Avalanche: 51-24-7, 109 points
Kraken:46-28-8, 100 points
Season series:COL 1-1-1; SEA 2-0-1
Game 1:Tuesday at Colorado (10 p.m. ET; ESPN, SN360, TVAS)
The Colorado Avalanche will begin their Stanley Cup title defense against the Seattle Kraken, who will appear in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time since joining the NHL as an expansion team last season.
The Avalanche have lost pieces from their championship team. That includes forward Andre Burakovsky, who signed with the Kraken as an unrestricted free agent July 13, and captain Gabriel Landeskog, who missed the regular season and will not play in the playoffs due to a knee injury.
Still, they have gone 31-7-4 since Jan. 14, the third-best points percentage (.786) in that span behind the Boston Bruins (.817) and Edmonton Oilers (.789). They finished the regular season on a 7-0-1 run to win the Central Division.
"I'm excited," Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. "I'm just like the players. We're looking forward to this time of the year, and also there's a sense of pride for this group. I mean, to be able to go through some of the adversity we've gone through, especially with the injuries, a lot of new players into the group, and to be able to finish at the top of the division is something outstanding for this team. We're proud of that, and now the hard part comes."
Seattle hasn't had a team face an NHL team in the playoffs since 1920, when the Seattle Metropolitans of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association lost to the original Ottawa Senators in the forerunner of the Stanley Cup Final. The first three games of the best-of-5 series were in Ottawa, the last two in Toronto.
The city hasn't hosted a playoff game involving an NHL team since 1919, when the Metropolitans played the Montreal Canadiens for the Cup. The series, played in Seattle, ended in a 2-2-1 tie because of the Spanish flu.
Seattle became the first city in the United States to win the Cup when the Metropolitans defeated the Canadiens in 1917, months before the NHL was founded.
After finishing last in the Pacific Division in their inaugural season, the Kraken improved by 40 points this season -- the largest jump between a first and second season in NHL history -- finishing fourth in the Pacific and earning the first wild card into the playoffs from the Western Conference.
"The last few weeks we've been ramping up and getting a good taste for it, and now the real fun starts," Kraken forward Jaden Schwartz said. "We're excited."