canadiens to tie the series 2–2.[11] Mika Zibanejad got the overtime-winner for the Rangers in game five after Chris Kreider deflected a pass off of Canadiens defenceman Alexei Emelin, landing towards the forward who put it past goaltender Carey Price in a 3–2 win.[12] Mats Zuccarello scored twice in game six as the Rangers eliminated the Canadiens in a 3–1 victory to advance to the second round.

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=New York Rangers
|team2=Montreal Canadiens
|stadium2=Madison Square Garden
|stadium1=Bell Centre
|date1 =April 12
|score1 =2–0
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-montreal-canadiens-game-recap/c-288723114
|1-1-1 =Tanner Glass (1) – 09:50
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =Michael Grabner (1) – en – 18:50
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 31 saves / 31 shots
|goalie1-2 =Carey Price 29 saves / 30 shots
|date2 =April 14
|score2 =3–4
|ot2 =1
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-montreal-canadiens-game-recap/c-288801196
|2-1-1 =Michael Grabner (2) – 13:48
|2-1-2 =04:05 – Jeff Petry (1)
15:42 – Paul Byron (1)
|2-2-1 =Rick Nash (1) – 09:58
Mats Zuccarello (1) – 14:47
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =19:42 – Tomas Plekanec (1)
|2-4-1 =No scoring
|2-4-2 =18:34 – Alexander Radulov (1)
|goalie2-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 54 saves / 58 shots
|goalie2-2 =Carey Price 35 saves / 38 shots
|date3 =April 16
|score3 =3–1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/montreal-canadiens-new-york-rangers-game-3-recap/c-288850154
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Artturi Lehkonen (1) – pp – 17:37
|3-3-1 =17:04 – Brady Skjei (1)
|3-3-2 =Shea Weber (1) – pp – 07:42
Alexander Radulov (2) – 15:35
|goalie3-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 26 saves / 29 shots
|goalie3-2 =Carey Price 20 saves / 21 shots
|date4 =April 18
|score4 =1–2
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/montreal-canadiens-new-york-rangers-game-recap/c-288917218
|4-1-1 =11:39 – Jesper Fast (1)
|4-1-2 =Torrey Mitchell (1) – 18:37
|4-2-1 =04:28 – Rick Nash (2)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 23 saves / 24 shots
|goalie4-2 =Carey Price 30 saves / 32 shots
|date5 =April 20
|score5 =3–2
|ot5 =1
|won5 =1
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-montreal-canadiens-game-5-recap/c-288979184
|5-1-1 =Jesper Fast (2) – sh – 15:56
|5-1-2 =12:07 – Artturi Lehkonen (2)
16:20 – pp – Brendan Gallagher (1)
|5-2-1 =Brady Skjei (2) – 18:28
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|5-4-1 =Mika Zibanejad (1) – 14:22
|5-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 34 saves / 36 shots
|goalie5-2 =Carey Price 33 saves / 36 shots
|date6 =April 22
|score6 =1–3
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/montreal-canadiens-new-york-rangers-game-6-recap/c-289033544
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =Alexei Emelin (1) – 06:19
|6-2-1 =02:26 – pp – Mats Zuccarello (2)
13:31 – Mats Zuccarello (3)
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =19:42 – Derek Stepan (1)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 27 saves / 28 shots
|goalie6-2 =Carey Price 20 saves / 22 shots
|series = New York won series 4–2
}}

(A2) Ottawa Senators vs. (A3) Boston Bruins

The Ottawa Senators finished second in the Atlantic Division, earning 98 points. The Boston Bruins earned 95 points in the regular season to finish third in the Atlantic. This was the first playoff meeting between the contemporary Ottawa franchise and Boston, and the first Boston-Ottawa series since the 1927 Stanley Cup Finals. Ottawa won all four games in this year's regular season series.

The Senators eliminated the Bruins in six games. In the first game, the Senators gained a 1–0 lead into the third on Bobby Ryan's goal in the second period, however, the Bruins scored twice in the final period with Brad Marchand having the final tally 2:33 before the game ended 2–1 for Boston.[13] In game two, Ottawa came back from a two-goal deficit in the third period and won via Dion Phaneuf whose goal in overtime helped tie the series 1–1 after a 4–3 conquest.[14] In game three, Ottawa had a three-goal lead with Mike Hoffman scoring twice, but the Bruins came back with three goals in the third period. In overtime, Bruins forward Riley Nash took a roughing penalty and on the ensuing power play, Bobby Ryan tipped in a pass from Kyle Turris ending the game 4–3 for the Senators.[15] Bobby Ryan scored the only goal in game four, at the 5:49 mark of the third period, allowing the Senators to achieve a 3–1 series lead.[16] Boston came back from an early 2–0 deficit in game five and the game would go to overtime. In double-overtime, Bruins rookie Sean Kuraly scored his second goal of the game, completing the comeback in a 3–2 feat.[17] In game six, Clarke MacArthur scored the series-winning goal on the power play in overtime for Ottawa to advance to the second round.[18]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Boston Bruins
|team2=Ottawa Senators
|stadium2=TD Garden
|stadium1=Canadian Tire Centre
|date1 =April 12
|score1 =2–1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/boston-bruins-ottawa-senators-game-1-recap/c-288725314
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =10:28 – Bobby Ryan (1)
|1-3-1 =Frank Vatrano (1) – 04:55
Brad Marchand (1) – 17:27
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Tuukka Rask 26 saves / 27 shots
|goalie1-2 =Craig Anderson 23 saves / 25 shots
|date2 =April 15
|score2 =3–4
|ot2 =1
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/boston-bruins-ottawa-senators-game-2-recap/c-288821902
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =Drew Stafford (1) – 09:47
Tim Schaller (1) – sh – 12:39
Patrice Bergeron (1) – pp – 16:01
|2-2-2 =10:57 – pp – Clarke MacArthur (1)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =05:28 – Chris Wideman (1)
07:48 – Derick Brassard (1)
|2-4-1 =No scoring
|2-4-2 =01:59 – Dion Phaneuf (1)
|goalie2-1 =Tuukka Rask 25 saves / 29 shots
|goalie2-2 =Craig Anderson 26 saves / 29 shots
|date3 =April 17
|score3 =4–3
|ot3 =1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =https://www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-boston-bruins-game-3-game-recap/c-288884316
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =Mike Hoffman (1) – 07:15
Derick Brassard (2) – 07:40
|3-2-1 =06:05 – Noel Acciari (1)
06:47 – David Backes (1)
13:51 – pp – David Pastrnak (1)
|3-2-2 =Mike Hoffman (2) – pp – 03:42
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|3-4-1 =No scoring
|3-4-2 =Bobby Ryan (2) – pp – 05:43
|goalie3-1 =Tuukka Rask 28 saves / 32 shots
|goalie3-2 =Craig Anderson 17 saves / 20 shots
|date4 =April 19
|score4 =1–0
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-boston-bruins-game-4-recap/c-288946766
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =No scoring
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =Bobby Ryan (3) – 05:49
|goalie4-1 =Tuukka Rask 26 saves / 27 shots
|goalie4-2 =Craig Anderson 22 saves / 22 shots
|date5 =April 21
|score5 =3–2
|ot5 =2
|won5 =1
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/boston-bruins-ottawa-senators-game-5-recap/c-289014676
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =11:19 – Mark Stone (1)
|5-2-1 =David Pastrnak (2) – 08:40
Sean Kuraly (1) – 17:05
|5-2-2 =00:30 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (1)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|5-4-1 =Sean Kuraly (2) – 10:19
|5-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Tuukka Rask 41 saves / 43 shots
|goalie5-2 =Craig Anderson 36 saves / 39 shots
|date6 =April 23
|score6 =3–2
|ot6 =1
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-boston-bruins-game-6-recap/c-289048782
|6-1-1 =18:13 – pp – Drew Stafford (2)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =Bobby Ryan (4) – pp – 03:26
Kyle Turris (1) – 08:32
|6-3-1 =01:57 – Patrice Bergeron (1)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|6-4-1 =No scoring
|6-4-2 =Clarke MacArthur (2) – pp – 06:30
|goalie6-1 =Tuukka Rask 26 saves / 29 shots
|goalie6-2 =Craig Anderson 28 saves / 30 shots
|series = Ottawa won series 4–2
}}

(M1) Washington Capitals vs. (WC2) Toronto Maple Leafs

The Washington Capitals earned the Presidents' Trophy for the second consecutive year as the NHL's best regular season team this time with 118 points. The Toronto Maple Leafs finished as the Eastern Conference's second wild-card, earning 95 points. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Washington won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

This became only the third playoff series in NHL history in which five games were decided in overtime (the first being the 1951 Stanley Cup Finals between the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Montreal Canadiens and the second occurring in the 2012 Western Conference Quarterfinals between the Phoenix Coyotes and the Chicago Blackhawks).

