2009 Stanley Cup playoffs
This article documents a current sporting event. Information may change rapidly as the event progresses. Initial news reports, scores, or statistics may be unreliable. The last updates to this article may not reflect the most current information. |
The 2009 Stanley Cup Playoffs of the National Hockey League began on April 15, 2009, after the 2008-09 regular season. The sixteen teams that qualify, eight from each conference (the winner of each of the three divisions plus the 5 teams with highest point totals from the teams remaining), play best-of-7 series for conference quarterfinals, semifinals and championships, and then the conference champions will play a best-of-7 series for the Stanley Cup.
Playoff seeds
After the 2008–09 NHL regular season, the standard of 16 teams qualified for the playoffs. The San Jose Sharks were the Western Conference regular season champions and were also the Presidents' Trophy winners with the best record at 117 points. The Boston Bruins earned the Eastern Conference regular season crown with 116 points. Division champions maintain their relative ranking during the entire playoffs while the remaining teams get reseeded below them after each round.
Eastern Conference
- Boston Bruins – Northeast Division and Eastern Conference regular season champions, 116 points
- Washington Capitals – Southeast Division champions, 108 points
- New Jersey Devils – Atlantic Division champions, 106 points
- Pittsburgh Penguins – 99 points (45 wins)
- Philadelphia Flyers – 99 points (44 wins)
- Carolina Hurricanes – 97 points
- New York Rangers – 95 points
- Montreal Canadiens – 93 points*
*Montreal finished with exactly the same record as the Florida Panthers (including number of wins), but garnered more points (the Canadiens with six, the Panthers with three) in the four game season series between them, to earn the 8th spot.
Western Conference
- San Jose Sharks – Pacific Division champions and Western Conference regular season champions; President's Trophy winners, 117 points
- Detroit Red Wings – Central Division champions, 112 points
- Vancouver Canucks – Northwest Division champions, 100 points
- Chicago Blackhawks – 104 points
- Calgary Flames – 98 points
- St. Louis Blues – 92 points (10 points head-to-head)
- Columbus Blue Jackets – 92 points (3 points head-to-head)
- Anaheim Ducks – 91 points
Playoff bracket
After the first round, all teams are re-seeded. Template:NHLBracket
In each round, the highest remaining seed in each conference is matched against the lowest remaining seed. The higher-seeded team is awarded home ice advantage, which gives them a possible maximum of four games on their home ice, with the lower-seeded team getting a possible maximum of three. In the Stanley Cup Finals, home ice is determined based on regular season points. Each best-of-seven series follows a 2–2–1–1–1 format. This means that the higher-seeded team will have home ice for Games 1 and 2, and if necessary, Games 5 and 7, while the lower-seeded team will have home ice for Games 3, 4, and, if necessary, Game 6.
Statistical leaders
Skaters
These are the top ten skaters based on points.[1]
Player | Team | GP | G | A | Pts | +/– | PIM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Evgeni Malkin | Pittsburgh Penguins | 6 | 4 | 5 | 9 | 0 | 10 |
Sidney Crosby | Pittsburgh Penguins | 6 | 4 | 4 | 8 | +2 | 8 |
Ryan Getzlaf | Anaheim Ducks | 6 | 2 | 6 | 8 | +5 | 15 |
Michael Ryder | Boston Bruins | 4 | 4 | 3 | 7 | +5 | 2 |
Alexander Semin | Washington Capitals | 6 | 4 | 3 | 7 | +4 | 8 |
Alexander Ovechkin | Washington Capitals | 6 | 3 | 4 | 7 | +5 | 2 |
Kris Versteeg | Chicago Blackhawks | 6 | 2 | 5 | 7 | -1 | 4 |
Phil Kessel | Boston Bruins | 4 | 4 | 2 | 6 | +2 | 4 |
Johan Franzen | Detroit Red Wings | 4 | 2 | 4 | 6 | +4 | 0 |
Patrick Sharp | Chicago Blackhawks | 5 | 3 | 3 | 6 | +2 | 2 |
Cam Barker | Chicago Blackhawks | 5 | 3 | 3 | 6 | -1 | 0 |
Martin Havlat | Chicago Blackhawks | 5 | 3 | 3 | 6 | -1 | 2 |
Jonathan Toews | Chicago Blackhawks | 5 | 2 | 4 | 6 | +4 | 8 |
Brent Seabrook | Chicago Blackhawks | 6 | 1 | 5 | 6 | +1 | 2 |
Tom Poti | Washington Capitals | 6 | 2 | 4 | 6 | +1 | 2 |
Nicklas Backstrom | Washington Capitals | 6 | 0 | 6 | 6 | +3 | 4 |
GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/– = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes
