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National Hockey League
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National Hockey League
Contact Information
National Hockey League
1251 Avenue of the Americas, 47th Fl.
New York, NY 10020
NY
Tel. 212-789-2000
Fax 212-789-2020
Type: Private - Association
On the web:
http://www.nhl.com
Hockey is more than a cool sport for serious fans. The National Hockey League is one of the four major professional sports associations in North America, boasting 30 professional ice hockey franchises in the US and Canada organized into two conferences with three divisions each. The NHL governs the game, sets and enforces rules, regulates team ownership, and collects licensing fees for merchandise. It also negotiates fees for national broadcasting rights. (Each team controls the rights to regional broadcasts.) In addition, five minor and semi-pro hockey leagues also fly under the NHL banner. The league was organized in Canada in 1917.
Officers:
Commissioner: Gary B. Bettman
EVP and CFO: Craig Harnett
EVP, Corporate Sales and Marketing: John Collins
Competitors:
Major League Baseball
NBA
NFL
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National Hockey League
Incorporated: 1917 NAIC: 711211 Sports Teams and Clubs SIC: 7941 Sports Clubs, Managers & Promoters
The National Hockey League (NHL) is a nonprofit corporation, based in New York, that serves as a trade association for its 30 franchises; six of its teams are located in Canada and the remaining 24 are U.S.-based. The NHL is unrivaled as a premiere hockey league, attracting the world's best players. Although hockey is Canada's most popular sport, and the NHL enjoyed rapid growth in the United States in the 1990s, hockey still ranks a distant fourth among the four major North American professional team sports in terms of revenues and television ratings. While early forms of ice hockey may be traced to 17th-century Holland, the origins of modern ice hockey may were established in the late 1800s, when the sport became especially popular among university students in Ontario, Canada. In fact, Kingston, Ontario, is reputed to be the site of the first amateur hockey league, which consisted of four teams. During this time, the English Governor General of Canada, Lord Stanley of Preston, had a son who was a fan of the growing sport. Stanley was convinced by his son to purchase a silver bowl and donate it as a trophy to be awarded to the winning amateur hockey team in an annual playoff. Thus, the Stanley Cup championship trophy actually predated the NHL. Lord Stanley never attended a championship game, let alone award his cup to the first winners in 1893. He had already returned to his native England. The Stanley Cup helped drive Canadian interest in hockey. Seeds of the game were then planted by Canadian college students attending Yale and Johns Hopkins, making New Haven and Baltimore the first homes to hockey in the United States. It was the Americans who introduced professionalism into the sport. Adhering perhaps to a British preference for amateur sports, Canadians seemed content to compete for an amateur cup, although a few players were known to accept money under the table. The Americans, however, seemed more interested in turning a profit from the game. The first professional league was formed in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, and the best Canadian talent was imported. In 1910 the National Hockey Association (NHA) was created out of two rival Canadian 'amateur' leagues that were at the time raiding one another's players, offering as much as $1,000 for a single game. The Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA) was soon formed and began luring players away from the NHA. By 1912 the NHA and PCHA champions were playing for the Stanley Cup, and any vestige of the original intent of awarding the trophy to the best amateur team was long forgotten. World War I disrupted play, especially in the NHA, when a team representing the 228th Battalion of the Canadian Army was ordered overseas. This left five teams in the league and an unbalanced schedule. To rectify the problem--as well as to rid themselves of Eddie Livingstone, the unpopular head of the Toronto franchise--the owners of the NHA hoped to drop the Toronto team and redistribute its players. In the end, however, they adopted a simpler solution; they formed a new league and left the NHA to Livingstone. Thus, on November 22, 1917, in Montreal's Windsor Hotel, the National Hockey League (NHL) was created. The champions of the NHL and PCHA now vied for the Stanley Cup. By the early 1920s, however, the PCHA was suffering financially and so joined forces with the Western Hockey League. WHL franchises were generally located in cities too small to generate the revenues required to match player salaries offered by the NHL. When the NHL began to expand to wealthy American cities, WHL players were sold to the new franchises, rather than be lost without compensation in the player raids that were sure to come. By 1926 the Stanley Cup had become the exclusive property of the NHL. The Boston Bruins became the first American-based franchise in the NHL, beginning play in 1924. The following year, the Hamilton franchise was sold and relocated to New York, where it was renamed the 'Americans' and rented Madison Square Garden for its games. Another new franchise, named the Pirates, was awarded to Pittsburgh. In 1926 three more American-based franchises were awarded. The owners of the Madison Square Garden, impressed