Individual first-round playoff tickets on sale.
From the Ducks' official Web site:
Playoff tickets for the Ducks' 2009 Western Conference Quarterfinal series home games will go on sale today at 10 a.m. Tickets may be purchased online or by phone with Ticketmaster at (714) 703-2545. Tickets may also be purchased at the Honda Center Box Office and all Ticketmaster locations in Southern California. All potential first round home games will go on sale Saturday morning. There is no ticket limit per game in the first round. Tickets will be sold at the box office on a first-come, first-served basis.
The Stanley Cup Playoffs will begin on either Wednesday, April 15 or Thursday, April 16. The Ducks are currently in seventh place in the Western Conference with 80 points (37-31-6) and are on a season-high five-game winning streak. The club has eight games remaining on its regular season schedule, four at Honda Center and four on the road. The top eight teams in each NHL conference qualify for the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The Ducks are looking to qualify for the postseason for the fourth consecutive year. No NHL team has won more playoff rounds in the postseason than Anaheim over the last three years (eight rounds, 2006-08).
Individual game tickets for the first round start at $56.50, with all tickets matching 2008 playoff prices. The Ducks will also have playoff strips available to all 2009 Stanley Cup Playoff games at Honda Center for those who place a deposit on a 2009-10 ticket plan (full, half or mini-plan). Playoff strip tickets begin at $13.50 per ticket, per game for the first two rounds (total cost for all four potential rounds/16 home games start at $342 with a full season deposit). Strips can be purchased by CLICKING HERE or by calling the Anaheim Ducks ticket sales office at 1-877-WILD WING.

J.P. Hoornstra has been covering the Anaheim Ducks since 2007. Eight months after the University of Wisconsin won its third NCAA hockey championship, he was born in a frigid Madison winter. He betrayed his blue-blooded beginnings by graduating from UCLA in 2003, and welcomes any and all dialogue on the finer points of hockey.


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