- All statistics as of: 05:10, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
Goaltending
This is a combined table of the top five goaltenders based on goals against average and the top five goaltenders based on save percentage with at least four games played. Players are listed alphabetically and not in any rank on this table.[2][3]
Player | Team | GP | W | L | SA | GA | GAA | SV% | SO | TOI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Martin Brodeur | New Jersey Devils | 6 | 3 | 3 | 208 | 13 | 2.13 | .938 | 1 | 367:08 |
Jonas Hiller | Anaheim Ducks | 5 | 3 | 2 | 193 | 9 | 1.77 | .953 | 2 | 304:36 |
Roberto Luongo | Vancouver Canucks | 4 | 4 | 0 | 131 | 5 | 1.15 | .962 | 1 | 259:32 |
Chris Osgood | Detroit Red Wings | 4 | 4 | 0 | 110 | 7 | 1.75 | .936 | 1 | 239:52 |
Tim Thomas | Boston Bruins | 4 | 4 | 0 | 111 | 6 | 1.50 | .946 | 0 | 239:38 |
Simeon Varlamov | Washington Capitals | 5 | 3 | 2 | 130 | 6 | 1.21 | .954 | 2 | 298:05 |
Cam Ward | Carolina Hurricanes | 6 | 3 | 3 | 207 | 12 | 1.96 | .942 | 1 | 366:35 |
GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; SV% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts; TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds)
- All statistics as of: 02:32, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
Conference Quarterfinals
All times listed are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−4). Dates and times typeset in italics indicate games that will only be played if neither team has won 4 out of the 7 games by that point.
Eastern Conference Quarterfinals
(1) Boston Bruins vs. (8) Montreal Canadiens
The Boston Bruins entered the playoffs after finishing the regular season with the best record in the Eastern Conference with 116 points. On the other hand, the Montreal Canadiens barely qualified for the postseason as the eighth seed with 93 points, winning the tiebreaker over the Florida Panthers based on the season series (6 points to 3).
Boston ended up sweeping Montreal, 4 games to 0, scoring at least four goals in each win. With the score tied 2–2 entering the third period of Game 1, Bruins captain Zdeno Chara scored a power play goal at 11:15 and Phil Kessel the added an empty net score in the closing seconds to clinch the victory.[4] Boston then scored three power play goals en route to a 5–1 victory in Game 2.[5] Game 3 resembled Game 1 in that both teams fought to a 2–2 midway through the game, but like the first contest the Bruins scored the go-ahead winning goal again, this time it was Michael Ryder at 17:21 in the second period.[6] Boston then went on to dominate Game 4, 4–1, to win the series.[7]
April 16 | Boston Bruins | 4–2 | Montreal Canadiens | TD Banknorth Garden | Recap | |||
Phil Kessel 1 - 13:11 David Krejci 1 - 14:41 |
First period | 16:19 - Christopher Higgins 1 | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 17:37 - Alexei Kovalev 1 | ||||||
Zdeno Chara 1 - pp - 11:15 Phil Kessel 2 - en - 19:46 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Tim Thomas 26 saves / 28 shots | Goalie stats | Carey Price 35 saves / 38 shots |
April 18 | Boston Bruins | 5–1 | Montreal Canadiens | TD Banknorth Garden | Recap | |||
Marc Savard 1 - pp - 09:59 Chuck Kobasew 1 - 15:12 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
Shane Hnidy 1 - 05:45 Marc Savard 2 - pp - 08:13 Michael Ryder 1 - pp - 19:57 |
Second period | 00:46 - Alexei Kovalev 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Tim Thomas 30 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Carey Price 21 saves / 26 shots Jaroslav Halak 5 saves / 5 shots |
April 20 | Montreal Canadiens | 2–4 | Boston Bruins | Bell Centre | Recap | |||
Christopher Higgins 2 - 11:52 | First period | 18:35 - Phil Kessel 3 | ||||||
Yannick Weber 1 - 05:16 | Second period | 03:36 - Shawn Thornton 1 17:21 - Michael Ryder 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 19:23 - en - Chuck Kobasew 2 | ||||||
Carey Price 26 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Tim Thomas 23 saves / 25 shots |
April 22 | Montreal Canadiens | 1–4 | Boston Bruins | Bell Centre | Recap | |||
Andrei Kostitsyn 1 - 00:39 | First period | 17:27 - Michael Ryder 3 19:25 - David Krejci 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 11:58 - Phil Kessel 4 12:43 - Michael Ryder 4 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Carey Price 26 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Tim Thomas 26 saves / 27 shots |
