Quinn tweaks D, Georgiev gets start at Ottawa

It didn’t take long for coach David Quinn to make some changes. Following last night’s 6-4 home win, he tweaked the D and made other adjustments in practice.

When the Rangers visit Ottawa tomorrow night, it’ll be Alexandar Georgiev in net for his season debut. We’ll see if the young backup goalie can deliver the same steady netminding as he did in the second half of his rookie year.

That’ll give Henrik Lundqvist a full week off before the next game. After Saturday, the Rangers are off until the following Saturday when they host the Oilers.

Also of note, Quinn made a couple of changes to the lines. In particular, the defense where he broke up Brady Skjei and Jacob Trouba in the third period on Thursday night. Skjei spent time with rookie Adam Fox. They’ll be together at the start of tomorrow’s game. He also tried rookie Libor Hajek with number one defenseman Jacob Trouba, who had a great Rangers debut scoring a goal and adding two assists.

The only tandem that will remain the same is Marc Staal with Tony DeAngelo. They’ve been an item since last season. They have chemistry.

By altering the D pairings, DQ probably is looking for more balance. Both Fox and Hajek played slightly over 12 minutes. Fox was the steadier player. Even though Hajek recorded his first NHL point with an assist, he was shaky defensively. Maybe that’s why Trouba will play with him. He’s clearly the team’s best defenseman.

As for the forwards, it looks like the lines will remain intact. That includes Lias Andersson, who only played 8:33 and wound up minus-one on Mark Scheifele’s goal in the first period. A play in which he lost a battle and Nik Ehlers beat Skjei behind the net to center for Scheifele.

Andersson will again center the fourth line with Brendan Lemieux and Brendan Smith, who had an effective night. So, the secret weapon stays in the lineup after scoring an empty netter.

Brett Howden, who got the game-winner, is between Vladislav Namestnikov and Jesper Fast. It’s status quo for the top two lines with rookie Kaapo Kakko staying with Ryan Strome, who was excellent on faceoffs winning 10 of 14. Chris Kreider stays on the second line, leaving Mika Zibanejad with Artemiy Panarin and Pavel Buchnevich.

That’s fine. You know what’s crazy. How many people are still complaining. They won! Sure. It wasn’t pretty with Kreider describing the game as “sloppy.” But it was Game 1 of 82.

One thing the Rangers don’t want to make a habit of is defending as much as they did to Winnipeg. They were out attempted by 30 (81-51). That must improve. They can’t ask Lundqvist and Georgiev to face 47 shots a night.

That’s all for now. Hasan will have the Devils season opener much later. They host the same Jets in Newark. It’s the NHL debut of top pick Jack Hughes. Cory Schneider gets the start and PK Subban debuts along with Wayne Simmonds. That should be interesting.

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Two WTF Moments highlight Opening Night

Marc Staal scored the first goal of the season during the Rangers 6-4 win over the Jets. AP Photo by Jim McIsaac via Getty Images

The Rangers were 6-4 winners in their home opener over the Winnipeg Jets at MSG. As I noted in the game recap during the previous post, the game was wild and crazy.

Here are two WTF moments that highlighted a wacky night of hockey at 33rd and 7th over Penn Station. The first actually came during player intros. Those are usually fun as each player skates out, acknowledges the cheering crowd and lines up next to their teammates.

For Lias Andersson, his introduction nearly resulted in a disaster. After coming out, he fell to the ice awkwardly. What happened?

As it turned out, Andersson tripped over a wire from a camera. He could’ve been accidentally injured. That is absolutely crazy. Cameramen have a job to do, but they should be more careful. Imagine if the reaction if Lias was hurt. Thankfully, he wasn’t and played over eight minutes on the fourth line.

The second unpredictable moment was more exciting. It came during the first period when notorious offensive defenseman Marc Staal scored the first goal of the season. It was definitely a what in the hell just happened kinda moment. Totally unexpected.

I must say when he took that puck around the net, Staal did his best Brian Leetch impersonation. Number 2 would be proud. Good for Staal, who takes so much abuse from uneducated fans, who can’t appreciate the warrior he’s been for so long.

He wasn’t perfect out there, getting victimized with partner Tony DeAngelo on Blake Wheeler’s goal. But Staal always gives an honest effort. It was nice to see him get rewarded in career game number 841 all spent as a Blueshirt. That deserves respect. Here’s a reminder.

And this in case you forgot.

Who knows? My next post could be devoted to Henrik Lundqvist the way the forgetful few are taking unnecessary shots at him following a victory. Just sad.

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Howden’s goal gives Rangers first win over Jets in wild one

Mika Zibanejad celebrates a goal in a nice comeback 6-4 Rangers win over the Jets in a crazy home opener. AP Photo by Adam Hunger via Getty Images

This one was crazy. It felt like a baseball game with home runs being hit and pitchers giving up long balls. That analogy certainly applied to what goalies Henrik Lundqvist and Connor Hellebuyck must’ve felt like.

