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Five things to know about the early days of the NHL playoffs

HereBԪַs some stories taking shape as the opening round moves on to night 4
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NHL Hall of famer Lanny McDonald is pictured near the Stanley Cup following a news conference in Toronto on Tuesday June 27, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

Mark Stone of the Vegas Golden Knights went from the 26-game injured reserve list to the Game 1 Dallas scoresheet in 83 seconds, the Boston fan with the big sign BԪַMatthews STILL stuck on 69!BԪַ was nowhere to be seen after last nightBԪַs Leafs-BruinsBԪַ game, and the New York Islanders played an impressive 24 minutes in Raleigh before getting whipped in the other 36 minutes by the Comeback BԪַCanes.

Here are five things you need to know about the NHL playoffs:

CURSE OF THE FIRST?

DonBԪַt scold fans of the Edmonton Oilers for biting their nails inside Rogers Place or outside in the Moss Pit before last nightBԪַs playoff opener against the visiting Los Angeles Kings.

Edmonton had a dismal 1-8 record in Game 1s dating back to 2017.

Captain Connor McDavid insisted the Oilers are better prepared this year to handle whatever the Kings throw at them. The Oil wasted no time last night proving it. Zach Hyman scored his first of three goals at 6:52 of the first period as Edmonton cruised to a comfortable 7-4 victory.

McDavid chipped in with five assists to help exorcise the curse.

ABSENCE MAKES HEART GROW FONDER

With the Vancouver Canucks playing their first playoff game at home Sunday since April 15, 2015, itBԪַs fair to suggest fans were extra jacked. Towel Power, U2 songs and flags reappeared.

Out in the suburb of Surrey BԪַ about 30 kilometres from Rogers Arena BԪַ hundreds of fans paraded in the streets after Vancouver edged Nashville 4-2 chanting BԪַwe want the Cup.BԪַ A few more kilometres east in Abbotsford, where the CanucksBԪַ farm team is preparing for the AHL playoffs, fans were driving up and down the streets honking and cheering.

Fans of other teams mocked this reaction on social media, but Canucks Quinn Hughes and Brock Boeser admitted the bottled-up enthusiasm is understandable. Expect more of the same for Game 2 tonight.

HUGGY BEARS ROTATE

The Boston Bruins started goaltender Linus Ullmark in Game 2 of their series against the Toronto Maple Leafs last night despite crease counterpart Jeremy SwaymanBԪַs 35-save performance in SaturdayBԪַs 5-1 win. The decision by coach Jim Montgomery continued the trend of rotating his netminders.

BostonBԪַs goalies, who have a well-documented friendship that includes an emphatic hug following every victory, have gone back and forth for the past 28 games. Ullmark made 30 stops last night but the Leafs won 3-2 on a late breakaway goal by Auston Matthews.

HOPING FOR PEAK PETEY

After taking a 1-0 lead in their first-round series against the Nashville Predators, the Vancouver Canucks are looking for ways to improve BԪַ including getting more out of centre Elias Pettersson.

The 25-year-old Swedish star did not register a point in SundayBԪַs 4-2 victory.

Canucks coach Rick Tocchet said PetterssonBԪַs line was BԪַa bit disconnectedBԪַ in the series opener and that Pettersson knows what he needs to do better.

SEEING RED IN WHITE-HOUSE

The Avalanche fired 46 shots at JetsBԪַ goalie Connor Hellebuyck on Sunday and scored six times. The bad news for Colorado is Winnipeg won 7-6, despite only managing 23 shots on Alexandar Georgiev.

It was the first time since 1985 that the first game of a first-round playoff series had two teams combine for 13 goals. It was also the fourth time in HellebuyckBԪַs career that he faced more than 45 shots in a playoff game. He has won three of those contests.

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