"Phase one was, our goal was to get in the playoffs. Proud of all the work you guys put in to this point. Hell of an accomplishment. We achieved where we wanted to get. That's step one.
"Great accomplishment just getting in the playoffs. There's going to be 16 teams that don't do it. We're in there so awesome job. Awesome job. Well done."
That was the message Devils head coach Lindy Ruff delivered to his team in the locker room Saturday night following the club's 5-3 victory against Ottawa at Prudential Center.
On this night, March 25, the Devils punched their ticket to the 2023 Stanley Cup playoffs, becoming just the third team in the league to clinch a spot in postseason play. It's also the first playoff appearance for the franchise since 2018, ending a four-year drought.
"It feels great. The work you put in during the summer and the work you put in during the whole year to get rewarded," captain Nico Hischier said with a smile. "It's an empty feeling after an 82-game season when you're not in the playoffs. It's finally coming together so it feels good."
What came together was a lot of work from many people in the Devils organization, from players to the coaching staff to training staff to equipment staff to medical staff to hockey operations to ownership.
"It sits a little better with you when you know the work you've put in over the years as an organization and all the motivation that's driving you every year," forward Jesper Bratt said. "For so many years we had our exit meetings in April, and you go home and watch (the playoffs) on TV and dream of being in that position.
"This feels really good. It's been a lot of years with struggle and not winning. It's just awesome coming out and playing these kinds of games and getting an x after your team name."
The x was never a given. New Jersey finished in the bottom-6 of the standings in each of the past four seasons. The club even began the 2022-23 campaign 0-2 and 3-3 before exploding for a 13-game winning streak and an 18-1-1 run.
The Devils still had to fight through a couple of dips in December (1-7-1) and even more recently (1-3-2). But the Devils have no quit in them. They've fought through every time and came out ahead on the other side. That same theme was true against the Senators.
The Devils entered Saturday night knowing that they could earn their playoff spot with a win against Ottawa. Although the Devils technically clinched a playoff spot in the middle of the game due to Florida's loss to the NY Rangers, many on the team were unaware of that fact. Instead, they were determined to win their own game and earn their own path.
New Jersey fell behind to Ottawa, but rebounded to record its NHL-leading 24th comeback victory of the season. Once again the team had to fight through adversity and overcome. A fitting way to seal your playoff spot.
"It means everything to the group," Ruff said of earning their postseason berth. "I'm proud of the work that was put in, I'm proud of where we got to. To clinch tonight, to be one of three teams that have an x next to their name. All the work that's been put in. The adversity they faced during the year. The adversity they faced right at the start of the season to where we've got to now."
The Devils' etched their 46th win and 100th point of the season against the Senators and still have nine games to be played. For perspective, in the last two years combined New Jersey won 46 games and earned 108 points.
That shows how far this team has come and grown over the past few years.
"For me it's seeing the growth of the team, seeing the growth of the players," Ruff said reflecting on how far the organization had come. "When I took the job (in 2020) and we talked about all the different young players. I was trying to find a role, trying to find a way to grow them. Live with some mistakes that a coach like myself normally wouldn't live with, knowing that to get to a certain point you can make mistakes but don't keep repeating them. And you just have to keep getting better.
"That has led us to today and one heck of an opportunity with 15 other teams to try to do something special. If you don't have a ticket to get in, you don't get the opportunity. We got a ticket to get in."
Ticket in hand, the Devils have emerged from the darkness to a brighter landscape. Hischier was a member of that 2018 playoff team, and despite the rough years that followed, he knew the team was moving in the right direction.
"It's been a while and it's been a couple rough years," Hischier said. "But we believed in each other, and we stuck together here. It just shows we were on the right track."
Clinching was a culmination of that track. But the roadmap to get here was set in place a few years prior.