In the end, Lundqvist prevailed with 43 saves for career victory number 450 in a wild and wacky 6-4 Rangers win over the Jets in the home opener. On a tough night for goaltending and defense, the Blueshirts found a way to get it done to win the season opener.

Brett Howden scored with 4:09 remaining to break a 4-4 tie. It wasn’t a pretty goal like the beauty Mika Zibanejad scored when he took a great Jacob Trouba pass and whipped a backhand past Hellebuyck on a great deke to tie the score. Zibanejad was the game’s best player putting up four points (goal/3 apples) in Game 1 of 82.

In a memorable opener that saw both Trouba and Artemi Panarin score their first goals and combine for five points, it was a young second-year player in a supporting role who got the game-winner. Howden won a offensive draw back to Jesper Fast for a shot that was partially blocked. With Brendan Lemieux creating havoc in front, Howden had an easy put away for his first of the season at 15:51.

They still needed a couple of big stops from Lundqvist, who wasn’t at his best. However, when he needed to come up with the clutch saves, he did to preserve a win. One that was clinched in odd fashion when secret weapon Brendan Smith scored into an empty net with under 17 seconds left. What made it so strange was nobody knew where the puck was. It must’ve gone out. My guess is the four officials missed it. Smith took a Zibanejad pass and sealed it.

What a bizarre game it was. Marc Staal scored the game’s first goal on a nice wraparound at 11:35 of the first thanks to some good sustained pressure from Zibanejad. He definitely surprised Hellebuyck. This is a guy who gets at best, three goals a season. He nearly had another on one of rookie Kaapo Kakko’s best early shifts. But was stopped by Hellebuyck.

A miscue from both Lias Andersson and Brady Skjei led to Mark Scheifele tying it at 17:23. After Andersson lost the puck along the boards, Skjei let Nik Ehlers go past him behind the net and center for a quick Scheifele one-timer past Lundqvist.

Despite getting outplayed and outshot 13-7 by an aggressive Winnipeg forecheck, the Rangers found themselves tied.

The second was even nuttier. On a power play, Panarin was able to find a heavy Zibanejad shot that caromed out for an easy rebound that was his first goal as a Ranger 27 seconds in. Trouba helped set it up the power play goal. That should be a theme to the new season.

Before fans could get into their seats, here came Ehlers and Blake Wheeler two on one. They absolutely dusted Staal and Tony DeAngelo with Ehlers dishing across for an easy Wheeler finish that knotted it 30 seconds later. Eighteen-year old Ville Heinola recorded his first NHL point by getting a secondary assist. He was the first round pick in the Trouba deal that included former Ranger defenseman Neal Pionk, who wore number 4 for his new team.

The game got even wackier when two goals were scored nine seconds apart by each team. First, Trouba got his first as a Blueshirt thanks to some good hustle and patience from Panarin. He went into the corner and retrieved a loose puck passing it to Chris Kreider. With the power play expiring, Kreider got it over for Trouba, who unleashed one through traffic for a 3-2 Rangers lead at 6:03.

Like the groundhog, they couldn’t even celebrate. Nine seconds is all it took for Wheeler to back up the Rangers five skaters and surprise Lundqvist through the wickets at 6:12. Ehlers and Dmitri Kulikov assisted. The D backed in too much. They gave up too many shots (47). But it’s the first game. It’s gonna take time. They are young.

Having been outplayed the first two periods, they remained tied at three. Winnipeg led in shots 33-20. All it was going to take was one good period to squeeze out a win.

The third didn’t start off right. The Jets took advantage of a Skjei delay of game minor by scoring on the power play. It was recently re-signed forward Kyle Connor, who snuck a tricky shot by Lundqvist. He didn’t get enough of it. That made it 4-3 Jets at 2:41 of the period.

There was plenty of time for a comeback. A couple of minutes later, Trouba found a huge seam to thread the needle for Zibanejad. He did the rest by flying in and going forehand, backhand deke and in one motion like he does in the shootout, top shelf. It was the goal of the game.

Even though the game was hanging in the balance, you had to feel good. The Rangers were resilient and never went away. They were up against one of the game’s best offenses. Winnipeg definitely was more attackable without Trouba, Dustin Byfuglien and Tyler Myers. It’s hard to be the same defense when you lose that kind of quality. They still have Morrisey and Kulikov. But the D is gonna struggle like it will in NYC.

The Rangers right side of Trouba (1-2-3), DeAngelo (🍎) and rookie Adam Fox is way better. In particular, I want to praise Fox for how well he played in his NHL debut. He was poised throughout and didn’t look nervous. Neither did Kakko, who got stronger as the game went on. He is gonna be very exciting.

