With a new brain trust in place, the Stars decided
the main ingredient in finding franchise stability was … more
change. The wholesale moves started when Dallas acquired the rights
to veteran defenseman Sergei
Gonchar from the Ottawa
Senators in early June. The team signed Gonchar to a new contract
three days later, and a month after that made a trade with the Boston
Bruins that brought centers Tyler
Seguin and Rich
Peverley to Dallas in exchange for forward Loui
Eriksson and prospects. With the acquisition of another center,
Shawn Horcoff,
that same day, Nill gave his team two things it desperately needed:
depth at center and a quarterback on the power play. Filling those
holes was a big step. But Nill said he sees the biggest beneficiary
from these moves being All-Star forward Jamie
Benn, who can move to the wing after playing much of last season
at center. "I think we're going to see even more growth from
Jamie Benn.
By making these moves, this allows us to get Jamie back to his
natural position. It gets him a real center to play with, a
right-handed center to play with (Seguin). So I think you're going to
see Jamie's game really grow."
Benn likely will have to take that step this
season if the Stars hope to return to the playoffs. Ruff brought
former Sabres assistant James
Patrick with him to Dallas, reuniting a staff that had some
success developing young players in Buffalo. That skill will be
crucial, considering the Stars' 2013-14 season could be riding on
their coaches' ability to groom a team that will be among the
youngest in the NHL. Benn, 24, could be entering his prime, but
Seguin is 21 and much of the team's depth will be made up of young
players who came in last season and established themselves on the
roster, among them Alex
Chiasson, Brenden
Dillon and Cody
Eakin. Throw in potential roster spots for defensive prospect
Jamie Oleksiak
and 18-year-old forward Valeri
Nichushkin, the team's first pick at the 2013 NHL Draft, and this
group could experience some growing pains coming out of the gate. "I
think there's no easy solution to any team becoming a good
franchise," Ruff told NHL.com. "I think that takes a
lot of hard work and discipline. For the most part, the good
franchises are teams that have been able to grow their young players
and be able to keep them. I think you've got to develop a trust in
the way you want to play and a commitment from players. When you get
that, it's a really powerful thing."
Franchise goaltender Kari
Lehtonen will be a rock in the Dallas crease, but the team will
need a drastic improvement on the blue line if it wants to take the
next step. Besides Gonchar, the unit mostly is unchanged from the one
that last season ranked 22nd in shots-allowed per game and 24th in
goals-against per game. Ruff knows the Stars will go only as far as
their defense takes them."It was a team the last couple of
years that had been knocking on the door. Offensively they've been
OK, but on the defensive side you'd like to be a little bit better."
Improving that defense will be a key to Ruff's
first season in Dallas. But he may be most excited by the prospect of
having a potential franchise center, Seguin. The longtime Sabres
coach faced off against Seguin in several Northeast Division matchups
and hopes to help him fulfill the expectations that have followed him
since the Bruins selected him with the second pick of the 2010 NHL
Draft. "For me, it's going to fall on how he handles the
opportunity to play center. That in the short term will be an
adjustment for him. I will have to be patient with him. He can change
the direction of the game with some of the tools that he has. You
want to see a player like that use the gifts he's been given."
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