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An early 2008 NHL playoff preview?

There's an interesting poll going on over at James Mirtle's blog, where you get to predict the eight playoff teams from the Eastern and Western Conferences. In his first look at the early returns, the voters clearly believe the Nashville Predators will be on the outside looking in. I voted them in, but it's not a sure thing, so let's walk through some of the logical choices in the Western Conference as I see it:

1. Anaheim and San Jose are seemingly locks to make the playoffs, and Dallas is likely to finish right alongside them. The Stars weren't far off the pace set by the Sharks and Ducks last year, and missed Brendan Morrow and Mike Modano for significant stretches. Combine that with what I think should be another solid effort by Marty Turco (who in my book at least has shrugged off the "can't perform in the playoffs" label), and the Stars should be major contenders.
2. Detroit is the obvious favorite to win the Central.
3. Vancouver is a leader in the Northwest, and Minnesota should be improved if Nicklas Backstrom keeps up his pace and Marian Gaborik stays healthy.

That right there gets us to six playoff teams, with only two spots remaining. I feel confident excluding Edmonton, Phoenix, Columbus, Chicago, and L.A. from consideration (the Kings may be improved, but they're stuck in the toughest division in the NHL). That leaves St. Louis, Nashville, Calgary and Colorado in the running.

St. Louis: While Andy Murray is an excellent choice to lead the Blues back out of the darkness, I don't think they've put enough pieces together yet to mold a winner. Keith Tkachuk seems unlikely to ever hit 30 goals again, and while Paul Kariya is still effective, his best days are behind him as well. Besides any offensive improvement PK may bring to the team, the Blues will also need to tighten up on the defensive end significantly just to break even.

Calgary: This is the biggest crapshoot in the league, with Iron Mike Keenan taking over behind the bench. Will he inspire a lunchpail work ethic that carries this team to new heights, or alienate his players and oversee a brutal train wreck? One thing to remember is that the Flames snuck into the playoffs with only three points earned during shootouts, one of the lowest totals in the league. Even a modest boost in that area should help them secure a spot.

Colorado: Yes, Mr. Smyth has gone to Colorado, but I don't recall the Avalanche having trouble scoring goals last year, as they tied Nashville for Goals For in the west. The team still has Jose Theodore and his MVP-like contract hanging over them, and unless he gets bonked on the head and suddenly believes it's 2002 all over again, I think the Avs will lose a bunch of exciting, 6-5 games. The alternative would be to give young Peter Budaj more of the workload, but that loosy-goosy defense might not be the best to put a developing goaltender behind. I'm forecasting a repeat of last spring's suspenseful, yet ultimately futile, run for the playoffs.

Nashville: Losing Steve Sullivan for at least the first two months of the season is a brutal blow to a team that already lost a great deal of offensive talent via trades and free agency this summer. Responsible veterans like Greg de Vries, Radek Bonk and Martin Gelinas will keep the Predators an above-average defensive team, and while Chris Mason appears to be ready to take over the #1 job in goal, there's always risk associated with making that transition. Still, there appears to be enough left in place for this team to outscore the opposition over the long haul, albeit not as much as last season (when they scored 272 goals and yielded 212). My guess here is that they score somewhere around 250 goals, and give up around 225, which should still be enough to earn a trip to the playoffs.

So that's my story, and I'm sticking to it. Out of those final four I'm going with Calgary and Nashville to make the playoffs, with Colorado and St. Louis left on the outs for one more year. Of course, injuries, coaching changes, and mid-season trades could change things immensely, but take a walk through the scenarios as you seem them, and head over to James' blog to cast your vote. Once he closes the polls, it will be interesting to look back next spring and see whether the "wisdom of crowds" fares better than the experts.

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Theodore barely played in the last 50 games; Budaj is the starter (and their record with him was quite good last season).

by James Mirtle on Sep 14, 2007 1:02 AM EDT reply actions  

I understand, but they're likely to give him another crack at the top job, and even if they don't, his contract is a drag on their salary cap position.

by The Forechecker on Sep 14, 2007 8:26 AM EDT reply actions  

Everything I've heard out of Denver has said that Theo will get a shot early, but they plan on pulling the trigger early rather than later if he doesn't improve. Plus that fact that he won't be attending camp due to some foot surgery, he may not even get the starting nod out of the gate this season.

You talked about the defensive woes for the Avs last year, and I want to point out a few things: the addition of Scott Hannan will bring an entirely new wrinkle to the blueline. Leopold and Liles both enter the season healthy, something that didn't ever really happen last year, and Breezy-by, Vaananen, and Klee are all former Avs now. At the very least, that's addition by subtraction.

by Mike at MHH on Sep 14, 2007 10:45 AM EDT reply actions  

I don't have as much faith in Dallas as you do. They look like a Bubble club to me.

They're GD last season was good, but not great. They have almost no one who can score this season. They're primary difference makers besides Turco and Morrow are getting dangerously close to retirement age. They have precious little depth up front as well. And they are in a TOUGH division.

I'd be surprised if they finished anywhere above 6th in the conference.

by Kent W. on Sep 14, 2007 12:28 PM EDT reply actions  

Budaj was 31-16-6 last season, which makes Theodore a non-factor, really. I can't see him getting 30 starts this year.

by James Mirtle on Sep 14, 2007 11:52 PM EDT reply actions  

In my opinion, Dallas will have a hard time. They haven't improved in the off-season, they play in a division that is going to be tougher now thanks to the Kings. I could compare them to the Canucks, both very good defensively and very bad offensively. But Luongo > Turco. I don't really think they are sure to go. Colorado is much more likely to, not only having addressed offense, but defense as well, with Scott Hannan joining the roster with a healthy Leopold who will together in the 1st defensive pair make a huge difference. If this team was one point away from the playoffs, last season, with these acquisitions (and I include Leopold), I can't see how they are not going to the playoffs.

Oh, and Pacific the toughest division? Not at all, Northwest the toughest division. With 4 teams capable of making the playoffs, this is going to be an interesting year there. Just look at Mirtle's poll and you see that people voted for four Northwest teams in the playoffs. The Coyotes are worse than the Oilers, no doubt, and although Anaheim and San Jose may be better than any team of the Northwest, the "average of greatness" (let's call it that way lol) of ANA, SJS, Dallas and LA is not as big as Vancouver, Calgary, Colorado and Minnesota.

Greetings from Portugal and keep up your work on this blog that I enjoy to read.

by Luís on Sep 15, 2007 3:37 PM EDT reply actions  

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