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Eastern Conference (NHL)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused withEast Division (NHL).
One of two conferences in the National Hockey League (NHL)
Eastern Conference
Eastern Conference logo (2006–present)
LeagueNational Hockey League
SportIce hockey
Founded1974 (as the Prince of Wales Conference),
Suspended for2020–21
Reactivated in2021
No. of teams16
Most recent
champion
Florida Panthers

TheEastern Conference (French:Conférence de l'Est) is one of two conferences in theNational Hockey League (NHL) used to divide teams. Its counterpart is theWestern Conference.

History

[edit]

Originally named thePrince of Wales Conference (orWales Conference for short), it was created in1974 when the NHL realigned its teams into two conferences and four divisions. Because the new conferences and divisions had little to do with North American geography, geographical references were removed.

ThePrince of Wales Trophy dates back to 1925, when it was donated to the League by thePrince of Wales, who later becameKing Edward VIII and then theDuke of Windsor. It was originally given to the NHL's playoff champion. (Until 1926, theStanley Cup was presented to the winner of a post-season playoff between the NHL andWestern Hockey League champions.) Since1926–27, the Stanley Cup has gone to the NHL's playoff champion. During the years when the NHL had no divisions, (i.e., 1925–26; 1938 to 1967), the Prince of Wales Trophy was presented to the League's regular season champion (analogous to today'sPresidents' Trophy). From 1926 to 1938, the Trophy went to the American Division regular season champion; from 1967 to 1974, it was presented to the East Division regular season champion; and from 1974 to 1981, it was presented to the Wales Conference regular season champion.

The conferences and divisions were re-aligned for the1981–82 to better reflect the geographical locations of the teams, but the existing names were retained with the Wales Conference becoming the conference primarily for the NHL's eastern teams. The names of conferences and divisions were changed for the1993–94 season to reflect their geographic locations. Then-newNHL CommissionerGary Bettman made the change to help non-hockey fans better understand the game, as theNational Basketball Association (NBA),National Football League (NFL) andMajor League Baseball (MLB) all use geographic-based names for their divisions. However, the trophy now awarded to the conferenceplayoff champion, the Prince of Wales Trophy, retains some connection to the heritage of the League. In 2005, following the2004–05 NHL lockout, Bettman changed the Eastern Conference logo (along with the Western Conference and NHL logos) to its current format.

Along with the Western Conference, the Eastern Conference was temporarily abolished for the2020–21 NHL season after theCOVID-19 pandemic in North America forced a realignment of the League to preclude the need for teams to regularly cross theCanada–United States border. For 2020–21 the three Canadian teams competed in the newly formedNorth Division while six Metropolitan Division teams and two American teams from the Atlantic Division formed a re-constituted East Division. The five remaining American teams from the Eastern Conference teams joined the Central Division. These changes were reversed, starting in the2021–22 season.

Divisions

[edit]

The Wales Conference originally consisted of theAdams Division and theNorris Division. The 1981 realignment moved the Norris Division to theClarence Campbell Conference and added that Conference'sPatrick Division instead. When the names of conferences and divisions were changed in 1993, the Eastern Conference's divisions became theAtlantic andNortheast. Realignment in 1998 added a third division, theSoutheast. Another realignment in 2013 reorganized the Eastern Conference into two, eight-team divisions: the Atlantic Division name retained, but was reassigned to what had been the Northeast Division, while the old Atlantic Division was renamed theMetropolitan Division; the Southeast Division was dissolved. With this 2013 realignment, all 16 teams in theEastern Time Zone are situated within the Eastern Conference.

Atlantic DivisionMetropolitan Division
Boston BruinsCarolina Hurricanes
Buffalo SabresColumbus Blue Jackets
Detroit Red WingsNew Jersey Devils
Florida PanthersNew York Islanders
Montreal CanadiensNew York Rangers
Ottawa SenatorsPhiladelphia Flyers
Tampa Bay LightningPittsburgh Penguins
Toronto Maple LeafsWashington Capitals

Champions and playoffs

[edit]
Main articles:Prince of Wales Trophy andStanley Cup playoffs

The NHL's playoff system has changed over the years. Prior to 1982, the NHL had a unique playoff system relative to the NFL, NBA and MLB. Playoff teams were seeded regardless of conference affiliation.[1] As a result, two teams from the same conference could meet in theStanley Cup Finals, as happened in1977,1978 and1980. Under this system, the Wales Conference champion, and therefore the winner of the Prince of Wales Trophy, was the team that finished with the bestregular season record in the conference.

Ever since the introduction of theConference finals in 1982, the Prince of Wales Trophy has been presented to the Wales/Eastern Conferenceplayoff champions.

In the playoff system introduced in 1982, the top four teams in each division made the playoffs. The first-round winners met in the Division finals, and the division final winners met in the conference finals. In this format, the division standings tended to be somewhat static, though not quite as static as in the Campbell Conference. In the Adams Division, theBoston Bruins andMontreal Canadiens never missed the playoffs in this format, while theBuffalo Sabres only missed twice. In the Patrick Division, theWashington Capitals only missed the playoffs once, theNew York Rangers twice, theNew York Islanders three times and thePhiladelphia Flyers four. In both cases, this usually left the other two teams to contend for the final playoff spot. This format also raised the possibility of the strongest teams in the regular season being forced to meet in the first or second round rather than the conference finals.

From 1994 to 2013, the top eight teams in each conference made the playoffs, with the division winners being guaranteed the top seeds (top two from 1994 to 1998 and top three from 1999 to 2013) and home ice in the first round regardless of record.

A new playoff format was introduced as part of the 2013 realignment. Under the new post-season system that was first used during the2014 Stanley Cup playoffs, the top three teams in each division make the playoffs, with two open wild cards spots in each conference for a total of eight playoff teams from each conference.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"List of Stanley Cup Playoff Formats". NHL.com. Archived fromthe original on 2010-12-17. Retrieved2008-04-18.
  2. ^Dan Rosen (March 14, 2013)."Realignment plan approved by Board of Governors".NHL.com.
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