A radical divisional realignment proposal with Utah in the NHL (2024)

In the aftermath of Utah landing an NHL team for next season, Gary Bettman did a wide range of interviews.

The NHL commissioner hosted press conferences in Phoenix and Salt Lake City, in addition to conducting multiple television interviews. It was during one of those television interviews in which Bettman dropped an interesting nugget about keeping Utah in the Central Division — the same one the Coyotes have been playing in for the past three seasons.

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“We didn’t have time under these circ*mstances to focus on realignment or a whole host of other issues related to geography,” Bettman told Sportsnet’s Caroline Cameron on April 18.

Bettman’s comment hints at the fact that realignment — perhaps related to geography — is something that could be in the cards when the league has a chance to exhale from the frenetic pace that enveloped Utah securing an NHL team. The league has toyed around with realignment on several occasions in recent years. The Coyotes themselves, for example, were in the Pacific Division from 2013-14 until the Seattle Kraken came along and pushed them into the Central Division in 2021.

GO DEEPEREx-Coyotes receive emotional welcome in Salt Lake City: 'We already want to fight for Utah’

When Winnipeg re-entered the NHL in 2011, they also helped accelerate a substantial realignment of the divisional format. After the Jets played their first two seasons in the Southeast Division, the league radically altered its entire structure, moving from six divisions of five teams to the current four-division model we see today, with the Atlantic, Metropolitan, Central and Pacific.

Utah entering the NHL fold gives us a natural opportunity to examine the idea of NHL realignment. And since Bettman and league officials admit they didn’t have adequate time to properly address the idea, we can go ahead and do the heavy lifting for them.

The idea is fairly straightforward and simple: Realign the NHL into eight divisions consisting of four teams each, similar to the NFL setup.

It’s an idea we floated back in 2021, but we’ve made some significant amendments now that Utah is in the mix. And three years ago, readers had plenty of opinions about how teams should be aligned, so we’ve taken some of that feedback into consideration wherever possible.

Before we lay out the proposal, there are a few disclaimers for readers:

  • This format is mostly based on geography. And where possible, we’ve tried to keep traditional rivals together — but there are exceptions to this rule.
  • If you think any of these divisional setups are strange, please consider that in the early 1980s the Norris Division featured Montreal, Los Angeles, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Hartford. And that was in the era before charter travel for teams. So if there are a couple of teams that feel misplaced or misaligned, just remember divisional formats in the past haven’t always been perfect either. Toronto actually spent five seasons in the Western Conference in the 1990s. So no matter what you see below, there is a good chance something wackier has existed in the NHL’s past.
  • No realignment formula is going to be perfect and please everybody. Feel free to leave your improvements in the comment section below. This is meant to be a leaping-off point to find a realignment solution that might make the most sense.

With those disclaimers out of the way, it’s time to analyze the proposed realignment that would put the NHL into eight divisions of four teams apiece.

Eastern Conference

Proposed Division No. 1

Team

Boston Bruins

New Jersey Devils

New York Islanders

New York Rangers

Let’s get the ball rolling with an admittedly controversial suggestion: splitting up the Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens. They have been historic and bitter rivals for decades. And the Bruins and Canadiens have been in the same division since 1981-82. But if we’re using geography as a major factor, putting the Bruins in this division makes a ton of sense. The three metropolitan New York teams would be a short distance away from Boston. And when you think about other leagues in North America, the Boston-New York rivalry is at the top of the heap. And it’s largely because the Yankees-Red Sox, Knicks-Celtics and Jets-Patriots are all in the same division. Maybe it’s time to stoke the flames of a Boston-New York rivalry in the NHL.

Proposed Division No. 2

Team

Buffalo Sabres

Montreal Canadiens

Ottawa Senators

Toronto Maple Leafs

When we did this exercise in 2021, I had the Sabres and Bruins swapped and Buffalo fans went ballistic. They didn’t believe the Sabres should be in the same division as the Rangers and Islanders simply because they all reside in the state of New York. So this time around, I’ve flipped the Sabres and Bruins and put Buffalo where a lot of their fans wanted them — alongside Toronto and Montreal. Ottawa fits geographically, sitting right in between Toronto and Montreal. For logistical and historical reasons, this divisional setup could make a lot of sense.

Proposed Division No. 3

Team

Columbus Blue Jackets

Philadelphia Flyers

Pittsburgh Penguins

Washington Capitals

The Penguins and Flyers are staying in the same division. That’s non-negotiable. And Washington has some great historical rivalries with both of those Pennsylvania teams dating from their time together in the Patrick Division. The Blue Jackets are a tricky one to try and slot in. They are relatively young as a franchise, so they don’t have longstanding rivalries with other teams. And geographically, they can almost push into the midwest region, so if we lumped them in with Detroit and Chicago, that would work too.

Proposed Division No. 4

Team

Carolina Hurricanes

Florida Panthers

Nashville Predators

Tampa Bay Lightning

This grouping should give you Southeast Division vibes from back in the day. Putting the two Florida teams together with Carolina makes a lot of sense. Nashville is a bit of a geographic outlier. They are not within 300 miles of another NHL city. But the state of Tennessee does border North Carolina, so it’s not outlandish to put Nashville and Raleigh in the same division. The mild hiccup on this is that Nashville would be the lone team in the Central Time Zone.

