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2010 NHL Playoff Predictions - Eastern Conference

April 12th, 2010 admin Posted in Boston Bruins, Buffalo Sabres, Montreal Canadiens, NHL playoffs, New Jersey Devils, Ottawa Senators, Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, washington capitals No Comments »

Well, after 1,230 games the curtain has finally closed on the 2009-10 NHL regular season, and what a season it was. There was no shortage of compelling drama down the stretch as multiple bubble teams struggled to capture a coveted playoff spot. As a result fans have been treated to close to a month of playoff intensity level hockey, with desperate teams clawing for valuable points down the stretch.

In the Eastern Conference the battles were particularly tight, with the Montreal Canadiens, Philadelphia Flyers, Boston Bruins, New York Rangers and Atlanta Thrashers all scrapping it out until the final minutes of the regular season to determine who would make the playoffs and who wouldn't. In the case of the Rangers and Flyers the decision came after 65 minutes of tooth and nail hockey, and ultimately took a shootout to determine who would secure the final playoff berth. A terrible way to decide such an important game, but I digress.

With the match-ups now set for the playoffs it is time for the prognosticators to come out and try and predict the winners. I figured I might as well contribute my own two cents on the matter, and do my best to try and foretell the outcome of the series laid out before us. Here are my 2010 NHL playoff predictions for the Eastern Conference:


#1 - WASHINGTON CAPITALS vs #8 MONTREAL CANADIENS

This is the biggest mismatch of the first round of the playoffs in either conference. The Capitals have been the class of the league since opening night of the regular season, quickly surging to the top of the standings and remaining there. Their 121 points was a franchise record, and gave them a cushy 8 point margin of victory over the San Jose Sharks in the President's Trophy race.

The Canadiens, on the other hand, barely managed to limp into the playoffs. They needed only 2 points in their final three games. With a playoff berth on the line, and facing 3 non-playoff teams in the New York Islanders, Carolina Hurricanes and Toronto Maple Leafs the Habs should have cruised into the playoffs. Instead, they managed to secure the bare minimum they required - 2 of a possible 6 points - making their increasingly nervous fans wait on pins and needles right up until the dying moments of regulation of game 82 before finally claiming their spot. Because they stumbled so badly down the stretch they must face the juggernaut Capitals in the first round, instead of arguably easier match-ups against either the New Jersey Devils or the Buffalo Sabres.

As big a mismatch as this one is on paper, I think it will be an ever bigger mismatch on the ice. The capitals have an embarrassment of fire power in Alexander Ovechkin, Alexander Semin, Nicklas Backstrom, Mike Green, Mike Knuble and Brooks Laich. They rank first in the league in powerplay efficiency, third in penalty killing, and have one of the best coaches in the league in 2008 Jack Adams winner Bruce Boudreau.

The only place where the Capitals might have a weakness is on the back end. Their defensive core certainly wouldn't be the envy of the league and the tandem of Semyon Varlamov and Jose Theodore in net is a big question mark going into this year's playoffs.

However, Washington's forwards spend so much time with the puck, and Montreal's forwards are so challenged to score, any deficiencies Washington's back end might have will remain unexposed against the Habs. Mike Cammalleri, Andrei Kostitsyn have both been ice cold since returning from injury, and if they don't pick up their game the Capitals will have little trouble shutting down an anemic Habs offense that managed to score only 20 goals in their final 10 games.

It is obviously already abundantly clear who I'm picking to win this series. Habs fans should be thrilled if their team wins a single game in the series - something they've failed to do in the first round of the past two seasons. However, I do believe they can steal one game, simply because of the stellar play of Jaroslav Halak. Halak was brilliant down the stretch, and his crucial back to back shutouts over the Flyers and the Sabres is the reason Habs fans will get to watch their Canadiens in the playoffs at all. However, Halak's magic will only take them far enough to avoid the broom.

PREDICTION: Washington wins the series 4-1


#2 NEW JERSEY DEVILS vs #7 PHILADELPHIA FLYERS

This one isn't quite the slam dunk that the Caps/Habs series is, but it is close. Once again the New Jersey Devils are a contender, thanks to great goaltending by Martin Brodeur, stellar team defense put in place by coach Jacques Lemaire, and a talented group of forwards that includes superstars Zach Parise and Ilya Kovalchuk. Top to bottom the Devils are solid, and they will tough for any opponent to eliminate in a 7 game series.

