A few minutes after his New York Rangers moved on to the second round of the NHL playoffs by beating the Pittsburgh Penguins, Gerard Gallant had not mentally moved on to whatâs next.
âI donât even know who we play,â Gallant said with a chuckle.
Itâs the Carolina Hurricanes, coach. Game 1 is Wednesday night. Shortly after, the Calgary Flames host the Edmonton Oilers in the first playoff rendition of the Battle of Alberta in 31 years.
Carolina and New York last met in the postseason in the best-of-five opening round of the 24-team expanded bubble playoffs in 2020. The fifth-seeded Hurricanes swept the 12th-seeded Rangers.
Before the Rangers beat the Penguins, Carolina captain Jordan Staal said either team would present a major challenge.
New York advanced to the second round for the first time since 2017 by beating the Penguins 4-3 in overtime in Game 7 Sunday night. It was the third consecutive comeback win for the Rangers, who trailed 3-1 in the series.
âWeâre not done,â Rangers center Mika Zibanejad said.
OILERS-FLAMES
Despite playing two seasons for Calgary, Oilers goaltender Mike Smithâs response Saturday night to who heâd rather play was a simple, âI donât really care.â
The hockey community will gladly take the first Flames-Oilers series since 1991. A year after the creation of the North Division guaranteed a Canada-based team in the final four, the same will happen with one from Alberta.
Calgary last reached the Cup Final in 2004 and Edmonton in 2006. Montreal in 1993 was the last team from Canada to win it all.
More work is left to end the country’s Cup drought.
âThe jobâs far from over,â Oilers defenseman Codi Ceci said. âWeâll just have to refocus and get ready for the second round.â
LIGHTNING-PANTHERS
Florida Panthers deadline addition Brandon Montour may not have had a rooting interest in Game 7 between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday night. Many of his teammates who got eliminated by the Lightning were happy to see the back-to-back defending Stanley Cup champions win to become their next opponent.
âI think a lot of guys wanted to play this team,â Montour said Sunday. âItâs always a battle against these guys, and weâre up for the challenge and everyoneâs excited in there.â
Lightning-Panthers is one of two second-round series that are rematches from last year. In the Western Conference, the top-seeded Colorado Avalanche face off against the St. Louis Blues they swept out of the playoffs in the first round in 2021.
Just like last time, Florida has home-ice advantage. It didnât matter much because Tampa Bay won the first two games in Sunrise on the way to knocking out the Panthers in six.
The Sunshine State rivals split their four meetings during the regular season.
âPeople especially in Florida have been begging for the two teams to be contenders and go at it,â Lightning coach Jon Cooper said in Toronto after Game 7 against the Maple Leafs. âTheyâve retooled their team and brought some big names in there and it should be a ton of fun. Theyâre fun to play against, theyâre competitive as hell and I think itâs really good for hockey.â
Montour is far from the only player who wasnât part of the series last year. The Panthers added forward Sam Reinhart last summer and acquired defenseman Ben Chiarot and longtime Philadelphia Flyers captain Claude Giroux at the trade deadline, while the Lightning signed Corey Perry and Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and brought back defenseman Zach Bogosian before the season before getting deeper at forward in March with Nick Paul and Brandon Hagel.
âThese were the kind of matchups that I was excited about making the move down here,â Reinhart said. âIt brings out the best and the intensity out of both teams.â
BLUES-AVALANCHE
This was the first matchup of the second round to get locked in after Colorado swept Nashville and St. Louis beat Minnesota in six. It also could be the feistiest, especially in the aftermath of Avalanche center Nazem Kadri concussing Blues defenseman Justin Faulk with an illegal check to the head in the series last year that prompted an eight-game suspension.
Kadri is having a career season, the Blues have already dealt with a series of injuries on their blue line and no one has forgotten that hit or the lopsided nature of the series.
âI think itâs in the back of guysâ minds, for sure â they were not too happy about it, as was nobody in the organization,â Blues coach Craig Berube told reporters Saturday. âWeâve got to focus on now. Yeah thereâs motivation, for sure, but youâre in the playoffs. Youâre trying to win. What more motivation do you need?â
There are some similarities to the Wild in style of play, but Minnesota didnât have Norris Finalist Cale Makar or skilled top-end forwards as big as Nathan MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen and Gabriel Landeskog.
âThatâs the difference,â Berube said. âYouâre talking 230-, 225-pound guys that are really good skaters, theyâre strong guys. … You want to be physical on them, but thereâs going to be times where youâre outmatched physically at times.â
Berube said his team would need to defend hard and also score some goals. The Avalanche know the Blues have plenty of depth offensively.
âItâs a different attack because itâs not just one line that you really have to focus on,â Colorado defenseman Devon Toews said. âTheyâve got a full 12 forwards up there that can really score. Itâs going to take all four of our lines and all six of our D to stop that and slow it down and then create our offense off of it.â
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AP Sports Writer Pat Graham in Denver contributed.
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Follow AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SWhyno
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