List of NHL rivalries: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Rivalries among NHL teams}}
{{unreferenced|date=July 2006}}
{{Fan POV|date=September 2025}}
'''Rivalries in the National Hockey League''' have occurred between many teams and cities. [[List of sports rivalries|Rivalries]] have arisen among [[National Hockey League|NHL]] teams for many different reasons, the primary ones including geographic proximity, familiarity with opponents, on-ice incidents, and cultural, linguistic, or national pride.
 
The importance of these various factors has varied widely throughout the history of the league.
[[Local derby|Rivalries]] in the '''[[National Hockey League]]''' (NHL) have occurred between many teams and cities, but none more famous and storied than that of the [[Boston Bruins]] vs. [[Montreal Canadiens]], [[Toronto Maple Leafs]] vs. [[Montreal Canadiens]], [[Detroit Red Wings]] vs. [[Toronto Maple Leafs]], [[New York Rangers]] vs. [[New York Islanders]], and the [[Edmonton Oilers]] vs. [[Calgary Flames]]. Recently, with the addition of an NHL team based in [[Ottawa]], there has been a revival of a much older '''Battle of Ontario''' between the [[Toronto Maple Leafs]] and [[Ottawa Senators]]. A newer rivalry that is approaching the level of these aforementioned rivalries is the one between the [[Philadelphia Flyers]], [[New York Rangers]], and the [[New Jersey Devils]], all three of which are in the Atlantic Division. The most bitter in most recent times has been between the [[Colorado Avalanche]] and the [[Detroit Red Wings]].
 
==Early history==
==Original Six rivalries==
{{see also|History of the National Hockey League|Timeline of the National Hockey League}}
In the original six era of the NHL, teams played more frequently, and games were often undermined by personal rivalries between players. These personal and team rivalries persisted for many years as the turnover rate on NHL rosters was very low. The strongest rivalries were:
During the earliest days of the NHL, the league was limited strictly to [[Central Canada]], and all cities in the league were in close proximity, making for bitter rivalries all around. In addition, [[Montreal]] had two teams representing its English-French divide. The "French" [[Montreal Canadiens|Canadiens]] battled the "English" [[Montreal Wanderers|Wanderers]] (and later the [[Montreal Maroons|Maroons]]). Rivalries also existed with other leagues, such as the [[Pacific Coast Hockey Association]]. It was not until 1926 that the NHL took sole ownership of the [[Stanley Cup]]. By that time, the league began expanding into the United States, and new rivalries were created. Rapid expansion into the U.S. for a short time created a cross-town rivalry in New York City between the [[New York Rangers]] and [[New York Americans]]. The economic turmoil of the [[Great Depression]] and World War II, however, forced several teams to fold, with the result that by [[1942–43 NHL season|1942]] the NHL consisted of only six teams.
 
===Original Six rivalries===
* [[Chicago Blackhawks]] & [[Detroit Red Wings]]
{{main|Original Six}}
* [[Detroit Red Wings]] & [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
From {{NHL Year|1942|start}} to {{NHL Year|1966|end}}, only six teams (the [[Boston Bruins]], [[Chicago Blackhawks]], [[Montreal Canadiens]], [[Detroit Red Wings]], [[New York Rangers]], and [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]) played in the NHL. With only five other opponents, teams played more frequently and games were often underscored by personal rivalries between players. These personal and team rivalries lasted for many years, as the turnover rate on NHL rosters was very low. At one point or another, during this era, all the teams had animosity towards one another.
* [[Detroit Red Wings]] & [[Montreal Canadiens]]
* [[Toronto Maple Leafs]] & [[Montreal Canadiens]]
* [[Montreal Canadiens]] & [[Boston Bruins]]
* [[Boston Bruins]] & [[New York Rangers]]
 
==Eastern Conference==
==Leafs-Canadiens Rivalry==
 
===Atlantic Division===
From the 1944 to 1978 these two teams met each other in the playoffs 12 times. Most importantly they also met in the Championship Final 5 times. But this is timid when measured against the cultural significance the rivalry symbolised in Canada during this 25 year period.
The [[Atlantic Division (NHL)|Atlantic Division]] was formed in 1974 as the [[Adams Division]], which beginning in 1981 had all its teams in Eastern Canada and New England with the exception of the [[Buffalo Sabres]], which are located in [[Western New York]]. The division became the [[Northeast Division (NHL)|Northeast Division]] in 1993, and then the Atlantic Division in 2013.
 
====Battle of Ontario: Ottawa Senators vs. Toronto Maple Leafs====
From the time of the [[British Conquest]] at the [[Plains of Abraham]] the primary political, social, economic, and cultural conflict in Canada was between the [[English-Canadian|British]] and the [[French Canadian|French]], [[Protestant]]s and [[Roman Catholic]]s, and [[Imperialists]] and [[Continentalists]]. These cleavages meshed perfectly in the rivalry between the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Montreal Canadiens.
{{main|Battle of Ontario}}
The Battle of Ontario is a rivalry between the Ottawa Senators and Toronto Maple Leafs. It is the current version of an old rivalry between Ottawa, Canada's capital, and Toronto, Canada's largest city and business capital. The teams compete in the [[Atlantic Division (NHL)|same division]] and meet frequently during regular season games. In the early 2000s, the teams met four consecutive times in the playoffs with Toronto winning all four series. The rivalry began before the NHL existed, as the Senators and Toronto Blueshirts competed in the National Hockey Association. Ottawa and Toronto ice hockey teams first competed against each other in 1890 in the amateur [[Ontario Hockey Association]].
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Ottawa leads the regular season series 76–55–3–13, while Toronto leads 20–10 in the playoff record.
The Leafs were the team of [[English Canada]] and were thus generally supported by those of British ethnic origin, who tended to be Protestant, Conservative, and Imperialist. As well, the Maple Leaf team logo was essentially a stylised version of the Canadian Army's Cap Badge Insignia from [[The Great War]], a deliberate homage to the Imperialist and Loyalist ethos Team Owner [[Conn Smythe]] lived as an Artillery Officer during that conflict. Thus, the whole image of the Leafs was created to draw fans from the common English-Canadian heritage.
 
====Battle of the QEW: Buffalo Sabres vs. Toronto Maple Leafs====
The Canadiens were the team of [[French Canada]] and thus were generally supported by those of French ethnic origin, most of whom tended to be Roman Catholic, Liberal, and Continentalist.
[[File:AirCanadaCentre hockeygame.jpg|thumb|The Sabres and Maple Leafs warming up prior to a pre-season exhibition game, September 2007]]
The rivalry between the [[Buffalo Sabres]] and Toronto Maple Leafs is due to proximity – only 100 miles separate the Sabres' home arena, [[KeyBank Center]], from the Maple Leafs' home arena, [[Scotiabank Arena]]. The Sabres won 70 of 103 all-time home games against the Maple Leafs from their inception in 1970–71 until 2015–16 (the last season before Toronto drafted [[Auston Matthews]]), despite the always large contingency of Toronto fans at those games.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/buffalo-sabres/latest-news/sabres-maple-leafs-rivalry-percolates-after-shutout-loss-|title=Sabres – Maple Leafs Rivalry Percolates After Shutout Loss|last=Augello|first=Michael|magazine=The Hockey News|date=April 1, 2024|accessdate=December 31, 2024}}</ref> Since the {{NHL Year|1998}} season, both teams have played in the Northeast Division, now the Atlantic Division. Buffalo won the [[1999 Stanley Cup playoffs|1999 Eastern Conference finals]] against Toronto in five games, the only playoff series between the two teams.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/24711/2016/11/03/maple-leafs-and-sabres-on-the-verge-of-renewing-rivalry/|title=Maple Leafs and Sabres on the verge of renewing rivalry|last=Kloke|first=Joshua|newspaper=The New York Times|date=November 3, 2016|accessdate=December 31, 2024}}</ref> During the [[2018–19 NHL season|2018–19 season]], Toronto swept Buffalo in the season series for the first time ever. Buffalo previously swept a season series with Toronto in [[1979–80 NHL season|1979–80]], [[1987–88 NHL season|1987–88]], and [[1991–92 NHL season|1991–92]].
 
As of the end of the [[2024–25 NHL season|2024–25 season]], Buffalo leads the regular season series 123–80–18–11 with a 4–1 playoff record against Toronto.
At one time there was a Montreal Team called the [[Montreal Maroons]] (a quite successful franchise of the 1930's who were the de facto team of English-speaking Quebeckers) but the Maroons went defunct in 1938.
 
====Boston Bruins vs. Montreal Canadiens====
Thus the tension of the rivalry mirrored the political and cultural rivalries of 20th Century Canada, and each contest between the two teams became rife with such passion.
{{main|Bruins–Canadiens rivalry}}
[[File:Boston vs Montreal.jpg|thumb|right|Players line up prior to game six of the 2008 Eastern Conference quarterfinals between the Bruins and Canadiens at then-TD Banknorth Garden]]
The Bruins–Canadiens rivalry is considered by former Canadiens head coach [[Jacques Martin (ice hockey)|Jacques Martin]] to be "one of the greatest rivalries in sports,"<ref name="BruinsCanadiens">{{cite news|title=Montreal v. Boston 'one of the greatest rivalries in sports'|last=MacGregor|first=Roy|newspaper=The Globe and Mail|date=April 12, 2011|page=S1|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/montreal-v-boston-one-of-the-greatest-rivalries-in-sports/article624027/|accessdate=July 6, 2023|___location=Toronto}}</ref> along with the [[Yankees–Red Sox rivalry]], [[Dodgers–Giants rivalry]], [[Bears–Packers rivalry]], and [[Celtics–Lakers rivalry]].<ref name="BruinsCanadiens"/><ref>{{cite news|title=Here they go again...; Red Sox vs. Yankees: Bitter enemies clash with Series on line|date=October 12, 2004|first=Mike|last=Dodd|newspaper=USA Today|page=C1}}</ref> The two teams have played each other more times, in both regular season play and [[List of the most frequent NHL playoff series|the playoffs]], than any other two teams in NHL history.<ref name=Canadiens.com>{{cite web|url=http://ourhistory.canadiens.com/opponent/Boston-Bruins|title=Boston Bruins - Canadiens rivalry: notable moments, stats and more|accessdate=January 9, 2011|website=Canadiens.com|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|archive-date=July 8, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708113412/http://ourhistory.canadiens.com/opponent/Boston-Bruins|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=It's just like old times for the fans|first=Michael|last=Whitmer|newspaper=Boston Globe|date=April 17, 2009|page=C6}}</ref>
 
In the playoffs, the two teams have met in 34 series for a total of 171 games, which is 11 series and 60 more games than two other Original Six teams, the Red Wings and Maple Leafs.<ref name=Canadiens.com/><ref>{{cite web|title=Canadiens, Bruins are NHL's longest playoff rivalry|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=559790|date=April 15, 2011|accessdate=April 15, 2011|first=John|last=Kreiser|website=NHL.com|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.}}</ref> The two teams have faced each other nine times in [[game seven]]s, more times than any other opponents in NHL history.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.cbc.ca/sports/hockey/nhl/game-7s-are-old-hat-for-bruins-canadiens-1.1104830?ref=rss|title=Game 7s are old hat for Bruins, Canadiens|date=April 27, 2011|access-date=April 27, 2011|agency=Associated Press|website=CBC.ca|publisher=CBC/Radio-Canada}}</ref>
For instance, until the 1970's the Maple Leafs kept a large portrait of the Reigning Monarch in the North End stands (only removed when Ballard said that "[[Queen Elizabeth II]] doesn't pay anything to get in, does she?") and each game began with the singing of the [[Royal Anthem of Canada]], [[God Save the Queen]]. By contrast, there was little reference to the Monarch in the [[Montreal Forum]], and Montreal was one of the first Canadian Sports Teams to regularly use the [[National Anthem]] [[O Canada]] prior to the commencement of the game.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Montreal leads the regular season series 365–284–103–12 with a 106–71 playoff record against Boston.
Even though the two teams did not meet as frequently in the playoffs as they did with other rivals, the fact of the matter is that Toronto-Montreal games were a matter of national tension - especially in the days of Radio, when almost the entire Dominion listened to the games on [[Hockey Night in Canada]].
 
====Boston Bruins vs. Toronto Maple Leafs====
The playoff rivalry was particulary acute in the 1960's and never more so than in 1967 when the Leafs and Canadiens took on each other in a memorable Stanley Cup Final played during the 100th anniversary of [[Canadian Confederation]].
{{main|Bruins–Maple Leafs rivalry}}
Both teams are [[Original Six]] teams, with their first game played in Boston's inaugural season in 1924–25. From [[1924–25 NHL season|1924]] to [[2023–24 NHL season|2024]], the two teams met each other in the 17 playoff series, and faced each other in one [[Stanley Cup Final]].
 
The rivalry has since been renewed from the [[2013 Stanley Cup playoffs]] which saw the Bruins rally from a 4–1 third period deficit to defeat the Maple Leafs in overtime, 5–4, and advance to the second round. The Bruins and Maple Leafs faced each other in the [[2018 Stanley Cup playoffs|2018]], [[2019 Stanley Cup playoffs|2019]], and [[2024 Stanley Cup playoffs]] with the Bruins winning all four series in seven games.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-boston-bruins-game-7-recap/c-298256440|title=Bruins advance with Game 7 win against Maple Leafs|last=Kalman|first=Matt|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L.P.|date=April 25, 2018|website=NHL.com|access-date=April 26, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-boston-bruins-game-7-recap/c-306981924|title=Bruins win Game 7, eliminate Maple Leafs|last=Kalman|first=Matt|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=April 23, 2019|website=NHL.com|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Pohoryles |first1=Joe |title=Pastrnak, Bruins eliminate Maple Leafs with OT win in Game 7 |url=https://www.nhl.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-boston-bruins-game-7-recap-may-4 |website=NHL.com |access-date=May 6, 2024 |date=May 4, 2024}}</ref>
Much of the contemporary chagrin Toronto Fans feel within this rivalry is based on the year 1993, when it appeared that the resurgent Toronto Maple Leafs seemed poised to meet Montreal in the Stanley Cup Final, but were denied the opportunity by NHL Referee [[Kerry Fraser]]'s inaction. Toronto was leading the Conference series against Los Angeles 3-2 and many fans, including CBC's Don Cherry, were hoping for an Leafs-Canadien final as the Montreal Canadiens had already advanced. However, during overtime of game six, [[Wayne Gretzky]] high-sticked [[Doug Gilmour]] without being assessed a penalty by Fraser, and then scored the winning goal moments later to stave off elimination.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Boston leads the regular season series 309–271–98–14 with a 46–43–1 playoff record against Toronto.
The rivalry has been the subject of many cultural references in Theatre, Cinema, and Song, but is very popularly represented in the Canadian short story, [[The Hockey Sweater]].
 
====Detroit Red Wings vs. Toronto Maple Leafs====
==Flyers-Rangers Rivalry==
{{main|Maple Leafs–Red Wings rivalry}}
The [[Philadelphia Flyers]] and [[New York Rangers]] have met ten times in Stanley Cup playoff contention, with the Flyers winning six of the series.
[[File:2014 NHL Winter Classic before puck drop.jpg|thumb|The [[2014 NHL Winter Classic]] prior to puck drop. The outdoor game featured the Red Wings and Maple Leafs.]]
While the Toronto-Montreal rivalry is one of the most famous in all of sports, the rivalry with the Red Wings is no less intense. This rivalry dates to the 1920s. As of 2017, they have had twenty-three playoff meetings, five in the finals. So fierce was the rivalry that when the New York Rangers reached the finals against Detroit in 1950, but could not play in their home rink, [[Madison Square Garden]], because the [[Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus]] were in town, they arranged to play home games in Toronto, whose fans hated the Wings.
 
The rivalry heightened to a fever pitch due to an incident in the [[1949–50 NHL season|1950 playoffs]] when Detroit's young star, [[Gordie Howe]], mistimed a check on Toronto's [[Ted Kennedy (ice hockey)|Ted Kennedy]] and fell head-first into the boards, suffering severe injuries and needing emergency surgery to save his life. While Kennedy was exonerated by the NHL, Detroit management and fans accused him of deliberately injuring Howe. The result was a violent playoff series and increased animosity between the teams. The teams' proximity to each other – Toronto and Detroit are approximately 240 miles (380&nbsp;km) apart, mainly using [[Ontario Highway 401]] — and a number of shared fans (particularly in markets such as Windsor, Ontario) added to the rivalry. After the Leafs moved to the Eastern Conference in 1998, they faced each other less often, and the rivalry was more often found in the stands than on the ice.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1993383-ranking-the-10-most-overrated-nhl-rivalries/page/5|title=Detroit Red Wings vs. Toronto Maple Leafs|last=Richardson|first=Lyle|date=March 15, 2014|website=bleacher report|accessdate=January 17, 2016}}</ref>
On their way to a Stanley Cup title in [[1973-74 NHL season|1973-74]], the Broad Street Bullies eliminated the Rangers in the semifinals. The series went seven games, with the Rangers sealing their own fate, taking a too-many-men penalty in the waning moments of the game while trying to replace the goaltender with an extra attacker. The Rangers would defeat the Flyers in five games in the [[1978-79 NHL season|1978-79]] quarterfinals on their way to a Stanley Cup Finals berth; the Flyers would do the same to the Rangers in [[1979-80 NHL season|1979-80]].
 
