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Stanley Cup Playoffs – May 18, 2022, Calgary Scores 9

FLAMES WIN ROLLERCOASTER GAME 1 OF THE “BATTLE OF ALBERTA”
The first playoff “Battle of Alberta” in 31 years was a high-scoring, back-and-forth contest reminiscent of the ‘80s heyday of the two clubs when they met in the playoffs on a regular basis. The Flames scored three goals in the opening 6:05 of the game, including two in the first 51 seconds, but Connor McDavid helped the Oilers rally from a four-goal deficit to tie the game early in the third period before the Flames sealed a Game 1 win with a Matthew Tkachuk hat trick.

  • After scoring just 15 goals through seven games in the First Round versus Dallas, Calgary opened its series against intraprovince-rival Edmonton with nine goals and matched its franchise record for most in a playoff contest (also 9 in Game 3 of 1995 CQF, Game 2 of 1993 DSF & Game 1 of 1988 DSF). The two teams combined for 15 goals, marking the highest-scoring “Battle of Alberta” game in postseason history.
  • Elias Lindholm and Andrew Mangiapane each scored in the opening 51 seconds of the first period, marking the fastest two tallies from the start of a playoff game in NHL history (single team or combined) – the previous best was 52 seconds, set in Game 2 of the 1993 Division Finals (Mark Hardy w/ LAK & Greg Adams w/ VAN).
  • With his family in the stands, Tkachuk became the sixth different player in franchise history to score a playoff hat trick and first since Theo Fleury in Game 4 of the 1995 Conference Quarterfinals (4-1—5). Only one other Flames player has scored a playoff hat trick against the Oilers: Paul Reinhart (3-0—3 in Game 1 of 1983 DF).

McDAVID ADDS TO NHL-SCORING LEAD WITH FOUR-POINT OUTING
Connor McDavid tallied a game-high 1-3—4 for his first career four-point outing in a playoff contest and improved his 2022 Stanley Cup Playoff totals to an NHL-leading 5-13—18 (8 GP).

  • McDavid became the sixth Oilers player in the past 30 years to record 18 or more points in a single postseason, joining Joe Murphy in 1992 (8-16—24 in 16 GP), Chris Pronger in 2006 (5-16—21 in 24 GP), Shawn Horcoff in 2006 (7-12—19 in 24 GP), Bernie Nicholls in 1992 (8-11—19 in 16 GP) and Fernando Pisani in 2006 (14-4—18 in 24 GP).
  • The Oilers captain has now recorded multiple points in seven of his first eight games of the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs. Only four other players in NHL history have notched as many multi-point outings through their first eight contests of a postseason: Glenn Anderson (1987 w/ EDM), Denis Savard (1985 w/ CHI), Tony Currie (1981 w/ STL) and Darryl Sittler (1977 w/ TOR).

COLE PLAYS THE HERO IN HURRICANES OVERTIME WIN
After Sebastian Aho (1-0—1) tied the game with 2:23 remaining in regulation, defenseman Ian Cole ended the contest just 3:12 into the extra frame to give the Hurricanes a 1-0 series lead in the Second Round as well as their fifth straight win at PNC Arena – matching the franchise record for most consecutive home victories to start a postseason (also 5-0 from Game 3 of 2019 R1 – Game 4 of 2019 R2).

  • Cole became the third blueliner in Hurricanes/Whalers history to score an overtime goal in the postseason as well as the third defenseman to do so in the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs alongside Cale Makar (Game 2 of First Round) and Josh Manson (Game 1 of Second Round). Only eight playoff years in NHL history have concluded with more unique defensemen scoring an overtime goal: 1995 (7), 2020 (6), 2001 (6), 2003 (5), 2013 (5), 2007 (5), 2019 (4) and 2014 (4).
  • Cole’s first playoff overtime goal marked just the second postseason tally of his career after skating in 104 contests through a span of nine playoff appearances. In fact, he scored just twice during the 2021-22 regular season (75 GP). The Hurricanes veteran is one of three players on Carolina’s roster with a Stanley Cup, hoisting the trophy with the Penguins in 2016 and 2017.
  • Aho’s goal, which was the latest game-tying tally by a Hurricanes skater in the playoffs since Jussi Jokinen (58:40) in Game 7 of the 2009 Conference Quarterfinals, also marked the 17th postseason goal of his career, matching Kevin Dineen for third place on the franchise’s all-time list.
  • Carolina’s win marked the 10th overtime game of the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs, with four of them coming in the last four days.

GAME 2s ARE A GO IN SUNRISE, DENVER BEFORE SERIES SHIFT

The two-time defending champion and the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference will look to pull ahead 2-0 in their respective series Thursday as the first Game 2s of the Second Round are contested in Sunrise and Denver. Tampa Bay has held a 2-0 series lead nine times, claiming each series in no more than six games, while Colorado is 15-4 when winning the first two contests in a best-of-seven series.

  • Just the second Presidents’ Trophy winner to drop Game 1 in each of the first two rounds (also BOS in 2014), Florida will look to pull even for the second straight series while St. Louis will try to head home with a two-game split for a second straight round. Teams that win Game 2 to even a best-of-seven series at 1-1 own an all-time series record of 179-164 (.522), including a 4-2 mark in the 2022 First Round.