The Capitals defeated the Maple Leafs in six games. Although Toronto had a two-goal lead in the first ten minutes of the first game, Washington scored two goals, both from Justin Williams, and won the game 3–2 in overtime from Tom Wilson's goal.[19] In game two, rookie Kasperi Kapanen scored twice including the game-winner in double-overtime leading the Maple Leafs to a 4–3 victory.[20] Washington took two two-goal leads in game three; the first pick in the 2016 NHL Draft, Auston Matthews, helped soften the lead with his first playoff goal, but after the Capitals got a 3–1 lead, the Maple Leafs scored twice to tie the game. Then in overtime, Tyler Bozak tipped a shot past the Capitals' goaltender to give the Leafs a 2–1 series lead.[21] Game four was the only game of the series not to go into overtime; Tom Wilson and T. J. Oshie both scored two goals and Oshie's second goal proved to be the game-winner in a 5–4 victory after an attempted comeback by Toronto was thwarted.[22] Game five featured the fourth overtime game of this series with Justin Williams scoring for Capitals in a 2–1, taking a 3–2 series lead in the process.[23] In game six, the game went to overtime for the fifth time this series and at 6:31 of the first overtime period Marcus Johansson scored his second goal for the Capitals in a 2–1 victory and another trip to the second round.[24]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Toronto Maple Leafs
|team2=Washington Capitals
|stadium2=Air Canada Centre
|stadium1=Verizon Center
|date1 =April 13
|score1 =2–3
|ot1 =1
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-washington-capitals-game-1-recap/c-288771920
|1-1-1 =Mitch Marner (1) – 01:35
Jake Gardiner (1) – 09:44
|1-1-2 =12:24 – pp – Justin Williams (1)
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =16:00 – Justin Williams (2)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|1-4-1 =No scoring
|1-4-2 =05:15 – Tom Wilson (1)
|goalie1-1 =Frederik Andersen 41 saves / 44 shots
|goalie1-2 =Braden Holtby 35 saves / 37 shots
|date2 =April 15
|score2 =4–3
|ot2 =2
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-washington-capitals-game-2-recap/c-288828964
|2-1-1 =James van Riemsdyk (1) – 17:34
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =Kasperi Kapanen (1) – 14:25
Morgan Rielly (1) – pp – 19:46
|2-2-2 =03:47 – pp – Alexander Ovechkin (1)
11:06 – pp – John Carlson (1)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =12:39 – Nicklas Backstrom (1)
|2-4-1 =Kasperi Kapanen (2) – 11:53
|2-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Frederik Andersen 47 saves / 50 shots
|goalie2-2 =Braden Holtby 47 saves / 51 shots
|date3 =April 17
|score3 =3–4
|ot3 =1
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-toronto-maple-leafs-game-3-recap/c-288885092
|3-1-1 =14:08 – Auston Matthews (1)
|3-1-2 =Nicklas Backstrom (2) – 02:43
Alexander Ovechkin (2) – 04:49
|3-2-1 =15:13 – Nazem Kadri (1)
19:20 – William Nylander (1)
|3-2-2 =Evgeny Kuznetsov (1) – 05:39
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|3-4-1 =01:37 – pp – Tyler Bozak (1)
|3-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Frederik Andersen 23 saves / 26 shots
|goalie3-2 =Braden Holtby 24 saves / 28 shots
|date4 =April 19
|score4 =5–4
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-toronto-maple-leafs-game-recap/c-288946114
|4-1-1 =05:16 – Zach Hyman (1)
|4-1-2 =T. J. Oshie (1) – 02:58
Alexander Ovechkin (3) – pp – 04:34
Tom Wilson (2) – 13:41
Tom Wilson (3) – 16:04
|4-2-1 =05:39 – pp – James van Riemsdyk (2)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =12:00 – Auston Matthews (2)
19:33 – Tyler Bozak (2)
|4-3-2 =T. J. Oshie (2) – 12:59
|goalie4-1 =Frederik Andersen 22 saves / 27 shots
|goalie4-2 =Braden Holtby 30 saves / 34 shots
|date5 =April 21
|score5 =1–2
|ot5 =1
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-washington-capitals-game-5-recap/c-289011910
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =18:15 – pp – T. J. Oshie (3)
|5-2-1 =Auston Matthews (3) – 06:00
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|5-4-1 =No scoring
|5-4-2 =01:04 – Justin Williams (3)
|goalie5-1 =Frederik Andersen 26 saves / 28 shots
|goalie5-2 =Braden Holtby 24 saves / 25 shots
|date6 =April 23
|score6 =2–1
|ot6 =1
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-toronto-maple-leafs-game-recap/c-289053624
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =07:45 – Auston Matthews (4)
|6-3-2 =Marcus Johansson (1) – 12:49
|6-4-1 =No scoring
|6-4-2 =Marcus Johansson (2) – 06:31
|goalie6-1 =Frederik Andersen 34 saves / 36 shots
|goalie6-2 =Braden Holtby 37 saves / 38 shots
|series = Washington won series 4–2
}}

(M2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (M3) Columbus Blue Jackets

The Pittsburgh Penguins finished second in the Metropolitan Division earning 111 points. The Columbus Blue Jackets earned 108 points to finish third in the Metropolitan. This was the second playoff meeting between these teams; they last met in the 2014 Eastern Conference First Round, which Pittsburgh won in six games. The teams split this year's four-game regular season series.

The Penguins defeated the Blue Jackets in five games. Before game one began, Matt Murray, the starting goaltender for the Penguins, injured himself during warm-ups forcing Marc-Andre Fleury, who had been demoted to the backup for the season, to start the game; his team would win the game 3–1, making 31 saves in the process.[25] Sidney Crosby got a goal and two assists in game two as the Penguins defeated the Blue Jackets 4–1 and took a 2–0 series lead.[26] In game three, Jake Guentzel scored a hat-trick, his third being the overtime-winner as the Penguins came back from a two-goal deficit and defeated the Blue Jackets 5–4 and take a 3–0 series lead.[27] Columbus avoided a sweep in game four, scoring with five different players in a 5–4 victory; this was also the franchise's first playoff win in regulation.[28] In game five, Bryan Rust scored twice, including the series-winner, and Fleury made 49 saves in a 5–2 win for the Penguins to advance to the second round.[29]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Columbus Blue Jackets
|team2=Pittsburgh Penguins
|stadium2=Nationwide Arena
|stadium1=PPG Paints Arena
|date1 =April 12
|score1 =1–3
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/columbus-blue-jackets-pittsburgh-penguins-game-1-recap/c-288726828
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =01:15 – Bryan Rust (1)
03:35 – pp – Phil Kessel (1)
16:25 – Nick Bonino (1)
|1-3-1 =Matt Calvert (1) – 12:41
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 26 saves / 29 shots
|goalie1-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 31 saves / 32 shots
|date2 =April 14
|score2 =1–4
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/columbus-blue-jackets-pittsburgh-penguins-game-2-recap/c-288800156
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =08:31 – Sidney Crosby (1)
|2-2-1 =Brandon Saad (1) – 07:00
|2-2-2 =07:51 – Jake Guentzel (1)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =02:01 – Evgeni Malkin (1)
19:14 – en – Patric Hornqvist (1)
|goalie2-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 28 saves / 31 shots
|goalie2-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 39 saves / 40 shots
|date3 =April 16
|score3 =5–4
|ot3 =1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-columbus-blue-jackets-game-3-recap/c-288848472
|3-1-1 =00:11 – Cam Atkinson (1)
05:02 – Cam Atkinson (2)
06:10 – pp – Zach Werenski (1)
|3-1-2 =Jake Guentzel (2) – 03:17
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Bryan Rust (2) – 05:21
Evgeni Malkin (2) – 13:25
|3-3-1 =15:11 – Brandon Dubinsky (1)
|3-3-2 =Jake Guentzel (3) – pp – 11:48
|3-4-1 =No scoring
|3-4-2 =Jake Guentzel (4) – 13:10
|goalie3-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 42 saves / 47 shots
|goalie3-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 33 saves / 37 shots
|date4 =April 18
|score4 =4–5
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-columbus-blue-jackets-game-4-recap/c-288918006
|4-1-1 =11:46 – Jack Johnson (1)
18:56 – Josh Anderson (1)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =04:48 – Markus Nutivaara (1)
|4-2-2 =Patric Hornqvist (2) – pp – 06:43
Ron Hainsey (1) – 16:24
|4-3-1 =00:27 – William Karlsson (1)
05:37 – Boone Jenner (1)
|4-3-2 =Tom Kuhnhackl (1) – 02:10
Jake Guentzel (5) – sh – 19:32
|goalie4-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 27 saves / 31 shots
|goalie4-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 29 saves / 34 shots
|date5 =April 20
|score5 =2–5
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/columbus-blue-jackets-pittsburgh-penguins-game-recap/c-288977508
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =09:07 – pp – Phil Kessel (2)
|5-2-1 =William Karlsson (2) – 09:30
Boone Jenner (2) – pp – 12:24
|5-2-2 =01:07 – Bryan Rust (3)
03:50 – Bryan Rust (4)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =05:31 – pp – Sidney Crosby (2)
06:22 – Scott Wilson (1)
|goalie5-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 27 saves / 32 shots
|goalie5-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 49 saves / 51 shots
|series = Pittsburgh won series 4–1
}}

Western Conference First Round

(C1) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (WC2) Nashville Predators

The Chicago Blackhawks finished first in the Central Division earning 109 points. The Nashville Predators finished as the Western Conference's second wild-card, earning 94 points. This was the third playoff meeting between these teams with Chicago winning both previous series. They last met in the 2015 Western Conference First Round, which Chicago won in six games. Chicago won four of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Predators defeated the Blackhawks in a four-game sweep; this was the first time in NHL playoff history that an eighth-seeded team swept a playoff series against the top seed in their conference. Viktor Arvidsson scored the only goal in game one as the Predators shut out the Blackhawks, stopping all 29 shots they faced.[30] The Blackhawks remained scoreless after game two, instead being outscored 5–0 with Pekka Rinne not only stopping all 30 shots he faced, but also providing two assists.[31] Chicago finally scored a goal in game three and they maintained a two-goal lead throughout the second period, but in the third period, Filip Forsberg scored twice for Nashville to tie the game and send it to overtime. In overtime, Nashville forward Kevin Fiala skated around Chicago goalie Corey Crawford and put the puck past the Chicago netminder to complete the comeback in a 3–2 victory giving them their first 3–0 series lead.[32] In game four, Roman Josi scored twice in a 4–1 victory and Rinne made 30 saves for the Predators, who swept a playoff opponent for the first time in franchise history.[33]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Nashville Predators
|team2=Chicago Blackhawks
|stadium2=Bridgestone Arena
|stadium1=United Center
|date1 =April 13
|score1 =1–0
|won1 =1
|recap1 =https://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/nsh-vs-chi/2017/04/13/2016030151#game=2016030151,game_state=final
|1-1-1 =Viktor Arvidsson (1) – 07:52
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Pekka Rinne 29 saves / 29 shots
|goalie1-2 =Corey Crawford 19 saves / 20 shots
|date2 =April 15
|score2 =5–0
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-chicago-blackhawks-game-2-recap/c-288827780
|2-1-1 =Ryan Ellis (1) – 03:44
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =Harry Zolnierczyk (1) – 02:51
Colton Sissons (1) – 13:00
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Ryan Johansen (1) – 13:46
Kevin Fiala (1) – pp – 18:13
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Pekka Rinne 30 saves / 30 shots
|goalie2-2 =Corey Crawford 24 saves / 29 shots
|date3 =April 17
|score3 =2–3
|ot3 =1
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/chicago-blackhawks-nashville-predators-game-3-recap/c-288891606
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Dennis Rasmussen (1) – 01:05
Patrick Kane (1) – pp – 11:15
|3-3-1 =04:24 – Filip Forsberg (1)
14:08 – Filip Forsberg (2)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|3-4-1 =16:44 – Kevin Fiala (2)
|3-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Pekka Rinne 34 saves / 36 shots
|goalie3-2 =Corey Crawford 46 saves / 49 shots
|date4 =April 20
|score4 =1–4
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/chicago-blackhawks-nashville-predators-game-4-recap/c-288979552
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =09:41 – Roman Josi (1)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =08:52 – Colton Sissons (2)
10:21 – Roman Josi (2)
18:12 – en – Viktor Arvidsson (2)
|4-3-2 =Jonathan Toews (1) – pp – 14:42
|goalie4-1 =Pekka Rinne 30 saves / 31 shots
|goalie4-2 =Corey Crawford 22 saves / 25 shots
|series = Nashville won series 4–0
}}

