logo
2025 NHL Playoffs Schedule: How to watch NHL Finals, TV, streaming, free

2025 NHL Playoffs Schedule: How to watch NHL Finals, TV, streaming, free

Fox Sports24-04-2025

The NHL Playoffs are here! Check out when and where you can watch each game and NHL Stanley Cup Finals: 2025 NHL Playoffs Schedule Thursday, April 24 Friday, April 25 Saturday, April 26 Sunday, April 27 First Round – East
(A1) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (WC1) Ottawa Senators
(A2) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (A3) Florida Panthers
(M1) Washington Capitals vs. (WC2) Montreal Canadiens
(M2) Carolina Hurricanes vs. (M3) New Jersey Devils First Round – West
(C1) Winnipeg Jets vs. (WC2) St. Louis Blues
(C2) Dallas Stars vs. (C3) Colorado Avalanche
(P1) Vegas Golden Knights vs. (WC1) Minnesota Wild
(P2) Los Angeles Kings vs. (P3) Edmonton Oilers When do the NHL playoffs start?
The first round of the NHL playoffs started on April 19. How can I watch the NHL Playoffs?
The NHL playoffs will be broadcast on ABC, ESPN, and TNT. Most traditional cable/satellite subscriptions have packages including some or all of these channels. You can also stream the full NHL playoffs with streaming providers Sling, fubo TV, YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV and DIRECTV STREAM. Who is in the 2025 NHL playoffs?
The 2025 NHL Playoff Bracket is set. Check out the teams playing here.
recommended
Get more from National Hockey League Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more in this topic

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Coach Paul Maurice has Florida Panthers back in Stanley Cup final, fueled by his mix of laughs and hard work
Coach Paul Maurice has Florida Panthers back in Stanley Cup final, fueled by his mix of laughs and hard work

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Coach Paul Maurice has Florida Panthers back in Stanley Cup final, fueled by his mix of laughs and hard work

Florida coach Paul Maurice keeps the day-to-day routine simple. Show up for work early and have copious amounts of coffee. Trust assistant coaches to do their jobs. Sit in on meetings when needed. Hammer home a consistent message with players. Swear a little bit sometimes, swear profusely at other times. Hey, it works. Florida Panthers head coach Paul Maurice reacts during the third period in Game 4 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Eastern Conference finals against the Carolina Hurricanes, Monday, May 26, 2025, in Sunrise, Fla. Lynne Sladky / AP In the Stanley Cup Final for a third consecutive season with the Panthers, Maurice's style — laugh-out-loud funny at times, incredibly smart and serious at others — continues to deliver results for Florida. He was 41-51 in his playoff career before coming to Florida; he's 41-21 in his playoff career with Florida. A coaching lifer, he already was well-respected within the game before the Panthers brought him aboard, but he never had anything close to a run like this until now. "I'm not being disrespectful to the other teams I've coached," Maurice said. "The team here, this is the best team I've ever coached. It's not really that close." Winners of the Stanley Cup last season, the Panthers will try for back-to-back titles starting Wednesday night when they visit Edmonton for Game 1 of a rematch. Florida beat the Oilers last year in seven games for Maurice's first Cup in a 30-year career. "Oh, I'll never get tired of hearing that," Maurice said. It's a hilarious game of tug-of-war that Maurice and the Panthers players are engaged in these days. Players don't want to be showered in praise for making a third consecutive Cup final; the coach insists that it's all about them and that he just pushes a few buttons here and there. The truth is that there's more than enough credit to go around. "He keeps things light, but he expects us to work our hardest and he's very prepared and — I know I've said this before — he can get you up for a Tuesday night game against Columbus or whatever in the middle of the year and it feels like a playoff game," forward Matthew Tkachuk said. "His speeches and his ability to get us to run through a wall each and every game is a big gift." The speeches aren't filibusters, however. Maurice thinks it's critically important to have the ability to go into the locker room, say exactly what needs to be said and depart without saying anything more or anything less. He's not afraid to tell his players that they're playing poorly. He's not afraid to tell his players that he loves them, either. He's also not afraid to make himself the butt of the joke. Florida was a 122-point, President's Trophy-winning team the season before Maurice arrived. The Panthers managed 92 points in Year 1 of his era. "Coaching," he quipped. The 30-point drop was in large part to the adjustment made by a stylistic change, and that change led them to the Cup final, but Maurice never misses a chance to make fun of how he turned a 122-point club into a 92-point club overnight. Panthers defenseman Seth Jones came to Florida around the trade deadline this season. He had a lot of learning to do — new systems, new expectations, new teammates, all of that. He also had to learn how to get coached differently, which he quickly realized wasn't a bad thing. Florida Panthers head coach Paul Maurice gestures during the second period in Game 3 of a second-round NHL hockey playoff series against the Toronto Maple Leafs, Friday, May 9, 2025, in Sunrise, Fla. Marta Lavandier / AP "It's different than what I've had," Jones said of Maurice's style. "I think he knows how to really take the temperature of the group and the situation of the group. And he can have a meeting where he's very intense, calling guys out or calling the team out. But he's also very good at throwing a joke in there, throwing a funny clip in there when we're doing video. He's very smart. I think he understands what the team needs at any given time. I don't think he gets too high or too low based on certain situations." That, the Panthers have learned, is critical. Consider how the title series went last season. The Panthers won the first three games and were on the brink of the Cup. Then they lost Game 4. And Game 5. And Game 6. The brink of the Cup became the brink of a collapse, real fast. Maurice started talking to his players about freedom and playing with that feeling. Game 7 was flawless. The Panthers won, and at the parade about a week later, Maurice ended his rain-soaked, highly profane remarks by throwing his arms into the air and yelling "Freedom!" at the top of his lungs to his team. "He gets the buy-in from the players and he treats all of us the same, which I think is really important as a coach and not to treat guys differently," Tkachuk said. "He expects us all to work hard and treat each other with respect and everything, but he treats us all the exact same. He's been a great coach and we're super lucky to have him here."