by the success of their tenants, purchased their own franchise and named it the Rangers. Also added were the Chicago Black Hawks and the Detroit Cougars (eventually renamed the Red Wings). By the late 1920s, the NHL consisted of ten teams. With six playing in the United States, the balance of power began a gradual shift to the south. To accommodate the large crowds necessary to support the growing NHL, the country also saw a golden era of rink construction in the 1920s. In addition to Madison Square Garden, several other storied arenas were built: the Montreal Forum, Boston Garden, Detroit's Olympia Stadium, the Chicago Stadium, and in 1931, Toronto's Maple Leaf Garden. The league was also bolstered by the growing popularity of radio. A newspaper reporter named Foster Hewitt began doing radio broadcasts of Toronto games, and in 1933 a network of 20 Canadian stations was created to carry NHL games on Saturday nights. By the end of the season this network had grown to include 33 stations. It was estimated that an impressive 72 percent of all radios in Canada were tuned to the weekly game. American-based teams soon began to broadcast their games as well. The Depression, followed by the uncertainties of World War II, resulted in NHL franchises transferring to other cities, and the eventual abandonment of some teams. Pittsburgh moved to become the Philadelphia Quakers, and the Ottawa Senators became the St. Louis Eagles. Both teams soon folded. Despite winning a Stanley cup, the Montreal Maroons withdrew from the NHL following the 1937-38 season. The New York Americans, at an economic disadvantage to the Madison Square Garden-owned Rangers, moved to Brooklyn, suspended operations for the duration of World War II, and never returned to league play. The era of the 'Original Six' teams--consisting of Montreal, Toronto, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, and New York--ran from the 1942-43 season to 1966-67. For most of this period, from 1946 until his retirement in 1977, Clarence S. Campbell headed up the NHL as league president. Despite strong attendance following the war, the NHL resisted expansion, rejecting bids for new franchises from Philadelphia, Los Angeles, and Cleveland. Television initially had an adverse effect on attendance in some of the American cities in the early 1950s, especially in Chicago and Boston. By the end of decade, however, both franchises were again prospering. NHL hockey was first broadcast on television on October 9, 1952, from the Montreal Forum, where the Canadiens hosted Chicago in the season opener. The following month Foster Hewitt provided the first telecast from Maple Leaf Garden. The popular Saturday night radio broadcasts in Canada were now superceded by the Hockey Night in Canada telecasts that quickly became a national obsession. Hockey Night in Canada would one day become the longest running television show in North America. While American-based teams began to televise their games locally, success on a national basis in the United States eluded the league. The first attempt was made by CBS with its 'Game of the Week' package that began with the 1959-60 season. Several years later, NBC would purchase the rights for slightly more than the $2 million-a-year that CBS had been paying. Hockey ratings were poor, lagging well behind ABC's Wide World of Sports and CBS's NBA basketball telecasts. By 1974 no U.S. television network was interested in broadcasting NHL hockey. After 25 years of maintaining a six-team league, the NHL was more than ready for expansion in 1966 when six additional cities were awarded franchises, at a cost of $2 million each, to begin play in the 1967-68 season. The new teams were the Los Angeles Kings, Minnesota North Stars, Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, Oakland Seals, and St. Louis Blues. In one stroke the NHL became a coast-to-coast league. By 1970 two more teams joined: the Buffalo Sabres and Vancouver Canucks. As more North American cities sought entry into the NHL, the franchise price rose to $6 million. While two additional teams joined the league in 1972, the Atlanta Flames and New York Islanders, a group of Canadian promoters formed the World Hockey Association. They charged only $500,000 for a franchise, a significant savings that the WHA urged its team owners to invest in, enticing established players away from the NHL. Although the NHL did not take the threat seriously at first, it quickly found itself in a war with the WHA, which was preparing to play its first season in 1972-73. The average player salary in the NHL was $25,000, but with competition from the WHA, the numbers quickly escalated, despite efforts to hold the line. When the WHA Winnipeg Jets signed Chicago superstar Bobby Hull, the new league gained instant credibility, which led to more NHL players switching leagues, including Detroit's legendary Gordie Howe. Clarence Campbell assured the NHL Board of Governors that the WHA would fold before the start of the 1973-74 season. He was wrong in that prediction and every one he would make over the next several years about the imminent demise of the rival league. Despite the crippling effects of the league war, the NHL continued to expand, adding the Washington Capitals and Kansas City Scouts for the 1975-76 season. During this period, NHL players met the Soviets in an eight-game Summit Series, which led to the 1976 Canada Cup tournament that featured four European national teams. The EuroSoviet style of play came as a revelation to the North Americans. Although