Playoff bracket The top three teams in each division qualified for the playoffs. The two division winners met in a
best-of-five Stanley Cup semifinal series. The divisional second-place teams and third-place teams played off in a
two-game total-goals series to determine the participants for the other two-game total-goals semifinal series. The semifinal winners then played in a best-of-five Stanley Cup Finals.
Quarterfinals (A2) Chicago Black Hawks vs. (C2) Montreal Maroons Chicago coach
Clem Loughlin said that the team who won the series very likely would win the Stanley Cup. Neither team scored after two regulation games. In the overtime, Maroons forward
Dave Trottier was cut and retired for stitches. He had hardly arrived in the dressing room when
Baldy Northcott scored the goal that won the series for the Maroons.
(A3) New York Rangers vs. (C3) Montreal Canadiens Semifinals Toronto's goaltender
George Hainsworth got hot and eliminated the Bruins, while the Rangers outlasted the
Montreal Canadiens on
Bill Cook's goal in the deciding game. He had been knocked goofy by the Canadiens Nels Crutchfield, but was not too groggy to win the series for the Rangers.
(C1) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (A1) Boston Bruins (C2) Montreal Maroons vs. (A3) New York Rangers Stanley Cup Finals The
Montreal Maroons throttled the Kid line of
Joe Primeau,
Harvey Jackson and
Charlie Conacher and goaltender
Alex Connell time and again foiled sure goals for Toronto, and the Maroons won the series three games to none, and as game three ended, the crowd let out a roar of approval and Connell leaned back on the crossbar and cried. All of the Maroons' games ended in ties or victories, making them the last team until the
1951–52 Detroit Red Wings to not lose a single game during the playoffs. The Maroons were also the last non-Original Six team to win the Stanley Cup until the Philadelphia Flyers won it in 1974 and the last team that is currently defunct to have won a Stanley Cup. ==Awards==