NHL has the better playoffs

Brandon Kruse

The NHL playoff format is both similar and different to the NBA. It is similar in that a total of 16 teams make the playoffs (eight from each conference), but different in the structure of who plays whom. The captions along with the photos below explain in depth the organization of the NHL playoffs.

Given this information, who has the superior playoffs: the NHL or NBA? It is the NHL and I will map out the reasons why. First is the format. Divisions are far more important in the NHL. In the NBA, division placement is irrelevant and useless. The only element that determines the matchups in the NBA playoffs are the conferences, which makes me wonder why the NBA even has divisions other than regular season matchups. On the other hand, the NHL encompasses both division and conference placement when identifying playoff matchups, which is a more effective and honorable strategy than strictly relying on conferences.

Another reason why the NHL has the better playoffs is simply the competition. In this year’s NHL playoffs, all the Wild Card teams advanced to the second-round. In fact, the Tampa Bay Lightning, who were the No. 1 overall seed in the East and had 21 more points than the second-best team in the league, got swept by the East’s last-seeded Columbus Blue Jackets. In the NBA, the competition for No. 1 & 2 seeds in the first-round is laughable. In general, higher seeds advanced to the second-round. The only tight series in the first-round was the No. 7 seed San Antonio Spurs and the No. 2 seed Denver Nuggets in the West. The Nuggets won that series in seven. Not even a five seed remotely challenged a four seed this year. Also, as Tyler mentioned, no number eight seed has ever beaten a number one seed. Seriously?! Why are eight seeds even allowed in the playoffs? (The answer is money!) Honestly, the first-round of the NBA playoffs is a complete waste of time. There has also been no competition in the NBA playoffs the previous four seasons. The Warriors have won four straight West titles and they have faced the Cleveland Cavaliers all four years. Thankfully, we will see a new East representative in the playoffs this year (given that the Cavaliers didn’t make the playoffs), but we are almost certain of another NBA Final return by the Warriors.

Finally, the play of the NHL is better than the NBA. In the NHL, there is continual action for sixty minutes. Power plays and penalty kills ignite the crowd and there is pushing, shoving, and intensity like no other. Hockey is just a fun and an entertaining sport to watch, especially when the playoffs arrive. And then there is the NBA, where they have to play beating “music” because the crowd isn’t loud enough. There is no defense, the refs are subpar—traveling doesn’t exist and big names like Kevin Durant and James Harden get every call—and the better team in the standings tends to always win. And how many timeouts can you possibly have in the last minute of a game? Maybe I’m being too critical of the NBA (I’m not). Nevertheless, the playoffs in the NHL greatly exceed what the NBA has to offer.