请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 2014 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) Boston Bruins vs. (WC2) Detroit Red Wings  (A2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (A3) Montreal Canadiens  (M1) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (WC1) Columbus Blue Jackets  (M2) New York Rangers vs. (M3) Philadelphia Flyers  Western Conference First Round  (C1) Colorado Avalanche vs. (WC1) Minnesota Wild  (C2) St. Louis Blues vs. (C3) Chicago Blackhawks  (P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (WC2) Dallas Stars  (P2) San Jose Sharks vs. (P3) Los Angeles Kings 

  4. Second Round

     Eastern Conference Second Round  (A1) Boston Bruins vs. (A3) Montreal Canadiens  (M1) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (M2) New York Rangers  Western Conference Second Round  (C3) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (WC1) Minnesota Wild  (P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (P3) Los Angeles Kings 

  5. Conference Finals

     Eastern Conference Final  (A3) Montreal Canadiens vs. (M2) New York Rangers  Western Conference Final  (C3) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (P3) Los Angeles Kings 

  6. Stanley Cup Finals

  7. Player statistics

     Skaters  Goaltending 

  8. Television

  9. References

{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2014}}{{infobox hockey tournament season
|title=Stanley Cup playoffs
|image=2014 Stanley Cup playoffs logo.png
|year=2014
|dates=April 16–June 13, 2014
|num_teams=16
|defending_champions=Chicago Blackhawks
|winners=Los Angeles Kings
|second=New York Rangers
|semifinal1=Chicago Blackhawks
|semifinal2=Montreal Canadiens
|scoring_leader=Anze Kopitar (Kings)
|points=26
|mvp=Justin Williams (Kings)
|prevseason=2013
|nextseason=2015
}}

The 2014 Stanley Cup playoffs of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 16, 2014 and ended June 13, 2014 when the Los Angeles Kings defeated the New York Rangers four games to one in the Stanley Cup Final.

For the first time since 1973, only one Canadian team qualified for the playoffs: the Montreal Canadiens.[1] This was also the first time since the 1978 Stanley Cup playoffs that no playoff games were played in Western Canada. The Detroit Red Wings increased their consecutive playoff appearance streak to 23 seasons, the longest streak at the time and the fifth longest streak in NHL history. The Dallas Stars ended the league's third longest active playoff appearance drought, qualifying for the postseason for the first time in six years.[2] For the third time in four years, all three California-based teams again made the playoffs. The Columbus Blue Jackets won their first franchise playoff game on April 19, 2014, and their first ever franchise playoff home game at Nationwide Arena on April 23, 2014, both against the Pittsburgh Penguins. Three Original Six teams reached the Conference Finals, the first time this has occurred since 1979.

The 2013–14 playoffs opening round featured leads changing hands more so than any other year. After the Anaheim Ducks rallied from a 4–2 deficit to defeat the Dallas Stars in game six of their opening round series on April 27, 2014, an NHL record was broken for most multi-goal comebacks by all teams in the opening round, with ten. In all four rounds combined in the previous year's playoffs, there were only eight such victories.[3] It also marked just the fourth time in NHL playoff history that a team who led a series 3–0 in a seven-game series failed to advance, when the San Jose Sharks lost to the Los Angeles Kings in game seven of the opening round on April 30, 2014.[4]

On May 29, 2014, the New York Rangers became the first team to ever advance past the Conference Finals after playing two seven-game series in the opening two rounds.[5] The Rangers also became the first captainless team to reach the finals since the Chicago Black Hawks in 1973. That same seven-game mark was eclipsed on June 1, 2014, as the Los Angeles Kings became the first team to ever reach the Stanley Cup Finals after having played three consecutive seven-game series. Los Angeles played all three of their game sevens on the road. Game five of the Stanley Cup final marked the 93rd game of the 2014 playoffs, eclipsing the previous single-year record of 92 established in 1991.[6]

The Kings tied the 1987 Philadelphia Flyers and the 2004 Calgary Flames, for most games played (26) in one playoff year.

Playoff seeds

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

The NHL adopted a new league alignment for the 2013–14 season, as the Detroit Red Wings and Columbus Blue Jackets were moved to the Eastern Conference and the Winnipeg Jets to the Western Conference. The 16-team Eastern Conference was then divided into two 8-team divisions (Metropolitan and Atlantic), while the 14-team Western Conference was divided into two 7-team divisions (Pacific and Central). As part of the realignment, the NHL also switched its former conference-based playoff structure to a divisional-based playoff structure. The top three teams from each division qualified for that conference's playoffs. The remaining two playoff spots in each conference were wild card teams, which were the top two clubs from each conference that failed to win a divisional playoff spot.

The following teams qualified for the playoffs:

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division

  1. Boston Bruins, Atlantic Division champions, Eastern Conference regular season champions, Presidents' Trophy winners – 117 points
  2. Tampa Bay Lightning – 101 points
  3. Montreal Canadiens – 100 points

Metropolitan Division

  1. Pittsburgh Penguins, Metropolitan Division champions – 109 points
  2. New York Rangers – 96 points
  3. Philadelphia Flyers – 94 points

Wild Cards

  1. Columbus Blue Jackets – 93 points (38 {{abbr|ROWs|Regulation + Overtime Wins}})
  2. Detroit Red Wings – 93 points (34 {{abbr|ROWs|Regulation + Overtime Wins}})

Western Conference

Central Division

  1. Colorado Avalanche, Central Division champions – 112 points
  2. St. Louis Blues – 111 points
  3. Chicago Blackhawks – 107 points

Pacific Division

  1. Anaheim Ducks, Pacific Division champions, Western Conference regular season champions – 116 points
  2. San Jose Sharks – 111 points
  3. Los Angeles Kings – 100 points

Wild Cards

  1. Minnesota Wild – 98 points
  2. Dallas Stars – 91 points

Playoff bracket

{{2014 Stanley Cup playoffs}}

First Round

Eastern Conference First Round

(A1) Boston Bruins vs. (WC2) Detroit Red Wings

The Boston Bruins won the Presidents' Trophy for earning the league's best record, with 117 points. The Detroit Red Wings earned 93 points during the regular season, and entered the playoffs as the Eastern Conference's second wild card. This was the eighth playoff meeting for these Original Six teams, with Boston having won four of the seven previous series. They last met in the 1957 Stanley Cup Semifinals, which Boston won in five games. The Red Wings won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Bruins eliminated the Red Wings in five games. In game one, Pavel Datsyuk scored the only goal with 3:01 left in Detroit's 1–0 victory,[7] but Boston went on to win four straight contests to capture the series. Four different Bruins players scored goals in Boston's 4–1 win in game two.[8] Bruins goalie Tuukka Rask then stopped all 23 Detroit shots in a 3–0 victory in game three.[9] In game four, Boston overcame a two-goal, second-period deficit, scoring three unanswered goals – including Jarome Iginla's game-winner at 13:32 of overtime to win 3–2.[10] The Bruins clinched the series with a 4–2 win in game five, as Torey Krug recorded two assists, and Rask made 31 saves on 33 shots.[11]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Detroit Red Wings
|team2=Boston Bruins
|stadium2=Joe Louis Arena
|stadium1=TD Garden
|date1 =April 18
|score1 =1–0
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030111
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =Pavel Datsyuk (1) – 16:59
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Jimmy Howard 25 saves / 25 shots
|goalie1-2 =Tuukka Rask 23 saves / 24 shots
|date2 =April 20
|score2 =1–4
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030112
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =07:28 – Justin Florek (1)
10:35 – pp – Reilly Smith (1)
|2-2-1 =Luke Glendening (1) – 13:20
|2-2-2 =18:16 – Milan Lucic (1)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =02:27 – pp – Zdeno Chara (1)
|goalie2-1 =Jimmy Howard 25 saves / 29 shots
|goalie2-2 =Tuukka Rask 34 saves / 35 shots
|date3 =April 22
|score3 =3–0
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030113
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =Dougie Hamilton (1) – pp – 09:00
Jordan Caron (1) – 15:48
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =Patrice Bergeron (1) – en – 18:01
|goalie3-1 =Jimmy Howard 31 saves / 33 shots
|goalie3-2 =Tuukka Rask 23 saves / 23 shots
|date4 =April 24
|score4 =3–2
|ot4 =1
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030114
|4-1-1 =11:00 – pp – Niklas Kronwall (1)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =04:27 – Pavel Datsyuk (2)
|4-2-2 =Torey Krug (1) – pp – 10:14
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =Milan Lucic (2) – 01:15
|4-4-1 =No scoring
|4-4-2 =Jarome Iginla (1) – 13:32
|goalie4-1 =Jonas Gustavsson 37 saves / 40 shots
|goalie4-2 =Tuukka Rask 35 saves / 37 shots
|date5 =April 26
|score5 =2–4
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030115
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =03:27 – pp – Loui Eriksson (1)
|5-2-1 =Pavel Datsyuk (3) – pp – 14:41
|5-2-2 =19:56 – pp – Zdeno Chara (2)
|5-3-1 =Henrik Zetterberg (1) – 16:08
|5-3-2 =04:27 – Milan Lucic (3)
19:44 – en – Jarome Iginla (2)
|goalie5-1 =Jonas Gustavsson 29 saves / 32 shots
|goalie5-2 =Tuukka Rask 31 saves / 33 shots
|series = Boston won series 4–1
}}

(A2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (A3) Montreal Canadiens

The Tampa Bay Lightning finished second overall in the Atlantic Division, earning 101 points. The Montreal Canadiens earned 100 points during the regular season, to finish third overall in the Atlantic Division. This was the second playoff meeting for these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2004 Eastern Conference Semifinals, in which Tampa Bay swept Montreal out of the playoffs en route to their Stanley Cup victory. The Lightning won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Canadiens swept the Lightning, who were without their starting goalie Ben Bishop after he suffered an injury during the last few weeks of the regular season.[12] With Anders Lindback in the Tampa Bay net,

Steven Stamkos of the Lightning scored at 13:27 of the third period to tie game one, 4–4, before Montreal's Dale Weise won it at 18:08 of overtime.[13] Rene Bourque scored two goals, and Carey Price stopped 26 out of 27 shots, in the Canadiens' 4–1 win in game two.[14] At 15:38 of the second period of game three, Tampa Bay's Ryan Callahan appeared to give his team a 2–1 lead, but his goal was waved off as the officials ruled that there was contact between Alexander Killorn and Price; Montreal's Brendan Gallagher then scored minutes later, and the Canadiens went on to win 3–2.[15] Max Pacioretty then scored a power-play goal at 19:17 of the third period of game four to give Montreal the 4–3 win and the series.[16]{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Montreal Canadiens
|team2=Tampa Bay Lightning
|stadium2=Bell Centre
|stadium1=Tampa Bay Times Forum
|date1 =April 16
|score1 =5–4
|ot1 =1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030121
|1-1-1 =Tomas Plekanec (1) – 10:28
|1-1-2 =10:09 – Nikita Kucherov (1)
|1-2-1 =Brian Gionta (1) – sh – 16:39
|1-2-2 =13:24 – Steven Stamkos (1)
|1-3-1 =Lars Eller (1) – 05:10
Thomas Vanek (1) – 11:30
|1-3-2 =07:11 – Alexander Killorn (1)
13:27 – Steven Stamkos (2)
|1-4-1 =Dale Weise (1) – 18:08
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Carey Price 21 saves / 25 shots
|goalie1-2 =Anders Lindback 39 saves / 44 shots
|date2 =April 18
|score2 =4–1
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030122
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =David Desharnais (1) – pp – 02:34
Rene Bourque (1) – 10:35
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Brendan Gallagher (1) – 11:46
Rene Bourque (2) – 14:39
|2-3-2 =18:01 – pp – Teddy Purcell (1)
|goalie2-1 =Carey Price 26 saves / 27 shots
|goalie2-2 =Anders Lindback 20 saves / 23 shots
Kristers Gudlevskis 2 saves / 3 shots
|date3 =April 20
|score3 =2–3
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030123
|3-1-1 =00:11 – Rene Bourque (3)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =18:10 – Brendan Gallagher (2)
|3-2-2 =Ondrej Palat (1) – pp – 08:39
|3-3-1 =05:43 – Tomas Plekanec (2)
|3-3-2 =Matt Carle (1) – 11:36
|goalie3-1 =Carey Price 27 saves / 29 shots
|goalie3-2 =Anders Lindback 28 saves / 31 shots
|date4 =April 22
|score4 =3–4
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030124
|4-1-1 =02:24 – Daniel Briere (1)
15:21 – Lars Eller (2)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =05:42 – Brendan Gallagher (3)
|4-2-2 =Ondrej Palat (2) – sh – 04:32
|4-3-1 =19:17 – pp – Max Pacioretty (1)
|4-3-2 =Victor Hedman (1) – 03:29
Tyler Johnson (1) – 06:31
|goalie4-1 =Carey Price 20 saves / 23 shots
|goalie4-2 =Anders Lindback 17 saves / 20 shots
Kristers Gudlevskis 16 saves / 17 shots
|series = Montreal won series 4–0
}}

(M1) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (WC1) Columbus Blue Jackets

The Pittsburgh Penguins finished first overall in the Metropolitan Division, earning 109 points. The Columbus Blue Jackets earned 93 points during the regular season, and entered the playoffs as the Eastern Conference's first wild card, making the post-season for the first time since 2009, and only the second time in the franchise's history.[17] This was the first playoff meeting for these two teams. The Penguins won all five games in this year's regular season series.

