EASTERN CONFERENCE
(1) PITTSBURGH VS. (8) New York ISLANDERS
Records: Penguins 36-12-0, 72 points; Islanders 24-17-7, 55 points.
Season series: Penguins won 4-1.
The skinny: Even with injuries the Penguins — first-round losers the past two years — went 23-4 at the finish. And now they're getting healthier, with Evgeni Malkin and James Neal back. The big question is whether Sidney Crosby will return from a broken jaw. The Penguins are loaded up front, with scoring depth all down the lineup , augmented by late additions Brenden Morrow and Jarome Iginla, who had goals in four of his past six games. Former Wild winger Pascal Dupuis was a league-best plus-31 and native Minnesotan Paul Martin had his best per-game point production (.64). Penguins G Marc-Andre Fleury and Islanders goalie Evgeni Nabokov each had 23 victories. The Islanders, in the playoffs for the first time since 2007, haven't won a playoff series since 1993. C John Tavares (28-19—47) and LW Matt Moulson (15-29—44) carry the offensive load while 37-year-old Nabokov (23-11-7) seems ageless. The Islanders were 14-6-4 on the road, third-best in the East.
(2) MONTREAL VS. (7) OTTAWA
Records: Canadiens 29-14-5, 63 points; Senators 25-17-6, 56 points
Season series: Both teams were 2-1-1.
The skinny: The Canadiens started hot but limped home, losing six of their past 10 games and giving up 29 goals in the six losses. Still, they went from last place in the Eastern Conference a year ago to Northeast Division champs with a combination of good defense and balanced scoring. LW Max Pacioretty (15-24—39) and D P.K. Subban (11-27—38) lead a lineup that had eight players with at least 10 goals but nobody with more than 39 points. G Carey Price has to rebound from a rocky finish. The Senators fought through a number of injuries to qualify for the playoffs. The worst was defenseman Erik Karlsson's torn Achilles tendon. The Senators haven't reached the second round since 2006, but Karlsson's late return should be a boost. C Kyle Turris (12-17—29) leads a balanced Ottawa attack. But the key is G Craig Anderson, who came back from a mid-season injury to lead the NHL with a 1.69 goals-against average. Ottawa finished second in goals against (2.08).
(3) WASHINGtON VS. (6) N.Y. RANGERS
Records: Capitals 27-18-3, 57 points; Rangers 26-18-4, 56 points.
Season series: Rangers 2-0-1, Washington 1-2-0.