May 4, 2022
Bettman: NHL not considering new playoff format
The NHL has no plans to change its playoff format, regardless of what other leagues are doing, says commissioner Gary Bettman.
The Canadian Press
EDMONTON — The NHL has no plans to change its playoff format, regardless of what other leagues are doing, says commissioner Gary Bettman.
The current structure sees half of the league's 32 teams play in the post-season, and that creates the right competitive balance, Bettman said Wednesday.
"I think it creates great competition throughout the regular season, it makes the games most meaningful and there’s nothing like our playoff tournament," he said during a wide-ranging press conference in Edmonton ahead of Game 2 between the Oilers and L.A. Kings in a first-round playoff series.
"The Stanley Cup is the hardest (championship) to win. And there’s nothing in any sport like our first round.”
The NBA has moved to include a play-in tournament which gives some teams a last shot at making the post-season and MLB expanded its playoffs last season.
The NHL used a play-in tournament in two "bubbles" to finish out the 2019-20 season after it was cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The league has considered modifications to its playoff format, Bettman said, but ultimately decided against tinkering.
“We’ve had conversations about lots of things," he said. "We’re not looking to change something that we think is working very well.”
The commissioner spoke on a number of other topics, including post-season officiating.
Penalties aren't called differently in the post-season, he said.
“The standard is the standard. It’s not a regular-season standard, it’s not a playoff standard," Bettman said. We continue … to reinforce to the officials, ‘We want you to call the NHL standard.’ And that standard is to reinforce speed and skill and the officials are doing that.”
Bettman also discussed the state of the league coming out of COVID-19, saying the NHL had to be agile to weather the pandemic.
The league has made a number of adjustments over the past two seasons, he said, from rearranging divisions last year to avoid border closures to not sending players to the Olympics after outbreaks forced more than 100 games to be rescheduled.
"Ultimately, I think the ultimate team sport engaged in the ultimate team effort," Bettman said. "The co-operation, the professionalism of the Players' Association and the players, the way our teams responded, the response from ownership, the resources that were committed — all of it was part of the effort to get through COVID. And I think as we all seek normalcy, we’re just about there.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 4, 2022.