The matchup became a divisional one for the first time in fifteen seasons, in the [[2013–14 NHL season|2013–14 season]] when the Red Wings moved into the Eastern Conference, sharing their division with the Maple Leafs. The [[2014 NHL Winter Classic]] was played between the Red Wings and the Maple Leafs at [[Michigan Stadium]] in [[Ann Arbor, Michigan|Ann Arbor]] on January 1, 2014.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/24-7/maple-leafs-red-wings-rivalry-needs-more-fuel/|title=Maple Leafs-Red Wings rivalry needs more fuel|last=Whyno|first=Stephen|publisher=Rogers Media |date=December 30, 2013|website=Sportsnet.ca|accessdate=January 17, 2016}}</ref> They also played each other in the [[NHL Centennial Classic]] on January 1, 2017.<ref>{{cite news|title=Detroit Red Wings, Maple Leafs set to play outdoor Centennial Classic|url=http://www.freep.com/story/sports/nhl/red-wings/2016/03/09/detroit-red-wings-centennial-classic/81556774/|last= St. James|first=Helene|date=March 9, 2016|accessdate=March 10, 2016|newspaper=Detroit Free Press}}</ref>
During the 1980s, the two teams met in the first round of the playoffs 5 out of 6 seasons. Beginning in [[1981-82 NHL season|1981-82]], the Rangers defeated the Flyers in four games, then swept them in three straight in [[1982-83 NHL season|1982-83]]. In [[1984-85 NHL season|1984-85]], the Flyers returned the favor by sweeping the Rangers, but in [[1985-86 NHL season|1985-86]], a "Cinderella" Rangers team got revenge, eliminating the Flyers in five. In
[[1986-87 NHL season|1986-87]] the first round format was expanded to best-of-seven, and the Flyers eliminated the Rangers in six.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Toronto leads the regular season series 303–285–93–6, while Detroit leads 59–58 in the playoff record.
The Flyers and Rangers renewed their playoff rivalry once more when the two teams met in the playoffs in [[1994-95 NHL season|1994-95]] and [[1996-97 NHL season|1996-97]], both series won by the Flyers. The first series was bitter for the Rangers – the Flyers four game sweep eliminated the defending Cup champions in the second round. Many Flyers fans remember this for the second game the Flyers won in overtime. [[Kevin Haller]] scored, sending normally laid-back Flyers color analyst [[Gary Dornhoefer]] into a frenzy. The latter series was the Eastern Conference Finals that sent the Flyers to the [[1996-97 NHL season|1996-97]] [[Stanley Cup Finals]]. With a 4-1 series win, it marked the last time the Rangers have made the playoffs until the [[2005-06 NHL Season|2005-06 season]] and it later turned out to be both [[Wayne Gretzky]] and [[Mark Messier]]'s last playoff game. Also adding to this rivalry was the original conflict between the teams in [[1992]] over the rights to [[Eric Lindros]], and then the Flyers trading Lindros to the Rangers in [[2001]].
 
====Florida Panthers vs. Tampa Bay Lightning====
There is a mutual hatred between the sports fans from both New York and Philly. Any time the two sets of fans get together for a hockey game, there is always nasty words exchanged, beer thrown at each other, and numerous fights in the stands. Flyers fans take great pride in their ability to buy large quantities of seats for Flyers games at Madison Square Garden, and starting fights with the home Rangers fans.
{{main|Lightning–Panthers rivalry}}
The [[Florida Panthers]] and [[Tampa Bay Lightning]] are both teams located within the state of [[Florida]] along [[Interstate 75]], representing different geographical areas within the state. The two teams have played in the same division since 1993 (Atlantic Division from 1993 to 1998, Southeast Division from 1998 to 2013, Central Division in the pandemic-shortened 2020–21 season, and the new Atlantic Division since 2013, except the 2020–21 season). The rivalry has at times been recognized by an actual trophy, known variously as the "Sunshine Cup", "Nextel Cup", and most recently, the "Governor's Cup." The physical trophy has not been awarded since the [[2013–14 NHL season|2013–14 season]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/lightning/news/governor-scott-panthers-and-lightning-launch-governors-cup/c-686098|title=Governor Scott, Panthers and Lightning Launch Governor's Cup|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=October 10, 2013|website=NHL.com|accessdate=November 9, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nbcsports.com/nhl/news/lightning-panthers-will-compete-for-the-governors-cup|title=Lightning, Panthers will compete for the Governor's Cup|last=Brough|first=Jason|publisher=NBC Universal|date=October 10, 2013|website=NBCSports.com|accessdate=November 9, 2013}}</ref>
 
Despite joining the league within a year of each other, Florida found success first, with a trip to the [[1996 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup Final]] in just its third season. The Lightning eventually gained the upper hand, making it to five [[NHL Conference Finals|Eastern Conference finals]] in the 2010s, while the Panthers fell to the bottom of the Atlantic; for much of this decade, the rivalry was considered dormant by sportswriters.<ref>{{cite news|last=Fennelly |first=Martin |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/364570453/?terms=Panthers|title=Lightning, Panthers and crickets |newspaper=Tampa Tribune|date=October 18, 2016|page=26|accessdate=March 13, 2018}}</ref> The improvement of the Panthers in the early 2020s under GM [[Bill Zito]], however, made regular season meetings far more competitive.<ref>{{cite web|last=Clark|first=Ryan S.|url=https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/3289636/2022/05/03/bill-zito-panthers-stanley-cup/|title=How Bill Zito built the Florida Panthers into Stanley Cup contenders|publisher=The Athletic Media Company|date=May 3, 2022|access-date=June 11, 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Klinkenberg|first=Marty|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/article-hockey-nhl-florida-panthers-tampa-bay-lightning/|title=Panthers and Lightning Sunshine State rivalry fuels NHL success story in the south|newspaper=The Globe & Mail|date=April 30, 2022|accessdate=May 10, 2022}}</ref>
==Devils-Flyers Rivalry==
The '''Flyers-Devils rivalry''' took off with their first playoff meeting in lockout-shortened [[1994-95 NHL season|1994-95]] when the Devils eliminated the Flyers 4-2 in the Eastern Conference Finals, en route to winning the [[Stanley Cup]]. It was considered an upset, as the Devils were barely able to qualify for the playoffs, while the Flyers had made a dramatic improvement to end their five-year playoff drought and were led by eventual [[Hart Trophy]] winner [[Eric Lindros]]. Lindros and Devils captain [[Scott Stevens]] were afterwards known for their on-ice feuds.
 
The teams met in the postseason for the first time in the first round of the [[2021 Stanley Cup playoffs]], with Tampa Bay winning the series in six games; they would go on to win their second consecutive [[2021 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]]. They met again in the second round of the [[2022 Stanley Cup playoffs]]. This time, the Lightning swept the Panthers, sending them to the conference finals en route to the [[2022 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup Final]]. In their third confrontation in the [[2024 Stanley Cup playoffs]], the Panthers won the series in five games; they would go and win their first ever [[2024 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]]. The teams met again in the postseason for the second straight time in the first round of the [[2025 Stanley Cup playoffs]] with Florida again winning the series in five games en route to their [[2025 Stanley Cup Final|second straight Stanley Cup]].
During the [[1999-00 NHL season|1999-00]] regular season, the Devils were leading in both the Eastern Conference and the Atlantic Division, but their 10-game slump near the end of the season resulted the Flyers overtaking them for both titles. They would meet once again in the Eastern Conference Finals; this time, the Flyers blew a 3-1 series lead over the Devils, including losing 2 games in [[Philadelphia]]. Game 7 of this series would also be the final game for [[Eric Lindros]] as a Flyer, suffering a [[concussion]] at the hands of Devils defenseman [[Scott Stevens]]. The loss in [[1999-00 NHL season|1999-00]] has been attributed by some Flyers fans to The [[Curse of Billy Penn]], as the Devils would go on to win the Cup by beating the [[Dallas Stars]] in 6 games.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Florida leads the regular season series 79–53–10–19, while both teams are tied with 10–10 in the playoff record.
The Flyers would finally defeat the Devils in the playoffs in [[2003-04 NHL season|2003-04]], when they eliminated the defending Cup champs 4-1 in the first round of the playoffs.
 
====Montreal Canadiens vs. Ottawa Senators====
This rivalry has become quite intense in [[New Jersey]] itself, with the northern part of the state being the Devils fanbase, while the southern part of the state is overwhemingly Flyers fans. The Flyers practice in [[Voorhees Township, New Jersey]] and most of the members of the team live in South Jersey. Incidentally, the first meeting between the two franchises was in the [[1977-78 NHL season|1977-78]] [[Stanley Cup]] Playoffs. The Devils were then known as the [[Colorado Rockies (NHL)|Colorado Rockies]]. The Flyers took the best-of-three Preliminary Round series 2-0.
[[File:Montreal Canadiens 3, Ottawa Senators 4, Centre Bell, Montreal, Quebec (30033616506).jpg|thumb|Skaters from the Canadiens and Senators prepare to face off during a pre-season exhibition game, September 2016]]
The rivalry between the [[Montreal Canadiens]] and the [[Ottawa Senators (original)|original Ottawa Senators]] and later, the contemporary [[Ottawa Senators]] began before the NHL was born as both teams played in the [[National Hockey Association]] beginning in 1910. Prior to that, Montreal and Ottawa teams played in various amateur leagues from 1884 and competed for the Stanley Cup from the first season it was awarded in 1894. The teams first played each other on January 22, 1910, when the Canadiens were still known as "Les Canadiens", and Ottawa had not adopted the Senators nickname. Ottawa and the Canadiens first met in the playoffs in March 1917, won by Montreal, which then faced Seattle in the Stanley Cup Final. This rivalry was transferred to the NHL as both teams were original members of the NHL. The first National Hockey League game was between the original Ottawa Senators and Montreal Canadiens on December 19, 1917. Also, in 1927, the two teams faced each other in the second round, Ottawa won that series and they went on to win the Stanley Cup. After the Senators NHL franchise was disbanded, an amateur [[Ottawa Senators (senior hockey)|Ottawa Senators]] team continued the rivalry by playing Montreal teams in the Quebec Senior League until 1954.
 
The Canadiens and the contemporary Senators face each other often as they are both in the Atlantic Division. Fueling the rivalry is the cities' proximity to each other. There is only a two-hour drive from Montreal to Ottawa via [[Quebec Autoroute 40]] and [[Ontario Highway 417]], plus railway and air connections. The current Ottawa Senators' first NHL game was held in Ottawa on October 8, 1992, where the expansion Senators beat the Canadiens 5–3. That victory was one of the only Senators' highlights of their inaugural season; they won only nine more games the rest of the season to finish with ten wins and 24 points, while the Canadiens won their [[1993 Stanley Cup Final|24th Stanley Cup]] that season. Another regular-season highlight of the Canadiens–Ottawa rivalry was the [[NHL Centennial Classic]] played at [[TD Place Stadium]] outdoors in Ottawa in December 2017, celebrating the centennial of the first NHL games.
==Hudson River Rivalry==
The Devils-Rangers Rivalry is known as the ''[[Hudson River]] Rivalry'' where they are commonly called, "Cross River Rivals". This is due to the fact that [[Madison Square Garden]] in Midtown [[Manhattan]] where the Rangers play is less than ten miles and across the Hudson River from the [[Continental Airlines Arena]] at the [[Meadowlands Sports Complex|Meadowlands]] where the Devils play. Both arenas are accessible via the [[Lincoln Tunnel]] and [[New Jersey Route 3]].
 
The current Senators and the Canadiens faced each other in the playoffs for the first time in [[2013 Stanley Cup playoffs|2013]]. In that series, there were a large number of controversial events. In game one, Ottawa's [[Eric Gryba]] laid out Montreal's [[Lars Eller]] in an open ice hit. After the game, the Senators' head coach [[Paul MacLean (ice hockey)|Paul MacLean]] blamed [[Raphael Diaz]] for a suicide pass.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://grantland.com/features/eric-gryba-suspension-lars-eller-hit/|title=After the Hit|last=Dryden|first=Ken|publisher=ESPN Enterprises, Inc.|date=May 8, 2013|website=Grantland.com|accessdate=January 12, 2025}}</ref> Later, Canadiens' coach [[Michel Therrien]] responded and said that what MacLean said was a "lack of respect." Ottawa won that game 4–2. [[Brandon Prust]] later insulted MacLean after the game, saying that he did not care what that "bug-eyed, fat walrus has to say."<ref>{{cite magazine|title=Sens-Habs series gets ugly:Eric Gryba suspended two games for Lars Eller hit|url=https://thehockeynews.com/news/sens-habs-series-gets-ugly-eric-gryba-suspended-two-games-for-lars-eller-hit|magazine=The Hockey News|date=May 3, 2013|accessdate=August 8, 2015}}</ref> In game three, there was a full line brawl between Ottawa and Montreal. And later in that game, Paul MacLean called a timeout with 17 seconds left in the third period with a 6–1 lead. Michel Therrien called Maclean classless while Maclean responded by saying that he was protecting his players from Montreal's dirty play in that game.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ottawasun.com/2015/04/12/a-look-back-at-the-2013-series-between-sens-and-habs|title=A look back at the 2013 series between Sens and Habs|last=Brennan|first=Don|date=April 12, 2015|newspaper=Ottawa Sun|accessdate=August 8, 2015}}</ref> The underdog Senators eventually won the series 4–1.
Despite the Devils' overall playoff superiority since 1990, the first three playoff series between these teams were all Rangers victories. The first series occurred in the spring of [[1992]], when the [[Presidents' Trophy]] champion Rangers survived a seven game series.
 
[[2015 Stanley Cup playoffs|Two years later]], the rivalry was renewed in another playoff series. In game one, Montreal's [[P. K. Subban]] slashed Ottawa's [[Mark Stone]] — breaking his wrist — and Subban was later ejected.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/sports/hockey/nhl/mark-stone-suffers-fractured-wrist-from-p-k-subban-slash-1.3035802 |title=Mark Stone suffers fractured wrist from P.K. Subban slash|last=Harrison|first=Doug|publisher=CBC/Radio-Canada|date=April 16, 2015|website=CBC.ca|accessdate=July 30, 2015}}</ref> Senators' coach [[Dave Cameron (ice hockey)|Dave Cameron]] called the slash vicious and said that Subban deserved a suspension.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/04/nhl-canadiens-pk-subban-ejected-for-slash-on-mark-stone |title=Senators coach makes threat after P.K. Subban's atrocious slash|last=Brehm|first=Mike|website=FTW.USAToday.com|date=April 15, 2015|publisher=For The Win|accessdate=August 8, 2015}}</ref> Ottawa's [[Clarke MacArthur]] called it a lumberjack slash, and Mark Stone said that he was being targeted all game. Meanwhile, Michel Therrien said that Subban did not deserve to be ejected and should have only gotten a minor penalty. The Canadiens won that game 4–3. The Montreal Canadiens won games two and three in overtime. Riding a 3–0 lead in the series, the Canadiens saw Ottawa win the next two games, before closing the series in game six with a 2–0 victory in Ottawa.
The rivalry's most famous moments are centered around the [[1994]] conference finals, a series that would become one of the greatest in league history.{{fact}} Although both teams were the top point-getters in 1994 (Rangers 112, Devils 106), the story entering the series was the Rangers 6-0 record against New Jersey that regular season. However, all ideas of a quick series were dashed after Game 1, a 2-1 double [[overtime (hockey)|overtime]] victory sealed by the Devils' [[Stephane Richer]]. The Rangers routed the Devils 4-0 in Game 2, and used a double overtime goal by [[Stephane Matteau]] to take a 2-1 lead after Game 3. After dropping Games 4 and 5, the Rangers faced elimination going to New Jersey for Game 6. Prior to the game, Rangers captain [[Mark Messier]] guaranteed a victory in Game 6 at the Meadowlands; with the Rangers down 0-2 to the Devils, Messier scored a hat trick to tie the series at 3-3 and send it back to New York for Game 7. In Game 7, thanks to another [[Stephane Matteau|Matteau]] goal in double overtime the Rangers won the series and later the [[Stanley Cup]]. Interestingly, the first six games were won by the team that lost that respective game in 1992. That trend was reversed when the Rangers won Game 7.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Montreal leads the current Ottawa Senators in the regular season series 84–66–5–16, while Ottawa leads 6–5 in the playoff record.
The Rangers, led by Messier and [[Wayne Gretzky]], also eliminated the Devils in the [[1997]] playoffs before losing to the Flyers in the conference finals. However, New Jersey was limited to five goals in the five game series, including two [[shutout]] losses.
 
====Montreal Canadiens vs. Toronto Maple Leafs====
The Devils dominated New York during the regular season in the late 1990s and early 2000s. At one point, the Devils had an unbeaten streak against New York, going 15-0-8 between [[February 17]], [[1997]] and [[March 31]], [[2001]] - a streak spanning four years.
{{main|Canadiens–Maple Leafs rivalry}}
[[File:HabsvLeafs2.JPG|thumb|A game between the Canadiens and Maple Leafs in March 1938]]
The Canadiens–Maple Leafs rivalry is the longest-running in NHL history. From [[1943–44 NHL season|1943]] to [[1978–79 NHL season|1979]], the two teams met each other in the playoffs 15 times, and faced off in five Stanley Cup Finals. While the on-ice competition is fierce, the Leafs–Habs rivalry is symbolic of the rivalry between Canada's two largest cities: [[Toronto]] and [[Montreal]], and by extension its two major linguistic groups, [[Languages of Canada|anglophones and francophones]] and their status as hubs for [[English Canada]] and [[French Canada]], respectively.
 