The Blue Jackets recorded their first ever playoff victories in team history, but the Penguins still managed to win the series in six games. The first five games in the series featured comebacks, including 3–1 leads evaporating into 4–3 losses in the first four games. In game one, Pittsburgh scored three unanswered goals, including Brandon Sutter's game winner 8:18 in the third period, to overcome a two-goal deficit to win, 4–3.[18] Columbus then overcame a two-goal deficit in game two after Pittsburgh built their lead with Brian Gibbons scoring his first two playoff goals, including a short-handed one. Matt Calvert then scored both a short-handed goal and then the game-winner 1:10 into double overtime to give the Blue Jackets their first playoff victory in franchise history.[19] game three saw Brooks Orpik score his second ever playoff goal with less than 2 seconds remaining in the second period. The Blue Jackets would jump back up to a two-goal lead at the start of the third period, thanks to Cam Atkinson's first ever playoff goal. But the Penguins scored three goals in a span of 2:13 in the third period, including Jussi Jokinen's game-winner at 8:06, for another 4–3 win.[20] The Blue Jackets then overcame a three-goal deficit in game four to record a fourth 4–3 contest in this series, with Brandon Dubinsky tying the game with 24 seconds left in regulation after Penguins goalie Marc-Andre Fleury mishandled the puck from behind his own net, allowing Ryan Johansen to fling the puck to a wide open Dubinsky. Nick Foligno then scored the game-winner at 2:49 into overtime, which gave the Blue Jackets their first home playoff victory in team history.[21] But Fleury rebounded in game five, making 23 saves out of 24 shots in Pittsburgh's 3–1 win. Columbus lost despite spectacular play by Sergei Bobrovsky, who stopped 48 of 50 shots but did not receive the goal support needed to win.[22] In game six, Evgeni Malkin's second career playoff hat trick helped the Penguins build a 4–0 lead, but they had to withstand a late comeback attempt by the Blue Jackets, who scored three unanswered goals in a span of five minutes late in the third period, to hold on to the 4–3 victory.[23]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Columbus Blue Jackets
|team2=Pittsburgh Penguins
|stadium2=Nationwide Arena
|stadium1=Consol Energy Center
|date1 =April 16
|score1 =3–4
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030131
|1-1-1 =Jack Johnson (1) – 06:20
Mark Letestu (1) – pp – 17:58
|1-1-2 =17:13 – Jussi Jokinen (1)
|1-2-1 =Derek MacKenzie (1) – sh – 00:43
|1-2-2 =01:34 – pp – Beau Bennett (1)
02:19 – pp – Matt Niskanen (1)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =08:18 – Brandon Sutter (1)
|goalie1-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 28 saves / 32 shots
|goalie1-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 31 saves / 34 shots
|date2 =April 19
|score2 =4–3
|ot2 =2
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030132
|2-1-1 =Ryan Johansen (1) – pp – 05:07
|2-1-2 =03:30 – Brian Gibbons (1)
04:24 – sh – Brian Gibbons (2)
17:52 – pp – Matt Niskanen (2)
|2-2-1 =Matt Calvert (1) – sh – 07:31
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Jack Johnson (2) – pp – 13:59
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|2-4-1 =Matt Calvert (2) – 01:10
|2-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 39 saves / 42 shots
|goalie2-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 41 saves / 45 shots
|date3 =April 21
|score3 =4–3
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030133
|3-1-1 =01:38 – Boone Jenner (1)
03:18 – Jack Johnson (3)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Brooks Orpik (1) – 19:58
|3-3-1 =01:04 – Cam Atkinson (1)
|3-3-2 =Brandon Sutter (2) – 05:53
Lee Stempniak (1) – 07:03
Jussi Jokinen (2) – 08:06
|goalie3-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 37 saves / 41 shots
|goalie3-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 17 saves / 20 shots
|date4 =April 23
|score4 =3–4
|ot4 =1
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030134
|4-1-1 =16:39 – pp – Boone Jenner (2)
|4-1-2 =Craig Adams (1) – sh – 06:09
Chris Kunitz (1) – pp – 10:37
James Neal (1) – 11:10
|4-2-1 =14:20 – pp – Ryan Johansen (2)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =19:36 – Brandon Dubinsky (1)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|4-4-1 =02:49 – Nick Foligno (1)
|4-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 22 saves / 25 shots
|goalie4-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 42 saves / 46 shots
|date5 =April 26
|score5 =1–3
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030135
|5-1-1 =Boone Jenner (3) – pp – 12:55
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =No scoring
|5-2-2 =07:42 – pp – Chris Kunitz (2)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =06:16 – Jussi Jokinen (3)
18:59 – en – Kris Letang (1)
|goalie5-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 48 saves / 50 shots
|goalie5-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 23 saves / 24 shots
|date6 =April 28
|score6 =4–3
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030136
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =Evgeni Malkin (1) – 09:11
Evgeni Malkin (2) – pp – 13:13
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =Brandon Sutter (3) – 00:34
Evgeni Malkin (3) – 15:22
|6-3-1 =10:21 – sh – Fedor Tyutin (1)
13:54 – pp – Artem Anisimov (1)
15:13 – Nick Foligno (2)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Sergei Bobrovsky 24 saves / 28 shots
|goalie6-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 24 saves / 27 shots
|series = Pittsburgh won series 4–2
}}

(M2) New York Rangers vs. (M3) Philadelphia Flyers

The New York Rangers finished second overall in the Metropolitan Division, earning 96 points. The Philadelphia Flyers earned 94 points during the regular season, to finish third overall in the Metropolitan Division. This was the 11th playoff meeting for these rivals, with Philadelphia having won six of the ten previous series. Their most recent meeting was in the 1997 Eastern Conference Finals, which Philadelphia won in five games. Each team won two games in this year's four-game regular season series.

The Rangers eliminated the Flyers in seven games. New York scored two power play goals, and Brad Richards recorded a goal and two assists, in a 4–1 victory in game one.[24] The Flyers overcame a two-goal deficit, scoring four unanswered goals from four different players to win game two, 4–2.[25] In game three, Daniel Girardi and Martin St. Louis each had a goal and an assist as they led the Rangers to another 4–1 win.[26] Steve Mason then replaced Ray Emery as the starting goalie for the Flyers in game four. Mason went on to make 37 saves out of 38 shots, and Jakub Voracek scored the game-winning goal on a power play in the second period, as Philadelphia won, 2–1.[27] However, Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist made 23 saves out of 25 shots en route to a 4–2 Rangers win in game five.[28] Back at home in game six, Wayne Simmonds recorded a hat-trick, leading Philadelphia to a 5–2 win.[29] game seven was played the next night, where the Rangers jumped to a 2–0 lead in the second period, and with Henrik Lundqvist stopping 26 out of 27 shots, the Rangers hung on for a 2–1 win.[30] The Rangers became the only NHL team to remain undefeated in a home game seven with a 6–0 franchise record.[31]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Philadelphia Flyers
|team2=New York Rangers
|stadium2=Wells Fargo Center
|stadium1=Madison Square Garden
|date1 =April 17
|score1 =1–4
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030141
|1-1-1 =Andrew MacDonald (1) – 07:28
|1-1-2 =10:53 – Mats Zuccarello (1)
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =08:22 – pp – Brad Richards (1)
09:09 – pp – Derek Stepan (1)
15:52 – Carl Hagelin (1)
|goalie1-1 =Ray Emery 32 saves / 36 shots
|goalie1-2 =Henrik Lundqvist 14 saves / 15 shots
|date2 =April 20
|score2 =4–2
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030142
|2-1-1 =Jakub Voracek (1) – 14:14
|2-1-2 =04:08 – Martin St. Louis (1)
08:22 – pp – Benoit Pouliot (1)
|2-2-1 =Jason Akeson (1) – pp – 05:45
Luke Schenn (1) – 11:18
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Wayne Simmonds (1) – en – 19:34
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Ray Emery 31 saves / 33 shots
|goalie2-2 =Henrik Lundqvist 21 saves / 24 shots
|date3 =April 22
|score3 =4–1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030143
|3-1-1 =17:18 – Mark Streit (1)
|3-1-2 =Derek Stepan (2) – 03:54
Martin St. Louis (2) – 10:24
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Daniel Girardi (1) – 05:17
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =Daniel Carcillo (1) – 10:53
|goalie3-1 =Ray Emery 16 saves / 20 shots
Steve Mason 3 saves / 3 shots
|goalie3-2 =Henrik Lundqvist 31 saves / 32 shots
|date4 =April 25
|score4 =1–2
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030144
|4-1-1 =08:55 – Matt Read (1)
|4-1-2 =Dominic Moore (1) – 04:38
|4-2-1 =07:22 – pp – Jakub Voracek (2)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Steve Mason 37 saves / 38 shots
|goalie4-2 =Henrik Lundqvist 23 saves / 25 shots
|date5 =April 27
|score5 =2–4
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030145
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =11:53 – Marc Staal (1)
|5-2-1 =Vincent Lecavalier (1) – pp – 19:27
|5-2-2 =08:07 – Brad Richards (2)
16:20 – Dominic Moore (2)
|5-3-1 =Claude Giroux (1) – 18:31
|5-3-2 =19:45 – en – Brian Boyle (1)
|goalie5-1 =Steve Mason 18 saves / 21 shots
|goalie5-2 =Henrik Lundqvist 24 saves / 26 shots
|date6 =April 29
|score6 =2–5
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030146
|6-1-1 =07:08 – pp – Wayne Simmonds (2)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =01:32 – Wayne Simmonds (3)
14:17 – Erik Gustafsson (1)
15:19 – pp – Wayne Simmonds (4)
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =15:49 – en – Claude Giroux (2)
|6-3-2 =Carl Hagelin (2) – 13:26
Mats Zuccarello (2) – 19:03
|goalie6-1 =Steve Mason 34 saves / 36 shots
|goalie6-2 =Henrik Lundqvist 19 saves / 23 shots
Cam Talbot 5 saves / 5 shots
|date7 =April 30
|score7 =1–2
|won7 =2
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030147
|7-1-1 =No scoring
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =No scoring
|7-2-2 =03:06 – Daniel Carcillo (2)
11:46 – Benoit Pouliot (2)
|7-3-1 =Jason Akeson (2) – 04:32
|7-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie7-1 =Steve Mason 31 saves / 33 shots
|goalie7-2 =Henrik Lundqvist 26 saves / 27 shots
|series = New York won series 4–3
}}