The Flyers, on the other hand, are a bit of an enigma. On paper, this team looks too good to have needed a shootout win in game 82 of the regular season just to qualify for the playoffs. With a group of forwards including Mike Richards, Jeff Carter, Daniel Briere, Simon Gagne and James Van Riemsdyk the offensive core of the Flyers is rock solid.

On defense they are anchored by former Norris and Hart trophy winning defenseman Chris Pronger. Pronger has plenty of help on the blueline from Kimmo Timonen, Matt Carle, Braydon Coburn and Ryan Parent. On paper their defensive core should stand up admirably against any group of blueliners in the league.

However, as always seems to be the case with the Flyers, it is their goaltending that is the biggest question mark. The Flyers raised eyebrows going into the season with the signing of Ray Emery. However, Flyers fans would be delighted to have the controversial tender between the pipes now. Instead, after injuries to both Emery and backup Michael Leighton, the Flyers playoff hopes rest on the narrow shoulders of journeyman Brian Boucher. Boucher has played decently in a rescue role with the Flyers, but it is unreasonable to expect him to out-duel NHL goaltending legend Martin Brodeur in a 7 game series.

All in all, I think we will see close games in the series, but the Devils specialize in tight games, and will come out victorious in all but one of them.

PREDICTION: New Jersey wins the series 4-1


#3 BUFFALO SABRES vs #6 BOSTON BRUINS

Of all the first round series in the Eastern Conference I believe this one will be the tightest. Since the days when they battled one another in the tightly contested Adams Division these two franchises have had a mutual loathing for one another, and that hate hasn't dissipated one iota over the years. Every inch of ice will be bitterly contested and there will be plenty of lumps and bumps dished out by the time the dust settles on this one.

The Buffalo Sabres are very much an "offense by committee" team, with their highest scorer - Derek Roy - finishing 32nd in league scoring with 69 points. Roy will be helped out by Tim Connolly, Jason Pominville and Thomas Vanek, who netted 65, 62 and 53 points respectively this season. Vanek, in particular, will have to be a factor if the Sabres want to do damage in this year's playoffs. Though his numbers certainly do not justify his enormous $7 million per season contract Vanek has been hot to close out the season, scoring 5 goals in the team's final two games. However, he will likely cool down in a hurry if Bruins' coach Claude Julien decides to match hulking d-man Zdeno Chara against him.

On defense the Sabres are surprisingly led by a rookie. Tyler Myers, who towers nearly as tall as Chara, has played with a poise and an offensive flair belying his tender years. Myers, who finished 5th in team scoring with 48 points and was an impressive +13 in his inaugural campaign, is the odds-on favorite to win the Calder trophy. Look for Myers to play big minutes against Boston's top forwards.

Buffalo's biggest ace in the hole is, of course, goaltender Ryan Miller. Through the entire regular season, and the Olympics Miller has been the best tender in the game, routinely stealing games for the Sabres they had no business winning. Miller's dominant performance this season has made him a sure bet to nab the Vezina trophy, and even has his name being whispered in conversations for the Hart trophy. If Miller continues to play the way he has been then the chances of the Bruins are slim indeed.

The challenge in scoring on Ryan Miller is magnified even further by the fact that the Bruins are a team that has trouble scoring on anybody, let alone the Vezina favorite. With Phil Kessel gone to Toronto and Marc Savard out with a serious concussion, the Bruins have struggled to score for most of the season. Players like David Krejci, Blake Wheeler, Milan Lucic and Michael Ryder all had statistically inferior seasons to the one previous. As a result the Bruins finished dead last in goals for, netting only 206 the entire season.

On defense the Bruins have arguably the most dominant defenseman in the league in defending Norris trophy winner Zdeno Chara. Chara can eat up close to 30 minutes of ice time a game without flagging, and is a force at both ends of the ice, excelling as a shutdown man against the league's top forwards. However, some of that advantage may be nullified by the simple fact that Buffalo doesn't really have a particular star for Chara to match up against. Vanek is the most likely target, but Buffalo has done pretty well this season, despite the fact that Vanek hasn't exactly put up stellar numbers.

The biggest surprise for the Bruins comes in net. Nobody predicted that defending Vezina trophy winner Tim Thomas would be relegated to a back-up role this season, but that is exactly what has happened. Rookie Tuukka Rask has snatched the number one role on the strength of his incredible play this season. Rask's save percentage - .931 - is two points better than Ryan Miller's, and his 1.97 goals against is a full quarter of a goal better than Miller's. Rask led the league in both categories this season. If Rask can continue the same high level of play during the playoffs then he will effectively nullify the Sabres' supposed advantage in net.