It was the Blueshirts who got the fifth goal. Coach David Quinn moved up the new Rangers Grate One Lemieux for the big shift. All he did was distract the defense and Hellebuyck, making the Fast rebound an easy one for Howden, who had a good night in front of his family.

All in all, a good win. The right way to start it off.

THREE STARS:

3rd ⭐ Blake Wheeler, Jets (2 goals)

2nd ⭐ Jacob Trouba, Rangers (first goal as NYR, 2 assists)

1st ⭐ Mika Zibanejad, Rangers (goal, 3 🍎)

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A tease that will pump Rangers fans up

Let’s be honest. How cool was the old video montage and music MSG once used for the New York Rangers in the 90’s?

If you’re a classic fan of the Blueshirts, there was nothing better than that tease featuring highlights of the championship team in ’93-94. The Garden brought it back for the special 25 Year Anniversary in which they honored that memorable Stanley Cup team.

Nostalgia is fun. Especially for the older generation, who identify with what MSG Network used to be. No disrespect to any of the splendid employees they currently have such as John Giannone, who does a wonderful job of reporting what’s going on between the benches along with other unique stuff.

I’m merely referring to how much CEO James Dolan changed MSG. The classic Sports Desk was one of my favorites. Who didn’t love no nonsense Smirk Meister Bob Page? Was there a better host, who captured the pulse of sports news going on? He was as hard hitting as it got.

You had the old reliable Mike Crispino, who was a pro’s pro in whatever role he had. Knicks games were better with him on the radio. Ditto that funny call of Marek Malik in the wild 15 round shootout against the Caps. Crispino got so excited that he screeched before yelling, “Malik Went Between His Legs!!!!!” We were there for that, but I always smile when I watch the video on YouTube and hear his crazy Rangers call. Plus JD was chuckling too. Oh Baby! It’s good to have him back.

I guess MSG just isn’t the same. Thankfully, we still have Sam Rosen and hopefully Al Trautwig, who’s out right now due to something they haven’t revealed. Hopefully, it’s not too serious. I always joke about Al, but he’s one of the pillars of MSG’s coverage. It’s hard to believe he and Rosen have been there so long.

So, what will pump up Rangers fans for tonight’s home opener against Winnipeg? Try this ultra cool tease with the same awesome production music using the current Blueshirts!

A terrific job of production and editing. If only they kept that music and used the same video montage for the New Era of Rangers hockey. Artemiy Panarin, Kaapo Kakko, Mika Zibanejad, Pavel Buchnevich, Chris Kreider and Jacob Trouba are ready to produce some new highlights. That includes Henrik Lundqvist, who is still being banked on to deliver the clutch saves when he starts. Ditto for Alexandar Georgiev as long as he’s here before Igor Shesterkin eventually sticks around Manhattan for good.

My family is about to leave now for the game. Let’s root for a win and kickoff the new season the right way.

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Rangers expected lines for tomorrow include Brendan Smith, Kakko understands how to play hockey

Tell me if you thought Brendan Smith would be in the starting lineup tomorrow night. That indeed appears to be the case. Cue NYR Twitter panic attacks in 5, 4, 3, 2, 1…

The Rangers will ice a team that includes the secret weapon on the fourth line against the Jets in Thursday’s home opener. Coach David Quinn revealed why.

Here’s my takeaway. It’s Game 1 of 82. How they start the ’19-20 season won’t be how they finish. A point GM Jeff Gorton made when thoughtfully explaining to the media their roster decisions that saw Filip Chytil, Vitali Kravtsov and Ryan Lindgren all get reassigned to Hartford.

The bottom line is as special as it is to be introduced on Opening Night to the crowd at MSG, it’s only one game. There’ll be plenty of time for those kids to prove they deserve a chance with the big club. As Gorton stated, it could be sooner rather than later ‘if’ they play well.

Nothing is ever etched in stone. That’s what all the negative detractors in other places seem to forget. A rebuild doesn’t mean instant success right away with every young player ready to contribute. It means there’s some thought that goes into it. It’s a process that includes development and progression. Patience must be preached.

Even if I disagree with the decision to start Smith on the fourth line over Greg McKegg tomorrow, it doesn’t mean anything. Unlike other overreactionary fans influenced by NYR bloggers, I don’t panic over one game, or an actual good response from 18-year old rookie Kaapo Kakko on how different he must play.

He’s not talking about strong puck possession in the offensive zone. The second pick is smart enough to realize that he can’t turn over the puck in the neutral zone or the opponent’s blueline. That can cause a quick counterattack and odd man rush the other way. He’s smarter than the judgmental fans who think these guys will be able to hold onto the puck for their entire shift. Have any of them ever played or watched the sport closely?

Ask Artemiy Panarin about his costly mistake not getting the puck deep in Game Five at Boston. It resulted in the Bruins getting the winner to deal his former team Columbus a crushing defeat in the second round. You can’t always be the hero. Especially in a close checking tie game with points on the line.

