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2019 National Hockey League All-Star Game

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2019 NHL All-Star Game
SAP Center, San Jose
January 26, 2019[1]
Game oneCentral 10 – 4 Pacific
Game twoMetropolitan 7 – 4 Atlantic
Game threeMetropolitan 10 – 5 Central

MVPSidney Crosby
Attendance17,562
← 2018 2020 ⊟

The 2019 National Hockey League All-Star Game was held at SAP Center in San Jose, home of the San Jose Sharks on January 26, 2019.[1] San Jose last held the NHL All Star Game in 1997.[2] This was the fourth consecutive All-Star Game that used a four-team, 3-on-3, single elimination format, with one team representing each of the league's four divisions. After years of being held on a Sunday, the 2019 All-Star Game was played on a Saturday, January 26, at 5 p.m. PST/8 p.m. EST, while the Skills Competition was also moved from its traditional Saturday night to Friday, January 25, 2019.[1]

The Metropolitan All-Stars won the All-Star Game, which was in its fourth straight year of a four-team, 3-on-3, single elimination format, with one team representing each of the league's four divisions. The team won $1 million (split 11 ways between the players). Sidney Crosby of the Pittsburgh Penguins was named the Most Valuable Player, scoring four goals and four assists. He received a new 2019 Honda Passport which he then proceeded to give to an Army veteran.

Skills Competition

[edit]
External videos
2019 All-Star Skills Competition
video icon Full replay (NBCSN's feed) on the NHL's official YouTube channel

The Skills Competition took place the day before the All-Star Game on Friday January 25, 2019 at the SAP Center. The winners of each event were awarded $25,000 in prize money.[3]

The league invited Renata Fast and Rebecca Johnston from the Canadian Women's National Team, and Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne Schofield from the U.S. Women's National Team, to demonstrate some of the events. After Nathan MacKinnon of the Colorado Avalanche (Central Division) pulled out of the fastest-skater event due to a bruised left foot, Coyne Schofield was named as his replacement, becoming the first woman to compete in the All-Stars skills competition.[4]

Brianna Decker demonstrated the premier passer skill, but she was not part of the competition. She was, in fact, three seconds faster than Leon Draisaitl and would have won had her time been included as they did with Kendall Coyne Schofield.[5] This prompted the hashtag #PayDecker on Twitter, as women's hockey salaries are a fraction of men's hockey salaries.[6] On January 26, hockey equipment company CCM announced they would give Decker the $25,000 she would have received for winning the competition.[7]

Results

[edit]

Fastest Skater

[edit]
External videos
2019 Fastest Skater
video icon NBCSN's feed on the NHL's official YouTube channel
video icon Sportsnet's feed on Sportsnet's official YouTube channel
Nat. Player Team Division Time (Seconds)
Canada Connor McDavid Edmonton Oilers Pacific 13.378[8]
United States Jack Eichel Buffalo Sabres Atlantic 13.582
Canada Mathew Barzal New York Islanders Metropolitan 13.780
Finland Miro Heiskanen Dallas Stars Central 13.914
Sweden Elias Pettersson Vancouver Canucks Pacific 13.930
United States Cam Atkinson Columbus Blue Jackets Metropolitan 14.152
United States Kendall Coyne USA National Team N/A 14.346
United States Clayton Keller Arizona Coyotes Pacific 14.526

Puck Control Play

[edit]
External videos
2019 Puck Control Play
video icon NBCSN's feed on the NHL's official YouTube channel
video icon Sportsnet's feed on Sportsnet's official YouTube channel
Nat. Player Team Division Time (Seconds)
United States Johnny Gaudreau Calgary Flames Pacific 27.045[9]
United States Patrick Kane Chicago Blackhawks Central 28.611
Canada Claude Giroux Philadelphia Flyers Metropolitan 30.270
Canada Mark Scheifele Winnipeg Jets Central 32.161
Sweden Gabriel Landeskog Colorado Avalanche Central 33.425
Canada John Tavares Toronto Maple Leafs Atlantic 35.210
Canada Jeff Skinner Buffalo Sabres Atlantic 35.407
Sweden Elias Pettersson Vancouver Canucks Pacific 43.622