Soviet players were forbidden from leaving their country, the Europeans were eager to sign on, and the WHA was eager to sign them. The NHL was slow to follow suit, but soon its scouts were also searching for talent in Czechoslovakia and Scandinavia. The war with the WHA lingered on, and one of its casualties was Clarence Campbell. After serving 31 years as president of the NHL, he was eased out, replaced in 1977 by John A. Ziegler, Jr., The most pressing matter for Ziegler to address, of course, was the war with the WHA that was crippling owners in both leagues. Several NHL franchises were forced to relocate and try their chances elsewhere, but it was apparent that North America simply could not support 32 major league hockey teams. After much back-channel negotiating, the war finally came to an end in 1979 when four WHA teams were added to the NHL: the Edmonton Oilers, Hartford Whalers, Quebec Nordiques, and Winnipeg Jets. Although the transaction was called an expansion, the effect was a merger between the two leagues. The NHL spent the next decade essentially marketing a former WHA player: Wayne Gretzky. His trade from Edmonton to the Los Angeles Kings in 1988 arguably saved that franchise and created the momentum for later expansion of the NHL to the Sun Belt cities of the United States. The rise of in-line skates also served to popularize the game of hockey in warm weather cities. Nevertheless, the NHL still lagged well behind the other major North American team sports, and still had no network television presence in the United States. It was a local broadcast and cable-only product. The NHL suffered its first labor disruption in April 1992 when a players' strike interrupted play for ten days. Although Ziegler saved the season, the strike cost him his job. He was replaced as league president in October 1992 by Gil Stein. Several months later, in February 1993, Gary Bettman left the NBA to become the first commissioner of the NHL. Because most of the clubs were losing money, Bettman initiated talks with National Hockey League Players' Association executive director Robert Goodenow to negotiate a salary cap in an effort to curb escalating costs. In the meantime, Bettman was forced to deal with a strike by on-ice officials in November 1993. The strike lasted 16 days and was resolved when a Collective Bargaining Agreement was reached on November 30, 1993. The situation with the players reached a head before the 1994 season. At the end of training camp, Bettman announced that the start of the season would be delayed. He and the owners believed that only by depriving the players of their salaries would the NHL be able to gain the relief it felt it so desperately needed. Goodenow and the players assumed that they were being locked out, but Bettman carefully avoided using the term, because the standard player's contract did not give the club the right to lock out a player and not pay him his salary. A player could give notice of default, and if not paid in three weeks become a free agent. According to Gil Stein in his book, Power Plays, 'Had the default notices been served, Bettman was prepared with a backup plan. He would try for three weeks to negotiate a new CBA with Goodenow, and then save face by announcing that, since he was satisfied with the progress of talks, the season would start.' Not realizing he could have bargained from a position of strength, Goodenow made major concessions in order to salvage the season, and Bettman made sure that the standard player's contract was amended so that the NHLPA would not be able to prevent a future lock out. Bettman aggressively positioned the NHL for the next century. As the league expanded into the West and South with new teams in Colorado, Dallas, Phoenix, Miami, Tampa Bay, the Carolinas, Nashville, and Atlanta, revenues rose rapidly. Annual sponsorships increased from $25 million to $300 million within five years. Grassroots efforts to attract children to the game were also stepped up. Street hockey tournaments were created, and equipment and instruction provided. After 20 years without a network presence on American television, Bettman landed a five-year, $250 million deal with Fox. Ratings steadily increased, and it appeared that the NHL was poised to attain unprecedented popularity for hockey. The numbers, however, began to slide. In its first season on Fox, the NHL averaged a 2.0 rating, but by 1999 the numbers had dipped to 1.4, prompting Fox to drop hockey from its schedule. ABC, partnered with ESPN, signed a five-year, $600 million deal that began in 1999-2000. Rather than the broad-based marketing approach that Fox employed, ABC targeted hockey's existing core audience. The early ratings showed promise, and the NHL was further encouraged by ABC's willingness to promote hockey on its prime-time schedule, a commitment that Fox had been unwilling to make. The NHL also took an aggressive position with the Internet, becoming the first major profession sports league to bring its Internet business in-house when it bought out partner IBM. According to league studies, hockey fans were more Internet-oriented than those of other sports. Furthermore, the NHL's web site attracted 30 percent of its hits from outside of North America. With the possibility of someday broadcasting its games over the Web, the NHL was unwilling to share future profits with a partner. As the league continued to expand, adding the Columbus Blue Jackets and Minnesota Wild for the 2000-01 season, to bring the number of franchises to 30, the pool of player