(C2) Minnesota Wild vs. (C3) St. Louis Blues

The Minnesota Wild finished second in the Central Division earning 106 points. The St. Louis Blues earned 99 points to finish third in the Central. This was the second playoff meeting between these teams; their only previous meeting was the 2015 Western Conference First Round, which Minnesota won in six games. St. Louis won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Blues defeated the Wild in five games. St. Louis won the first game of the series 2–1 17:48 into overtime from Joel Edmundson's wrist shot after the Wild tied the game in the final minute of the game, Jake Allen made 51 saves in the process.[34] In game two, Jaden Schwartz scored the game-winner with 2:27 left in the third period, giving the Blues another 2–1 victory over the Wild.[35] The Wild continued to score only one goal in each game this series, losing the game nevertheless, this time 3–1 as Allen made 40 saves and the Blues took a 3–0 series lead.[36] Devan Dubnyk kept the Wild alive in the series, stopping all 28 shots he faced in a 2–0 victory in game four.[37] In game five, the Blues took a 3–1 lead in the third period only to see the Wild tie it up in the last ten minutes. However, in overtime, Magnus Paajarvi ended the game for St. Louis, defeating the Wild 4–3 to advance to the second round.[38]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=St. Louis Blues
|team2=Minnesota Wild
|stadium2=Scottrade Center
|stadium1=Xcel Energy Center
|date1 =April 12
|score1 =2–1
|ot1 =1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-minnesota-wild-game-recap/c-288737082
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =Vladimir Sobotka (1) – 06:21
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =19:37 – Zach Parise (1)
|1-4-1 =Joel Edmundson (1) – 17:48
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Jake Allen 51 saves / 52 shots
|goalie1-2 =Devan Dubnyk 24 saves / 26 shots
|date2 =April 14
|score2 =2–1
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-minnesota-wild-game-recap/c-288802124
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =Joel Edmundson (2) – 03:51
|2-2-2 =17:44 – pp – Zach Parise (2)
|2-3-1 =Jaden Schwartz (1) – 17:33
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Jake Allen 21 saves / 22 shots
|goalie2-2 =Devan Dubnyk 22 saves / 24 shots
|date3 =April 16
|score3 =1–3
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/minnesota-wild-st-louis-blues-game-recap/c-288844554
|3-1-1 =03:25 – Colton Parayko (1)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =15:19 – pp – Jaden Schwartz (2)
|3-2-2 =Charlie Coyle (1) – 12:59
|3-3-1 =18:49 – en – Alexander Steen (1)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Jake Allen 40 saves / 41 shots
|goalie3-2 =Devan Dubnyk 28 saves / 30 shots
|date4 =April 19
|score4 =2–0
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/minnesota-wild-st-louis-blues-game-4-recap/c-288945542
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =Charlie Coyle (2) – 16:50
|4-2-1 =No scoring
|4-2-2 =Martin Hanzal (1) – 16:41
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Jake Allen 26 saves / 28 shots
|goalie4-2 =Devan Dubnyk 28 saves / 28 shots
|date5 =April 22
|score5 =4–3
|ot5 =1
|won5 =1
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-minnesota-wild-game-recap/c-289028908
|5-1-1 =Vladimir Tarasenko (1) – 07:16
Alexander Steen (2) – 10:31
|5-1-2 =18:31 – pp – Ryan Suter (1)
|5-2-1 =No scoring
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =Paul Stastny (1) – 07:23
|5-3-2 =10:38 – pp – Mikko Koivu (1)
14:59 – Jason Zucker (1)
|5-4-1 =Magnus Paajarvi (1) – 09:42
|5-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Jake Allen 34 saves / 37 shots
|goalie5-2 =Devan Dubnyk 23 saves / 27 shots
|series = St. Louis won series 4–1
}}

(P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (WC1) Calgary Flames

The Anaheim Ducks finished first in the Pacific Division for the fifth consecutive year, this time earning 105 points. The Calgary Flames finished as the Western Conference's first wild-card, earning 94 points. This was the third playoff meeting between these teams with Anaheim winning both previous series. They last met in the 2015 Western Conference Second Round which Anaheim won in five games. Anaheim won four of the five games in this year's regular season series. Anaheim has also won 25 straight regular-season home games against Calgary.

The Ducks defeated the Flames in a four-game sweep. In game one, both Ryan Getzlaf and Jakob Silfverberg had a goal and an assist, the latter of whom had the game-winning goal in a 3–2 victory for the Ducks.[39] Anaheim continued their home-dominance over Calgary defeating the Flames 3–2 with a goal and an assist by Getzlaf again.[40] The Flames had a lead of 4–1 in game three, forcing Ducks goaltender John Gibson to be replaced by Jonathan Bernier. The Ducks came back in this game, scoring three times, in what would become the fourth overtime game of this night. Corey Perry then threw the puck towards the net and it bounced off both Calgary goaltender Brian Elliott and defenceman Michael Stone and into the net, to give the Ducks a 3–0 series lead.[41] In game four, Gibson stopped 36 shots by the Flames, but allowed only one goal as the Ducks ended the series with a 3–1 win.[42]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Calgary Flames
|team2=Anaheim Ducks
|stadium2=Scotiabank Saddledome
|stadium1=Honda Center
|date1 =April 13
|score1 =2–3
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/calgary-flames-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-288771460
|1-1-1 =Sean Monahan (1) – pp – 08:43
|1-1-2 =00:52 – pp – Ryan Getzlaf (1)
|1-2-1 =Sam Bennett (1) – 09:46
|1-2-2 =13:53 – Rickard Rakell (1)
17:47 – pp – Jakob Silfverberg (1)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Brian Elliott 38 saves / 41 shots
|goalie1-2 =John Gibson 30 saves / 32 shots
|date2 =April 15
|score2 =2–3
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/calgary-flames-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-288826432
|2-1-1 =Mikael Backlund (1) – sh – 18:24
|2-1-2 =03:21 – Jakob Silfverberg (2)
06:44 – Rickard Rakell (2)
|2-2-1 =Sean Monahan (2) – pp – 07:01
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =15:14 – pp – Ryan Getzlaf (2)
|goalie2-1 =Brian Elliott 26 saves / 29 shots
|goalie2-2 =John Gibson 35 saves / 37 shots
|date3 =April 17
|score3 =5–4
|ot3 =1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-calgary-flames-game-recap/c-288891628
|3-1-1 =02:10 – pp – Sean Monahan (3)
09:18 – pp – Kris Versteeg (1)
|3-1-2 =Nick Ritchie (1) – 15:33
|3-2-1 =04:34 – Michael Stone (1)
08:33 – pp – Sam Bennett (2)
|3-2-2 =Shea Theodore (1) – 19:11
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =Nate Thompson (1) – 11:14
Shea Theodore (2) – 15:39
|3-4-1 =No scoring
|3-4-2 =Corey Perry (1) – 01:30
|goalie3-1 =Brian Elliott 22 saves / 27 shots
|goalie3-2 =John Gibson 12 saves / 16 shots
Jonathan Bernier 16 saves / 16 shots
|date4 =April 19
|score4 =3–1
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-calgary-flames-game-recap/c-288952994
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =Patrick Eaves (1) – 05:38
Nate Thompson (2) – 06:46
|4-2-1 =16:07 – pp – Sean Monahan (4)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =Ryan Getzlaf (3) – en – 19:53
|goalie4-1 =Brian Elliott 2 saves / 3 shots
Chad Johnson 20 saves / 21 shots
|goalie4-2 =John Gibson 36 saves / 37 shots
|series = Anaheim won series 4–0
}}

(P2) Edmonton Oilers vs. (P3) San Jose Sharks

The Edmonton Oilers finished second in the Pacific Division with 103 points. The San Jose Sharks earned 99 points in the regular season to finish third in the Pacific. Edmonton started a playoff series at home for the first time since the 1991 Campbell Conference Finals. This was the second playoff meeting between these teams; their only previous series was the 2006 Western Conference Semifinals, which Edmonton won in six games. Edmonton won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Oilers defeated the Sharks in six games. In Edmonton's first playoff game since 2006, the Oilers took a 2–0 lead in the first period, but the Sharks scored three goals over the second, third, and first overtime period winning the game 3–2 from Melker Karlsson's goal.[43] The Oilers scored two shorthanded goals in game two as they blanked San Jose 2–0.[44] The shutout streak continued in game three, as Zack Kassian scored the only goal for the Oilers and Cam Talbot stopped 23 shots.[45] Logan Couture and Joe Pavelski scored two goals each and Martin Jones stopped all 23 shots as the Sharks blanked the Oilers 7–0 in game four to tie the series at two.[46] The Sharks gained a 3–1 lead over the Oilers in game five, but both Mark Letestu and Oscar Klefbom scored to tie the game and send it to overtime. David Desharnais would end it at 18:15 of overtime to give the Oilers a 4–3 triumph and a 3–2 series lead.[47] In game six, the Oilers scored twice in the second period, both on breakaways, and closed out the series with a 3–1 win.[48]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=San Jose Sharks
|team2=Edmonton Oilers
|stadium2=SAP Center
|stadium1=Rogers Place
|date1 =April 12
|score1 =3–2
|ot1 =1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/san-jose-sharks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-288723116
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =06:44 – Oscar Klefbom (1)
17:07 – pp – Milan Lucic (1)
|1-2-1 =Joel Ward (1) – pp – 01:43
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =Paul Martin (1) – 05:22
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|1-4-1 =Melker Karlsson (1) – 03:22
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Martin Jones 17 saves / 19 shots
|goalie1-2 =Cam Talbot 41 saves / 44 shots
|date2 =April 14
|score2 =0–2
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/san-jose-sharks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-288801870
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =00:42 – sh – Zack Kassian (1)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =10:31 – sh – Connor McDavid (1)
|goalie2-1 =Martin Jones 34 saves / 36 shots
|goalie2-2 =Cam Talbot 16 saves / 16 shots
|date3 =April 16
|score3 =1–0
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-san-jose-sharks-game-recap/c-288855884
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =Zack Kassian (2) – 10:45
|goalie3-1 =Martin Jones 21 saves / 22 shots
|goalie3-2 =Cam Talbot 22 saves / 22 shots
|date4 =April 18
|score4 =0–7
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-san-jose-sharks-game-4-recap/c-288915656
|4-1-1 =00:15 – Joe Pavelski (1)
11:02 – pp – Logan Couture (1)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =02:02 – pp – Patrick Marleau (1)
09:46 – Marcus Sorensen (1)
12:52 – Logan Couture (2)
16:46 – pp – Joe Pavelski (2)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =06:45 – pp – David Schlemko (1)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Martin Jones 23 saves / 23 shots
|goalie4-2 =Cam Talbot 19 saves / 24 shots
Laurent Brossoit 6 saves / 8 shots
|date5 =April 20
|score5 =3–4
|ot5 =1
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/san-jose-sharks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-288976164
|5-1-1 =Mikkel Boedker (1) – 10:12
Patrick Marleau (2) – 15:52
|5-1-2 =05:28 – Patrick Maroon (1)
|5-2-1 =David Schlemko (2) – 08:58
|5-2-2 =18:33 – pp – Mark Letestu (1)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =17:14 – Oscar Klefbom (2)
|5-4-1 =No scoring
|5-4-2 =18:15 – David Desharnais (1)
|goalie5-1 =Martin Jones 44 saves / 48 shots
|goalie5-2 =Cam Talbot 27 saves / 30 shots
|date6 =April 22
|score6 =3–1
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-san-jose-sharks-game-recap/c-289036190
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =Leon Draisaitl (1) – 00:54
Anton Slepyshev (1) – 01:50
|6-3-1 =12:12 – Patrick Marleau (3)
|6-3-2 =Connor McDavid (2) – en – 19:59
|goalie6-1 =Martin Jones 18 saves / 20 shots
|goalie6-2 =Cam Talbot 27 saves / 28 shots
|series = Edmonton won series 4–2
}}

