Stanley Cup Playoffs Record Book: 1918-2011

(Page 2)

Individual Records

GAMES PLAYED

MOST YEARS IN PLAYOFFS

24 – Chris Chelios, Montreal, Chicago, Detroit (1984-97, inclusive; 1999-2004, inclusive, 2006-08, inclusive)

21 – Raymond Bourque, Boston, Colorado (1980-96 inclusive; 98-2001 inclusive)

20 –

– Larry Robinson, Montreal, Los Angeles

– Larry Murphy, Los Angeles, Washington, Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Toronto, Detroit

– Scott Stevens, Washington, St. Louis, New Jersey

– Steve Yzerman, Detroit

MOST CONSECUTIVE YEARS IN PLAYOFFS

20 – Larry Robinson, Montreal, Los Angeles (1973-92, inclusive)

19 – Brett Hull, Calgary, St. Louis, Dallas, Detroit (1986-2004, inclusive)

18 – Larry Murphy, Washington, Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Toronto, Detroit (1984-2001, inclusive)

17 – Brad Park, NY Rangers, Boston, Detroit (1969-85, inclusive)

– Raymond Bourque, Boston (1980-96, inclusive)

MOST PLAYOFF GAMES

266 – Chris Chelios, Montreal, Chicago, Detroit

247 – Patrick Roy, Montreal, Colorado

236 – Mark Messier, Edmonton, NY Rangers

233 – Claude Lemieux, Montreal, New Jersey, Colorado, Phoenix, Dallas

– Scott Stevens, Washington, St. Louis, New Jersey

GOALS

MOST GOALS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

122 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles, St. Louis, NY Rangers

109 – Mark Messier, Edmonton, NY Rangers

106 – Jari Kurri, Edmonton, Los Angeles, NY Rangers, Anaheim

100 – Brett Hull, Calgary, St. Louis, Dallas, Detroit

93 – Glenn Anderson, Edmonton, Toronto, NY Rangers, St. Louis

MOST GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

19 – Reggie Leach, Philadelphia, 1976. 16 games.

– Jari Kurri, Edmonton, 1985. 18 games.

18 – Joe Sakic, Colorado, 1996. 22 games.

17 – Newsy Lalonde, Montreal, 1919. 10 games.

– Mike Bossy, NY Islanders, 1981. 18 games.

– Steve Payne, Minnesota, 1981. 19 games.

– Mike Bossy, NY Islanders, 1982. 19 games.

– Mike Bossy, NY Islanders, 1983. 19 games.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1985. 18 games.

– Kevin Stevens, Pittsburgh, 1991. 24 games.

MOST GOALS IN ONE SERIES (OTHER THAN FINAL)

12 – Jari Kurri, Edmonton in 1985 CF, 6 games vs. Chicago.

11 – Newsy Lalonde, Montreal in 1919 NHL F, 5 games vs. Ottawa.

10 – Tim Kerr, Philadelphia in 1989 DF, 7 games vs. Pittsburgh.

9 – Reggie Leach, Philadelphia in 1976 SF, 5 games vs. Boston.

– Bill Barber, Philadelphia in 1980 SF, 5 games vs. Minnesota.

– Mike Bossy, NY Islanders in 1983 CF, 6 games vs. Boston.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh in 1989 DF, 7 games vs. Philadelphia.

- John Druce, Washington in 1990 DF, 5 games vs. NY Rangers.

– Johan Franzen, Detroit. in 2008 CSF, 4 games vs. Colorado.

MOST GOALS IN FINAL SERIES (NHL ONLY)

9 – Babe Dye, Toronto in 1922, 5 games vs. Vancouver.

8 – Alf Skinner, Toronto in 1918, 5 games vs. Vancouver.

7 – Jean Beliveau, Montreal in 1956, 5 games vs. Detroit.

– Mike Bossy, NY Islanders in 1982, 4 games vs. Vancouver.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1985, 5 games vs. Philadelphia.

MOST GOALS, ONE GAME

5 – Newsy Lalonde, Montreal, March 1, 1919, at Montreal. Final score: Montreal 6, Ottawa 3.

– Maurice Richard, Montreal, March 23, 1944, at Montreal. Final score: Montreal 5, Toronto 1.

– Darryl Sittler, Toronto, April 22, 1976, at Toronto. Final score: Toronto 8, Philadelphia 5.

– Reggie Leach, Philadelphia, May 6, 1976, at Philadelphia. Final score: Philadelphia 6, Boston 3.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, April 25, 1989, at Pittsburgh. Final score: Pittsburgh 10, Philadelphia 7.

MOST GOALS, ONE PERIOD

4 – Tim Kerr, Philadelphia, April 13, 1985, at NY Rangers, second period. Final score: Philadelphia 6, NY Rangers 5.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, April 25, 1989, at Pittsburgh, first period. Final score: Pittsburgh 10, Philadelphia 7.

ASSISTS

MOST ASSISTS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

260 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles, St. Louis, NY Rangers

186 – Mark Messier, Edmonton, NY Rangers

139 – Raymond Bourque, Boston, Colorado

137 – Paul Coffey, Edmonton, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, Detroit, Philadelphia, Carolina

128 – Doug Gilmour, St. Louis, Calgary, Toronto, New Jersey, Buffalo, Montreal

MOST ASSISTS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

31 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1988. 19 games.

30 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1985. 18 games.

29 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1987. 21 games.

28 – Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, 1991. 23 games.

26 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1983. 16 games.

MOST ASSISTS IN ONE SERIES (OTHER THAN FINAL)

14 – Rick Middleton, Boston in 1983 DF, 7 games vs. Buffalo.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1985 CF, 6 games vs. Chicago.

13 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1987 DSF, 5 games vs. Los Angeles.

– Doug Gilmour, Toronto in 1994 CSF, 7 games vs. San Jose.

11 – Al MacInnis, Calgary in 1984 DF, 7 games vs. Edmonton.

– Mark Messier, Edmonton in 1989 DSF, 7 games vs. Los Angeles.

– Mike Ridley, Washington in 1992 DSF, 7 games vs. Pittsburgh.

– Ron Francis, Pittsburgh in 1995 CQF, 7 games vs. Washington.

– Henrik Sedin, Vancouver, in 2011 CF, 5 games vs. San Jose.