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Western Conference

Proposed Division No. 5

Team

Chicago Blackhawks

Detroit Red Wings

Minnesota Wild

St. Louis Blues

St. Louis fans, I heard you loud and clear. When we did this back in 2021, I took St. Louis away from Chicago and Minnesota and let’s just say Blues fans didn’t take it well. So I’ve tried to rectify that here by putting the Blues back with the Blackhawks, Wild and Red Wings. It’s almost like the old Norris Division with Chicago, Detroit, Minnesota and St. Louis. Would the Red Wings be happy to be the lone Eastern Time Zone team in their division? Probably not. But that shouldn’t be a huge price to pay to play in a division with their old Norris pals again. If Detroit was adamant about staying out of the Western Conference, we could always swap them out with either Nashville or Columbus to try and find a solution that works.

Proposed Division No. 6

TEAM

Colorado Avalanche

Dallas Stars

NHL Utah (Formerly Arizona Coyotes)

Vegas Golden Knights

Utah officially enters the mix and we’ve got them placed alongside two of their closest geographic counterparts in Colorado and Vegas. That should be a good start to create a rivalry for the fans in Salt Lake City. Given their southern location, it’s always difficult to try and figure out where to put the Dallas Stars. Currently, Dallas is in the Central Division with Winnipeg, which is 1,300 miles to the north. The distance between Dallas and Vegas is about the same at 1,200 miles. So no matter how you slice this, Dallas is going to be a team with a bit of travel within their division.

Proposed Division No. 7

Team

Calgary Flames

Edmonton Oilers

Vancouver Canucks

Winnipeg Jets

This is one configuration that is going to generate a lot of discussion. It’s an all-Canadian division, that lumps Winnipeg into the mix with its Western Canadian counterparts. And yes, it’s a long haul from Winnipeg to Vancouver. But it’s pretty much the exact distance the Jets travel when they head to Dallas to face the Stars for Central Division matchups right now. These four teams were all together in the Smythe Division back in the day, so it seems fitting to give Winnipeg some natural rivals.

Proposed Division No. 8

Team

Anaheim Ducks

Los Angeles Kings

San Jose Sharks

Seattle Kraken

In order to put Winnipeg in that division above, we had to split apart Seattle and Vancouver. And maybe that will be a non-starter for a lot of fans who want to see that geographic rivalry blossom. But in order to make this all work out, there are a couple of little sacrifices to be made and splitting up the Kraken and Canucks is one of them. Considering the Kraken have only played two seasons, it’s not like we’re detonating decades of a heated and bitter rivalry. And as you read below, there is a workaround solution that would still allow the Kraken and Canucks to meet up to four times each regular season. The three California teams are a natural fit together and now that Arizona is out of the picture, it’s tricky to find a fourth team to fit with them. But staying on the Pacific coast seems like the best option.

Schedule format

Fans will want to know how the regular season schedule could play out under this type of divisional format. And the good news is this is a pretty easy formula, keeping the 82-game season intact.

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To put this in the simplest terms:
• You play teams within your own division six times (three home, three road).
• You will face every other opponent in the league at least twice (one home, one road).

The fact every team in the NHL plays each other at home and on the road seems important, ensuring fans the opportunity to see Connor Bedard, Connor McDavid or Auston Matthews in their home city every year.

If fans would like a more detailed version of how the schedule could play out, let’s use the New York Islanders as our example team.

• New York would play the three teams in its own division six times each (18 games total — three home, three road).
• They would play one other Eastern Conference Division team four times each (16 games total — two home, two road).
• They would play the remaining six divisions in the league two times each (48 games total — once home, once road).

And just like the NFL does with out-of-conference games, the NHL can employ a three-year rotation for which division you play the extra games against. For the Islanders, it would shake out like this:

Year 1: Islanders play four games each against the Buffalo/Montreal/Ottawa/Toronto division.
Year 2: Islanders play four games each against the Columbus/Philadelphia/Pittsburgh/Washington division.
Year 3: Islanders play four games each against the Carolina/Florida/Nashville/Tampa division.

If you don’t love this idea, there is a slight variation where you could also permanently “attach” teams to historical rivals who now fall outside of their divisions to guarantee four games against them.

So for example, Montreal and Boston — who would no longer be in the same division — could be guaranteed four games every season. (That’s the same number of games the Canadiens and Bruins played against each other this season, while they were both in the Atlantic Division.) The same could hold true for rivalries like the Kraken-Canucks, Rangers-Flyers or any other matchup you feel is being slighted under this proposed format. There is a path to still having them meet four times in the regular season.

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Playoff format

Realistically, we can be as creative as we want with the playoff format.

All eight division winners would automatically receive a playoff berth. The next four teams with the best records in each conference can also qualify. In an ideal world, the teams would be seeded from 1-16 from the entire league and play in that format. But since that seems like a non-starter for the NHL, at least a return to 1-8 in each conference could be a nice alternative.

If we want to get really fun and creative we could go with this option: The top two teams in each of the eight divisions advance to the playoffs. And we could add one small caveat, where if the third-place team is within five points of the second-place team at the end of the regular season, they will have a mini play-in series to determine who gets the final playoff spot.

Under this scenario, each team would start the season with a 50 percent chance of nabbing one of those two playoff spots in their four-team divisions. The 18 regular-season games within your division would take on an added significance and hopefully fuel rivalries — both old and new.

Essentially, that’s the realignment in broad strokes. We put the teams into eight divisions, they still play 82 games and when it comes to the playoffs, we can have a little flexibility on the formal. And we can at least stick with this format until the NHL decides to expand again in a few years, maybe re-adding Phoenix and Atlanta to the fold.

When that happens, maybe we’ll have to go back to the drawing board, because a 34-team league sounds like a recipe for trouble when it comes to balanced alignment within the divisions.

(Photo of NHL Utah’s launch party at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City earlier this month: Chris Gardner / Getty Images)

A radical divisional realignment proposal with Utah in the NHL (2024)

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