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|Rich Stadium
|Rich Stadium
|18–17 BUF
|18–17 BUF
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|1977
|December 11
|'''Buffalo Bills'''
|14–10
|New York Jets
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|Shea Stadium
|19–17 BUF
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Revision as of 15:16, 3 October 2018

1960s (Bills 11–9)

Year Date Winner Result Loser Attendance Location Series
1960 September 11 New York Titans 27–3 Buffalo Bills Polo Grounds 1–0 NYT
1960 October 16 New York Titans 17–13 Buffalo Bills War Memorial Stadium 2–0 NYT
1961 September 17 Buffalo Bills 41–13 New York Titans War Memorial Stadium 2–1 NYT
1961 November 23 New York Titans 21–14 Buffalo Bills Polo Grounds 3–1 NYT
1962 September 22 New York Titans 17–6 Buffalo Bills War Memorial Stadium 4–1 NYT
1962 December 8 Buffalo Bills 20–3 New York Titans Polo Grounds 4–2 NYT
1963 December 8 Buffalo Bills 45–14 New York Jets War Memorial Stadium 4–3 NYJ
1963 December 14 Buffalo Bills 19–10 New York Jets Polo Grounds 4–4
1964 October 24 Buffalo Bills 34–24 New York Jets War Memorial Stadium 5–4 BUF
1964 November 8 Buffalo Bills 20–7 New York Jets Shea Stadium 6–4 BUF
1965 September 26 Buffalo Bills 33–21 New York Jets War Memorial Stadium 7–4 BUF
1965 December 19 New York Jets 14–12 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 7–5 BUF
1966 October 30 Buffalo Bills 33–23 New York Jets Shea Stadium 8–5 BUF
1966 November 13 Buffalo Bills 14–3 New York Jets War Memorial Stadium 9–5 BUF
1967 September 10 Buffalo Bills 20–17 New York Jets War Memorial Stadium 10–5 BUF
1967 November 12 New York Jets 20–10 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 10–6 BUF
1968 September 29 Buffalo Bills 37–35 New York Jets War Memorial Stadium 11–6 BUF
1968 November 3 New York Jets 25–21 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 11–7 BUF
1969 September 14 New York Jets 33–19 Buffalo Bills War Memorial Stadium 11–8 BUF
1969 November 9 New York Jets 16–6 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 11–9 BUF

1970s

Year Date Winner Result Loser Attendance Location Series
1970 October 4 Buffalo Bills 34–31 New York Jets War Memorial Stadium 12–9 BUF
1970 October 25 Buffalo Bills 10–6 New York Jets Shea Stadium 13–9 BUF
1971 October 17 New York Jets 28–17 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 13–10 BUF
1971 November 21 New York Jets 20–7 Buffalo Bills War Memorial Stadium 13–11 BUF
1972 September 17 New York Jets 41–24 Buffalo Bills Rich Stadium 13–12 BUF
1972 November 12 New York Jets 41–3 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 13–13
1973 September 30 Buffalo Bills 9–7 New York Jets Rich Stadium 14–13 BUF
1973 December 16 Buffalo Bills 34–14 New York Jets Shea Stadiun 15–13 BUF
1974 September 29 Buffalo Bills 16–12 New York Jets Rich Stadium 16–13 BUF
1974 December 8 New York Jets 20–10 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 16–14 BUF
1975 September 21 Buffalo Bills 42–14 New York Jets Rich Stadium 17–14 BUF
1975 November 2 Buffalo Bills 24–23 New York Jets Shea Stadium 18–14 BUF
1976 October 10 New York Jets 17–14 Buffalo Bills Shea Stadium 18–15 BUF
1976 October 31 New York Jets 19—14 Buffalo Bills Rich Stadium 18–16 BUF
1977 October 9 New York Jets 24–19 Buffalo Bills Rich Stadium 18–17 BUF
1977 December 11 Buffalo Bills 14–10 New York Jets Shea Stadium 19–17 BUF


Metropolitan Division
FormerlyPatrick Division
ConferenceEastern Conference
LeagueNational Hockey League
SportIce hockey
Founded1993
No. of teams8
Most recent
champion(s)
Washington Capitals (3rd title)
Most titlesNew Jersey Devils (9)

The NHL’s Metropolitan Division was formed in 1993 as part of a league realignment. It’s predecessor was the Patrick Division. It was known as the Atlantic Division for its first 19 seasons until the 2013 league realignment, when it adopted its current name and added three teams.

This is the only division in the league based entirely in the United States.

