NHL Players' Association agrees to realignment

 

Canucks would join Ducks, Flames, Oilers, Kings, Coyotes and Sharks in Pacific Division

 
 
 
 
Expect a bigger dose of Shark meat should NHL realignment go through as expected. Canuck Mason Raymond and Shark Joe Pavelski would go nose to nose more often in a revamped Pacific Division.
 

Expect a bigger dose of Shark meat should NHL realignment go through as expected. Canuck Mason Raymond and Shark Joe Pavelski would go nose to nose more often in a revamped Pacific Division.

Photograph by: Darryl Dyck, The Canadian Press

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NEW YORK — The NHL moved a step closer to realignment Thursday as the players' association approved a proposed plan that is set to go into effect next season.

Now that the league has gotten the go-ahead from union chief Donald Fehr, the NHL will only need to get approval from team owners to put it in place.

"The NHL Players' Association confirmed to us today that it has consented to a revised plan for realignment, effective for the 2013-14 season," NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said in a statement. "Our next step will be to bring the proposed plan for realignment to the NHL board of governors for its consideration."

Fehr signed off on the plan after discussions with the union's executive board and said the realignment issue will be "re-evaluated following the 2014-15 season."

No official details of the changes have been released by the NHL, but it is widely believed that teams such as Detroit and Columbus will be put into more travel-friendly divisions in the Eastern time zone, and the Winnipeg Jets -- formerly the Atlanta Thrashers -- will leave the Southeast Division for a spot in the Western Conference.

Up until now, there has been an even split of teams with 15 in each conference. Under the new plan, the East will have 16 clubs in it -- making playoff qualification a bit tougher.

The two divisions out West will contain seven teams each. The East divisions will both contain eight.

Each conference will still have eight teams in the playoffs but the setup will be slightly different.

Instead of the current system, under which the top eight teams in each conference make the playoffs, the new plan will award spots to the top three teams in each division along with the next two teams with the best records as wild cards.

The Eastern Conference would look like this:

Atlantic Division: Carolina, Columbus, New Jersey, New York Islanders, New York Rangers, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington.

Central Division: Boston, Buffalo, Detroit, Florida, Montreal, Ottawa, Tampa Bay, Toronto.

The Western Conference would shape up this way:

Midwest Division: Chicago, Colorado, Dallas, Minnesota, Nashville, St. Louis, Winnipeg.

Pacific Division: Anaheim, Calgary, Edmonton, Los Angeles, Phoenix, San Jose, Vancouver.

 
 
 
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Expect a bigger dose of Shark meat should NHL realignment go through as expected. Canuck Mason Raymond and Shark Joe Pavelski would go nose to nose more often in a revamped Pacific Division.
 

Expect a bigger dose of Shark meat should NHL realignment go through as expected. Canuck Mason Raymond and Shark Joe Pavelski would go nose to nose more often in a revamped Pacific Division.

Photograph by: Darryl Dyck, The Canadian Press

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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