talent changed in composition. Once dominated by Canadian players, hockey by the end of the 20th century was truly an international sport. Nearly a quarter of NHL players came from Europe, representing 16 nations. The change in the All-Star Game format was indicative of this shift. Beginning in 1998 the game pitted 'North America' versus 'the World.' Facilities were upgraded across the league. Not only were expansion teams moving into state-of-the-art arenas, replete with the luxury boxes that generate the income crucial to the economic viability of team sports, but the older franchises also saw a wave of construction. New arenas were opened in Montreal, Toronto, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Buffalo, and Los Angeles. Despite many promising signs, the NHL faced some serious challenges at the end of the century, mostly involving small-market Canadian franchises that were saddled with a number of economic disadvantages. The U.S.-Canadian exchange rate was crippling, because players insisted on being paid in U.S. dollars, but the clubs' received most of their revenues in weaker Canadian currency. They also had to pay far more in national and local taxes than U.S.-based teams. In fact, the Montreal Canadiens and Vancouver Canucks each paid more in taxes than all of the U.S. teams combined. To help these Canadian franchises, the NHL adopted an assistance plan in 1996. Efforts to provide public assistance, however, received little support from Canadian voters. To keep pace with rising players' salaries, ticket prices rose steadily across the league, often driving away many traditional fans. To some observers, the economics of hockey entered a rarefied state at the close of the century, as corporations replaced gentleman owners. Although most teams lost money each year, the value of an NHL franchise increased in value. According to former NHL president and CEO, Gil Stein, 'The hockey business may not be a money-maker, but the arena business seems to be. And the presence of an NHL hockey team appears to be a necessary component for operating a successful arena. ... So large corporate entities whose core businesses benefit from a hockey team should continue to covet owning one, provided, of course, that their other businesses (arena, cable TV, beer sales, and so forth) are successful enough to absorb the annual hockey deficits. However, the continued rise in losses generated by NHL clubs does not augur well for the viability of small-market teams where that corporate synergy does not exist.' Principal Divisions NHL Enterprises, L.P.; NHL Enterprises Canada, L.P.; NHL Europe; NHL Productions. Principal Competitors The National Basketball Association; The National Football League; Major League Baseball. Further Reading Barry, Allen and Andrew Albanese, 'By the Numbers: Who's Watching?,' Wall Street Journal, June 2, 2000, p. W9. Beltrame, Julian, 'Canada Backs Out of Pledge to Aid Hockey Teams,' Wall Street Journal, January 24, 2000, p. B10. Conway, Russ, Game Misconduct, Buffalo: London Bridge, 1996, 304 p. Diamond, Dan, et. al., Total Hockey, Kingston, N.Y.: Total Sports, 1998, 1878 p. Fischler, Stan, Cracked Ice, Lincolnwood, Ill.: Masters Press, 1998, 340 p. Fong, Petti, 'Canada: Penny-Wise, Franchise-Foolish,' Business Week, March 27, 2000, p. 70. Friedman, Wayne, 'Hockey Comeback Tied to Engaging its Core Audience,' Advertising Age, February 2, 2000, p. 40-41. National Hockey League Official Guide & Record Book 2000, Kingston, N.Y.: National Hockey League, 2000. Stein, Gil, Power Plays: An Inside Look at the Big Business of the National Hockey League, Secaucus, N.J.: Carol Publishing Group, 1997, 240 p. Stone, David, 'NHL Looks to Cast a Web on the Net,' Hockey Digest, Summer 2000, p. 12.
— Ed Dinger
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National Hockey League
Organization of professional North American ice-hockey teams. The league was formed in 1917 by five Canadian teams; the first U.S. team, the Boston Bruins, was added in 1924. It today consists of 30 teams in two conferences and six divisions. The Eastern Conference includes the Atlantic Division (New Jersey Devils, New York Islanders, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, and Pittsburgh Penguins), the Northeast Division (Boston Bruins, Buffalo Sabres, Montreal Canadiens, Ottawa Senators, and Toronto Maple Leafs), and the Southeast Division (Atlanta Thrashers, Carolina Hurricanes, Florida Panthers, Tampa Bay Lightning, and Washington Capitals). The Western Conference includes the Central Division (Chicago Blackhawks, Columbus Blue Jackets, Detroit Red Wings, Nashville Predators, and St. Louis Blues), the Northwest Division (Calgary Flames, Colorado Avalanche, Edmonton Oilers, Minnesota Wild, and Vancouver Canucks), and the Pacific Division (Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, Dallas Stars, Los Angeles Kings, Phoenix Coyotes, and San Jose Sharks). At the end of the regular winter season, the top teams in each division engage in a play-off for the Stanley Cup.
For more information on
National Hockey League,
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National Hockey League
The National Hockey League (NHL) (French: Ligue
Nationale de Hockey (LNH)) is a professional ice hockey league composed of teams
in North America. It is the premier professional ice hockey league in the world,[1] and one of the North American major professional sports leagues. The NHL is divided into two
fifteen-team conferences, each of which consists of three five-team divisions.