Current standings

Metropolitan Division
Pos Team GP W L OTL ROW GF GA GD Pts
1 y – Washington Capitals 82 48 26 8 44 278 249 +29 104
2 x – New York Islanders 82 48 27 7 43 228 196 +32 103
3 x – Pittsburgh Penguins 82 44 26 12 42 273 241 +32 100
4 x – Carolina Hurricanes 82 46 29 7 44 245 223 +22 99
5 x – Columbus Blue Jackets 82 47 31 4 45 258 232 +26 98
6 Philadelphia Flyers 82 37 37 8 34 244 281 −37 82
7 New York Rangers 82 32 36 14 26 227 272 −45 78
8 New Jersey Devils 82 31 41 10 28 222 275 −53 72
Source: National Hockey League[1]
x – Clinched playoff spot; y – Clinched division

Division lineups

1993–1998

Changes from the 1992–93 season

  • The Atlantic Division is formed as a result of NHL realignment
  • The New Jersey Devils, New York Islanders, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, and Washington Capitals come from the Patrick Division
  • The Tampa Bay Lightning come from the Norris Division
  • The Florida Panthers are added as an expansion team

1998–2013

Changes from the 1997–98 season

2013–present

Changes from the 2012–13 season

  • The Atlantic Division becomes the Metropolitan Division as the league realigns into two conferences with two divisions each
  • The Carolina Hurricanes and Washington Capitals come from the dissolved Southeast Division (with the latter returning to this division after a 14-season absence)
  • The Columbus Blue Jackets come from the Central Division

Division champions

Season results

Season 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th
1993–94 NY Rangers (112)‡† New Jersey (106) Washington (88) NY Islanders (84) Florida (83) Philadelphia (80) Tampa Bay (71)
1994–95 Philadelphia (60) New Jersey (52) Washington (52) NY Rangers (47) Florida (46) Tampa Bay (37) NY Islanders (35)
1995–96 Philadelphia (103) NY Rangers (96) Florida (92) Washington (89) Tampa Bay (88) New Jersey (86) NY Islanders (54)
1996–97 New Jersey (104) Philadelphia (103) Florida (89) NY Rangers (86) Washington (75) Tampa Bay (74) NY Islanders (70)
1997–98 New Jersey (107) Philadelphia (95) Washington (92) NY Islanders (71) NY Rangers (68) Florida (63) Tampa Bay (44)
1998–99 New Jersey (105) Philadelphia (93) Pittsburgh (90) NY Rangers (77) NY Islanders (58)
1999–2000 Philadelphia (105) New Jersey (103) Pittsburgh (88) NY Rangers (73) NY Islanders (58)
2000–01 New Jersey (111) Philadelphia (100) Pittsburgh (96) NY Rangers (72) NY Islanders (52)
2001–02 Philadelphia (97) NY Islanders (96) New Jersey (95) NY Rangers (80) Pittsburgh (69)
2002–03 New Jersey (108) Philadelphia (107) NY Islanders (83) NY Rangers (78) Pittsburgh (65)
2003–04 Philadelphia (101) New Jersey (100) NY Islanders (91) NY Rangers (69) Pittsburgh (58)
2004–05 No season due to 2004–05 NHL lockout
2005–06 New Jersey (101) Philadelphia (101) NY Rangers (100) NY Islanders (78) Pittsburgh (58)
2006–07 New Jersey (107) Pittsburgh (105) NY Rangers (94) NY Islanders (92) Philadelphia (56)
2007–08 Pittsburgh (102) New Jersey (99) NY Rangers (97) Philadelphia (95) NY Islanders (79)
2008–09 New Jersey (106) Pittsburgh (99) Philadelphia (99) NY Rangers (95) NY Islanders (61)
2009–10 New Jersey (103) Pittsburgh (101) Philadelphia (88) NY Rangers (87) NY Islanders (79)
2010–11 Philadelphia (106) Pittsburgh (106) NY Rangers (93) New Jersey (81) NY Islanders (73)
2011–12 NY Rangers (109) Pittsburgh (108) Philadelphia (103) New Jersey (102) NY Islanders (79)
2012–13 Pittsburgh (72) NY Rangers (56) NY Islanders (55) Philadelphia (49) New Jersey (48)
2013–14 Pittsburgh (109) NY Rangers (96) Philadelphia (94) Columbus (93) Washington (90) New Jersey (88) Carolina (83) NY Islanders (79)
2014–15 NY Rangers (113) Washington (101) NY Islanders (101) Pittsburgh (98) Columbus (89) Philadelphia (84) New Jersey (78) Carolina (71)
2015–16 Washington (120) Pittsburgh (104) NY Rangers (101) NY Islanders (100) Philadelphia (96) Carolina (86) New Jersey (84) Columbus (76)
2016–17 Washington (118) Pittsburgh (111) Columbus (108) NY Rangers (102) NY Islanders (94) Philadelphia (88) Carolina (87) New Jersey (70)
2017–18 Washington (105) Pittsburgh (100) Philadelphia (98) Columbus (97) New Jersey (97) Carolina (83) NY Islanders (80) NY Rangers (77)
  •   Qualified for playoffs
  • ‡ denotes winner of the Presidents' Trophy
  • † denotes winner of the Stanley Cup