The rivalry is illustrated in the iconic [[Roch Carrier]] short story "[[The Hockey Sweater]]". Published in 1979, it recalls an incident from his boyhood in 1946, [[Sainte-Justine, Quebec]], as a childhood Canadiens fan whose mother mistakenly buys him a Toronto Maple Leafs sweater to wear in his neighbourhood hockey games. It remains a timeless favourite in Canadian literature.<ref name="Gazette30th">{{cite news |last=McGillis |first=Ian |date=28 November 2014 |title=The Hockey Sweater as Timeless as the Game Itself |url=https://montrealgazette.com/entertainment/books/books-the-hockey-sweater-as-timeless-as-the-game-itself |work=Montreal Gazette |access-date=24 April 2015}}</ref>
At the end of the [[2005-06 NHL season|2005-06 season]], the Devils had won 11 straight games - the second such streak of the season - and capped off the run by winning the [[Atlantic Division (NHL)|Atlantic Division]] in comeback fashion against the [[Montreal Canadiens]], a division win made all the more exciting by the fact that the Devils had been 19 points out of the lead just months prior, and many thought the team wouldn't make the playoffs. Meanwhile, the Rangers had the division lead for most of the latter part of the season, but fell victim to a losing skid as the season came to a close. As fate would have it, the red-hot Devils met the ice-cold Rangers, and the result was a four-game sweep by New Jersey over their cross-river rivals for the first time ever.
 
Notably, the Canadiens and the Maple Leafs have won the most Stanley Cups in the NHL, with 24 and 13, respectively. As a result of their success, they have the two largest fanbases in the entire league – both teams have an influx of visiting fans in their home arenas when they play each other. However, neither team has won the cup since the 1990s when Montreal won the cup in 1993, and Toronto in 1967.
Some New Jersey Devils fans also have a cheer that is yelled and whistled at every game.
In response to the "[[Denis Potvin#.22Potvin Sucks.21.22|Potvin Sucks]]" chant of Rangers fans against the Islanders, the Devils fans at the [[Continental Airlines Arena]] cheer "Rangers Suck." This chant, just like the Potvin chant being heard whether the Rangers are playing the Islanders or not, is heard at nearly every Devils game.{{fact}}<!-- whole paragraph -->
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Montreal leads the regular season series 367–303–88–14 with a 46–32 playoff record against Toronto.
This rivalry was satirized in the [[Seinfeld]] episode [[The Face Painter]] in which [[David Puddy]], a hard-core Devils fan, paints his face red at a game at the Garden to the embarrassment of [[Jerry Seinfeld (character)|Jerry]], [[Cosmo Kramer|Kramer]], and [[Elaine Benes|Elaine]].
 
===Metropolitan Division===
==Islanders-Rangers Rivalry==
The basic structure of the [[Metropolitan Division]] dates to the [[1974–75 NHL season|1974]] formation of the [[Patrick Division]], which from 1981 onwards would have all its teams in the [[Mid-Atlantic States]]. It became the Atlantic Division (not the same as the current Atlantic Division) in 1993, and then the Metropolitan Division in [[2013–14 NHL season|2013]]. The Metropolitan division boasts several of the NHL's longest and most storied rivalries.
The '''Islanders-Rangers Rivalry''' was established when the [[National Hockey League|NHL]] awarded a second franchise in the [[New York metropolitan area]]. With the impending start of the [[World Hockey Association]] in the fall of [[1972-73 WHA season|1972]], the upstart league had plans to place a team in the new [[Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum]] in [[Nassau County, New York|Nassau County]]. The [[National Hockey League]] did not want the competition in the nation's largest metro area,{{verify source}} so despite having expanded two years before, the NHL awarded franchises to [[Atlanta Flames|Atlanta]] and [[Long Island]]. The fledgling [[New York Islanders]] had an extra burden to pay in the form of a $4 million territorial fee to the nearby [[New York Rangers]]. The Islanders and Rangers, unlike New York's [[MLB]] and [[NFL]] teams, play in the same division of the same conference. As a result, their rivalry is more pronounced because the teams play each other in important division games during the regular season.
 
====Battle of New York: New York Islanders vs. New York Rangers====
In 1975, the Islanders made their first trip to the NHL playoffs, facing the established Rangers in a best-of-three first-round series. After splitting the first two games, the Islanders won Game 3, and the series, when [[J.P. Parise]] scored 11 seconds into overtime. The teams met again in the 1979 playoffs; this time the underdog Rangers were victorious, eliminating the heavily favoured Islanders in 6 games and earning a spot in the Stanley Cup finals. This was particularily memorable as it continued the Islander's reputation for playoff "chokes" despite finishing [[Presidents' Trophy|first in the league]] during the regular season.
{{main|Islanders–Rangers rivalry}}
The Islanders–Rangers rivalry, also unofficially known as the "Battle of New York", is unique among New York City's major league sports, as the Islanders and Rangers are in the same conference and division, guaranteeing plenty of matchups – similar to the [[National Basketball Association]]'s [[Brooklyn Nets]] and [[New York Knicks]], who between 2015 and 2020 also shared arenas with the Islanders and Rangers, respectively. [[Major League Baseball]]'s [[New York Yankees]] and [[New York Mets]] are in different [[Sports league|leagues]], as are the [[National Football League]]'s [[New York Jets]] and [[New York Giants]], so the only meeting opportunities are during inter-league or championship games. The games are often characterized by more fights in the stands than on the ice. The [[New York Islanders]] originally entered the league as the "step sister" of the New York Rangers, but their four straight Stanley Cups in the early 1980s generated a fierce rivalry between the teams and fan bases.
 
====Battle of Pennsylvania: Philadelphia Flyers vs. Pittsburgh Penguins====
The teams also met in the playoffs every year from 1981-1984; the Islanders won each series by margins of 4-0, 4-2, 4-2 and 3-2 enroute to 4 finals and three Stanley Cups (in addition to their 1980 win to make it four championships and 5 finals in a row). The closeness of the 1984 series led it to be nicknamed the "Battle of New York".{{fact}} In the 1990's, the teams met twice, with the Rangers winning 4-1 in 1990, and sweeping the Islanders 4-0 in 1994, en route to winning their first Stanley Cup since 1940.
{{main|Flyers–Penguins rivalry}}
The Battle of Pennsylvania, which is the Philadelphia Flyers–[[Pittsburgh Penguins]] rivalry, began in [[1967 NHL expansion|1967]] when the teams were introduced into the NHL's "Next Six" expansion wave. The rivalry exists due to divisional alignment and geographic ___location, as both teams play in the state of [[Pennsylvania]]. In their [[2012 Stanley Cup playoffs|2012 Eastern Conference quarterfinals]] matchup, the rivalry strengthened with several on and off-ice incidents resulting in suspensions and fines. Philadelphia took a 3–0 series lead, and by the fourth game the two teams had combined to score an NHL-record 45 goals. The Flyers ultimately prevailed in game six, by which point the two teams had combined for 309 penalty minutes. At times, the rivalry has been considered by some to be the most heated in the league.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://deadspin.com/5985879/flyers-penguins-is-the-nhls-best-rivalry |title=Flyers-Penguins Is The NHL's Best Rivalry|last=Petchesky|first=Barry|publisher=G/O Media|date=February 21, 2013|website=Deadspin.com|accessdate=March 3, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/flyers/news/rival-in-focus-pittsburgh-penguins/c-320227172|title=Rival in Focus: Pittsburgh Penguins|last=Meltzer|first=Bill|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=January 12, 2021|website=NHL.com|accessdate=July 6, 2023}}</ref>
 
====Battle of the Hudson River: New Jersey Devils vs. New York Rangers====
With both teams' fans visiting "enemy territory" for games, organized shouting matches and fights break out in the stands. Fans will direct derisive chants at their rivals regardless of whether the teams are actually playing. At each home game, Ranger fans engage in perhaps their most popular chant: humming the song "Let's Go Band" and punctuating it with "Potvin sucks", referring to retired Islander [[Hockey Hall of Fame|Hall of Famer]] [[Denis Potvin]]. Rangers fans also occasionally bring out the chant "Beat your wife, Potvin, beat your wife", a reference to allegations that Potvin has committed domestic abuse.
{{main|Devils–Rangers rivalry}}
[[File:Averyrule.jpg|thumb|Rangers forward [[Sean Avery]] attempting to screen Devils goaltender [[Martin Brodeur]] during game three of the 2008 playoffs]]
The Devils–Rangers rivalry<ref name="RangersDevils"/> exists between two teams in the New York metropolitan area. The two teams are called "cross-river rivals."<ref name="RangersDevils">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/13/sports/hockey/13rangers.html|title=Rangers Dig Themselves a Hole, and Devils Push Them In|first=Lynn|last=Zinser|newspaper=New York Times|date=December 13, 2008|page=D5|accessdate=July 6, 2023}}</ref> This is because [[Madison Square Garden]] in [[Midtown Manhattan]], where the Rangers play, is less than ten miles and across the Hudson River from the [[Prudential Center]] in downtown [[Newark, New Jersey|Newark]] (and previously, the [[Meadowlands Arena]] in [[East Rutherford, New Jersey|East Rutherford]]), the home arena of the Devils. Travel between both arenas is easily accomplished by road (usually through the [[Lincoln Tunnel]]), rapid transit (on the [[Port Authority Trans-Hudson|Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH)]] train) and rail (along the [[Northeast Corridor]]). The teams have met seven times in the playoffs, with the Rangers winning four times.
 
====Battle of the Turnpikes: New Jersey Devils vs. Philadelphia Flyers====
Islander fans taunted Rangers fans for many years with the chant "[[Nineteen Forty]]", referring to the Rangers having the longest drought without winning the [[Stanley Cup]], until the Rangers finally won in 1994. For a period in the late '90s and early 2000s, Islanders fans would punctuate the "[[Chicken Dance]]" with chants of "the Rangers suck", but in recent years the song has not been played. [[Theoren Fleury]] used the chant as an excuse for flapping his arms to taunt Islanders [[Enforcer (hockey)|enforcer]] [[Eric Cairns]]. Islanders fans also sing a song to the tune of "If You're Happy and You Know It", replacing the standard lyrics with "If you know the Rangers suck, clap your hands."
{{main|Devils–Flyers rivalry}}
The rivalry between the [[New Jersey Devils]] and [[Philadelphia Flyers]] is very intense in both [[New Jersey]] and [[Pennsylvania]], sometimes being referred to as the "'''Battle of the Turnpikes'''."<ref>{{cite news|last=LaPointe|first=Joe|date=May 18, 2000|title=ON HOCKEY; Rough Stuff Equals Good Stuff|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/05/18/sports/on-hockey-rough-stuff-equals-good-stuff.html?mcubz=2|newspaper=The New York Times|accessdate=May 28, 2017}}</ref> The Devils play in [[Newark, New Jersey]], which can be accessed by using the [[New Jersey Turnpike]] and the Flyers play in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which is about twenty-five miles from the Pennsylvania Turnpike. The two turnpikes connect over the Delaware River on the border of Pennsylvania and New Jersey near [[Northeast Philadelphia]] and [[Burlington, New Jersey]]. In addition, the Flyers practice in [[Voorhees Township, New Jersey]], and since their Stanley Cup championships of {{scfy|1974}} and {{scfy|1975}}, many members of those Cup-winning teams (as well as other Flyers alumni) have lived in South Jersey. Since the late-80's, battle lines were drawn, with the Flyers maintaining a significant territory in southern New Jersey, particularly around the Philadelphia metropolitan area, while the Devils mainly dominate northern New Jersey and little fan bases spread across the south. To some Devils fans, it has always been a battle for territory and respect.
 
Since the conferences were realigned and renamed prior to the {{NHL Year|1993}} season, the two teams have won the two highest numbers of division titles (the Devils nine, the Flyers six). Together, the two teams' 15 division championships account for almost all of the 18 total Atlantic Division titles.
One well-known incident at an Islanders/[[Philadelphia Flyers]] game in 2003 turned an innocent holiday promotion at Nassau Coliseum into a playful on-ice brawl between Rangers and Islanders fans in Santa suits. When the Isles and the Rangers play at the Coliseum, Rangers fans call it their second home or "[[Madison Square Garden|Garden East]]", as they sometimes make up 50% or more of the fans in attendance.
 
====New York Islanders vs. Philadelphia Flyers====
As of 2005, the Rangers hold a slight lead in the all-time series with 89 wins, 85 losses (including overtime and shootout losses), and 19 ties. In the playoffs, however, the Islanders hold the lead with a 20-19 record, and have won five of the eight playoff series between the two teams.
{{Main|Flyers–Islanders rivalry}}
The rivalry takes place in the Metropolitan Division. The Flyers and Islanders have met five times in the playoffs, with four of the meetings coming between 1975 and 1987. Their most notable playoff series was the [[1980 Stanley Cup Final]].
 
====New York Islanders vs. Washington Capitals====
Since 2001, the [[Pat LaFontaine]] Trophy has been awarded to the winner of the Rangers-Islanders regular season series. The winning team receives a trophy to parade around for their fans and bragging rights for another year, while the losing team must make a $50,000 contribution to the charity of Pat LaFontaine's choice.
{{main|Capitals–Islanders rivalry}}
The rivalry takes place in the Metropolitan Division. The Capitals and Islanders were heavy rivals during the 1980s and early 1990s.
 
====New York Rangers vs. Philadelphia Flyers====
==Bruins-Canadiens Rivalry==
{{main|Flyers–Rangers rivalry}}
The '''Bruins-Canadiens Rivalry''' is a rivalry in the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL) between the [[Boston Bruins]] and the [[Montreal Canadiens]], two teams that are considered a part of the [[Original Six]]. It is considered one of the most bitter in the NHL, particularly by Bruins fans, and especially as the Bruins and Canadiens have played each other more times than any other two currently existing teams in NHL history. The rivalry is one sided, with the Canadiens winning 3/4 of [[List of Boston Bruins-Montreal Canadiens playoff series|head to head playoff series]] and all of the finals series, but the Bruins have gotten some memorable shots in. As of the start of the 2005-06 NHL season, the Bruins have won some 250 of these matches, with the Canadiens winning over 310 of them, with 105 other games between the two teams ending in ties, going back all the way to the Bruins' first NHL season of 1924-25.
[[File:Rangers vs Flyers 2007 1.jpg|thumb|right|Skaters from the Rangers and Flyers prepare to face off during a game, January 2007|upright]]
The Flyers–Rangers rivalry is one of the most well-known of the league. They have met 11 times in the Stanley Cup playoffs, with the Flyers winning six times, and have been division rivals since the {{NHL Year|1974}} season.
 
There is a long-standing bitter rivalry between the sports fans from [[Sports in the New York metropolitan area|New York City]] and [[Sports in Philadelphia|Philadelphia]], which are approximately two hours apart by car,<ref>{{cite news|title=Mets Can't Even Pick a Good Fight|date=April 4, 2004|first=David|last=Waldstein|page=Sports.9|newspaper=The Star-Ledger|quote=You've got the proximity, a natural rivalry between the cities, and there are fans of both clubs in Jersey.}}</ref> also seen in the [[Mets–Phillies rivalry]] in [[Major League Baseball]], the [[Philadelphia 76ers]] and the [[New York Knicks]] in the [[National Basketball Association]], and the [[Eagles–Giants rivalry]] in the [[National Football League]].<ref>{{cite news|title=A City's Hopes Fly High on the Wings of Eagles|date=January 5, 2001|first=Peter|last=Mucha|newspaper=The Philadelphia Inquirer|page=A1|quote=New York teams&mdash;the Mets, Rangers, Giants and Knicks&mdash;rank among Philadelphia's most loathed rivals.}}</ref> Games between the two teams at [[Madison Square Garden]] and [[Xfinity Mobile Arena]] are often very intense, hard-hitting affairs, as each home crowd does its best to create an unfriendly, sometimes volatile atmosphere for any visiting-team fans.
In the 1950s, the Canadiens would defeat the Bruins in the Stanley Cup finals three times. Also during the 1952 playoff semi-finals, [[Maurice Richard]] was knocked out in the seventh game but returned to score the series winning goal. One of the most famous NHL photos is the one of Richard and Bruins goaltender "[[Sugar]]" Jim Henry shaking hands after the conclusion of the series; Richard has a cut above his eyebrow while Henry has a black eye.
 
====New York Rangers vs. Pittsburgh Penguins====
On [[March 13]], [[1954-55 NHL season|1955]], [[Montreal]] superstar Richard was given a [[Penalty (hockey)|match penalty]] and suspended for the remainder of the season for deliberately injuring [[Hal Laycoe]], in a game against the Bruins. Laycoe had moments earlier high-sticked Richard in the head but no penalty was called. When Richard saw blood, he skated towards Laycoe who dropped his gloves to fight. The incident was exacerbated by Richard repeatedly breaking away to attack Laycoe with hockey sticks, and then assaulting linesman [[Cliff Thompson]] who attempted to restrain him. The suspension prevented Montreal from winning the Stanley Cup and personally cost Richard the [[Art Ross Trophy|league scoring title]]. It went to Habs teammate [[Bernie Geoffrion]], who was booed by the [[Montreal]] faithful when he passed Richard for the point lead on the last day. Geoffrion had struggled just to gain recognition of his considerable talents, as [[Gordie Howe]], [[Andy Bathgate]] and Richard were some of the most outstanding players in the [[1950s]] in the NHL.
Both franchises have been part of the same division on four different occasions: with the [[Patrick Division]] from 1981 to 1993, from 1998 to 2013 as part of the [[Atlantic Division (NHL)|Atlantic Division]], since 2013 as part of the [[Metropolitan Division]], and in the 2020–21 season as part of the [[East Division (NHL)|East Division]].
 