The same thing applies to Smith starting on a surprising fourth line with Lias Andersson and Brendan Lemieux. Andersson probably deserves to start on the third line. However, it’ll be Brett Howden centering Vladislav Namestnikov and Jesper Fast instead for the first game.

That’s okay. What’s important is how Quinn’s staff handles the entire season. With improved depth and more talent, he’s going to try some different combinations. That includes the power play where Kakko got bumped down to the second unit for Pavel Buchnevich.

Right now, it’s gonna be Mika Zibanejad, Panarin, Buchnevich, Chris Kreider and Jacob Trouba on the first unit. The second unit will feature Kakko, Ryan Strome, Lemieux, Adam Fox and Tony DeAngelo. By adding Kakko to the second unit, it gives them more puck possession and skill. Not a bad way to go when they know Buchnevich had success last season by scoring a career high seven power play goals. That tied him with Kreider for second on the club behind Zibanejad, who led them with 11.

No matter what, tomorrow begins a New Era of Rangers hockey. Even if the new catchphrase is cheesy by our standards, #PlayLikeANewYorker is something everyone can get behind. That doesn’t stand for only skill and Corsi puck possession. But grit. Something every New Yorker is familiar with.

Let’s try to embrace what they’re doing. Enjoy the games for a change.

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Rangers won’t have a captain again, tab four alternates

So much for speculation. The Rangers won’t have a captain again. For a second straight season, they will go with just alternates. Coach David Quinn decided to give the A’s to the best possible candidates, who have been here a while.

As expected, Mika Zibanejad, Chris Kreider, Marc Staal and Jesper Fast are those four players. All are team leaders, who’ll help make the transition easier for first-year players Kaapo Kakko, Adam Fox and Libor Hajek. Eventually, they’ll be rejoined by Filip Chytil, Vitali Kravtsov and Ryan Lindgren.

There’s nothing wrong with going with four alternates instead of having a traditional captain. I’ve referenced Staal before as one of the team leaders due to being around almost as long as Henrik Lundqvist, who doesn’t need a letter on his jersey. The guys with the most experience know what it takes.

So do Kreider, Zibanejad and Fast. All of whom were around for the good times when this team contended. They’ll set a good example for the younger players to learn from. That includes Lias Andersson, Brett Howden and other young players like Brendan Lemieux and Tony DeAngelo.

Given that they also have Brendan Smith, who apparently is expected to be in the lineup on the fourth line for tomorrow’s home opener, there are enough voices in the locker room to make it work.

It’ll be interesting to watch the season unfold. While eight teams get going tonight, the Rangers will be in action for real on Thursday against the Jets. We’ll see how it goes.

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NHL ’19-20 Division and Conference Rankings, Predictions

So, how do they stack up? As it gets going tomorrow with the first game between polar opposites in the Battle Of Ontario between Toronto and Ottawa, there will be surprises because there always are.

This is just my best guess. Some divisions are much harder to call than others. Without further notice, let’s go division by division and do rankings for both conferences. Predictions will follow.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division

