I've been consistently right about the leafs by picking them to lose against BJ, lose against Boston 2x. I can back that up. It's not a biase if it's reflected in reality.
You would pick the leafs to lose every series
I've been consistently right about the leafs by picking them to lose against BJ, lose against Boston 2x. I can back that up. It's not a biase if it's reflected in reality.
I've been consistently right about the leafs by picking them to lose against BJ, lose against Boston 2x. I can back that up. It's not a biase if it's reflected in reality.
You would pick the leafs to lose every series
Everyone likes to say the North sucks but maybe just maybe it has 1 really good club, 3 or 4 playoff quality clubs and some struggling clubs. I think the Oilers and Jets are better than other people think. Hell even the pesky Sens are better than people think. Not sure whats up with the Flames but its clear something is amiss.As an Oilers fan, I find that highly unlikely lol.
A lot of discussion has been had about how the current divisions are unbalanced, but you have to wonder how much worse it really is then in years past: The top 3 teams in the former Atlantic division are 3 of the 4 division leaders (there are no Atlantic teams in the West division) and the second placed team in the Central is the former fourth placed Atlantic division team.
Admittedly there were other times there were “overpowered” divisions (the Central a few years ago was absolutely insane). Do you think that in a post-covid world the NHL should try to just reorganize everything into just two conferences in order to try and make things more balanced? Or would the costs of removing divisions in terms of scheduling and travel just outweigh any advantages in terms of having a more even strength of schedule?