The Penguins and Rangers met in eight playoff series, with the Penguins winning five of them. Between [[1989 Stanley Cup playoffs|1989]] and [[1996 Stanley Cup playoffs|1996]], the two teams met thrice in the playoffs. The most memorable of those confrontations came in the [[1992 Stanley Cup playoffs|1992 Patrick Division finals]], in which the Penguins upset the [[Presidents' Trophy]]-winning Rangers in six games en route to winning the second of their back-to-back [[1992 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cups]]. That series was best remembered for Lemieux breaking his left wrist following a controversial slashing penalty from [[Adam Graves]] in game two,<ref>{{YouTube|title=5/5/92 - Mario Lemieux Slashed|id=VwgAV2djXXg}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Sell|first=Dave|date=1992-05-09|title=GRAVES SUSPENDED 4 GAMES|language=en-US|newspaper=[[Washington Post]]|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1992/05/09/graves-suspended-4-games/a5934b87-6286-4957-967b-4dc6dc2ce168/|access-date=2021-07-26}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Lapointe|first=Joe|date=1992-05-07|title=HOCKEY; Lemieux Is Sidelined Amid Slash Controversy|work=[[The New York Times]]|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/05/07/sports/hockey-lemieux-is-sidelined-amid-slash-controversy.html|access-date=2021-07-20}}</ref> and [[Ron Francis]]' overtime winner in game four.<ref>{{YouTube|title=1992 Patrick Division Final Game 4 Rangers VS Penguins|id=RkBetCrJTZw}}</ref>
While the teams played each other often, the teams became truly pronounced rivals in the [[1970s]], when both were yearly contenders. In 1971, despite the Bruins finishing first in the league and shattering many NHL scoring records, they lost in the first round to the Canadiens in seven games; the pivotal moment was game two when the Bruins squandered a 5-1 lead to lose 5-7. This ended a potential Bruins dynasty, although they would win the Stanley Cup the following season. [[Don Cherry]]'s "Lunch Pail Gang" in 1977 and 1978 would lose both finals to the Canadiens. Habs fans remember the rough tactics that Cherry's players used against [[Guy Lafleur]], whose head was swaved in bandages at the end of the 1978 series after repeated highsticking from Bruins players.
 
During the early 21st century (2000s and 2010s), the Penguins and Rangers met four times in the playoffs, with each team winning two series each. Both teams, led by [[Sidney Crosby]], [[Evgeni Malkin]], and [[Marc-André Fleury|Marc-Andre Fleury]] (Pittsburgh), [[Ryan Callahan]], [[Chris Kreider]], and [[Henrik Lundqvist]] (New York Rangers) respectively, after their [[2008 Stanley Cup playoffs|2008 playoff meeting]], they met in three consecutive postseason series from 2014 to 2016. In [[2014 Stanley Cup playoffs|2014]], the Rangers came back from a 3–1 series deficit to win the series in seven games, en route to making the [[2014 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup Final]]. In both [[2015 Stanley Cup playoffs|2015]] and [[2016 Stanley Cup playoffs|2016]], the two teams exchanged five-game first round series victories, with the Penguins eventually taking home the [[2016 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]] in the latter year.
The seminal moment in the history of the rivalry was probably Game 7 of the [[1978-79 NHL season|1979]] Semi-Finals, (the terms Wales/Campbell Conference Finals was in use during 1982-93 NHL playoffs). After a rough and tumble series in which saw both sides win their home games so far, the Bruins were ahead in the closing four minutes thanks to a goal by [[Rick Middleton]] which [[Ken Dryden]] would later remark as the "most beautiful goal that he ever let in".
 
In [[2022 Stanley Cup playoffs|2022]], both teams met again in the first round. The Penguins obtained a 3–1 series lead, except the Rangers again came back to win in seven games. This was the second time the Penguins blew a 3–1 lead against the Rangers, as well as the fourth time in franchise history that the Penguins have done so.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://triblive.com/sports/tim-benz-blown-leads-result-in-blown-series-as-penguins-season-ends-in-new-york/|title=Blown leads result in blown series as Penguins season ends in New York|date=16 May 2022|last=Benz|first=Tim|publisher=Trib Total Media|website=TribLive.com|accessdate=June 21, 2022}}</ref>
However, after the Boston bench was charged with a minor penalty for "[[Penalty (hockey)|Too Many Men on the Ice]]," [[Guy Lafleur]] scored the tying goal on the ensuing power play, and Montreal won in [[overtime]]. The win allowed Montreal to advance to the [[Stanley Cup]] finals to win for the fourth consecutive year.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, New York leads the regular season series 142–121–23–17, while Pittsburgh leads 27–17 in the playoff record.
The rivalry continued throughout the 1980s, mainly due to a division-oriented playoff format that seemed to pair the teams every year. In 1988, the Bruins finally won a playoff series against Canadiens in the latter's [[Montreal Forum]] on the way to advancing to the Stanley Cup championship. The next year, the Canadiens beat the Bruins on their trip to the finals. In 1990, the Bruins finished off the Canadiens for the first time in the [[Boston Garden]] since 1943 and would also win the 1991 and 1992 playoff match-ups against the Canadiens, the last one being a 4-0 sweep. Part of the Bruins' victories over the Canadiens was due to goaltender [[Andy Moog]] who was afterwards known as the "greatest Hab killer" that the Bruins ever had. Ironically, Moog signed with the Canadiens for the 1997-998 season and helped them to their first playoff series win in several seasons.
 
====New York Rangers vs. Washington Capitals====
In 1994, the Canadiens were the defending champions but they were knocked out in the first round by the Bruins. Nonetheless, that seven game series was notable in the eyes of [[Montreal]] fans as superstar net minder [[Patrick Roy]] came down with appendicitis and missed game three. Roy convinced doctors to let him return for Game Four and led the Canadiens to a 5-2 victory, stopping 39 shots[http://www.hockeygoalies.org/bio/roy.html].
The rivalry takes place in the Metropolitan Division. The two have been rivals since the Capitals joined the [[Patrick Division]] in [[1979–80 NHL season|1979]]. The teams have had batches of playoff series such as three series between 1990–1994 and five series between 2009 and 2015. They first met in the [[1986 Stanley Cup playoffs|1986 Patrick Division finals]], which New York won in six games. Their first batch of frequent playoff series started in [[1990 Stanley Cup playoffs|1990]] with the Capitals defeating the Rangers in five games. The Capitals defeated them in the [[1991 Stanley Cup playoffs|following season's]] Patrick Division semifinals in six games. During their [[1994 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup run]], the Rangers defeated the Capitals in five games in the conference quarterfinals in [[1994 Stanley Cup playoffs|1994]]. The two teams did not meet in the playoffs until [[2009 Stanley Cup playoffs|2009]], which Washington defeated New York in seven games. The two teams met again in [[2011 Stanley Cup playoffs|2011]], with the Capitals emerging victorious in five games. The next three series were won by New York, all in seven games, in [[2013 Stanley Cup playoffs|2012]], [[2013 Stanley Cup playoffs|2013]], and [[2015 Stanley Cup playoffs|2015]] with the latter series being a 3–1 series comeback.
 
On May 3, 2021, when Capitals forward [[Tom Wilson (ice hockey)|Tom Wilson]] punched Rangers forward [[Pavel Buchnevich]] for being aggressive toward his teammate, goaltender [[Vítek Vaněček|Vitek Vanecek]]. He also injured forward [[Artemi Panarin]] after a scrum. Wilson was fined $5,000, the maximum allowable under the NHL's [[collective bargaining agreement]] (CBA).<ref>{{cite web|title=Wilson fined maximum for actions in Capitals game against Rangers|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/tom-wilson-fine-for-roughing-pavel-buchnevich/c-324337768|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=May 4, 2021|accessdate=July 24, 2023|website=NHL.com}}</ref> The Rangers later called [[George Parros]], the head of the NHL Department of Player Safety, unfit to continue serving the role.<ref>{{cite web|title=New York Rangers' statement calls Tom Wilson's non-suspension "a dereliction of duty" by NHL's George Parros|url=https://thecomeback.com/nhl/new-york-rangers-call-tom-wilson-non-suspension-dereliction-of-duty-george-parros.html|last=Bucholtz|first=Andrew|publisher=www.TheComeback.com|date=May 4, 2021|accessdate=July 24, 2023|website=TheComeback.com}}</ref> Two days later, on May 5, a line brawl ensued after the actions of the game precedent. Six misconduct penalties (fighting majors) were placed in 4:14 of the first period.<ref>{{cite web|author=Ben Morse|title=Huge brawl mars hockey game as controversy continues|url=https://edition.cnn.com/2021/05/06/sport/tom-wilson-new-york-rangers-washington-capitals-nhl-spt-intl/index.html|date=May 7, 2021|accessdate=May 8, 2021|website=CNN}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|date=2021-05-06|title=Fist Period: Caps, Rangers fight right out of gate|url=https://www.espn.com/nhl/story/_/id/31396210/new-york-rangers-washington-capitals-square-six-fights-first-period-tom-wilson-controversy-lingers|publisher=ESPN Enterprises Inc.|accessdate=2021-05-08|website=ESPN.com}}</ref> The night after the brawl, on May 6, the Rangers were fined $250,000 by the NHL.<ref>{{cite web|title=Rangers fined $250,000 for comments on Player Safety director Parros|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/league-fines-new-york-rangers-for-comments-about-george-parros/c-324410452|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=May 6, 2021|accessdate=May 8, 2021|website=NHL.com}}</ref> The two teams then met in the [[2024 Stanley Cup playoffs|2024 Eastern Conference first round]], with the Rangers sweeping the Capitals in four games.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Mercogliano |first1=Vince|title=Game 4 takeaways: Rangers complete sweep of Capitals, advance to second round|url=https://www.lohud.com/story/sports/nhl/rangers/2024/04/28/game-4-takeaways-rangers-complete-sweep-of-caps-advance-to-2nd-round/73469043007/|newspaper=The Journal News|accessdate=April 29, 2024|date=April 28, 2024}}</ref>
The Bruins were defeated in both the [[2001-02 NHL season|2002]] and the [[2003-04 NHL season|2004]] [[Stanley Cup|Stanley Cup Playoffs]] in the first round by the Canadiens, despite the Bruins being seeded higher, which contributed to the animosity.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Washington leads the regular season series 120–101–18–8, while New York leads 31–28 in the playoff record.
The recent signing of former Bruins star left-wing [[Sergei Samsonov]] to the Canadiens, for play starting in the 2006-07 NHL season, looks to possibly warm up the rivalry for the near future. Samsonov's first goals for the Canadiens, against his former team came in a game on [[December 12]], [[2006]]. He scored two goals, one each in the second and third period of the game played in the Canadiens' home rink that night (a 4-3 victory for the Canadiens), to do his part in resuming North America's oldest professional hockey rivalry.
 
====Philadelphia Flyers vs. Washington Capitals====
==Blues-Blackhawks Rivalry==
{{main|Capitals–Flyers rivalry}}
Not unlike the baseball rivalry between the [[St. Louis Cardinals]] and the [[Chicago Cubs]], the [[St. Louis Blues (hockey)|St. Louis Blues]] and [[Chicago Blackhawks]] share an intense hatred of each other. Separated by 300 miles and at one time owned by the same man ([[Arthur Wirtz]], who had a stake in the [[St. Louis Arena]], where the 'Hawks farm club, the [[St. Louis Braves]], played before the Blues' entered the NHL in [[1967-68 NHL season|1967]]), the clubs have been in the same division (Western 1970-74, Smythe 1974-1981, Norris 1981-1993, Central 1993-present) since 1970. The matchups were at a hilt in the early '90s, when both teams had well-known stars such as [[Denis Savard]], [[Chris Chelios]] and [[Ed Belfour]] for the Hawks and [[Brett Hull]], [[Adam Oates]] and [[Curtis Joseph]] for the Blues and played in old arenas ([[St. Louis Arena|The Arena]] and [[Chicago Stadium]]) that were regarded as two of the loudest in the league.
[[File:Caps-Flyers (January 17, 2010) - 12 (4282874211).jpg|thumb|upright|Capitals winger [[Alex Ovechkin]] prepares to take a shot against Flyers goaltender [[Ray Emery]], January 2010]]
The Flyers and Capitals have been rivals through the 1980s, dating back to their days in the [[Patrick Division]]. In 1984, [[Mike Gartner]] lead the Capitals to a three-game sweep of the Flyers in the [[1984 Stanley Cup playoffs|1984 Patrick Division semifinals]] for the Capitals' first ever playoff series victory, and in the process ending the careers of [[Bobby Clarke]] and [[Bill Barber]], the last two players of the Broad Street Bullies era. The Capitals then trailed the Flyers three games to one in [[1988 Stanley Cup playoffs|1988 Patrick Division semifinals]]. Washington would rally to win the next three games to take the series in seven games capped off by [[Dale Hunter]]'s overtime goal in game seven. The following year, [[Tim Kerr]] and [[Ron Hextall]] helped the Flyers take down the division champion Capitals in the [[1989 Stanley Cup playoffs|1989 Patrick Division semifinals]], exacting revenge for their 1988 defeat.
 
In the 2000s, the rivalry was reignited by the rebirth of the [[Alexander Ovechkin]]-led Capitals, whom the Flyers eliminated in the [[2008 Stanley Cup playoffs|2008 Eastern Conference quarterfinals]] in overtime on a power play goal by [[Joffrey Lupul]] in the seventh game, and avoid squandering a 3–1 series advantage like in 1988.<ref>{{cite news|last=Jackson|first=James H.|date=February 11, 1991|title=Capitals fight past Flyers, 5-2 game has 294 penalty minutes|url=https://www.baltimoresun.com/1991/02/11/capitals-fight-past-flyers-5-2-game-has-294-penalty-minutes/|newspaper=The Baltimore Sun|access-date=December 11, 2016}}</ref> Since the league-wide realignment in 2013, the rivalry between the teams has started to intensify. During a regular season game in 2013, there was an all-out line-brawl between the two teams. Washington would win the game 7–0. Both teams met in the [[2016 Stanley Cup playoffs|2016 Eastern Conference first round]], with the Capitals winning the series four games to two after winning the first three games.
Possibly the greatest moment in the rivalry was the 1993 Norris Division Semifinal: Chicago had won the division handily but were swept by the Blues, winning the series on an overtime goal. Belfour, who said he had been interfered with on the goal by [[Brett Hull]], went on to cause thousands of dollars' worth of damage to the visiting locker room at the Arena, breaking a coffeemaker, hot tub and television among other objects. To this day Belfour refuses to appear in regular-season games in St. Louis: the only exception coming in 1999 when he replaced [[Roman Turek]] for the [[Dallas Stars]] in the 3rd period of a 4-4 game, and only after Turek had allowed four unanswered goals. When he was spotted skating onto the ice, the [[Scottrade Center|Savvis Center]] crowd greeted him with the "Bellll-foooour" chant, first popularized in the '93 series. Ironically, Hull and "The Eagle" were Dallas teammates in 1998-99, and both critical in the Stars' narrow Cup win that summer, which came at the expense of the [[Buffalo Sabres]] and Belfour's former teammate [[Dominik Hasek]].
 
====Pittsburgh Penguins vs. Washington Capitals====
Although the Hawks have had a large string of bad fortune under [[Craig Hartsburg]], [[Dirk Graham]] and [[Bob Pulford]], keeping them out of the playoffs in recent years, whilst the Blues had made the playoffs for 25 successive years (a streak ending with the 2005-06 season), the Blues and Blackhawks did meet in the 2002 Western Conference Quarterfinals. The Blues won the series 4 games to 1.
{{main|Capitals–Penguins rivalry}}
These two teams played in the Patrick Division together from 1981 to 1993, and have been part of the Metro Division since [[2013–14 NHL season|2013]]. In total, the two teams have met 11 times in the playoffs. Despite trailing in nine of the eleven series, Pittsburgh has won all but the 1994 Eastern Conference quarterfinals and the 2018 Eastern Conference second round. The teams first met in the 1991 Patrick Division finals, when the Penguins defeated the Capitals in five en route to capturing the [[Stanley Cup]]. In fact, all six Stanley Cups championship seasons combined between Washington and Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh has 5 of them), have involved a round against the other team. The rivalry was intense during the early 2000s when the Penguins beat the Capitals in the first round in consecutive seasons ([[1999–2000 NHL season|1999–2000]], [[2000–01 NHL season|2000–01]]), and seemed to amplify more after the trade of [[Jaromír Jágr|Jaromir Jagr]].
[[File:Caps-Pens- Game 1 (2009 NHL Playoffs) - 13 (3494716673).jpg|thumb|An altercation between the Penguins and the Capitals during game one of the 2009 playoffs]]
More recently, with the drafting and emergence of [[Alexander Ovechkin]] in Washington, and [[Sidney Crosby]] in Pittsburgh, the rivalry heated up again, with controversial comments that [[Alexander Semin]] made about Crosby in the media and physical altercations taking place between Ovechkin and Malkin during games. One of the best series to date between the teams was the [[2009 Stanley Cup playoffs|2009 Eastern Conference semifinals]], in which the Capitals took a 2–0 series lead before being defeated in seven games, ending with a 6–2 game seven loss at the [[Capital One Arena|Verizon Center]]. Just like in 1991 and 1992, the Penguins defeated the Capitals in the playoffs en route to the [[2009 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]]. The two teams faced off at the [[2011 NHL Winter Classic]] hosted in Pittsburgh at [[Heinz Field]], with the Capitals emerging victorious 3–1, and a hit in the game resulted in Crosby missing nearly all of two seasons with concussion-related issues.<ref>{{cite news|last=Svrluga|first=Barry|date=November 20, 2013|title=On hockey: Washington Capitals-Pittsburgh Penguins rivalry continues, with a new feel|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/on-hockey-washington-capitals-pittsburgh-penguins-rivalry-continues-with-a-new-feel/2013/11/20/1a1ac7a0-5259-11e3-a7f0-b790929232e1_story.html|newspaper=The Washington Post|accessdate=November 20, 2013}}</ref> Both teams completed their second playoff confrontation in the Ovechkin-Crosby era in the [[2016 Stanley Cup playoffs]] with the Penguins winning in six games, again preceding [[2016 Stanley Cup Final|Pittsburgh's fourth Stanley Cup title]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Mirtle|first=James|date=April 24, 2016|title=Capitals and Penguins open a new chapter in Ovechkin-Crosby rivalry|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/capitals-and-penguins-open-a-new-chapter-in-ovechkin-crosby-rivalry/article29746384/|newspaper=The Globe and Mail|accessdate=April 26, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/penguins-capitals-game-6-recap/c-280628750?tid=280531774|title=Penguins eliminate Capitals with Game 6 OT win|last=Crosby|first=Wes|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=May 10, 2016|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 10, 2016}}</ref> In [[2017 Stanley Cup playoffs|2017]], these two teams met again in the second round. Pittsburgh gained a 3–1 series lead only to see Washington win the next two games. The Penguins shut out the Capitals at [[Capital One Arena|Verizon Center]] in Washington, D.C. to advance to the Eastern Conference finals and eventually the [[2017 Stanley Cup Final|franchise's fifth Stanley Cup]]. The two teams met again in the [[2018 Stanley Cup playoffs]] in the second round for the third consecutive year. The Washington Capitals defeated the Pittsburgh Penguins in six games to advance to the Eastern Conference finals, and eventually win the [[2018 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]].
 
