Last season saw a number of young prospects get a
shot to crack the Stars' lineup. Some, Cody
Eakin and Brenden
Dillon, stuck around for much of the season. Others, Alex
Chiasson and Jamie
Oleksiak, had short stints with the club. A refurbished Dallas
team will be looking to all of these young players to assert
themselves more this season. With 21-year-old Seguin centering the
top line, and 18-year-old Valeri
Nichushkin having a chance at making the lineup, this young team
is sure to experience its share of growing pains. How the prospects
weather that adversity and earn their stripes under Ruff could
dictate how far this team goes. Be it with a strong statistical
season or a highlight-reel play, Jamie Benn has shown the ability to
be a marquee offensive player for the Stars. It's the main reason the
team signed him to a five-year, $26.25 million contract extension in
January. The past four months have seen the Stars trade most of their
veteran forwards, including Brenden
Morrow, Derek
Roy, Jaromir
Jagr and Loui
Eriksson. With that experience now absent from the roster, much
of the responsibility will fall on Benn to lead a unit that is one of
the youngest in the League. Benn led Dallas last season with 33
points, and if he can answer the call, he could prove to be a star
among Stars. For the past three seasons the Stars have found
themselves on the playoff bubble only to miss the postseason with a
late-season collapse. With an outside chance in 2012-13, the Stars
finished 1-5-1, eliminating any hope of making the playoffs for the
first time since 2008. It was yet another slump for a club that
struggled through similar swoons in 2011-12 (3-9-0) and 2010-11
(5-6-3). A young roster with a glaring lack of NHL experience could
have trouble turning around this trend. But if the Stars hope to see
playoff hockey for the first time in five seasons, they'll need to
dig deep as the games become more important. Put simply, the Stars
lacked the polish required to win games last season. They ranked 29th
in shots on goal per game and 22nd in shots allowed, posting a
minus-13 goal differential. Throw in a 2-15-0 record when trailing
after two periods and this is a team that had trouble carrying the
play in a competitive Western Conference. That's why it's important
they take on the personality of their no-nonsense coach. Ruff likely
won't tolerate youth as an excuse for sloppy play. In a new
environment with a new team, the veteran coach will need to instill
the character that has made him one of the game's most respected
bench bosses. Kari Lehtonen has established himself as a franchise
goalie since coming to Dallas in 2010. The second pick in the 2002
NHL Draft has been a rock in the Stars' net, although he occasionally
has been prone to injury. That's been a problem, considering the lack
of any contingency plan in the Dallas goal. Last season Lehtonen's
backups, Richard
Bachman and Cristopher
Nilstorp - combined to go 7-8-1 with an .889 save percentage.
That was only a slightly worse showing than the previous season, when
the backups, Bachman and Andrew
Raycroft, went 10-13-1 with a .905 save percentage. Lehtonen
mostly was healthy last season, starting 35 games, but the lack of a
proper backup was a glaring problem in a conference where the margin
for error is razor thin. The Stars brought.
NHL coverage from the United Kingdom, by Hockey Nerd 'Sergei Adamov' Follow me on Facebook.com/Hockey-From-Across-the-Pond Twitter: @SergeiAdamov
Sunday, 11 August 2013
Dallas Stars - Tyler Seguin, Central to Plans
For a team that underwent massive reconstruction
in the wake of a fifth straight season out of the Stanley Cup
Playoffs, it's fair to say there are more than six questions the
Dallas Stars will
need to answer coming into the season. But following some major
additions to their roster and an overhaul of the front office and
coaching staff, Dallas will be an intriguing team to watch entering
the 2013-14 NHL season. It starts with the hiring of Jim
Nill as general manager and Lindy
Ruff as coach. Each enjoyed successful stretches with the Detroit
Red Wings and Buffalo
Sabres, respectively, and are among the most-respected men in the
game. They'll likely have to harness all their expertise to lead a
team that is very different from the one that finished 2012-13 seven
points out of a Stanley Cup Playoff spot. Despite the changes, Dallas
will have stability where it counts. Jamie
Benn, easily the team's best all-round forward, will be expected
to take the next step toward becoming a franchise player, and
goaltender Kari
Lehtonen again will be expected to carry the defense as far as he
can. In an offseason filled with transactions, none earned the kind
of headlines that came with Tyler Seguin's move to the Stars in July.
The second pick in the 2010 NHL Draft led the Boston
Bruins in goals and points as a 20-year-old in 2011-12 and earned
a spot at the 2012 All-Star Game. But his play dipped last season and
he was relegated mostly to third-line duty through the Bruins' run to
the 2013 Stanley Cup Final. That demotion isn't going to happen in
Dallas, where Seguin is expected to shift back to his natural center
spot on the Stars' top line and handle the kind of responsibility he
never confronted in Boston. How successfully he handles that pressure
and takes on that role likely will decide which direction this season
goes in for Dallas.
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