1.Maple Leafs

2.Lightning

3.Bruins

4.Panthers

5.Canadiens

6.Sabres

7.Red Wings

8.Senators

Metropolitan Division

1.Hurricanes

2.Capitals

3.Flyers

4.Penguins

5.Devils

6.Islanders

7.Rangers

8.Blue Jackets

EAST RANKINGS

*1.Maple Leafs 111 Points

2.Lightning 106

3.Bruins 104

*4.Hurricanes 102

5.Capitals 100

6.Panthers 97

7.Flyers 95

8.Penguins 94

9.Devils 91

10.Islanders 89

11.Canadiens 88

12.Sabres 87

13.Rangers 85

14.Blue Jackets 81

15.Red Wings 77

16.Senators 55

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Central Division

1.Stars

2.Avalanche

3.Blues

4.Predators

5.Jets

6.Blackhawks

7.Wild

Pacific Division

1.Golden Knights

2.Sharks

3.Flames

4.Coyotes

5.Ducks

6.Canucks

7.Oilers

8.Kings

WEST RANKINGS

*1.Golden Knights 107

2.Sharks 103

*3.Stars 102

4.Avalanche 99

5.Blues 97

6.Predators 96

7.Flames 95

8.Coyotes 93

9.Jets 92

10.Blackhawks 89

11.Ducks 85

12.Wild 84

13.Canucks 81

14.Oilers 79

15.Kings 68

FIRST ROUND MATCH UPS

(A1) Maple Leafs over (M4) Penguins in 5

(A3) Bruins over (A2) Lightning in 6

(M1) Hurricanes over (A4) Panthers in 6

(M3) Flyers over (M2) Capitals in 7

(P1) Golden Knights over (P4) Coyotes in 5

(P2) Sharks over (P3) Flames in 6

(C1) Stars over (C4) Predators in 7

(C2) Avalanche over (C3) Blues in 7

SECOND ROUND

(A1) Maple Leafs over (A3) Bruins in 7

(M3) Flyers over (M1) Hurricanes in 6

(C2) Avalanche over (C1) Stars in 6

(P1) Golden Knights over (P2) Sharks in 7

CONFERENCE FINALS

Maple Leafs over Flyers in 5

Avalanche over Golden Knights in 7

STANLEY CUP

Maple Leafs over Avalanche in 7

NHL AWARDS

Conn Smythe- Mitch Marner

Hart- Nathan MacKinnon

Vezina- Ben Bishop

Norris- Victor Hedman

Art Ross- Connor McDavid

Rocket Richard- Alexander Ovechkin

Selke- Mark Stone

Calder- Jack Hughes

Byng- Johnny Gaudreau

Adams- Alain Vigneault

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2019-20 NHL PREVIEW: Is it time to crown a new champion?

The storyline for the 2019-20 NHL season is one of great anticipation and theatre. Last season, it was the St. Louis Blues, who came out of nowhere to deliver their first Stanley Cup. They’re ready to celebrate on Wednesday by helping open up the new year by hosting the former ’17-18 champion Capitals.

Conn Smythe winner Ryan O’Reilly, captain Alex Pietrangelo, Vladimir Tarasenko, Jaden Schwartz, Jordan Binnington and the rest of the Blues will get their Stanley Cup rings. That includes coach Craig Berube, who took over in January and guided them from one of the league’s worst teams into a winner. They had to go through both Winnipeg and Dallas the first two rounds. Then, overcame the Bruins with an amazing Game Seven win in Boston to avenge a Cup loss to Bobby Orr and Boston in 1970.

It’s a brand new season and with that comes change. That includes some more mind numbing rules like teams having the option on which side they want the face-off to start a power play. What’s the point? Offense increased plenty. Instead of focusing too much on the new variations, we’re excited to bring in a new era of young potential franchise players. The Hudson Rivalry should get a jolt with Devils’ top pick Jack Hughes and Rangers’ second pick Kaapo Kakko entering the newest chapter.

Keep an eye on rookie defensemen Quinn Hughes of Vancouver and Cale Makar of Colorado. Noah Dobson also made the Islanders, who said goodbye to well respected veteran Thomas Hickey on Monday. They also placed former first round pick Josh Ho-Sang on waivers. Maybe he winds up finding a new home. There’ll be other first-year players who excite hockey fans. Is Thatcher Demko this year’s Binnington in Vancouver?

Of course, you always have plenty of roster turnover due to free agency and shocking trades like the one the Devils pulled off with Nashville to land the game’s biggest personality, P.K. Subban. He certainly will add a lot to the rivalries with the Rangers and Flyers. Wayne Simmonds also traded in a Flyers jersey for a Devils one. How will he be received by Flyer fans?

You also have Kevin Hayes and Alain Vigneault on the Philadelphia side of the rivalry with the Rangers. They already met twice in preseason, and Hayes scored versus his former team. He’s getting paid a lot to make a difference for a coach who knows him well. How they do depends largely on Carter Hart.

Perhaps the biggest move was made by the Maple Leafs. They acquired defenseman Tyson Barrie from the Avalanche, who got center help by getting Nazem Kadri. Toronto was also able to add Alexander Kerfoot, who should add more depth to a star laden core that features Mitch Marner, Auston Matthews, John Tavares, William Nylander and Morgan Rielly.

Nashville cleared space by moving Subban to the Devils so they could sign Matt Duchene. Is that enough to boost the Predators out of a topsy turvy Central that includes the Blues, Stars, Avalanche and Jets, who’ll be without Dustin Byfuglien, who’s debating his future. At least both Kyle Connor and Patrik Laine are back. They’ll score a lot, but could give up more minus Byfuglien and Jacob Trouba, who’s now a Ranger.

The Blue Jackets were raided in the summer losing star forward Artemi Panarin to the Blueshirts, top flight goalie Sergei Bobrovsky to the Panthers, and Duchene to the Predators. Can the Bread Man bring a revamped Rangers back to the playoffs? What about Bob in Florida, who believe the two-time Vezina winner along with new coach Joel Quenneville can finally bring postseason hockey back.

The Penguins made a big change by moving Phil Kessel to the Coyotes for already injured Alex Galchenyuk. They added gritty former Jet Brandon Tanev, hoping the moves will make Pittsburgh fans forget a humiliating first round sweep to the Islanders. Are the Isles overlooked? They let Robin Lehner go to Chicago and replaced him with Semyon Varlamov. Anders Lee remained loyal despite a run at Panarin. Jordan Eberle and Brock Nelson also are back. Is having the same nucleus enough to stay in the playoffs?

