The 2008 Calder Cup playoffs of the
American Hockey League began on April 16, 2008.[1] The sixteen teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played
best-of-7 series for division semifinals, finals and conference finals. The conference champions played a best-of-7 series for the
Calder Cup. The Calder Cup Final ended on June 10, 2008 with the
Chicago Wolves defeating the
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, four games to two, to win the second Calder Cup in team history.
Jason Krog won the
Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as playoff
MVP, after having already been named the
regular-season MVP. Krog also tied the AHL record for most
assists in one playoff with 26.[2]
In Game 5 of the East Division Semifinals between the
Philadelphia Phantoms and
Albany River Rats,
Ryan Potulny of Philadelphia scored 2:58 into the fifth overtime period, ending what was longest game in AHL history.[3] In
2018 a game would last until 6:48 into the fifth overtime period, setting a new record. Chicago's
Darren Haydar set two AHL playoff scoring records in Game 2 of the Calder Cup Final by recording his 52nd career AHL playoff
goal, as well as his 120th career AHL playoff
point.[4] In the same game, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton's
Alex Goligoski set an AHL record for most points scored by a
defenseman in a single post-season with 26. This eclipsed the record set by former Wilkes-Barre/Scranton defenseman
Chris Kelleher, who scored 25 points in the
2001 Calder Cup Playoffs.[5] Goligoski extended his record to 28 points before the playoffs ended.[6]
Playoff seeds
After the
2007–08 AHL regular season, 16 teams qualified for the playoffs. The top four teams from each division qualified for the playoffs, except in the North division where the fourth playoff spot was taken by the fifth-placed team from the West division since the fifth-placed
San Antonio Rampage earned more points than the
Hamilton Bulldogs during the season. This is because the West division has 8 teams while the other three divisions have 7 teams each. Therefore, this was the only situation in which a crossover was possible.[7] The
Providence Bruins were the Eastern Conference regular season champions as well as the
Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy winners with the best overall regular season record. The
Chicago Wolves were the Western Conference regular season champions.[8]
In each round the team that earned more points during the regular season receives home ice advantage, meaning they receive the "extra" game on home-ice if the series reaches the maximum number of games. There is no set series format due to arena scheduling conflicts and travel considerations.[9]
(E2) Philadelphia Phantoms vs. (E3) Albany River Rats
Game five was the longest game in AHL history at the time at 82 minutes, 58 seconds of overtime play. It is now the second longest game in AHL history. Philadelphia's Michael Leighton faced 101 shots and made 98 saves, which remains the AHL record.[10][11]