Overall, evidence points to this being an incredibly low scoring series. Fans will have to be satisfied cheering for big hits and great saves rather than goals in this one. I'd be surprised to see any of the games decided by more than two goals. Though Boston will certainly be in every game, I think the slight edge the Sabres have on offense and the experience of Miller in net vs Rask as a rookie will ultimately be telling.

PREDICTION: Buffalo wins the series 4-2


#4 PITTSBURGH PENGUINS vs #5 OTTAWA SENATORS

Though not a traditional rivalry by any means, these two teams have been meeting regularly in the playoffs for the past half decade, so there is some built-in bad blood that may spill over before this series is said and done. With agitators like Matt Cooke and Jarkko Ruutu out there you know guys like Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Jason Spezza and Daniel Alfredsson will all have targets on their chest.

Though these two teams finished only 7 points apart in the standings, I believe Pittsburgh has to be considered the heavy favorite in this match-up. First, and most importantly, they are the defending Stanley Cup champions, and have been too the finals in each of the last two seasons. That experience will be a huge factor in Pittsburgh's playoff run this season.

Second, the Penguins have arguably the greatest player in the game today in Sidney Crosby. Crosby became the youngest player in NHL history to captain his team to a Stanley Cup last spring. This year he has scored an Olympic gold medal winning goal, and he has completely reinvented his game, switching it up from pure passer to one of the deadliest snipers in the game. He was so successful that he actually tied with Steven Stamkos in the race for the Rocket Richard trophy, beating out arch-rival Alexander Ovechkin by a single tally - a result no one ever would have predicted at the beginning of the season. Crosby comes into the playoffs on a hot streak, and he will be a handful for the Senators to contend with.

Crosby doesn't enjoy the offensive help that Ovechkin gets in Washington, but superstar forward Evgeni Malkin isn't too shabby. Malkin has had an off-year by his standards, but he won the Conn Smythe as playoff MVP last spring. If he can regain that form the Penguins will be sitting pretty.

Ultimately it will be the play of goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury that determines the Pens' fate. Fleury, like Malkin is suffering from a bit of a Stanley Cup hangover, and hasn't seemed able to put together a consistent stretch to get his confidence back up to the level it was at last spring.

The Senators will be led by Daniel Alfredsson and Jason Spezza once again, with third Musketeer Dany Heatley moved onto to greener pastures in San Jose. Jonathan Cheechoo, who came the other way in the Heatley deal has been a complete bust, scoring a measly 5 goals all season. However, Mike Fisher has had a bounceback year. The Senators' hopes took a devastating blow when it was learned that Alexei Kovalev's knee injury was actually a torn ACL and effectively ended the Russian star's 2009-10 season.

The picture isn't much brighter for the Sens on defense. Veteran Chris Phillips and shot-blocking specialist Anton Volchenkov will have to carry the load on a defensive core that is noticeably absent of stars. They will have to play a near perfect defensive game if they want to shut down Crosby and Malkin.

In net the Senators' fortunes rest on the shoulders of Brian Elliott. Elliott has been a pleasant surprise, and the young tender has impressed with 5 shutouts, and a respectable 2.57 goals against average. He will need to play at the absolute pinnacle of his game to give the Senators any shot at all in my opinion.

PREDICTION: Pittsburgh wins the series 4-1


As you can see I'm not predicting any upsets in the first round. Though in this age of parity it is common for lower seeded teams to advance in this case I think there is a distinct line between the 1 through 4 in the conference and 5 through 8. More compelling battles will come in round two and beyond when the Eastern superpowers start to clash.

Look for my Western Conference playoff predictions, coming tomorrow.

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Who are the Hart Trophy Favorites for the 2009-10 Season?

March 31st, 2010 admin Posted in Buffalo Sabres, Opinion Pieces, Pittsburgh Penguins, Vancouver Canucks, washington capitals No Comments »

Hockey writers are going to have some tough decisions this year when it comes to voting on the NHL awards. However, no decision is going to be tougher than picking the Hart Trophy winner for 2010.

Every year there are several worthwhile candidates, but most seasons there is a clear favorite who separates himself from the rest of the pack to clearly establish himself as the most valuable player to his team. 2010 is a whole different animal though.