PANTHERS LOOK TO SPARK POWER PLAY AND REBOUND IN GAME 2

After ranking fifth in the NHL with a 24.4% power-play percentage during the regular season, Florida has reached the Second Round despite being the only team without a goal on the man advantage in the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs (0-for-21).

  • The Panthers, who fired a playoff-high six shots on goal with the man advantage in Game 1, have scored 19 of their 21 goals this postseason at five-on-five, third in the NHL behind the Oilers (22) and Penguins (20). Florida is the first team since 2009-10 to score at least 90% of its goals at five-on-five through seven games in a playoff year (the first season for which the data is available).

FRANCHISE RECORDS COULD BE SET, MATCHED AS BLUES VISIT AVS FOR GAME 2

After falling in their first overtime game of the 2022 Stanley Cup Playoffs, Ryan O’Reilly and the Blues will look to rebound for a Game 2 victory and halt the streaking Avalanche. O’Reilly can set a franchise playoff record by scoring a goal for a sixth straight game, while Colorado (5-0) will look to tie a club record for most consecutive postseason victories (for a second straight year).

  • Jordan Binnington made 12 of his 51 saves in overtime during Game 1, the second most in an extra frame in franchise history behind 14 stops from Ryan Miller in Game 1 of the 2014 First Round against Chicago.

BRUNETTE, GALLANT AND SUTTER VOTED JACK ADAMS AWARD FINALISTS

Andrew Brunette of the Florida Panthers, Gerard Gallant of the New York Rangers and Darryl Sutter of the Calgary Flames are the three finalists for the 2021-22 Jack Adams Award, presented to the head coach who has “contributed the most to his team’s success.”

Members of the NHL Broadcasters’ Association submitted ballots for the Jack Adams Award after the conclusion of the regular season, with the top three vote-getters designated as finalists. The winners of the 2022 NHL Awards will be revealed during the Conference Finals and Stanley Cup Final.

Following are the finalists for the Jack Adams Award, in alphabetical order:

Andrew Brunette, Florida Panthers

Brunette, who joined the Panthers coaching staff as an assistant coach prior to the 2019-20 season, was elevated to interim head coach on Oct. 29, 2021, and led the Panthers to the first Presidents’ Trophy in franchise history as the NHL’s top regular-season team. Florida (58-18-6) set a slew of team records, including total wins (58), home wins (34), road wins (24), points (122), goals for (340), points percentage (.744) and shots per game (37.3). The catalyst to their Presidents’ Trophy run was a franchise-record 13-game win streak from March 29 – April 23, outscoring opponents by nearly two-to-one (64-33) in that span. Brunette is the third Panthers coach voted a Jack Adams finalist in the past seven years and is aiming to become the team’s first-ever winner, following second-place finishes by Doug MacLean in 1995-96 and Gallant in 2015-16, plus Joel Quenneville’s third-place ranking last season.

Gerard Gallant, New York Rangers

Gallant became just the second head coach in franchise history to win 50+ games in his first season. guiding the Rangers (52-24-6, 110 points) to their best record since capturing the Presidents’ Trophy in 2014-15. The team’s overall League position (7th overall) represented its third-best finish in the past 25 seasons. The Blueshirts’ team defense ranked second in the League at 2.49 goals-against per game, holding the opposition to two goals or fewer in 45 games including nine shutouts. The Rangers power play ranked fourth in the NHL at 25.2%, their best success rate with the man advantage in 42 years. Gallant has been voted a Jack Adams finalist for the third time, with his third different club. He finished second with Florida in 2015-16 and captured the award with Vegas in 2017-18. He looks to become the first Rangers coach in franchise history to receive Jack Adams honors.

Darryl Sutter, Calgary Flames

Sutter returned to Calgary in 2021-22 for his second stint behind the bench and oversaw the biggest season-over-season improvement by any team in the League. The Flames, who missed the Stanley Cup Playoffs in 2020-21 (26-27-3, .491), stormed to the Pacific Division title with the NHL’s sixth-best record (50-21-11, .677). They climbed from 19th to 6th in goals-per-game (2.77 to 3.55) and improved from 16th to 3rd in goals-against per contest (2.86 to 2.51). Sutter is a Jack Adams Award finalist for the second time, coming 18 years after his third-place finish in 2003-04 during his first coaching tenure in Calgary. He aims to become the second winner in franchise history, following Bob Hartley’s victory in 2014-15, and would match the feat of his brother Brian Sutter, who won the award with the St. Louis Blues in 1990-91.

This marks the first time in 32 years that all three Jack Adams Award finalists were in the debut season with their clubs (current tenure). In 1989-90, winner Bob Murdoch (Winnipeg Jets), 2nd place Mike Milbury (Boston Bruins) and 3rd-place Roger Neilson (New York Rangers) all were first-year coaches with their respective clubs.

History

The award was presented by the NHL Broadcasters’ Association in 1974 in honor of the late Jack Adams, longtime coach and general manager of the Detroit Red Wings.

Announcement Schedule

The series of announcements unveiling finalists for the 2022 NHL Awards concludes Friday, May 20, with the three finalists for the King Clancy Memorial Trophy.

Stanley Cup Playoff Schedule