The league was founded in 1917 in Montreal, Quebec,
Canada with four teams, and through a series of expansions, reductions and relocations is now
composed of 30 teams, 24 of which are based in the United States and six in
Canada. After a labour dispute that led to the
cancellation of the complete 2004–05 season, the league has staged a successful 2005–06
regular season and 2006 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Because the sport originated in Canada, Canadians have historically constituted a large majority of the players in the NHL.
Over the past 25 years, the percentages of American and European players have increased because
of the NHL's continued expansion into the United States, its high standard of play compared to other leagues, and the
availability of highly skilled European players. Nevertheless, more than half of the league's players on the 2005–06 roster were
born in Canada.
History
-
Original NHL logo, used before 2005. A version of the logo features it in the likeness of a
hockey puck.
After a series of disputes in the Canadian National Hockey Association
(NHA) between Eddie Livingstone, owner of the Toronto Blue Shirts and the owners of other teams, the owners of the Montreal Canadiens, Montreal Wanderers, Ottawa Senators, and Quebec Bulldogs met at the
Windsor Hotel in Montreal to talk about the NHA's future.[2] Their discussions eventually led
to the creation of the National Hockey League in 1917; the founding teams were the Canadiens, Wanderers, Senators, and the
newly-created Toronto Arenas (later known as the St. Patricks and now the Maple
Leafs).[2]
Montreal Canadiens in 1942
Even though the league struggled to stay in business during its first decade, the NHL's teams were very successful on the ice;
only once, in 1925, did a team from any other league win the Stanley Cup, and by 1927 the
NHL was the only league competing for the Cup.[3] The NHL then started a process of expansion: the Boston
Bruins (the first U.S.-based NHL franchise) and Montreal Maroons entered the league in 1924–25; the New York
Americans and the Pittsburgh Pirates entered in the 1925–26 season; and
the New York Rangers, Chicago Black Hawks
(now spelled Blackhawks), and Detroit Cougars (now known as the Red Wings) entered in
the 1926–27 season, raising the number of teams in the NHL to 10. The Great Depression and the onset of World War
II, took a toll on the league, and by 1942 the NHL was reduced to six teams. These six teams (the Montreal Canadiens,
Toronto Maple Leafs, Detroit Red Wings, Chicago Black Hawks, Boston Bruins, and New York Rangers) are collectively known as the
Original Six, and for the next quarter-century were the only teams in the National Hockey
League.
By the mid 1960s, the desire for a network television contract in the U.S., and concerns that the Western Hockey League was planning to declare itself a major league and challenge for
the Stanley Cup, spurred the NHL to undertake its first expansion since the 1920s.
Six new teams were added to the NHL roster in 1967, and placed in their own
newly-created division. The teams were the Philadelphia Flyers, St. Louis Blues, Minnesota North Stars,
Los Angeles Kings, Oakland Seals, and
Pittsburgh Penguins. Three years later, the NHL added the Vancouver Canucks and Buffalo Sabres.
In 1972, the World Hockey
Association (WHA) was formed, and though it never challenged for the Stanley Cup, its status as a potential rival to the
NHL did not go unnoticed. In response, the NHL decided to rush its own expansion plans by adding the New York Islanders and Atlanta Flames (which soon became the
Calgary Flames) in 1972 to forestall WHA franchises in newly constructed arenas in those
markets, followed by the addition of the Kansas City Scouts and Washington Capitals two years later.[4] The two leagues fought for the rights of players and fans
until the WHA folded in 1979 as part of an agreement whereby four of the remaining
six WHA teams would enter the NHL as expansion teams: the Hartford Whalers (now the
Carolina Hurricanes, 1997-present), Québec Nordiques (now the Colorado Avalanche,
1996-present), Edmonton Oilers, and Winnipeg Jets
(now the Phoenix Coyotes, 1996-present).[5]
After a period of stability in the 1980s, the NHL further expanded with nine new franchises in ten years. The San Jose Sharks entered in 1991; a season later the Ottawa
Senators would return to the NHL along with the addition of the Tampa Bay
Lightning. In 1993, the league added two additional teams, the Mighty Ducks of
Anaheim and the Florida Panthers. Next came the Nashville Predators in 1998, the Atlanta Thrashers in
1999, and then the Minnesota Wild and the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2000, bringing the total to 30 teams.
Game
-
Each National Hockey League regulation game is an ice hockey game played between two teams
and is 60 minutes long. The game is composed of three 20-minute periods with an intermission of 17 minutes between
periods.[6] Television timeouts are
taken at the first stoppage of play after 6, 10, and 14 minutes of elapsed time unless there is a power play or the first
stoppage is the result of a goal. In these cases the timeout will occur at the first stoppage after the penalty expires or the
second stoppage after the goal. At the end of the 60 minute regulation time, the team with the most goals wins the game. If a
game is tied after regulation time, overtime ensues. During the regular season,
overtime is a five-minute, four-player on four-player sudden-death period, in which
the first team to score a goal wins the game.
