What teams are considered a current dynasty in the NHL?

When you look at all professional sports, every league has a dynasty. Some dynasties are perceived in their own unique way. Football features the New England Patriots of the NFL and Notre Dame of the NCAA. Basketball features the Los Angeles Lakers of the NBA. Of course, baseball has the most obvious and prolific dynasty of all, the New York Yankees. These are still teams that made history then and are still making history now. Note that I haven’t mentioned the list of hockey dynasties yet. That’s because the NHL doesn’t have teams that have made as much history now as they have in the past. Sure, you can claim the Montreal Canadiens are a dynasty, but not to the modern fan. The Canadiens last won the Stanley Cup in 1993 and that was 19 years ago at the time I’m evoking this article. Since this is a hockey article, let’s stay on topic, I’ll tell you the top nominees for making dynasty status in the NHL and also tell you the reasons why they’re not a dynasty.

The Pittsburgh Penguins have made a success story in the past and also a few years back in 2009 when they won their third Stanley Cup. Between the late 1990s and the 2004-2005 lockout, the Penguins faced many difficulties on the ice and in the accounting records. First, the team was starting to show disappointing seasons after back-to-back Stanley Cups in 1991 and 1992. Mario Lemiuex and Jaromir Jagr were still performing well, but they didn’t have the Championship-caliber team they had before, Jagr was still having a good performance, but Lemieux had initial heart problems. An athlete in peak physical condition shouldn’t have an abnormal heartbeat, but it still occurred to him and forced him to retire in 1997. Jagr, meanwhile, was still posting incredible offensive totals, but there was no playoff success for his team. during Lemieux’s absence between 1997 and 2000. Lemieux came out of retirement and barely pushed his team to the playoffs during the 2000-2001 season. Jagr was already traded at the time and he also led his own team to the playoffs, which at the time was the Washington Capitals. Nothing happened from that glorious comeback season and once again the Penguins fell on hard times.

In the 2003-2004 season, the Penguins declared bankruptcy during their worst season in franchise history. Lemieux was out for most of the season due to the recurring heart problem and the team played absolutely poorly, finishing last in the entire league. The lockout happened and then things got better very quickly for the organization. With the number one draft picks they acquired, they conquered the NHL and became a modern NHL phenomenon posting winning records and eventually winning the Stanley Cup in 2009.

The Detroit Red Wings hold the record in all of professional sports by making the playoffs for 21 consecutive seasons since 1991. Due to their winning ways, they are known as hockeytown and have earned the utmost respect from teams and even fans from around the world. all the world. During their incredible playoff streak, they won the Stanley Cup four times, including back-to-back cups in 1997 and 1998. Steve Yzerman, Brendan Shanahan, Kris Draper, Niklas Lidstrom and company stuck around for all those years winning cups and building their legendary status. It was only in 2008 that Steve Yzerman and Brendan Shanahan did not win the cup with that edition of the team. Due to their unannounced drafting abilities, they found Pavel Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg in the 6th and 7th rounds respectively in the NHL draft. Both Datsyuk and Zetterberg led the charge to win the 2008 Stanley Cup and were responsible for keeping the playoff streak alive after Yzerman retired. You might think this team sounds like a dynasty, but the amount of time they’ve won the cup between 2002 and 2008 is too far a distance to be recognized as a clear dynasty, plus they’ve accomplished little since the Stanley Cup final run. in 2009. when they lost to the Pittsburgh Penguins.

The final team on my list of nominees to be in the close dynasty category was a tough choice because there are so many teams around the same amount of success as each other. My final nominee is the New Jersey Devils. The reason I chose New Jersey over the Colorado Avalanche, Chicago Blackhawks, and Dallas Stars is because the Devils had some type of success in both the pre- and post-lockout era, unlike the other three teams that only had appearances in the Stanley Cup in just one of those eras. The Devils have won the Stanley Cup three times since 1995 and appeared in the Stanley Cup Finals in 2012 and Martin Brodeur was in the net for all those appearances and wins in the Stanley Cup Final. The Devils had supreme defense from Scott Niedermayer, Scott Stevens and Ken Daneyko manning the point. The Devils didn’t actually have superstar forwards like the Penguins and Red Wings, but they played a consistently solid, defensive-minded game wearing down opponents with their defensive and goalkeeping prowess. They always had excellent training with Jacques Lemaire, Lou Lamieriello, Pat Burns and more recently Peter Deboer behind the bench. It tells you how well they look for talent year after year in the personnel department and shows how it translates into winning teams. Even after all those times they won the Lord Stanley Cup, the average attendance after all those years was only 16,000 people, well their legacy remains.

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