Second Round

Eastern Conference Second Round

(A2) Ottawa Senators vs. (WC1) New York Rangers

This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams; their only previous series was in the 2012 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, which New York won in seven games. This was the second time under the current playoff format and the second year in a row in which a wild-card team had more points than its opponent during the regular season but did not have home ice advantage; the other time was the Tampa Bay Lightning and the New York Islanders in last year's Eastern Conference Second Round. Ottawa won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Senators defeated the Rangers in six games. In the first game, goaltender Craig Anderson made 34 saves in a 2–1 victory for the Senators.[49] The Rangers had leads of 3–1, 4–2, and 5–3 in game two only to have the Senators tie up the game on Jean-Gabriel Pageau's hat-trick goal with 1:02 remaining. In double-overtime, Pageau's fourth goal of the game gave the Senators a 6–5 win and a 2–0 series lead. In doing this, he became the first player to score four goals in a playoff game since Johan Franzen scored four goals for the Detroit Red Wings in Game 4 of their 2010 second round series against the San Jose Sharks.[50] Mats Zuccarello had a goal and an assist in game three as the Rangers won the affair 4–1.[51] The Rangers defeated the Senators 4–1 again in game four, tying the series 2–2; Oscar Lindberg scored twice in the victory.[52] The Rangers got an early two-goal lead in game five, but the Senators came back scoring three goals in return. The Rangers regained the lead, but former Ranger Derick Brassard tied the game in the final minutes to send it to overtime. Kyle Turris ended the game 6:28 into overtime to give the Senators a 5–4 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[53] In game six, Erik Karlsson netted the series-winning goal and added an assist for the Senators who advanced to the Conference Finals for the first time in ten years after a 4–2 victory.

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=New York Rangers
|team2=Ottawa Senators
|stadium2=Madison Square Garden
|stadium1=Canadian Tire Centre
|date1 =April 27
|score1 =1–2
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-ottawa-senators-game-1-recap/c-289138300
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =Ryan McDonagh (1) – pp – 07:10
|1-2-2 =18:39 – pp – Ryan Dzingel (1)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =15:49 – Erik Karlsson (1)
|goalie1-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 41 saves / 43 shots
|goalie1-2 =Craig Anderson 34 saves / 35 shots
|date2 =April 29
|score2 =5–6
|ot2 =2
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-ottawa-senators-game-2-recap/c-289174964
|2-1-1 =Michael Grabner (3) – sh – 04:16
|2-1-2 =13:59 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (2)
|2-2-1 =Chris Kreider (1) – 10:39
Derek Stepan (2) – sh – 13:10
Brady Skjei (3) – 15:51
|2-2-2 =14:00 – Marc Methot (1)
|2-3-1 =Brady Skjei (4) – 05:10
|2-3-2 =01:28 – Mark Stone (2)
16:41 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (3)
18:58 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (4)
|2-4-1 =No scoring
|2-4-2 =02:54 – Jean-Gabriel Pageau (5)
|goalie2-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 28 saves / 34 shots
|goalie2-2 =Craig Anderson 43 saves / 48 shots
|date3 =May 2
|score3 =1–4
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-new-york-rangers-game-3-recap/c-289231906
|3-1-1 =05:31 – Mats Zuccarello (4)
13:24 – Michael Grabner (4)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =12:21 – Rick Nash (3)
18:17 – Oscar Lindberg (1)
|3-2-2 =Jean-Gabriel Pageau (6) – 18:49
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 26 saves / 27 shots
|goalie3-2 =Craig Anderson 26 saves / 30 shots
|date4 =May 4
|score4 =1–4
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-new-york-rangers-game-recap/c-289278746
|4-1-1 =14:04 – Nick Holden (1)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =02:01 – Oscar Lindberg (2)
15:54 – Oscar Lindberg (3)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =10:45 – pp – Chris Kreider (2)
|4-3-2 =Kyle Turris (2) – 13:34
|goalie4-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 22 saves / 23 shots
|goalie4-2 =Craig Anderson 17 saves / 20 shots
Mike Condon 9 saves / 10 shots
|date5 =May 6
|score5 =4–5
|ot5 =1
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-ottawa-senators-game-5-recap/c-289310288
|5-1-1 =Jesper Fast (3) – 04:07
Nick Holden (2) – 05:13
|5-1-2 =06:03 – Mark Stone (3)
|5-2-1 =Ryan McDonagh (2) – 17:49
|5-2-2 =08:17 – Mike Hoffman (3)
08:50 – Tom Pyatt (1)
|5-3-1 =Jimmy Vesey (1) – 12:48
|5-3-2 =18:34 – Derick Brassard (3)
|5-4-1 =No scoring
|5-4-2 =06:28 – Kyle Turris (3)
|goalie5-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 32 saves / 37 shots
|goalie5-2 =Craig Anderson 29 saves / 33 shots
|date6 =May 9
|score6 =4–2
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-new-york-rangers-game-6-recap/c-289362806
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =Mike Hoffman (4) – 04:27
Mark Stone (4) – 14:44
|6-2-1 =13:32 – Mika Zibanejad (2)
|6-2-2 =Erik Karlsson (2) – 15:53
|6-3-1 =00:53 – Chris Kreider (3)
|6-3-2 =Jean-Gabriel Pageau (7) – en – 19:53
|goalie6-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 22 saves / 25 shots
|goalie6-2 =Craig Anderson 37 saves / 39 shots
|series = Ottawa won series 4–2
}}

(M1) Washington Capitals vs. (M2) Pittsburgh Penguins

This was the tenth playoff meeting between these teams and the second consecutive in the second round. Pittsburgh has won eight of the nine previous series including last year's confrontation which ended in six games. These teams split their four-game regular season series.

The Penguins defeated the Capitals in seven games after they gave up a 3–1 series lead. In the final eight minutes of game one, Nick Bonino scored the game-winning goal as the Penguins once led 2–0 only to have Washington score twice to tie the game, then with 8:24 left in the third period Bonino gave the Penguins a 3–2 lead and thus the victory.[54] Phil Kessel and Jake Guentzel both scored twice for the Penguins in a 6–2 victory, gaining a 2–0 series lead as a result.[55] The Capitals got an early 1–0 lead in game three, then a goal by Evgeny Kuznetsov put them up by two goals, however, in the final two minutes of the game, the Penguins tied the score 2–2. In overtime, Trevor Daley of the Penguins was penalized for holding and on the ensuing power play, Kevin Shattenkirk scored to give the Capitals a 3–2 victory.[56] Pittsburgh lead 2–0 in game four only to have Washington tie the game, however, 2:49 after Nate Schmidt tied the game for Washington, Justin Schultz on the power play gave the Penguins a 3–2 lead and the victory.[57] Washington scored three times in the third period of game five after being down one goal to win 4–2.[58] Andre Burakovsky scored twice in game six, forcing a seventh game in Washington's 5–2 triumph.[59] In game seven, Marc-Andre Fleury stopped all 29 shots and Bryan Rust scored the series-winning goal to defeat the Capitals 2–0 and advance to the Conference Finals for the second consecutive year.[60]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Pittsburgh Penguins
|team2=Washington Capitals
|stadium2=PPG Paints Arena
|stadium1=Verizon Center
|date1 =April 27
|score1 =3–2
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-recap/c-289139100
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =Sidney Crosby (3) – 00:12
Sidney Crosby (4) – 01:04
|1-2-2 =18:17 – Alexander Ovechkin (4)
|1-3-1 =Nick Bonino (2) – 12:36
|1-3-2 =08:05 – Evgeny Kuznetsov (2)
|goalie1-1 =Marc-Andre Fleury 33 saves / 35 shots
|goalie1-2 =Braden Holtby 18 saves / 21 shots
|date2 =April 29
|score2 =6–2
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-recap/c-289181350
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =Matt Cullen (1) – sh – 01:15
Phil Kessel (3) – 13:04
Jake Guentzel (6) – 16:14
|2-2-2 =02:09 – pp – Matt Niskanen (1)
|2-3-1 =Phil Kessel (4) – pp – 02:19
Evgeni Malkin (3) – 05:31
Jake Guentzel (7) – en – 19:17
|2-3-2 =03:44 – Nicklas Backstrom (3)
|goalie2-1 =Marc-Andre Fleury 34 saves / 36 shots
|goalie2-2 =Braden Holtby 11 saves / 14 shots
Philipp Grubauer 7 saves / 9 shots
|date3 =May 1
|score3 =3–2
|ot3 =1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-pittsburgh-penguins-game-3-recap/c-289214090
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =Nicklas Backstrom (4) – pp – 13:05
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =18:07 – Evgeni Malkin (4)
18:55 – Justin Schultz (1)
|3-3-2 =Evgeny Kuznetsov (3) – 09:46
|3-4-1 =No scoring
|3-4-2 =Kevin Shattenkirk (1) – pp – 03:13
|goalie3-1 =Marc-Andre Fleury 30 saves / 33 shots
|goalie3-2 =Braden Holtby 28 saves / 30 shots
|date4 =May 3
|score4 =2–3
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-pittsburgh-penguins-game-4-recap/c-289257166
|4-1-1 =04:39 – Patric Hornqvist (3)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =03:51 – Jake Guentzel (8)
11:24 – pp – Justin Schultz (2)
|4-2-2 =Evgeny Kuznetsov (4) – 07:21
Nate Schmidt (1) – 08:33
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Marc-Andre Fleury 36 saves / 38 shots
|goalie4-2 =Braden Holtby 16 saves / 19 shots
|date5 =May 6
|score5 =2–4
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-5-recap/c-289314030
|5-1-1 =Carl Hagelin (1) – 10:24
|5-1-2 =19:30 – Andre Burakovsky (1)
|5-2-1 =Phil Kessel (5) – pp – 04:20
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =02:49 – Nicklas Backstrom (5)
07:20 – Evgeny Kuznetsov (5)
07:47 – Alexander Ovechkin (5)
|goalie5-1 =Marc-Andre Fleury 28 saves / 32 shots
|goalie5-2 =Braden Holtby 20 saves / 22 shots
|date6 =May 8
|score6 =5–2
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-pittsburgh-penguins-game-6-recap/c-289346314
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =T. J. Oshie (4) – pp – 12:41
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =Andre Burakovsky (2) – 06:36
|6-3-1 =16:38 – Jake Guentzel (9)
17:30 – Evgeni Malkin (5)
|6-3-2 =Nicklas Backstrom (6) – 00:16
John Carlson (2) – pp – 11:17
Andre Burakovsky (3) – 12:29
|goalie6-1 =Marc-Andre Fleury 21 saves / 26 shots
|goalie6-2 =Braden Holtby 16 saves / 18 shots
|date7 =May 10
|score7 =2–0
|won7 =1
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-7-recap/c-289381056
|7-1-1 =No scoring
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =Bryan Rust (5) – 08:49
|7-2-2 =No scoring
|7-3-1 =Patric Hornqvist (4) – 04:14
|7-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie7-1 =Marc-Andre Fleury 29 saves / 29 shots
|goalie7-2 =Braden Holtby 26 saves / 28 shots
|series = Pittsburgh won series 4–3
}}