Boston won series 4–0 | |
(2) Washington Capitals vs. (7) New York Rangers
April 15 | Washington Capitals | 3–4 | New York Rangers | Verizon Center | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Tomas Fleischmann 1 - pp - 06:40 Viktor Kozlov 1 - 19:11 |
Second period | 07:49 - Scott Gomez 1 16:49 - pp - Nik Antropov 1 18:28 - pp - Markus Naslund 1 | ||||||
Alexander Semin 1 - pp - 01:42 | Third period | 11:43 - Brandon Dubinsky 1 | ||||||
Jose Theodore 17 saves / 21 shots | Goalie stats | Henrik Lundqvist 32 saves / 35 shots |
April 18 | Washington Capitals | 0–1 | New York Rangers | Verizon Center | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | 07:44 - Ryan Callahan 1 | ||||||
No Scoring | Second period | No Scoring | ||||||
No Scoring | Third period | No Scoring | ||||||
Simeon Varlamov 23 saves / 24 shots | Goalie stats | Henrik Lundqvist 35 saves / 35 shots |
April 20 | New York Rangers | 0–4 | Washington Capitals | Madison Square Garden | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 06:57 - Alexander Semin 2 11:36 - Alexander Semin 3 | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 11:29 - pp - Brooks Laich 1 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 18:35 - pp - Tom Poti 1 | ||||||
Henrik Lundqvist 36 saves / 40 shots | Goalie stats | Simeon Varlamov 33 saves / 33 shots |
April 22 | New York Rangers | 2–1 | Washington Capitals | Madison Square Garden | Recap | |||
Paul Mara 1 - 13:55 | First period | No Scoring | ||||||
Chris Drury 1 - 02:23 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 02:13 - Alexander Ovechkin 1 | ||||||
Henrik Lundqvist 38 saves / 39 shots | Goalie stats | Simeon Varlamov 19 saves / 21 shots |
April 24 | Washington Capitals | 4–0 | New York Rangers | Verizon Center | Recap | |||
Matt Bradley 1 - sh - 04:58 Matt Bradley 2 - 12:07 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
Alexander Semin 4 - 04:57 Alexander Ovechkin 2 - 19:31 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Simeon Varlamov 20 saves / 20 shots | Goalie stats | Henrik Lundqvist 10 saves / 14 shots Stephen Valiquette 7 saves / 7 shots |
April 26 | New York Rangers | 3–5 | Washington Capitals | Madison Square Garden | Recap | |||
Scott Gomez 2 - pp - 08:15 | First period | 07:09 - Milan Jurcina 1 13:58 - pp - Mike Green 1 17:14 - Tom Poti 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 09:21 - Viktor Kozlov 2 16:44 - pp - Alexander Ovechkin 3 | ||||||
Ryan Callahan 2 - pp - 04:21 Marc Staal 1 - 19:54 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Henrik Lundqvist 15 saves / 20 shots Stephen Valiquette 2 saves / 2 shots |
Goalie stats | Simeon Varlamov 29 saves / 32 shots |
April 28 | Washington Capitals | 7:00 PM | New York Rangers | Verizon Center | RDS, TSN, Versus |
Series tied 3–3 | |
(3) New Jersey Devils vs. (6) Carolina Hurricanes
April 15 | New Jersey Devils | 4–1 | Carolina Hurricanes | Prudential Center | Recap | |||
Mike Mottau 1 - 16:03 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Zach Parise 1 - 00:59 Patrik Elias 1 - 11:33 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Jamie Langenbrunner 1 - 09:51 | Third period | 09:22 - Ray Whitney 1 | ||||||
Martin Brodeur 18 saves / 19 shots | Goalie stats | Cam Ward 35 saves / 39 shots |
April 17 | New Jersey Devils | 1–2 | OT | Carolina Hurricanes | Prudential Center | Recap | ||
Zach Parise 2 - 10:44 | First period | 19:35 - Eric Staal 1 | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 02:40 - Tim Gleason 1 | ||||||
Martin Brodeur 30 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Cam Ward 33 saves / 34 shots |
April 19 | Carolina Hurricanes | 2–3 | OT | New Jersey Devils | RBC Center | Recap | ||
Ryan Bayda 1 - 06:35 | First period | 06:04 - Zach Parise 3 19:51 - Brian Gionta 1 | ||||||
Chad Larose 1 - 15:30 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 04:58 - Travis Zajac 1 | ||||||
Cam Ward 31 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Brodeur 28 saves / 30 shots |
April 21 | Carolina Hurricanes | 4–3 | New Jersey Devils | RBC Center | Recap | |||
Eric Staal 2 - 07:44 Ryan Bayda 2 - 08:47 |
First period | No Scoring | ||||||