===Interdivisional===
==Battle of [[Alberta]]==
====Boston Bruins vs. New York Rangers====
{{main|Battle of Alberta}}
The NHL's extension of the Boston–New York rivalry – present in the other leagues with the [[Yankees–Red Sox rivalry]], [[Celtics–Knicks rivalry]], [[Giants–Patriots rivalry]] and [[Jets–Patriots rivalry]] – had its peak during the 1970s, but saw a resurgence in the 2010s. In the Original Six era, the teams had six matchups, with the Rangers only winning in 1928 and 1940 – both on the way to a Stanley Cup title. Between 1970 and 1973, where the Rangers' [[GAG line]] and the Bruins led by Bobby Orr and Phil Esposito had strong showings; the teams met three times, with the highest point being the [[1972 Stanley Cup Final]], which the Bruins won in six games. However, the Rangers won in five games in 1973. 40 years passed before the next series between the Bruins and Rangers, and in 2013 the Bruins eliminated the Rangers in five games.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Klein|first1=Jeff Z.|last2=May|first2=Peter|date=May 14, 2013|title=Rangers, Bruins and a Rivalry That Once Raged|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/15/sports/hockey/rangers-and-bruins-renew-a-longtime-playoff-rivalry.html?_r=0|newspaper=The New York Times|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/brad-park-remembers-fierce-rivalry-between-bruins-and-rangers/c-321211560|title=Bruins-Rangers games spark memories of fierce rivalry for Park|last=Stubbs|first=Dave|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=February 9, 2021|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 21, 2022}}</ref>
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Boston leads the all-time regular season series 306–256–97–13 with a 26–19–2 playoff record against the New York Rangers. The Bruins have won seven of 10 playoffs series between the teams.
The '''Battle of Alberta''' is the bitter rivalry between the [[Edmonton Oilers]] and [[Calgary Flames]] of the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL). The 2 teams are based in the cities of [[Edmonton]], the provincial capital of Alberta and [[Calgary]], the province's largest city..
 
==Western Conference==
The Oilers joined the NHL as one of the teams making the switch from the [[World Hockey Association]] in 1979, soon followed by the [[Atlanta Flames]] moving to [[Calgary, Alberta|Calgary]] in 1980, suddenly making the question of who would be #1 in [[Alberta]] pro hockey a hot topic. At first it was the Flames who were the dominant squad (making it to the [[Stanley Cup]] conference final in their first season), but the Oilers were starting to make headlines with their rising star, [[Wayne Gretzky]]. It was the Oilers who became champions first, building an NHL dynasty with a lineup that included legends like [[Grant Fuhr]], [[Paul Coffey]], and [[Mark Messier]].
{{further|East Coast bias}}
There are significantly fewer major rivalries in the NHL's Western Conference, due to this conference being much newer (its predecessor – the West Division – was created in 1967, while the conference was created in 1974) and only one of the conference's teams – the Chicago Blackhawks – predates the conference's creation. Geographically, its teams are generally spread much farther apart than those of the Eastern Conference.
 
===Central Division===
[[Edmonton]] defeated [[Calgary]] in the playoffs in [[1982-83 NHL season|1983]], [[1983-84 NHL season|1984]], [[1987-88 NHL season|1988]], and [[1990-91 NHL season|1991]], winning the [[Stanley Cup]] in 1984, [[1984-85 NHL season|1985]], [[1986-87 NHL season|1987]], 1988, and [[1989-90 NHL season|1990]]. Calgary interrupted Edmonton's bid for a [[Three-peat|third championship]] by beating the latter in the infamous [[1985-86 NHL season|1986]] series. The Flames had surprised the Oilers by taking the two-time defending Cup winners to seven games and the series was decided when Oiler [[James Stephen Smith|Steve Smith]] accidentally deflected the puck in his own net. Afterwards, when ever the Oilers played in Calgary, Flames fans would taunt them about Smith's [[own goal]]. The following season, the Oilers exacted revenge on the Flames to win the championship, and [[Wayne Gretzky]] first handed the Cup to Smith after the former had hoisted it as captain.
The [[Central Division (NHL)|Central Division]] was essentially formed as the [[Norris Division]] in 1974. From 1981 onward, it would have all the [[Central Time Zone]] teams in the US and the [[Eastern Time Zone]] teams not in the Wales Conference. It became the Central Division in 1993.
 
====Chicago Blackhawks vs. Minnesota Wild====
The Flames eventually won the Cup in [[1988-89 NHL season|1989]] with [[Lanny McDonald]], [[Doug Gilmour]] and [[Mike Vernon]] leading them; but they did not have to face the Oilers who were eliminated by the [[Los Angeles Kings]]. The last time the two teams met in the playoffs was in 1991 during the first round, and it is often cited as one of the most exciting playoff series of all time, with the Oilers advancing.
[[File:Chicago Blackhawks vs Minnesota Wild.JPG|thumb|A game between the Blackhawks and Wild in October 2013]]
The Blackhawks–Wild rivalry started when the two teams met in the [[2013 Stanley Cup playoffs|2013 Western Conference quarterfinals]]. The Blackhawks won in five games in that series en route to their fifth [[2013 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]]. The NHL realignment that took place during the 2013 off-season placed [[Chicago Blackhawks|Chicago]] and [[Minnesota Wild|Minnesota]] within the Central Division, further invigorating the rivalry, and also rekindling the Chicago-Minnesota hockey rivalry that died out when the [[Minnesota North Stars]] relocated to Dallas in 1993. However, the two markets have major rivalries in two other sports leagues; the NFL with the [[Bears–Vikings rivalry|Bears–Vikings]] and the [[Twins–White Sox rivalry|Twins–White Sox]] rivalries in MLB.
 
The rivalry between the two hockey teams became even more intense with another playoff meeting between the Blackhawks and the Wild in the [[2014 Stanley Cup playoffs|2014 Western Conference second round]]. The Blackhawks once again turned out victorious, this time winning in six games. In the [[2015 Stanley Cup playoffs|2015 Western Conference second round]], the Blackhawks and the Wild met once again. The Blackhawks won yet again, but this time, in a four-game sweep en route to their sixth [[2015 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]]. The rivalry sparked interest within the NHL, and during the [[60th National Hockey League All-Star Game|2015 All Star]] Weekend in Columbus, the League announced two [[NHL Stadium Series]] games and the [[2016 NHL Winter Classic]]. Game one of the [[2016 NHL Stadium Series]] featured the Blackhawks and the Wild at [[TCF Bank Stadium]] in Minneapolis, Minnesota on February 21, 2016. Minnesota won the game 6–1.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nhl.com/gamecenter/chi-vs-min/2016/02/21/2015020884|title=Wild cruise past Blackhawks in Stadium Series game|last=Morreale |first=Mike G.|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=February 21, 2016|website=NHL.com|access-date=March 3, 2016}}</ref>
With the fortunes of both teams hitting a relative nadir during the 1990s, the rivalry cooled. Both teams were in the spotlight because of their dire financial situation, with experts predicting the demise of all Canadian NHL teams except for the Toronto Maple Leafs. The passions ignited in the 1980s playoff sagas would only make brief appearances during the regular season.
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Minnesota leads the regular season series 57–29–1–5, while Chicago leads 12–3 in the playoffs.
The Flames made the Stanley Cup final in [[2003-04 NHL season|2004]], and the Oilers made the Stanley Cup final in [[2005-06 NHL season|2006]]. Both teams lost, to the [[Tampa Bay Lightning]] and [[Carolina Hurricanes]], respectively, but the Battle of Alberta has been re-ignited.
 
====Chicago Blackhawks vs. St. Louis Blues====
As both cities are rivals when it comes to many things (not just pro sports), the ''Battle of Alberta'' label has been applied to various other endeavours, most notably the rivalry between the [[Edmonton Eskimos]] and [[Calgary Stampeders]] of the [[Canadian Football League]].
{{main|Blackhawks–Blues rivalry}}
The Blackhawks–Blues rivalry features the [[Chicago Blackhawks]] and [[St. Louis Blues]]. From {{NHL Year|1970|start}} to {{NHL Year|2019|start}}, the two teams have been in the same division together.<ref name=BluesBlackhawks>{{cite web |last1=Browning |first1=William |title=First person fan smack talk: Chicago Blackhawks no comparison to St. Louis Blues |url=https://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news?slug=ac-6957780 |website=Yahoo Sports |access-date=December 21, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101017092223/https://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news?slug=ac-6957780 |archive-date=October 17, 2010 |date=October 13, 2010}}</ref> However, the teams were placed into separate divisions for the {{NHL Year|2020}} season as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is the most intense rivalry in terms of penalty minutes and fighting.<ref name=BluesBlackhawks/> At the height of the rivalry throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, it was common to go to a Chicago vs. St. Louis game and see a brawl break out. The most famous brawl of this era was the St. Patrick's Day Massacre.<ref name=BluesBlackhawks/> The rivalry cooled somewhat in the 2000s, but it heated back up in the 2010s, with both teams finding success in the early 2010s as well as Chicago losing the longtime division rivalry with the Detroit Red Wings as a result of the 2013–14 realignment. All six [[Sutter family|Sutter Brothers]] would play for this rivalry. In the 2010s, Chicago won the Stanley Cup three times and St. Louis once.
 
===Pacific Division===
==Battle of [[Ontario]]==
The [[Pacific Division (NHL)|Pacific Division]] dates back to the 1974 formation of the [[Smythe Division]], which from 1981–onward would contain the westernmost teams in the NHL. It became the Pacific Division in 1993.
The rivalry between the [[Ottawa Senators]] and [[Toronto Maple Leafs]] is popular and often surfaces during the playoffs, as the two teams are in the same division and have repeatedly met in the postseason. It is often referred to as the '''Battle of Ontario'''. The major catalyst for this rivalry is the fact that both cities' roles to [[Canada]] are vital: [[Ottawa]] is the nation's capital and [[Toronto]] is Canada's overall largest city (in addition to being [[Ontario]]'s provincial capital).
 
====Anaheim Ducks vs. San Jose Sharks====
The Senators entered the league in [[1991-92 NHL season|1992]], but the rivalry between the two teams did not begin to emerge until the late [[1990s]]. From 1992 to 1998, Toronto was in the NHL's Western Conference and Ottawa was in the Eastern, which meant that the two teams rarely played each other. Before the [[1998-99 NHL season|1998-99 season]], the conferences and divisions were re-aligned, and Toronto was moved into the Eastern Conference's Northeast Division with Ottawa, Montreal, the [[Buffalo Sabres]], and Boston. By [[1999]], both Ottawa and Toronto were elite Eastern Conference teams, annually competing for the division title. Anglophones in Eastern Canada finally had a team other than Toronto to root for, and eagerly embraced the Senators. In the same way, many Franco-Canadians hoping to distinguish themselves from "les equipes Quebecois" adopted the Sens as their own. What makes this rivalry even more intense is the fact that not all Leafs fans in the Ottawa area become Senators fans upon the granting of the Ottawa franchise. This has resulted in a base of Leafs fans that attend Leafs-Senators games in Ottawa.
[[File:Ducks Sharks (242394706).jpg|thumb|A game between the Ducks and Sharks, April 2006]]
The [[Anaheim Ducks|Ducks]]–[[San Jose Sharks|Sharks]] rivalry has been going since 1993 when the Ducks came into existence. The rivalry got heated when the two faced each other in the [[2009 Stanley Cup playoffs]]. The Ducks won the series 4–2.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bleacherreport.com/articles/809475-san-jose-sharks-5-biggest-rivals-in-the-nhl/page/7|title=San Jose Sharks' 5 Biggest Rivals in the NHL|last=Semmler|first=Scott|publisher=Bleacher Report, Inc.|date=August 18, 2011|website=BleacherReport.com|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref> Both teams met again in the [[2018 Stanley Cup playoffs|2018 playoffs]], where the Sharks swept the Ducks 4–0 in the first round.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/04/18/broom-service-led-by-martin-jones-sharks-sweep-anaheim-ducks/|title=Broom service! Led by Martin Jones, Sharks sweep Anaheim Ducks|last=Pashelka|first=Curtis|date=April 18, 2018|newspaper=The Mercury News|accessdate=April 20, 2018}}</ref>
 
As of the end of the [[2024–25 NHL season|2024–25 season]], San Jose leads the regular season series 81–63–4–18 with a 6–4 playoff record against Anaheim.
In [[1999-2000 NHL season|2000]], the teams met for the first time in the playoffs, with the Maple Leafs dispatching the Senators in six games. Some Leafs fans saw this as revenge, since the Senators' [[Marián Hossa]] had accidentally clipped the Leafs' [[Bryan Berard]] in the eye on [[March 11]], thereby ending the young rearguard's season and almost his career. Berard did forgive Hossa, but no Leaf fan wanted to do such.
 
====Battle of Alberta: Calgary Flames vs. Edmonton Oilers====
[[2000-01 NHL season|The next season]], they met again in the first round as Ottawa entered the playoffs ranked 2nd in the East and the Maple Leafs 7th. While the Senators were expected to defeat the Maple Leafs, especially since they had swept the regular season series against them, the Leafs swept the series in a major upset; Ottawa did not score their first goal of the series until 16:51 of the third period in the third game. It was after this series that the rivalry became more pronounced, especially in the eyes of Senators fans.
{{Main|Battle of Alberta (NHL)}}
The Battle of Alberta is the bitter rivalry between the [[Calgary Flames]] and [[Edmonton Oilers]]. The two teams are based in the cities of [[Edmonton]], the provincial capital of Alberta, and [[Calgary]], the province's most populous city. Most often it is used to describe sporting events between the two cities, although this is not exclusive as the rivalry predates organized sports in Alberta.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/espn/print?id=2191048&type=story|title=Bile back in Battle of Alberta|date=October 14, 2005|first=George|last=Johnson|publisher=ESPN Interactive, Inc.|accessdate=July 5, 2023|website=ESPN.com}}</ref> The rivalry peaked during the mid-late 1980s, as from 1983 to 1990 the Western Conference only had two different champions, both being Calgary and Edmonton. They frequently played each other in the playoffs, with three series going seven games. Edmonton won the Stanley Cup in [[1984 Stanley Cup Final|1984]], [[1985 Stanley Cup Final|1985]], [[1987 Stanley Cup Final|1987]], [[1988 Stanley Cup Final|1988]], and [[1990 Stanley Cup Final|1990]]. Calgary won the Stanley Cup in [[1989 Stanley Cup Final|1989]]. Calgary leads the all-time series with a 141–129–18–6 record, however, Edmonton leads in postseason victories with a 23–12 record.
 
====Calgary Flames vs. Vancouver Canucks====
In [[2001-02 NHL season|2002]], the teams met in the playoffs for the third straight year. The two teams were very evenly matched, and the Maple Leafs, despite missing several key players, managed to win the second-round series in the full seven games and advance to the conference finals. One incident happened late in game five when Sens' captain [[Daniel Alfredsson]] hit Leafs forward [[Darcy Tucker]] in what the Leafs called a hit-from-behind, and then seconds after hitting Tucker in the Leafs zone, he scored the game-winning goal. Tucker suffered an injury on the play, and Alfredsson was not penalized or suspended for it. This began the ongoing Leafs' fans hatred of Alfredsson.
{{main|Canucks–Flames rivalry}}
The Canucks–Flames rivalry is a rivalry between the [[Vancouver Canucks]] and [[Calgary Flames]]. The two teams have played in the same division since the 1981–82 NHL division realignment.
 