Western Conference First Round

(C1) Colorado Avalanche vs. (WC1) Minnesota Wild

The Colorado Avalanche finished first overall in the Central Division, earning 112 points. The Minnesota Wild earned 98 points during the regular season and entered the playoffs as the Western Conference's first wild card. This was the third playoff meeting for these two teams; the Wild earned a seven-game series victory in the 2003 Western Conference Quarterfinals, while the Avalanche earned a six-game series victory in the 2008 Western Conference Quarterfinals. The Avalanche won four of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Wild defeated the Avalanche in seven games. The home team had won the first six games in the series before Minnesota won game seven on the road. Throughout the series, Colorado head coach Patrick Roy used his strategy of pulling goalie Semyon Varlamov for an extra attacker earlier than usual when trailing late in the third period.[32] In game one trailing by a goal, Roy pulled Varlamov with 3:01 remaining in regulation. Paul Stastny then tied the game with 13.4 seconds remaining and then scored the game-winner 7:27 into overtime to give the Avalanche a 5–4 win.[33] Gabriel Landeskog then scored two goals in game two to lead Colorado to a 4–2 victory.[34] In game three, Mikael Granlund scored the only goal 5:08 into overtime in Minnesota's 1–0 victory.[35] The Wild then only allowed 12 Colorado shots in a 2–1 win in game four, even after Roy pulled Varlamov for the extra attacker with less than three minutes left.[36] In game five (after Roy pulled Varlamov with 2:22 left in the third period), Colorado's P.A. Parenteau's game-tying goal with 1:14 remaining was met with controversy as the Avalanche appeared to have been offside on the play, but it was never called.[37] Nathan MacKinnon then scored 3:27 into overtime to give the Avalanche a 4–3 win.[38] Zach Parise scored two goals in game six, including the game-winner 13:31 into the third period that broke a 2–2 tie. This time, Roy's tactic of pulling Varlamov early backfired as the Wild scored two empty net goals to win, 5–2.[39] In game seven, Minnesota's Jared Spurgeon tied the game, 4–4, at 17:33 in the third period, and Nino Niederreiter scored the series-winning goal 5:02 into overtime to give the Wild a 5–4 win.[40]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Minnesota Wild
|team2=Colorado Avalanche
|stadium2=Xcel Energy Center
|stadium1=Pepsi Center
|date1 =April 17
|score1 =4–5
|ot1 =1
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030151
|1-1-1 =Charlie Coyle (1) – 15:20
|1-1-2 =13:14 – Gabriel Landeskog (1)
|1-2-1 =Ryan Suter (1) – pp – 11:05
Erik Haula (1) – 16:08
Kyle Brodziak (1) – 18:12
|1-2-2 =14:12 – Ryan O'Reilly (1)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =07:13 – Jamie McGinn (1)
19:46 – Paul Stastny (1)
|1-4-1 =No scoring
|1-4-2 =07:27 – Paul Stastny (2)
|goalie1-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 26 saves / 31 shots
|goalie1-2 =Semyon Varlamov 29 saves / 33 shots
|date2 =April 19
|score2 =2–4
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030152
|2-1-1 =Charlie Coyle (2) – 04:18
|2-1-2 =06:20 – Nathan MacKinnon (1)
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =02:58 – Gabriel Landeskog (2)
11:59 – Gabriel Landeskog (3)
|2-3-1 =Marco Scandella (1) – sh – 18:41
|2-3-2 =19:45 – en – Paul Stastny (3)
|goalie2-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 11 saves / 14 shots
Darcy Kuemper 14 saves / 14 shots
|goalie2-2 =Semyon Varlamov 30 saves / 32 shots
|date3 =April 21
|score3 =0–1
|ot3 =1
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030153
|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 =No scoring
|3-4-1 =05:08 – Mikael Granlund (1)
|3-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Darcy Kuemper 22 saves / 22 shots
|goalie3-2 =Semyon Varlamov 45 saves / 46 shots
|date4 =April 24
|score4 =1–2
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030154
|4-1-1 =03:47 – Jared Spurgeon (1)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =12:55 – pp – Charlie Coyle (3)
|4-2-2 =Ryan O'Reilly (2) – 13:25
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Darcy Kuemper 11 saves / 12 shots
|goalie4-2 =Semyon Varlamov 30 saves / 32 shots
|date5 =April 26
|score5 =3–4
|ot5 =1
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030155
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =Matt Moulson (1) – 09:17
|5-2-2 =08:04 – sh – Cody McLeod (1)
12:16 – Nick Holden (1)
|5-3-1 =Zach Parise (1) – 04:34
Kyle Brodziak (2) – 06:25
|5-3-2 =18:46 – P.A. Parenteau (1)
|5-4-1 =No scoring
|5-4-2 =03:27 – Nathan MacKinnon (2)
|goalie5-1 =Darcy Kuemper 31 saves / 35 shots
|goalie5-2 =Semyon Varlamov 29 saves / 32 shots
|date6 =April 28
|score6 =2–5
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030156
|6-1-1 =00:49 – pp – Zach Parise (2)
09:35 – Mikael Granlund (2)
|6-1-2 =Paul Stastny (4) – sh – 16:59
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =Nick Holden (2) – pp – 04:47
|6-3-1 =13:31 – Zach Parise (3)
18:34 – en – Jason Pominville (1)
19:04 – en – Marco Scandella (2)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Darcy Kuemper 21 saves / 23 shots
|goalie6-2 =Semyon Varlamov 18 saves / 21 shots
|date7 =April 30
|score7 =5–4
|ot7 =1
|won7 =1
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030157
|7-1-1 =Mikko Koivu (1) – 08:04
|7-1-2 =02:52 – pp – Nick Holden (3)
13:38 – Jamie McGinn (2)
|7-2-1 =Dany Heatley (1) – 07:27
|7-2-2 =No scoring
|7-3-1 =Nino Niederreiter (1) – 06:33
Jared Spurgeon (2) – 17:33
|7-3-2 =02:55 – Paul Stastny (5)
11:16 – Erik Johnson (1)
|7-4-1 =Nino Niederreiter (2) – 05:02
|7-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie7-1 =Darcy Kuemper 17 saves / 21 shots
Ilya Bryzgalov 1 save / 1 shot
|goalie7-2 =Semyon Varlamov 30 saves / 35 shots
|series = Minnesota won series 4–3
}}

(C2) St. Louis Blues vs. (C3) Chicago Blackhawks

The St. Louis Blues finished second overall in the Central Division, earning 111 points. The Chicago Blackhawks earned 107 points during the regular season, to finish third overall in the Central Division. This was the eleventh playoff meeting between these two teams, with Chicago having won seven of the ten previous series. Their most recent meeting was in the 2002 Western Conference Quarterfinals, which St. Louis won in five games. The Blues won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.

This was the second consecutive year in which St. Louis faced the defending Stanley Cup champions in the first round. Much like last year, the Blues would win the first two games at Scottrade Center, but then go on to lose the next four games. In game one, the Blues' Jaden Schwartz scored his first career playoff goal with 1:45 left in regulation to tie the score at 3–3, then Alexander Steen won it at 26 seconds into triple-overtime.[41] In game two, the Blackhawks held a 3–2 lead in the third period, but with less than 5 minutes left in regulation Chicago's Brent Seabrook was called for a five-minute major penalty and a game misconduct (and later given a three-game suspension[42]) for charging David Backes. Vladimir Tarasenko then tied the game on the ensuing power play, followed by Barret Jackman scoring the game-winner at 5:50 of overtime to give St. Louis a 4–3 win.[43] Blackhawks goalie Corey Crawford then stopped all 34 Blues shots to help give Chicago a 2–0 victory in game three.[44] In game four, Patrick Kane scored two of the Blackhawks' goals in a 4–3 win, including the game-winner at 11:17 of overtime in which he took a pass in the defensive zone and then raced up ice to score from a shot from the left circle.[45] Jonathan Toews gave Chicago a 3–2 win in game five, scoring on a breakaway at 7:36 of overtime.[46] The Blackhawks then clinched the series with a 5–1 victory in game six, scoring 4 unanswered goals in the third period.[47]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Chicago Blackhawks
|team2=St. Louis Blues
|stadium2=United Center
|stadium1=Scottrade Center
|date1 =April 17
|score1 =3–4
|ot1 =3
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030161
|1-1-1 =Johnny Oduya (1) – 11:14
Brent Seabrook (1) – pp – 14:39
Patrick Kane (1) – 18:24
|1-1-2 =04:40 – Adam Cracknell (1)
15:52 – Vladimir Tarasenko (1)
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =18:15 – Jaden Schwartz (1)
|1-4-1 =No scoring
|1-4-2 =00:26 – Alexander Steen (1)
|goalie1-1 =Corey Crawford 48 saves / 52 shots
|goalie1-2 =Ryan Miller 39 saves / 42 shots
|date2 =April 19
|score2 =3–4
|ot2 =1
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030162
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =07:08 – Chris Porter (1)
19:58 – Kevin Shattenkirk (1)
|2-2-1 =Duncan Keith (1) – 17:25
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Brent Seabrook (2) – 04:53
Michal Rozsival (1) – 06:38
|2-3-2 =19:53 – pp – Vladimir Tarasenko (2)
|2-4-1 =No scoring
|2-4-2 =05:50 – Barret Jackman (1)
|goalie2-1 =Corey Crawford 27 saves / 31 shots
|goalie2-2 =Ryan Miller 25 saves / 28 shots
|date3 =April 21
|score3 =0–2
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030163
|3-1-1 =04:10 – Jonathan Toews (1)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =19:40 – en – Marcus Kruger (1)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Corey Crawford 34 saves / 34 shots
|goalie3-2 =Ryan Miller 23 saves / 24 shots
|date4 =April 23
|score4 =3–4
|ot4 =1
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030164
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =08:40 – pp – Andrew Shaw (1)
16:09 – Patrick Kane (2)
|4-2-2 =Vladimir Tarasenko (3) – pp – 18:51
Maxim Lapierre (1) – 19:56
|4-3-1 =16:08 – Bryan Bickell (1)
|4-3-2 =Vladimir Tarasenko (4) – 12:26
|4-4-1 =11:17 – Patrick Kane (3)
|4-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Corey Crawford 30 saves / 33 shots
|goalie4-2 =Ryan Miller 30 saves / 34 shots
|date5 =April 25
|score5 =3–2
|ot5 =1
|won5 =1
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030165
|5-1-1 =Marian Hossa (1) – 16:11
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =Ben Smith (1) – 17:10
|5-2-2 =11:04 – T.J. Oshie (1)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =01:42 – Alex Pietrangelo (1)
|5-4-1 =Jonathan Toews (2) – 07:36
|5-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Corey Crawford 27 saves / 29 shots
|goalie5-2 =Ryan Miller 27 saves / 30 shots
|date6 =April 27
|score6 =1–5
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030166
|6-1-1 =04:12 – Bryan Bickell (2)
|6-1-2 =T.J. Oshie (2) – 16:28
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =00:44 – pp – Jonathan Toews (3)
02:01 – Patrick Sharp (1)
07:30 – Andrew Shaw (2)
17:05 – Duncan Keith (2)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Corey Crawford 35 saves / 36 shots
|goalie6-2 =Ryan Miller 22 saves / 27 shots
|series = Chicago won series 4–2
}}

(P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (WC2) Dallas Stars

The Anaheim Ducks finished first overall in the Pacific Division, earning 116 points. The Dallas Stars earned 91 points during the regular season and entered the playoffs as the Western Conference's second wild card. This was the third playoff meeting for these two franchises; the Mighty Ducks earned a six-game series victory in the 2003 Western Conference Semifinals, while the Stars earned a six-game series victory in the 2008 Western Conference Quarterfinals. The Stars won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

The Ducks defeated the Stars in six games. The first five games in this series were won by the home team. Anaheim head coach Bruce Boudreau decided to start the series with Frederik Andersen in net, who was the hotter goalie going into the postseason, rather than original Ducks starter Jonas Hiller. Anaheim jumped to a 4–0 lead in game one but had to hold off a Dallas comeback in a 4–3 win.[48] The Ducks scored three unanswered goals in game two, but had to hold off another Stars comeback to preserve a 3–2 victory.[49] The series moved to Dallas for game three, where Stars goalie Kari Lehtonen stopped all 37 Anaheim shots to earn his first playoff victory in a 3–0 win.[50] Dallas then evened the series with a 4–2 victory in game four, scoring 4 unanswered goals to overcome a two-goal deficit.[51] Returning to Anaheim for game five, the Ducks scored three unanswered goals in the third period to pull away for a 6–2 victory.[52] Back in Dallas for game six, the Stars built a 4–2 lead in the second period before Boudreau decided to replace Andersen with Hiller. Anaheim then staged a comeback, first with Nick Bonino's goal with 2:10 remaining in regulation, and then Devante Smith-Pelly's score with 24 seconds left to tie the game and force overtime. Both of these goals occurred with the goalie pulled to give the Ducks an extra attacker. Bonino then scored at 2:47 into the extra period to give the Ducks a 5–4 win; it was the only game in the series won by the road team.[53]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Dallas Stars
|team2=Anaheim Ducks
|stadium2=American Airlines Center
|stadium1=Honda Center
|date1 =April 16
|score1 =3–4
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030171
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =01:53 – Kyle Palmieri (1)
12:49 – Ryan Getzlaf (1)
19:30 – Mathieu Perreault (1)
|1-2-1 =Jamie Benn (1) – pp – 16:36
Colton Sceviour (1) – 18:09
|1-2-2 =09:04 – pp – Matt Beleskey (1)
|1-3-1 =Tyler Seguin (1) – 13:53
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Kari Lehtonen 31 saves / 35 shots
|goalie1-2 =Frederik Andersen 32 saves / 35 shots
|date2 =April 18
|score2 =2–3
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030172
|2-1-1 =Alex Chiasson (1) – pp – 07:40
|2-1-2 =17:14 – Ryan Getzlaf (2)
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =16:15 – Corey Perry (1)
|2-3-1 =Ryan Garbutt (1) – 09:58
|2-3-2 =05:09 – sh – Andrew Cogliano (1)
|goalie2-1 =Kari Lehtonen 16 saves / 19 shots
|goalie2-2 =Frederik Andersen 34 saves / 36 shots
|date3 =April 21
|score3 =0–3
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030173
|3-1-1 =19:25 – Jamie Benn (2)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =17:15 – Valeri Nichushkin (1)
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =07:52 – Ryan Garbutt (2)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Kari Lehtonen 37 saves / 37 shots
|goalie3-2 =Frederik Andersen 19 saves / 22 shots
|date4 =April 23
|score4 =2–4
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030174
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =Bryan Allen (1) – 12:17
Patrick Maroon (1) – 18:16
|4-2-1 =00:27 – Jamie Benn (3)
06:33 – Vernon Fiddler (1)
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =06:22 – Cody Eakin (1)
07:44 – Alex Goligoski (1)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Kari Lehtonen 21 saves / 23 shots
|goalie4-2 =Frederik Andersen 21 saves / 25 shots
Jonas Hiller 1 save / 1 shot
|date5 =April 25
|score5 =2–6
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030175
|5-1-1 =Jamie Benn (4) – sh – 10:00
|5-1-2 =05:32 – pp – Nick Bonino (1)
10:26 – pp – Rickard Rakell (1)
|5-2-1 =Shawn Horcoff (1) – 08:19
|5-2-2 =01:05 – pp – Mathieu Perreault (2)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =01:07 – Jakob Silfverberg (1)
04:30 – Ryan Getzlaf (3)
06:49 – pp – Corey Perry (2)
|goalie5-1 =Kari Lehtonen 16 saves / 21 shots
Tim Thomas 1 save / 2 shots
|goalie5-2 =Frederik Andersen 34 saves / 36 shots
|date6 =April 27
|score6 =5–4
|ot6 =1
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030176
|6-1-1 =05:16 – Trevor Daley (1)
10:27 – pp – Cody Eakin (2)
19:01 – Ryan Garbutt (3)
|6-1-2 =Devante Smith-Pelly (1) – pp – 17:57
|6-2-1 =10:33 – Trevor Daley (2)
|6-2-2 =Ben Lovejoy (1) – 03:55
|6-3-1 =No scoring
|6-3-2 =Nick Bonino (2) – 17:50
Devante Smith-Pelly (2) – 19:36
|6-4-1 =No scoring
|6-4-2 =Nick Bonino (3) – 02:47
|goalie6-1 =Kari Lehtonen 25 saves / 30 shots
|goalie6-2 =Frederik Andersen 8 saves / 12 shots
Jonas Hiller 12 saves / 12 shots
|series = Anaheim won series 4–2
}}