Chad LaRose 2 - 06:30 | Second period | 19:32 - Brian Gionta 2 | ||||||
Jussi Jokinen 1 - 19:59 | Third period | 04:21 - Brendan Shanahan 1 08:46 - David Clarkson 1 | ||||||
Cam Ward 26 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Brodeur 42 saves / 46 shots |
April 23 | New Jersey Devils | 1–0 | Carolina Hurricanes | Prudential Center | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
David Clarkson 2 - pp - 11:22 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Martin Brodeur 44 saves / 44 shots | Goalie stats | Cam Ward 41 saves / 42 shots |
April 26 | Carolina Hurricanes | 4–0 | New Jersey Devils | RBC Center | Recap | |||
Ray Whitney 2 - 10:32 | First period | No Scoring | ||||||
Eric Staal 3 - 04:44 Eric Staal 4 - 07:30 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Jussi Jokinen 2 - pp - 09:12 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Cam Ward 28 saves / 28 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Brodeur 33 saves / 37 shots |
April 28 | New Jersey Devils | 7:30 PM | Carolina Hurricanes | Prudential Center | TSN2 |
Series tied 3–3 | |
(4) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (5) Philadelphia Flyers
The Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers both qualified for the playoffs as the fourth and fifth seeds in the Eastern Conference, respectively. Both finished the regular season with 99 points, but the Penguins won the tiebreaker based on total wins (45 to 44).
Pittsburgh won the series over Philadelphia, four games to two. Sidney Crosby scored a power play goal early in the first period of Game 1, sparking the Penguins to a 4–1 win.[8] Then in Game 2, Bill Guerin scored two goals including the game-winner during a power play at 18:29 in overtime to give Pittsburgh a 3–2 victory.[9] The Flyers bounced back in Game 3 with a 6–3 victory. But goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 45 shots and helped kill off nine Philadelphia power plays to give Pittsburgh a 3–1 win in Game 4.[10] Not to be outdone, goaltender Martin Biron stopped all 28 Penguins to give the Flyers a 3–0 shotout victory in Game 5.[11] Then in Game 6, Philadelphia jumped to a 3–0 lead in the second period and appeared to be on their way to force a Game 7, but Pittsburgh erupted to score five unanswered goals, including two by Crosby, to win the game and the series.[12]
April 15 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 4–1 | Philadelphia Flyers | Mellon Arena | Recap | |||
Sidney Crosby 1 - pp - 04:41 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Tyler Kennedy 1 - 01:39 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Evgeni Malkin 1 - 06:28 Mark Eaton 1 - 10:27 |
Third period | 15:25 - pp - Simon Gagne 1 | ||||||
Marc-Andre Fleury 26 saves / 27 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Biron 29 saves / 33 shots |
April 17 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 3–2 | OT | Philadelphia Flyers | Mellon Arena | Recap | ||
No Scoring | First period | 13:26 - pp - Scott Hartnell 1 | ||||||
Bill Guerin 1 - 16:38 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Evgeni Malkin 2 - pp - 16:23 | Third period | 02:09 - Darroll Powe 1 | ||||||
Bill Guerin 2 - pp - 18:29 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Marc-Andre Fleury 38 saves / 40 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Biron 46 saves / 49 shots |
April 19 | Philadelphia Flyers | 6–3 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Wachovia Center | Recap | |||
Jeff Carter 1 - 02:59 Mike Richards 1 - pp - 05:14 |
First period | 19:48 - Evgeni Malkin 3 | ||||||
Claude Giroux 1 - 04:32 Simon Gagne 2 - sh - 08:58 |
Second period | 00:13 - Rob Scuderi 1 | ||||||
Jared Ross 1 - 03:42 Simon Gagne 3 - en - 18:24 |
Third period | 08:30 - pp - Evgeni Malkin 4 | ||||||
Martin Biron 26 saves / 29 shots | Goalie stats | Marc-Andre Fleury 24 saves / 29 shots |
April 21 | Philadelphia Flyers | 1–3 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Wachovia Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No Scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 03:19 - Sidney Crosby 2 07:41 - Tyler Kennedy 2 | ||||||
Daniel Carcillo 1 - 11:44 | Third period | 19:08 - en - Max Talbot 1 | ||||||
Martin Biron 23 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Marc-Andre Fleury 45 saves / 46 shots |