====Edmonton Oilers vs. Los Angeles Kings====
In [[2002-03 NHL season|2003]], the rivalry hit an all-time high when Tucker attacked [[Chris Neil]], who was sitting on the bench. Neil started punching Tucker back, Tucker then attacked [[Shane Hnidy]] but Hnidy started beating on Tucker too. This resulted in numerous players exchanging punches before order was restored. Tucker, Neil and Hnidy all received fighting majors and game misconducts for the same incident. After the game Tucker claimed Neil spit on him, an allegation which Neil denies. The NHL board looked into this claim and concluded Neil did not do this. Tempers remained frayed, especially with 83 seconds to play, when Toronto's [[Tie Domi]] jumped [[Magnus Arvedson]] from behind and threw several punches at Arvedson for no reason. Domi received a roughing minor, instigator minor, fighting major, misconduct and game misconduct. Arvedson did not get a penalty on the play. The suspensions were announced a few hours after Tucker and Domi appeared at NHL head offices in Toronto for a hearing. Tucker was suspended for five games, without pay, and it was made clear at the hearing that Neil didn't spit at Toronto's bench. Domi was suspended for three games, also without pay. A total of 163 minutes in penalties were called in the game.
{{Main|Kings–Oilers rivalry}}
[http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/sport/archives/2003/03/07/197156]
The rivalry between the [[Edmonton Oilers]] and [[Los Angeles Kings]] was known to be one of the most fierce matchups of the late 1980s and early 1990s. The two teams have played in the same division after the Oilers were instated into the NHL following the dissolution of the [[World Hockey Association|WHA]] in 1979. Both teams quickly became fierce divisional opponents with frequent playoff matchups occurring, in addition to the notorious trade of [[Wayne Gretzky]] and [[Marty McSorley]]. Both the Kings and Oilers have combined for seven Stanley Cups between them. Both teams have met in the playoffs eleven times with Edmonton leading the regular season series 108–90–30–4, in addition to leading the playoff series 40–20.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://bleacherreport.com/articles/1659901-ranking-the-10-greatest-nhl-playoff-rivalries-in-history|title=Ranking the 10 Greatest NHL Playoff Rivalries in History|last=Silverman|first=Steve|publisher=Bleacher Report, Inc.|date=June 3, 2013|website=BleacherReport.com|accessdate=July 5, 2023}}</ref>
[http://www.usatoday.com/sports/scores103/103063/20030304NHL--OTTAWA----0nr.htm]
 
====Freeway Face-Off: Anaheim Ducks vs. Los Angeles Kings====
Another incident in the regular season fueled the rivalry even more. On [[January 6]], [[2004]], the Maple Leafs were playing a game against the [[Nashville Predators]], when Leaf captain [[Mats Sundin]]'s stick broke on an attempted shot at the blue line and he threw it away in disgust. Instead of hitting the glass, the stick went over and into the crowd. The NHL reacted by giving him a one-game suspension. The game he was suspended for was a game against the Senators in [[Toronto]]. During the game, Sundin's good friend and fellow Swede, Sens' captain [[Daniel Alfredsson]]'s, stick broke, and immediately he faked a toss of his stick into the stands. This caused an uproar with the Maple Leafs, in part because they had also lost the game badly, by a score of 7-1. Alfredsson dismissed the Leafs' reaction, calling it an over-reaction. This incident added to the rivalry, and Leafs fans continue to boo Alfredsson at games in both Toronto and Ottawa.
{{main|Freeway Face-Off}}
[[File:Ducks @ Kings.jpg|thumb|An altercation between the Ducks and Kings, April 2008]]
The term Freeway Face-Off refers to a series of games played between the [[Anaheim Ducks]] and [[Los Angeles Kings]]. The series takes its name from the massive [[freeway]] system in the [[Greater Los Angeles area|greater Los Angeles metropolitan area]], the home of both teams; one can travel from one team's arena to the other simply by traveling along [[Interstate 5]]. The two teams have also faced off in an outdoor game at [[Dodger Stadium]], in which the Ducks won 3–0. The two teams have met only once in the playoffs, during the [[2014 Stanley Cup playoffs]], of which the Kings won four games to three. The Kings would eventually go on to win the [[2014 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]] that year. The term is akin to the ''[[Freeway Series]]'' which refers to meetings between the [[Los Angeles metropolitan area|Los Angeles]] area baseball teams, the [[Los Angeles Angels]] and the [[Los Angeles Dodgers]].<ref>{{cite news|title=No controversy, just champions|date=December 14, 2007|first=Peter|last=Yoon|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|page=D3|quote=Now that we have the Freeway Faceoff between the Kings and Ducks to go along with the Freeway Series between the Dodgers and Angels, we need a name for this. It might be difficult to incorporate 'freeway' into it, though, since they share the same building. Maybe we could call it the 'We took the same freeway as you did to get here tipoff.' Or, 'The showdown at the intersection of the 10 and 110 freeways.'}}</ref>
 
====Los Angeles Kings vs. San Jose Sharks====
Ottawa and Toronto matched up in the playoffs for the fourth time in five years in [[2003-04 NHL season|2004]]. As was the case each time prior, the Leafs beat the Senators, this time in 7 games, but many observers thought that Ottawa outplayed Toronto, and gave credit for Toronto's win to an exceptional performance by Leaf goaltender [[Ed Belfour]] who shutout the Senators three times.
{{main|Kings–Sharks rivalry}}
The rivalry between Los Angeles ([[Los Angeles Kings|Kings]]) and the [[San Francisco Bay Area]] ([[San Jose Sharks|Sharks]]) NHL teams began as a result of the [[1967 NHL expansion]], which established both the Los Angeles Kings and the [[California Golden Seals]]. At the time, the Kings and Seals were the only NHL teams located west of the [[Mississippi River]] (the [[St. Louis Blues]] and the [[Minnesota North Stars]] were located on that river), and thus were created for each other to both reduce the amount of travel each team would need to do and to gain a foothold on the West Coast, previously the province of the borderline-major [[Western Hockey League (1952–1974)|Western Hockey League]], of which the [[San Francisco Seals (ice hockey)|Seals]] had been a member. The Seals were a historically unsuccessful team and left the Bay Area in 1976; the team ceased to exist when its successor, [[Cleveland Barons (NHL)|Cleveland Barons]], merged with the [[Minnesota North Stars]] in 1978.
 
[[File:Michael Cammalleri and Patrick Marleau.jpg|thumb|left|Sharks captain [[Patrick Marleau]] skates with the puck as he is pursued by Kings' winger [[Michael Cammalleri]]]]
In [[2005-06 NHL season|2005-06]], the two teams nearly met again, but the Maple Leafs missed the playoffs by two points, while the Senators clinched the top spot in the East. The Sens largely dominated the season series by winning 7 of the 8 games (including 3 routs of 8-0, 8-2, and 7-0) which may have been the main catalyst for the Leafs. Ottawa TV station CJOH even called it "The Public Beating of Ontario".
The Kings–Sharks rivalry started in 1991, when the San Jose was awarded a team and expansion team. This rivalry kicked off when the Sharks defeated the Wayne Gretzky-led Los Angeles Kings 4–0 on April 28, 1995, and destroyed any hope of a Kings playoff appearance. The Kings did not get a definitive win over the Sharks until the [[2002–03 NHL season|2002–03 season]], when the Kings' victory on February 17, 2003, at the Staples Center ended the Sharks' hope of making the playoffs. The Kings and Sharks met in the playoffs for the first time ever in the [[2011 Stanley Cup playoffs|2011 Western Conference quarterfinals]]. The Sharks were the second seed, and the Kings were seventh-seeded. The San Jose eliminated Los Angeles in six games with [[Joe Thornton]] scoring the series-winning overtime goal in game six. In the [[2011–12 NHL season|2011–12 season]], the teams competed for the last two playoff seeds in the conference, with the order determined by their last game against each other on April 7, 2012. San Jose won the game 3–2 in overtime to secure the seventh seed, while Los Angeles had the eighth seed. the Sharks were eliminated in the first round, while the Kings went on to win their first Stanley Cup in the [[2012 Stanley Cup Final]]. The two teams faced each other again in the [[2013 Stanley Cup playoffs|2013 Western Conference semifinals]], with the Kings winning the series 4–3 that saw the home team winning every game.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.thehockeynews.com/articles/54548-Five-reasons-why-KingsSharks-is-the-best-NHL-rivalry-today.html |title=Five reasons why Kings-Sharks is the best NHL rivalry today |last=Boylen |first=Rory |date=November 28, 2013 |website=The Hockey News |access-date=December 21, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Kwong |first=Jessica |date=November 29, 2013 |title=Sharks-Kings rivalry intensifies with each showdown |url=http://www.sfexaminer.com/sanfrancisco/sharks-kings-rivalry-intensifies-with-each-showdown/Content?oid=2637773 |url-status=bot: unknown |newspaper=The Examiner |___location=San Francisco |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150220225432/http://www.sfexaminer.com/sanfrancisco/sharks-kings-rivalry-intensifies-with-each-showdown/Content?oid=2637773 |archive-date=February 20, 2015 |access-date=December 21, 2015 }}</ref>
 
The Kings and Sharks met again in the playoffs for the second year in a row in the [[2014 Stanley Cup playoffs|2014 first round]], further adding fuel to the rivalry in a series that turned out to be a seven-game series. San Jose had home-ice advantage and quickly stormed to a 3–0 series lead, winning on home ice 6–3 and 7–2 before edging the Kings at Staples Center 4–3 in overtime. The Kings then rebounded to send the series back to San Jose with a 6–3 victory in game four before winning on the road 3–0 in game five to head back to Los Angeles. A 4–1 win in Los Angeles for the Kings brought the series to seven games, with the Kings becoming just the ninth team in history to force a game seven after being down 0–3 in the series. Given the chance to become just the fourth team in NHL history to complete the unlikeliest of comebacks, the Kings won 5–1 in San Jose to win the series en route to their second [[2014 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]]. In doing so, [[Mike Richards (ice hockey)|Mike Richards]] and [[Jeff Carter]] became the first NHL players to complete the comeback twice, both being part of the [[2009–10 Philadelphia Flyers season|2009–10 Philadelphia Flyers]] team that came back from 3–0 down to the Boston Bruins.<ref>{{cite web |last1=LeBrun |first1=Pierre |title=Listen up, Sens: Here's the secret to overcoming a 3-0 deficit |url=https://www.espn.com/blog/nhl/post/_/id/35925/whats-the-secret-to-overcoming-a-3-0-deficit |website=ESPN.com |access-date=May 12, 2025 |date=April 22, 2015}}</ref> In February 2015, the two teams faced off against each other in the [[2015 NHL Stadium Series]], an outdoor game at [[Levi's Stadium]]. The Kings won the game 2–1.
==Colorado vs. Detroit==
The groundwork for the rivalry between the [[Colorado Avalanche]] and [[Detroit Red Wings]] was laid well before [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]] even had a NHL franchise, during games between Detroit and the [[Quebec Nordiques]]. Once the Nordiques moved to Denver, the small rivalry still existed. On their way to a Stanley Cup, the Avalanche were forced to face Detroit in the 1996 Western Conference Finals. During Game 6, [[Claude Lemieux]], who had won the [[Conn Smythe Trophy]] the year before with the [[New Jersey Devils]] when they swept the Red Wings in the Stanley Cup Finals, checked [[Kris Draper]] into the boards as Draper was leaving the ice, giving him a concussion and several facial lacerations. Due to the cheapness of the hit, many of the eliminated Red Wings refused to shake Lemieux's hands during the handshake at the end of the series.
 
Following a season where the Kings and Sharks missed the playoffs, both teams met in the [[2016 Stanley Cup playoffs|2016 first round]]. San Jose won in five games,<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.si.com/nhl/2016/04/23/stanley-cup-playoffs-sharks-kings-game-5|title=Sharks' late surge in Game 5 takes series from Kings|last=Baumgaertner|first=Gabriel|magazine=Sports Illustrated|date=April 23, 2016|access-date=April 27, 2016}}</ref> en route to the [[2016 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup Final]].
Next season, during the final game between them in the regular season, the incident known now as the [[Brawl in Hockeytown]], the Red Wing's [[Darren McCarty]] got into a fight with Lemieux. [[Patrick Roy]] went out to assist but was stopped by [[Brendan Shanahan]] as both teams erupted into a huge brawl. Detroit won the fight and also the game in overtime. The teams would meet again in the Western Conference Finals that same year. Tied one game a piece going to [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]], the Red Wings won both of their home games. A Game 4 6-0 win would provide the Avalanche with enough anger to get their own six-goal shutout in game five. Game 6 saw a different playing style from the last two games for the Red Wings, where they switched to defense to win the conference and eventually, the [[Stanley Cup]].
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, San Jose leads the regular season record 95–67–7–12 with a 14–11 playoff record.
The next year the Avalanche wouldn't make it past the first round, being upset by the [[Edmonton Oilers]]. In 1999, they did meet again in the second round with Detroit looking to get its third title in a row. Colorado was the lower seeded team and lost the first two games but came back for four straight to win the series, including the clinching game six at [[Joe Louis Arena]]. The Red Wings had acquired [[Chris Chelios]] at the trade deadline and Colorado fans often poke fun at how that was unable to led Detroit to a [[three-peat]].
 
====Los Angeles Kings vs. Vegas Golden Knights====
In 2000, the teams met again in the second round, with Colorado being seeded higher because it won its division, despite Detroit having a better regular season record. The Avalanche took the first three games, while the Red Wings managed to win back one, but the Avalanche prevailed in game five held on [[Pepsi Center|their home ice]].
One of the more recent rivalries to grow in the division, the Golden Knights joined the league as an expansion team prior to the [[2017–18 NHL season]]. The Kings are longtime members of the league, particularly since their founding in 1967. The Golden Knights instantly experienced playoff success upon their first season; reaching the [[2018 Stanley Cup Final]] and eventually winning the [[2023 Stanley Cup Final]]. At the time of the Knights' inception, the Kings were a dominant team in the division through most of the 2010s, winning two Stanley Cups in the process. Both teams played an annual preseason game in [[Salt Lake City]] known as the [[Frozen Fury]], which occurred between 2018 and 2023.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.reviewjournal.com/sports/golden-knights-nhl/golden-knights-la-kings-set-to-renew-budding-rivalry/|title=Golden Knights, LA Kings set to renew budding rivalry|last=Schoen|first=David|newspaper=Las Vegas Review Journal|date=February 25, 2018|accessdate=July 5, 2023}}</ref> The Kings in 2020 and 2023 traded longtime fan-favorite players [[Alec Martinez]] and goaltender [[Jonathan Quick]] respectively to Vegas, and both became pivotal pieces in the team's 2023 Stanley Cup victory.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/nhl/article/weekend-takeaways-has-quicks-trade-ignited-a-kings-knights-rivalry/|title=Weekend Takeaways: Has Quick's trade ignited a Kings-Knights rivalry?|last=Dixon|first=Ryan|publisher=Rogers Media|date=March 13, 2023|website=Sportsnet.ca|accessdate=July 5, 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/sports/hockey/story/2023-03-01/los-angeles-kings-trade-goaltender-jonathan-quick|title=Column: Kings use their heads over hearts in trading Jonathan Quick|last=Elliott|first=Helene|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=March 1, 2023|accessdate=July 5, 2023}}</ref> The two teams have met once in the postseason during the [[2018 Stanley Cup playoffs|2018 First Round]], with the Golden Knights winning the series in a 4–0 sweep.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/kings/news/series-preview-la-kings-vegas-golden-knights-set-for-royal-rumble/c-297883528|title=SERIES PREVIEW: LA Kings, Vegas Golden Knights Set for Royal Rumble|last=Cooper|first=Josh|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=April 11, 2018|website=NHL.com|accessdate=July 5, 2023}}</ref> Vegas currently leads the all-time series 21–15.
 
