- Nov 11, 2017
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Hi everyone. I was just musing about different ways the playoffs could work given everyone talking about wanting to go back to 1-8. I'm not opposed to that, but I know the NHL doesn't like that idea due to travel considerations and things like divisional play. So, please don't respond to this by just saying you prefer a 1-8 system.
Anyway, I've come up with a divisional setup that's probably not entirely original, but at least different than what we have now, and a playoff format to go with it.
First, we break up the league into eight 4-team divisions (the names are just placeholders for now - feel free to suggest new ones).
*wild card teams
The idea here is to increase in-division play and reduce travel time.
IN DIVISION PLAY
Currently, the NHL schedule works like this:
Within division: 4 games × 5 opponents + 3 games × 2 opponents (26 total games)
Within conference, non-divisional: 3 games × 8 opponents (24 games)
Inter-conference: 2 games × 16 opponents (32 games)
Total: 82 games
In this system, it would work like this:
Within division: 5 games x 3 opponents (15 games)
Within conference, non-divisional: 3 games × 12 opponents (36 games)
Inter-conference: 2 games × 16 opponents (32 games)
Total: 83 games
TRAVEL TIME
Smaller divisions with more divisional games means less overall travel time. To demonstrate this, I looked at the average distance between three teams (Dallas, Florida, Anaheim) and their division rivals. Here are the average travel miles for each of those teams within their division (current vs this system):
Dallas: 939 vs 771
Florida: 1326 vs 710
Anaheim: 907 vs 233
This will put much less stress on the players and make back-to-backs less of a burden.
PLAYOFFS
Ideally, we could just go with a 1-8 system that re-seeds every round. Unfortunately, the NHL likes to have a predictable bracket and wants divisions to mean something. To achieve this, the divisions would each be paired to create a region that forms a corner of the bracket (Southeast vs Northeast, Metro vs East, Northwest vs Southwest, North vs Central). The winner of each division automatically hosts the first round game for their division. There are then 4 wild card teams for each conference, which match up against the division winners in reverse points order, regardless of division. This gets as close to 1-8 as possible while still maintaining division-based brackets to some degree. A big advantage of this system over the current one is the playoff matchups would be difficult to predict right until the end of the season. The four division winners would be jockeying for position, and teams would be moving up and down among the four wild card spots. if I made this same bracket next week, there might be significantly different matchups.
Let me know what you think. Is this better than the current system? Worse? The same?
Anyway, I've come up with a divisional setup that's probably not entirely original, but at least different than what we have now, and a playoff format to go with it.
First, we break up the league into eight 4-team divisions (the names are just placeholders for now - feel free to suggest new ones).
*wild card teams
The idea here is to increase in-division play and reduce travel time.
IN DIVISION PLAY
Currently, the NHL schedule works like this:
Within division: 4 games × 5 opponents + 3 games × 2 opponents (26 total games)
Within conference, non-divisional: 3 games × 8 opponents (24 games)
Inter-conference: 2 games × 16 opponents (32 games)
Total: 82 games
In this system, it would work like this:
Within division: 5 games x 3 opponents (15 games)
Within conference, non-divisional: 3 games × 12 opponents (36 games)
Inter-conference: 2 games × 16 opponents (32 games)
Total: 83 games
TRAVEL TIME
Smaller divisions with more divisional games means less overall travel time. To demonstrate this, I looked at the average distance between three teams (Dallas, Florida, Anaheim) and their division rivals. Here are the average travel miles for each of those teams within their division (current vs this system):
Dallas: 939 vs 771
Florida: 1326 vs 710
Anaheim: 907 vs 233
This will put much less stress on the players and make back-to-backs less of a burden.
PLAYOFFS
Ideally, we could just go with a 1-8 system that re-seeds every round. Unfortunately, the NHL likes to have a predictable bracket and wants divisions to mean something. To achieve this, the divisions would each be paired to create a region that forms a corner of the bracket (Southeast vs Northeast, Metro vs East, Northwest vs Southwest, North vs Central). The winner of each division automatically hosts the first round game for their division. There are then 4 wild card teams for each conference, which match up against the division winners in reverse points order, regardless of division. This gets as close to 1-8 as possible while still maintaining division-based brackets to some degree. A big advantage of this system over the current one is the playoff matchups would be difficult to predict right until the end of the season. The four division winners would be jockeying for position, and teams would be moving up and down among the four wild card spots. if I made this same bracket next week, there might be significantly different matchups.
Let me know what you think. Is this better than the current system? Worse? The same?
If anyone is curious, here is what things would have looked like last season with this system:
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