Save Streak

[edit]
External videos
2019 Save Streak
video icon NBCSN's feed on the NHL's official YouTube channel
video icon Sportsnet's feed on Sportsnet's official YouTube channel
Nat. Player Team Division Division Faced Save Streak
Sweden Henrik Lundqvist New York Rangers Metropolitan Atlantic 12[10]
Russia Andrei Vasilevskiy Tampa Bay Lightning Atlantic Metropolitan 8
Canada Devan Dubnyk Minnesota Wild Central Pacific 7
Canada Marc-Andre Fleury Vegas Golden Knights Pacific Central 6
United States John Gibson Anaheim Ducks Pacific Central 3
United States Jimmy Howard Detroit Red Wings Atlantic Metropolitan 2
Finland Pekka Rinne Nashville Predators Central Pacific 2
Canada Braden Holtby Washington Capitals Metropolitan Atlantic 2

Premier Passer

[edit]
External videos
2019 Premier Passer
video icon NBCSN's feed on the NHL's official YouTube channel
video icon Sportsnet's feed on Sportsnet's official YouTube channel
Nat. Player Team Division Time (Seconds)
Germany Leon Draisaitl Edmonton Oilers Pacific 69.088[11]
Finland Sebastian Aho Carolina Hurricanes Metropolitan 78.530
Canada Ryan O'Reilly St. Louis Blues Central 85.897
United States Keith Yandle Florida Panthers Atlantic 94.611
Canada Thomas Chabot Ottawa Senators Atlantic 100.568
Switzerland Roman Josi Nashville Predators Central 107.128
Sweden Erik Karlsson San Jose Sharks Pacific 118.824
Finland Mikko Rantanen Colorado Avalanche Central 137.379

Hardest Shot

[edit]
External videos
2019 Hardest Shot
video icon NBCSN's feed on the NHL's official YouTube channel
video icon Sportsnet's feed on Sportsnet's official YouTube channel
Nat. Player Team Division Speed (MPH)
Attempt 1 Attempt 2
United States John Carlson Washington Capitals Metropolitan 102.8 mph[12] 100.8 mph
Canada Brent Burns San Jose Sharks Pacific 0 (Miss) 100.6
United States Seth Jones Columbus Blue Jackets Metropolitan 99.4 95.1
Canada Steven Stamkos Tampa Bay Lightning Atlantic 96.2 93.1

Accuracy Shooting

[edit]
External videos
2019 Accuracy Shooting
video icon NBCSN's feed on the NHL's official YouTube channel
video icon Sportsnet's feed on Sportsnet's official YouTube channel
Nat. Player Team Division Time (Seconds)
Czech Republic David Pastrnak Boston Bruins Atlantic 11.309 seconds[13]
Canada Kris Letang Pittsburgh Penguins Metropolitan 12.693 seconds
Canada Drew Doughty Los Angeles Kings Pacific 13.591 seconds
United States Joe Pavelski San Jose Sharks Pacific 14.423 seconds
United States Blake Wheeler Winnipeg Jets Central 18.585 seconds
Russia Nikita Kucherov Tampa Bay Lightning Atlantic 19.706 seconds
United States Kyle Palmieri New Jersey Devils Metropolitan 20.209 seconds
United States Auston Matthews Toronto Maple Leafs Atlantic 35.626 seconds

Rosters

[edit]

As in the previous three All-Star Games, captaincy of each division was determined by a fan vote, the 2019 vote running from December 1, 2018, until December 23, 2018.[14] On December 27, the four captains were announced by the NHL. For the third straight year, Connor McDavid of the Edmonton Oilers was selected to captain the Pacific Division, along with first time captains Auston Matthews of the Toronto Maple Leafs for the Atlantic Division and Nathan MacKinnon of the Colorado Avalanche for the Central Division. Alexander Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals was selected for the Metropolitan Division,[15] but Ovechkin opted to abstain from the game to rest.[16] Fans were also permitted, after most of the rest of the rosters were set, to vote for a "Last Man In" for each division.[17] The Last Men In—Jeff Skinner (Atlantic), Gabriel Landeskog (Central), Kris Letang (Metropolitan) and Leon Draisaitl (Pacific)—were announced January 11.[18]

On January 6, the coaches for the All-Star Game were announced, chosen from the team in each division with the highest points percentage through January 5, roughly the regular season's halfway point: Jon Cooper of the Tampa Bay Lightning (Atlantic), Todd Reirden of the Washington Capitals (Metropolitan), Paul Maurice of the Winnipeg Jets (Central), and Bill Peters of the Calgary Flames (Pacific).[19]