Western Conference Second Round

(C3) St. Louis Blues vs. (WC2) Nashville Predators

This was the first playoff meeting between these teams. Nashville won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Predators defeated the Blues in six games. The first game of the series had Nashville gain a 3–1 lead, St. Louis then scored twice in the third period to tie the game, but with 5:05 left in the third period, Vernon Fiddler gave the Predators 4–3 lead as well a 1–0 series lead. During the game, Kevin Fiala fractured his left leg after being checked by Robert Bortuzzo; Fiala would require a stretcher to get off the ice.[61] In game two, Vladimir Tarasenko scored twice including the game-winner, tying the series 1–1 in a 3–2 triumph.[62] The Predators continued their home-winning streak dating back to last year's first round winning game three, by a final score of 3–1 with Colton Sissons assisting twice, increasing the streak to seven home games.[63] Nashville won their eighth consecutive playoff home game after game four, defeating the Blues 2–1 and Pekka Rinne making 32 saves.[64] Jaden Schwartz broke a 1–1 tie in the third period of the fifth game and maintained the 2–1 lead to a victory.[65] In game six, Ryan Johansen scored the series-winning goal in a 3–1 victory as the Predators moved onto the Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history after eighteen seasons in the league.[66] This left the Columbus Blue Jackets as the only team that has never made it to the Conference Finals, after the Winnipeg Jets beat the Predators in the 2018 Western Conference Second Round to make it to the Conference Finals.

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Nashville Predators
|team2=St. Louis Blues
|stadium2=Bridgestone Arena
|stadium1=Scottrade Center
|date1 =April 26
|score1 =4–3
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-st-louis-blues-game-recap/c-289111840
|1-1-1 =Colin Wilson (1) – pp – 11:24
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =P. K. Subban (1) – 02:22
Filip Forsberg (3) – pp – 12:11
|1-2-2 =08:04 – Colton Parayko (2)
|1-3-1 =Vernon Fiddler (1) – 14:55
|1-3-2 =06:48 – Jaden Schwartz (3)
09:22 – Vladimir Sobotka (2)
|goalie1-1 =Pekka Rinne 27 saves / 30 shots
|goalie1-2 =Jake Allen 28 saves / 32 shots
|date2 =April 28
|score2 =2–3
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-st-louis-blues-game-recap/c-289162182
|2-1-1 =James Neal (1) – 07:49
|2-1-2 =19:40 – pp – Vladimir Tarasenko (2)
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Ryan Ellis (2) – 03:07
|2-3-2 =07:39 – Jori Lehtera (1)
16:09 – Vladimir Tarasenko (3)
|goalie2-1 =Pekka Rinne 17 saves / 20 shots
|goalie2-2 =Jake Allen 22 saves / 24 shots
|date3 =April 30
|score3 =1–3
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-nashville-predators-game-3-recap/c-289190628
|3-1-1 =10:34 – Ryan Ellis (3)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =02:29 – Cody McLeod (1)
|3-2-2 =Alexander Steen (3) – 12:59
|3-3-1 =14:11 – Roman Josi (3)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Pekka Rinne 22 saves / 23 shots
|goalie3-2 =Jake Allen 31 saves / 34 shots
|date4 =May 2
|score4 =1–2
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-nashville-predators-game-recap/c-289235612
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =No scoring
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =05:09 – pp – Ryan Ellis (4)
13:03 – James Neal (2)
|4-3-2 =Joel Edmundson (3) – 16:11
|goalie4-1 =Pekka Rinne 32 saves / 33 shots
|goalie4-2 =Jake Allen 23 saves / 25 shots
|date5 =May 5
|score5 =1–2
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-st-louis-blues-game-5-recap/c-289297128
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =James Neal (3) – pp – 13:50
|5-2-2 =05:43 – Dmitrij Jaskin (1)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =00:25 – Jaden Schwartz (4)
|goalie5-1 =Pekka Rinne 30 saves / 32 shots
|goalie5-2 =Jake Allen 21 saves / 22 shots
|date6 =May 7
|score6 =1–3
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-nashville-predators-game-recap/c-289323596
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =Paul Stastny (2) – 02:04
|6-2-1 =00:35 – Roman Josi (4)
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =03:15 – Ryan Johansen (2)
19:00 – en – Calle Jarnkrok (1)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Pekka Rinne 23 saves / 24 shots
|goalie6-2 =Jake Allen 15 saves / 17 shots
|series = Nashville won series 4–2
}}

(P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (P2) Edmonton Oilers

This was the second playoff meeting between these teams; their only previous series was in the 2006 Western Conference Finals, which Edmonton won in five games. Edmonton won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Ducks defeated the Oilers in seven games. In the first game, Mark Letestu scored twice and Leon Draisaitl had a goal and three assists as the Oilers, who once gained a 3–1 lead in the third period only to see the Ducks tie the game in less than three minutes, scored twice in the final five minutes to achieve a 5–3 lead and thus the victory.[67] Goalie Cam Talbot stopped 39 shots and former-Duck Patrick Maroon scored the game-winning goal in game two for the Oilers' 2–1 victory.[68] Anaheim took an early 3–0 lead in game three only to see the Oilers tie the game. The Ducks took the lead back in the second period with Chris Wagner's goal, then Jakob Silfverberg scored his second of the game and Ryan Kesler provided an insurance goal to close out the game 6–3.[69] In game four, Ryan Getzlaf scored twice to take the lead for the Ducks after being down 2–0 in the game, then in 45 seconds into overtime, Silfverberg scored to give the Ducks the victory and the series tie.[70] The Oilers gained a 3–0 lead in game five, but with 3:16 left in the game, the Ducks scored three times to tie the game becoming the first team to score three goals in that span of time left to tie the game. The comeback was complete at 6:57 of double-overtime when Corey Perry gave Ducks a 4–3 victory and a 3–2 series lead.[71] The Oilers scored five times in the first period of game six and Draisaitl had a hat trick along with two assists to defeat the Ducks 7–1 and force a seventh game.[72] In game seven, Nick Ritchie's goal proved to be the series-winner as the Ducks were able to win a series via seventh game for the first time since 2006 and advance to the Conference Finals with a 2–1 victory.[73]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Edmonton Oilers
|team2=Anaheim Ducks
|stadium2=Rogers Place
|stadium1=Honda Center
|date1 =April 26
|score1 =5–3
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-1-recap/c-289116614
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =Mark Letestu (2) – pp – 06:22
|1-2-2 =00:37 – pp – Ryan Getzlaf (4)
|1-3-1 =Mark Letestu (3) – pp – 06:23
Adam Larsson (1) – 08:03
Adam Larsson (2) – 15:20
Leon Draisaitl (2) – en – 18:55
|1-3-2 =09:22 – Patrick Eaves (2)
10:47 – Jakob Silfverberg (3)
|goalie1-1 =Cam Talbot 33 saves / 36 shots
|goalie1-2 =John Gibson 27 saves / 31 shots
|date2 =April 28
|score2 =2–1
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289164432
|2-1-1 =Andrej Sekera (1) – 01:05
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =Patrick Maroon (2) – pp – 06:41
|2-2-2 =15:34 – pp – Jakob Silfverberg (4)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Cam Talbot 39 saves / 40 shots
|goalie2-2 =John Gibson 21 saves / 23 shots
|date3 =April 30
|score3 =6–3
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-edmonton-oilers-game-3-recap/c-289193994
|3-1-1 =19:20 – Patrick Maroon (3)
|3-1-2 =Rickard Rakell (3) – 00:25
Jakob Silfverberg (5) – 05:33
Ryan Getzlaf (5) – 11:51
|3-2-1 =01:28 – Anton Slepyshev (2)
08:40 – Connor McDavid (3)
|3-2-2 =Chris Wagner (1) – 09:28
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =Jakob Silfverberg (6) – 04:56
Ryan Kesler (1) – 10:38
|goalie3-1 =Cam Talbot 22 saves / 28 shots
|goalie3-2 =John Gibson 24 saves / 27 shots
|date4 =May 3
|score4 =4–3
|ot4 =1
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-edmonton-oilers-game-4-recap/c-289255526
|4-1-1 =15:38 – pp – Milan Lucic (2)
17:43 – Connor McDavid (4)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =No scoring
|4-2-2 =Ryan Getzlaf (6) – 01:37
Rickard Rakell (4) – 05:33
Ryan Getzlaf (7) – 14:25
|4-3-1 =18:18 – Drake Caggiula (1)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|4-4-1 =No scoring
|4-4-2 =Jakob Silfverberg (7) – 00:45
|goalie4-1 =Cam Talbot 35 saves / 39 shots
|goalie4-2 =John Gibson 29 saves / 32 shots
|date5 =May 5
|score5 =3–4
|ot5 =2
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289296296
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =Leon Draisaitl (3) – 00:15
Connor McDavid (5) – pp – 02:55
Drake Caggiula (2) – 12:28
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =16:44 – Ryan Getzlaf (8)
17:19 – Cam Fowler (1)
19:45 – Rickard Rakell (5)
|5-4-1 =No scoring
|5-4-2 =06:57 – Corey Perry (2)
|goalie5-1 =Cam Talbot 60 saves / 64 shots
|goalie5-2 =John Gibson 35 saves / 38 shots
|date6 =May 7
|score6 =1–7
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-289327984
|6-1-1 =02:45 – Leon Draisaitl (4)
07:22 – Leon Draisaitl (5)
08:25 – Zack Kassian (3)
11:39 – Mark Letestu (4)
18:49 – pp – Mark Letestu (5)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =00:45 – Anton Slepyshev (3)
15:27 – pp – Leon Draisaitl (6)
|6-2-2 =Rickard Rakell (6) – 08:56
|6-3-1 =No scoring
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Cam Talbot 34 saves / 35 shots
|goalie6-2 =John Gibson 3 saves / 6 shots
Jonathan Bernier 25 saves / 29 shots
|date7 =May 10
|score7 =1–2
|won7 =2
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289385314
|7-1-1 =Drake Caggiula (3) – 03:31
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =No scoring
|7-2-2 =08:55 – Andrew Cogliano (1)
|7-3-1 =No scoring
|7-3-2 =03:21 – Nick Ritchie (2)
|goalie7-1 =Cam Talbot 28 saves / 30 shots
|goalie7-2 =John Gibson 23 saves / 24 shots
|series = Anaheim won series 4–3
}}

