The NHL Teams Each Province and State Hates the Most

Colorado Avalanche goalie Semyon Varlamov stopping a breakaway against the Winnipeg Jets

Nothing brings hockey fans together quite like a shared enemy. Rivalries fuel the NHL — shaping fan identity, playoff intensity, and even betting behaviour.

To find out which teams fans love to root against, we analyzed Google search behavior across Canada and the United States. First, we identified the most followed NHL team in each province and state based on average search volume. We then paired those teams with their primary historical rivals to estimate which franchises each region is most likely rooting against.

The result is a cross-border “hate map” that highlights two different fan dynamics: Canada’s inherited, regional rivalries and America’s broader, exposure-driven fandom.

Canada: Where Rivalries Are Inherited

In Canada, NHL fandom is learned early and rarely abandoned. Teams are tied to geography, passed down through families, and reinforced by decades of shared history. That makes many Canadian rivalries easier to predict — and the map comes out strikingly consistent.

Key Findings (Canada)

  • The Montreal Canadiens emerge as the most “hated” team in seven provinces and territories — concentrated across Eastern Canada.
  • The Calgary Flames show up most often across the West, appearing as the top “most hated” team in five western provinces and territories — consistent with Prairie and Northern rivalry patterns.
  • The Minnesota Wild appear as the most “hated” team in Manitoba, reflecting a strong cross-border rivalry signal in the data.
  • Compared with the U.S., there are fewer “surprise” outcomes — the results cluster around a small set of long-running, well-defined rivals.

Overall, Canada’s results suggest a fan culture where rivalry is more often inherited than adopted — and once a team becomes “the enemy,” it tends to stay there.

The Most “Hated” NHL Teams in Canada

  • Montreal Canadiens – 7 provinces & territories
  • Calgary Flames – 5 provinces & territories
  • Minnesota Wild – 1 province

Note: “Most hated” is inferred by pairing each region’s most-followed team (by search interest) with its primary historical rival.

Most Hated NHL Team by Province & Territory (Canada)

Province / Territory Most “Hated” NHL Team
British ColumbiaCalgary Flames
AlbertaCalgary Flames
SaskatchewanCalgary Flames
YukonCalgary Flames
Northwest TerritoriesCalgary Flames
ManitobaMinnesota Wild
OntarioMontreal Canadiens
QuebecMontreal Canadiens
New BrunswickMontreal Canadiens
Nova ScotiaMontreal Canadiens
Prince Edward IslandMontreal Canadiens
Newfoundland and LabradorMontreal Canadiens
NunavutMontreal Canadiens

Why Canada’s Hate Map Is So Consistent

In Canada, NHL loyalty is rarely fluid. Fans don’t bounce between teams based on stars or recent success — they align with regional identity and stay there. That tends to produce fewer “most hated” teams overall, but stronger concentration around the rivalries that do exist.

The East’s opposition to Montreal aligns with decades of prominence and visibility, while Calgary absorbs much of the West’s rivalry signal through Prairie proximity and familiar matchups. Manitoba’s outlier result highlights that proximity matters just as much as nationality when it comes to hockey rivalries.

In short: Canada’s rivalry patterns are traditional — and the map reflects that.

United States: How NHL Hate Spreads Beyond Home Markets

American NHL fandom doesn’t follow the same geographic rules as Canada’s. While local rivalries still matter, a lot of the “hate” signal in this dataset appears tied to national exposure rather than proximity.

Teams with sustained success or heavy media coverage — including the Colorado Avalanche and Detroit Red Wings — show up as inferred “most hated” franchises across large parts of the Midwest, Plains, and South, well outside their home markets. In many states, fans seem to adopt rivalries through the teams they follow most, even if those teams aren’t local.

In short, U.S. NHL hate doesn’t stay local — it follows the teams people follow.

Key Findings (United States)

  • The Colorado Avalanche appear as the inferred “most hated” team in 12 states — the largest footprint in the dataset.
  • The Detroit Red Wings follow, showing up in 10 states, particularly across the Plains and Mountain regions.
  • The Chicago Blackhawks remain a frequent “villain” outcome in parts of the Midwest, consistent with long-standing divisional rivalries.
  • In coastal and non-NHL states, patterns appear less about proximity and more about national visibility and repeated playoff narratives.

As in Canada, “most hated” is inferred via rivalry mapping from the most-followed team in each state (based on search interest).

The Most “Hated” NHL Teams in the U.S.

