Greg Wyshynski, ESPN
Minnesota Wild coach Dean Evason can read a calendar.
His team was predicted by many to make the Stanley Cup playoffs for the fifth straight season and for the 11th time in 12 seasons. But the Wild were seven points out of a playoff spot on Nov. 23, aka American Thanksgiving.
“Everything’s absolutely negative around everything. But we can’t be negative,” he said. “If we just continue to stay that way, then we’re not going to get out of this. We have to have a little pushback.”
It’s hard not to feel pessimistic for any team that’s outside of the playoff picture on Turkey Day. Since the NHL began its wild-card format in 2013-14, 76.6% of the teams in a playoff spot on U.S. Thanksgiving ended up advancing to the postseason.
But here’s a message of hope for the Wild and everyone else chasing a playoff berth: There have been seasons when this trend has been bucked. There have been years when the postseason field looks starkly different than it does on Thanksgiving. And I think we’re in for another season of playoff berth upheaval.
Editor’s Picks
2 Related
These were the NHL standings on Thanksgiving Day, based on points percentage:
Atlantic
1. Boston Bruins (.861)
2. Florida Panthers (.658)
3. Toronto Maple Leafs (.647)
Metro
1. New York Rangers (.794)
2. Washington Capitals (.688)
3. Carolina Hurricanes (.611)
WC1: Detroit Red Wings (.583)
WC2: Tampa Bay Lightning (.575)
Central
1. Dallas Stars (.722)
2. Colorado Avalanche (.667)
3. Winnipeg Jets (.667)
Pacific
1. Vegas Golden Knights (.750)
2. Los Angeles Kings (.735)
3. Vancouver Canucks (.675)
WC1: St. Louis Blues (.585)
WC2: Seattle Kraken (.500)
It was the same pool of teams based on raw standings points, too.
Congrats to all of these teams, because history shows us that the majority of them should be in the playoffs next spring.
Here’s the season-by-season breakdown of teams in playoff position on Thanksgiving vs. those who made the postseason, during the wild-card era (courtesy of ESPN Stats & Information):
2013-14: 13 out of 16 teams
2014-15: 13
2015-16: 12
2016-17: 13
2017-18: 11
2018-19: 11
2019-20: 24-team pandemic playoff
2020-21: 56-game temporary realignment
2021-22: 12
2022-23: 13
The first thing that stands out here? There has never been a season under the wild-card format when all 16 teams in playoff spots on Turkey Day ended up in the postseason — or 15 teams or 14 teams, for that matter.
At least three teams fall out of the playoff picture every season.
The 2017-18 season was our first with five teams getting flipped, including four in the Western Conference: The St. Louis Blues, who led the West, Canucks (third in the Pacific) and both wild cards (Dallas Stars and Calgary Flames).
Another five teams were flipped in 2018-19: The Buffalo Sabres (third in the Atlantic), New York Rangers (second in the Metro) and Canadiens (second wild card), as well as the Minnesota Wild (second in the Central) and Anaheim Ducks (third in the Pacific … I think we detect a trend in this particular spot in the standings).
Watch NHL games on ESPN networks
This season will include 100 exclusive regular-season games across ESPN, ESPN+, Hulu and ABC. More than 1,050 out-of-market games will be available to ESPN+ subscribers via NHL PowerPlay on ESPN+.
• How to watch
• Subscribe to ESPN+
• Stream the NHL on ESPN
After two COVID-19-impacted seasons, the NHL saw four teams flip in 2021-22 — including the Vegas Golden Knights, who were No. 3 in the Pacific. It went back to only three teams missing last season.
So that’s the trend for teams in playoff spots on Thanksgiving. What about the teams that eventually replace some of them?
According to ESPN Stats & Information, teams that eventually make the playoff cut trailed by an average of 3.4 points on Thanksgiving since the wild-card format was introduced.
Teams that were within three points of a playoff spot this Thanksgiving: the Ducks and Arizona Coyotes in the West; the Sabres, New York Islanders, Canadiens, Philadelphia Flyers and Pittsburgh Penguins in the East. Teams within four points: the Flames and New Jersey Devils.
Four teams have overcome a gap of one point to make the playoffs. The largest gap overcome was eight points, which was accomplished by the Stars in 2013-14, who finished with just 91 points on the season. Even the Blues, who famously went worst-to-first in their 2018-19 Stanley Cup-winning season, were close at Thanksgiving: seven points behind the Stars.
As one former NHL player told me recently: “Out of all the teams outside the playoffs, Edmonton is the one that can roll off three great weeks and get right back into this.”
That’s the theory for the Oilers. But their actual points projection (via Micah Blake McCurdy) through Saturday’s games was 85.0, which would have them more than three points behind the Blues (88.1) for the final wild-card spot in the West.
Those point projections have the Flames in and the Kraken out as a wild card. But they also have a lot of fluctuation in the East, with the Islanders (92.7) and Devils (92.1) both making the playoffs ahead of the Penguins (91.1), Senators (89.1), Capitals (88.8) and Red Wings (88.8).
Hockey Fights Cancer and the V Foundation
The NHL, the Players’ Association, and the V Foundation are united in the fight against cancer. Together they are funding game-changing research to help achieve Victory Over Cancer. You can join them in this fight. Visit HockeyFightsCancer.com to donate now.
What’s most interesting about McCurdy’s recent points projections is the playoff cutoff line. Commonly, the line is usually around 93 points. But in the Western Conference, the bar is currently set at just 88 points.
The Devils also fare well in Money Puck’s playoff probability metric, with a 62% chance of making the cut. Other teams outside the Turkey Day standings with decent odds: the Nashville Predators (84%), Penguins (47.4%) and Islanders (40.4%) as of Sunday.
Dom Luszczyszyn’s projections at The Athletic are kinder to the Devils (82% chance of making the playoffs), Oilers (54%) and Wild (50%) as of Sunday. Not so much for the Kraken (28%) and Blues (4%).
All of this leads to a general thesis about the “Thanksgiving trend,” as it applies to the 2023-24 NHL season: We’re in for chaos.
We’re in for one of those 11-of-16 seasons. Or perhaps even 10-of-16, which would be the biggest changeover in the standings in the wild-card era.
It’s hard to imagine everything holds with seven teams within three points of playoff spots on Thanksgiving. Or with a team like the Predators, who have really found their stride under coach Andrew Brunette recently. Or a team like Ottawa, which is seeking consistency and a healthy lineup. Or with teams like the Devils, Oilers and Wild, all assumed to be in the playoffs and too good not to make things interesting despite their putrid starts.
They’re chasing teams like the Capitals and Blues, who have ridden strong goaltending to playoff spots on Turkey Day. The Jets and Red Wings have been early-season surprises — can they keep up the pace? As of Sunday, the Kraken have a points percentage (.477) and a goal differential (minus-16) that are both underwater.
Trends are trends for a reason. We already mentioned 76.6% of teams in Thanksgiving playoff spots make the cut under the wild-card format. According to Emily Sadler of Sportsnet, the trend even extends beyond this playoff format: Since 2005-06, 184 of 240 teams in a playoff spot on Turkey Day went on to make the postseason. That’s 76.7%, to be exact.
But chaos is chaos for a reason, too. The predictions are wrong. Projections are adjusted. And Turkey Day’s playoff field becomes a faded, unfamiliar snapshot when the postseason begins.