MOST ASSISTS, FINAL SERIES

10 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1988, 4 games plus suspended game vs. Boston.

9 – Jacques Lemaire, Montreal in 1973, 6 games vs. Chicago.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1987, 7 games vs. Philadelphia.

– Larry Murphy, Pittsburgh in 1991, 6 games vs. Minnesota.

– Danny Briere, Philadelphia, in 2010, 6 games vs. Chicago.

MOST ASSISTS, ONE GAME

6 – Mikko Leinonen, NY Rangers, April 8, 1982, at NY Rangers. Final score: NY Rangers 7, Philadelphia 3.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 9, 1987, at Edmonton. Final score: Edmonton 13, Los Angeles 3.

5 – Toe Blake, Montreal, March 23, 1944, at Montreal. Final score: Montreal 5, Toronto 1.

– Maurice Richard, Montreal, March 27, 1956, at Montreal. Final score: Montreal 7, NY Rangers 0.

– Bert Olmstead, Montreal, March 30, 1957, at Montreal. Final score: Montreal 8, NY Rangers 3.

– Don McKenney, Boston, April 5, 1958, at Boston. Final score: Boston 8, NY Rangers 2.

– Stan Mikita, Chicago, April 4, 1973, at Chicago. Final score: Chicago 7, St. Louis 1.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 8, 1981, at Montreal. Final score: Edmonton 6, Montreal 3.

– Paul Coffey, Edmonton, May 14, 1985, at Edmonton. Final score: Edmonton 10, Chicago 5.

– Doug Gilmour, St. Louis, April 15, 1986, at Minnesota. Final score: St. Louis 6, Minnesota 3.

– Risto Siltanen, Quebec, April 14, 1987, at Hartford. Final score: Quebec 7, Hartford 5.

– Patrik Sundstrom, New Jersey, April 22, 1988, at New Jersey. Final score: New Jersey 10, Washington 4.

– Geoff Courtnall, St. Louis, April 23, 1998, at St. Louis. Final score: St. Louis 8, Los Angeles 3.

MOST ASSISTS, ONE PERIOD

3 – Three assists by one player in one period of a playoff game has been recorded on 80 occasions. Brad Richards of the Dallas Stars is the most recent to equal this mark with 3 assists in the third period at San Jose, April 27, 2008. Final score: Dallas 5, San Jose 2.

– Wayne Gretzky has had 3 assists in one period 5 times; Raymond Bourque, 3 times; Toe Blake, Jean Beliveau, Doug Harvey and Bobby Orr, twice each. Joe Primeau of Toronto was the first player to be credited with this record with 3 assists in the third period at NY Rangers, April 7, 1932. Final score: Toronto 6, NY Rangers 2.

POINTS

MOST POINTS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

382 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles, St. Louis, NY Rangers, 122 goals, 260 assists.

295 – Mark Messier, Edmonton, NY Rangers, 109 goals, 186 assists.

233 – Jari Kurri, Edmonton, Los Angeles, NY Rangers, Anaheim, 106 goals, 127 assists.

214 – Glenn Anderson, Edmonton, Toronto, NY Rangers, St. Louis, 93 goals, 121 assists.

196 – Paul Coffey, Edmonton, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, Detroit, Philadelphia, Carolina, 59 goals, 137 assists.

MOST POINTS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

47 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1985. 17 goals, 30 assists in 18 games.

44 – Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh in 1991. 16 goals, 28 assists in 23 games.

43 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1988. 12 goals, 31 assists in 19 games.

40 – Wayne Gretzky, Los Angeles in 1993. 15 goals, 25 assists in 24 games.

38 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1983. 12 goals, 26 assists in 16 games.

MOST POINTS, ONE SERIES (OTHER THAN FINAL)

19 – Rick Middleton, Boston in 1983 DF, 7 games vs. Buffalo. 5 goals, 14 assists.

18 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1985 CF, 6 games vs. Chicago. 4 goals, 14 assists.

17 – Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh in 1992 DSF, 6 games vs. Washington. 7 goals, 10 assists.

16 – Barry Pederson, Boston in 1983 DF, 7 games vs. Buffalo. 7 goals, 9 assists.

– Doug Gilmour, Toronto in 1994 CSF, 7 games vs. San Jose. 3 goals, 13 assists.

MOST POINTS, FINAL SERIES

13 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton in 1988, 4 games plus suspended game vs. Boston. 3 goals, 10 assists.

12 – Gordie Howe, Detroit in 1955, 7 games vs. Montreal. 5 goals, 7 assists.

– Yvan Cournoyer, Montreal in 1973, 6 games vs. Chicago. 6 goals, 6 assists.

– Jacques Lemaire, Montreal in 1973, 6 games vs. Chicago. 3 goals, 9 assists.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh in 1991, 5 games vs. Minnesota. 5 goals, 7 assists.

– Danny Briere, Philadelphia, in 2010, 6 games vs. Chicago. 3 goals, 9 assists.

MOST POINTS, ONE GAME

8 – Patrik Sundstrom, New Jersey, April 22, 1988, at New Jersey, in 10-4 win vs. Washington. 3 goals, 5 assists.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, April 25, 1989, at Pittsburgh, in 10-7 win vs. Philadelphia. 5 goals, 3 assists.

7 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 17, 1983, at Calgary, in 10-2 win. 4 goals, 3 assists.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 25,1985, at Winnipeg, in 8-3 win. 3 goals, 4 assists.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 9, 1987, at Edmonton, in 13-3 win vs. Los Angeles. 1 goal, 6 assists.

6 – Dickie Moore, Montreal, March 25, 1954, at Montreal, in 8-1 win vs. Boston. 2 goals, 4 assists.

– Phil Esposito, Boston, April 2, 1969, at Boston, in 10-0 win vs. Toronto. 4 goals, 2 assists.

– Darryl Sittler, Toronto, April 22, 1976, at Toronto, in 8-5 win vs. Philadelphia. 5 goals, 1 assist.

– Guy Lafleur, Montreal, April 11, 1977, at Montreal, in 7-2 win vs. St. Louis. 3 goals, 3 assists.

– Mikko Leinonen, NY Rangers, April 8, 1982, at NY Rangers, in 7-3 win vs. Philadelphia. 6 assists.