Eastern Conference

[edit]
Atlantic Division[18]
Head coach: Canada Jon Cooper, Tampa Bay Lightning
Nat. Player Team Pos. #
United States Auston Matthews (C[15]) Toronto Maple Leafs F 34
United States Jack Eichel Buffalo Sabres F 9
Russia Nikita Kucherov Tampa Bay Lightning F 86
Czech Republic David Pastrnak Boston Bruins F 88
Canada Steven Stamkos Tampa Bay Lightning F 91
Canada John Tavares Toronto Maple Leafs F 91
Canada Jeff Skinner~ Buffalo Sabres F 53
Canada Thomas Chabot Ottawa Senators D 72
United States Keith Yandle Florida Panthers D 3
United States Jimmy Howard Detroit Red Wings G 35
Russia Andrei Vasilevskiy Tampa Bay Lightning G 88
Metropolitan Division[18]
Head coach: United States Todd Reirden, Washington Capitals
Nat. Player Team Pos. #
Finland Sebastian Aho Carolina Hurricanes F 20
United States Cam Atkinson Columbus Blue Jackets F 13
Canada Mathew Barzal New York Islanders F 13
Canada Sidney Crosby* Pittsburgh Penguins F 87
Canada Claude Giroux Philadelphia Flyers F 28
United States Kyle Palmieri New Jersey Devils F 21
United States John Carlson Washington Capitals D 74
United States Seth Jones Columbus Blue Jackets D 3
Canada Kris Letang~ Pittsburgh Penguins D 58
Canada Braden Holtby Washington Capitals G 70
Sweden Henrik Lundqvist New York Rangers G 30
  • ~ Voted as "Last Man In".[18]
  • Alexander Ovechkin (C) (Washington Capitals) opted to abstain from the game to rest.[16]
  • Replaced Taylor Hall (New Jersey Devils) due to injury.[21]
  • * Did not participate in Skills Competition due to illness.[22]

Western Conference

[edit]
Central Division[18]
Head coach: Canada Paul Maurice, Winnipeg Jets
Nat. Player Team Pos. #
Canada Nathan MacKinnon (C[15])* Colorado Avalanche F 29
United States Patrick Kane Chicago Blackhawks F 88
Canada Ryan O'Reilly St. Louis Blues F 90
Finland Mikko Rantanen Colorado Avalanche F 96
Canada Mark Scheifele Winnipeg Jets F 55
United States Blake Wheeler Winnipeg Jets F 26
Sweden Gabriel Landeskog~ Colorado Avalanche F 92
Finland Miro Heiskanen Dallas Stars D 4
Switzerland Roman Josi Nashville Predators D 59
Canada Devan Dubnyk Minnesota Wild G 40
Finland Pekka Rinne Nashville Predators G 35
  • ~ Voted as "Last Man In".[18]
  • * Did not participate in Skills Competition or All-Star Games due to injury (still attended All-Star weekend). Replaced by Kendall Coyne Schofield in the Skills Competition.[23]
Pacific Division[18]
Head coach: Canada Bill Peters, Calgary Flames
Nat. Player Team Pos. #
Canada Connor McDavid (C[15]) Edmonton Oilers F 97
United States Johnny Gaudreau Calgary Flames F 13
United States Clayton Keller Arizona Coyotes F 9
United States Joe Pavelski San Jose Sharks F 8
Sweden Elias Pettersson Vancouver Canucks F 40
Germany Leon Draisaitl~ Edmonton Oilers F 29
Canada Brent Burns San Jose Sharks D 88
Canada Drew Doughty Los Angeles Kings D 8
Sweden Erik Karlsson San Jose Sharks D 65
Canada Marc-Andre Fleury Vegas Golden Knights G 29
United States John Gibson Anaheim Ducks G 36
  • ~ Voted as "Last Man In".[18]

Bracket

[edit]
External videos
2019 NHL All-Star Game
video icon Full replay (NBC's feed) on the NHL's official YouTube channel
Semi-Finals Final
Central 10
Pacific 4 Central 5
Metropolitan 7 Metropolitan 10
Atlantic 4

Game summaries

[edit]