April 23 | Pittsburgh Penguins | 0–3 | Philadelphia Flyers | Mellon Arena | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 06:23 - Arron Asham 1 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 03:25 - Claude Giroux 2 13:13 - Mike Knuble 1 | ||||||
Marc-Andre Fleury 23 saves/ 26 shots | Goalie stats | Martin Biron 28 saves/ 28 shots |
April 25 | Philadelphia Flyers | 3–5 | Pittsburgh Penguins | Wachovia Center | Recap | |||
Mike Knuble 2 - 17:48 Joffrey Lupul 1 - 18:39 |
First period | No Scoring | ||||||
Daniel Briere 1 - pp - 04:06 | Second period | 04:35 - Ruslan Fedotenko 1 06:32 - Mark Eaton 2 16:59 - Sidney Crosby 3 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 02:19 - Sergei Gonchar 1 19:32 - en - Sidney Crosby 4 | ||||||
Martin Biron 30 saves / 34 shots | Goalie stats | Marc-Andre Fleury 22 saves / 25 shots |
Pittsburgh won series 4–2 | |
Western Conference Quarterfinals
(1) San Jose Sharks vs. (8) Anaheim Ducks
The San Jose Sharks entered the playoffs as the Presidents' Trophy winner, earning the NHL's best regular season record with 117 points. On the other hand, the Anaheim Ducks earned 91 points to clinch the eighth playoff seed in the Western Conference.
The Ducks defeated the Sharks, 4 games to 2, to become just the fourth team (after the 1991 Minnesota North Stars over the Chicago Blackhawks, the 2000 Sharks over the St. Louis Blues, and the 2006 Edmonton Oilers over the Detroit Red Wings) to eliminate a Presidents' Trophy winner in the first round of the playoffs. Anaheim goaltender Jonas Hiller earned two shutout victories in Games 1 and 4, stopping a total of 66 shots. Hiller also stopped 42 out 44 shots in Game 2, and 36 out of 37 shots in Game 6.
April 16 | San Jose Sharks | 0–2 | Anaheim Ducks | HP Pavilion at San Jose | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 05:18 - pp - Scott Niedermayer 1 17:35 - Ryan Getzlaf 1 | ||||||
Evgeni Nabokov 15 saves / 17 shots | Goalie stats | Jonas Hiller 35 saves / 35 shots |
April 19 | San Jose Sharks | 2–3 | Anaheim Ducks | HP Pavilion at San Jose | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | 03:45 - pp - Bobby Ryan 1 | ||||||
Ryan Clowe 1 - 05:38 | Second period | No Scoring | ||||||
Jonathan Cheechoo 1 - 15:54 | Third period | 09:44 - Andrew Ebbett 1 13:17 - Drew Miller 1 | ||||||
Evgeni Nabokov 23 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Jonas Hiller 42 saves / 44 shots |
April 21 | Anaheim Ducks | 3–4 | San Jose Sharks | Honda Center | Recap | |||
Bobby Ryan 2 - pp - 11:12 James Wisniewski 1 - 14:50 |
First period | 05:34 - Rob Blake 1 13:07 - pp - Dan Boyle 1 | ||||||
Chris Pronger 1 - 11:50 | Second period | 01:05 - Dan Boyle 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 10:33 - pp - Patrick Marleau 1 | ||||||
Jonas Hiller 31 saves / 35 shots | Goalie stats | Evgeni Nabokov 27 saves / 30 shots |
April 23 | Anaheim Ducks | 4–0 | San Jose Sharks | Honda Center | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | No Scoring | ||||||
Bobby Ryan 3 - 06:33 Bobby Ryan 4 - 10:13 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Corey Perry 1 - 14:09 Drew Miller 2 - en - 19:19 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Jonas Hiller 31 saves / 31 shots | Goalie stats | Evgeni Nabokov 22 saves / 25 shots |
April 25 | San Jose Sharks | 3–2 | OT | Anaheim Ducks | HP Pavilion at San Jose | Recap | ||
Joe Thornton 1 - pp - 07:25 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Devin Setoguchi 1 - 17:16 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 00:55 - Ryan Carter 1 04:42 - Corey Perry 2 | ||||||
Patrick Marleau 2 - 06:02 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Evgeni Nabokov 23 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Jonas Hiller 45 saves / 48 shots |
April 27 | Anaheim Ducks | 4–1 | San Jose Sharks | Honda Center | CBC, RDS, Versus |
Anaheim won series 4–2 | |
(2) Detroit Red Wings vs. (7) Columbus Blue Jackets
The Detroit Red Wings entered the playoffs as the second overall seed in the Western Conference, having clinched the Central Division title with 112 points. Meanwhile, the Columbus Blue Jackets qualified for the playoffs for the first time in franchise history, clinching the seventh seed with 92 points but losing the tiebreaker over the St. Louis Blues with 3 points head-to-head versus 10.