What of the Hurricanes, who kept Petr Mrazek and lost valuable leader Justin Williams, who’s taking the year off? Jake Gardiner is added to arguably the best blueline in the Metro. They finally traded Justin Faulk, who lucked out in St. Louis. Joel Edmundson came back to a D featuring Jaccob Slavin, Dougie Hamilton, Gardiner and Brett Pesce. Veteran forwards Erik Haula and Ryan Dzingel were added to a nucleus of Sebastian Aho, Jordan Staal, Teuvo Teravainen, Andrei Svechnikov and Nino Niederreiter. They should challenge the Capitals for the division.

It’ll be odd to see Joe Pavelski in a Stars jersey after being Mr. Shark. His addition along with Vezina favorite Ben Bishop lead a very good Dallas team that could contend. Are the Oilers the same old team boasting superstar duo Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, or can the astute hire of Dave Tippett turn things around? Mike Smith and Mikko Koskinen need defensive help. Tippett should add structure.

Is there enough offense in Calgary again to overcome new iffy tandem David Rittich and Cam Talbot? They’ll light the lamp plenty. The Golden Knights get a full season of Mark Stone. They should be locked and loaded. Joe Thornton is back in teal for one more year. They took a huge risk with Erik Karlsson, who’s an old 29. It’ll only work if Martin Jones holds up in net.

Perhaps the biggest question is how the Lightning respond to their first round stunner against Columbus. They’re hoping Kevin Shattenkirk has something left. He won’t have any pressure thanks to Victor Hedman, who’s the best defenseman in hockey. Nikita Kucherov looks to repeat for the Hart, but he’d trade it for a Cup. So would Steven Stamkos, Brayden Point and Tyler Johnson. Andrei Vasilevskiy is the best goalie in the East.

Can the Bruins recover from that crushing Game Seven loss on home ice to the determined Blues for Lord Stanley? They’ll be good. Charlie Coyle is the third line center behind Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci. Brad Marchand and David Pastrnak form a great line with Bergeron. Both Coyle and Torey Krug are in contract years.

These are some of the storylines hockey fans will be following.

Coming Next: Division and Conference Rankings and Predictions

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Rangers Preview: Trusting the Process will be key to new and exciting season on Broadway

The excitement is palpable over Opening Night this Thursday on Broadway. A new era of Rangers hockey will finally be upon us when the Winnipeg Jets visit MSG.

They’ll roll out the blue carpet for prize second pick Kaapo Kakko, star free agent addition Artemi Panarin, and former Jet Jacob Trouba. For once, it won’t be all about Henrik Lundqvist, who always looks like a GQ model instead of the franchise’s record holder in several goaltender categories.

This time, it’s bigger than the brand new ’19-20 season that officially begins on Wednesday with the usual allotment of four games. It’s about both the present and future for the new look New York Rangers. Similar to close Hudson rival New Jersey, who boast top pick Jack Hughes, added P.K. Subban along with KHL import Nikita Gusev, the Rangers are looking to challenge for the playoffs. Whether or not it’s realistic remains to be seen.

Let’s forget about the division they play in. Everyone knows the Metro should be very competitive from top to bottom. Even the projected best teams aren’t going to blow anyone away. It should be competitive and hard fought.

What’s most important for the new Blueshirts is the continued development of a mostly young core that still includes Lundqvist, Marc Staal, Chris Kreider, Jesper Fast, Mika Zibanejad and Brady Skjei. They all were around the last time the team was in the postseason. All seven will be looked upon as team leaders along with key additions Panarin and Trouba, who both understand what it’s all about.

It’s understandable why youngsters Filip Chytil and Vitali Kravtsov aren’t on the roster. Neither was going to play in the top six and probably wouldn’t have gotten ideal ice time that includes what should be an improved power play. Throw out the preseason that meant very little. Once you add Panarin and Trouba to a top unit that also features Zibanejad, Kreider and Kakko, it has big time potential to do damage.

Don’t forget they can have either rookie Adam Fox or a surprisingly sharp Tony DeAngelo man the points on a second unit with possibly Skjei that should include Ryan Strome, Pavel Buchnevich and either Vladislav Namestnikov or Brendan Lemieux. So, opponents will get two different looks. Eventually, expect Kravtsov or Chytil to be added once they earn a recall. Given the way the schedule is, it won’t be right away.

As breathtaking as the Bread Man will be to watch work with Zibanejad and key right wing Buchnevich, who must build on a strong finish, all eyes will be glued on number 24, Kaapo Kakko. The 18-year old out of Turko, Finland has the tools to become a power forward capable of scoring a lot of goals. He is a powerful skater with tremendous hockey sense and good hands around the net. This is the kind of player Garden Faithful have been waiting for.