Conference Finals

{{Main|NHL Conference Finals}}

Eastern Conference Final

(M2) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (A2) Ottawa Senators

This was the fifth playoff meeting between these teams with Pittsburgh winning three of the four previous series. They last met in the 2013 Eastern Conference Semifinals, which Pittsburgh won in five games. This was the second consecutive Conference Finals appearance for Pittsburgh who defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning last year in seven games. Ottawa last went to the Conference Finals in 2007; they defeated the Buffalo Sabres in five games. Ottawa won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Penguins defeated the Senators in seven games. In game one, the Senators held onto a one-goal lead until Evgeni Malkin tied the game in the third period, but in overtime, Bobby Ryan scored to give Ottawa a 2–1 victory.[74] The second game remained scoreless until Phil Kessel scored with 6:55 left in the game to give the Penguins a 1–0 lead and the victory; Marc-Andre Fleury made 23 saves in the process.[75] In the first period of game three, the Senators scored four times including three in a span of 2:18 leading them into a 5–1 victory.[76] In his first playoff game since his injury before the first game of the playoffs, goaltender Matt Murray made 24 saves and stopped a comeback from Ottawa in a 3–2 victory for Pittsburgh.[77] Murray stopped all 26 shots and the Penguins routed the Senators 7–0 in game five to take a 3–2 series lead.[78] Craig Anderson made 45 saves in game six, forcing a seventh game in a 2–1 victory.[79] In game seven, Chris Kunitz of the Penguins and Mark Stone of the Senators started the scoring 20 seconds apart in the second period. After both Justin Schultz and Ryan Dzingel made the game 2–2, the match headed into overtime. In double-overtime, Kunitz scored his second of the game to send the Pittsburgh Penguins to the Finals for the second consecutive year.[80]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Ottawa Senators
|team2=Pittsburgh Penguins
|stadium2=Canadian Tire Centre
|stadium1=PPG Paints Arena
|date1 =May 13
|score1 =2–1
|ot1 =1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-1-recap/c-289434450
|1-1-1 =Jean-Gabriel Pageau (8) – 14:32
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =14:25 – Evgeni Malkin (6)
|1-4-1 =Bobby Ryan (5) – 04:59
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Craig Anderson 27 saves / 28 shots
|goalie1-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 33 saves / 35 shots
|date2 =May 15
|score2 =0–1
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-2-recap/c-289460590
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =13:05 – Phil Kessel (6)
|goalie2-1 =Craig Anderson 28 saves / 29 shots
|goalie2-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 23 saves / 23 shots
|date3 =May 17
|score3 =1–5
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-ottawa-senators-game-recap/c-289494306
|3-1-1 =00:48 – Mike Hoffman (5)
10:34 – Marc Methot (2)
12:28 – Derick Brassard (4)
12:52 – Zack Smith (1)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =18:18 – Kyle Turris (4)
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =Sidney Crosby (5) – pp – 06:07
|goalie3-1 =Craig Anderson 25 saves / 26 shots
|goalie3-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 5 saves / 9 shots
Matt Murray 19 saves / 20 shots
|date4 =May 19
|score4 =3–2
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-ottawa-senators-game-4-recap/c-289529290
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =Olli Maatta (1) – 19:14
|4-2-1 =18:22 – Clarke MacArthur (3)
|4-2-2 =Sidney Crosby (6) – pp – 07:41
Brian Dumoulin (1) – 11:30
|4-3-1 =14:59 – Tom Pyatt (2)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Craig Anderson 32 saves / 35 shots
|goalie4-2 =Matt Murray 24 saves / 26 shots
|date5 =May 21
|score5 =0–7
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-recap/c-289548768
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =08:14 – Olli Maatta (2)
12:03 – pp – Sidney Crosby (7)
16:04 – Bryan Rust (6)
18:17 – Scott Wilson (2)
|5-2-1 =No scoring
|5-2-2 =01:54 – Matt Cullen (2)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =00:50 – pp – Phil Kessel (7)
08:49 – pp – Trevor Daley (1)
|goalie5-1 =Craig Anderson 10 saves / 14 shots
Mike Condon 19 saves / 22 shots
|goalie5-2 =Matt Murray 25 saves / 25 shots
|date6 =May 23
|score6 =1–2
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-ottawa-senators-game-6-recap/c-289587028
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =13:15 – pp – Bobby Ryan (6)
|6-2-2 =Evgeni Malkin (7) – 04:51
|6-3-1 =01:34 – Mike Hoffman (6)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Craig Anderson 45 saves / 46 shots
|goalie6-2 =Matt Murray 28 saves / 30 shots
|date7 =May 25
|score7 =2–3
|ot7 =2
|won7 =2
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-recap/c-289618298
|7-1-1 =No scoring
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =Mark Stone (5) – 10:15
|7-2-2 =09:55 – Chris Kunitz (1)
|7-3-1 =Ryan Dzingel (2) – 14:41
|7-3-2 =11:44 – pp – Justin Schultz (3)
|7-4-1 =No scoring
|7-4-2 =05:09 – Chris Kunitz (2)
|goalie7-1 =Craig Anderson 39 saves / 42 shots
|goalie7-2 =Matt Murray 27 saves / 29 shots
|series = Pittsburgh won series 4–3
}}

Western Conference Final

(P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (WC2) Nashville Predators

This was the second consecutive playoff meeting and the third overall between these teams with Nashville winning both previous series, including a seven-game win in last year's first round. This was Anaheim's fifth Conference Finals appearance. They last made the Conference Finals in 2015 where they were defeated in seven games by the Chicago Blackhawks. This was Nashville's first Conference Finals appearance in their 19-year history. Anaheim won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Predators defeated the Ducks in six games. The first game of the series went into overtime, and at 9:24 James Neal put the puck past the Ducks goaltender to take game one, 3–2.[81] In game two, the Ducks rallied from an early-two-goal deficit to defeat the Predators 5–3 and Ryan Getzlaf assisted thrice in the victory.[82] Nashville kept their home playoff win streak alive in game three, winning 2–1; after a pair of goals were disallowed due to goaltender interference, Roman Josi scored for the Predators with 2:43 left in the game.[83] Although Nashville tied the game after being down by two goals in game four, Anaheim won the game on Corey Perry's goal 10:25 into overtime, tying the series 2–2 in a 3–2 victory.[84] Pekka Rinne made 32 saves in game five for the Predators as Nashville took a 3–2 series lead in a 3–1 victory.[85] In game six, Colton Sissons' hat trick goal was the series-winning goal in a 6–3 victory, putting the Nashville Predators in the Finals for the first time in their 19-year history.[86]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Nashville Predators
|team2=Anaheim Ducks
|stadium2=Bridgestone Arena
|stadium1=Honda Center
|date1 =May 12
|score1 =3–2
|ot1 =1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289423400
|1-1-1 =Filip Forsberg (4) – 12:34
|1-1-2 =05:15 – Jakob Silfverberg (8)
|1-2-1 =Austin Watson (1) – 02:42
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =07:21 – Hampus Lindholm (1)
|1-4-1 =James Neal (4) – 09:24
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Pekka Rinne 27 saves / 29 shots
|goalie1-2 =John Gibson 43 saves / 46 shots
|date2 =May 14
|score2 =3–5
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-2-recap/c-289442372
|2-1-1 =Ryan Johansen (3) – 04:18
James Neal (5) – pp – 08:32
|2-1-2 =19:00 – pp – Sami Vatanen (1)
|2-2-1 =Filip Forsberg (5) – 07:59
|2-2-2 =00:39 – Jakob Silfverberg (9)
10:41 – Ondrej Kase (1)
17:07 – Nick Ritchie (3)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =19:16 – en – Antoine Vermette (1)
|goalie2-1 =Pekka Rinne 22 saves / 26 shots
|goalie2-2 =John Gibson 30 saves / 33 shots
|date3 =May 16
|score3 =1–2
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-nashville-predators-game-3-recap/c-289477646
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Corey Perry (3) – pp – 15:35
|3-3-1 =03:54 – Filip Forsberg (6)
17:17 – pp – Roman Josi (5)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Pekka Rinne 19 saves / 20 shots
|goalie3-2 =John Gibson 38 saves / 40 shots
|date4 =May 18
|score4 =3–2
|ot4 =1
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-nashville-predators-game-4-recap/c-289513074
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =Rickard Rakell (7) – 11:30
|4-2-1 =No scoring
|4-2-2 =Nick Ritchie (4) – 10:22
|4-3-1 =13:33 – P. K. Subban (2)
19:24 – Filip Forsberg (7)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|4-4-1 =No scoring
|4-4-2 =Corey Perry (4) – 10:25
|goalie4-1 =Pekka Rinne 33 saves / 36 shots
|goalie4-2 =John Gibson 32 saves / 34 shots
|date5 =May 20
|score5 =3–1
|won5 =1
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-5-recap/c-289539948
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =Colin Wilson (2) – pp – 19:19
|5-2-2 =12:46 – Chris Wagner (2)
|5-3-1 =Pontus Aberg (1) – 11:01
Austin Watson (2) – en – 19:12
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Pekka Rinne 32 saves / 33 shots
|goalie5-2 =John Gibson 10 saves / 10 shots
Jonathan Bernier 16 saves / 18 shots
|date6 =May 22
|score6 =3–6
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-6-recap/c-289568254
|6-1-1 =01:21 – Austin Watson (3)
08:47 – Colton Sissons (3)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =Ondrej Kase (2) – 04:45
|6-3-1 =03:00 – Colton Sissons (4)
14:00 – Colton Sissons (5)
17:38 – en – Filip Forsberg (8)
18:26 – en – Austin Watson (4)
|6-3-2 =Chris Wagner (3) – 05:00
Cam Fowler (2) – 08:52
|goalie6-1 =Pekka Rinne 38 saves / 41 shots
|goalie6-2 =Jonathan Bernier 12 saves / 16 shots
|series = Nashville won series 4–2
}}

Stanley Cup Finals

{{Main|2017 Stanley Cup Finals}}

This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. Pittsburgh made their second consecutive Stanley Cup Finals appearance and their sixth overall; they won in the previous year defeating the San Jose Sharks in six games. Nashville made their first Finals appearance in their nineteenth season since entering the league in 1998–99. These teams split their two-game regular season series.

