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Could NHL home-nation advantage end Canada's Cup drought?

Ken Dryden became so accustomed to winning championships with the Montreal Canadiens the Hockey Hall of Fame goalie has difficulty assessing Canada's Stanley Cup drought.

'œIt is bizarre,'ť Dryden recently told The Associated Press by phone from his home in Toronto.

'œIf you go back to the records, I remember, from 1944 to 1979, Canadian teams won 24 times or something,'ť he said. 'œIt's just amazing that was the case. And then from 1993, not at all. It is just a weird anomaly.'ť

Canada's Cup total over that 35-year span is actually 27, with Dryden and the Canadiens claiming six of them from 1971-79.

But who's counting?

'œYeah, it's time,'ť Dryden said. 'œIt's been time for quite some time for a Canadian team to win. And I would think it would be fantastic if that happened.'ť

And on Canadian ice, no less.

The NHL playoffs are scheduled to be held exclusively in Canada, with games set to open in Toronto and Edmonton, Alberta, on Saturday. Not since 1925 has every NHL playoff game been held north of the border, when Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver and Victoria were in the four-team mix.

And yet, even with six of Canada's seven franchises competing in this year's 24-team format, there is no guarantee one of them will become the first in 27 years to win the Cup since Montreal defeated the Los Angeles Kings in five games.

The streak is so long that 22-year-old New York Islanders prospect Kieffer Bellows wasn't even born when his father, Brian, hoisted the Cup for Montreal.

'œWe've talked about it sometimes,'ť said Bellows, who was born in Minnesota, where his family maintained an offseason home. 'œBeing from Canada (my father) is going to cheer for Montreal and stuff. He's always going to have a soft place for them in his heart.'ť

The same goes for Philadelphia first-year coach Alain Vigneault. As former coach of the Canucks, Vigneault was in the most recent position of ending Canada's drought in 2011, when the Canucks lost the final in Game 7 to Boston - also the last time the Cup was awarded in Canada.

'œThere's no doubt that in Canada, hockey's the No. 1 sport. You can probably say everybody's focused on it 24 hours a day,'ť said Vigneault, whose Flyers will compete in a round-robin series to determine first-round playoff seeding. 'œThere was obviously positive pressure in Vancouver I felt. And there's some positive pressure here in Philly.'ť

Where once a Cup drought such as this would've made a significant dent in a passionate hockey nation's psyche, the same can't be said today.

Dryden, who went on to enjoy a successful career as an author, scholar and politician, believes Canada is a far more self-confident nation.

'œCanada in 2020 is different from the Canada in 2000 or 1980,'ť said Dryden, who also noted how Canadians feared they were losing a grip on hockey with the NHL expanding into non-traditional U.S. markets and the Colorado Avalanche winning the Cup in 1996, their first season after relocating from Quebec City.

'œWe are a much more self-assured place than we used to be,'ť Dryden said. 'œWe're good at a lot of things And we know that we have created something pretty special here.'ť

In the present, that includes Canada's far better effort in flattening the COVID-19 impact when compared to the U.S. It's also 'œnot a coincidence that the hub cities are Toronto and Edmonton,'ť as NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said last week in citing health and safety issues in ruling out seven U.S. markets.

'œToday we have many points of pride,'ť Toronto Mayor John Tory said.

'œWe have values that are admired around the world. We have a political culture that seems to work. It's a functioning democracy where you don't have polarization and terrible divisions happening,'ť he said. 'œAnd we've done a better job, though far from perfect, in addressing some issues to do with racism and discrimination.'ť

Important as hockey is to Canada, it is no longer the everything it once may have been, Tory added, noting how the Toronto Raptors captivated the nation in winning the NBA championship last year.

The game once predominantly played by Canadians is also now awash with American and European stars, with German Leon Draisaitl and Russian Artemi Panarin vying with Canada's Nathan MacKinnon for MVP honors this year.

'œThose things could've shaken us a lot, and maybe did. But I don't think that's the case now,'ť Dryden said.

Of course, Dryden is rooting for the drought to end. But he's keeping it in perspective.

'œIt remains a deep hope, and wonderfully anticipated, but I don't think it's more than that,'ť he said.

___

For more AP NHL coverage: https://apnews.com/NHL and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

FILE - In this Jan. 29, 2007 file photo, Former Montreal Canadiens goaltender Ken Dryden waves to the crowd at the Bell Centre as his number is retired during a pre-game ceremony in Montreal. Drop the talk about placing an asterisk next to this year's Stanley Cup champion because many consider this year's postseason to be among hockey's most grueling tests. (AP Photo/Ryan Remiorz, CP, file) The Associated Press
A security guard peers out from behind NHL-branded fencing at the entrance where players arrive at Toronto's Royal York hotel, which is acting as the "bubble" ahead of the return of the league's season following disruption due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Sunday, July 26, 2020. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press via AP) The Associated Press
A section of the street outside Toronto's Royal York hotel is closed off as NHL teams arrive at the "bubble" ahead of the return of the league's season following a disruption due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in Toronto, Sunday, July 26, 2020. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press via AP) The Associated Press
Edmonton Oilers players take to the ice for NHL hockey training camp in Edmonton on Monday, July 13, 2020. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP) The Associated Press
Vancouver Canucks general manager Jim Benning, top left, watches from the stands during the NHL hockey team's training camp in Vancouver, British Columbia, Saturday, July 25, 2020. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press via AP) The Associated Press
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