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This is the Bruins' 18th appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals, and their first since losing to the [[Edmonton Oilers]] in {{scfy|1990}} in five games. Boston will be seeking their sixth Cup championship, and their first one since defeating the [[New York Rangers]] in {{scfy|1972}} in six games.
This is the Bruins' 18th appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals, and their first since losing to the [[Edmonton Oilers]] in {{scfy|1990}} in five games. Boston will be seeking their sixth Cup championship, and their first one since defeating the [[New York Rangers]] in {{scfy|1972}} in six games.


Boston Bruins greatest team.... Recent winning of game 7 left Wayne L. Speechless
===Vancouver Canucks===
===Vancouver Canucks===
{{Main|2010–11 Vancouver Canucks season}}
{{Main|2010–11 Vancouver Canucks season}}

Revision as of 04:14, 28 May 2011

2011 Stanley Cup Finals
1234 Total
Boston Bruins ---- 0
Vancouver Canucks ---- 0
Location(s)Vancouver: Rogers Arena (1,2,5,7)
Boston: TD Garden (3,4,6)
CoachesBoston: Claude Julien
Vancouver: Alain Vigneault
CaptainsBoston: Zdeno Chara
Vancouver: Henrik Sedin
National anthemsBoston: Rene Rancourt
Vancouver: Mark Donnelly (Canadian)
Richard Loney (American)
DatesJune 1 - June 15
NetworksCBC, RDS, NBC, Versus
Announcers(NBC/Versus) Mike Emrick, Ed Olczyk
(CBC) Jim Hughson, Craig Simpson
(RDS) Pierre Houde, Benoit Brunet
← 2010 Stanley Cup Finals 2012 →

The 2011 Stanley Cup Finals will be the championship series of the National Hockey League (NHL) 2010–11 season, and the culmination of the 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs. This will be the 118th year of the Stanley Cup's presentation. It will pit the Eastern Conference Champion Boston Bruins against the Western Conference Champion Vancouver Canucks. The last time both teams were in the Stanley Cup Finals, they both lost to a Mark Messier-captained team; the Bruins to the Edmonton Oilers in 1990 and the Canucks to the New York Rangers in 1994.[1][2]

The Canucks will have home ice advantage in the Finals by virtue of winning the Presidents' Trophy as the team that finished with the best regular season record (117 points). Game 1 will be held on June 1, while Game 7 (if necessary) is scheduled for June 15.[3]

Path to the Finals

Boston Bruins

The Bruins finished the regular season as the Northeast Division champion with 103 points, earning the #3 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. In their 33rd postseason meeting, Boston eliminated their bitter rivals, Montreal Canadiens in the first round of the playoffs in seven games. The Bruins went on to sweep the Philadelphia Flyers in the second round, outscored the Flyers 20–7 in four games. And later in Eastern Conference Finals, Boston defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning in seven games.

This is the Bruins' 18th appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals, and their first since losing to the Edmonton Oilers in 1990 in five games. Boston will be seeking their sixth Cup championship, and their first one since defeating the New York Rangers in 1972 in six games.

Boston Bruins greatest team.... Recent winning of game 7 left Wayne L. Speechless

Vancouver Canucks

The Canucks, in their 40th season, finished the regular season with the best record at 117 points, winning their first Presidents' Trophy in team history, and the Northwest Division championship. In the first round of the playoffs, the Canucks met the Chicago Blackhawks for the third straight postseason, having lost both previous series in six games. After Vancouver won the first three games, Chicago won the next three to force a game seven. Vancouver won the seventh game in overtime on goal by Alexandre Burrows to avoid becoming the fourth team in NHL history to lose a series after taking a 3–0 series lead.[4] The second round saw the Canucks eliminate the Nashville Predators in six games, with each game in that series decided by just a single goal (with the exception of an empty net goal scored by Vancouver in Game 4).[5] Vancouver then went on to defeat the San Jose Sharks in the Western Conference Finals in five games.[6]

This is Vancouver's third appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals, following their unsuccessful Cinderella marches of 1982 and 1994, both times losing to a team from New York.[7][8] They were swept by the Islanders in 1982, and were defeated in seven games by the Rangers in 1994. Vancouver is also attempting to become the first Canada-based NHL team to win the Cup since the Montreal Canadiens in 1993.

The series

Note: All times are in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-04). Games to be played if necessary are indicated by italicized dates and times.

Game one

June 1 Boston Bruins 8:00 pm Vancouver Canucks Rogers Arena CBC, RDS, NBC


Game two

June 4 Boston Bruins 8:00 pm Vancouver Canucks Rogers Arena CBC, RDS, NBC


Game three

June 6 Vancouver Canucks 8:00 pm Boston Bruins TD Garden CBC, RDS, Versus


Game four

June 8 Vancouver Canucks 8:00 pm Boston Bruins TD Garden CBC, RDS, Versus


Game five

June 10 Boston Bruins 8:00 pm Vancouver Canucks Rogers Arena CBC, RDS, NBC


Game six

June 13 Vancouver Canucks 8:00 pm Boston Bruins TD Garden CBC, RDS, NBC


Game seven

June 15 Boston Bruins 8:00 pm Vancouver Canucks Rogers Arena CBC, RDS, NBC


Television

In Canada, the series will be televised in English on CBC and in French on the cable network RDS. In the United States, NBC will broadcast the first two and final three games, while Versus will televise games three and four.

Officials

The officials for the series will be announced after the conclusion of the Eastern Conference Finals.