The Red Wings ended up sweeping the Blue Jackets, 4 games to 0. Detroit scored four goals in each of the first three games of the series, while goaltender Chris Osgood only allowed two total goals out of 78 Columbus shots, including a shutout victory in Game 2.
Game 4 proved to be the most competitive contest of the series. Nicklas Lidstrom scored a power play goal early in the first period to give the Red Wings an early lead before Kristian Huselius tied the score about three minutes later on a power play goal of his own. Tomas Holmstrom and Dan Cleary then scored to give Detroit a 3–1 lead before the end of the opening period. Columbus fought to tie the score again at 5:38 of the second period with goals by Rick Nash and R.J. Umberger, but the Red Wings Marian Hossa answered with two consecutive goals to give his team a two goal lead again. The Blue Jackets then rallied to tie the score, 5–5, by the closing minutes of the second period with scores by Kris Russell and Fredrik Modin. The third period remained scoreless until the closing minutes of regulation. With less than two minutes left, the Blue Jackets were called for too many men on the ice, which enabled Johan Franzen to score the series winning power play goal with :46.6 remaining.
April 16 | Detroit Red Wings | 4–1 | Columbus Blue Jackets | Joe Louis Arena | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Jiri Hudler 1 - 10:48 Jonathan Ericsson 1 - 14:21 Niklas Kronwall 1 - pp - 15:09 |
Second period | 11:40 - R. J. Umberger 1 | ||||||
Johan Franzen 1 - 02:54 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Chris Osgood 20 saves / 21 shots | Goalie stats | Steve Mason 30 saves / 34 shots |
April 18 | Detroit Red Wings | 4–0 | Columbus Blue Jackets | Joe Louis Arena | Recap | |||
Brian Rafalski 1 - pp - 13:13 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Pavel Datsyuk 1 - pp - 07:18 Henrik Zetterberg 1 - 15:30 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Jiri Hudler 2 - pp - 03:38 | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Chris Osgood 25 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Steve Mason 35 saves / 39 shots |
April 21 | Columbus Blue Jackets | 1–4 | Detroit Red Wings | Nationwide Arena | Recap | |||
No scoring | First period | 01:07 - Tomas Holmström 1 19:14 - Daniel Cleary 1 | ||||||
No scoring | Second period | 13:55 - Henrik Zetterberg 2 | ||||||
R. J. Umberger 2 - pp - 16:07 | Third period | 19:29 - en - Henrik Zetterberg 3 | ||||||
Steve Mason 22 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Chris Osgood 31 saves / 32 shots |
April 23 | Columbus Blue Jackets | 5–6 | Detroit Red Wings | Nationwide Arena | Recap | |||
Kristian Huselius 1 - pp - 06:12 | First period | 02:58 - pp - Nicklas Lidstrom 1 07:09 - Tomas Holmstrom 2 10:02 - Daniel Cleary 2 | ||||||
Rick Nash 1 - 01:44 R. J. Umberger 3 - pp - 05:38 Kris Russell 1 - 15:45 Fredrik Modin 1 - 18:04 |
Second period | 06:59 - Marian Hossa 1 11:26 - pp - Marian Hossa 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 19:13 - pp - Johan Franzen 2 | ||||||
Steve Mason 35 saves / 41 shots | Goalie stats | Chris Osgood 27 saves / 32 shots |
Detroit won series 4–0 | |
(3) Vancouver Canucks vs. (6) St. Louis Blues
The Vancouver Canucks entered the playoffs as the third overall seed in the Western Conference, having clinched the Northwest Division title with 100 points. Meanwhile, the St. Louis Blues qualified for the playoffs for the first time since 2004, clinching the sixth seed with 92 points and winning the tiebreaker over the Columbus Blue Jackets with 10 points head-to-head versus 3.