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Nashville Predators
|team2=Pittsburgh Penguins
|stadium2=Bridgestone Arena
|stadium1=PPG Paints Arena
|date1 =May 29
|score1 =3–5
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-1-stanley-cup-final-recap/c-289662896
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =15:38 – pp – Evgeni Malkin (8)
16:37 – Conor Sheary (1)
19:43 – Nick Bonino (3)
|1-2-1 =Ryan Ellis (5) – pp – 08:21
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =Colton Sissons (6) – pp – 10:06
Frederick Gaudreau (1) – 13:29
|1-3-2 =16:43 – Jake Guentzel (10)
18:58 – en – Nick Bonino (4)
|goalie1-1 =Pekka Rinne 7 saves / 11 shots
|goalie1-2 =Matt Murray 23 saves / 26 shots
|date2 =May 31
|score2 =1–4
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-2-stanley-cup-final-recap/c-289699762
|2-1-1 =Pontus Aberg (2) – 12:57
|2-1-2 =16:36 – Jake Guentzel (11)
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =00:10 – Jake Guentzel (12)
03:13 – Scott Wilson (3)
03:28 – Evgeni Malkin (9)
|goalie2-1 =Pekka Rinne 21 saves / 25 shots
Juuse Saros 2 saves / 2 shots
|goalie2-2 =Matt Murray 37 saves / 38 shots
|date3 =June 3
|score3 =1–5
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-nashville-predators-game-3-recap/c-289765836
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =Jake Guentzel (13) – 02:46
|3-2-1 =05:51 – pp – Roman Josi (6)
06:33 – Frederick Gaudreau (2)
19:37 – James Neal (6)
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =04:54 – Craig Smith (1)
13:10 – pp – Mattias Ekholm (1)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Pekka Rinne 27 saves / 28 shots
|goalie3-2 =Matt Murray 28 saves / 33 shots
|date4 =June 5
|score4 =1–4
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-nashville-predators-stanley-cup-game-4-recap/c-289798404
|4-1-1 =14:51 – Calle Jarnkrok (2)
|4-1-2 =Sidney Crosby (8) – 15:57
|4-2-1 =03:45 – Frederick Gaudreau (3)
13:08 – Viktor Arvidsson (3)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =16:37 – en – Filip Forsberg (9)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Pekka Rinne 23 saves / 24 shots
|goalie4-2 =Matt Murray 22 saves / 25 shots
|date5 =June 8
|score5 =0–6
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-pittsburgh-penguins-stanley-cup-final-game-5-recap/c-289851792
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =01:31 – pp – Justin Schultz (4)
06:43 – Bryan Rust (7)
19:49 – Evgeni Malkin (10)
|5-2-1 =No scoring
|5-2-2 =01:19 – Conor Sheary (2)
08:02 – Phil Kessel (8)
16:40 – Ron Hainsey (2)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Pekka Rinne 6 saves / 9 shots
Juuse Saros 12 saves / 15 shots
|goalie5-2 =Matt Murray 24 saves / 24 shots
|date6 =June 11
|score6 =2–0
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-nashville-predators-game-6-recap/c-289884970
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =No scoring
|6-3-2 =Patric Hornqvist (5) – 18:25
Carl Hagelin (2) – en – 19:46
|goalie6-1 =Pekka Rinne 27 saves / 28 shots
|goalie6-2 =Matt Murray 27 saves / 27 shots
|series = Pittsburgh won series 4–2
}}

Player statistics

Skaters

These are the top ten skaters based on points.[87]

PlayerTeam{{abbr|GP|Games Played{{abbr|G|Goals{{abbr|A|Assists{{abbr|Pts|Points{{abbr|+/–|Plus/Minus{{abbr|PIM|Penalties In Minutes
{{sortname|Evgeni|Malkin}}Pittsburgh Penguins 25 10 18 28 +9 53
{{sortname|Sidney|Crosby}}Pittsburgh Penguins 24 8 19 27 +4 10
{{sortname|Phil|Kessel}}Pittsburgh Penguins 25 8 15 23 +12 2
{{sortname|Jake|Guentzel}}Pittsburgh Penguins 25 13 8 21 +1 10
{{sortname|Ryan|Getzlaf}}Anaheim Ducks 17 8 11 19 +7 8
{{sortname|Erik|Karlsson}}Ottawa Senators 19 2 16 18 +13 10
{{sortname|Filip|Forsberg}}Nashville Predators 22 9 7 16 +14 14
{{sortname|Leon|Draisaitl}}Edmonton Oilers 13 6 10 16 +8 19
{{sortname|Bobby|Ryan}}Ottawa Senators 19 6 9 15 +1 14
{{sortname|Jakob|Silfverberg}}Anaheim Ducks 17 9 5 14 –4 6
{{sortname|Roman|Josi}}Nashville Predators 22 6 8 14 +2 12

Goaltenders

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 are bolded.[88]

PlayerTeam{{abbr|GP|Games Played{{abbr|W|Wins{{abbr|L|Losses{{abbr|SA|Shots Against{{abbr|GA|Goals Against{{abbr|GAA|Goals Against Average{{abbr|SV%|Save Percentage{{abbr|SO|Shutouts{{abbr|TOI|Time On Ice (Minutes:Seconds)
{{sortname|Matt|Murray|dab=ice hockey}}Pittsburgh Penguins 11 7 3 303 19 1.70 .937 3 668-55}} 668:55
{{sortname|Jake|Allen|dab=ice hockey}}St. Louis Blues 11 6 5 336 22 1.96 .935 0 674-56}} 674:56
{{sortname|Pekka|Rinne}}Nashville Predators 22 14 8 599 42 1.96 .930 2 1288-44}} 1288:44
{{sortname|Henrik|Lundqvist}}New York Rangers 12 6 6 395 29 2.25 .927 1 774-34}} 774:34
{{sortname|Craig|Anderson|dab=ice hockey}}Ottawa Senators 19 11 8 590 46 2.34 .922 1 1178-08}} 1178:08
{{sortname|Cam|Talbot}}Edmonton Oilers 13 7 6 437 33 2.48 .924 2 799-23}} 799:23
{{sortname|Marc-Andre|Fleury|Marc-André Fleury}}Pittsburgh Penguins 15 9 6 490 37 2.56 .924 2 866-31}} 866:31

Television

This marked the sixth postseason under NBC Sports' current 10-year contract for American television rights to the NHL. All national coverage of games aired on either NBCSN, the NBC broadcast network, NHL Network, USA Network, or CNBC. During the first round, excluding games exclusively broadcast on NBC, the regional rightsholders of each participating U.S. team produced local telecasts of their respective games; NBCUniversal held exclusive rights to all games from the second round onward. Unlike past seasons, the national broadcasts were no longer blacked out on television in the markets of participating teams, and could co-exist with the local broadcasts (however, NBC-provided streaming was still restricted in Boston and Pittsburgh).[89]

For first-round games involving Chicago, San Jose and Washington—teams whose regional rights are held by the co-owned NBC Sports Regional Networks—the national broadcasts shared the same video as the local broadcasts but overdubbed with national commentators. This was done so NBC would not have to bring additional equipment to these games to produce an entirely separate telecast for the national audience.[89]

In Canada, for the third postseason under Rogers Media's current 12-year contract, coverage was broadcast by Sportsnet networks and CBC Television under the Hockey Night in Canada brand, and streamed on Sportsnet Now, CBCSports.ca (for games televised by CBC), or the subscription service Rogers NHL GameCentre Live.[90] French-language coverage was on TVA Sports. Rogers agreed not to schedule games on CBC for the first four Sunday nights of the playoffs, so that the network could broadcast The Story of Us, a documentary series it had commissioned as part of programming commemorating the 150th anniversary of Canadian confederation.[91]