– Paul Coffey, Edmonton, May 14, 1985, at Edmonton, in 10-5 win vs. Chicago. 1 goal, 5 assists.

– John Anderson, Hartford, April 12, 1986, at Hartford, in 9-4 win vs. Quebec. 2 goals, 4 assists.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, April 23, 1992, at Pittsburgh, in 6-4 win vs. Washington. 3 goals, 3 assists.

– Geoff Courtnall, St. Louis Blues, April 23, 1998, at St. Louis, in 8-3 win vs. Los Angeles. 1 goal, 5 assists.

– Johan Franzen, Detroit, May 6, 2010, at Detroit, in 7-1 win vs. San Jose.

4 goals, 2 assists.

MOST POINTS, ONE PERIOD

4 – Maurice Richard, Montreal, March 29, 1945, at Montreal, third period, in 10-3 win vs. Toronto. 3 goals, 1 assist.

– Dickie Moore, Montreal, March 25, 1954, at Montreal, first period, in 8-1 win vs. Boston. 2 goals, 2 assists.

– Barry Pederson, Boston, April 8, 1982, at Boston, second period, in 7-3 win vs. Buffalo. 3 goals, 1 assist.

– Peter McNab, Boston, April 11, 1982, at Buffalo, second period, in 5-2 win. 1 goal, 3 assists.

– Tim Kerr, Philadelphia, April 13, 1985, at NY Rangers, second period, in 6-5 win. 4 goals.

– Ken Linseman, Boston, April 14, 1985, at Boston, second period, in 7-6 win vs. Montreal. 2 goals, 2 assists.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 12, 1987, at Los Angeles, third period, in 6-3 win. 1 goal, 3 assists.

– Glenn Anderson, Edmonton, April 6, 1988, at Edmonton, third period, in 7-4 win vs. Winnipeg. 3 goals, 1 assist.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, April 25, 1989, at Pittsburgh, first period, in 10-7 win vs. Philadelphia. 4 goals.

– Dave Gagner, Minnesota, April 8, 1991, at Minnesota, first period, in 6-5 loss vs. Chicago. 2 goals, 2 assists.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, April 23, 1992, at Pittsburgh, second period, in 6-4 win vs. Washington. 2 goals, 2 assists.

– Alexander Mogilny, New Jersey, April 28, 2001, at New Jersey, second period, in 6-5 win vs. Toronto. 1 goal, 3 assists.

– Brad Richards, Dallas, April 27, 2008, at San Jose, third period, in 5-2 win vs. San Jose. 1 goal, 3 assists.

– Johan Franzen, Detroit, May 6, 2010, at Detroit, first period, in 7-1 win vs. San Jose.

3 goals, 1 assist.

– Tyler Seguin, Boston, May 17, 2011, at Boston, second period, in 6-5 win vs. Tampa Bay. 2 goals, 2 assists.

POWER-PLAY GOALS

MOST POWER-PLAY GOALS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

38 – Brett Hull, St. Louis, Dallas, Detroit

35 – Mike Bossy, NY Islanders

34 – Dino Ciccarelli, Minnesota, Washington, Detroit

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles, St. Louis, NY Rangers

30 – Nicklas Lidstrom, Detroit

29 – Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh

MOST POWER-PLAY GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

9 – Mike Bossy, NY Islanders, 1981. 18 games vs. Toronto, Edmonton, NY Rangers and Minnesota.

– Cam Neely, Boston, 1991. 19 games vs. Hartford, Montreal and Pittsburgh.

8 – Tim Kerr, Philadelphia, 1989. 19 games.

– John Druce, Washington, 1990. 15 games.

– Brian Propp, Minnesota, 1991. 23 games.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, 1992. 15 games.

MOST POWER-PLAY GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF SERIES

6 – Chris Kontos, Los Angeles, 1989 DSF vs. Edmonton. Los Angeles won series 4-3.

5 – Andy Bathgate, Detroit, 1966 SF vs. Chicago. Detroit won series 4-2.

– Denis Potvin, NY Islanders, 1981 QF vs. Edmonton. NY Islanders won series 4-2.

– Ken Houston, Calgary, 1981 QF vs. Philadelphia. Calgary won series 4-3.

– Rick Vaive, Chicago, 1988 DSF vs. St. Louis. St. Louis won series 4-1.

– Tim Kerr, Philadelphia, 1989 DF vs. Pittsburgh. Philadelphia won series 4-3.

– Mario Lemieux, Pittsburgh, 1989 DF vs. Philadelphia. Philadelphia won series 4-3.

– John Druce, Washington, 1990 DF vs. NY Rangers. Washington won series 4-1.

– Pat LaFontaine, Buffalo, 1992 DSF vs. Boston. Boston won series 4-3.

– Adam Graves, NY Rangers, 1996 CQF vs. Montreal. NY Rangers won series 4-2.

MOST POWER-PLAY GOALS, ONE GAME

3 – Syd Howe, Detroit, March 23, 1939, at Detroit vs. Montreal. Detroit won 7-3.

– Sid Smith, Toronto, April 10, 1949, at Detroit. Toronto won 3-1.

– Phil Esposito, Boston, April 2, 1969, at Boston vs. Toronto. Boston won 10-0.

– John Bucyk, Boston, April 21, 1974, at Boston vs. Chicago. Boston won 8-6.

– Denis Potvin, NY Islanders, April 17, 1981, at NY Islanders vs. Edmonton. NY Islanders won 6-3.

– Tim Kerr, Philadelphia, April 13, 1985, at NY Rangers. Philadelphia won 6-5.

– Jari Kurri, Edmonton, April 9, 1987, at Edmonton vs. Los Angeles. Edmonton won 13-3.

– Mark Johnson, New Jersey, April 22, 1988, at New Jersey vs. Washington. New Jersey won 10-4.

– Dino Ciccarelli, Detroit, April 29, 1993, at Toronto. Detroit won 7-3.

– Dino Ciccarelli, Detroit, May 11, 1995, at Dallas. Detroit won 5-1.

– Valeri Kamensky, Colorado, April 24, 1997, at Colorado vs. Chicago. Colorado won 7-0.

– Jonathan Toews, Chicago, May 7, 2010, at Vancouver. Chicago won 7-4.

MOST POWER-PLAY GOALS, ONE PERIOD

3 – Tim Kerr, Philadelphia, April 13, 1985, at NY Rangers, second period, in 6-5 win.

