Central Division (NHL)
Formerly | Norris Division |
---|---|
Conference | Western Conference |
League | National Hockey League |
Sport | Ice hockey |
Founded | 1993 |
No. of teams | 7 (8 in 2021) |
Most recent champion(s) | St. Louis Blues (4th title) |
Most titles | Detroit Red Wings (13 titles) |
The NHL's Central Division was formed in 1993 as part of the Western Conference in a league realignment. Its predecessor was the Norris Division. As part of the 2013 realignment, the Central Division expanded into 7 teams. It is also one of two successors to the Northwest Division. Three of its teams—the Minnesota Wild, Nashville Predators, and Winnipeg Jets (as the Atlanta Thrashers)—joined the NHL in the league's last expansion phase between 1998 and 2000. The fourth team in that group, the Columbus Blue Jackets, is no longer part of the Central Division, having moved to the Metropolitan Division. After the addition of the Vegas Golden Knights to the Pacific Division in 2017, the Central Division is currently the only division in the NHL without eight teams. This situation will remain until the 2021–22 NHL season, when the Seattle Kraken enter the league in the Pacific Division and the Arizona Coyotes are realigned into the Central Division.[1]
The Central Division has sent five teams to the Stanley Cup playoffs on seven occasions. In the first three seasons after the most recent realignment in 2013, Central Division teams occupied both Wild Card playoff spots in the Western Conference. This occurred again in the 2018–19 season, for the fourth time in six seasons.
Current standings
Pos | Team | GP | W | L | OTL | RW | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | St. Louis Blues | 71 | 42 | 19 | 10 | 33 | 225 | 193 | +32 | 94 |
2 | Colorado Avalanche | 70 | 42 | 20 | 8 | 37 | 237 | 191 | +46 | 92 |
3 | Dallas Stars | 69 | 37 | 24 | 8 | 26 | 180 | 177 | +3 | 82 |
4 | Winnipeg Jets | 71 | 37 | 28 | 6 | 30 | 216 | 203 | +13 | 80 |
5 | Nashville Predators | 69 | 35 | 26 | 8 | 28 | 215 | 217 | −2 | 78 |
6 | Minnesota Wild | 69 | 35 | 27 | 7 | 30 | 220 | 220 | 0 | 77 |
7 | Chicago Blackhawks | 70 | 32 | 30 | 8 | 23 | 212 | 218 | −6 | 72 |
Division lineups
1993–1996
Changes from the 1992–93 season
- The Central Division is formed as the result of NHL realignment
- The Minnesota North Stars move to Dallas, Texas, and become the Dallas Stars
- The Chicago Blackhawks, Dallas Stars, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues, and Toronto Maple Leafs come from the Norris Division
- The Winnipeg Jets come from the Smythe Division
1996–1998
- Chicago Blackhawks
- Dallas Stars
- Detroit Red Wings
- Phoenix Coyotes
- St. Louis Blues
- Toronto Maple Leafs
Changes from the 1995–96 season
- The Winnipeg Jets move to Phoenix, Arizona, to become the Phoenix Coyotes
1998–2000
- Chicago Blackhawks
- Detroit Red Wings
- Nashville Predators
- St. Louis Blues
Changes from the 1997–98 season
- The Dallas Stars and Phoenix Coyotes move to the Pacific Division
- The Toronto Maple Leafs move to the Northeast Division
- The Nashville Predators are added as an expansion team
2000–2013
- Chicago Blackhawks
- Columbus Blue Jackets
- Detroit Red Wings