Vancouver ended up sweeping St. Louis, 4 games to 0, their first sweep of a best-of-7 series in franchise history, to move on to the second round. The Canucks held off the Blues in Game 1, winning 2–1 by killing off a Blues 5-on-3 power play midway through the first period.[13] Vancouver then shutout St. Louis in Game 2, 3–0, with goaltender Roberto Luongo stopping all 30 Blues shots.[14] The Blues were hoping to gain momentum when the series shifted to St. Louis for Game 3, but Vancouver held on to a 3–2 win off of 3 power play goals, two of which were scored within 2:21 apart in the second period.[15] Alexandre Burrows then scored with 18.9 seconds left in the first overtime period of Game 4 to give the Canucks a 3-2 victory and the four-game sweep.[16]
April 15 | Vancouver Canucks | 2–1 | St. Louis Blues | General Motors Place | Recap | |||
Daniel Sedin 1 - 10:03 | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Sami Salo 1 - pp - 05:11 | Second period | 18:16 - pp - Brad Boyes 1 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Roberto Luongo 25 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Chris Mason 29 saves / 31 shots |
April 17 | Vancouver Canucks | 3–0 | St. Louis Blues | General Motors Place | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | No scoring | ||||||
Mats Sundin 1 - 18:04 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Alexandre Burrows 1 - 09:46 Henrik Sedin 1 - en - 18:36 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Roberto Luongo 30 saves / 30 shots | Goalie stats | Chris Mason 24 saves / 26 shots |
April 19 | St. Louis Blues | 2–3 | Vancouver Canucks | Scottrade Center | Recap | |||
David Backes 1 - 03:11 | First period | No Scoring | ||||||
Andy McDonald 1 - 16:13 | Second period | 07:57 - pp - Mattias Ohlund 1 10:18 - pp - Daniel Sedin 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | 01:41 - pp - Steve Bernier 1 | ||||||
Chris Mason 23 saves / 26 shots | Goalie stats | Roberto Luongo 24 saves / 26 shots |
April 21 | St. Louis Blues | 2–3 | OT | Vancouver Canucks | Scottrade Center | Recap | ||
No scoring | First period | 05:20 - Kyle Wellwood 1 | ||||||
Brad Boyes 2 - 13:30 David Perron 1 - 16:54 |
Second period | 09:23 - Alexandre Burrows 2 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | First overtime period | 19:41 - Alexandre Burrows 3 | ||||||
Chris Mason 33 saves / 36 shots | Goalie stats | Roberto Luongo 47 saves / 49 shots |
Vancouver won series 4–0 | |
(4) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (5) Calgary Flames
The Chicago Blackhawks finished the regular season in second place in the Central division with 104 points, and thus entered the playoffs as the fourth overall seed in the Western Conference. Meanwhile, the Calgary Flames got 98 points during the regular season to finish fifth overall in the Western Conference.
Chicago won the series over Calgary, four games to two, with the home team winning the first five games of the series. Martin Havlat scored the game-winning goal 12 seconds into overtime to win Game 1 for the Blackhawks, 3–2.[17] Then in Game 2, Chicago overcame a 2-goal deficit by scoring 3 goals in the second period to win, 3–2.[18] But when the series shifted to Calgary for Game 3, David Moss scored two goals to help the Flames earn a 4–2 victory.[19] And in Game 4, Calgary scored 6 goals, including 2 by Olli Jokinen, to win 6–4.[20] But the Blackhawks responded in Game 5 by exploding to a 5–1 victory, limiting the Flames to 20 shots on goal.[21] And then Chicago defeated Calgary, 4–1, in Game 6 to win the series, with goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin stopping 43 out of 44 shots.[22]
April 16 | Chicago Blackhawks | 3–2 | OT | Calgary Flames | United Center | Recap | ||
No Scoring | First period | 08:38 - David Moss 1 | ||||||
Cam Barker 1 - 13:17 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
Martin Havlat 1 - 14:27 | Third period | 03:54 - Michael Cammalleri 1 | ||||||
Martin Havlat 2 - 00:12 | First overtime period | No scoring | ||||||
Nikolai Khabibulin 23 saves / 25 shots | Goalie stats | Miikka Kiprusoff 25 saves / 28 shots |
April 18 | Chicago Blackhawks | 3–2 | Calgary Flames | United Center | Recap | |||
No Scoring | First period | 07:44 - pp - Jarome Iginla 1 16:15 - Adrian Aucoin 1 | ||||||
Jonathan Toews 1 - pp - 00:46 Patrick Sharp 1 - 13:58 Jonathan Toews 2 - 19:36 |
