The NHL’s 2027 All-Star Weekend is getting a complete overhaul, and the league is not being subtle about it. The midseason showcase, set for February 5-6 at UBS Arena in Elmont, New York, will ditch the traditional divisional format entirely in favor of a country-versus-country tournament, a direct reflection of how much appetite exists for international hockey after the success of the 4 Nations Face-Off.Five teams will compete: Canada, the United States, Sweden, Finland and a “World” squad made up of players from every other nation. Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly confirmed Russian players will be eligible for that World team, a notable detail given the ongoing uncertainty around their status at other international events.
NHL All-Star 2027 format: How the international tournament will work
Each roster carries nine skaters and two goalies, competing in a 3-on-3 round-robin. Every team plays four five-minute games, earning two points for a win, one for a tie and nothing for a loss. The top two teams advance to a 10-minute championship final, with the winning side splitting a $2 million prize.Fan voting opens in December. The NHL and NHLPA will present 30 players per team, fans pick eight from each, and the league and union jointly fill the final three spots per roster.Commissioner Gary Bettman framed the format shift as something the league had been working toward carefully. “We’re extremely excited to bring this event to New York. We think the format we’ve created will be fun. It’ll be entertaining. It’ll be great for the players and the fans,” he said Tuesday at his state of the league address before Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final.NHLPA executive director Marty Walsh put it in broader context. “Four Nations was a kind of a prelude into the Olympics. This All-Star Weekend can be a prelude to the World Cup of Hockey in the following year,” Walsh said.
NHL All-Star Skills Competition 2027: Young stars take the spotlight
The skills event is also getting a fresh identity. Ten players aged 25 or younger, selected jointly by the NHL and NHLPA, will compete across four of six possible events: fastest skater, hardest shot, passing challenge, one timers, stick handling and accuracy shooting. The top four scorers advance to a shootout round against All-Star goaltenders. From there, the top two face off in an obstacle course finale, with a $1 million prize going to the winner.It is a deliberate move to put the next generation front and center, giving younger fans a reason to connect with players who are still building their names.For the Islanders, this marks the first time they have hosted All-Star festivities since 1983, when the franchise was at the height of its dynasty run. ESPN carries the skills event on February 5, with ABC and Sportsnet broadcasting the main game on February 6.