This year there are four choices that could conceivably capture the title, and few would bat an eye if any one of them walked away from this spring’s NHL awards with the hardware.

Alexander Ovechkin

Ovechkin is the two-time defending Hart Trophy champion and at the midway point of the season most were picking him to make it a three-peat. He has had another dominant season, and has been among the league leaders in goals, points and plus-minus all season long. He also assumed the mantle of captain and has flourished in a leadership role. However, apart from his massive hit on Jaromir Jagr, Ovechkin had a relatively poor Olympics, and Team Russia’s failure at the games in Vancouver seems to have given Ovie a bit of a hangover ever since he returned to Washington.

He went into the Olympics with a healthy lead in the scoring race, and most were ready to hand him the Art Ross Trophy at that point. However, since he has returned he has seen Henrik Sedin erase the point spread between them, and it is now Ovechkin who is looking up, trailing Sedin by 3 points.

Even if he doesn’t win the scoring race Ovechkin still has a great shot at a 3rd consecutive Hart. His league-leading +43 rating, his league-leading points-per-game average, his leadership, and his punishing physical play will earn him plenty of votes in this year’s race. However, the fact that he gets to play with such stars as Nicklas Backstrom, Mike Green and Alexander Semin on a nightly basis might weigh against him when the final votes are tallied.

Sidney Crosby

The 2009-10 season has been yet another compelling chapter in the ongoing debate about who is the best player in the game today. Crosby’s trophy case isn’t quite on par with Ovechkin’s personal hardware collection, but when he became the youngest player to captain his team to a Stanley Cup last spring he sure livened up the debate again.

This year, Crosby has completely reinvented his game, driving the net more, and shooting consistently rather than trying to look for a trailing player to dish the puck to. The result has been nothing short of spectacular. Crosby’s lack of scoring touch has often been pointed to as a weakness in his game in the past, but his naysayers are eating a large helping of crow right now. With 47 goals he is currently sitting first in the race for the Rocket Richard Trophy, and with several games still to play should have no problem reaching the magical 50 goal plateau for the first time in his career.

At this point it doesn’t look like Crosby can get his mitts on the Art Ross – he currently trails Henrik Sedin by 10 points - but he should finish in the top 3 in league scoring. With Evgeni Malkin having an off year Crosby’s offense has been of paramount importance to his team, and he has delivered consistently throughout the year, despite the fact that he has had to battle against the league’s toughest defensive forwards. As of now the Pittsburgh Penguins are currently sitting in first in the tough Atlantic division, and Crosby is the main reason for that. Remember, the Hart goes to the player deemed to be most valuable to his team, so despite Ovechkin’s and Sedin’s statistical edge I believe he is very much in the mix to capture the 2010 Hart Trophy.

Henrik Sedin

For years this Swedish star, along with twin brother Daniel Sedin, has been maligned by the press and fans alike for his inability to take his game to the next level and become one of the game’s true elite. Though he had been remarkably consistent over the course of his career he hadn’t been able to produce at better than a point a game clip.

All that changed with the start of the 2009-10 season. With the ink barely dry on a rich new contract, Henrik Sedin wasted no time showing his critics he was ready to assume the mantle of NHL superstar. Through the bulk of the season he has sat either first or second in league scoring. Even when brother Daniel went down with injury, Henrik kept producing with barely a blip, and over the season he, Daniel and Alex Burrows have arguably been the best line in the NHL.

At the time of this writing Sedin currently leads the NHL with 104 points, and with the way he has been putting points on the board lately (and the way Ovechkin has not) there is a very good chance he’ll make me eat my words – I wrote that Sedin had blown his shot at the Art Ross prior to the Olympic break – and become the first player in Vancouver Canucks history to win the NHL scoring title.

Add in a healthy +36 rating, and the fact that Sedin leads the league in assists by a wide margin and you’ve got some compelling arguments to hand Henrik Sedin the Hart Trophy. In my mind, this guy deserves it. Vancouver is a bona fide Stanley Cup contender with him in the lineup. Without him, I think they’d have their hands full making the playoffs. If he can stave off Ovechkin and win the scoring title he may just be able to add first Canuck to win the Hart Trophy as well.