(P2) San Jose Sharks vs. (P3) Los Angeles Kings

The San Jose Sharks finished second overall in the Pacific Division, earning 111 points. The Los Angeles Kings earned 100 points during the regular season, to finish third overall in the Pacific Division. This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams; the Sharks earned a six-game series victory in the 2011 Western Conference Quarterfinals, while the Kings earned a seven-game series victory in the 2013 Western Conference Semifinals. The Kings won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Kings became just the fourth team in NHL playoff history (after the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs, 1975 New York Islanders, and the 2010 Philadelphia Flyers) to come back from a 3–0 deficit to win a series 4–3.[54] The Sharks controlled the first two games in the series, winning 6–3 and 7–2 in game one and game two, respectively, scoring 12 total goals on Kings goalie Jonathan Quick and an empty netter.[55][56] In game three, Patrick Marleau scored at 6:20 into overtime to give San Jose a 4–3 victory.[57] However, in game four Justin Williams scored two goals to lead Los Angeles to a 6–3 win.[58] At San Jose for game five, Quick posted a shutout, as he stopped all 30 San Jose shots.[59] In game six, San Jose head coach Todd McLellan started goalie Alex Stalock instead of Antti Niemi. Williams' game-winning goal (his second of the game) at 11:56 into the third period of game six to break a 1–1 tie was met with controversy. Stalock attempted to control a loose puck in his crease, but Williams managed to poke it through Stalock's legs across the goal line. It appeared that Williams pushed Stalock backwards during the play, and the puck seemed to disappear out of sight under the goalie's pads before Williams poked at it.[60] The play went to video review but the call of goal on the ice stood. The Kings' Anze Kopitar then scored two more unanswered goals in a 4–1 victory.[61] Niemi was reinstated as the Sharks starter for game seven, but the Kings scored 5 unanswered goals, and killed all six San Jose power plays, to win the game 5–1.[62] Mike Richards and Jeff Carter, who both played for the Flyers in 2010, became the first players in NHL history to be part of two teams that won the final four games of a series, after initially facing a 3–0 series deficit.

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Los Angeles Kings
|team2=San Jose Sharks
|stadium2=Staples Center
|stadium1=SAP Center
|date1 =April 17
|score1 =3–6
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030181
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =03:06 – Joe Thornton (1)
19:08 – Tomas Hertl (1)
19:56 – Patrick Marleau (1)
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =12:57 – Raffi Torres (1)
16:29 – pp – Marc-Edouard Vlasic (1)
|1-3-1 =Jake Muzzin (1) – 02:01
Slava Voynov (1) – 06:55
Trevor Lewis (1) – 13:59
|1-3-2 =19:05 – en – Brent Burns (1)
|goalie1-1 =Jonathan Quick 23 saves / 28 shots
Martin Jones 4 saves / 4 shots
|goalie1-2 =Antti Niemi 31 saves / 34 shots
|date2 =April 20
|score2 =2–7
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030182
|2-1-1 =Jake Muzzin (2) – 01:51
Trevor Lewis (2) – 09:33
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =04:25 – Mike Brown (1)
09:04 – Raffi Torres (2)
14:45 – Justin Braun (1)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =01:08 – Patrick Marleau (2)
04:07 – Joe Pavelski (1)
08:08 – Logan Couture (1)
10:06 – pp – Joe Thornton (2)
|goalie2-1 =Jonathan Quick 33 saves / 40 shots
|goalie2-2 =Antti Niemi 24 saves / 26 shots
|date3 =April 22
|score3 =4–3
|ot3 =1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030183
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =Brent Burns (2) – pp – 03:16
|3-2-1 =04:48 – pp – Jarret Stoll (1)
07:59 – Marian Gaborik (1)
|3-2-2 =Matthew Nieto (1) – 09:17
|3-3-1 =00:51 – pp – Jeff Carter (1)
|3-3-2 =Tomas Hertl (2) – 09:17
|3-4-1 =No scoring
|3-4-2 =Patrick Marleau (3) – 06:20
|goalie3-1 =Jonathan Quick 36 saves / 40 shots
|goalie3-2 =Antti Niemi 28 saves / 31 shots
|date4 =April 24
|score4 =3–6
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030184
|4-1-1 =04:08 – Marian Gaborik (2)
|4-1-2 =James Sheppard (1) – 19:52
|4-2-1 =03:52 – pp – Justin Williams (1)
16:07 – Justin Williams (2)
19:01 – Tyler Toffoli (1)
|4-2-2 =Matthew Nieto (2) – 08:25
|4-3-1 =00:34 – Marian Gaborik (3)
18:32 – en – Dustin Brown (1)
|4-3-2 =Joe Pavelski (2) – pp – 11:36
|goalie4-1 =Jonathan Quick 36 saves / 39 shots
|goalie4-2 =Antti Niemi 21 saves / 26 shots
Alex Stalock 4 saves / 4 shots
|date5 =April 26
|score5 =3–0
|won5 =1
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030185
|5-1-1 =Tyler Toffoli (2) – 08:09
Anze Kopitar (1) – 12:52
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =Jeff Carter (2) – pp – 00:22
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Jonathan Quick 30 saves / 30 shots
|goalie5-2 =Antti Niemi 16 saves / 19 shots
Alex Stalock 22 saves / 22 shots
|date6 =April 28
|score6 =1–4
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030186
|6-1-1 =05:39 – Justin Williams (3)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =James Sheppard (2) – 12:26
|6-3-1 =11:56 – Justin Williams (4)
13:27 – Anze Kopitar (2)
14:42 – pp – Anze Kopitar (3)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Jonathan Quick 25 saves / 26 shots
|goalie6-2 =Alex Stalock 26 saves / 30 shots
|date7 =April 30
|score7 =5–1
|won7 =1
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030187
|7-1-1 =No scoring
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =Drew Doughty (1) – pp – 04:57
Anze Kopitar (4) – 18:39
|7-2-2 =00:28 – Matt Irwin (1)
|7-3-1 =Tyler Toffoli (3) – 04:40
Dustin Brown (2) – en – 17:53
Tanner Pearson (1) – en – 19:12
|7-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie7-1 =Jonathan Quick 39 saves / 40 shots
|goalie7-2 =Antti Niemi 25 saves / 28 shots
|series = Los Angeles won series 4–3
}}

Second Round

Eastern Conference Second Round

(A1) Boston Bruins vs. (A3) Montreal Canadiens

One of the greatest rivalries in North American professional sports, this was the 34th meeting between these teams in the postseason, which is the most frequent playoff series in NHL history. Coming into the series, Montreal owned a record of 24–9 against Boston in the 33 previous series played by the teams, and had won 18 straight between 1946 and 1987. However, the Bruins had won the two most recent series between these two teams, the last of which was a seven-game Boston victory in the 2011 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals. The Canadiens won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.

The Canadiens eliminated the Bruins in seven games. P. K. Subban scored 4:17 into the second overtime to give Montreal a 4–3 victory in game one.[63] In game two, the Bruins scored four unanswered goals in the third period to overcome a two-goal deficit to win 5–3.[64] In game three, the Canadiens built a 3–0 lead, as Subban and Dale Weise each had a goal and an assist, en route to a 4–2 win.[65] Matt Fraser then scored the only goal in game four at 1:19 into overtime in Boston's 1–0 victory.[66] In game five, Reilly Smith and Jarome Iginla scored two power play goals 32 seconds apart in the second period to help give the Bruins a 4–2 win.[67] However, Carey Price stopped all 26 Boston shots, and Thomas Vanek scored two goals, helping to give Montreal a 4–0 win in game six.[68] In Boston for game seven, Montreal defeated the Bruins 3–1, as Price made 29 saves.[69]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Montreal Canadiens
|team2=Boston Bruins
|stadium2=Bell Centre
|stadium1=TD Garden
|date1 =May 1
|score1 =4–3
|ot1 =2
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030211
|1-1-1 =P. K. Subban (1) – pp – 11:23
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =Rene Bourque (4) – 03:38
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =Francis Bouillon (1) – 12:09
|1-3-2 =02:44 – Reilly Smith (2)
06:30 – Torey Krug (2)
18:02 – Johnny Boychuk (1)
|1-4-1 =P. K. Subban (2) – pp – 04:17
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Carey Price 48 saves / 51 shots
|goalie1-2 =Tuukka Rask 29 saves / 33 shots
|date2 =May 3
|score2 =3–5
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030212
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =13:02 – Daniel Paille (1)
|2-2-1 =Mike Weaver (1) – 01:09
Thomas Vanek (2) – pp – 18:09
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Thomas Vanek (3) – pp – 06:30
|2-3-2 =10:56 – Dougie Hamilton (2)
14:17 – Patrice Bergeron (2)
16:28 – Reilly Smith (3)
18:54 – en – Milan Lucic (4)
|goalie2-1 =Carey Price 30 saves / 34 shots
|goalie2-2 =Tuukka Rask 25 saves / 28 shots
|date3 =May 6
|score3 =2–4
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030213
|3-1-1 =10:57 – Tomas Plekanec (3)
14:44 – P. K. Subban (3)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =13:52 – Dale Weise (2)
|3-2-2 =Patrice Bergeron (3) – 17:48
|3-3-1 =19:57 – en – Lars Eller (3)
|3-3-2 =Jarome Iginla (3) – 17:44
|goalie3-1 =Carey Price 26 saves / 28 shots
|goalie3-2 =Tuukka Rask 22 saves / 25 shots
|date4 =May 8
|score4 =1–0
|ot4 =1
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030214
|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 =No scoring
|4-4-1 =No scoring
|4-4-2 =Matt Fraser (1) – 01:19
|goalie4-1 =Carey Price 34 saves / 35 shots
|goalie4-2 =Tuukka Rask 33 saves / 33 shots
|date5 =May 10
|score5 =2–4
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030215
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =13:20 – Carl Soderberg (1)
|5-2-1 =Brendan Gallagher (4) – pp – 14:39
|5-2-2 =01:04 – pp – Reilly Smith (4)
01:36 – pp – Jarome Iginla (4)
|5-3-1 =P. K. Subban (4) – pp – 17:31
|5-3-2 =14:12 – Loui Eriksson (2)
|goalie5-1 =Carey Price 26 saves / 30 shots
|goalie5-2 =Tuukka Rask 29 saves / 31 shots
|date6 =May 12
|score6 =0–4
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030216
|6-1-1 =02:11 – Lars Eller (4)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =15:24 – Max Pacioretty (2)
17:39 – pp – Thomas Vanek (4)
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =16:04 – Thomas Vanek (5)
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Carey Price 26 saves / 26 shots
|goalie6-2 =Tuukka Rask 24 saves / 28 shots
|date7 =May 14
|score7 =3–1
|won7 =1
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030217
|7-1-1 =Dale Weise (3) – 02:18
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =Max Pacioretty (3) – 10:22
|7-2-2 =17:58 – pp – Jarome Iginla (5)
|7-3-1 =Daniel Briere (2) – pp – 17:07
|7-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie7-1 =Carey Price 29 saves / 30 shots
|goalie7-2 =Tuukka Rask 15 saves / 18 shots
|series = Montreal won series 4–3
}}

(M1) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (M2) New York Rangers

This was the fifth playoff meeting for these two teams, with Pittsburgh winning all four previous playoff series. Their most recent meeting was in the 2008 Eastern Conference Semifinals, which Pittsburgh won in five games. Each team won two games in this year's four-game regular season series.