Stanley Cup winners produced

  1. 1994—New York Rangers
  2. 1995—New Jersey Devils
  3. 2000—New Jersey Devils
  4. 2003—New Jersey Devils
  5. 2009—Pittsburgh Penguins
  6. 2016—Pittsburgh Penguins
  7. 2017—Pittsburgh Penguins
  8. 2018—Washington Capitals

Presidents' Trophy winners produced

  1. 1994—New York Rangers
  2. 2015—New York Rangers
  3. 2016—Washington Capitals
  4. 2017—Washington Capitals

Atlantic Division titles won by team

Team Number of championships won Last year won
New Jersey Devils 9 2010
Philadelphia Flyers 6 2011
Washington Capitals 3 2018
New York Rangers 2 2015
Pittsburgh Penguins 2 2013
Carolina Hurricanes 0
Columbus Blue Jackets 0
Florida Panthers 0
New York Islanders 0
Tampa Bay Lightning 0

Teams in bold are currently in the division.

References

  1. ^ "2018-2019 NHL Hockey Standings". NHL.com.

Category:National Hockey League divisions


Atlantic Division
FormerlyAdams Division
ConferenceEastern Conference
LeagueNational Hockey League
SportIce hockey
Founded1993
No. of teams8
Most titlesBoston Bruins (6)

The NHL's Atlantic Division was formed in 1993 as part of the Eastern Conference in a league realignment. Its predecessor was the Adams Division. It was known as the Northeast Division for its first 19 seasons (not including the cancelled 2004–05 season) until the 2013 league realignment, when it adopted its current name and then added three teams.

Although none of the division’s members won the Stanley Cup following the 1993 realignment until the Boston Bruins' title in 2011, its members account for a combined 55 Stanley Cup championships (24 by Montreal, 13 by Toronto, 11 by Detroit, 6 by Boston, and 1 by Tampa Bay), which is the most combined championships of any division in the league. In 2012, the Boston Bruins became the first team in the division to win consecutive division titles.

Division lineups

1993–1995

Changes from the 1992–93 season

  • The Northeast Division is formed as a result of NHL realignment
  • The Boston Bruins, Buffalo Sabres, Hartford Whalers, Montreal Canadiens, Ottawa Senators, and Quebec Nordiques come from the Adams Division
  • The Pittsburgh Penguins come from the Patrick Division

1995–1997

  • Boston Bruins
  • Buffalo Sabres
  • Hartford Whalers
  • Montreal Canadiens
  • Ottawa Senators
  • Pittsburgh Penguins

Changes from the 1994–95 season

1997–1998

  • Boston Bruins
  • Buffalo Sabres
  • Carolina Hurricanes
  • Montreal Canadiens
  • Ottawa Senators
  • Pittsburgh Penguins

Changes from the 1996–97 season

1998–2013

Changes from the 1997–98 season

2013–present

Changes from the 2012–13 season

  • The Northeast Division becomes the Atlantic Division (taking the Metropolitan Division’s old name) as the league realigns into two conferences with two divisions each
  • The Detroit Red Wings come from the Central Division
  • The Florida Panthers and Tampa Bay Lightning come from the Southeast Division

