The 2019 National Hockey League All-Star Game was held at
SAP Center in
San Jose, home of the
San Jose Sharks on January 26, 2019.[1] San Jose last held the NHL All Star Game in
1997.[2] This was the fourth consecutive All-Star Game that used a four-team, 3-on-3, single elimination format, with one team representing each of the league's four divisions. After years of being held on a Sunday, the 2019 All-Star Game was played on a Saturday, January 26, at 5 p.m.
PST/8 p.m.
EST, while the Skills Competition was also moved from its traditional Saturday night to Friday, January 25, 2019.[1]
The Metropolitan All-Stars won the All-Star Game, which was in its fourth straight year of a four-team, 3-on-3, single elimination format, with one team representing each of the league's four divisions. The team won $1 million (split 11 ways between the players).
Sidney Crosby of the
Pittsburgh Penguins was named the Most Valuable Player, scoring four goals and four assists. He received a new 2019
Honda Passport which he then proceeded to give to an
Army veteran.
The Skills Competition took place the day before the All-Star Game on Friday January 25, 2019 at the SAP Center. The winners of each event were awarded $25,000 in prize money.[3]
Brianna Decker demonstrated the premier passer skill, but she was not part of the competition. She was, in fact, three seconds faster than
Leon Draisaitl and would have won had her time been included as they did with Kendall Coyne Schofield.[5] This prompted the hashtag #PayDecker on Twitter, as women's hockey salaries are a fraction of men's hockey salaries.[6] On January 26, hockey equipment company
CCM announced they would give Decker the $25,000 she would have received for winning the competition.[7]
Results
Fastest Skater
External videos
2019 Fastest Skater
NBCSN's feed on the NHL's official YouTube channel
* Did not participate in Skills Competition or All-Star Games due to injury (still attended All-Star weekend). Replaced by
Kendall Coyne Schofield in the Skills Competition.[23]
The All-Star uniforms for this game were created by
Adidas Parley, the partnership between
Adidas and the environmental organization
Parley for the Oceans that produces products made with plastic ocean debris. Also for the first time, the uniforms featured each player's respective team logo on the front instead of the NHL shield or conference logo.[24]
Festivities and entertainment
This year's NHL Fan Fair, featuring various fan activities during All-Star Weekend, was held between Thursday, January 24 and Sunday, January 27 at the
San Jose Convention Center.[25]
The All-Star Game and skills competition were broadcast in the United States by
NBC and
NBCSN, respectively. In Canada, both the All-Star Game and skills competition were broadcast In English on both
CBC and
Sportsnet (under the Hockey Night in Canada branding), and on
TVA Sports in French.[14]
The NHL conducted a trial of player and puck tracking during the All-Star Game with technology developed by one of the German
Fraunhofer Institutes using transmitters embedded inside pucks and jerseys.[27] The technology enables on-air features such as speed displays, puck tracking graphics (reminiscent of the
FoxTrax graphics utilized in the late 1990s by previous U.S. national NHL broadcaster
Fox, developed by Sportvision), and marker graphics hovering above players.[28] Using the system, NBC and Sportsnet both showcased some tracking data on their respective broadcasts,[29] while NBC also offered a secondary broadcast of the game via its digital platforms to showcase expanded real-time statistics and other information.[30][31] NHL Commissioner
Gary Bettman stated during All-Star weekend that the league planned to deploy the system to all 31 NHL arenas prior to the start of the
2019–20 NHL season.[29][32]