For the first time in their team history, the Rangers overcame a 3–1 game deficit to win a seven-game series.[70] The team who scored first won the game for all seven contests in the series. Much was made early on about scheduling, as the Rangers played five games in seven days, due to going to seven games in the first round and scheduling conflicts at Madison Square Garden. They were the first team to have such a playoff schedule in 25 years, and early on it looked like the schedule might adversely affect the Rangers' chances, noted by many including Rangers coach Alain Vigneault.[71][72] Derick Brassard scored 3:06 into overtime to give New York a 3–2 victory in game one.[73] Penguins goalie Marc-Andre Fleury then recorded two consecutive shutouts, stopping all 22 shots in a 3–0 win in game two and 35 shots in a 2–0 victory in game three.[74][75] Fleury's back-to-back shutouts on back-to-back calendar days was the first time this was ever achieved in franchise history. It was also the first time the Rangers were shut out in back-to-back playoff games since 1937.[76] Pittsburgh also took in game four, 4–2, as Evgeni Malkin had a goal and an assist, and Sidney Crosby recorded two assists.[77] Between games four and five, Rangers forward Martin St. Louis received the news that his mother unexpectedly died at the age of 63 due to a heart attack. Despite being in mourning, St. Louis remained in the lineup, and the emotional spark that it provided turned New York around.[78] The Rangers began their comeback with a 5–1 win in game five, as Brassard scored two of New York's goals and Mats Zuccarello recorded three assists.[79] New York then recorded a 3–1 victory in game six, with three different players scoring goals.[80] Finally, Brad Richards's power play goal 7:56 into the second period proved to be the difference in the Rangers' 2–1 victory in game seven.[70]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=New York Rangers
|team2=Pittsburgh Penguins
|stadium2=Madison Square Garden
|stadium1=Consol Energy Center
|date1 =May 2
|score1 =3–2
|ot1 =1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030221
|1-1-1 =Benoit Pouliot (3) – 05:04
Brad Richards (3) – 17:03
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =07:15 – Lee Stempniak (2)
13:28 – James Neal (2)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|1-4-1 =Derick Brassard (1) – 03:06
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 34 saves / 36 shots
|goalie1-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 24 saves / 27 shots
|date2 =May 4
|score2 =0–3
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030222
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =10:26 – Kris Letang (2)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =16:30 – pp – Jussi Jokinen (4)
19:06 – en – Evgeni Malkin (4)
|goalie2-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 32 saves / 34 shots
|goalie2-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 22 saves / 22 shots
|date3 =May 5
|score3 =2–0
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030223
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Sidney Crosby (1) – 02:34
Jussi Jokinen (5) – 15:20
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 13 saves / 15 shots
|goalie3-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 35 saves / 35 shots
|date4 =May 7
|score4 =4–2
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030224
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =Evgeni Malkin (5) – 02:31
|4-2-1 =05:30 – Carl Hagelin (3)
|4-2-2 =Brandon Sutter (4) – sh – 18:27
|4-3-1 =13:07 – Mats Zuccarello (3)
|4-3-2 =Jussi Jokinen (6) – 07:02
Chris Kunitz (3) – 14:04
|goalie4-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 23 saves / 27 shots
|goalie4-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 13 saves / 15 shots
|date5 =May 9
|score5 =5–1
|won5 =1
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030225
|5-1-1 =Chris Kreider (1) – pp – 09:36
Derick Brassard (2) – 15:23
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =Derick Brassard (3) – 07:58
Ryan McDonagh (1) – pp – 08:48
|5-2-2 =03:23 – Evgeni Malkin (6)
|5-3-1 =Kevin Klein (1) – en – 17:31
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 31 saves / 32 shots
|goalie5-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 30 saves / 34 shots
|date6 =May 11
|score6 =1–3
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030226
|6-1-1 =03:34 – Martin St. Louis (3)
06:25 – Carl Hagelin (4)
|6-1-2 =Brandon Sutter (5) – 16:56
|6-2-1 =15:30 – Derick Brassard (4)
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =No scoring
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 36 saves / 37 shots
|goalie6-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 26 saves / 29 shots
|date7 =May 13
|score7 =2–1
|won7 =1
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030227
|7-1-1 =Brian Boyle (2) – 05:25
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =Brad Richards (4) – pp – 07:56
|7-2-2 =04:15 – Jussi Jokinen (7)
|7-3-1 =No scoring
|7-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie7-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 35 saves / 36 shots
|goalie7-2 =Marc-Andre Fleury 18 saves / 20 shots
|series = New York won series 4–3
}}

Western Conference Second Round

(C3) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (WC1) Minnesota Wild

This was the second playoff meeting for these two teams. Their only previous meeting was in the 2013 Western Conference Quarterfinals, which Chicago won in five games. The Wild won three of the five games in this year's regular season series.

The Blackhawks eliminated the Wild in six games. The first five games in the series were won by the home team. Patrick Kane scored two goals to help give Chicago a 5–2 victory in game one.[81] In game two, Bryan Bickell had a goal and two assists in Chicago's 4–1 win.[82] The Wild won game three, 4–0, scoring four goals in the third period and limiting Chicago to only 19 shots on goal.[83] Four different Minnesota players then recorded goals in the Wild's 4–2 victory in game four.[84] In game five, Jonathan Toews scored the game-winning goal at 4:33 into the third period to break a 1–1 tie, and thus give the Blackhawks a 2–1 win.[85] Game six in Minnesota went into overtime, where Kane scored the winning goal after the puck deflected off the glass behind the Wild net and then rolled into the slot, allowing him to take a shot just under the Minnesota crossbar.[86]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Minnesota Wild
|team2=Chicago Blackhawks
|stadium2=Xcel Energy Center
|stadium1=United Center
|date1 =May 2
|score1 =2–5
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030231
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =14:48 – pp – Bryan Bickell (3)
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =11:21 – pp – Marian Hossa (2)
|1-3-1 =Clayton Stoner (1) – 02:19
Kyle Brodziak (3) – 06:56
|1-3-2 =08:22 – Patrick Kane (4)
16:47 – Patrick Kane (5)
17:19 – en – Bryan Bickell (4)
|goalie1-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 17 saves / 21 shots
|goalie1-2 =Corey Crawford 30 saves / 32 shots
|date2 =May 4
|score2 =1–4
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030232
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =11:02 – Jonathan Toews (4)
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =19:04 – Brandon Saad (1)
|2-3-1 =Cody McCormick (1) – 02:00
|2-3-2 =17:15 – Bryan Bickell (5)
18:37 – en – Brandon Saad (2)
|goalie2-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 18 saves / 21 shots
|goalie2-2 =Corey Crawford 18 saves / 19 shots
|date3 =May 6
|score3 =0–4
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030233
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =01:41 – Erik Haula (2)
04:18 – Mikael Granlund (3)
17:25 – pp – Zach Parise (4)
18:43 – en – Mikael Granlund (4)
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 19 saves / 19 shots
|goalie3-2 =Corey Crawford 14 saves / 17 shots
|date4 =May 9
|score4 =2–4
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030234
|4-1-1 =07:24 – Justin Fontaine (1)
|4-1-2 =Patrick Sharp (2) – 19:21
|4-2-1 =03:51 – Jason Pominville (2)
07:12 – Nino Niederreiter (3)
|4-2-2 =Michal Handzus (1) – 06:28
|4-3-1 =03:47 – pp – Jared Spurgeon (3)
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 18 saves / 20 shots
|goalie4-2 =Corey Crawford 27 saves / 31 shots
|date5 =May 11
|score5 =1–2
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030235
|5-1-1 =Erik Haula (3) – 16:33
|5-1-2 =No scoring
|5-2-1 =No scoring
|5-2-2 =09:18 – pp – Bryan Bickell (6)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =04:33 – Jonathan Toews (5)
|goalie5-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 26 saves / 28 shots
|goalie5-2 =Corey Crawford 27 saves / 28 shots
|date6 =May 13
|score6 =2–1
|ot6 =1
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030236
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =Kris Versteeg (1) – 01:58
|6-2-1 =02:29 – Erik Haula (4)
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =No scoring
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|6-4-1 =No scoring
|6-4-2 =Patrick Kane (6) – 09:42
|goalie6-1 =Ilya Bryzgalov 25 saves / 27 shots
|goalie6-2 =Corey Crawford 34 saves / 35 shots
|series = Chicago won series 4–2
}}

(P1) Anaheim Ducks vs. (P3) Los Angeles Kings

This was the first playoff meeting between the Pacific Division and crosstown rivals. The Ducks won four of the five games in this year's regular season series, including a 3–0 win at the NHL's inaugural Stadium Series game held at Dodger Stadium.

The Kings eliminated the Ducks in seven games. The first four games in the series were won by the visiting team. Anaheim head coach Bruce Boudreau started game one with Jonas Hiller in net. However, Marian Gaborik tied the game with about seven seconds remaining in regulation, then scored the game-winner 12:17 into overtime to give Los Angeles a 3–2 win.[87] The Kings also won game two, 3–1, as goalie Jonathan Quick only allowed one power play goal out of 37 shots.[88] Boudreau then named Frederik Andersen as his starting goalie for game three. Andersen made 22 saves out of 23 shots before leaving in the third period due to a lower-body injury. Hiller went into the game as Andersen's replacement and made 7 saves out of 8 shots to help preserve a 3–2 victory over the Ducks.[89] With Anaheim's starting goalie situation still in flux, Boudreau decided to turn to rookie John Gibson for game four. The 20-year-old Gibson then became the youngest goalie in NHL history to record a shutout in his playoff debut, making 28 saves to give Anaheim a 2–0 win.[90] Gibson followed up his performance by recording 39 saves out of 42 shots, and Devante Smith-Pelly scored two goals, to help give the Ducks a 4–3 win in game five.[91] However, the Kings built a 2–0 second period lead in game six en route to a 2–1 win.[92] Los Angeles then controlled most of game seven, building a 4–0 second period lead before Boudreau opted to replace Gibson with Hiller. The Kings then scored another goal against Hiller to make it 5–0 and held to win, 6–2, to advance to the Conference Final.[93]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Los Angeles Kings
|team2=Anaheim Ducks
|stadium2=Staples Center
|stadium1=Honda Center
|date1 =May 3
|score1 =3–2
|ot1 =1
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030241
|1-1-1 =Alec Martinez (1) – pp – 09:04
|1-1-2 =11:41 – Matt Beleskey (2)
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =No scoring
|1-3-1 =Marian Gaborik (4) – 19:53
|1-3-2 =08:08 – Teemu Selanne (1)
|1-4-1 =Marian Gaborik (5) – 12:07
|1-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie1-1 =Jonathan Quick 33 saves / 35 shots
|goalie1-2 =Jonas Hiller 33 saves / 36 shots
|date2 =May 5
|score2 =3–1
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030242
|2-1-1 =Marian Gaborik (6) – 00:34
Alec Martinez (2) – 12:07
|2-1-2 =09:40 – pp – Patrick Maroon (2)
|2-2-1 =No scoring
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =Dwight King (1) – en – 19:02
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Jonathan Quick 36 saves / 37 shots
|goalie2-2 =Jonas Hiller 14 saves / 16 shots
|date3 =May 8
|score3 =3–2
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030243
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =Corey Perry (3) – pp – 04:06
|3-2-1 =04:59 – pp – Jeff Carter (3)
|3-2-2 =Teemu Selanne (2) – pp – 15:10
|3-3-1 =19:29 – Mike Richards (1)
|3-3-2 =Ben Lovejoy (2) – 17:05
|goalie3-1 =Jonathan Quick 19 saves / 22 shots
|goalie3-2 =Frederik Andersen 22 saves / 23 shots
Jonas Hiller 7 saves / 8 shots
|date4 =May 10
|score4 =2–0
|won4 =2
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030244
|4-1-1 =No scoring
|4-1-2 =Devante Smith-Pelly (3) – 16:02
Ryan Getzlaf (4) – pp – 18:45
|4-2-1 =No scoring
|4-2-2 =No scoring
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Jonathan Quick 9 saves / 11 shots
Martin Jones 3 saves / 3 shots
|goalie4-2 =John Gibson 28 saves / 28 shots
|date5 =May 12
|score5 =3–4
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030245
|5-1-1 =Trevor Lewis (3) – 09:12
|5-1-2 =02:15 – Nick Bonino (4)
|5-2-1 =Marian Gaborik (7) – pp – 18:42
|5-2-2 =01:11 – pp – Devante Smith-Pelly (4)
02:34 – Devante Smith-Pelly (5)
08:23 – Jakob Silfverberg (2)
|5-3-1 =Marian Gaborik (8) – 14:12
|5-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie5-1 =Jonathan Quick 20 saves / 24 shots
|goalie5-2 =John Gibson 39 saves / 42 shots
|date6 =May 14
|score6 =1–2
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030246
|6-1-1 =08:16 – Jake Muzzin (3)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =14:04 – Trevor Lewis (4)
|6-2-2 =Kyle Palmieri (2) – 15:42
|6-3-1 =No scoring
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Jonathan Quick 21 saves / 22 shots
|goalie6-2 =John Gibson 21 saves / 23 shots
|date7 =May 16
|score7 =6–2
|won7 =1
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030247
|7-1-1 =Justin Williams (5) – pp – 04:30
Jeff Carter (4) – 08:48
Mike Richards (2) – 15:12
|7-1-2 =No scoring
|7-2-1 =Anze Kopitar (5) – 02:02
Marian Gaborik (9) – pp – 14:08
|7-2-2 =17:02 – Kyle Palmieri (3)
|7-3-1 =Tanner Pearson (2) – 13:54
|7-3-2 =03:42 – Corey Perry (4)
|goalie7-1 =Jonathan Quick 25 saves / 27 shots
|goalie7-2 =John Gibson 14 saves / 18 shots
Jonas Hiller 10 saves / 12 shots
|series = Los Angeles won series 4–3
}}

Conference Finals

{{Main|NHL Conference Finals}}

Eastern Conference Final

(A3) Montreal Canadiens vs. (M2) New York Rangers

This was the fifteenth playoff meeting for these two Original Six teams, with each team having won seven of the fourteen previous playoff series. Their most recent meeting was in the 1996 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, which the Rangers won in six games. Montreal most recently made it to the Conference Finals in 2010, losing to the Philadelphia Flyers in five games, while the Rangers made it to the Conference Finals in 2012, losing in six games to the New Jersey Devils. Montreal won two of the three games in this year's regular season series.