- Nashville Predators
- St. Louis Blues
Changes from the 1999–2000 season
- The Columbus Blue Jackets are added as an expansion team
2013–present
- Chicago Blackhawks
- Colorado Avalanche
- Dallas Stars
- Minnesota Wild
- Nashville Predators
- St. Louis Blues
- Winnipeg Jets
Changes from the 2012–13 season
- The Northwest Division is dissolved due to NHL realignment
- The Columbus Blue Jackets move to the Metropolitan Division
- The Detroit Red Wings move to the Atlantic Division
- The Colorado Avalanche and Minnesota Wild come from the Northwest Division
- The Dallas Stars come from the Pacific Division
- The Winnipeg Jets come from the Southeast Division
Division champions
- 1994 – Detroit Red Wings (46–30–8, 100 pts)
- 1995 – Detroit Red Wings (33–11–4, 70 pts)
- 1996 – Detroit Red Wings (62–13–7, 131 pts)
- 1997 – Dallas Stars (48–26–8, 104 pts)
- 1998 – Dallas Stars (49–22–11, 109 pts)
- 1999 – Detroit Red Wings (43–32–7, 93 pts)
- 2000 – St. Louis Blues (51–19–11–1, 114 pts)
- 2001 – Detroit Red Wings (49–20–9–4, 111 pts)
- 2002 – Detroit Red Wings (51–17–10–4, 116 pts)
- 2003 – Detroit Red Wings (48–20–10–4, 110 pts)
- 2004 – Detroit Red Wings (48–21–11–2, 109 pts)
- 2005 – no season (NHL Lockout)
- 2006 – Detroit Red Wings (58–16–8, 124 pts)
- 2007 – Detroit Red Wings (50–19–13, 113 pts)
- 2008 – Detroit Red Wings (54–21–7, 115 pts)
- 2009 – Detroit Red Wings (51–21–10, 112 pts)
- 2010 – Chicago Blackhawks (52–22–8, 112 pts)
- 2011 – Detroit Red Wings (47–25–10, 104 pts)
- 2012 – St. Louis Blues (49–22–11, 109 pts)
- 2013 – Chicago Blackhawks (36–7–5, 77 pts)
- 2014 – Colorado Avalanche (52–22–8, 112 pts)
- 2015 – St. Louis Blues (51–24–7, 109 pts)
- 2016 – Dallas Stars (50–23–9, 109 pts)
- 2017 – Chicago Blackhawks (50–23–9, 109 pts)
- 2018 – Nashville Predators (53–18–11, 117 pts)
- 2019 – Nashville Predators (47–29–6, 100 pts)
- 2020 – St. Louis Blues (42–19–10, 94 pts)
Season results
Season | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1993–94 | Detroit (100) | Toronto (98) | Dallas (97) | St. Louis (91) | Chicago (87) | Winnipeg (57) | |
1994–95 | Detroit (70)‡ | St. Louis (61) | Chicago (53) | Toronto (50) | Dallas (42) | Winnipeg (39) | |
1995–96 | Detroit (131)‡ | Chicago (94) | Toronto (80) | St. Louis (80) | Winnipeg (78) | Dallas (66) | |
1996–97 | Dallas (104) | Detroit (94)† | Phoenix (83) | St. Louis (83) | Chicago (81) | Toronto (68) | |
1997–98 | Dallas (109) | Detroit (103)† | St. Louis (98) | Phoenix (82) | Chicago (73) | Toronto (69) | |
1998–99 | Detroit (93) | St. Louis (87) | Chicago (70) | Nashville (63) | |||
1999–2000 | St. Louis (114)‡ | Detroit (108) | Chicago (78) | Nashville (70) | |||
2000–01 | Detroit (111) | St. Louis (103) | Nashville (80) | Chicago (71) | Columbus (71) | ||
2001–02 | Detroit (116)‡† | St. Louis (98) | Chicago (96) | Nashville (69) | Columbus (57) | ||
2002–03 | Detroit (110) | St. Louis (99) | Chicago (79) | Nashville (74) | Columbus (69) | ||
2003–04 | Detroit (109)‡ | St. Louis (91) | Nashville (91) | Columbus (62) | Chicago (59) | ||
2004–05 | No season due to 2004–05 NHL lockout | ||||||
2005–06 | Detroit (124)‡ | Nashville (106) | Columbus (74) | Chicago (65) | St. Louis (57) | ||