====San Jose Sharks vs. Vegas Golden Knights====
Colorado's [[Adam Deadmarsh]] played a key role in defeating Detroit during the 1999 and 2000 playoffs. Near the 2001 trade deadline, Deadmarsh was traded to the [[Los Angeles Kings]], and with the Kings he helped to defeat the Red Wings in the first round, prompting Detroit captain [[Steve Yzerman]] to remark that Deadmarsh was "killing them". Ironically, Deadmarsh would meet his former team in the second round, though the Avalanche prevailed in a hard fought seven game series.
[[File:Sharks 2 Golden Knights 1 (40076820965).jpg|thumb|The Sharks and Golden Knights prepare to take a face off, March 2018]]
The Golden Knights–Sharks rivalry started during the [[2017–18 NHL season|2017–18 season]] in which Vegas began playing. Both teams met in the playoffs in the [[2018 Stanley Cup playoffs|2018 Western Conference second round]] after both teams swept their opponents in the first round, which Vegas won in six games. During the [[2018–19 NHL season]], the rivalry became intense. With both teams set to play each other in the first round of the playoffs, the two teams met in a regular season game prior to the playoffs. The game decided home-ice advantage during that first round match up for which the Sharks won in overtime.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.foxsports.com/nhl/story/burns-scores-in-ot-sharks-top-golden-knights-4-3-033119|title=Burns scores in OT, Sharks top Golden Knights 4-3|publisher=Associated Press|date=March 31, 2019|website=FOXSports.com|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref> In the [[2019 Stanley Cup Playoffs|2019 Western Conference first round]], the Golden Knights took a 3–1 series lead. Game three saw Golden Knights enforcer [[Ryan Reaves]] call out Sharks forward [[Evander Kane]] after the two fought each other.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.reviewjournal.com/sports/golden-knights-nhl/golden-knights-ryan-reaves-calls-out-sharks-evander-kane-video-1641092/|title=Golden Knights' Ryan Reaves calls out Sharks' Evander Kane — VIDEO|last=Hill|first=Adam|work=Las Vegas Review Journal|date=April 14, 2019|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref> After a victorious game five at home, the Sharks forced a seventh game with [[Tomáš Hertl|Tomas Hertl's]] double overtime goal.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://lasvegassun.com/news/2019/apr/23/high-stakes-golden-knights-heated-rival-game-7/|title=High stakes for Golden Knights against heated rival in Game 7|last=Emerson|first=Justin|work=Las Vegas Sun|date=April 23, 2019|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref> Prior to game seven, both head coaches took shots at each other with Sharks coach [[Peter DeBoer]] calling out [[Gerard Gallant]] for chirping at players while Gallant responded by saying, "For that clown to say that in the paper yesterday is not right."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://nesn.com/2019/04/golden-knights-coach-calls-sharks-coach-a-clown-ahead-of-game-7/|title=Golden Knights Coach Calls Sharks Coach 'A Clown' Ahead Of Game 7|last=McMahon|first=Michael|publisher=NESN|date=April 23, 2019|website=NESN.com|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref> In game seven, the Knights took a 3–0 lead in the third period, however, Vegas forward [[Cody Eakin]] was given a questionable and controversial major penalty for cross-checking which injured Sharks captain [[Joe Pavelski]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nhl/2019/04/23/nhl-playoffs-cody-eakins-major-penalty-sharks-golden-knights/3559044002/|title=Golden Knights' Cody Eakin gets major penalty; Sharks stage furious rally for Game 7 win|last=Brehm|first=Mike|publisher=USA Today|date=April 23, 2019|website=USAToday.com|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref> (later forcing the NHL to introduce a new rule, effective the [[2019–20 NHL season|following season]], to review all major penalties except for fighting from a monitor in a scorer's table; officials will reserve authority to reduce the penalty to a minor penalty depending on the result of the review).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nhl-announces-rule-changes-for-2019-20-season/c-307949196|title=NHL announces rule changes for 2019-20 season|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=June 20, 2019|website=NHL.com|accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref> San Jose scored four goals in 4:01 on the ensuing power play to take the lead late, but with 47.0 seconds left, the Golden Knights forward [[Jonathan Marchessault]] tied it up to send the game into overtime. In overtime, Sharks forward [[Barclay Goodrow]] completed the comeback, ending the Knights season and propelling the Sharks into a second round matchup with the [[Colorado Avalanche]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/vegas-golden-knights-san-jose-sharks-game-7-recap/c-306981370|title=Sharks rally for OT win against Golden Knights in Game 7|last=Satriano|first=David|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=April 23, 2019|website=NHL.com|access-date=April 23, 2019}}</ref> In a pre-season game between the two teams on September 29, 2019, multiple fights broke out, including two line brawls. The teams accumulated a total of 106 penalty minutes between them, with Sharks forward [[Evander Kane]] alone accumulating 27. Multiple game misconducts were given out and Kane was ejected for abuse of officials, being later given a three-game suspension.
 
On January 15, 2020, Peter DeBoer was hired as the head coach of the Golden Knights after being fired by the Sharks on December 11, 2019, replacing Gerard Gallant, who was fired the same day.<ref>{{cite web
In 2002, Colorado and Detroit both made it to the Western Conference Finals. Detroit had won four straight after losing the first two in the first round against the [[Vancouver Canucks]] then won a series four games to one against [[St. Louis Blues (hockey)|St. Louis Blues]]. Colorado had been forced to game sevens by both of their other opponents, the [[Los Angeles Kings]] and the [[San Jose Sharks]]. The series was tied going into a game seven where the Red Wings scored seven goals and earned a shutout. As with the teams other meetings in the Conference Finals, the winner went on to win the Cup.
|url=https://nhl.nbcsports.com/2020/01/15/golden-knights-fire-gallant-hire-peter-deboer-as-head-coach/|title= Golden Knights fire Gallant, hire Peter DeBoer as head coach|publisher=NBC Universal|date=January 15, 2020|last=Leahy|first=Sean|accessdate=May 20, 2022|website=NHL.NBCSports.com}}</ref>
 
As of the end of the 2024–25 season, Vegas leads the regular season record 27–2–0–5 with a 1–1 playoff series record.
==Other Historical Rivalries==
 
*[[Montreal Canadiens]] vs. [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
==Historical==
*Battle of Quebec ([[Montreal Canadiens]] vs. [[Quebec Nordiques]])
 
**This rivalry was nicknamed '''Bataille de la 20''' (Battle of the 20), named for the highway which links both cities.
===Battle of New England: Boston Bruins vs. Hartford Whalers (1979–1997)===
*[[Vancouver Canucks]] vs. [[Calgary Flames]]
They first played against each other in the [[1979–80 NHL season|1979–80 season]] with the Bruins flourishing during the season while the expansion Whalers played awfully that year. The Whalers have played the Bruins twice in the playoffs in [[1990 Stanley Cup playoffs|1990]] and [[1991 Stanley Cup playoffs|1991]], with the Bruins winning both times. The rivalry got to a heating point when the Bruins' [[Cam Neely]] and the Whalers' [[Ulf Samuelsson]] would fight on a regular occasion. It got to a point where Samuelsson hit Neely in the knees during the 1991 Stanley Cup playoffs, but Samuelsson was traded to the Penguins earlier that season.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.upi.com/Archives/1990/04/04/Whalers-have-their-chance-for-rivalry-with-Bruins/9765639201600/|title=Whalers have their chance for rivalry with Bruins|last=Waterman|first=Frederick|publisher=United Press International, Inc.|date=April 4, 1990|website=UPI|accessdate=December 11, 2016}}</ref> At the [[Hartford Civic Center]], after games where more often than not the Bruins won, the Whalers fans would fight Bruins fans on [[Ann Street Historic District|Ann St]]. in [[Downtown Hartford]]. The rivalry ended in 1997 when the [[Carolina Hurricanes|Whalers relocated to Raleigh, North Carolina]].
*[[Vancouver Canucks]] vs. [[Colorado Avalanche]]
 
*[[Vancouver Canucks]] vs. [[Minnesota Wild]]
Before the Whalers moved to Raleigh, Boston won the all-time regular season series (68–42–14), and the all-time playoff series (8–5), for a total of (76–47–14) against Hartford.
*[[Edmonton Oilers]] vs. [[Vancouver Canucks]]
 
*[[Edmonton Oilers]] vs. [[Dallas Stars]]
In 2018–19, the rivalry had a callback. The Hurricanes wore the Whalers late 1980s jerseys in two games against the Bruins, one in Raleigh, proclaimed as “Whalers Night” and one in Boston. The series was split 1–1. The Hurricanes then brought back the same jerseys again on March 23, 2023, in Raleigh against the Bruins. Boston's [[David Pastrňák|David Pastrnak]] scored his 50th goal of the season, a feat not seen since [[Cam Neely]] did in 1994. Boston would win the game in a shootout, 4–3, bringing that renewed rivalry to a 2–1 count for Boston.
*[[St. Louis Blues (hockey)|St. Louis Blues]] vs. [[Minnesota North Stars]] (now the [[Dallas Stars]])
 
*[[Philadelphia Flyers]] vs. [[Boston Bruins]]
===Battle of Quebec: Montreal Canadiens vs. Quebec Nordiques (1979–1995)===
*[[Philadelphia Flyers]] vs. [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]
{{main|Battle of Quebec (ice hockey)}}
*[[Philadelphia Flyers]] vs. [[New York Islanders]]
The Battle of Quebec is the nickname for a former NHL rivalry between the Montreal Canadiens and [[Quebec Nordiques]]. The rivalry lasted from {{NHL Year|1979}} to {{NHL Year|1994}}. The teams played against each other five times in the NHL playoffs, and the Canadiens won three of the series. One meeting, in 1984, resulted in the [[Good Friday Massacre]], a game in which multiple brawls happened.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/canadiens/news/the-battle-of-quebec/c-523608|title=The Battle of Quebec|date=April 2, 2010|website=NHL.com|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|accessdate=April 25, 2023}}</ref> The Battle of Quebec extended to politics, in which the Canadiens and Nordiques became symbols for rival parties, and beer distribution, as the teams were both owned by competing breweries. The Nordiques' departure from Quebec City to become the [[Colorado Avalanche]] in [[1995–96 NHL season|1995]] ended the rivalry.
*[[Philadelphia Flyers]] vs. [[Buffalo Sabres]]
 
*[[Buffalo Sabres]] vs. [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
Before the Nordiques moved to Denver, Montreal won the all-time regular season series 62–39–12, and the all-time playoff series 17–14, for a total of 79–53–12 against Quebec.
*[[Philadelphia Flyers]] vs. [[Toronto Maple Leafs]]
 
*[[Washington Capitals]] vs. [[Philadelphia Flyers]]
===Calgary Flames vs. Winnipeg Jets (original) (1980–1996)===
*[[Washington Capitals]] vs. [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]
The Flames and Jets (the [[Winnipeg Jets (1972–1996)|original incarnation]] and later the [[Winnipeg Jets|modern]]) rivalry is unique in the NHL. Both teams compete in the [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western Conference]], as they are both located in [[Western Canada]]. However, Calgary plays in the [[Pacific Division (NHL)|Pacific Division]] and Winnipeg plays in the [[Central Division (NHL)|Central Division]] (they played in the [[North Division (NHL)|North Division]] in 2021). The Flames and both the original and modern Jets met in the playoffs four times (three straight years in the 1980s; the fourth in 2020), with each team winning two series. In [[1985 Stanley Cup playoffs|1985]], the Jets defeated the Flames 3–1 for their first ever playoff series victory. In the [[1986 Stanley Cup playoffs|next playoffs]], the Flames got their revenge by sweeping the Jets in three straight games capped off by [[Lanny McDonald]]'s overtime winner in the deciding game beginning Calgary's run to the [[1986 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup Final]] where they lost to the [[Montreal Canadiens]] in five games. In [[1987 Stanley Cup playoffs|1987]], the Jets upset the Flames in six games in the opening round in what would turn out to be their final playoff series victory for the franchise until 2012, when they were known as the [[Phoenix Coyotes]]. This was also the last time a Winnipeg-based NHL team won a playoff series until [[2018 Stanley Cup playoffs|2018]] when the modern [[Winnipeg Jets]] won the first round series in five games.
*[[St. Louis Blues (hockey)|St. Louis Blues]] vs. [[Detroit Red Wings]]
 
*[[Minnesota North Stars]] (now the [[Dallas Stars]]) vs. [[Chicago Blackhawks]]
The rivalry is based on the tradition used by their set of fans. Both the [[Winnipeg Jets (1972–1996)|original]] and later the [[Winnipeg Jets|modern]] created the Winnipeg Whiteout by wearing white to home playoff games in Winnipeg,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://globalnews.ca/news/1952200/man-behind-the-winnipeg-jets-whiteout/|title=Meet the man behind the Winnipeg Jets' whiteout|last=Nickel|first=Lorraine|publisher=Global News|date=April 22, 2015|website=GlobalNews.ca|accessdate=September 13, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|first=Hal|last=Sigurdson|author-link=Hal Sigurdson|title=Whiteout aside, defence tells tale|work=Winnipeg Free Press|page=83|date=April 18, 1987}}</ref> and the "C of Red" is used by [[Calgary Flames]] fans by wearing a red jersey with Calgary's flaming C on it.
*[[Detroit Red Wings]] vs. [[Dallas Stars]]
 
*[[Carolina Hurricanes]] vs. [[New Jersey Devils]]
From 1980 (when the Flames moved to Calgary) to 1996 (when the original Jets moved to Arizona), Calgary won the all-time series 57–45–16–0 (including a 6–7 playoff record) against Winnipeg.
*[[Hartford Whalers]] (now [[Carolina Hurricanes]]) vs. [[Boston Bruins]]
 
*[[Tampa Bay Lightning]] vs. [[Florida Panthers]]
===Chicago Blackhawks vs. Detroit Red Wings (1926–2013; 2020–21)===
*[[Anaheim Ducks]] vs. [[Los Angeles Kings]]
{{main|Blackhawks–Red Wings rivalry}}
[[File:Chicago Blackhawks Vs Detroit Red Wings (5070748957).jpg|thumb|The Blackhawks and Red Wings warming up prior to a game in October 2010]]
The Blackhawks–Red Wings rivalry was the most intense in the [[Central Division (NHL)|Central Division]] during the post lockout era.<ref name="HawksWings"/> It existed between {{NHL Year|1926}}, went through the Original Six days (during which they were the league's only teams in the [[Midwestern United States|Midwest]]), to 2013. These two clubs have faced each other in more regular season games than any other two clubs in NHL history, except the [[Bruins–Canadiens rivalry]], which exceeds them in total games played when Stanley Cup playoff games are included.<ref name="HawksWings">{{cite web|title=Blackhawks-Red Wings has been building since 1926|url=https://www.nhl.com/blackhawks/news/blackhawks-red-wings-has-been-building-since-1926/c-477504|date=December 6, 2008|first=Rocky|last=Bonanno|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 25, 2023|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.}}</ref>
 
Before the 2013–14 season, the Detroit Red Wings moved from the [[Central Division (NHL)|Central Division]] of the [[Western Conference (NHL)|Western Conference]] to the newly formed [[Atlantic Division (NHL)|Atlantic Division]] of the [[Eastern Conference (NHL)|Eastern Conference]], while Chicago stayed in the Central Division. This effectively caused the rivalry to cease (despite the two cities' proximity to each other), as the Blackhawks and Red Wings now meet only twice a year; the one exception was the [[2020–21 NHL season|2020–21 season]], in which the Red Wings were moved back to the Central on an interim basis. However, the rich history between the two teams remains very popular today, and some even consider the rivalry to still be in existence deep down, despite them now being in different conferences.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sportsmockery.com/2017/01/blackhawks-red-wings-rivalry-verge-death/|title=Blackhawks And Red Wings Rivalry Is On The Verge Of Death|last=Paprzyca|first=Marc-Louis|publisher=Sports Mockery, Inc.|date=January 10, 2017|website=SportMockery.com|accessdate=April 22, 2019}}</ref>
 
===Chicago Blackhawks vs. Los Angeles Kings (2012–2018)===
Originally both meeting during the 1974 playoffs (culminating in a five-game Blackhawks' series victory), a brief playoff rivalry had erupted between the two teams as they often locked horns into a fierce playoff battle culminating in five Stanley Cup wins from either of two teams from 2010 to 2015.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/blog/los-angeles/kings/post/_/id/233/blackhawks-kings-is-a-growing-rivalry|title=Blackhawks-Kings is a growing rivalry|last=Arritt|first=Dan|publisher=ESPN Interactive, Inc.|date=January 27, 2015|website=NHL.com|accessdate=July 6, 2023}}</ref> The rivalry reached its high point on January 19, 2013, when the Blackhawks spoiled the Kings' Stanley Cup party.<ref>{{Cite web |date=January 19, 2013 |title=Blackhawks crash Kings' Cup party with 5-2 rout |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/hockey/2013/01/19/blackhawks-king-stanley-cup-champions-hossa-kane-toews/1848067/ |access-date=2025-01-25 |website=USA TODAY |language=en-US}}</ref> Furthermore, it caught fire when both teams met in back-to-back Western Conference championship matchups with either side winning a series; the Blackhawks during the [[2013 Stanley Cup Playoffs#Western Conference final|2013 Western Conference finals]], and the Kings during the [[2014 Stanley Cup Playoffs#Western Conference final|2014 Western Conference finals]]. During the 2013 matchup, both sides spent a cumulative 74 minutes in the penalty box as a direct result from the fierce competition between both sides, most notably between Blackhawks' Star Right Winger [[Patrick Kane]] and Kings' Defenseman [[Drew Doughty]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/nhl/video/best-series-ive-ever-coached-flames-sutter-toffoli-reflect-on-kings-blackhawks-rivalry/|title="Best series I Ever Coached" Sutter, Toffoli reflect on Kings-Blackhawks Rivalry|publisher=Rogers Media|date=January 26, 2023|website=Sportsnet.ca|accessdate=July 6, 2023}}</ref> The 2014 conference finals saw the Kings return with vengeance. The Kings held a 3–1 series lead, except Chicago came back to force a seventh game.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2081441-red-hot-patrick-kane-bedevils-kings-as-chicago-forces-game-7-in-thrilling-wcf|title=Red-Hot Patrick Kane Bedevils Kings as Chicago Forces Game 7 in Thrilling WCF|last=Willis|first=Jonathan|publisher=Bleacher Report, Inc.|date=May 30, 2014|website=BleacherReport.com|accessdate=July 6, 2023}}</ref> In the subsequent overtime, [[Alec Martinez]] scored for Los Angeles to defeat the Blackhawks. Though the Blackhawks would manage another Stanley Cup victory in 2015, both teams regressed massively after 2018 due to rebuilds and neither team being competitive at the same time.
 