Rosters

Boston Bruins

Updated December 11, 2024[9][10]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
19 United States John Beecher C L 23 2019 Elmira, New York
55 Canada Justin Brazeau RW R 26 2024 New Liskeard, Ontario
25 United States Brandon Carlo D R 28 2015 Colorado Springs, Colorado
13 United States Charlie Coyle C R 32 2019 Weymouth, Massachusetts
11 United States Trent Frederic LW L 26 2016 St. Louis, Missouri
39 Canada Morgan Geekie RW R 26 2023 Strathclair, Manitoba
90 United States Tyler Johnson C R 34 2024 Spokane, Washington
47 United States Mark Kastelic C R 25 2024 Phoenix, Arizona
45 United States Cole Koepke LW L 26 2024 Two Harbors, Minnesota
70 Finland Joonas Korpisalo G L 30 2024 Pori, Finland
28 Sweden Elias Lindholm C R 30 2024 Boden, Sweden
27 Sweden Hampus Lindholm Injured Reserve D L 30 2022 Helsingborg, Sweden
6 United States Mason Lohrei D L 23 2020 Baton Rouge, Louisiana
63 Canada Brad Marchand (C) LW L 36 2006 Halifax, Nova Scotia
73 United States Charlie McAvoy (A) D R 26 2016 Long Beach, New York
26 United States Marc McLaughlin C R 25 2022 North Billerica, Massachusetts
82 United States Jordan Oesterle D L 32 2024 Dearborn Heights, Michigan
88 Czech Republic David Pastrnak (A) RW R 28 2014 Havířov, Czech Republic
52 United States Andrew Peeke D R 26 2024 Parkland, Florida
1 United States Jeremy Swayman G L 26 2017 Anchorage, Alaska
29 Canada Parker Wotherspoon D L 27 2023 Surrey, British Columbia
18 Czech Republic Pavel Zacha C L 27 2022 Brno, Czech Republic
91 Russia Nikita Zadorov D L 29 2024 Moscow, Russia


Vancouver Canucks

Updated December 10, 2024[11][12]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
53 Latvia Teddy Blueger C L 30 2023 Riga, Latvia
6 United States Brock Boeser RW R 27 2015 Burnsville, Minnesota
26 Sweden Erik Brannstrom D L 25 2024 Eksjö, Sweden
74 Canada Jake DeBrusk RW L 28 2024 Edmonton, Alberta
35 United States Thatcher Demko G L 29 2014 San Diego, California
73 Canada Vincent Desharnais D R 28 2024 Laval, Quebec
27 United States Derek Forbort Injured Reserve D L 32 2024 Duluth, Minnesota
51 Canada Mark Friedman D R 28 2023 Toronto, Ontario
8 United States Conor Garland RW R 28 2021 Scituate, Massachusetts
20 Canada Danton Heinen LW L 29 2024 Langley, British Columbia
21 Sweden Nils Hoglander LW L 23 2019 Bocktrask, Sweden
17 Czech Republic Filip Hronek Injured Reserve D R 27 2023 Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
43 United States Quinn Hughes (C) D L 25 2018 Orlando, Florida
81 United States Dakota Joshua C L 28 2022 Dearborn, Michigan
47 Canada Noah Juulsen D R 27 2021 Surrey, British Columbia
32 Finland Kevin Lankinen G L 29 2024 Helsinki, Finland
9 United States J. T. Miller (A) C/RW L 31 2019 East Palestine, Ohio
57 Canada Tyler Myers D R 34 2019 Houston, Texas
40 Sweden Elias Pettersson (A) C L 26 2017 Sundsvall, Sweden
54 Finland Aatu Raty C L 22 2023 Oulunsalo, Finland
63 United States Max Sasson C L 24 2023 Birmingham, Michigan
44 United States Kiefer Sherwood RW R 29 2024 Columbus, Ohio
7 Canada Carson Soucy D L 30 2023 Viking, Alberta
24 Switzerland Pius Suter C L 28 2023 Zürich, Switzerland


References

Inline citations
  1. ^ Cole, pp. 120, 128
  2. ^ Morrison, pp. 136–139
  3. ^ "2011 Stanley Cup Final Schedule". NHL.com. National Hockey League. May 26, 2011. Retrieved May 26, 2011.
  4. ^ Wharnsby, Tim (April 27, 2011). "Burrows, Canucks win Game 7 in OT". CBC Sports. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved May 25, 2011.
  5. ^ Rucker, Beth (May 9, 2011). "Canucks beat Predators to advance to West finals". Yahoo! Sports. Associated Press. Retrieved May 25, 2011.
  6. ^ Wharnsby, Tim (May 25, 2011). "Canucks bound for Stanley Cup final". CBCSports.ca. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved May 25, 2011.
  7. ^ Associated Press (May 24, 2011). "Bieksa scores in OT to send Canucks to Cup finals". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved May 25, 2011.
  8. ^ Morrison, Scott (2008). Hockey Night in Canada: My Greatest Day. Toronto: Key Porter Books. pp. 106–109. ISBN 978-1-55470-086-8.
  9. ^ "Boston Bruins Roster". National Hockey League. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
  10. ^ "Boston Bruins Hockey Transactions". The Sports Network. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
  11. ^ "Vancouver Canucks Roster". National Hockey League. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
  12. ^ "Vancouver Canucks Hockey Transactions". The Sports Network. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
Bibliography
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Stanley Cup Champions

2011
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