NHL coverage from the United Kingdom, by Hockey Nerd 'Sergei Adamov' Follow me on Facebook.com/Hockey-From-Across-the-Pond Twitter: @SergeiAdamov
Thursday, 22 August 2013
Florida Panthers - Preview
You'll have to excuse the Florida
Panthers if they seem especially eager for the 2013-14 season to
begin. The sooner they can erase the bad taste of 2012-13, the
better. The Panthers went from division champion to last in the NHL,
a dive caused in part by injuries to almost all of their top players
and deficiencies in their conditioning and consistency of effort.
Then, to add insults to the injuries, the Panthers lost the NHL
Draft Lottery and saw their franchise leader in games played leave as
a free agent. So when the puck drops Oct. 3, they could be without
two of their better players, this after losing an incredible 320-man
games over a 48-game schedule, along with 33 on the scoreboard
(15-27-6). Seeking any sunshine from their sorry state of affairs,
Florida turned to its fruitful crop of top-level prospects, getting
them NHL exposure earlier than planned. The Panthers are hopeful
their fountain of youth can help them in their transfer from the
friendly but now-extinct Southeast Division to the realigned
Atlantic, where some Original Six NHL heavyweights (Boston
Bruins, Detroit
Red Wings, Montreal
Canadiens) will extend a chilly greeting. Goaltender Jacob
Markstrom, 23, is ascending to the No. 1 job, with free agent
Jose Theodore unlikely to return. The top-four defensemen will include 21-year-old
Erik
Gudbranson and 22-year-old Dmitry
Kulikov, with 21-year-old Alex
Petrovic likely to earn a roster spot. Forwards Nick
Bjugstad (21), Quinton
Howden (21) and Drew
Shore (22), who each made his NHL debut last season, could be
part of the top six, where 20-year-old Calder Trophy winner Jonathan
Huberdeau already is. Add to that mix 20-year-old Vincent
Trocheck, the Ontario Hockey League's Most Outstanding Player,
and 17-year-old Aleksander
Barkov, the No. 2 pick in the 2013 NHL Draft. Injuries dictate
that too. Seventeen Panthers were sidelined at one point last season,
including captain Ed
Jovanovski (hip) and top-line forward Kris
Versteeg (knee). Those two may not be recovered by opening night.
Huberdeau, coming off hip labrum surgery himself, is the face of the
franchise with forward Stephen
Weiss gone to the Red Wings. Weiss left not only as the Panthers'
all-time leader in games played, but also first in assists, second in
points and fourth in goals. Veteran forwards Tomas
Fleischmann, Tomas
Kopecky and Shawn
Matthias return after productively surviving last season; with
Huberdeau, they combined for 55 of the Panthers' 109 goals. The
Panthers seemed like a team on the rise after winning the Southeast
in 2011-12 with 94 points to make the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the
first time since 2000. Their collection of high draft picks was lined
up to foster improvement. But Florida started last season 1-5-0 after
winning the opener, and closed 2-7-0. The Panthers won three games in
a row once, went 4-23-4 when allowing the first goal, and finished
last in the League in goals-for and goals-against. The GM helped
construct the core of the two-time Stanley Cup winning Chicago
Blackhawks, and he recalled difficult times there coming out of
the 2004-05 lockout. Two playoff-free seasons allowed Tallon to draft
Jonathan Toews
in 2006 and Patrick
Kane the following year. Tallon expects a similar payoff in
Florida, someday.
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