Beginning in 2005–06, if the game is still tied at the end of overtime, the game
enters a shootout. Three players for each team in turn take a penalty shot.
The team with the most goals during the three round shootout wins the game. If the game is still tied after the three shootout
rounds, the shootout continues, but becomes sudden death. Whichever team ultimately wins the shootout is awarded a goal in the
game score and awarded two points in the standings. The losing team in overtime or shootout is awarded only one. Shootout goals
and saves are not tracked in hockey statistics; shootout statistics are tracked separately.
Shootouts do not occur during the playoffs. In the playoffs, sudden-death 20-minute five-on-five periods are played until one
team scores. While a game could theoretically continue forever, only four games have reached five overtime periods, two have
reached six, and none have gone beyond six.[7]
Teams
The National Hockey League originated in 1917 with 5 teams, and through a sequence of team expansions, reductions and relocations currently consists of 30 teams, 24 of which are based in the United
States and 6 in Canada. The Montreal Canadiens are the most successful franchise with
twenty-four Stanley Cup championships; in the four major North American professional sports leagues the Montreal Canadiens are
only surpassed in the number of championships by the New York Yankees of
Major League Baseball. The next most successful franchise is the Toronto Maple Leafs with thirteen Stanley Cups, but they have not won a championship since 1967. The
Detroit Red Wings, with 10 Stanley Cups, is the most successful American franchise. The longest streak of winning the Stanley Cup in consecutive years is five held by the
Montreal Canadiens from 1955-56 to 1959-60; the New York Islanders (from 1980-1983)
and the Montreal Canadiens (from 1976-1979) have four-year championship streaks.[8] The 1977 edition of the Montreal Canadiens, the second of four
straight Stanley Cup champions, was named by ESPN as the second greatest sports team of
all-time.[9]
Of the four major leagues in the United States, the NHL is the only league to field
teams that play in the capital cities of two countries (Ottawa and Washington, D.C.). The league also boasts more Canadian teams than the three other major leagues (the
NBA and MLB both have one each, both based in Toronto.) The NHL currently has six.
The current league organization divides the teams into two conferences. Each conference has three divisions, and each division
has five teams. The current organization has roots in the 1998–99 season where a
league realignment added two divisions to bring the total number of divisions to six; the current team alignment began with the
2000–2001 season when the Minnesota Wild and the Columbus Blue Jackets joined the
league as expansion teams.
| Division |
Team |
City |
Arena |
Capacity |
Founded |
| Atlantic |
New Jersey Devils |
Newark, New Jersey |
Prudential Center[10] |
17,615 |
1974 |
| New York Islanders |
Uniondale, New York |
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum |
16,234 |
1972 |
| New York Rangers |
New York, New York |
Madison Square Garden |
18,200 |
1926 |
| Philadelphia Flyers |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Wachovia Center |
19,500 |
1967 |
| Pittsburgh Penguins |
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
Mellon Arena |
17,132 |
1967 |
| Northeast |
Boston Bruins |
Boston, Massachusetts |
TD Banknorth Garden |
17,565 |
1924 |
| Buffalo Sabres |
Buffalo, New York |
HSBC Arena |
18,690 |
1970 |
| Montreal Canadiens |
Montreal, Quebec |
Bell Centre |
21,273 |
1909 |
| Ottawa Senators |
Ottawa, Ontario |
Scotiabank Place |
20,500 |
1992 |
| Toronto Maple Leafs |
Toronto, Ontario |
Air Canada Centre |
18,800 |
1917 |
| Southeast |
Atlanta Thrashers |
Atlanta, Georgia |
Philips Arena |
18,750 |
1999 |
| Carolina Hurricanes |
Raleigh, North Carolina |
RBC Center |
18,639 |
1972 |
| Florida Panthers |
Sunrise, Florida (Fort Lauderdale area) |
Bank Atlantic Center |
19,452 |
1993 |
| Tampa Bay Lightning |
Tampa, Florida |
St. Pete Times Forum |
19,500 |
1992 |
| Washington Capitals |
Washington, D.C. |
Verizon Center |
18,277 |
1974 |
| Division |
Team |
City |
Arena |
Capacity |
Founded |
| Central |
Chicago Blackhawks |
Chicago, Illinois |
United Center |
20,500 |
1926 |
| Columbus Blue Jackets |
Columbus, Ohio |
Nationwide Arena |
18,500 |
2000 |
| Detroit Red Wings |
Detroit, Michigan |
Joe Louis Arena |
20,066 |
1926 |
| Nashville Predators |
Nashville, Tennessee |
Sommet Center |
17,113 |
1998 |
| St. Louis Blues |
St. Louis, Missouri |
Scottrade Center |
19,260 |
1967 |
| Northwest |
Calgary Flames |
Calgary, Alberta |
Pengrowth Saddledome |
19,289 |
1972 |
| Colorado Avalanche |
Denver, Colorado |
Pepsi Center |
18,007 |
1972 |
| Edmonton Oilers |
Edmonton, Alberta |
Rexall Place |
16,839 |
1972 |
| Minnesota Wild |