2 – Two power-play goals have been scored by one player in one period on 55 occasions. Charlie Conacher of Toronto was the first to do so with two power-play goals in the second period at Toronto vs. Boston, March 26, 1936. Final score: Toronto 8, Boston 3. Brad Richards of the Tampa Bay Lightning is the most recent to equal this mark with two power-play goals in the second period at Calgary, June 5, 2004. Final score: Tampa Bay 3, Calgary 2.

SHORTHAND GOALS

MOST SHORTHAND GOALS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

14 – Mark Messier, Edmonton, NY Rangers

11 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles

10 – Jari Kurri, Edmonton, Los Angeles, NY Rangers

8 – Ed Westfall, Boston, NY Islanders

– Hakan Loob, Calgary

MOST SHORTHAND GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

3 – Derek Sanderson, Boston, 1969. 1 vs. Toronto in QF, won by Boston 4-0; 2 vs. Montreal in SF, won by Montreal, 4-2.

– Bill Barber, Philadelphia, 1980. 3 vs. Minnesota in SF, won by Philadelphia 4-1.

– Lorne Henning, NY Islanders, 1980. 1 vs. Boston in QF, won by NY Islanders 4-1, 1 vs. Buffalo in SF, won by NY Islanders 4-2, 1 vs. Philadelphia in F, won by NY Islanders 4-2.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1983. 2 vs. Winnipeg in DSF, won by Edmonton 3-0; 1 vs. Calgary in DF, won by Edmonton 4-1.

– Wayne Presley, Chicago, 1989. 3 vs. Detroit in DSF, won by Chicago 4-2.

– Todd Marchant, Edmonton, 1997. 1 vs. Dallas in CQF, won by Edmonton 4-3; 2 vs. Colorado in CSF, won by Colorado 4-1.

MOST SHORTHAND GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF SERIES

3 – Bill Barber, Philadelphia, 1980 SF vs. Minnesota. Philadelphia won series 4-1.

– Wayne Presley, Chicago, 1989 DSF vs. Detroit. Chicago won series 4-2.

2 – Mac Colville, NY Rangers, 1940 SF vs. Boston. NY Rangers won series 4-2.

– Jerry Toppazzini, Boston, 1958 SF vs. NY Rangers. Boston won series 4-2.

– Dave Keon, Toronto, 1963 F vs. Detroit. Toronto won series 4-1.

– Bob Pulford, Toronto, 1964 F vs. Detroit. Toronto won series 4-3.

– Serge Savard, Montreal, 1968 F vs. St. Louis. Montreal won series 4-0.

– Derek Sanderson, Boston, 1969 SF vs. Montreal. Montreal won series 4-2.

– Bryan Trottier, NY Islanders, 1980 PRE vs. Los Angeles. NY Islanders won series 3-1.

– Bobby Lalonde, Boston, 1981 PRE vs. Minnesota. Minnesota won series 3-0.

– Butch Goring, NY Islanders, 1981 SF vs. NY Rangers. NY Islanders won series 4-0.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1983 DSF vs. Winnipeg. Edmonton won series 3-0.

– Mark Messier, Edmonton, 1983 DF vs. Calgary. Edmonton won series 4-1.

– Jari Kurri, Edmonton, 1983 CF vs. Chicago. Edmonton won series 4-0.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1985 DF vs. Winnipeg. Edmonton won series 4-0.

– Kevin Lowe, Edmonton, 1987 F vs. Philadelphia. Edmonton won series 4-3.

– Bob Gould, Washington, 1988 DSF vs. Philadelphia. Washington won series 4-3.

– Dave Poulin, Philadelphia, 1989 DF vs. Pittsburgh. Philadelphia won series 4-3.

– Russ Courtnall, Montreal, 1991 DF vs. Boston. Boston won series 4-3.

– Sergei Fedorov, Detroit, 1992 DSF vs. Minnesota. Detroit won series 4-3.

– Mark Messier, NY Rangers, 1992 DSF vs. New Jersey. NY Rangers series 4-3.

– Tom Fitzgerald, NY Islanders, 1993 DF vs. Pittsburgh. NY Islanders won series 4-3.

– Mark Osborne, Toronto, 1994 CSF vs. San Jose. Toronto won series 4-3.

– Tony Amonte, Chicago, 1997 CQF vs. Colorado. Colorado won series 4-2.

– Brian Rolston, New Jersey, 1997 CQF vs. Montreal. New Jersey won series 4-1.

– Rod Brind’Amour, Philadelphia, 1997 CQF vs. Pittsburgh. Philadelphia won series 4-1.

– Todd Marchant, Edmonton, 1997 CSF vs. Colorado. Colorado won series 4-1.

– Jeremy Roenick, Phoenix, 1998 CQF vs. Detroit. Detroit won series 4-2.

– Vincent Damphousse, San Jose, 1999 CQF vs. Colorado. Colorado won series 4-2.

– Dixon Ward, Buffalo, 1999 CF vs. Toronto. Buffalo won series 4-1.

– Curtis Brown, Buffalo, 2001 CSF vs. Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh won series 4-3.

– John Madden, New Jersey, 2006 CQF vs. NY Rangers. New Jersey won series 4-0.

– David Legwand, Nashville, 2011 CSF vs. Vancouver, won by Vancouver 4-2.

MOST SHORTHAND GOALS, ONE GAME

2 – Dave Keon, Toronto, April 18, 1963, at Toronto, in 3-1 win vs. Detroit.

– Bryan Trottier, NY Islanders, April 8, 1980, at NY Islanders, in 8-1 win vs. Los Angeles.

– Bobby Lalonde, Boston, April 11, 1981, at Minnesota, in 6-3 loss vs. Minnesota.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 6, 1983, at Edmonton, in 6-3 win vs. Winnipeg.

– Jari Kurri, Edmonton, April 24, 1983, at Edmonton, in 8-3 win vs. Chicago.

– Mark Messier, NY Rangers, April 21, 1992, at NY Rangers, in 7-3 loss vs. New Jersey.

– Tom Fitzgerald, NY Islanders, May 8, 1993, at NY Islanders, in 6-5 win vs. Pittsburgh.

