The National Hockey League (NHL) season describes the playing structure in the National Hockey League. The season is divided into two sections. In the regular season teams play other teams in 82 games which determine their standings. The top eight teams in each conference enter an elimination tournament to determine the Stanley Cup champion.
The following tiebreaking procedures are used in case two teams have earned the same amount of points: *
The current playoff that was contested in the NHL uses the following format: the division winners are seeded one through three, and then the next five teams with the best records in the conference are seeded four through eight. In the event of a tie in points in the standings, ties are broken first by amount of wins, then by record against the team that is tied (disregarding the first game played at the arena of the team that hosted more games than the other during the season series, if applicable). Next, the tied team with the better positive differential between goals scored for and against is given preference, and in the rare circumstance these tiebreakers are insufficient, the Commissioner has the authority to devise some other means of breaking the tie.
The first round of the playoffs, or Conference Quarterfinals, consists of the first seed playing the eighth seed, the second playing the seventh, third playing the sixth, and the fourth playing the fifth. In the second round, or Conference Semifinals, the NHL re-seeds (unlike the NBA), with the top remaining Conference seed playing against the lowest remaining seed, and the other two remaining conference teams pairing off. In the third round, the Conference Finals, the two remaining teams in each conference play each other, with the Conference champions proceeding to the Stanley Cup Finals.
The higher-ranked team is said to be the team with the home-ice advantage. Four of the seven games are played at this team's home venue - the first and second, and, where necessary, the fifth and seventh, with the other games played at the lower-ranked team's home venue.
In the playoffs if the score is tied at the end of the third period a continous series of sudden-death overtime periods are played until a team scores. Overtime periods are full periods of twenty minutes (of five-on-five hockey), rather than the five minutes (of four-on-four hockey, followed by a shootout) in the regular season. The overtime is played with golden goal rule (sudden death) so the game ends as soon as either team scores a goal.
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It uses material from the
"Season structure of the NHL".
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