\n\t\t\t\t\t\tThe New York Rangers celebrate a goal from Mika Zibanejad in Game 1 of the Easter Conference finals.\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/p>\n
Sarah Stier \/ Getty Images<\/p>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
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It’s been a good, if stressful, month for fans of the New York Rangers, who play Game 2 of the NHL’s Eastern Conference final tonight at Madison Square Garden. The Broadway Blueshirts put a 6-2 hurting on the Tampa Bay Lightning in their series opener Wednesday, giving the Rangers a 60 percent chance of playing for the Stanley Cup for the first time since 2014. But before that, New York put its fans on a roller-coaster ride of emotions, battling its way through the playoffs by outlasting, outfighting and out-clutch<\/em>-ing the Pittsburgh Penguins and Carolina Hurricanes. Maybe they won’t need to do the same against the Lightning, but the Rangers are already skating along a hazardous path toward the Cup – a path that doesn’t always end in success.<\/p>\nIn the first round, the Rangers required seven games (and a 3-1 comeback) to eventually prevail over Pittsburgh, with left wing Artemi Panarin scoring the game-winner in overtime of the deciding contest. Then New York fell behind again versus Carolina, trailing 3-2 in the series before rallying to win Game 6 at home and Game 7 on the road. If you’re counting, that means the Rangers have faced elimination five different times so far this postseason, going a perfect 5-0 in those games. Since the NHL’s first round expanded from best-of-five to best-of-seven in 1987, only two teams – the 2013-14 Los Angeles Kings and the 2002-03 Minnesota Wild – have advanced to the third round with a better record in elimination contests over the playoffs’ first two rounds.<\/p>\n
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\n\nThe Rangers are in clutch company<\/h5>\n For teams that made the third round of the NHL playoffs, most wins in elimination games during the first two rounds, 1987-2022<\/p>\n<\/header>\n
\n\n\n \nAll Games<\/th>\n Elimination Games<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n \nYear<\/th>\n Team<\/th>\n Wins<\/th>\n Losses<\/th>\n Wins<\/th>\n Losses<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n \n\n2014<\/td>\n Los Angeles Kings<\/td>\n 8<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n2003<\/td>\n Minnesota Wild<\/td>\n 8<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n2022<\/td>\n New York Rangers<\/td>\n 8<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 5<\/td>\n 0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n2010<\/td>\n Montreal Canadiens<\/td>\n 8<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 5<\/td>\n 0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n2019<\/td>\n San Jose Sharks<\/td>\n 8<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 4<\/td>\n 0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n2014<\/td>\n New York Rangers<\/td>\n 8<\/td>\n 6<\/td>\n 4<\/td>\n 0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n \n2010<\/td>\n Philadelphia Flyers<\/td>\n 8<\/td>\n 4<\/td>\n 4<\/td>\n 0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n\nFor the 2020 playoffs, the qualifying round did not count toward these records; only the rounds of 16 and eight did.<\/p>\n
Source: Hockey-Reference.com<\/p>\n<\/footer>\n<\/section>\n<\/div>\n
The Wild were promptly blown out in the conference finals, as were the 2009-10 Montreal Canadiens – who, like the Rangers, had gone a collective 5-0 in elimination games through two rounds. (The two teams lost by a combined margin of eight games to one.) But the Kings actually used their clutch play as a springboard to winning the Cup – over the Rangers of all teams. So this year’s version of the Blueshirts might turn the tables by emulating the team that bested them eight years earlier.<\/p>\n
However, our previous research on elimination-game winning streaks in the NHL found that recent success when a team’s back is against the wall doesn’t really give it anything more than a coin-flip’s chance when predicting its next must-win matchup. Living dangerously, as the Rangers have certainly been doing in these playoffs, eventually just leads to dying if you try it long enough.<\/p>\n
Furthermore, the Rangers are in a select but not particularly successful club of teams that started off the playoffs by winning a pair of Game 7s. Since 1987, a dozen other teams have made the third round while needing seven games in each of their first two series. Of those 12, 10 ended up losing in the third round, with only two of the losers making it to another Game 7 before bowing out.<\/p>\n