If it doesn’t happen right away, fans must remain patient. It’s quite an adjustment going from European style rinks to the smaller and more challenging North American game. You can’t rush the development or success of a player that’s still only 18. That’s why it’ll be interesting to see how second-year coach David Quinn manages Kakko throughout a much longer season than he’s used to. Having Kreider to lean on should help.

Quinn learned on the job last year. Former first round pick Lias Andersson wasn’t fully ready for the NHL. He was mishandled by the organization. However, he worked extremely hard on his conditioning and diet in the offseason. Now 20, the seventh pick in the 2017 NHL Draft looks ready to contribute. He earned the third line center job with a strong camp. It should be fun to follow the Swede’s progress.

That’s what we mean by patience. How interesting will it be to watch rookie third pair Libor Hajek and Fox develop? There might be some bumps and bruises. That’s expected. Both are just 21 with five games of NHL experience. That would be Hajek’s initiation last Spring. Fox has the skating and skill to become a fixture in the top four and on the power play. He’s looked poised so far. The regular season is a different animal. We’ll see how it goes.

That’s probably why forgotten man Brendan Smith is the seventh defenseman, who can also double as a fourth line forward if needed. Actually, he too was part of the last Rangers postseason in 2017. So, that makes it eight experienced leftovers from the end of the Alain Vigneault era. He’s currently coaching the rival Flyers where former Blueshirt Kevin Hayes now centers the second line. It’s gonna be strange.

Having a mix of vets with younger players is all about balance. Buchnevich is still considered one of those promising forwards, who still must improve. He learned a lot under Quinn last season. The demanding coach pushed the 24-year old Russian to become a better overall player. He was a healthy scratch a few times due to inconsistency. He too was on that ’16-17 playoff roster. So, it’s really nine players that survived. But he’s younger and not yet a finished product.

By the end of ’18-19, Buchnevich had become a different player. He set a new career high with 21 goals and did a better job taking the body. He has a golden opportunity to produce even more while getting the first chance on the top line with Zibanejad and Panarin. They had some early chemistry when put together in preseason. We’ll see if it translates.

Adding veterans like Greg McKegg and even Micheal Haley should only help keep this team with enough edge necessary when things get nasty. In particular, McKegg proved he could play during the Hurricanes’ run to the Conference Finals. He was a part timer, who always added energy in a supporting role.

That’s why I thought the signing was underrated. He can play fourth line, take draws, and kill penalties. He hustles to win loose pucks and is fundamentally sound. Haley is the 13th forward that can step in if Quinn wants that physical element. He doesn’t back down.

The third line should be your classic two-way, hard working types in Andersson with Namestnikov and agitator Lemieux. A player who will never pass up an opportunity to finish a check. He also loves getting his jersey dirty in front and creates a distraction for opponents. Look how much attention the Isles paid to him on Saturday. Cal Clutterbuck gave him a chop and Matt Martin cross-checked him post scrum. That’s who Lemieux is. He also has a bit of skill as his 12 goals showed last year with Winnipeg and New York. He must remember to stay away from undisciplined penalties.

The fourth line will be centered by forgotten sophomore Brett Howden, who was beaten out by Andersson for a top nine spot. A heady player with solid passing skills and an effective penalty killer, he will work with Fast and McKegg on a checking line. We know what Fast brings. The grit and heart fans appreciate. It could be an effective trio.

It’s all about the top pair of Skjei and Trouba. If the defense is to work, the close USA friends must take on the tough assignments at five-on-five while logging important minutes on the penslty kill and power play. Trouba is the difference maker on the right side this team hasn’t had since Dan Girardi in his prime. However, Trouba is a much better skater with a big shot. He’s certainly capable of the kind of offense we haven’t seen from the right side in quite a while. Plus he’s physical and tough. I’m hoping having Trouba will influence Skjei, who must become more consistent overall. He looked better by the end of camp. A encouraging sign.

For now, Staal and DeAngelo remain as the second pair. They formed solid chemistry last year. Staal is the slower, stay at home type who plays the man hard. DeAngelo is the much better skater, who can carry the puck out of harm’s way and transition quickly. He will see some time on the power play due to his low, accurate shot. He also doesn’t take any crap. He turned his season around after a lot of time in the press box. Maybe even his career.

The wildcard is Hajek, who has the skating they prefer. That’s why he made it over Ryan Lindgren, who we will see sooner rather than later. Trust me on that one. Fox looks as good as advertised. It’s hard to believe he’s on his third organization due to not signing with Calgary and then Carolina, who traded him to the hometown Blueshirts where he wanted to play. He’s from Jericho, New York. I’m excited to see what he can bring.

Goaltending shouldn’t be an issue. Lundqvist looked sharp throughout preseason, getting stronger as it went on. At 37, his desire to get back to what he once was is unquestioned. He also wants to see the rebuild through and get back to the playoffs. It’s all about how he’s managed. He doesn’t have to play a hectic schedule anymore due to Alexandar Georgiev.