===Chicago Blackhawks vs. Minnesota North Stars (1981–1993)===
The North Stars and the Blackhawks played each other in the playoffs six times from 1982 through 1991 in [[1982 Stanley Cup playoffs|1982]], [[1983 Stanley Cup playoffs|1983]], [[1984 Stanley Cup playoffs|1984]], [[1985 Stanley Cup playoffs|1985]], 1990 and 1991. The rivalry was at its most fierce from the 1981–82 through 1984–85 seasons, when the teams played in four straight playoff series, with the Blackhawks winning three out of the four. In [[1991 Stanley Cup playoffs|1991]], the Blackhawks had won the Presidents’ Trophy with 106 points and were among the favorites to win the Stanley Cup. However, despite Minnesota finishing with 68 points (38 behind Chicago) during the season, the North Stars upset the Presidents’ Trophy winning Blackhawks in the Norris Division semifinals in six games, beginning their Cinderella run to the [[1991 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup Final]] before losing to Pittsburgh Penguins, in six games. It was the 2nd largest upset in NHL history in terms of points. The Blackhawks got a small measure of revenge the [[1992 Stanley Cup playoffs|next year]], when they dethroned the North Stars as Campbell Conference Champions. Just like the North Stars the year before, the Blackhawks lost to Pittsburgh Penguins in the [[1992 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup Final]]. The rivalry died in 1993, when the North Stars moved to Dallas.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://shnarped.wordpress.com/2013/04/28/playoff-rewind-chicago-blackhawks-minnesota-north-stars-rivalry-timeline/|title=Playoff Rewind: Chicago Blackhawks & Minnesota North Stars Rivalry Timeline |publisher=WordPress|date=April 28, 2013|website=Shnarped Blog|access-date=December 21, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Reusse|first=Patrick|date=December 15, 2011|title=Reusse: Quiche, chardonnay and the new Blackhawks/Wild rivalry|url=http://www.startribune.com/sports/wild/135632973.html|newspaper=Star Tribune|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref>
 
===Chicago Blackhawks vs. Vancouver Canucks (1974–2013)===
[[File:Playoff Brawl (5644333304).jpg|thumb|An altercation between the Blackhawks and Canucks during game five of the 2011 Stanley Cup quarterfinals]]
For a period of five seasons between 2008–09 and 2012–13, this rivalry was considered one of the best in the NHL. This is mainly because there were three straight years of playoffs series between these teams in [[2009 Stanley Cup playoffs|2009]], [[2010 Stanley Cup playoffs|2010]], and [[2011 Stanley Cup playoffs|2011]]. The first seeds of the rivalry began with the realignment of the NHL in 1974, placing both teams in the newly formed [[Smythe Division]]. For two years, they battled each other for the top spot and in [[1976–77 NHL season|1977]], they went down to the wire for the last playoff spot, which Chicago won on a tiebreaker by virtue of having more wins at season's end.
 
The two teams met in the playoffs for the first time in the [[1982 Stanley Cup playoffs|1982 Campbell Conference finals]], which is best remembered for a mock surrender by then-Canucks coach [[Roger Neilson]] over what he deemed questionable officiating in game two, which began the [[Towel Power]] tradition in Vancouver and elsewhere in sports.<ref name="1982 Campbell ConferenceFinal">{{harvnb|Cole|2004|page=107}}</ref> Vancouver prevailed in the series four games to one, as part of their 1982 Cinderella Stanley Cup run.<ref name="1982 Campbell ConferenceFinal" /> The Blackhawks swept the Canucks in the 1995 Western Conference semifinals.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/nhl/blackhawks-canucks-rivalry-top-moments/|title=Top 5 Canucks-Blackhawks moments of hate|last=Porth|first=Ryan|publisher=Rogers Media|date=January 31, 2013|website=Sportsnet.ca|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref>
 
They did not meet again until the {{NHL Year|2008}} season. The Blackhawks eliminated the Canucks in the playoffs that season in the second round and defeated them again the following season in the same round as part of their [[2010 Stanley Cup Final|2010 Stanley Cup run]]. The rivalry reached its peak in the 2011 playoffs, as they met for the third straight year in the first round of the playoffs that year, where the Canucks finally defeated Chicago 4–3. In this series, the Canucks took a 3–0 series only to drop the next three games. In game seven, the Blackhawks tied it in the final minutes shorthanded, sending the game to overtime. In overtime, Canucks forward [[Alexandre Burrows]] scored on a slapshot to win the series for the Canucks, as part of their run to the [[2011 Stanley Cup Final]], in which they ultimately lost in seven games to the [[Boston Bruins]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/sports-content/hockey/opinion/2013/02/notable-moments-in-the-canucksblackhawks-rivalry.html|title=A brief history of the Canucks-Blackhawks rivalry|last=Piercy|first=Justin|publisher=CBC/Radio-Canada|date=February 19, 2013|website=CBC.ca|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref> The rivalry has died down since then due to the subsequent decline of the Canucks in the 2010s following their appearance in the [[2011 Stanley Cup Final]], as well as a lack of playoff matches between the two teams.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://thehockeywriters.com/blackhawks-canucks-rivalry/|title=The Rise and Fall of the Blackhawks / Canucks Rivalry|last=Sarcu|first=Sean|publisher=The Hockey Writers|date=December 21, 2013|website=TheHockeyWriters.com|accessdate=December 11, 2016}}</ref>
 
===Colorado Avalanche vs. Detroit Red Wings (1995–2003)===
{{main|Colorado Avalanche–Detroit Red Wings brawl|Avalanche–Red Wings rivalry}}
 
The groundwork for the Avalanche–Red Wings rivalry was laid well before Denver even had an NHL franchise, during games between Detroit and Quebec City. Once the Nordiques moved to Denver, the small rivalry still existed. In a regular season game between Detroit and Montreal, the Wings scored on [[Patrick Roy]] nine times, leading to Roy demanding a trade. Roy was eventually traded to Colorado and became a huge factor in the rivalry.
 
During the [[1996 Stanley Cup playoffs#(1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (2) Colorado Avalanche|1996 Stanley Cup playoffs]], Red Wings player [[Kris Draper]] was checked into the boards and severely injured by Avalanche player [[Claude Lemieux]]. Draper went to the hospital with a concussion and multiple broken bones in his face as a result, and he required surgery and stitches; he did not return to play until much later in the following season. This incident led to a series of on-ice confrontations during an Avalanche-Red Wings game on March 26, 1997, including [[Colorado Avalanche-Detroit Red Wings brawl|a massive brawl]] near the end of the first period which featured Red Wings enforcer [[Darren McCarty]] (another member of the "Grind Line" and Draper's best friend) brutally beating up Lemieux as revenge for the incident with Draper, as well as a vicious goaltender fight between Patrick Roy and [[Mike Vernon (ice hockey)|Mike Vernon]]. Both of these events were major reasons for the extremely sudden intensification of the Detroit-Colorado rivalry, which is regarded by many as one of the greatest and bloodiest rivalries in NHL history, and even all of sports.<ref>{{cite web|last=Goff|first=Kevin|date=February 24, 2016|title=Avalanche vs. Red Wings: Reliving the Great Rivalry|url=https://thehockeywriters.com/avalanche-vs-red-wings-reliving-the-great-rivalry/|access-date=April 25, 2023|publisher=The Hockey Writers|website=TheHockeyWriters.com|language=en-us}}</ref>
 
The rivalry was largely predicated on the competitiveness of both teams in the late 1990s and early 2000s. From {{NHL Year|1995|start}} to {{NHL Year|2001|end}}, the teams met in five playoff series, three times in the Western Conference finals. Out of those seven seasons, the teams combined to win five [[Stanley Cup]]s and four [[Presidents' Trophy|Presidents' Trophies]]. From {{scfy|1995}} to {{scfy|2003}}, both teams, along with the [[New Jersey Devils]], reigned exclusively as Stanley Cup champions, except in {{scfy|1999}}, which was won by the [[Dallas Stars]] (the Devils beat the Red Wings in 1995, while the Avalanche beat the Devils in {{scfy|2001}}). The rivalry started to cool down after the [[2002–03 NHL season|2002–03 season]], with both teams falling in round one and Roy announcing his retirement shortly afterwards. The last playoff meeting between the two teams was in [[2008 Stanley Cup playoffs|2008]], with the Red Wings sweeping the Avalanche 4–0 on the way to the [[2008 Stanley Cup Final|Stanley Cup]]. The Red Wings joined the Eastern Conference in 2013 and the two former rivals now only meet twice a year.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/looking-back-at-the-bloody-avalanche-wings-rivalry/c-518769 |title=Looking back at the bloody Avalanche-Wings rivalry|last=Sadowski|first=Rick|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=February 27, 2010|website=NHL.com|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref> However, a [[NHL Stadium Series|stadium series]] game took place on February 27, 2016, between the two teams at [[Coors Field]], which the Red Wings won 5–3, though the Avalanche came back in the alumni game the day before, winning the exhibition contest 5–3.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/brad-richards-scores-late-for-red-wings-against-avalanche-in-stadium-series/c-279210354|title=Richards goal lifts Red Wings past Avalanche|last=Rosen|first=Dan|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=February 28, 2016|website=NHL.com|accessdate=April 25, 2023}}</ref>
 
===Detroit Red Wings vs. St. Louis Blues (1981–2013)===
The rivalry began when the Red Wings switched divisions for the [[1981–82 NHL season|1981–82 season]] and developed in the late 1980s when they had intense division battles. In [[1988 Stanley Cup playoffs|1988]], the Red Wings defeated the Blues in five games in the Norris division final. The rivalry really heated up in the 1990s. In [[1991 Stanley Cup playoffs|1991]], the Blues defeated the Red Wings in seven games in the Norris division semifinals after overcoming a 3–1 series deficit. They met up in the playoffs three straight times between 1996 and 1998; the Red Wings won all three series. However, the Blues almost defeated the Red Wings in 1996. They held a 3–2 advantage and it looked like the Blues would upset the Wings in game six, but the Wings won the last two games including a double overtime victory in game seven. This was also part of the [[1997 Stanley Cup Final|1997]] and [[1998 Stanley Cup Final|1998 Stanley Cup runs]]. When the Divisions realigned in [[1998–99 NHL season|1998]], this was the most intense rivalry in the Central division as they had many division battles until the [[2003–04 NHL season|2003–04 season]]. They met during the playoffs in [[2002 Stanley Cup playoffs|2002]] in the conference semifinals. The Red Wings defeated the Blues in five games en route to their [[2002 Stanley Cup Final|2002 Stanley Cup run]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/redwings/news/wings-blues-add-chapter-to-classic-rivalry/c-655529|title=Wings, Blues add chapter to classic rivalry|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=February 13, 2013|website=NHL.com|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref> The rivalry died down in the post-lockout era as the Blues entered a slump, only reviving as the teams fought for the Central Division title in the [[2011–12 NHL season|2011–12 season]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1047467-detroit-red-wings-ten-most-viscious-rivals-in-the-nhl/page/10|title=Detroit Red Wings: 10 Most Vicious Rivals in the NHL|last=Matthews|first=Jordan|publisher=Bleacher Report, Inc.|date=February 2, 2012|website=BleacherReport.com|accessdate=December 21, 2015}}</ref> The Red Wings' move to the Eastern Conference in 2013 ended the rivalry for good.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.stltoday.com/sports/hockey/professional/memories-of-blues-red-wings-rivalry-continue-to-fade/article_6d2052c8-fbc1-5934-8ba2-949d5c5dc43c.html|title=Memories of Blues-Red Wings' rivalry continue to fade|last=Rutherford|first=Jeremy|newspaper=St. Louis Post Dispatch|date=November 21, 2015|accessdate=April 22, 2019}}</ref>
 
===Detroit Red Wings vs. San Jose Sharks (1994–2013)===
The rivalry between the Red Wings and the Sharks began in the [[1994 Stanley Cup playoffs]], in which the upstart Sharks upset the Red Wings 4–3 in their playoff debut. Game seven saw Sharks forward [[Jamie Baker (ice hockey)|Jamie Baker]] score the series-winning goal on the road. After the Red Wings returned the favor by sweeping them in the second round of the {{scpy|1995}} playoffs, the rivalry further intensified after the Red Wings acquired Russian defenseman [[Igor Larionov]] in a trade with the Sharks, eventually forming the [[Russian Five]] core that resulted in them winning back-to-back Stanley Cups in [[1997 Stanley Cup Final|1997]] and [[1998 Stanley Cup Final|1998]]. Both teams also faced each other in three playoff series between {{scpy|2007}} and {{scpy|2011}}, with the Sharks winning two series. The 2011 meeting saw the Red Wings nearly overcome a 3–0 deficit only to lose in game seven. However, the rivalry ended in 2013 after the Red Wings moved to the Eastern Conference.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.mercurynews.com/2013/10/20/nhl-red-wings-sharks-rivalry-takes-a-hit/|title=NHL: Red Wings-Sharks rivalry takes a hit|last=Pollak|first=David|work=The Mercury News|date=October 20, 2013|accessdate=February 19, 2022}}</ref>
 
===Edmonton Oilers vs. Winnipeg Jets (original) (1972–1996)===
The Oilers and the [[Winnipeg Jets (1972–1996)|original Jets]] both started their existence in the [[World Hockey Association]] in 1972. There, the Jets dominated the Oilers winning the [[Avco Cup]] three times, while the Oilers were not playoff contenders. But, when they joined the NHL in 1979 (along with the Quebec Nordiques and Hartford Whalers), the tables were turned, thanks to an 18-year-old from [[Brantford, Ontario]] named [[Wayne Gretzky]]. From 1983 to 1988, the Oilers and Jets met in the playoffs five times, the Oilers won every one of them, losing only one game out of the 19 games played between the two on their way to the Stanley Cup Final in 1983, [[1984 Stanley Cup Final|1984]], [[1985 Stanley Cup Final|1985]], [[1987 Stanley Cup Final|1987]], and [[1988 Stanley Cup Final|1988]]; with the Oilers winning the Stanley Cup in the latter four years. Gretzky had been traded to the [[Los Angeles Kings]] by the time the two teams met in the first round of the [[1990 Stanley Cup playoffs|1990 playoffs]]. The Jets took a commanding 3–1 series lead and led Game 5 by that same margin. Eventually, the Oilers fought back to win the next three games and the series in seven. The Oilers would lose just three more games the remainder of the playoffs, en route to their [[1990 Stanley Cup Final|fifth Stanley Cup championship]] in seven years. The rivalry ended in 1996 when the original Jets left [[Winnipeg]] to become the [[Arizona Coyotes|Phoenix Coyotes]].<ref>{{cite web|title=The history and heartbreak behind the Jets-Oilers rivalry - Sportsnet.ca|url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/nhl/the-history-and-heartbreak-behind-the-jets-oilers-rivalry/|last=Pack|first=Joe|publisher=Rogers Media|accessdate=April 25, 2023|website=Sportsnet.ca}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Former Oilers, Jets tell of storied rivalry|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/history-of-edmonton-oilers-winnipeg-jets-rivalry/c-282920354|last=Campbell|first=Tim|publisher=NHL Enterprises, L. P.|date=October 22, 2016|accessdate=April 25, 2023|website=NHL.com|language=en-US}}</ref>
 
Before the Jets moved to Arizona, Edmonton won the all-time regular season series 64–39–8–0, and the all-time playoff series 22–4, for a total of 86–43–8–0.
 
===Montreal Canadiens vs. Montreal Maroons (1924–1938)===
[[File:Morenz Game.jpg|thumb|upright|Sweater worn by the Montreal All-Stars at the [[Howie Morenz Memorial Game]] in 1937. Players for the Montreal All-Stars were drawn from the two Montreal-based clubs, the Maroons and Canadiens.]]
The Montreal Canadiens and [[Montreal Maroons]] had a rivalry that existed between [[1924–25 NHL season|1924]] and [[1937–38 NHL season|1938]]. Since [[1917–18 NHL season|1918]] no other team had been occupied in Montreal. The [[Montreal Wanderers]] had played for only six games before the arena they played in, the [[Montreal Arena]], burnt down.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1999|p=15}}</ref> The Montreal Maroons were meant to appeal to the English-speaking people of Quebec while the Canadiens were meant to appeal to [[French Canadians]]. The two teams met in the playoffs for the first time in [[1926–27 NHL season|1927]] for a two-game total goals series. The final game had 11,000 fans packed in an arena meant for 10,000 as the Canadiens defeated the Maroons.<ref name="TotalHockey">{{cite book|title=Total Hockey|page=207|year=1998|publisher=National Hockey League|first1=Dan|last1=Diamond|first2=Eric|last2=Zweig|isbn=0-8362-7114-9}}</ref> The [[1927–28 NHL season|next year]] the Maroons would have their revenge as they defeated the Canadiens 3–2 in total goals. This was their last playoff meeting before the Maroons eventually folded in 1938.
 
==See also==
* [[Major League Baseball rivalries]]
*[[List of most common NHL playoff series]]
* [[SportsMLS rivalry cups|Major League Soccer rivalries]]
* [[National Basketball Association rivalries]]
*[[Local derby]]
* [[National Football League rivalries]]
*[[Stanley Cup]]
 
*[[List of Stanley Cup champions]]
==References==
*[[List of NHL seasons]]
;Bibliography
* {{Citation|last=Brown|first=William|year=1999|title=The Montreal Maroons: The Forgotten Stanley Cup Champions|publisher=Véhicule Press|___location=Montreal|isbn=1-55065-128-5}}
*{{cite book|last=Cole|first=Stephen|title=The Best of Hockey Night in Canada|year=2004|publisher=McArthur & Company|___location=Toronto|isbn=1-55278-408-8}}
 
;Specific
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{{NHL topics}}
[[Category:Ice hockey related lists]]
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