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Gary Bettman faces major backlash over controversial NHL playoff scheduling decision

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Skyler Walker
May 28, 2026  (5:39 PM)
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Apr 24, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; NHL commissioner Gary Bettman speaks to the media before game three of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs between the Utah Mammoth and the Vegas Golden Knights at Delta Center.
Photo credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Martin St-Louis and the Montreal Canadiens are staring at another sign the NHL expects this run to end against Carolina.

The league has officially adjusted its schedule, and the timing is already raising eyebrows in Montreal.

It sends a clear message, even if nobody around the Canadiens needs help understanding the spot they're in right now.

Carolina has control of the series, and the NHL appears to be building its Stanley Cup Final calendar around that outcome.

That's the part Canadiens fans won't love, because it feels like the league is already looking past Montreal before the series is even fully settled.

It also adds another layer of tension to a playoff run that has already pushed Martin St-Louis' group into a corner.

"If Carolina closes out this series in 5 games, the Stanley Cup Final will begin on June 2nd in Raleigh.

If Montreal somehow forces a Game 6 and/or 7, the Stanley Cup Final will begin on June 4th in one of the Eastern Conference cities."

The NHL is already mapping out the next step

Everything now seems to be lining up for a final between the Carolina Hurricanes and the Vegas Golden Knights.

That doesn't leave much room for interpretation.

On the NHL side, there doesn't seem to be much of a working scenario where the Canadiens reach the Stanley Cup Final.

To a lot of fans in Montreal, that feels premature.

At the same time, the league always has to get ahead of major logistics, and that part is easy to understand.

Flights need to be arranged. Hotels need to be locked in. Broadcast windows, ticketing, and event promotion all need to be set before puck drop.

Still, it's the kind of move that invites reaction, especially in a market that watches every league decision closely.

And yes, some Canadiens fans will look at this and wonder whether the NHL would be just fine with an all-American final featuring Carolina and Vegas.

Those are strong U.S. markets, clean broadcast windows, and a matchup that would carry major advertising appeal.

Montreal can complain about the optics, but the only answer that matters now has to come on the ice.

If the Canadiens can drag this series deeper, they'll force the league to rip up the early script.

That would be the best response possible, and in Montreal, it would feel even better because nobody seems to be expecting it.