Ryan Miller

Though some argue that goaltenders don’t belong in the Hart Race – that the Vezina should be enough for them – I think in special cases an exception should be made. Yes, if the definition of the Hart Trophy is adhered to – most valuable to his team – a goaltender should win the award every season. Obviously that is not the case, so other considerations come into play. However, if a goalie has such a dominant season that is abundantly clear that his team would be in dire straits without him, then a goalie should be considered. Miller’s Buffalo Sabres already saw that happen twice in the 90s when Dominik Hasek captured back to back Hart Trophies during the peak of his incredible career. Granted, Miller hasn’t quite been the brick wall that Hasek was, but he has been hands down the best goalie in the league this season, and is the sole reason Buffalo is not only in a playoff spot, but has a healthy lead in their division, putting them in the number 3 spot in the Eastern Conference. Yes, it would be a bit of a surprise if Miller took home the hardware, but don’t be shocked if he gets his fair share of votes along the way.

There you have it, the top 4 Hart Trophy favorites for the 2009-10 season. There are arguably more candidates, including another two goaltenders in Craig Anderson and Ilya Bryzgalov, but the vast majority of the first place votes will be split between these four guys. It will be very interesting to see which of them finishes on top this time around.

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Top 5 Stanley Cup Contenders in the 2010 NHL Playoffs

March 22nd, 2010 admin Posted in Chicago Blackhawks, NHL playoffs, Pittsburgh Penguins, San Jose Sharks, Vancouver Canucks, washington capitals No Comments »

With only 10 games left in the NHL regular season, and with many of the teams in the Eastern and Western conferences sitting relatively comfortably in playoff spots I figured it would be a good time to start prognosticating on the playoff chances of various teams, and predict which teams had the best chance of hoisting the 2010 Stanley Cup. Of course, in this post-lockout era, parity is much greater than ever before, and playoff upsets are inevitable. Still, in most playoff years the cream eventually rises to the top, and in my opinion it will be one of the teams listed below that will carry home the hardware this year. Here are my picks for the top Stanley Cup contenders for 2010, counted down from 5 to 1:

5 - San Jose Sharks - A perennial regular season powerhouse the San Jose Sharks have been notorious underachievers come playoff time for the past half-decade or so. Despite an abundance of talent at forward, a strong defensive core, and a top flight goaltender in Evgeni Nabokov, the Sharks have been unable to take their game to the next level and match the playoff intensity of their opponents in years gone by. Will this year be any different? Sadly for Sharks fans, I don’t think so.

With the off-season acquisition of sniper Dany Heatley expectations by Sharks fans going into this season. Fans salivated at the prospect of Heatley and Joe Thornton – arguably the league’s premier passer – forming a one-two punch that would be the envy of the league. Heatley and Thornton have shown decent chemistry this year, but at his current pace Heatley will finish the season with between 40 and 45 goals, far short of the 50-60 most pundits were predicting.

However, if Heatley is a mild disappointment to date long-time Shark Patrick Marleau has been a pleasant surprise. With 41 goals, Marleau currently sits 4th in the league in that category. With both Marleau and Heatley a threat to score opposing teams have had a nightmare trying to defend the Sharks this season.

Unfortunately for the Sharks it is not goal-scoring that wins NHL championships, but defense and goaltending. Over much of the season the Sharks have been solid in both categories, but since the Olympic break the Sharks defense, and in particular goaltender Evgeni Nabokov, has been particularly porous – not a good sign heading down the stretch to the playoffs.

Overall, though San Jose certainly has all the pieces of the puzzle to capture a championship, questionable big-game goaltending and a tendency for stars like Thornton and Marleau to disappear in the post-season will keep San Jose from hoisting the Stanley Cup in 2010 – again.

4 – Pittsburgh Penguins - Yes, they are the defending Stanley Cup champions, and yes, they’ve been to the finals two years in a row now, but I think this year Pittsburgh is going to have their work cut out for them making it out of the Eastern Conference.

Sidney Crosby is having another terrific year. Always known as a terrific passer Crosby has reinvented his game this year, shooting the puck more, and driving the net harder rather than always looking to find a teammate. The impact to his game has been significant, and Crosby has been dueling all season long with nemesis Alexander Ovechkin for the league lead in goals – a race no one would have predicted even one short year ago.

