Two iconic hockey clubs have renewed hopes that a decades-long wait for a Stanley Cup win is over—both for themselves and for Canada. The Toronto Maple Leafs and Edmonton Oilers have been champions many times, but not recently. And Canada hasn’t had a Stanley Cup champion since the Montreal Canadiens won in 1993.
What’s more, the Stanley Cup playoffs are wide open, with the top team during the regular season—the record-setting Boston Bruins—eliminated in addition to the defending Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche.
Last year, Toronto lost to two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Tampa Bay Lightning in seven games in the first round. This year, they beat the Lightning in six, advancing to the second round for the first time in 19 years. Sports talk show host Rod Pedersen says the progression bodes well and might just result in a championship.
“You need to learn how to lose before you learn how to win. It’s part of the process,” Pedersen said in an interview.
“That’s not to say that the Toronto Maple Leafs are gonna win the Stanley Cup, but this was a major door to kick in. Tampa Bay did it, Colorado did it, maybe Toronto will do it. But sometimes you need to suffer those tough lessons before you learn. It looks like the Leafs have.”
“You want the road to be easier. I’ve been with championship teams. You need some luck along the way. It’s not always just about how you play. It’s going to be a major, major lucky charm for the Toronto Maple Leafs that they don’t have to go through Boston.”
Edmonton also got a break. Last year, they advanced to the Western Conference finals for the first time since 2006. They lost to the Colorado Avalanche, which upset the Lightning to win the cup. This year, the Avalanche lost to the Seattle Kraken. The Oilers beat the L.A. Kings in six games but face stiff competition in the Las Vegas Golden Knights.
Pedersen projects the Leafs and the Golden Knights to win in six games. Moshe Lander, Canada’s pre-eminent sports economist and a senior lecturer at Concordia University, says Toronto’s second round bid is noteworthy no matter how it goes.
“It’s a big deal for Leafs fans, sure. It’s a big deal for us Leaf-haters. It’s nearing the end of the world. And for the Leafs ownership, it means an extra two, three, maybe even four guaranteed home games. Each one brings in $1–$2 million in just street profit,” Lander told The Epoch Times.
It’s a three-hour flight or a 23-hour drive from Toronto to the Panthers’ arena in Sunrise, Florida, just west of Fort Lauderdale and just north of Miami. Fearing an influx of Leafs fans and the loss of home ice advantage, the team barred Canadians from buying playoff tickets for the first 24 hours they were on sale.
‘Canadian Sense of Entitlement’
Toronto teams have won the Stanley Cup 13 times. The Arenas took the title in 1918 and the St. Patricks in 1922 before the Maple Leafs took 11 wins between 1932 and 1967. The Edmonton Oilers won five Stanley Cups between 1984 and 1990.No Canadian team has won the Stanley Cup since the Montreal Canadiens in 1993, which many Canadians feel just isn’t right, Lander says.
“There’s still that Canadian sense of entitlement that hockey belongs to them, and I don’t think that’s been true for a long time. But there is that belief. So winning it, whether it’s the Oilers or the Leafs, would for sure restore some of that pride,” Lander said.
“There’s more at stake for the Leafs than for the Oilers. At some point you risk losing a young fan base that says I’m not all that interested in hockey anyway, and this team has done nothing for half a century, thanks. I'll throw in my lot with the Raptors [basketball club] or Toronto MLS soccer.”
Lander said that better weather, lower taxes, and an easier travel schedule draw some elite players to prefer one of the 25 U.S. NHL teams instead of the seven Canadian ones. He acknowledges that many Canadians blame Gary Bettman, who took over as league commissioner in 1992.
“That’s again, one of those ways that we justify going so long without a Stanley Cup,” Lander said. “But he’s never been against Canada. He was speaking very vocally about making sure that Edmonton, and recently Calgary, got new arenas.”
Pedersen agrees.
“Why hasn’t there been a Canadian Stanley Cup champion since 1993? It very devilishly coincides with Gary Bettman’s term as commissioner, but I don’t think he’s behind it, I really don’t,” Pedersen said.
Whatever the cause, the veteran commentator says Canadian fans need a cup “really badly” from one of the two “iconic” teams.
“If it was Toronto, Edmonton to the Stanley Cup, we'd be assured a Canadian cup victor, and I think that would be the best thing for the NHL.”