Bay Area sports calendar, June 4-5
Bay Area sports calendar, June 4-5

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Bay Area sports calendar, June 4-5

BASEBALL NHL PLAYOFFS SOCCER SOFTBALL SWIMMING 4p USA Swimming National Championships Peacock TENNIS VOLLEYBALL 9a Women, Nations League: United States vs. Italy CBSSN THURSDAY BASEBALL 9a Arizona at Atlanta MLB Net 12:30p Minnesota at A's NBCSCA (960) 12:45p San Diego at Giants NBCSBA (680, 104.5) 1p N.Y. Mets at L.A. Dodgers MLB Net 4p Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees MLB Net 6:05p Ballers at Glacier Ridge (860) FOOTBALL 6p CFL: Ottawa at Saskatchewan CBSSN GOLF 4a DP World Tour: KLM Open GOLF 9a Korn Ferry: BMW Charity Pro-Am GOLF Noon PGA: Canadian Open GOLF NBA PLAYOFFS 5:30p Finals, Game 1: Indiana at Oklahoma City Channel 7 Channel 10 SOCCER SOFTBALL SWIMMING 4p USA Swimming National Championships Peacock TENNIS WNBA

Connor McDavid shrugs off Stanley Cup superstition with surprising reason
Connor McDavid shrugs off Stanley Cup superstition with surprising reason

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Connor McDavid shrugs off Stanley Cup superstition with surprising reason

If you're an NHL fan, you know the drill. If your team wins the Eastern or Western Conference title before heading to the Stanley Cup Finals, your captain is presented with a trophy. In the East, it's the Prince of Wales Trophy. In the West, it's the Clarence S. Campbell Bowl. Advertisement Got it? Good. Because it's what comes next that counts: there's a superstition that you should NOT touch those trophies or it's bad luck before the Stanley Cup Finals. The logic, I think, is that you'd want to touch the trophy that counts over the one that's secondary. TIME FOR CONNOR MCDAVID TO FINALLY WIN IT ALL: Read our take on the Oilers captain Connor McDavid ignored that on Thursday night after the Edmonton Oilers took down the Dallas Stars. Other teams have done so at their own peril, but it's been no big deal in recent years, weirdly. Teams out of both the East and West have touched the winning trophy, then gone on to win the other, much bigger (and bigger deal) trophy for hockey immortality. Oilers fans were worried: But listen to McDavid, who has been here before: the Oilers DIDN'T touch it last year and lost to the Panthers. So he's just trying to reverse the curse in a way: This is brilliant logic by McDavid. Real captain-level stuff there. Take a bow, put that trophy in your locker and then get focused for the task ahead. Also, it's superstition, right? Hockey players win games, not touching trophies or not. Got to love it. This article originally appeared on For The Win: Connor McDavid breaks Stanley Cup final trophy superstition

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store