  • Colorado Avalanche – 12 states
  • Detroit Red Wings – 10 states
  • Montreal Canadiens – 6 states
  • Pittsburgh Penguins – 4 states
  • St. Louis Blues – 3 states
  • Chicago Blackhawks – 2 states
  • Philadelphia Flyers – 2 states
  • Tampa Bay Lightning – 2 states
  • Vancouver Canucks – 2 states
  • Washington Capitals – 2 states
  • Anaheim Ducks – 1 state
  • San Jose Sharks – 1 state
  • Toronto Maple Leafs – 1 state
  • Vegas Golden Knights – 1 state

Why the U.S. Hate Map Looks Messier

In many U.S. states, fans don’t dislike a team because it’s nearby — they dislike it because it’s the rival of the team they follow most. Even in places without a local NHL presence, fans can pick up rivalries through playoff matchups, national broadcasts, and social media.

Simply put, U.S. NHL hate often spreads by association, not inheritance.

Most Hated NHL Team by State (United States)

State Most “Hated” NHL Team
AlabamaSt. Louis Blues
AlaskaColorado Avalanche
ArizonaDetroit Red Wings
ArkansasColorado Avalanche
CaliforniaAnaheim Ducks
ColoradoDetroit Red Wings
ConnecticutMontreal Canadiens
DelawarePittsburgh Penguins
FloridaTampa Bay Lightning
GeorgiaTampa Bay Lightning
HawaiiDetroit Red Wings
IdahoDetroit Red Wings
IllinoisDetroit Red Wings
IndianaDetroit Red Wings
IowaColorado Avalanche
KansasDetroit Red Wings
KentuckySt. Louis Blues
LouisianaColorado Avalanche
MaineMontreal Canadiens
MarylandPittsburgh Penguins
MassachusettsMontreal Canadiens
MichiganChicago Blackhawks
MinnesotaColorado Avalanche
MississippiColorado Avalanche
MissouriChicago Blackhawks
MontanaDetroit Red Wings
NebraskaDetroit Red Wings
NevadaSan Jose Sharks
New HampshireMontreal Canadiens
New JerseyNew York Islanders
New MexicoDetroit Red Wings
New YorkToronto Maple Leafs
North CarolinaWashington Capitals
North DakotaColorado Avalanche
OhioPittsburgh Penguins
OklahomaColorado Avalanche
OregonVancouver Canucks
PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia Flyers
Rhode IslandMontreal Canadiens
South CarolinaWashington Capitals
South DakotaColorado Avalanche
TennesseeSt. Louis Blues
TexasColorado Avalanche
UtahVegas Golden Knights
VermontMontreal Canadiens
VirginiaPittsburgh Penguins
WashingtonVancouver Canucks
West VirginiaPhiladelphia Flyers
WisconsinColorado Avalanche
WyomingDetroit Red Wings

Expert Comment

“This data shows how NHL rivalries can spread differently in Canada and the U.S. In Canada, rivalries are more inherited and regional, which is why the map looks cleaner. In the U.S., fans often pick up rivalries through the teams they follow most — even if those teams aren’t local — creating wider and less predictable patterns.”

From a betting perspective, that matters. Games involving widely disliked teams can attract more emotional wagers and heavier public action, especially during rivalry matchups.

“Knowing who fans are most likely to root against can be just as useful as knowing who they support when interpreting betting behavior.”

Conclusion

Rivalry is the NHL’s most reliable ingredient — and this map suggests the pattern isn’t random. In Canada, “hate” clusters around geography and history, producing cleaner, more predictable rivalries. In the United States, it appears to spread through exposure, media, and affiliation, creating a wider and less intuitive footprint.

Different dynamics, same outcome: fans care more when there’s someone to root against. And whether that animosity is inherited or adopted, it still shapes how fans watch, talk about, and bet on the game.

Methodology

We analyzed Google search behavior across all 50 U.S. states and every Canadian province and territory, using Google Keyword Planner to capture average monthly search volume for all 32 NHL teams (December 2021 – November 2025).

  1. The team with the highest search volume in each region was identified as that region’s most followed NHL team.
  2. That team was matched to its primary historical rival using an internal rivalry dataset.
  3. The rival was labeled the region’s “most hated” team — meaning the team fans are most likely rooting against, based on this pairing.

Search interest is used as a proxy for fan engagement: more searches generally indicate more attention and emotional investment, but this approach infers “hate” rather than measuring it directly.

Sources

  • Google Keyword Planner: Average monthly search volume for all 32 NHL teams by region (Dec 2021 – Nov 2025).
  • National Hockey League (NHL): Team listings, divisional alignments, and rivalry context.
  • NHL media coverage and rivalry histories: Used to validate primary rival pairings.
  • Secondary research on sports fandom and wagering behavior: Used for interpretation of rivalry-driven public betting patterns.