Unfortunately, though Crosby’s been just as good or better than he was last year, teammates Evgeni Malkin and Marc-Andre Fleury have seen their respective games sag. Malkin, last year’s Art Ross Trophy winner currently sits 17th in league scoring, 27 points behind league leader Ovechkin. Fleury hasn’t been able to recapture the brilliance that saw him lead the Pens to the promise land last June. Amazingly, he recorded his first shutout of the year just the other night, with less than a month remaining in the regular season. He has been average at best, and he will have to regain his form if the Penguins have a hope of getting past the powerful Washington Capitals, a feat they barely accomplished in last year’s playoffs when Fleury was playing at the pinnacle of his capability.

Pittsburgh gained valuable experience over their past two playoff runs, and with Sidney Crosby leading the way, anything is possible, but I don’t like their chances of repeating, and I see them bowing out to Washington in the semi-finals this year.

3 – Chicago Blackhawks

Though fans of the Washington Capitals might argue, in my mind this is the most exciting young team in the league. With a plethora of young stars like Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Duncan Keith, Kris Versteeg and Brent Seabrook, win or lose the Hawks put an entertaining product on the ice each and every night. Not only do the Hawks possess plenty of youthful enthusiasm, but all those young 20-something play with a poise belying their tender years.

However, as good as the Hawks are at the forward position and on the blueline they do have an Achillles’ Heel, and that is in net. Neither Cristobal Huet nor Antti Niemi can really be consider a bona fide number one goaltender, and their play throughout the season has been inconsistent to say the least. Fans were understandably upset when Chicago failed to make a move to address their goaltending deficiency at the trade deadline, and that failure may ultimately prove to be Chicago’s undoing in this year’s playoff run.

2 – Vancouver Canucks

Ranking the Canucks number two on this list of 2010 Stanley Cup contenders might raise some eyebrows, but in my mind it is a ranking that is well-deserved. For decades long-suffering Canucks fans have watched their team fail to achieve Stanley Cup glory, despite close runs in 1982 and 1994. In intervening years they’ve ice competitive teams, but there was always an ingredient missing. Sometimes it was a championship caliber goaltender; other times it was a lack of offense. This year, perhaps for the first time since 1994, the Canucks don’t have any glaring deficiencies.

On offense the Sedin twins have vaulted into the realm of superstardom, challenging players like Crosby, Ovechkin and Thornton for title of the NHL’s best player. With their emergence as bona fide superstars, and the improved offensive play of former grinders like Alex Burrows and Ryan Kesler the Canucks have a balanced scoring attack. Having other players like Kesler, Burrows, Samuelsson and Demitra to worry about means opposing teams can’t strictly focus their defensive assets on the Sedins.

Ultimately the Canucks’ success is going to be determined by goaltending, and in that category they should have the advantage over the other teams on this list. For several seasons now Roberto Luongo has been one of the best goaltenders in the world, and he is capable of single-handedly stealing a playoff series. Luongo, much like Fleury in Pittsburgh, has been inconsistent this year, but if he can find his A game going into the playoffs, then it is hard to imagine anyone in the Western Conference beating this team in a seven game series.

1 – Washington Capitals - This team has been an absolute juggernaut all season long, and at this point, with the way they’ve dominated this year, it is hard to deny them top spot on the list of Stanley Cup favorites. Led by 2 time defending Hart Trophy winner Alex Ovechkin the Caps are more offensively gifted than any team in the league. Backing up Ovechkin are stars like Nicklas Backstrom, Alexander Semin, and Mike Green. Even supposed role players like Mike Knuble and Brooks Laich have gotten into the act, contributing regularly to the Caps impressive offensive attack.

Though I said above that defense and goaltending wins NHL championships, this might be one of those rare seasons that is the exception to that rule. Washington’s defensive core is certainly far from horrible, but on many nights they give up too many chances, and only Washington’s ability to score goals in bunches keeps them from scrutiny.

In goal the picture is even cloudier. Semyon Varlamov was expected to carry the load this season, but due to injury has had to defer to veteran Jose Theodore. Varlamov is back, but has yet to find his game, giving up 14 goals in his last four games. If he continues to struggle going into the playoffs then Washington’s chances get a lot slimmer.

There you have it – the top 5 contenders going into the 2010 Stanley Cup playoffs. As I said before upsets happen all the time in the NHL playoffs, and there is a fair chance that another team than the ones listed above will capture hockey’s ultimate prize. The Buffalo Sabres, New Jersey Devils, Detroit Red Wings and even the Phoenix Coyotes can be considered dark horse teams, and will bear watching in this year’s playoffs.

No matter how it plays out it is going to be a thrilling time for hockey fans. Every playoff year seems to get better, and 2010 is going to be no exception.

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