Division Champions

Season results

Season 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th
1993–94 Pittsburgh (101) Boston (97) Montreal (96) Buffalo (95) Quebec (76) Hartford (63) Ottawa (37)
1994–95 Quebec (65) Pittsburgh (61) Boston (57) Buffalo (51) Hartford (43) Montreal (43) Ottawa (23)
1995–96 Pittsburgh (102) Boston (91) Montreal (90) Hartford (77) Buffalo (72) Ottawa (41)
1996–97 Buffalo (92) Pittsburgh (84) Ottawa (77) Montreal (77) Hartford (75) Boston (61)
1997–98 Pittsburgh (98) Boston (91) Buffalo (89) Montreal (87) Ottawa (83) Carolina (74)
1998–99 Ottawa (103) Toronto (97) Boston (91) Buffalo (91) Montreal (75)
1999–2000 Toronto (100) Ottawa (95) Buffalo (85) Montreal (83) Boston (73)
2000–01 Ottawa (109) Buffalo (98) Toronto (90) Boston (88) Montreal (70)
2001–02 Boston (101) Toronto (100) Ottawa (94) Montreal (87) Buffalo (82)
2002–03 Ottawa (113) Toronto (98) Boston (87) Montreal (77) Buffalo (72)
2003–04 Boston (104) Toronto (103) Ottawa (102) Montreal (93) Buffalo (85)
2004–05 No season due to 2004–05 NHL lockout
2005–06 Ottawa (113) Buffalo (110) Montreal (93) Toronto (90) Boston (74)
2006–07 Buffalo (113) Ottawa (105) Toronto (91) Montreal (90) Boston (76)
2007–08 Montreal (104) Ottawa (94) Boston (94) Buffalo (90) Toronto (83)
2008–09 Boston (116) Montreal (93) Buffalo (91) Ottawa (83) Toronto (81)
2009–10 Buffalo (100) Ottawa (94) Boston (91) Montreal (88) Toronto (74)
2010–11 Boston (103) Montreal (96) Buffalo (96) Toronto (85) Ottawa (74)
2011–12 Boston (102) Ottawa (92) Buffalo (89) Toronto (80) Montreal (78)
2012–13 Montreal (63) Boston (62) Toronto (57) Ottawa (56) Buffalo (48)
2013–14 Boston (117) Tampa Bay (101) Montreal (100) Detroit (93) Ottawa (88) Toronto (84) Florida (66) Buffalo (52)
2014–15 Montreal (110) Tampa Bay (108) Detroit (100) Ottawa (99) Boston (96) Florida (91) Toronto (68) Buffalo (54)
2015–16 Florida (103) Tampa Bay (97) Detroit (93) Boston (93) Ottawa (85) Montreal (82) Buffalo (81) Toronto (69)
2016–17 Montreal (103) Ottawa (98) Boston (95) Toronto (95) Tampa Bay (94) Florida (81) Detroit (79) Buffalo (78)
2017–18 Tampa Bay (113) Boston (112) Toronto (105) Florida (96) Detroit (73) Montreal (71) Ottawa (67) Buffalo (62)

Stanley Cup winners produced

  1. 2011—Boston Bruins

Presidents' Trophy winners produced

  1. 2003—Ottawa Senators
  2. 2007—Buffalo Sabres
  3. 2014—Boston Bruins

Atlantic Division titles won by team

Team Number of Championships Won Last Year Won
Boston Bruins 6 2014
Ottawa Senators 4 2006
Pittsburgh Penguins 3 1998
Buffalo Sabres 3 2010
Montreal Canadiens 4 2017
Florida Panthers 1 2016
Quebec Nordiques 1 1995
Tampa Bay Lightning 1 2018
Toronto Maple Leafs 1 2000
Detroit Red Wings 0
Hartford Whalers 0

Teams in bold are currently in the division

References


Category:National Hockey League divisions



Canadiens–Senators rivalry
Montreal Canadiens
Ottawa Senators
First meetingOctober 8, 1992
Latest meetingFebruary 4, 2018
Statistics
Meetings total149
All-time series74–70–5 (MTL)
Regular season series69–64–5 (MTL)
Postseason results6–5 (OTT)
Longest win streakMTL W9
Current win streakMTL W1
Post-season history

The Canadiens–Senators rivalry is a hockey rivalry between the Montreal Canadiens and Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League. This rivalry stems from the fact that the two teams are based 124 miles apart along Highway 40 in Quebec and Highway 417 in Ontario, and the long history of hockey games played between teams from the two cities. The two teams have been in the same division (currently the Atlantic Division) ever since the Senators debuted in 1992.

Early History

The Canadiens and the Ottawa Hockey Club played on the first evening in NHL history. It was widely thought to be the first ever NHL game, but it was later found out that the puck dropped earlier in the Montreal Wanderers' home game against the Toronto Hockey Club.[1] During the original Senators' time in the NHL, the team won four Stanley Cups while the Canadiens won three. It was Ottawa, however, who later relocated to St. Louis to become the Eagles after the 1933–34 season, and later folded, ending the rivalry between Montreal and Ottawa for 58 years.

1990s and 2000s

References

  1. ^ Laucius, Joanne (April 17, 2017). "If You Think the First NHL Game Was Played in Ottawa, Think Again". ottawacitizen.com. Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved February 15, 2018.