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Tensions rising: NHL multigame series ratchet up animosity

It turns out Saturday night was all right for fighting between Arizona and St. Louis. Monday night, too. Coyotes and Blues players dropped the gloves in both games, which were the third and fourth consecutive against each other.
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It turns out Saturday night was all right for fighting between Arizona and St. Louis. Monday night, too.

Coyotes and Blues players dropped the gloves in both games, which were the third and fourth consecutive against each other. They will play three more times in four days 鈥 that's right, seven games in a row, like a playoff series that goes the distance, and a regular-season first for the NHL.

Tensions will continue to rise.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to play a team seven times in a row, it鈥檚 going to happen,鈥 Coyotes forward Conor Garland said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to have individual battles and then team battles. It鈥檚 hockey. It鈥檚 just the way it goes.鈥

Especially this season, when the NHL cooked up four new divisions and scheduled all regular-season games within those divisions. That set up miniseries of anywhere from two to five games, with the NHL trying to limit travel in a bid to stem the spread of the coronavirus. Seven chapters of Coyotes-Blues is an anomaly caused by scheduling changes forced by the pandemic.

Animosity is clearly up around the league with players seeing the same familiar, aggravating faces over and over again. There have been 37 fights already this season, and only two of the league's 31 teams haven't had at least one.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a little bit of bad blood that goes on between games,鈥 Tampa Bay's Anthony Cirelli said after a game against Nashville that featured 32 penalty minutes. "The more and more we play teams, the emotions are high and these are the fun ones to play in because it kind of replicates that playoff kind of hockey.鈥

It's not a perfect comparison. As Blues winger David Perron said, 鈥淭here鈥檚 not a Cup on the line鈥 and Lord Stanley's trophy is far in the distance with the NHL just a quarter of the way through a shortened, 56-game regular season.

But the divisional schedule also means each game and point earned or lost is more important. It's direct competition in the eight-team U.S. divisions and seven-team Canadian division for four playoff spots each, which leads to what Winnipeg forward Adam Lowry called 鈥渁 little more chippiness.鈥

鈥淛ust the battles I think get a little more intense, especially as it goes along,鈥 Lowry said. 鈥淚f you can get a couple games up on the other team, they鈥檙e that much more desperate.鈥

The Blues know how that feels. They've lost three of the first four against the Coyotes, including allowing a tying goal with 0.7 seconds left in regulation and getting beat in a shootout in the most recent meeting.

Asked if he's tired of facing the Coyotes, Blues coach Craig Berube said, 鈥淚'm tired of losing to them.鈥 Same for Vancouver, which was swept in its last two 鈥渟eries鈥 鈥 two against Montreal and three against Toronto. Those games got increasingly heated.

鈥淚t鈥檚 competitive and it鈥檚 intense,鈥 Canucks rookie Adam Gaudette said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot of fun playing in these important, competitive games. Every series means something. That鈥檚 the way it鈥檚 going to be all year.鈥

A couple of title-winning coaches, Washington's Peter Laviolette Columbus' John Tortorella, haven't noticed their games getting out of control yet. Edmonton's Zach Kassian described it early on as a 鈥渇eeling out process鈥 between division rivals and expects it to be a slow build from now through May.

Of course, certain events in games can cause spikes of hatred.

The Canadiens were none too pleased with a hit by Canucks defenceman Tyler Myers on Joel Armia last month, and Montreal coach Claude Julien added some grit to his lineup the next game against Vancouver by inserting Corey Perry. Garland mentioned a hit on teammate Nick Schmaltz that got Coyotes players' backs up. And the next St. Louis-Vegas game could feature some fireworks after Golden Knights captain Mark Stone injured Tyler Bozak with a heavy hit.

"Shots that happened to Bozy or other guys like that, sometimes that can carry over," Perron said.

Arizona coach Rick Tocchet said he sees a carryover from one game to the next against the same opponent, just like a playoff series. The roller coaster ride also shakes up emotions.

鈥淥ne team鈥檚 happy, one team鈥檚 unhappy,鈥 Tocchet said. 鈥淭he team that鈥檚 happy, can you stay even keel in the moment? And the team that鈥檚 pissed, are they going to do something about it? That鈥檚 really why the chippiness comes out.鈥

Nashville and Tampa Bay weren't even in the same conference until this season, but that didn't stop them from combining for 60 penalty minutes in back-to-back games. Arizona and St. Louis didn't play much in previous years either, but it's fair to call it a rivalry, even if it ends up being temporary.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like anything,鈥 Garland said. 鈥淵ou spend time around somebody too long, you get aggravated with them, and you play someone seven times, you鈥檒l get aggravated with them, too.鈥

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AP Sports Writer Teresa M. Walker contributed to this report.

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More AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/NHL and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Stephen Whyno, The Associated Press

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