2006–07 | Detroit (113) | Nashville (110) | St. Louis (81) | Columbus (73) | Chicago (71) | ||
2007–08 | Detroit (115)‡† | Nashville (91) | Chicago (88) | Columbus (80) | St. Louis (79) | ||
2008–09 | Detroit (112)‡ | Chicago (104) | St. Louis (92) | Columbus (92) | Nashville (88) | ||
2009–10 | Chicago (112)† | Detroit (102) | Nashville (100) | St. Louis (90) | Columbus (79) | ||
2010–11 | Detroit (104) | Nashville (99) | Chicago (97) | St. Louis (87) | Columbus (81) | ||
2011–12 | St. Louis (109) | Nashville (104) | Detroit (102) | Chicago (101) | Columbus (65) | ||
2012–13 | Chicago (77)‡† | St. Louis (60) | Detroit (56) | Columbus (55) | Nashville (41) | ||
2013–14 | Colorado (112) | St. Louis (111) | Chicago (107) | Minnesota (98) | Dallas (91) | Nashville (88) | Winnipeg (84) |
2014–15 | St. Louis (109) | Nashville (104) | Chicago (102)† | Minnesota (100) | Winnipeg (99) | Dallas (92) | Colorado (90) |
2015–16 | Dallas (109) | St. Louis (107) | Chicago (103) | Nashville (96) | Minnesota (87) | Colorado (82) | Winnipeg (78) |
2016–17 | Chicago (109) | Minnesota (106) | St. Louis (99) | Nashville (94) | Winnipeg (87) | Dallas (79) | Colorado (48) |
2017–18 | Nashville (117)‡ | Winnipeg (114) | Minnesota (101) | Colorado (95) | St. Louis (94) | Dallas (92) | Chicago (76) |
2018–19 | Nashville (100) | Winnipeg (99) | St. Louis (99)† | Dallas (93) | Colorado (90) | Chicago (84) | Minnesota (83) |
2019–20** | St. Louis (71 gp 94 pts. .662 ppct.) |
Colorado (70 gp 92 pts. .657 ppct.) |
Dallas (69 gp 82 pts. .594 ppct.) |
Nashville (69 gp 78 pts. .565 ppct.) |
Winnipeg (71 gp 80 pts. .563 ppct.) |
Minnesota (69 gp 77 pts. .558 ppct.) |
Chicago (70 gp 72 pts. .514 ppct.) |
- Qualified for playoffs
- ‡ denotes winner of the Presidents' Trophy
- † denotes winner of the Stanley Cup
- ** 2019–20 season rankings were determined by points percentage; season was cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic
Stanley Cup winners produced
- 1997 – Detroit Red Wings
- 1998 – Detroit Red Wings
- 2002 – Detroit Red Wings
- 2008 – Detroit Red Wings
- 2010 – Chicago Blackhawks
- 2013 – Chicago Blackhawks
- 2015 – Chicago Blackhawks
- 2019 – St. Louis Blues
Presidents' Trophy winners produced
- 1995 – Detroit Red Wings
- 1996 – Detroit Red Wings
- 1998 – Dallas Stars
- 2000 – St. Louis Blues
- 2002 – Detroit Red Wings
- 2004 – Detroit Red Wings
- 2006 – Detroit Red Wings
- 2008 – Detroit Red Wings
- 2013 – Chicago Blackhawks
- 2018 – Nashville Predators
Central Division titles won by team
Teams in bold are currently in the division.
Team | Wins | Last win |
---|---|---|
Detroit Red Wings | 13 | 2011 |
St. Louis Blues | 4 | 2020 |
Chicago Blackhawks | 3 | 2017 |
Dallas Stars | 3 | 2016 |
Nashville Predators | 2 | 2019 |
Colorado Avalanche | 1 | 2014 |
Minnesota Wild | 0 | — |
Winnipeg Jets | 0 | — |
Columbus Blue Jackets | 0 | — |
Toronto Maple Leafs | 0 | — |
Winnipeg Jets/Arizona Coyotes | 0 | — |
References
- ^ "Seattle NHL expansion approved by Board of Governors". December 4, 2018. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
- ^ "NHL Hockey Standings". www.nhl.com. National Hockey League.