New York defeated Montreal in six games. With the Rangers holding a 2–1 lead midway through the second period of game one, New York's Chris Kreider collided with Carey Price, injuring the Montreal goalie's knee. Although Price finished the rest of the period, he did not return for the rest of the series. Peter Budaj played for the rest of the game but the Rangers won 7–2.[94] Canadiens head coach Michel Therrien started rookie goalie Dustin Tokarski in game two. However Henrik Lundqvist stopped 40 of 41 shots, helping New York to a 3–1 victory.[95]

Early in the first period of game three, Montreal's Brandon Prust leveled Derek Stepan but the referees missed the interference call; the league would later suspend Prust two games.[96] Later in the first period, Daniel Carcillo was penalized for charging into Prust from behind. As linesman Scott Driscoll attempted to escort Carcillo to the penalty box, Carcillo physically attempted to get away from Driscoll, leading to an automatic game misconduct and multi-game suspension.[97] Meanwhile, the last three goals of the game were scored on rebounds and deflections. At 16:58 of the third period, Daniel Briere's shot deflected off of the Rangers's Ryan McDonagh's skate and into the net to give the Canadiens a 2–1 lead. New York then tied the game at 19:31 of the third period after Dan Girardi's shot deflected of off Chris Kreider and bounced off of Montreal's Alexei Emelin's skate into the net. And finally, 72 seconds into overtime, Tomas Plekanec's shot deflected off of Alex Galchenyuk into the New York net to give the Canadiens the 3–2 win.[98]

The Rangers won game four, 3–2, as Martin St. Louis scored 6:02 into overtime.[99] The Canadiens then bounced back in game five, winning 7–4, as they scored 4 goals out of their first 18 shots, and Rene Bourque recorded a hat-trick.[100] However, Dominic Moore scored game six's only goal late in the second period and with a 1–0 win the Rangers advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in twenty years.[101]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=New York Rangers
|team2=Montreal Canadiens
|stadium2=Madison Square Garden
|stadium1=Bell Centre
|date1 =May 17
|score1 =7–2
|won1 =1
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030311
|1-1-1 =Martin St. Louis (4) – 04:35
Mats Zuccarello (4) – 06:27
|1-1-2 =No scoring
|1-2-1 =Chris Kreider (2) – 18:59
Brad Richards (5) – 19:48
|1-2-2 =12:38 – Rene Bourque (5)
|1-3-1 =Ryan McDonagh (2) – pp – 01:28
Derek Stepan (3) – pp – 04:11
Rick Nash (1) – pp – 04:36
|1-3-2 =15:22 – sh – Lars Eller (5)
|goalie1-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 20 saves / 22 shots
|goalie1-2 =Carey Price 16 saves / 20 shots
Peter Budaj 5 saves / 8 shots
|date2 =May 19
|score2 =3–1
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030312
|2-1-1 =Ryan McDonagh (3) – 06:31
Rick Nash (2) – 18:58
|2-1-2 =06:14 – Max Pacioretty (4)
|2-2-1 =Martin St. Louis (5) – pp – 08:03
|2-2-2 =No scoring
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 40 saves / 41 shots
|goalie2-2 =Dustin Tokarski 27 saves / 30 shots
|date3 =May 22
|score3 =3–2
|ot3 =1
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030313
|3-1-1 =15:18 – Carl Hagelin (5)
|3-1-2 =No scoring
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Andrei Markov (1) – 03:20
|3-3-1 =19:31 – Chris Kreider (3)
|3-3-2 =Daniel Briere (3) – 16:58
|3-4-1 =No scoring
|3-4-2 =Alex Galchenyuk (1) – 01:12
|goalie3-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 22 saves / 25 shots
|goalie3-2 =Dustin Tokarski 35 saves / 37 shots
|date4 =May 25
|score4 =2–3
|ot4 =1
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030314
|4-1-1 =07:18 – sh – Carl Hagelin (6)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =19:04 – Derick Brassard (5)
|4-2-2 =Francis Bouillon (2) – 08:08
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =P. K. Subban (5) – pp – 02:00
|4-4-1 =06:02 – Martin St. Louis (6)
|4-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 27 saves / 29 shots
|goalie4-2 =Dustin Tokarski 26 saves / 29 shots
|date5 =May 27
|score5 =4–7
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030315
|5-1-1 =Derek Stepan (4) – 10:44
|5-1-2 =01:48 – pp – Alex Galchenyuk (2)
12:24 – Tomas Plekanec (4)
|5-2-1 =Rick Nash (3) – 09:48
Derek Stepan (5) – 12:06
Chris Kreider (4) – pp – 14:12
|5-2-2 =03:44 – Max Pacioretty (5)
06:54 – Rene Bourque (6)
15:10 – Rene Bourque (7)
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =06:33 – Rene Bourque (8)
15:43 – en – David Desharnais (2)
|goalie5-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 15 saves / 19 shots
Cam Talbot 6 saves / 8 shots
|goalie5-2 =Dustin Tokarski 23 saves / 27 shots
|date6 =May 29
|score6 =0–1
|won6 =1
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030316
|6-1-1 =No scoring
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =18:07 – Dominic Moore (3)
|6-2-2 =No scoring
|6-3-1 =No scoring
|6-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie6-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 18 saves / 18 shots
|goalie6-2 =Dustin Tokarski 31 saves / 32 shots
|series = New York won series 4–2
}}

Western Conference Final

(C3) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (P3) Los Angeles Kings

This was the third playoff meeting between these two franchises, with Chicago having won both of their previous playoff meetings. This was a rematch of the previous season's Western Conference Finals, which Chicago won in five games. This was the third straight Conference Finals appearance for the Kings, while it was Chicago's fourth trip to the Conference Finals since 2009. Chicago won all three games in this year's regular season series.

The Kings eliminated the Blackhawks in seven games. Chicago took game one, 3–1, as Brandon Saad recorded a goal and assist, and Corey Crawford made 26 saves.[102] In game two, the Kings scored six unanswered goals, including a hat trick from Jeff Carter, to come back from a 2–0 deficit to win 6–2.[103] Jonathan Toews scored two goals in the first period of game three to give the Blackhawks a 2–1 lead after twenty minutes, but Los Angeles's second line of Carter, Tyler Toffoli, and Tanner Pearson created two second period goals and the Kings won 4–3.[104] The Kings also dominated game four, building a 4–0 lead in the second period en route to a 5–2 victory.[105] Although the Kings rallied to tie game five after falling behind 3-1 in the first period, Michal Handzus scored at 2:04 of double overtime to give the Blackhawks a 5–4 victory.[106] Drew Doughty and Patrick Kane both had a goal and an assist in the third period of a back-and-forth game six, which the Blackhawks won 4–3.[107] The Blackhawks scored the first two goals of game seven. The Kings cut the lead in half with a controversial goal when Kings forward, Jeff Carter, appeared to be offside.[108] The Kings briefly tied the game on a goal by Justin Williams, only to have the Blackhawks regain a 4-3 lead after two Patrick Sharp goals. But Marian Gaborik converted Dustin Brown's rebound to tie the game in the third period, and at 5:47 of overtime Alec Martinez's wrist shot from the blue line deflected past Crawford to give the Kings a 5–4 victory and a spot in the Stanley Cup Finals.[109]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=Los Angeles Kings
|team2=Chicago Blackhawks
|stadium2=Staples Center
|stadium1=United Center
|date1 =May 18
|score1 =1–3
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030321
|1-1-1 =No scoring
|1-1-2 =14:46 – pp – Brandon Saad (3)
|1-2-1 =Tyler Toffoli (4) – 04:35
|1-2-2 =11:54 – Duncan Keith (3)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =16:10 – Jonathan Toews (6)
|goalie1-1 =Jonathan Quick 17 saves / 20 shots
|goalie1-2 =Corey Crawford 25 saves / 26 shots
|date2 =May 21
|score2 =6–2
|won2 =1
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030322
|2-1-1 =No scoring
|2-1-2 =14:16 – pp – Nick Leddy (1)
|2-2-1 =Justin Williams (6) – 18:14
|2-2-2 =01:40 – Ben Smith (2)
|2-3-1 =Jeff Carter (5) – pp – 01:37
Jake Muzzin (4) – pp – 04:04
Tyler Toffoli (5) – 08:59
Jeff Carter (6) – 14:44
Jeff Carter (7) – en – 16:29
|2-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie2-1 =Jonathan Quick 23 saves / 25 shots
|goalie2-2 =Corey Crawford 25 saves / 30 shots
|date3 =May 24
|score3 =3–4
|won3 =1
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030323
|3-1-1 =06:16 – pp – Slava Voynov (2)
|3-1-2 =Jonathan Toews (7) – sh – 05:26
Jonathan Toews (8) – 13:19
|3-2-1 =08:08 – Jeff Carter (8)
14:19 – Tyler Toffoli (6)
|3-2-2 =No scoring
|3-3-1 =11:57 – Drew Doughty (2)
|3-3-2 =Patrick Sharp (3) – 19:55
|goalie3-1 =Jonathan Quick 24 saves / 27 shots
|goalie3-2 =Corey Crawford 28 saves / 32 shots
|date4 =May 26
|score4 =2–5
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030324
|4-1-1 =09:00 – pp – Jake Muzzin (5)
11:13 – Marian Gaborik (10)
15:56 – pp – Dustin Brown (3)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =12:43 – Drew Doughty (3)
|4-2-2 =Brandon Saad (4) – 14:03
|4-3-1 =18:58 – en – Tanner Pearson (3)
|4-3-2 =Bryan Bickell (7) – 09:29
|goalie4-1 =Jonathan Quick 22 saves / 24 shots
|goalie4-2 =Corey Crawford 16 saves / 20 shots
|date5 =May 28
|score5 =4–5
|ot5 =2
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030325
|5-1-1 =Jarret Stoll (2) – 09:49
Marian Gaborik (11) – 13:16
|5-1-2 =01:13 – pp – Brent Seabrook (3)
03:40 – Johnny Oduya (2)
11:06 – Brandon Saad (5)
|5-2-1 =Dustin Brown (4) – 11:08
Tanner Pearson (4) – 13:08
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =01:17 – Ben Smith (3)
|5-4-1 =No scoring
|5-4-2 =02:04 – Michal Handzus (2)
|goalie5-1 =Jonathan Quick 40 saves / 45 shots
|goalie5-2 =Corey Crawford 40 saves / 44 shots
|date6 =May 30
|score6 =4–3
|won6 =2
|recap6 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030326
|6-1-1 =17:03 – Dwight King (2)
|6-1-2 =No scoring
|6-2-1 =No scoring
|6-2-2 =Patrick Kane (7) – pp – 01:12
Ben Smith (4) – 02:49
|6-3-1 =05:32 – Drew Doughty (4)
07:38 – pp – Alec Martinez (3)
|6-3-2 =Duncan Keith (4) – 11:34
Patrick Kane (8) – 16:15
|goalie6-1 =Jonathan Quick 21 saves / 25 shots
|goalie6-2 =Corey Crawford 26 saves / 29 shots
|date7 =June 1
|score7 =5–4
|ot7 =1
|won7 =1
|recap7 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030327
|7-1-1 =Jeff Carter (9) – 16:31
Justin Williams (7) – 17:22
|7-1-2 =05:06 – Brandon Saad (6)
08:36 – pp – Jonathan Toews (9)
17:34 – Patrick Sharp (4)
|7-2-1 =Tyler Toffoli (7) – 10:31
|7-2-2 =18:25 – pp – Patrick Sharp (5)
|7-3-1 =Marian Gaborik (12) – 12:43
|7-3-2 =No scoring
|7-4-1 =Alec Martinez (4) – 05:47
|7-4-2 =No scoring
|goalie7-1 =Jonathan Quick 37 saves / 41 shots
|goalie7-2 =Corey Crawford 27 saves / 32 shots
|series = Los Angeles won series 4–3
}}