– Rod Brind’Amour, Philadelphia, April 26, 1997, at Philadelphia, in 6-3 win vs. Pittsburgh.

– Jeremy Roenick, Phoenix, April 24, 1998, at Detroit, in 7-4 win vs. Detroit.

– Vincent Damphousse, San Jose, April 30, 1999, at Colorado, in 7-3 win vs. Colorado.

– John Madden, New Jersey, April 24, 2006, at New Jersey, in 4-1 win vs. NY Rangers.

MOST SHORTHAND GOALS, ONE PERIOD

2 – Bryan Trottier, NY Islanders, April 8, 1980, second period, at NY Islanders, in 8-1 win vs. Los Angeles.

– Bobby Lalonde, Boston, April 11, 1981, third period, at Minnesota, in 6-3 loss vs. Minnesota.

– Jari Kurri, Edmonton, April 24, 1983, third period, at Edmonton, in 8-4 win vs. Chicago.

– Rod Brind’Amour, Philadelphia, April 26, 1997, first period, at Philadelphia, in 6-3 win vs. Pittsburgh.

– Jeremy Roenick, Phoenix, April 24, 1998, second period, at Detroit, in 7-4 win vs. Detroit.

– Vincent Damphousse, San Jose, April 30, 1999, third period, at Colorado, in 7-3 win vs. Colorado.

GAME-WINNING GOALS

MOST GAME-WINNING GOALS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

24 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles, St. Louis, NY Rangers

– Brett Hull, St. Louis, Dallas, Detroit

19 – Claude Lemieux, Montreal, New Jersey, Colorado

- Joe Sakic, Colorado

18 – Maurice Richard, Montreal

MOST GAME-WINNING GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

7 – Brad Richards, Tampa Bay, 2004. 23 games.

6 – Joe Sakic, Colorado, 1996. 22 games.

– Joe Nieuwendyk, Dallas, 1999. 23 games.

MOST GAME-WINNING GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF SERIES

4 – Mike Bossy, NY Islanders, 1983 CF vs. Boston. NY Islanders won series 4-2.

OVERTIME GOALS

MOST OVERTIME GOALS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

7 – Joe Sakic, Colorado (2 in 1996; 1 in 1998; 1 in 2001; 2 in 2004; 1 in 2006)

6 – Maurice Richard, Montreal

5 – Glenn Anderson, Edmonton, Toronto, St. Louis

4 – Bob Nystrom, NY Islanders

– Dale Hunter, Quebec, Washington

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles

– Stephane Richer, Montreal, New Jersey

– Joe Murphy, Edmonton, Chicago

– Esa Tikkanen, Edmonton, NY Rangers

– Jaromir Jagr, Pittsburgh

– Kirk Muller, Montreal, Dallas

– Jeremy Roenick, Chicago, Philadelphia

– Chris Drury, Colorado, Buffalo

– Jamie Langenbrunner, Dallas, New Jersey

MOST OVERTIME GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

3 – Mel Hill, Boston, 1939. All vs. NY Rangers in SF. Boston won series 4-3.

– Maurice Richard, Montreal, 1951. 2 vs. Detroit in SF. Montreal won series 4-2; 1 vs. Toronto in F. Toronto won series 4-1.

MOST OVERTIME GOALS, ONE PLAYOFF SERIES

3 – Mel Hill, Boston, 1939 SF vs. NY Rangers, won by Boston 4-3. Hill scored at 59:25 of overtime March 21 for a 2-1 win; at 8:24 of overtime, March 23 for a 3-2 win; and at 48:00 of overtime, April 2 for a 2-1 win.

SCORING BY A DEFENSEMAN

MOST GOALS BY A DEFENSEMAN, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

12 – Paul Coffey, Edmonton, 1985. 18 games.

11 – Brian Leetch, NY Rangers, 1994. 23 games.

9 – Bobby Orr, Boston, 1970. 14 games.

– Brad Park, Boston, 1978. 15 games.

8 – Denis Potvin, NY Islanders, 1981. 18 games.

– Raymond Bourque, Boston, 1983. 17 games.

– Denis Potvin, NY Islanders, 1983. 20 games.

– Paul Coffey, Edmonton, 1984. 19 games.

MOST GOALS BY A DEFENSEMAN, ONE GAME

3 – Bobby Orr, Boston, April 11, 1971, at Montreal. Final score: Boston 5, Montreal 2.

– Dick Redmond, Chicago, April 4, 1973, at Chicago. Final score: Chicago 7, St. Louis 1.

– Denis Potvin, NY Islanders, April 17, 1981, at NY Islanders. Final score: NY Islanders 6, Edmonton 3.

– Paul Reinhart, Calgary, April 14, 1983, at Edmonton. Final score: Edmonton 6, Calgary 3.

– Doug Halward, Vancouver, April 7, 1984, at Vancouver. Final score: Vancouver 7, Calgary 0.

– Paul Reinhart, Calgary, April 8, 1984, at Vancouver. Final score: Calgary 5, Vancouver 1.

– Al Iafrate, Washington, April 26, 1993, at Washington. Final score: Washington 6, NY Islanders 4.

– Eric Desjardins, Montreal, June 3, 1993, at Montreal. Final score: Montreal 3, Los Angeles 2.

– Gary Suter, Chicago, April 24, 1994, at Chicago. Final score: Chicago 4, Toronto 3.

– Brian Leetch, NY Rangers, May 22, 1995, at Philadelphia. Final score: Philadelphia 4, NY Ran

– Andy Delmore, Philadelphia, May 7, 2000, at Philadelphia. Final score: Philadelphia 6, Pittsburgh 3.

MOST ASSISTS BY A DEFENSEMAN, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

25 – Paul Coffey, Edmonton, 1985. 18 games.

24 – Al MacInnis, Calgary, 1989. 22 games.

23 – Brian Leetch, NY Rangers, 1994. 23 games.

19 – Bobby Orr, Boston, 1972. 15 games.

18 – Raymond Bourque, Boston, 1988. 23 games.

– Raymond Bourque, Boston, 1991. 19 games.

– Larry Murphy, Pittsburgh, 1991. 23 games.

– Chris Pronger, Philadelphia, 2010. 23 games.

MOST ASSISTS BY A DEFENSEMAN, ONE GAME

5 – Paul Coffey, Edmonton, May 14, 1985, at Edmonton vs. Chicago. Edmonton won 10-5.