They can be an effective tandem who push each other. There’s nothing wrong with a little friendly competition. If the exhibition season was any early indication, they’ll have to be steady for this team to stay in the playoff race. That should include bubble teams such as the Devils, Flyers, Islanders, Panthers, Canadiens and maybe even the Sabres. I’m not even sure the Penguins are a lock. Don’t discount the Blue Jackets either.

Usually, I make a prediction in these previews. However, I honestly don’t know what to expect. I’ll say this. The team will be exciting. You’re going to see some flashes of brilliance from Panarin and Kakko. Zibanejad will be a huge key to any success. He is now the man they look to as the flexible top center, who is a power play weapon and good penalty killer. The center depth and young D could have some growing pains.

For that reason, I believe they’ll be competitive. But fall short of the postseason. If I had to guess on a number, I’ll say 85 points. It might be higher if the Bread Man and Kakko click. Especially in three-on-three overtime and shootouts.

It’s not about this season. It’s about what’s coming in the next decade. They’re on the right track.

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Kakko, Andersson and Hajek get new numbers, Gorton explains the tough decisions

On what he referred to as “one of the toughest days in hockey,” Rangers GM Jeff Gorton explained why the team made the decisions they did to reporters.

Referencing the light schedule they have early on, it was a factor. However, he also made good points about what would be best for the development of Filip Chytil, Vitali Kravtsov and Ryan Lindgren. The latter two who probably could’ve made the 22-man roster.

Following hosting Winnipeg on October 3 this Thursday, the Blueshirts visit the Senators on Saturday night. That’s the first two games over three days. They then don’t play again until the following Saturday on Oct. 12 against the Oilers at home. Then they’re off for four days until the much anticipated first meeting at the Hudson rival Devils that’ll hopefully feature a battle between second pick Kaapo Kakko and top pick Jack Hughes in Newark on 10/17.

The schedule finally picks up with a back-to-back the following night at the Capitals. The Canucks visit New York City for a rare 1 PM matinee on football Sunday, Oct. 20. That’s three games in four days.

Gorton indicated that after internal discussions, the organization felt it was best for Chytil to go play his natural center position at Hartford. It certainly is something the 20-year old needs to work on if he’s to eventually become the player they think he can be.

He also felt that even though Kravtsov showed off some of his promising skill, he wasn’t guaranteed top minutes due to the current alignment. What’s the point of having the 19-year old on the roster right away if there could be some games where he only plays six to seven minutes a night? That’s basically what I tried to explain. He can get top line and power play duty while adjusting to the North American style. Don’t forget he played on the bigger ice surface in the KHL. As did expected Wolf Pack starting goalie Igor Shesterkin.

Lindgren could easily have made the roster. His strong play throughout camp including the physical edge he had against a full Islanders roster, impressed the Rangers staff. However, Gorton liked the flexibility veteran Brendan Smith brings due to being able to come in as either a defenseman or a energizing forward, which he became familiar with under coach David Quinn. Smith had a good camp and got rewarded.

In terms of putting veteran center Micheal Haley on the team for the purpose of signing him to a two-way contract, Gorton made sure to point out the element Haley can bring into the lineup. He can change the momentum of a game with a big hit or fight. He also is a solid forechecker, which explains why San Jose had him twice.

Even though the game is going away from that physical style, you still need those high character guys around to help inject life. Especially on a young roster with only a handful of vets who are actually over 30. I would liken Haley’s role to that of everyone’s favorite, Tanner Glass, who now works in the organization. Those good team guys are infectious.

I really liked how honestly Gorton answered each reporter’s questions. You can tell he gets it. He understands the unique situation they’re in. When pressed on Kakko, he didn’t hesitate to say that Kaapo can help this team right away and also was sick. He emphasized what he did in practice. You still saw it in some shifts where he had the puck like a magnet with defenders chasing him around the net. An area he’s most dangerous. Wait until it starts up for real.

On the cooler side, there are some new numbers for Kakko, Lias Andersson and Libor Hajek. Each will get to debut those numbers on Thursday night.

As expected, Kakko goes from 45 to his more familiar 24 that he wore in Finland. Andersson took number 28. That’ll take some getting used to. He’s not gonna remind anyone of Tie Domi. However, it sure beats wearing 50. He’s excited to be here after earning the third line center role.

They also spoke to Hajek, who indicated that he didn’t know if he would make the team after having seven months off due to his shoulder. He did note that the number change had to do with what he wore in the Czech Republic and for Saskatoon in the WHL.

As for Adam Fox, he said he liked 23. So, he’s keeping it. When asked sarcastically about number 18, he mentioned that it wasn’t available.

That’ll do it for now. Coming up next. The Rangers Season Preview. Stay tuned.

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