Flyers looking good in expanded playoffs, but Vigneault fine with 16-team format
TORONTO — The Philadelphia Flyers have looked right at home playing in the NHL’s expanded 24-team playoff format, but head coach Alain Vigneault isn’t big on the idea of doing it for more than one season.
With seeding round-robin wins over Presidents’ Trophy-wining Boston and Eastern Conference powerhouse Washington, the Flyers have an opportunity to take the top seed in the conference heading into the post-season’s main draw. Philadelphia takes on Tampa Bay on Saturday with top spot in the East on the line. Vigneault says he has been impressed with the intensity so far in these unique playoffs, but he hopes for a return to a more traditional route to the Stanley Cup final after this season.
“Having been there a couple of times, to win four rounds, to win a best-of-seven series, that’s a big challenge,” Vigneault said during a Friday teleconference. “To add this (preliminary round) to an already 82-game schedule, it would be a real challenge for players, their bodies, their physical health.”
Vigneault said the format that has been in place since the 2013-14 season, which sees the top-three teams in each division along with two wild-card teams from each conference make the cut, is challenging enough without adding eight other teams into the mix.