Second period | No scoring | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Nikolai Khabibulin 30 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Miikka Kiprusoff 30 saves / 33 shots |
April 20 | Calgary Flames | 4–2 | Chicago Blackhawks | Pengrowth Saddledome | Recap | |||
Eric Nystrom 1 - 06:40 | First period | 02:03 - pp - Patrick Sharp 2 | ||||||
Rene Bourque 1 - 17:07 | Second period | No scoring | ||||||
David Moss 2 - 01:18 David Moss 3 - 05:24 |
Third period | 15:35 - Martin Havlat 3 | ||||||
Miikka Kiprusoff 36 saves / 38 shots | Goalie stats | Nikolai Khabibulin 24 saves / 28 shots |
April 22 | Calgary Flames | 6–4 | Chicago Blackhawks | Pengrowth Saddledome | Recap | |||
Jarome Iginla 2 - pp - 05:47 | First period | 04:40 - Patrick Kane 1 | ||||||
Olli Jokinen 1 - 00:50 Adrian Aucoin 1 - 08:10 Olli Jokinen 2 - 09:16 |
Second period | 12:13 - pp - Kris Versteeg 1 16:44 - Cam Barker 2 19:27 - pp - Samuel Pahlsson 1 | ||||||
Eric Nystrom 2 - 13:04 Jarome Iginla 3 - en - 19:49 |
Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Miikka Kiprusoff 28 saves / 32 shots | Goalie stats | Nikolai Khabibulin 21 saves / 26 shots |
April 25 | Chicago Blackhawks | 5–1 | Calgary Flames | United Center | Recap | |||
Brent Seabrook 1 - pp - 09:19 Patrick Sharp 3 - 10:49 Kris Versteeg 2 - 11:08 |
First period | No scoring | ||||||
Andrew Ladd 1 - 06:14 Cam Barker 3 - 14:56 |
Second period | 02:45 - Dustin Boyd 1 | ||||||
No scoring | Third period | No scoring | ||||||
Nikolai Khabibulin 19 saves / 20 shots | Goalie stats | Miikka Kiprusoff 14 saves / 18 shots Curtis McElhinney 9 saves / 10 shots |
April 27 | Calgary Flames | 1–4 | Chicago Blackhawks | Pengrowth Saddledome |
Chicago won series 4–2 | |
Stanley Cup Final
In the United States, NBC will broadcast the first two and final three games of the Final, while Versus will broadcast games three and four.[23] In Canada, all games of the Finals will be broadcast in English on the CBC's Hockey Night in Canada and in French on the cable network RDS.
The CBC will have a new broadcast team calling the Final with Jim Hughson and Craig Simpson.
References
- ^ "2008–2009 - Playoffs - All Skaters - Summary - Total points". National Hockey League. Retrieved 18 April 2009.
- ^ "2008–2009 - Playoffs - Goalie - Summary - Goals against average". National Hockey League. Retrieved 18 April 2009.
- ^ "2008–2009 - Playoffs - Goalie - Summary - Save percentage". National Hockey League. Retrieved 18 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Canadiens @ Bruins - 04/16/2009". Retrieved 23 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Canadiens @ Bruins - 04/18/2009". Retrieved 23 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Bruins @ Canadiens - 04/20/2009". Retrieved 23 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Bruins @ Canadiens - 04/22/2009". Retrieved 23 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Flyers @ Penguins - 04/15/2009". Retrieved 26 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Flyers @ Penguins - 04/17/2009". Retrieved 26 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Penguins @ Flyers - 04/21/2009". Retrieved 26 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Flyers @ Penguins - 04/23/2009". Retrieved 26 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Penguins @ Flyers - 04/25/2009". Retrieved 26 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Blues @ Canucks - 04/15/2009". Retrieved 22 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Blues @ Canucks - 04/17/2009". Retrieved 22 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Canucks @ Blues - 04/19/2009". Retrieved 22 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Canucks @ Blues - 04/21/2009". Retrieved 22 April 2009.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Flames @ Blackhawks - 04/16/2009". Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Flames @ Blackhawks - 04/18/2009". Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Blackhawks @ Flames - 04/20/2009". Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Blackhawks @ Flames - 04/22/2009". Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Flames @ Blackhawks - 04/25/2009". Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "NHL.com - Recap: Blackhawks @ Flames - 04/27/2009". Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "NBC to air Stanley Cup finals games". ESPN.com. New York City. AP. 7 March 2009. Retrieved 7 March 2009.