It was a long, hard-fought series for the New Jersey Devils in their First Round matchup and it was also filled with valuable lessons. In their first playoff series since 2018, things started out bleak. Whether it be for nerves, inexperience or maybe both, the first two games were a crash course in playoff hockey. The Devils had the home-ice advantage, but the Rangers had the experience, taking the first two games of the series at Prudential Center, both by 5-1 scorelines.
Then came Game 3. It was a turning point in the series.
Lindy Ruff and his staff made the call to make a goalie change, always a risk, particularly at this time of year. Making matters even more heightened, they were putting in a 22-year-old goaltender, who had played just 18 games this season, 14 as a starter.
The move immediately paid dividends, making Ruff and his staff look like geniuses. Schmid backstopped the Devils in Game 3 to a close 2-1 overtime victory. Dougie Hamilton won the game with his goal, just past the halfway mark of the first overtime period.
They were back in it and playing like they've played all season, fast, intense, and energetic. They made the Rangers look slow and old, particularly in comparison to the Devils exuberance and youth.
Game 4 the Rangers could only muster one shot past Schmid, the Devils responding with three goals. Even series.
Back at Prudential Center for Game 5, Schmid posted the first of his two playoff shutouts and Erik Haula contributed two of the Devils 4 goals against Igor Shesterkin. The Devils were on to Game 6 with a chance to eliminate the Rangers.
The Rangers pushed back, winning their first - and only - home game of the series with a 5-2 victory taking the series to the distance to a Game 7.
In the seventh game of the series, the Devils skated circles around the Rangers and Schmid backstopped the team to a second shutout. The 4-0 scoreline eliminated the Rangers and the Devils move on to the Second Round.
Haula finished the series leading the team in points with six (4g-2a), while Jack Hughes (3g-2a), Ondrej Palat (2g-3a) and Nico Hischier (0g-5a) all finished with five points.
For the Hurricanes, their First Round series with the New York Islanders didn't quite go the full distance, ending in six games.
Carolina finished the season in the Metropolitan Division top spot, while the Islanders made it in as the first Wild Card team.
In Game 1 between the Canes and Islanders, special teams played the biggest factor. The Hurricanes opened the series at home with a win scoring two power play goals on Ilya Sorokin, and their penalty killers went 4-for-4.
Game 2 went to overtime, with Jesper Fast scoring early, needing just 5:03 of extra time to put the Hurricanes up 2-0 in the series.
As the series headed to Long Island, the Islanders and Hurricanes split the two games. The Islanders won Game 3, 5-1, and it would prove to be a very costly loss for the Hurricanes. Already without top player Andrei Svechnikov the Hurricanes lost another one of their top offensive talents when Teuvo Teravainen was slashed by Jean-Gabriel Pageau in the third period.
Immediately after the game head coach Rod Brind'Amour announced that Teravianen had a broken hand that would require immediate surgery and is out indefinitely with no clear timeline as to his potential return.
Despite the adversity of losing one of their top players, the Hurricanes went up 3-1 in the series, ending an eight-game road losing streak in the playoffs, dating back to last post-season.
With a chance to close out the series on home ice, the Islanders were not going to go down that easily. They kept their playoff lives in tact, defeating the Hurricanes 3-2 in Game 5. It the game with an infamous Kyle Palmeri goal, where defending in front of the net, Carolina's Sebastian Aho had a puck deflect off his face and Palmieri then whacked it out of the air behind Raanta.
And then came Game 6, where the Hurricanes ended the Islanders season when Paul Stastny whiped a shot in overtime at Sorokin from a near-impossible angle. The puck deflected off Sorokin's skate and into the net, stunning the Islanders and ending their season.
Finishing in six games, the Hurricanes have been off from competition since April 28 awaiting their Second Round opponent.