First semifinal game

[edit]
January 26, 2019 Central 10–4 Pacific SAP Center Recap  
1:03 – Mikko Rantanen (1)
1:33 – Gabriel Landeskog (1)
5:08 – Roman Josi (1)
5:31 – Patrick Kane (1)
6:39 – Mark Scheifele (1)
7:50 – Mikko Rantanen (2)
8:11 – Patrick Kane (2)
First period Erik Karlsson (1) – 4:51
0:42 – Gabriel Landeskog (2)
2:30 – Ryan O'Reilly (1)
4:36 – Gabriel Landeskog (3)
Second period Johnny Gaudreau (1) – 4:47
Erik Karlsson (2) – 5:52
Brent Burns (1) – 6:02
No period Third period No period
Pekka Rinne 8 saves / 9 shots
Devan Dubnyk 19 saves / 22 shots
Goalie stats John Gibson 2 saves / 9 shots
Marc-Andre Fleury 6 saves / 9 shots


Second semifinal game

[edit]
January 26, 2019 Metropolitan 7–4 Atlantic SAP Center Recap  
0:15 – Sidney Crosby (1)
1:56 – Seth Jones (1)
9:40 – Seth Jones (2)
First period Jack Eichel (1) – 2:04
Steven Stamkos (1) – 3:13
3:37 – Sidney Crosby (2)
6:22 – Kris Letang (1)
8:08 – Sebastian Aho (1)
9:14 – Cam Atkinson (1)
Second period Jeff Skinner (1) – 0:56
John Tavares (1) – 1:28
No period Third period No period
Henrik Lundqvist 5 saves / 7 shots
Braden Holtby 11 saves / 13 shots
Goalie stats Andrei Vasilevskiy 10 saves / 13 shots
Jimmy Howard 9 saves / 13 shots


Final

[edit]
January 26, 2019 Metropolitan 10–5 Central SAP Center Recap  
0:22 – Mathew Barzal (1)
1:53 – Claude Giroux (1)
3:40 – Kris Letang (2)
8:16 – Kyle Palmieri (1)
9:55 – Sidney Crosby (3)
First period No scoring
4:02 – Sidney Crosby (4)
5:35 – Sebastian Aho (2)
5:43 – Cam Atkinson (2)
7:16 – en – Mathew Barzal (2)
9:08 – Cam Atkinson (3)
Second period Gabriel Landeskog (4) – 1:15
Mikko Rantanen (1) – 3:25
Ryan O'Reilly (2) – 4:38
Mikko Rantanen (3) – 8:30
Blake Wheeler (1) – 8:50
No period Third period No period
Henrik Lundqvist 6 saves / 6 shots
Braden Holtby 12 saves / 17 shots
Goalie stats Devan Dubnyk 6 saves / 11 shots
Pekka Rinne 6 saves / 10 shots


Uniforms

[edit]

The All-Star uniforms for this game were created by Adidas Parley, the partnership between Adidas and the environmental organization Parley for the Oceans that produces products made with plastic ocean debris. Also for the first time, the uniforms featured each player's respective team logo on the front instead of the NHL shield or conference logo.[24]

Festivities and entertainment

[edit]

This year's NHL Fan Fair, featuring various fan activities during All-Star Weekend, was held between Thursday, January 24 and Sunday, January 27 at the San Jose Convention Center.[25]

Country music artist Chad Brownlee performed the Canadian national anthem while pop singer and Fifth Harmony member Lauren Jauregui performed the U.S. national anthem. Singer Bebe Rexha performed during the second intermission. The Stanford Band also performed during the game.[26]

Television

[edit]

The All-Star Game and skills competition were broadcast in the United States by NBC and NBCSN, respectively. In Canada, both the All-Star Game and skills competition were broadcast In English on both CBC and Sportsnet (under the Hockey Night in Canada branding), and on TVA Sports in French.[14]

