The playoff field was determined early in the East this season, and there was a massive gap between the second wild card into the playoffs from the East and the next best team -- 16 points between the Washington Capitals and New York Islanders.
But that was an anomaly in this era of parity, and each playoff team in the East reached 100 points. Never before had eight teams in the same conference reached 100 points in the same season. In the West, the last spots came down to the final days.
In each conference, each wild card team this season has made the Cup Final recently: the Bruins (2019) and Capitals (2018) in the East, the Dallas Stars (2020) and the Nashville Predators (2017) in the West.
"There's a lot of, a lot of, a lot of really good teams this year, and it's a little bit of a crapshoot," Marchand said. "I mean, every team in the East is a contender. There's a lot of really good teams in the West."
The NHL enjoyed an offensive renaissance in the regular season. The League averaged 6.3 goals per game, the most in a quarter century.
Maple Leafs center Auston Matthews led the NHL with 60 goals, becoming the first 60-goal scorer since Lightning forward Steven Stamkos did it in 2011-12.
Four players scored at least 50 goals: Matthews, Edmonton Oilers forward Leon Draisaitl (55), New York Rangers forward Chris Kreider (52) and Capitals forward Alex Ovechkin (50). This, after four players had reached 50 goals over the past 10 seasons combined: Draisaitl, Ovechkin (four times), Stamkos and Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin.
Three defensemen had more than 80 points: Roman Josi of the Predators (96), Cale Makar of the Avalanche (86) and Victor Hedman of the Lightning (85). That hadn't happened since 1993-94.
No wonder there were 716 lead changes, the most in NHL history, surpassing the 711 from 2005-06, and comebacks in 42 percent of games, third-most in NHL history, behind 46 percent of games in 1920-21 and 44 percent in 2005-06.