Eastern Conference quarterfinals (1) Boston Bruins vs. (8) Montreal Canadiens For an NHL-record 32nd time, the Bruins and Canadiens faced each other in the playoffs. The Boston Bruins entered the playoffs after finishing the regular season with the best record in the Eastern Conference with 116 points. The Montreal Canadiens qualified for the postseason as the eighth seed with 93 points, winning the tiebreaker over the Florida Panthers based on the season series (six points to three). Boston swept Montreal, scoring at least four goals in each win. With the score tied 2–2 entering the third period of Game 1, Bruins captain
Zdeno Chara scored a power play goal at 11:15 and
Phil Kessel added an empty net score in the closing seconds to clinch the victory. Boston scored three power play goals, including two from
Marc Savard, en route to a 5–1 victory in Game 2. Game 3 resembled the first game in that both teams fought to a 2–2 tie midway through the game, but like the first contest the Bruins scored the go-ahead winning goal again. This time it was
Michael Ryder at 17:21 in the second period. Montreal scored in the first minute of Game 4 off the stick of
Andrei Kostitsyn, but Boston went on to dominate the rest of the game, grabbing two goals from Ryder in a 4–1 victory, to win the series.
(2) Washington Capitals vs. (7) New York Rangers The Washington Capitals entered the playoffs as the second seed in the Eastern Conference after winning the Southeast Division with 108 points. The New York Rangers earned the seventh seed with 95 points. The teams met in the playoffs four times previously, with each winning two series. They last met in the
1994 Eastern Conference semifinals, which the Rangers won in five games. The Capitals overcame a 3-1 series deficit to defeat the Rangers in seven games. The Rangers won the first game by a 4–3 score, with
Brandon Dubinsky scoring the game winner at 11:43 in the third period. Capitals head coach
Bruce Boudreau benched starting goaltender
Jose Theodore and replaced him with
Semyon Varlamov for Game 2, after Theodore allowed four goals on just 21 shots. The goaltending change was not immediately effective as New York netminder
Henrik Lundqvist stopped all 35 Washington shots to give the Rangers a 1–0 victory (with
Ryan Callahan providing the only tally) in the following game. However, Lundqvist stopped 38 of 39 shots, including 10 of 11 from the stick of
Alexander Ovechkin, to give the Rangers a 2–1 victory in Game 4. The Capitals limited the Rangers to just 20 shots to win 4–0 in Game 5. Fourth liner
Matt Bradley scored two goals in the game and Lundquist was pulled after allowing four goals on 14 shots. Rangers head coach
John Tortorella was suspended for Game 6 due to getting into an altercation with Capitals fans that saw him throw a water bottle at a heckler;
Jim Schoenfeld (who ironically had once been
suspended for a game during the
Stanley Cup playoffs in 1988 due to an altercation) served as coach for Game 6. Washington erupted in Game 6 to score five goals, including powerplay markers from
Mike Green and Ovechkin, for a 5–3 victory. After Game 6, the league suspended Capitals forward
Donald Brashear for both a pre-game altercation with Rangers forward
Colton Orr and what was ruled to be a late hit on
Blair Betts, in which the Rangers center suffered an orbital eye socket fracture.
Sergei Fedorov scored the game-winning goal 15:01 into the third period in Game 7 to give the Capitals a 2–1 victory and eliminate the Rangers for their first playoff series victory since reaching the Stanley Cup Finals in
1998.
(3) New Jersey Devils vs. (6) Carolina Hurricanes The New Jersey Devils entered the playoffs as the third seed in the Eastern Conference after winning the Atlantic Division with 106 points. The Carolina Hurricanes earned the sixth seed with 97 points. These teams met three times previously in the playoffs, with the Hurricanes winning two series. They last met in the
2006 Eastern Conference semifinals, with the Hurricanes winning in five games. The Hurricanes defeated the Devils in seven games. New Jersey won the first game with goaltender
Martin Brodeur stopping 18 of 19 shots and the Devils' top line playing phenomenally, with
Zach Parise and
Patrik Elias coming up with goals. . In game two,
Tim Gleason scored 2:40 into overtime for his first goal of the season to give Carolina a 2–1 victory. The game was a goaltending battle that saw Brodeur and
Cam Ward each stop over 30 shots Game 3 also went into overtime, but this time the Devils prevailed, 3–2, with
Travis Zajac scoring at 4:48 into the extra period. It appeared that game four would also go into overtime, but it ended with an epic conclusion. Carolina led 3–0, but New Jersey rallied to tie the game in the third.
Jussi Jokinen proved to be the hero, as he scored on a deflection with 0.2 seconds remaining in regulation to give the Hurricanes a 4–3 victory. This goal was the latest game winning regulation goal in Stanley Cup Playoff history. The next two games of the series were shutouts: Brodeur stopped 44 shots in a 1–0 victory for the Devils in game five (with
David Clarkson providing the game's sole goal), while
Cam Ward stopped 28 shots and
Eric Staal scored twice in a 4–0 victory for Carolina in game six. The Hurricanes were behind for much of game seven but scored two goals inside the last 1:20 of the third period, one by Jokinen and the other by Staal, to win the contest 4–3 and eliminate the Devils.