– Risto Siltanen, Quebec, April 14, 1987, at Hartford. Quebec won 7-5.

MOST POINTS BY A DEFENSEMAN, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

37 – Paul Coffey, Edmonton, 1985. 12 goals, 25 assists in 18 games.

34 – Brian Leetch, NY Rangers, 1994. 11 goals, 23 assists in 23 games.

31 – Al MacInnis, Calgary, 1989. 7 goals, 24 assists in 22 games.

25 – Denis Potvin, NY Islanders, 1981. 8 goals, 17 assists in 18 games.

– Raymond Bourque, Boston, 1991. 7 goals, 18 assists in 19 games.

MOST POINTS BY A DEFENSEMAN, ONE GAME

6 – Paul Coffey, Edmonton, May 14, 1985, at Edmonton vs. Chicago. 1 goal, 5 assists. Edmonton won 10-5.

5 – Eddie Bush, Detroit, April 9, 1942, at Detroit vs. Toronto. 1 goal, 4 assists. Detroit won 5-2.

– Bob Dailey, Philadelphia, May 1, 1980, at Philadelphia vs. Minnesota. 1 goal, 4 assists. Philadelphia won 7-0.

– Denis Potvin, NY Islanders, April 17, 1981, at NY Islanders vs. Edmonton. 3 goals, 2 assists. NY Islanders won 6-3.

– Risto Siltanen, Quebec, April 14, 1987, at Hartford. 5 assists. Quebec won 7-5.

SCORING BY A ROOKIE

MOST GOALS BY A ROOKIE, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

14 – Dino Ciccarelli, Minnesota, 1981. 19 games.

11 – Jeremy Roenick, Chicago, 1990. 20 games.

10 – Claude Lemieux, Montreal, 1986. 20 games.

9 – Pat Flatley, NY Islanders, 1984. 21 games.

8 – Steve Christoff, Minnesota, 1980. 14 games.

– Brad Palmer, Minnesota, 1981. 19 games.

– Mike Krushelnyski, Boston, 1983. 17 games.

– Bob Joyce, Boston, 1988. 23 games.

MOST POINTS BY A ROOKIE, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

21 – Dino Ciccarelli, Minnesota, 1981. 14 goals, 7 assists in 19 games.

20 – Don Maloney, NY Rangers, 1979. 7 goals, 13 assists in 18 games.

THREE-OR-MORE-GOAL GAMES

MOST THREE-OR-MORE-GOAL GAMES IIN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

10 – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, Los Angeles, NY Rangers. 8 three-goal games; 2 four-goal games.

7 – Maurice Richard, Montreal. 4 three-goal games; 2 four-goal games; 1 five-goal game.

– Jari Kurri, Edmonton. 6 three-goal games; 1 four-goal game.

6 – Dino Ciccarelli, Minnesota, Washington, Detroit. 5 three-goal games; 1 four-goal game.

5 – Mike Bossy, NY Islanders. 4 three-goal games; 1 four-goal game.

MOST THREE-OR-MORE-GOAL GAMES, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

4 – Jari Kurri, Edmonton, 1985. 1 four-goal game, 3 three-goal games.

3 – Mark Messier, Edmonton, 1983. 3 three-goal games.

– Mike Bossy, NY Islanders, 1983. 1 four-goal game, 2 three-goal games.

2 – Newsy Lalonde, Montreal, 1919. 1 five-goal game, 1 four-goal game.

– Maurice Richard, Montreal, 1944. 1 five-goal game; 1 three-goal game.

– Doug Bentley, Chicago, 1944. 2 three-goal games.

– Norm Ullman, Detroit, 1964. 2 three-goal games.

– Phil Esposito, Boston, 1970. 2 three-goal games.

– Pit Martin, Chicago, 1973. 2 three-goal games.

– Rick MacLeish, Philadelphia, 1975. 2 three-goal games.

– Lanny McDonald, Toronto, 1977. 1 four-goal game; 1 three-goal game.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1981. 2 three-goal games.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1983. 2 four-goal games.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1985. 2 three-goal games.

– Petr Klima, Detroit, 1988. 2 three-goal games.

– Cam Neely, Boston, 1991. 2 three-goal games.

– Wayne Gretzky, NY Rangers, 1997. 2 three-goal games.

– Daniel Alfredsson, Ottawa, 1998. 2 three-goal games.

– Patrick Marleau, San Jose, 2004. 2 three-goal games.

– Johan Franzen, Detroit, 2008. 2 three-goal games.

MOST THREE-OR-MORE-GOAL GAMES, ONE PLAYOFF SERIES

3 – Jari Kurri, Edmonton, 1985 CF vs. Chicago, won by Edmonton 4-2. Kurri scored 3 goals May 7 at Edmonton in 7-3 win, 3 goals May 14 at Edmonton in 10-5 win and 4 goals May 16 at Chicago in 8-2 win.

2 – Doug Bentley, Chicago, 1944 SF vs. Detroit, won by Chicago 4-1. Bentley scored 3 goals March 28 at Chicago in 7-1 win and 3 goals March 30 at Detroit in 5-2 win.

– Norm Ullman, Detroit, 1964 SF vs. Chicago, won by Detroit 4-3. Ullman scored 3 goals March 29 at Chicago in 5-4 win and 3 goals April 7 at Detroit in 7-2 win.

– Mark Messier, Edmonton, 1983 DF vs. Calgary, won by Edmonton 4-1. Messier scored 4 goals April 14 at Edmonton in 6-3 win and 3 goals April 17 at Calgary in 10-2 win.

– Mike Bossy, NY Islanders, 1983 CF vs. Boston, won by NY Islanders 4-2. Bossy scored 3 goals May 3 at NY Islanders in 8-3 win and 4 goals May 7 at NY Islanders in 8-4 win.

– Johan Franzen, Detroit, 2008 CSF vs. Colorado, won by Detroit 4-0. Franzen scored 3 goals April 26 at Detroit in 5-1 win and 3 goals May 1 at Colorado in 8-2 win.

SCORING STREAKS

LONGEST CONSECUTIVE GOAL-SCORING STREAK, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

10 games – Reggie Leach, Philadelphia, 1976. Streak started April 17 at Toronto and ended May 9 at Montreal. He scored one goal in each of eight games; two in one game; and five in another; a total of 15 goals.