St. Paul, Minnesota |
Xcel Energy Center |
18,568 |
2000 |
| Vancouver Canucks |
Vancouver, British Columbia |
General Motors Place |
18,630 |
1945 |
| Pacific |
Anaheim Ducks |
Anaheim, California |
Honda Center |
17,250 |
1993 |
| Dallas Stars |
Dallas, Texas |
American Airlines Center |
18,500 |
1967 |
| Los Angeles Kings |
Los Angeles, California |
Staples Center |
18,118 |
1967 |
| Phoenix Coyotes |
Glendale, Arizona (Phoenix area) |
Jobing.com Arena |
18,000 |
1972 |
| San Jose Sharks |
San Jose, California |
HP Pavilion |
17,496 |
1991 |
Season structure
-
- See also: List of NHL
seasons
The National Hockey League season is divided into a regular season from the first
Wednesday in October through the beginning of April, when teams play each other in a predefined schedule, and a playoffs from April to the beginning of June, which is an elimination tournament where two teams play against
each other to win a best-of-seven series in order to advance to the next round. The final
remaining team is crowned the Stanley Cup champion.
In the regular season, each team plays 82 games; 41 games at home and 41 on the road. Currently, of the 82 games, teams play
32 games within their division (8 games against each team in the division), 40 games
against non-divisional intra-conference opponents (4 games against each team in two other divisions of the same conference) and
10 inter-conference games (1 game against each team in two of the three divisions in the opposite conference).[11] The two divisions from the opposite conference which each team plays
against are rotated every year, much like interleague play in baseball. Points are
awarded for each game, where two points are awarded for a win, one point for losing in overtime or a shootout, and zero points for a loss in regulation.[12] Among major professional sports leagues, the NHL is the only one to award a team
points for losing in overtime.
At the end of the regular season, the team that finishes with the most points in each division is crowned the division
champion with the league overall leader awarded the Presidents' Trophy. The three
division champions along with the five other teams in each conference with the next highest number of points, for a total of 8
teams in each conference, qualify for the playoffs. The division winners are seeded one through
three (even if a non-division winner has a higher point total), and the next five teams with the best records in the conference
are seeded four through eight.[13] The Stanley Cup Playoffs is an
elimination tournament, where two teams battle to win a best-of-seven series in order to advance to the next round. The first round of the playoffs, or
conference quarterfinals, consists of the first seed playing the eighth seed, the second playing the seventh, third playing the
sixth, and the fourth playing the fifth.[13] In the second round, or conference semifinals, the NHL re-seeds the teams, with the
top remaining conference seed playing against the lowest remaining seed, and the other two remaining conference teams pairing
off. In the third round, the conference finals, the two remaining teams in each conference play each other, with the conference
champions proceeding to the Stanley Cup Finals.
In each round the higher-ranked team is said to be the team with the home-ice
advantage. Four of the seven games are played at this team's home venue — the first and second, and, when necessary, the
fifth and seventh games — with the other games played at the lower-ranked team's home venue.
Notable players
The top five point scoring forwards in the 2006-07 season were Sidney Crosby, Joe Thornton, Vincent Lecavalier, Dany Heatley, and Martin St. Louis. The top goal scorer was Vincent
Lecavalier.[14] The top three scoring defencemen
were Scott Niedermayer, Sergei Gonchar, and
Sheldon Souray,[15]
and the top three goaltenders (by wins) were Martin Brodeur, Roberto Luongo, and Marc-Andre Fleury.[16]
In addition to Canadian and American players, who have historically composed a large majority of NHL players, the NHL draws
players from all over the world. Since the 1990s when communism collapsed in Eastern Europe and the newly formed nations did not
restrict the movements of players there has been a large increase in the number of European players in the NHL.[17] European players were drafted and signed by NHL
teams in an effort to bring in more skilled offensive players.[18] The addition of European players has changed the style of play in the NHL considerably;
European style hockey has been accepted, if not embraced, in the NHL.[17] The league also voluntarily stops its season so that its players can play in the
Winter Olympics to have the players represent their own country. Currently the NHL
has players from 18 different countries, with the majority still coming from Canada.[19]
For more information about the origins of NHL players, see the List of NHL statistical leaders by country.