(4) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. (5) Philadelphia Flyers The Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers qualified for the playoffs by finishing the regular season tied with 99 points, but the Penguins earned the fourth seed because they won the tiebreaker on total wins (45–44) while the Flyers got the fifth seed. The Penguins and Flyers had previously met in the
previous season's Eastern Conference Final, with the Penguins winning in five games. It was the Penguins first win against the Flyers, having lost against them in three previous series (
1989,
1997 and
2000). The Penguins defeated the Flyers in six games.
Sidney Crosby scored a power play goal early in the first period of game one, sparking the Penguins to a 4–1 win against an undisciplined Flyers team that took 12 penalties. In game two,
Bill Guerin scored two goals including the game-winner during a five-on-three power play at 18:29 in overtime to give Pittsburgh a 3–2 victory. The Flyers bounced back in game three with a 6–3 victory that featured two goals by
Simon Gagne. Pittsburgh goaltender
Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 45 shots and helped kill off nine Philadelphia power plays, while
Tyler Kennedy scored the game winner, to give Pittsburgh a 3–1 win in Game 4. Flyers goaltender
Martin Biron stopped all 28 shots, and Philadelphia got scoring from unlikely sources such as
Arron Asham, to give the Flyers a 3–0 victory in game five. Then in game six, Philadelphia jumped to a 3–0 lead in the second period and appeared to be on their way to force a game seven. However, a fight between Philadelphia's
Daniel Carcillo and Pittsburgh's
Max Talbot reenergized the Penguins, who erupted to score five unanswered goals, including two by Crosby, to win the game and the series.
Western Conference quarterfinals (1) San Jose Sharks vs. (8) Anaheim Ducks The series between the Sharks and Ducks was just the second time in NHL history that two California teams were facing each other in the playoffs. The first series was in 1969 between the
Los Angeles Kings and the
Oakland Seals. The San Jose Sharks entered the playoffs as the
Presidents' Trophy winner, earning the NHL's best regular season record with 117 points. The Anaheim Ducks earned 91 points to clinch the eighth playoff seed in the Western Conference. The Ducks defeated the Sharks in six games, to become just the second California team (after the 2000 Sharks over the
St. Louis Blues) to eliminate a Presidents' Trophy winner in the first round of the playoffs. Anaheim goaltender
Jonas Hiller earned two shutout victories in games one and four, stopping a total of 66 shots. Game one was deadlocked until a
Scott Niedermayer powerplay goal broke the ice at 5:18 in the third, while game four was dominated by Anaheim and featured two goals from
Bobby Ryan Hiller also stopped 42 out of 44 shots in game two, as
Drew Miller picked up the game winner, and 36 out of 37 shots in a game six that saw the Ducks produce powerplay goals from
Corey Perry and
Teemu Selanne. In total, Hiller allowed only ten goals in the series. For the Sharks,
Dan Boyle scored two goals in game three to give San Jose a 4–3 win in that contest, while
Patrick Marleau scored the game-winning goal in game five to give the Sharks a 3–2 overtime victory. However, back in Anaheim for game six, the Ducks grabbed goals from big-name players like Selanne and Perry, dominating the Sharks to win the game 4–1, and eliminating the Sharks. The fourth game proved to be the most competitive contest of the series.
Nicklas Lidstrom scored a power play goal early in the first period to give the Red Wings the lead before
Kristian Huselius tied the score about three minutes later on a power play goal of his own.
Tomas Holmstrom and
Dan Cleary then scored to give Detroit a 3–1 lead before the end of the opening period. Vancouver then
shut out St. Louis in game two, 3–0, with goaltender
Roberto Luongo stopping all 30 Blues shots and
Mats Sundin providing the game-winning goal. The Blues were hoping to gain momentum when the series shifted to St. Louis for game three, but Vancouver held on to a 3–2 win, scoring three power play goals, with
Mattias Ohlund, Sedin, and
Steve Bernier providing the man-advantage tallies. In game four,
Brad Boyes and
David Perron helped St. Louis to tie the game after falling behind early. However,
Alex Burrows scored with 18.9 seconds left in the first overtime period to give the Canucks a 3–2 victory and the four-game sweep.
(4) Chicago Blackhawks vs. (5) Calgary Flames The Chicago Blackhawks finished the regular season in second place in the Central division with 104 points and thus entered the playoffs as the fourth-overall seed in the Western Conference. The Calgary Flames earned 98 points during the regular season to finish fifth-overall in the Western Conference. Chicago made the playoffs for the first time since
2002. The two teams met in the playoffs three times previously, with the Flames winning two series. They last met in the
1996 Western Conference quarterfinals, with the Blackhawks winning in four games. Chicago won the series over Calgary in six games, with the home team winning the first five games of the series.
Martin Havlat scored the game-winning goal 12 seconds into overtime to win game one for the Blackhawks, 3–2. Then in game two, Chicago overcame a 2-goal deficit by scoring 3 goals in the second period, including a pair from
Jonathan Toews, to win 3–2. When the series shifted to Calgary for game three,
David Moss scored two goals to help the Flames earn a 4–2 victory. In game four, Calgary scored six goals, including two by each of their top stars
Jarome Iginla and
Olli Jokinen, to win 6–4. The Blackhawks responded in game five by exploding to a 5–1 victory, going up 3–0 after one period with goals from
Brent Seabrook,
Patrick Sharp, and
Kris Versteeg, and limiting the Flames to 20 shots on goal. Chicago defeated Calgary by a score of 4–1 in game six to win the series, with
Patrick Kane providing the early game winner and goaltender
Nikolai Khabibulin stopping 43 out of 44 shots. ==Conference semifinals==