LONGEST CONSECUTIVE POINT-SCORING STREAK, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

18 games – Bryan Trottier, NY Islanders, 1981. 11 goals, 18 assists, 29 points.

17 games – Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, 1988. 12 goals, 29 assists, 41 points.

– Al MacInnis, Calgary, 1989. 7 goals, 19 assists, 26 points.

LONGEST CONSECUTIVE POINT-SCORING STREAK, MORE THAN ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

27 games – Bryan Trottier, NY Islanders, 1980, 1981 and 1982. 7 games in 1980 (3 goals, 5 assists, 8 points), 18 games in 1981 (11 goals, 18 assists, 29 points), and 2 games in 1982 (2 goals, 3 assists, 5 points). Total points: 42.

FASTEST GOALS

FASTEST GOAL FROM START OF GAME

0:06 – Don Kozak, Los Angeles, April 17, 1977, at Los Angeles vs. Boston and goaltender Gerry Cheevers. Los Angeles won 7-4.

0:07 – Bob Gainey, Montreal, May 5, 1977, at NY Islanders vs. goaltender Glenn Resch. Montreal won 2-1.

– Terry Murray, Philadelphia, April 12, 1981, at Quebec vs. goaltender Dan Bouchard. Quebec won 4-3 in overtime.

FASTEST GOAL FROM START OF PERIOD (OTHER THAN FIRST)

0:06 – Pelle Eklund, Philadelphia, April 25, 1989, at Pittsburgh vs. goaltender Tom Barrasso, second period. Pittsburgh won 10-7.

0:09 – Bill Collins, Minnesota, April 9, 1968, at Minnesota vs. Los Angeles and goaltender Wayne Rutledge, third period. Minnesota won 7-5.

– Dave Balon, Minnesota, April 25, 1968, at St. Louis vs. goaltender Glenn Hall, third period. Minnesota won 5-1.

– Murray Oliver, Minnesota, April 8, 1971, at St. Louis vs. goaltender Ernie Wakely, third period. St. Louis won 4-2.

– Clark Gillies, NY Islanders, April 15, 1977, at Buffalo vs. goaltender Don Edwards, third period. NY Islanders won 4-3.

– Eric Vail, Atlanta, April 11, 1978, at Atlanta vs. Detroit and goaltender Ron Low, third period. Detroit won 5-3.

– Stan Smyl, Vancouver, April 10, 1979, at Philadelphia vs. goaltender Wayne Stephenson, third period. Vancouver won 3-2.

– Wayne Gretzky, Edmonton, April 6, 1983, at Edmonton vs. Winnipeg and goaltender Brian Hayward, second period. Edmonton won 6-3.

– Mark Messier, Edmonton, April 16, 1984, at Calgary vs. goaltender Don Edwards, third period. Edmonton won 5-3.

– Brian Skrudland, Montreal, May 18, 1986, at Calgary vs. goaltender Mike Vernon, first overtime period. Montreal won 3-2.

FASTEST TWO GOALS

0:05 – Norm Ullman, Detroit, April 11, 1965, at Detroit vs. Chicago and goaltender Glenn Hall. Ullman scored at 17:35 and 17:40 of second period. Detroit won 4-2.

FASTEST TWO GOALS FROM START OF A GAME

1:08 – Dick Duff, Toronto, April 9, 1963, at Toronto vs. Detroit and goaltender Terry Sawchuk. Duff scored at 0:49 and 1:08. Toronto won 4-2.

FASTEST TWO GOALS FROM START OF A PERIOD

0:35 – Pat LaFontaine, NY Islanders, May 19, 1984, at Edmonton vs. goaltender Andy Moog. LaFontaine scored at 0:13 and 0:35 of third period. Edmonton won 5-2.

PENALTIES

MOST PENALTY MINUTES IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

729 – Dale Hunter, Quebec, Washington, Colorado

541 – Chris Nilan, Montreal, NY Rangers, Boston

529 – Claude Lemieux, Montreal, New Jersey, Colorado, Phoenix. Dallas

471 – Rick Tocchet, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Boston, Phoenix

466 – Willi Plett, Atlanta, Calgary, Minnesota, Boston

MOST PENALTIES, ONE GAME

8 – Forbes Kennedy, Toronto, April 2, 1969, at Boston. Kennedy was assessed 4 minors, 2 majors, 1 10-minute misconduct and 1 game misconduct. Boston won 10-0.

– Kim Clackson, Pittsburgh, April 14, 1980, at Boston. Clackson was assessed 5 minors, 2 majors and 1 10-minute misconduct. Boston won 6-2.

MOST PENALTY MINUTES, ONE GAME

42 – Dave Schultz, Philadelphia, April 22, 1976, at Toronto. Schultz was assessed 1 minor, 2 majors, 1 10-minute misconduct and 2 game misconducts. Toronto won 8-5.

MOST PENALTIES, ONE PERIOD AND MOST PENALTY MINUTES, ONE PERIOD

Jun-39 – Six penalties, 39 minutes. Ed Hospodar, NY Rangers, April 9, 1981, at Los Angeles, first period. Hospodar was assessed 2 minors, 1 major, 1 10-minute misconduct and 2 game misconducts. Los Angeles won 5-4.

GOALTENDING

MOST PLAYOFF GAMES APPEARED IN BY A GOALTENDER, CAREER

247 – Patrick Roy, Montreal, Colorado

181 – Martin Brodeur, New Jersey

161 – Ed Belfour, Chicago, Dallas, Toronto

150 – Grant Fuhr, Edmonton, Buffalo, St. Louis

138 – Mike Vernon, Calgary, Detroit, San Jose, Florida

MOST MINUTES PLAYED BY A GOALTENDER, CAREER

15,209 – Patrick Roy, Montreal, Colorado

11,248 – Martin Brodeur, New Jersey

9,945 – Ed Belfour, Chicago, Dallas, Toronto

8,834 – Grant Fuhr, Edmonton, Buffalo, St. Louis

8,214 – Mike Vernon, Calgary, Detroit, San Jose, Florida

MOST MINUTES PLAYED BY A GOALTENDER, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

1,655 – Mikka Kiprusoff, Calgary, 2004. 26 games.

