Eastern Conference final (2) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (5) New Jersey Devils This was the second playoff series between these two teams, with Philadelphia winning the only previous meeting in two games. They last met in the
1978 Preliminary Round where Philadelphia swept the
Colorado Rockies. This was the third Conference Final appearance for New Jersey and the second consecutive appearance after losing to the New York Rangers in seven games the year before. Philadelphia made their fourth Conference Final appearance and first since losing to Montreal in six games in
1989. New Jersey handed Philadelphia their first two playoff home losses of the season winning 4–1 in game one and 5–2 in game two and they outshot the Flyers 28–21 and 24–20 respectively. In game three Philadelphia played with a sense of urgency. Trailing 2–1 the Flyers tied the game on
Rod Brind'Amour's goal with 6:03 to go in regulation. They went on to win the game 3–2 on captain
Eric Lindros' goal at 4:19 of the first overtime period. Playing with their newfound confidence the Flyers won game four by a score of 4–2 despite being outshot 34–19, Flyers goaltender
Ron Hextall made 32 saves. In game five the Devils took a 2–1 lead into the second period which ended up scoreless. The Flyers tied the game on
Kevin Dineen's second goal of the game at 3:13 of the third period. The Devils almost regained the lead on
Stephane Richer's breakaway shot that hit the crossbar with less than four minutes to go in regulation. Then with less than a minute remaining Devils forward
Claude Lemieux picked up the puck on a backcheck in the New Jersey zone and skated up the ice, once over the Flyers' blue line Lemieux fired a slap shot that beat Hextall on his blocker side. The goal silenced the Spectrum crowd and gave New Jersey a 3–2 lead with just 44.2 seconds to play. The Devils hung on to win the game 3–2. In game six Philadelphia opened the scoring on
Jim Montgomery's goal at 4:05 of the first period. The Devils calmly utilized the neutral-zone trap to shut down the Flyers' offense while their forwards took advantage.
Stephane Richer tied the game with a power play goal at 10:25 and
Brian Rolston put the Devils up 2–1 with a goal at 18:15. The scored remained 2–1 for New Jersey until midway through the second period. After a blocked shot by Devils defenceman
Shawn Chambers led to a three on one rush for New Jersey, Randy McKay scored his seventh goal of the postseason. The Devils made it 4–1 at 10:11 of the third period when
Bobby Carpenter passed the puck past Flyers defenceman
Karl Dykhuis up to
Claude Lemieux at center ice who went in on a breakaway and scored his league leading eleventh goal of the playoffs. The Flyers fought back as
Mikael Renberg scored on the power play at 16:29 to cut the Devils' lead to 4–2 but New Jersey held on to the lead and went on to win the game and series, advancing to the
Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in team history.
Western Conference final (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (4) Chicago Blackhawks This was the 14th playoff series between these two teams, with Chicago winning eight of the thirteen previous series. They last met in the
1992 Norris Division Final where Chicago swept Detroit in four games. This was the seventh conference final appearance for Chicago and first since 1992 where the Blackhawks swept Edmonton in four games. Detroit made their third conference final appearance and first since losing to Edmonton in five games in
1988. The Red Wings defeated the Blackhawks in five games to return to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since
1966. Game one of the series at the
Joe Louis Arena in
Detroit saw a goaltending battle between
Ed Belfour and
Mike Vernon. The two teams skated to a 1–1 tie after regulation before
Nicklas Lidstrom scored the game-winning goal for Detroit at 1:01 of the first overtime period. It was the first overtime playoff game that Detroit had won at home since 1960. In game two Chicago led by a score of 2–1 after two periods on goals by
Chris Chelios and
Tony Amonte. In the third period, Detroit kept pressing and eventually tied the game on
Doug Brown's goal.
Kris Draper scored the winner for Detroit with just 1:45 remaining in regulation. In game three of the series at the
United Center, Detroit led 3–2 going into the third period.
Jeff Shantz scored at 8:33 to tie the game for Chicago. The game went to double overtime where
Vladimir Konstantinov scored the game-winner for Detroit at 9:25. The win gave the Red Wings a commanding 3–0 series lead. The Blackhawks responded to the urgency and came out flying in game four as
Denis Savard and
Joe Murphy both scored twice and captain
Dirk Graham had a goal to give Chicago a dominating 5–0 lead after 40 minutes. Detroit scored twice in the third period on goals by Kris Draper and
Ray Sheppard as the Blackhawks went on to win the game 5–2. In game five Chicago jumped out to a 1–0 lead on Denis Savard's power play goal at 10:18 of the first period. Detroit then tied the game on captain
Steve Yzerman's goal at 11:36 of the second. After a scoreless third period the game went into double overtime where
Vyacheslav Kozlov scored at 2:25 to give the Red Wings a 2–1 win and a series clinching victory. ==Stanley Cup Finals==