The NHL conducted a trial of player and puck tracking during the All-Star Game with technology developed by one of the German Fraunhofer Institutes using transmitters embedded inside pucks and jerseys.[27] The technology enables on-air features such as speed displays, puck tracking graphics (reminiscent of the FoxTrax graphics utilized in the late 1990s by previous U.S. national NHL broadcaster Fox, developed by Sportvision), and marker graphics hovering above players.[28] Using the system, NBC and Sportsnet both showcased some tracking data on their respective broadcasts,[29] while NBC also offered a secondary broadcast of the game via its digital platforms to showcase expanded real-time statistics and other information.[30][31] NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman stated during All-Star weekend that the league planned to deploy the system to all 31 NHL arenas prior to the start of the 2019–20 NHL season.[29][32]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "NHL moves up All-Star skills competition, game in 2019". ESPN. Associated Press. April 9, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  2. ^ Pashelka, Curtis (January 27, 2017). "San Jose picked to host 2019 NHL All-Star Game". The Mercury News. Retrieved January 28, 2017.
  3. ^ "2019 SAP NHL All-Star Skills results". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  4. ^ Benjamin, Amalie (January 25, 2019). "Coyne Schofield shines in fastest skater at All-Star Skills". NHL.com. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  5. ^ "#PayDecker: Fans demand women's hockey star get paid after NHL skills comp | CBC Sports". CBC Sports. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
  6. ^ @THNMattLarkin (January 26, 2019). "Brianna Decker: "Karlsson went after me, so I was like, 'OK, I think I might have beaten him,' but I didn't know how long it took me. I was just casually going through the demo." Leon Draisaitl: "She beat me? Wow. That's really impressive. Good for her." #PayDecker" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  7. ^ @CCMHockey (January 26, 2019). "We're gonna #PayDecker" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  8. ^ "McDavid wins fastest skater for third straight year at All-Star Skills". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  9. ^ "Gaudreau wins puck control for second straight year at All-Star Skills". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  10. ^ "Lundqvist wins save streak at All-Star Skills". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  11. ^ "Draisaitl wins premier passer at All-Star Skills". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  12. ^ "Carlson tops Burns, wins hardest shot at All-Star Skills". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  13. ^ "Pastrnak wins accuracy shooting at All-Star Skills". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  14. ^ a b "NHL All-Star Game fan vote now open". NHL.com. December 1, 2018. Retrieved December 29, 2018.
  15. ^ a b c d Kimelman, Adam (December 27, 2018). "McDavid, Ovechkin, Matthews, MacKinnon voted NHL All-Star captains". NHL.com. Retrieved December 29, 2018.
  16. ^ a b "Capitals' Alex Ovechkin to skip NHL All-Star Game". sportsnet.ca. January 2, 2019. Retrieved January 3, 2019.
  17. ^ Gulitti, Tom (January 3, 2019). "NHL All-Star Game Last Men In ballot revealed". NHL.com. Retrieved January 3, 2019.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Skinner, Landeskog, Letang, Draisaitl named Last Men In winners". NHL.com. January 11, 2019. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  19. ^ "NHL announces 2019 All-Star game coaches". NBC Sports. Yahoo! Sports. January 6, 2019. Archived from the original on January 7, 2019. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  20. ^ Emily Sadler (January 8, 2019). "Lightning's Vasilevskiy replaces Canadiens' Price on All-Star roster". sportsnet.ca. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  21. ^ "Hall to miss NHL All-Star Game for Devils". NHL.com. January 19, 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  22. ^ "Crosby to miss All-Star Skills with illness". tsn.ca. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  23. ^ Benjamin, Amalie (January 26, 2019). "MacKinnon out of All-Star Game with bruised foot". nhl.com. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  24. ^ "NHL All-Star jerseys made of ocean garbage". ESPN. January 10, 2019.
  25. ^ "2019 NHL Fan Fair presented by SAP". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  26. ^ "Brownlee, country star, Canucks draft pick, to sing at All-Star Game". NHL.com. January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  27. ^ Hornick, Matt (January 25, 2019). "Gary Bettman announces puck, player tracking for 2019-20 NHL season". Sporting News. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  28. ^ Kerschbaumer, Ken. "NHL About To Enter New Era of Statistical Insight via On-Bench App Developed by League, Apple, SAP". Sports Video Group. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  29. ^ a b Whyno, Stephen. "NHL gets into data game". Toronto Star. Associated Press. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  30. ^ Costa, Brandon. "In NBC Sports' NHL All-Star Game Production, Player/Puck Tracking Is the Belle of the Ball". Sports Video Group. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  31. ^ Thomas, Ian. "NBC Sports readies new moves for NHL All-Star Game". New York Business Journal. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  32. ^ Hornick, Matt (January 25, 2019). "Gary Bettman announces puck, player tracking for 2019-20 NHL season". Sporting News. Retrieved January 27, 2019.