Stanley Cup Finals

{{Main|2014 Stanley Cup Finals}}

This was the third playoff meeting for these two teams, with the Rangers having won both of their previous playoff series against the Kings. Their most recent meeting was in the preliminary round of the 1981 playoffs, a best-of-five series which the Rangers won 3–1,[110] as well as the first major professional sports championship final between New York City and Los Angeles since the Dodgers beat the Yankees in the 1981 World Series in a strike-shortened season.[110][111]

While the Kings won their franchise's first Stanley Cup in {{scfy|2012}}, the Rangers had not won a Stanley Cup since {{scfy|1994}}. The Kings and Rangers split this year's two-game regular season series. This was the third Finals appearance for the Kings, while the Rangers made their eleventh Finals appearance. This was the first time a Norwegian player appeared in the Finals (Mats Zuccarello of the New York Rangers).[112]

{{NHLPlayoffs
|team1=New York Rangers
|team2=Los Angeles Kings
|stadium2=Madison Square Garden
|stadium1=Staples Center
|date1 =June 4
|score1 =2–3
|ot1 =1
|won1 =2
|recap1 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030411
|1-1-1 =Benoit Pouliot (4) – 13:21
Carl Hagelin (7) – sh – 15:03
|1-1-2 =17:33 – Kyle Clifford (1)
|1-2-1 =No scoring
|1-2-2 =06:36 – Drew Doughty (5)
|1-3-1 =No scoring
|1-3-2 =No scoring
|1-4-1 =No scoring
|1-4-2 =04:36 – Justin Williams (8)
|goalie1-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 40 saves / 43 shots
|goalie1-2 =Jonathan Quick 25 saves / 27 shots
|date2 =June 7
|score2 =4–5
|ot2 =2
|won2 =2
|recap2 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030412
|2-1-1 =Ryan McDonagh (4) – 10:48
Mats Zuccarello (5) – 18:46
|2-1-2 =No scoring
|2-2-1 =Martin St. Louis (7) – pp – 11:24
Derick Brassard (6) – 14:50
|2-2-2 =01:46 – Jarret Stoll (3)
14:39 – pp – Willie Mitchell (1)
|2-3-1 =No scoring
|2-3-2 =01:58 – Dwight King (3)
07:36 – Marian Gaborik (13)
|2-4-1 =No scoring
|2-4-2 =10:26 – Dustin Brown (5)
|goalie2-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 39 saves / 44 shots
|goalie2-2 =Jonathan Quick 34 saves / 38 shots
|date3 =June 9
|score3 =3–0
|won3 =2
|recap3 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030413
|3-1-1 =No scoring
|3-1-2 =Jeff Carter (10) – 19:59
|3-2-1 =No scoring
|3-2-2 =Jake Muzzin (6) – pp – 04:17
Mike Richards (3) – 17:14
|3-3-1 =No scoring
|3-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie3-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 12 saves / 15 shots
|goalie3-2 =Jonathan Quick 32 saves / 32 shots
|date4 =June 11
|score4 =1–2
|won4 =1
|recap4 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030414
|4-1-1 =07:25 – Benoit Pouliot (5)
|4-1-2 =No scoring
|4-2-1 =06:27 – Martin St. Louis (8)
|4-2-2 =Dustin Brown (6) – 08:46
|4-3-1 =No scoring
|4-3-2 =No scoring
|goalie4-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 40 saves / 41 shots
|goalie4-2 =Jonathan Quick 17 saves / 19 shots
|date5 =June 13
|score5 =2–3
|ot5 =2
|won5 =2
|recap5 =www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030415
|5-1-1 =No scoring
|5-1-2 =06:04 – Justin Williams (9)
|5-2-1 =Chris Kreider (5) – pp – 15:37
Brian Boyle (3) – sh – 19:30
|5-2-2 =No scoring
|5-3-1 =No scoring
|5-3-2 =07:56 – pp – Marian Gaborik (14)
|5-4-1 =No scoring
|5-4-2 =14:43 – Alec Martinez (5)
|goalie5-1 =Henrik Lundqvist 48 saves / 51 shots
|goalie5-2 =Jonathan Quick 28 saves / 30 shots
|series = Los Angeles won series 4–1
}}

Player statistics

Skaters

These are the top ten skaters based on points.

PlayerTeam{{abbr|GP|Games Played{{abbr|G|Goals{{abbr|A|Assists{{abbr|Pts|Points{{abbr|+/–|Plus/Minus{{abbr|PIM|Penalties In Minutes
{{sortname|Anze|Kopitar|Anže Kopitar}}Los Angeles Kings 26 5 21 26 +9 14
{{sortname|Jeff|Carter}}Los Angeles Kings 26 10 15 25 +5 4
{{sortname|Justin|Williams}}Los Angeles Kings 26 9 16 25 +13 35
{{sortname|Marian|Gaborik|Marián Gáborík}}Los Angeles Kings 26 14 8 22 +6 6
{{sortname|Patrick|Kane}}Chicago Blackhawks 19 8 12 20 +5 8
{{sortname|Drew|Doughty}}Los Angeles Kings 26 5 13 18 +2 30
{{sortname|Jonathan|Toews}}Chicago Blackhawks 19 9 8 17 +3 8
{{sortname|Ryan|McDonagh}}New York Rangers 25 4 13 17 −1 8
{{sortname|Brandon|Saad}}Chicago Blackhawks 19 6 10 16 +10 6
{{sortname|Martin|St. Louis}}New York Rangers 25 8 7 15 −5 2

Goaltending

This is a combined table of the top five goaltenders based on goals against average (GAA) 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.

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|Tuukka|Rask}}Boston Bruins 12 7 5 348 25 1.99 .928 2 0752-43}}752:43
{{sortname|Henrik|Lundqvist}}New York Rangers 25 13 11 737 54 2.14 .927 1 1515-35}}1,515:35
{{sortname|Carey|Price}}Montreal Canadiens 12 8 4 358 29 2.35 .919 1 0738-46}}738:46
{{sortname|Marc-Andre|Fleury|Marc-André Fleury}}Pittsburgh Penguins 13 7 6 378 32 2.40 .915 2 0799-40}}799:40
{{sortname|Corey|Crawford}}Chicago Blackhawks 19 11 8 590 52 2.53 .912 1 1233-50}}1,233:50
{{sortname|Semyon|Varlamov}}Colorado Avalanche 7 3 4 231 20 2.78 .913 0 432-28}}432:28

Television

In Canada, the Stanley Cup Playoffs were broadcast by CBC, TSN and RDS, with each network having exclusive broadcast rights to selected series throughout, and CBC having exclusive rights to the finals.[113] This season marked the final playoffs broadcast by TSN and RDS, as Rogers Media, Sportsnet and TVA take over national broadcast rights to the NHL beginning in the 2014–15 season (although CBC will still air Rogers-produced coverage of the playoffs and finals).[114] Due to scheduling conflicts with a Toronto Raptors NBA playoff game on TSN, game three of the Rangers-Flyers first round series on April 22 was moved to Sportsnet 360—a sister network of the future rightsholder, and joined in progress by TSN following the game.[115]

In the United States, all playoff games were nationally televised by either NBCSN, CNBC, NHL Network, or NBC. During the first round, these telecasts co-existed with those of regional rightsholders, after which NBC had exclusive rights to the remaining games.