References

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4. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/2017-stanley-cup-playoffs-sets-overtime-record/c-289053508|title=2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs sets overtime record|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 23, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 23, 2017}}
5. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nhl/2017/04/23/nhl-stanley-cup-playoffs-overtime-bettman-laviolette/100815952/|title=2017 NHL Playoffs set first-round overtime record|first1=Kevin|last1=Allen|first2=Peter|last2=Barzilai|publisher=USA Today|date=April 23, 2017|accessdate=April 27, 2017}}
6. ^{{cite news|last=Elliott|first=Helene|date=May 11, 2017|title=NHL playoffs: Previewing the Stanley Cup conference finals|url=http://www.latimes.com/sports/ducks/la-sp-nhl-preview-capsules-20170511-story.html|work=Los Angeles Times|accessdate=May 20, 2017}}
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8. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-montreal-canadiens-game-recap/c-288723114|title=Rangers shut out Canadiens in Game 1|last=Farrell|first=Sean|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L. P.|date=April 12, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 12, 2017}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-montreal-canadiens-game-recap/c-288801196|title=Canadiens rally past Rangers to tie series|last=Farrell|first=Sean|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L. P.|date=April 14, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 14, 2017}}
10. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/montreal-canadiens-new-york-rangers-game-3-recap/c-288850154|title=Alexander Radulov lifts Canadiens in Game 3|last=Compton|first=Brian|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 16, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 22, 2017}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/montreal-canadiens-new-york-rangers-game-recap/c-288917218|title=Rangers hold on to win Game 4, even series with Canadiens|last=Compton|first=Brian|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 18, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 22, 2017}}
12. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-montreal-canadiens-game-5-recap/c-288979184|title=Rangers win Game 5 in overtime, take series lead|last=Farrell|first=Sean|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 20, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 22, 2017}}
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26. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/columbus-blue-jackets-pittsburgh-penguins-game-2-recap/c-288800156|title=Sidney Crosby gets three points, Penguins win Game 2|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 14, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 14, 2017}}
27. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-columbus-blue-jackets-game-3-recap/c-288848472|title=Jake Guentzel hat trick gives Penguins win in Game 3|last=Merz|first=Craig|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 16, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 16, 2017}}
28. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-columbus-blue-jackets-game-4-recap/c-288918006|title=Blue Jackets avoid sweep by Penguins with Game 4 win|last=Merz|first=Craig|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 18, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 19, 2017}}
29. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/columbus-blue-jackets-pittsburgh-penguins-game-recap/c-288977508|title=Marc-Andre Fleury makes 49 saves, Penguins win series in Game 5|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 20, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 20, 2017}}
30. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-chicago-blackhawks-game-recap/c-288772928|title=Predators shut out Blackhawks in Game 1|last=Hedger|first=Brian|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 13, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 14, 2017}}
31. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-chicago-blackhawks-game-2-recap/c-288827780|title=Predators shut out Blackhawks again, win Game 2|last=Hedger|first=Brian|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 15, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 16, 2017}}
32. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/chicago-blackhawks-nashville-predators-game-3-recap/c-288891606|title=Predators take 3-0 series lead with OT win|last=Stanley|first=Robby|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 17, 2017|website=NHL.com|access-date=April 18, 2017}}
33. ^{{cite news|last=Megargee|first=Steve|title=Predators beat Blackhawks 4-1 to complete sweep|url=https://apnews.com/5ffbce781aa5431fafd97f4ef7fc6d1e/Predators-beat-Blackhawks-4-1-to-complete-sweep|accessdate=April 24, 2017|work=Associated Press|agency=Associated Press|publisher=AP News|date=April 21, 2017|location=Nashville, Tennessee}}
34. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-minnesota-wild-game-recap/c-288737082|title=Jake Allen makes 51 saves for Blues in Game 1 win|last=Pierce|first=Jessi|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L. P.|date=April 13, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 14, 2017}}
35. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-minnesota-wild-game-recap/c-288802124|title=Blues defeat Wild in Game 2 on Jaden Schwartz goal|last=Pierce|first=Jessi|date=April 14, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 14, 2017}}
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37. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/minnesota-wild-st-louis-blues-game-4-recap/c-288945542|title=Wild shut out Blues in Game 4, avoid elimination|last=Korac|first=Louie|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 19, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 21, 2017}}
38. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-minnesota-wild-game-recap/c-289028908|title=Blues eliminate Wild with Game 5 OT win|last=Pierce|first=Jessi|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 22, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 22, 2017}}
39. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/calgary-flames-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-288771460|title=Ducks hang on to win Game 1 against Flames|last=Arrit|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 14, 2017|website=NHL.com|location=Anaheim, California|accessdate=April 14, 2017}}
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41. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-calgary-flames-game-recap/c-288891628|title=Ducks rally for OT win, 3-0 series lead against Flames|last=Vickers|first=Aaron|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 17, 2017|website=NHL.com|location=Calgary|accessdate=April 18, 2017}}
42. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-calgary-flames-game-recap/c-288952994?tid=287344830|title=Ducks complete sweep of Flames|last=Vickers|first=Aaron|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 19, 2017|website=NHL.com|location=Calgary|accessdate=April 20, 2017}}
43. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/san-jose-sharks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-288723116|title=Sharks rally to win Game 1 in overtime|last=Van Deist|first=Derek|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 13, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 14, 2017}}
44. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/san-jose-sharks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-288801870|title=Oilers shut out Sharks in Game 2, tie series|last=Van Deist|first=Derek|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 15, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 17, 2017}}
45. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-san-jose-sharks-game-recap/c-288855884|title=Cam Talbot, Oilers blank Sharks in Game 3|last=Gilmore|first=Eric|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 16, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 17, 2017}}
46. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-san-jose-sharks-game-4-recap/c-288915656|title=Sharks score seven goals in Game 4 win, even series|last=Gilmore|first=Eric|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 18, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 19, 2017}}
47. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/san-jose-sharks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-288976164|title=Oilers win Game 5 against Sharks in OT, take 3-2 series lead|last=Van Deist|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 21, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 22, 2017}}
48. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-san-jose-sharks-game-recap/c-289036190|title=Oilers advance with Game 6 win against Sharks|last=Gilmore|first=Eric|publisher=NHL Enterprise, L.P.|date=April 23, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 23, 2017}}
49. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-ottawa-senators-game-1-recap/c-289138300|title=Erik Karlsson scores to give Senators Game 1 win against Rangers|last=Rosen|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 27, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 1, 2017}}
50. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-ottawa-senators-game-2-recap/c-289174964|title=Jean-Gabriel Pageau scores in 2OT, Senators defeat Rangers in Game 2|last=Rosen|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 29, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 1, 2017}}
51. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-new-york-rangers-game-3-recap/c-289231906|title=Rangers top Senators in Game 3 for first win of series|last=Compton|first=Brian|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 2, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 3, 2017}}
52. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-new-york-rangers-game-recap/c-289278746|title=Rangers handle Senators in Game 4, even series|last=Compton|first=Brian|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P>|date=May 4, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 4, 2017}}
53. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/new-york-rangers-ottawa-senators-game-5-recap/c-289310288|title=Senators rally for OT win against Rangers in Game 5|last=Stevenson|first=Chris|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 6, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 8, 2017}}
54. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-recap/c-289139100|title=Penguins rebound, defeat Capitals in Game 1|last=Gulitti|first=Tom|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 27, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 28, 2017}}
55. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-recap/c-289181350|title=Penguins win again, defeat Capitals in Game 2|last=Gulitti|first=Tom|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 29, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 1, 2017}}
56. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-pittsburgh-penguins-game-3-recap/c-289214090|title=Capitals win Game 3 against Penguins in overtime|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 1, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 1, 2017}}
57. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-pittsburgh-penguins-game-4-recap/c-289257166|title=Penguins win Game 4 to put Capitals on brink|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 3, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 6, 2017}}
58. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-5-recap/c-289314030|title=Capitals defeat Penguins in Game 5 to stay alive|last=Brown|first=Katie|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 6, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 8, 2017}}
59. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/washington-capitals-pittsburgh-penguins-game-6-recap/c-289346314|title=Capitals coast to Game 6 win against Penguins, extend series|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 8, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 9, 2017}}
60. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-washington-capitals-game-7-recap/c-289381056|title=Penguins shut out Capitals to win Game 7, reach Eastern Final|last=Brown|first=Katie|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 10, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 10, 2017}}
61. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-st-louis-blues-game-recap/c-289111840|title=Predators respond to defeat Blues in Game 1|last=Korac|first=Louie|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 26, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 26, 2017}}
62. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-st-louis-blues-game-recap/c-289162182|title=Blues rally for Game 2 win against Predators, even series|last=Korac|first=Louie|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 28, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 1, 2017}}
63. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-nashville-predators-game-3-recap/c-289190628|title=Defensemen lift Predators past Blues in Game 3|last=Roarke|first=Shawn P.|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 30, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 1, 2017}}
64. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-nashville-predators-game-recap/c-289235612|title=Predators hold off Blues to win Game 4, take 3-1 series lead|last=Stanley|first=Robby|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 2, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 6, 2017}}
65. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-st-louis-blues-game-5-recap/c-289297128|title=Blues defeat Predators in Game 5, extend series|last=Stanley|first=Robby|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 5, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 6, 2017}}
66. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/st-louis-blues-nashville-predators-game-recap/c-289323596|title=Predators defeat Blues, advance to first conference final|last=Stanley|first=Robby|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 7, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 8, 2017}}
67. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-1-recap/c-289116614|title=Oilers defeat Ducks in Game 1 with four points from Leon Daisaitl|last=Campbell|first=Tim|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 27, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 1, 2017}}
68. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289164432|title=Cam Talbot, Oilers hang on for Game 2 win against Ducks|last=Campbell|first=Tim|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 29, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 10, 2017}}
69. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-edmonton-oilers-game-3-recap/c-289193994|title=Jakob Silfverberg boosts Ducks past Oilers in Game 3|last=Campbell|first=Tim|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 30, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 6, 2017}}
70. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-edmonton-oilers-game-4-recap/c-289255526|title=Ducks defeat Oilers in OT in Game 4, even series|last=Van Deist|first=Derek|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 4, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 6, 2017}}
71. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289296296|title=Ducks stun Oilers in 2OT, Game 5 win, take 3-2 series lead|last=Arritt|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 6, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 6, 2017}}
72. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-edmonton-oilers-game-recap/c-289327984|title=Oilers score seven in Game 6 win against Ducks|last=Van Deist|first=Derek|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 7, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 8, 2017}}
73. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/edmonton-oilers-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289385314|title=Ducks win Game 7, eliminate Oilers to reach Western Final|last=Arritt|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 10, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 22, 2017}}
74. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-1-recap/c-289434450|title=Senators win Game 1 against Penguins in OT|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 13, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 16, 2017}}
75. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-2-recap/c-289460590|title=Phil Kessel scores, Penguins shut out Senators in Game 2|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 15, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 16, 2017}}
76. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-ottawa-senators-game-recap/c-289494306|title=Senators score five, coast to Game 3 win against Penguins|last=Stevenson|first=Chris|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 17, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 18, 2017}}
77. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-ottawa-senators-game-4-recap/c-289529290|title=Matt Murray, Penguins hold off Senators in Game 4|last=Stevenson|first=Chris|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 19, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 20, 2017}}
78. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-recap/c-289548768|title=Penguins cruise past Senators in Game 5, take 3-2 series lead|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 21, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 23, 2017}}
79. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/pittsburgh-penguins-ottawa-senators-game-6-recap/c-289587028|title=Craig Anderson shines, Senators avoid elimination with Game 6 win|last=Stevenson|first=Chris|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 23, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 23, 2017}}
80. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-game-recap/c-289618298|title=Penguins defeat Senators in 2OT of Game 7, return to Cup Final|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 25, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 25, 2017}}
81. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-recap/c-289423400|title=Predators win Game 1 in OT against Ducks|last=Arritt|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 12, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 16, 2017}}
82. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-2-recap/c-289442372|title=Ducks rally to win Game 2 against Predators, tie series|last=Arritt|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 14, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 16, 2017}}
83. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-nashville-predators-game-3-recap/c-289477646|title=Roman Josi's late goal sends Predators past Ducks in Game 3|last=Stanley|first=Robby|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 16, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 18, 2017}}
84. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/anaheim-ducks-nashville-predators-game-4-recap/c-289513074|title=Ducks recover for OT win against Predators in Game 4|last=Stanley|first=Robby|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 18, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 20, 2017}}
85. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-5-recap/c-289539948|title=Predators defeat Ducks in Game 5, take 3-2 series lead|last=Arritt|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 20, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 22, 2017}}
86. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nashville-predators-anaheim-ducks-game-6-recap/c-289568254|title=Predators oust Ducks to reach first Stanley Cup Final|last=Stanley|first=Robby|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=May 22, 2017|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 22, 2017}}
87. ^NHL.com - Skater Stats
88. ^NHL.com - Goalie Stats
89. ^{{cite web|title=NBC Sports, RSNs Unlock New Stanley Cup Production Synergies With Side-by-Side Telecasts|url=http://www.sportsvideo.org/2017/04/11/nbc-sports-rsns-unlock-new-stanley-cup-production-synergies-with-side-by-side-telecasts/|website=Sports Video Group|accessdate=April 13, 2017}}
90. ^{{cite press release|url=http://media.sportsnet.ca/2017/04/sportsnet-announces-2017-stanley-cup-playoffs-first-round-broadcast-schedule/|title=Sportsnet Announces 2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs First Round Broadcast Schedule|publisher=Sportsnet|date=April 10, 2017|accessdate=April 11, 2017}}
91. ^{{cite news|title=Rogers Media begins to reap reward in billion-dollar NHL broadcast deal|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/rogers-media-begins-to-reap-reward-in-billion-dollar-nhl-deal/article34662329/|newspaper=The Globe And Mail|date=April 11, 2017|accessdate=April 15, 2017}}

External links

  • [https://www.nhl.com/stanley-cup-playoffs/2017 2017 Stanley Cup playoffs]
{{S-start}}{{Succession box|title=Stanley Cup playoffs|years=2017|before=2016 Stanley Cup playoffs|after=2018 Stanley Cup playoffs}}{{S-end}}{{2016–17 NHL season by team}}{{Stanley Cup playoffs}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs}}

2 : Stanley Cup playoffs|2017 Stanley Cup

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