Hockey rink
-
National Hockey League games are played on a hockey rink which is rectangular
ice rink with rounded corners and surrounded by a wall. It measures 25.91 by 60.92 metres (85
by 200 ft) in the NHL,[20] while international
standards call for a rink measuring 60–61 metres long by 29–30 metres wide (196.85–200.13 ft by 95.14–98.43 ft). The
center line divides the ice in half,[21] and is used to judge icing violations. There are two blue
lines that divide the rink roughly into thirds, which divide the ice into two attacking and one neutral zone.[21] Near the end of
both ends of the rink, there is a thin red goal line spanning the width of the ice, which is used to judge
goals and icing calls.
Starting in the 2005–2006 season, after testing in the American Hockey League,
a trapezoid area behind each goal net has been introduced.[22] The goaltender can only play the puck within that area or in front of the goal line; if the
goaltender plays the puck behind the goal line and not in the trapezoid area, a 2 minute minor penalty for delay of game is
assessed by the referees.[23]
Rules
- Main articles: National Hockey League rules
While the National Hockey League follows the general rules of ice hockey, it differs
slightly from those used in international games organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) such as the Olympics. Infractions of the rules can lead to either the stoppage of play in the case
of offside and icing calls, or a
penalty call for more serious infractions.
During the 2004–05 lockout, the league changed some of the rules regarding being offside; first the league removed the
offside pass or two-line pass rule, which required a stoppage in play if a pass originating from inside a team's
defending zone was completed on the offensive side of the center line, unless the puck crossed the line before the player;[24] and second the league reinstated the tag-up offside which allows
an attacking player a chance to get back onside by returning to the neutral zone.[24] The changes to the offside rule were one of several rule changes
intended to increase overall scoring,[24] which had been in decline since the expansion years of the mid-nineties.
Another rule difference between the NHL and the IIHF rules concerns how icings are
called. In the NHL, a linesman stops play due to icing if a defending player
(other than the goaltender) touches the puck before an attacking player is able to,[25] in contrast to the IIHF rules where play is stopped the moment the puck
crosses the goal line. As a result of the rule changes following the 2004–05 lockout, when a team is guilty of icing the puck
they are not allowed to make a line change before the following faceoff.[25]
In regards to penalties, the NHL, in addition to the minor and double minor
penalties called in IIHF games, calls major penalties which are more dangerous infractions of the rules, such as
fighting, and have a duration of five minutes;[26] this is in contrast to the IIHF rule, where players who fight are ejected from the game.[27] Usually a penalized team cannot
replace a player that is penalized on the ice and is thus shorthanded for the duration of
the penalty,[28] but if the penalties are
coincidental, such as with fighting, both teams remain at full strength. Also, unlike minor penalties, major penalties must be
served to their full completion, regardless of number of goals scored during the power play.[28]
The NHL and the NHLPA created a stringent anti-doping policy in the new CBA
in September of 2005. The policy provides for a 20-game penalty for a first positive test, 60 games for a second positive test,
and a third offence results in a permanent ban.[29]
Trophies and awards
Hart Memorial Trophy on display at the Hockey Hall of Fame
-
The National Hockey League presents several trophies each year. The most prestigious team award is the Stanley Cup, which is awarded to the league champion at the end of the Stanley Cup playoffs. The team that
has the most points in the regular season is awarded the Presidents' Trophy. There
are also numerous trophies that are awarded to players based on their statistics during the regular season; they include, among
others, the Art Ross Trophy for the league scoring champion (goals and assists), the
Maurice 'Rocket' Richard Trophy for the goal-scoring leader, and the
William M. Jennings Trophy for the goalkeeper(s) for the team with the fewest
goals against them.[30] For the 2005–06 season
these statistics-based trophies were awarded to Joe Thornton, and Jonathan Cheechoo of the San Jose Sharks and Miikka
Kiprusoff of the Calgary Flames respectively.[30]
The other player trophies are voted on by the Professional Hockey Writers Association or the team general managers.[30] The most prestigious individual award is the
Hart Memorial Trophy which is awarded annually to the Most Valuable Player; the voting is conducted by members of the Professional Hockey Writers
Association to judge the player who is the most valuable to his team during the regular season. The Vezina Trophy is awarded annually to the person deemed the best goalkeeper as voted on by the general
managers of the teams in the NHL. The James Norris Memorial Trophy is
awarded annually to the National Hockey League's top defenceman, the Calder Memorial
Trophy is awarded annually to the top rookie, and the Lady Byng Memorial
Trophy is awarded to the player deemed to combine the highest degree of skill and sportsmanship; all three of these awards
are voted on by members of the Professional Hockey Writers Association.
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