References

1. ^{{cite news|url=http://espn.go.com/nhl/story/_/id/10767832/canada-home-fewest-playoff-teams-1973|title=Wanted: Playoff teams in Canada|date=April 11, 2014|publisher=ESPN|agency=Associated Press|accessdate=April 14, 2014}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/daley-stars-beat-blues-end-playoff-drought-23299531|title=Daley, Stars Beat Blues 3-0, End Playoff Drought|last1=Dixon|first1=Schuyler|date=April 12, 2014|publisher=ABC News|agency=Associated Press|accessdate=April 14, 2014}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=716874|title=Anaheim Ducks' rally sets new record for multigoal comebacks in first round of Stanley Cup Playoffs - Ducks vs Stars - 2014 SCP First Round|publisher=Nhl.com|accessdate=May 1, 2014}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=717457|title=San Jose Sharks devastated after blowing 3-0 series lead to Los Angeles Kings - Sharks vs Kings - 2014 SCP First Round|publisher=Nhl.com|accessdate=June 14, 2014}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2014/05/29/rangers-as-confident-as-ever-heading-into-2nd-shot-at-stanley-cup-final/|title=NY Rangers Confident Heading Into 2nd Shot At Stanley Cup Final « CBS New York|publisher=Newyork.cbslocal.com|date=May 29, 2014|accessdate=June 14, 2014}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.torontosun.com/2014/06/14/nhl-playoff-highlights-during-this-lengthy-post-season/|author=Mike Zeisberger - The Toronto Sun|title=NHL playoff highlights during this lengthy post-season|date=June 14, 2014 |accessdate=July 2, 2014}}
7. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030111|title=Datsyuk's late goal lifts Red Wings past Bruins|work=NHL.com|date=April 19, 2014}}
8. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030112|title=Florek leads way, Bruins even series with Red Wings|work=NHL.com|date=April 20, 2014}}
9. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030113|title=Rask, Bruins blank Red Wings to grab series lead|work=NHL.com|date=April 22, 2014}}
10. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030114|title=Iginla's OT goal puts Bruins up 3-1 in series|work=NHL.com|date=April 25, 2014}}
11. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030115|title=Bruins win Game 5, advance to face Canadiens|work=NHL.com|date=April 26, 2014}}
12. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.torontosun.com/2014/04/16/bolts-ben-bishop-ruled-out-for-series-opener|title=Bolts' Ben Bishop ruled out for series opener|publisher=Toronto Sun|date=April 16, 2014}}
13. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030121|title=Weise's OT goal lifts Canadiens to win in game one|work=NHL.com|date=April 17, 2014}}
14. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030122|title=Price, Bourque put Canadiens up 2-0 in series|work=NHL.com|date=April 19, 2014}}
15. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030123|title=Canadiens edge Lightning, take 3-0 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=April 20, 2014}}
16. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030124|title=Canadiens sweep Lightning on Pacioretty's late goal|work=NHL.com|date=April 22, 2014}}
17. ^{{Cite news |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/hockey/nhl/gameflash/2014/04/12/33216_recap.html |title=Johansen lifts Blue Jackets past Panthers, 3–2 |work=Sports Illustrated |agency=Associated Press |date=April 12, 2014 |accessdate=April 15, 2014}}
18. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030131|title=Penguins, down by two, rally to win Game 1 |work=NHL.com|date=April 17, 2014}}
19. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030132|title=Blue Jackets win in double OT to even series|work=NHL.com|date=April 20, 2014}}
20. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030133|title=Penguins rally past Blue Jackets, take series lead|work=NHL.com|date=April 21, 2014}}
21. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030134|title=Foligno's OT goal caps Blue Jackets' comeback|work=NHL.com|date=April 24, 2014}}
22. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030135|title=Fleury makes 23 saves, Penguins win Game 5|work=NHL.com|date=April 26, 2014}}
23. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030134|title=Penguins survive, advance to face Rangers or Flyers|work=NHL.com|date=April 28, 2014}}
24. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030141|title=Quick power-play goals in third give Rangers Game 1 |work=NHL.com|date=April 18, 2014}}
25. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030142|title=Flyers use strong second period to even series|work=NHL.com|date=April 21, 2014}}
26. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030143|title=Rangers roll over Flyers in game three|work=NHL.com|date=April 23, 2014}}
27. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030144|title=Mason helps Flyers even series with Rangers|work=NHL.com|date=April 26, 2014}}
28. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030145|title=Rangers defeat Flyers, head to Philly with 3-2 lead|work=NHL.com|date=April 27, 2014}}
29. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030146|title=Simmonds' hat trick helps Flyers force game seven|work=NHL.com|date=April 29, 2014}}
30. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030147|title=Rangers win Game 7, advance to play Penguins|work=NHL.com|date=April 30, 2014}}
31. ^{{cite web|last=McAlister |first=Monica |url=http://kuklaskorner.com/hockey/comments/while-you-were-sleeping |title=Kukla's Korner Hockey - Kukla's Korner |publisher=Kuklaskorner.com |date=May 27, 1994 |accessdate=May 1, 2014}}
32. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=717184|title=Roy's early empty-net moves getting noticed|work=NHL.com|date=April 29, 2014}}
33. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030151|title=Stastny lifts Avalanche to game one win vs. Wild|work=NHL.com|date=April 18, 2014}}
34. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030152|title=Avalanche top Wild, grab 2-0 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=April 20, 2014}}
35. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030153|title=Granlund's highlight-reel goal wins it for Wild in OT|work=NHL.com|date=April 22, 2014}}
36. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030154|title=Wild stifle Avalanche to even series at 2-2|work=NHL.com|date=April 22, 2014}}
37. ^{{cite web|url=http://prohockeytalk.nbcsports.com/2014/04/27/video-parenteau-scores-tying-goal-sends-avs-wild-game-5-to-overtime/|title=Parenteau scores tying goal, sends Avs-Wild game five to overtime|website=ProHockeyTalk.com|date=April 27, 2014|accessdate=May 1, 2014}}
38. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030155|title=Avalanche beat Wild on MacKinnon's OT goal|work=NHL.com|date=April 27, 2014}}
39. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030156|title=Parise, Wild force game seven against Avalanche|work=NHL.com|date=April 27, 2014}}
40. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030157|title=Wild win game seven in OT, will face Blackhawks|work=NHL.com|date=May 1, 2014}}
41. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030161|title=Steen's goal in 3rd OT lifts Blues to game one win|work=NHL.com|date=April 18, 2014}}
42. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=715650|title=Seabrook suspended three games for charging|work=NHL.com|date=April 20, 2014}}
43. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030162|title=Blues stun Blackhawks in OT again|work=NHL.com|date=April 19, 2014}}
44. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030163|title=Toews, Crawford lead Blackhawks past Blues|work=NHL.com|date=April 22, 2014}}
45. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030164|title=Blackhawks even series on Kane's OT winner|work=NHL.com|date=April 24, 2014}}
46. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030165|title=Blackhawks top Blues on Toews' OT breakaway|work=NHL.com|date=April 26, 2014}}
47. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030166|title=Blackhawks advance with win over Blues|work=NHL.com|date=April 27, 2014}}
48. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030171|title=Ducks build big lead, hold off Stars in game one|work=NHL.com|date=April 17, 2014}}
49. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030172|title=Ducks hold off Stars, take 2-0 lead in series|work=NHL.com|date=April 19, 2014}}
50. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030173|title=Lehtonen leads Stars past Ducks in game three|work=NHL.com|date=April 22, 2014}}
51. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030174|title=Stars rally to even series with Ducks |work=NHL.com|date=April 24, 2014}}
52. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030175|title=Getzlaf helps Ducks roll over Stars in game five|work=NHL.com|date=April 25, 2014}}
53. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030176|title=Ducks win in OT; will face Sharks-Kings winner|work=NHL.com|date=April 27, 2014}}
54. ^{{cite web|url=http://prohockeytalk.nbcsports.com/2014/04/29/the-good-news-for-the-sharks-is/|title=The good news for the Sharks is….|website=ProHockeyTalk.com|publisher=NBC Sports|date=April 29, 2014|accessdate=May 1, 2014}}
55. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030181|title=Sharks build big lead, then hold off Kings in game one|work=NHL.com|date=April 18, 2014}}
56. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030182|title=Sharks' seven-goal blitz routs Kings|work=NHL.com|date=April 21, 2014}}
57. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030183|title=Sharks take 3-0 series lead on Marleau's OT goal|work=NHL.com|date=April 23, 2014}}
58. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030184|title=Kings stay alive by beating Sharks in game four|work=NHL.com|date=April 25, 2014}}
59. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030185|title=Kings stay alive by blanking Sharks in game five|work=NHL.com|date=April 27, 2014}}
60. ^{{cite web|url=https://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nhl-puck-daddy/justin-williams--controversial-goal-gives-kings-game-6-win--video-052146922.html|title=Kings force game seven after Justin Williams scores controversial winning goal|work=Puck Daddy|publisher=Yahoo! Sports|accessdate=May 1, 2014}}
61. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030186|title=Kings win third straight, force game seven against Sharks|work=NHL.com|date=April 29, 2014}}
62. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030187|title=Kings complete comeback, advance to face Ducks|work=NHL.com|date=May 1, 2014}}
63. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030211|title=Canadiens stun Bruins in second OT|work=NHL.com|date=May 2, 2014}}
64. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030212|title=Bruins score four in 3rd, even series with Canadiens|work=NHL.com|date=May 3, 2014}}
65. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030213|title=Subban sparks Canadiens to lead in series|work=NHL.com|date=May 7, 2014}}
66. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030214|title=Bruins top Canadiens on rookie Fraser's OT goal|work=NHL.com|date=May 9, 2014}}
67. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030215|title=Power play helps Bruins take 3–2 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 11, 2014}}
68. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030216|title=Price, Canadiens blank Bruins to force game seven|work=NHL.com|date=May 13, 2014}}
69. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030217|title=Canadiens win game seven, will face Rangers|work=NHL.com|date=May 15, 2014}}
70. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030227|title=Rangers win Game 7, will play Bruins or Canadiens|work=NHL.com|date=May 14, 2014}}
71. ^{{cite web|url=http://prohockeytalk.nbcsports.com/2014/05/05/vigneault-blasts-stupid-schedule-after-fifth-game-in-seven-nights/ |title=Vigneault blasts 'stupid schedule' after fifth game in seven nights | ProHockeyTalk |publisher=Prohockeytalk.nbcsports.com |date=|accessdate=June 14, 2014}}
72. ^{{cite web|url=http://nhl.si.com/2014/05/14/new-york-rangers-beat-pittsburgh-penguins-game-7/ |title=New York Rangers eliminate Pittsburgh Penguins in game seven | Home Ice - SI.com |publisher=Nhl.si.com |date=May 14, 2014 |accessdate=June 14, 2014}}
73. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030221|title=Brassard's OT goal lifts Rangers past Penguins|work=NHL.com|date=May 3, 2014}}
74. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030222|title=Fleury, Penguins blank Rangers to even series|work=NHL.com|date=May 5, 2014}}
75. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030223|title=Penguins blank Rangers again, grab series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 6, 2014}}
76. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2013/12/18/penguins-waste-late-lead-but-top-rangers-in-so/ |title=Fleury blanks Rangers again, Pens take 2-1 series edge |publisher=Fox News |date=|accessdate=June 14, 2014}}
77. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030224|title=Penguins beat Rangers again, take 3-1 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 8, 2014}}
78. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=719373 |title=Five reasons why the New York Rangers advanced to the Eastern Conference Final - Penguins vs Rangers - 2014 SCP Second Round |publisher=Nhl.com |date=May 14, 2014 |accessdate=June 14, 2014}}
79. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030225|title=Rangers extend series with dominant game five win|work=NHL.com|date=May 10, 2014}}
80. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030226|title=Rangers win second straight to force Game 7|work=NHL.com|date=May 11, 2014}}
81. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030231|title=Kane connects twice in third to lift Blackhawks|work=NHL.com|date=May 3, 2014}}
82. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030232|title=Bickell's three points lead Blackhawks past Wild|work=NHL.com|date=May 4, 2014}}
83. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030233|title=Third-period outburst helps Wild blank Blackhawks|work=NHL.com|date=May 7, 2014}}
84. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030234|title=Wild beat Blackhawks in game four to even series|work=NHL.com|date=May 10, 2014}}
85. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030235|title=Blackhawks edge Wild, grab 3-2 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 12, 2014}}
86. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030236|title=Blackhawks win in OT; will face Ducks or Kings|work=NHL.com|date=May 14, 2014}}
87. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030241|title=Gaborik's OT goal gives game one to Kings|work=NHL.com|date=May 5, 2014}}
88. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030242|title=Gaborik, Quick lead Kings to sixth straight win|work=NHL.com|date=May 6, 2014}}
89. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030243|title=Ducks hang on to edge Kings in game three|work=NHL.com|date=May 9, 2014}}
90. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030244|title=Rookie goalie blanks Kings; Ducks even series|work=NHL.com|date=May 11, 2014}}
91. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030245|title=Smith-Pelly, Gibson help Ducks take 3-2 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 13, 2014}}
92. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030246|title=Kings hold off Ducks to force game seven|work=NHL.com|date=May 15, 2014}}
93. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030247|title=Kings eliminate Ducks, face Blackhawks next|work=NHL.com|date=May 17, 2014}}
94. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030311|title=Rangers rout Canadiens in Eastern Final game one|work=NHL.com|date=May 17, 2014}}
95. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030312|title=Rangers beat Canadiens again, take 2–0 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 20, 2014}}
96. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=720474|title=Prust suspended 2 games for interference|work=NHL.com|date=May 23, 2014}}
97. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=720443|title=Carcillo automatically suspended 10 games|work=NHL.com|date=May 23, 2014}}
98. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030313|title=Galchenyuk scores in OT to give Canadiens win|work=NHL.com|date=May 23, 2014}}
99. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030314|title=Rangers beat Canadiens in OT, take 3–1 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 26, 2014}}
100. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030315|title=Canadiens extend series with wild game five win|work=NHL.com|date=May 28, 2014}}
101. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030316|title=Rangers win Game 6, reach Stanley Cup Final|work=NHL.com|date=May 29, 2014}}
102. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030321|title=Blackhawks edge Kings, grab 1–0 series lead|work=NHL.com|date=May 18, 2014}}
103. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030322|title=Kings score six in row to even series with Blackhawks|work=NHL.com|date=May 22, 2014}}
104. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030323|title=Kings overtake Blackhawks to win Game 3|work=NHL.com|date=May 25, 2014}}
105. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030324|title=Kings handle Blackhawks, now one win from Final|work=NHL.com|date=May 27, 2014}}
106. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030325|title=Blackhawks stay alive, beat Kings in double OT|work=NHL.com|date=May 29, 2014}}
107. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030326|title=Kane keeps Blackhawks alive with Game 6 winner|work=NHL.com|date=May 31, 2014}}
108. ^{{Cite web |url=http://www.myfoxchicago.com/story/25668289/kings-deserved-to-advance-but-were-aided-by-the-men-in-stripes-cimaglia |title=Archived copy |access-date=May 30, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402091203/http://www.myfoxchicago.com/story/25668289/kings-deserved-to-advance-but-were-aided-by-the-men-in-stripes-cimaglia |archive-date=April 2, 2015 |dead-url=yes |df=mdy-all }}
109. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/en/recap?id=2013030327|title=Kings win in OT, advance to Cup Final vs. Rangers|work=NHL.com|date=June 1, 2014}}
110. ^{{cite news|title=New York vs. Los Angeles: Rivalry Revived|last=Branch|first=John|newspaper=The New York Times|date=June 5, 2014|page=B11}}
111. ^{{cite journal|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/print/708558|date=June 1, 2014|accessdate=May 15, 2015|first=Mike|last=Barnes|journal=The Hollywood Reporter|title=Stanley Cup Final: Kings vs. Rangers in L.A.-New York Championship Duel}}
112. ^{{cite news|title=Zuccarello making name for Norwegian hockey in NHL|newspaper=Charleston Daily Mail|date=June 4, 2014|page=B3|quote=Hockey rarely gets much attention in Norway, a skiing-obsessed nation that turns to soccer when the snow melts. Mats Zuccarello is changing that. Zuccarello is only the seventh player from Norway to make it to the NHL, and he's the first to make it to the Stanley Cup finals.|author=Associated Press}}
113. ^{{cite web|title=CBC and TSN release NHL broadcast schedule|url=https://ca.sports.yahoo.com/blogs/the-eh-game/cbc-tsn-release-nhl-broadcast-schedule-032204203.html|work=Eh! Game|publisher=Yahoo! Sports|accessdate=April 23, 2014}}
114. ^{{cite news |title=NHL signs 12-year TV, Internet deal with Rogers; CBC keeps 'Hockey Night in Canada{{'-}} |first=Curtis |last=Rush |date=November 26, 2013 |url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/hockey/2013/11/26/nhl_signs_12year_broadcast_deal_with_rogers_cbc_keeps_hockey_night_in_canada.html |work=Toronto Star |accessdate=March 26, 2014}}
115. ^{{cite web|title=TSN Announces Updated Broadcast Schedule for Tomorrow Night|url=http://bellmediapr.ca/Network/TSN/Press/TSN-Announces-Updated-Broadcast-Schedule-for-Tomorrow-Night|publisher=Bell Media|accessdate=April 23, 2014}}
{{S-start}}{{Succession box|before=2013 Stanley Cup playoffs|after=2015 Stanley Cup playoffs|title=Stanley Cup playoffs|years=2014|}}{{S-end}}{{2013–14 NHL season by team}}{{Stanley Cup playoffs}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2014 Stanley Cup Playoffs}}

2 : 2014 Stanley Cup|Stanley Cup playoffs

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/21 11:00:29