1,544 – Kirk McLean, Vancouver, 1994. 24 games.

– Ed Belfour, Dallas, 1999. 23 games.

1,540 – Ron Hextall, Philadelphia, 1987. 26 games.

1,505 – Martin Brodeur, 2001. 25 games.

MOST SHUTOUTS IN PLAYOFFS, CAREER

23 – Patrick Roy, Montreal, Colorado

– Martin Brodeur, New Jersey

16 – Curtis Joseph, St. Louis, Edmonton, Toronto

MOST SHUTOUTS, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

7 – Martin Brodeur, New Jersey, 2003. 24 games.

6 – Dominik Hasek, Detroit, 2002. 23 games.

5 – Jean-Sebastien Giguere, Anaheim, 2003. 21 games.

– Nikolai Khabibulin, Tampa Bay, 2004. 23 games.

– Miikka Kiprusoff, Calgary, 2004. 26 games.

MOST SHUTOUTS, ONE PLAYOFF SERIES

3 – Clint Benedict, Mtl. Maroons, 1926 F vs. Victoria. 4 games.

– Dave Kerr, NY Rangers, 1940 SF vs. Boston. 6 games.

– Frank McCool, Toronto, 1945 F vs. Detroit. 7 games.

– Turk Broda, Toronto, 1950 SF vs. Detroit. 7 games.

– Felix Potvin, Toronto, 1994 CQF vs. Chicago. 6 games.

– Martin Brodeur, New Jersey, 1995 CQF vs. Boston. 5 games.

– Brent Johnson, St. Louis, 2002 CQF vs. Chicago. 5 games.

– Patrick Lalime, Ottawa, 2002 CQF vs. Philadelphia. 5 games.

– Jean-Sebastien Giguere, Anaheim, 2003 CF vs. Minnesota. 4 games.

– Martin Brodeur, New Jersey, 2003 F vs. Anaheim. 7 games.

– Ed Belfour, Toronto, 2004 CQF vs. Ottawa. 7 games.

– Nikolai Khabibulin, Tampa Bay, 2004 CQF vs. NY Islanders. 5 games.

– Marty Turco, Dallas, 2007 CQF vs. Vancouver. 7 games.

– Michael Leighton, Philadelphia, 2010 CF vs. Montreal. 5 games.

MOST WINS BY A GOALTENDER, CAREER

151 – Patrick Roy, Montreal, Colorado

99 – Martin Brodeur, New Jersey

92 – Grant Fuhr, Edmonton, Buffalo, St. Louis

88 – Billy Smith, NY Islanders

– Ed Belfour, Chicago, Dallas, Toronto

MOST WINS BY A GOALTENDER, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

16 – Sixteen wins by a goaltender in one playoff year has been recorded on 20 occasions. Tim Thomas of the Boston Bruins is the most recent to equal this mark, posting a record of 16 wins and 9 losses in 25 games in 2011k. It was first accomplished by Grant Fuhr of Edmonton in 1988.

MOST CONSECUTIVE WINS BY A GOALTENDER, MORE THAN ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

14 – Tom Barrasso, Pittsburgh, 1992, 1993; 3 wins vs. NY Rangers in 1992 DF, won by Pittsburgh 4-2; 4 wins vs. Boston in 1992 CF, won by Pittsburgh 4-0; 4 wins vs. Chicago in 1992 F, won by Pittsburgh 4-0; and 3 wins vs. New Jersey in 1993 DSF, won by Pittsburgh 4-1.

MOST CONSECUTIVE WINS BY A GOALTENDER, ONE PLAYOFF YEAR

11 – Ed Belfour, Chicago, 1992. 3 wins vs. St. Louis in DSF, won by Chicago 4-2; 4 wins vs. Detroit in DF, won by Chicago 4-0; and 4 wins vs. Edmonton in CF, won by Chicago 4-0.

– Tom Barrasso, Pittsburgh, 1992. 3 wins vs. NY Rangers in DF, won by Pittsburgh 4-2; 4 wins vs. Boston in CF, won by Pittsburgh 4-0; and 4 wins vs. Chicago in F, won by Pittsburgh 4-0.

– Patrick Roy, Montreal, 1993. 4 wins vs. Quebec in DSF, won by Montreal 4-2; 4 wins vs. Buffalo in DF, won by Montreal 4-0; and 3 wins vs. NY Islanders in CF, won by Montreal 4-1.

LONGEST SHUTOUT SEQUENCE

270:08:00 – George Hainsworth, Montreal, 1930. Hainsworth’s shutout streak began after Murray Murdoch scored a goal for the NY Rangers at 15:34 of the first period in the first game of a SF series on March 28, 1930. Hainsworth did not allow another goal in the final 113:18 of that game, won by Montreal 2-1 at 8:52 of the 4th overtime period. Hainsworth then shutout the NY Rangers in the next and final game of the series on March 30, 1930, won by Montreal 2-0. The streak continued with a 3-0 win over Boston in the opening game of the F series on April 1, 1930. His streak ended on April 3, 1930 when Boston’s Eddie Shore scored at 16:50 of the second period in the second game of the F series.

MOST CONSECUTIVE SHUTOUTS

3 – Clint Benedict, Mtl. Maroons, 1926. Benedict shut out Ottawa 1-0, March 27; he then shut out Victoria twice, 3-0, March 30; 3-0, April 1. Mtl. Maroons won total-goals NHL F vs. Ottawa 2-1 and won F vs. Victoria 3-1.

– John Ross Roach, NY Rangers, 1929. Roach shut out NY Americans twice, 0-0, March 19; 1-0, March 21; he then shut out Toronto 1-0, March 24. NY Rangers won total-goals QF vs. NY Americans 1-0 and won SF vs. Toronto 2-0.

– Frank McCool, Toronto, 1945. McCool shut out Detroit three times, 1-0, April 6; 2-0, April 8; 1-0, April 12. Toronto won F 4-3.

– Brent Johnson, St. Louis, 2002. Johnson shut out Chicago three times, 2-0, April 20; 4-0, April 21; 1-0, April 23. St. Louis won CQF 4-1.

– Patrick Lalime, Ottawa, 2002. Lalime shut out Philadelphia three times, 3-0, April 20; 3-0, April 22; 3-0, April 24. Ottawa won CQF 4-1.