What a strange 36 months or so it has been for the
New Jersey Devils.
After finishing first or second in their division 12 times in a
13-year span, the Devils have finished fourth or lower in each of the
past three. Twice they've missed the Stanley Cup Playoffs, but once
they accumulated 102 points in the NHL's best division and went on a
run to the Cup Final. Things haven't exactly been stable in northern
New Jersey this offseason, but stability could be the end result
moving forward. The team's best player left for the second straight
summer. A year after Zach
Parise went home to play for the Minnesota
Wild, Ilya
Kovalchuk went home to Russia and SKA St. Petersburg in the
Kontinental Hockey League, retiring from the NHL with 12 years and
$77 million left on his contract. The Devils signed Ryane
Clowe and Michael
Ryder shortly after free agency opened, then added Jaromir
Jagr after Kovalchuk turned in his retirement papers. Two other
big moves could help bring about that stability. The Devils traded
for Cory
Schneider on the day they were host of the 2013 NHL Draft,
providing a succession plan as Martin
Brodeur nears retirement. On Aug. 15, the team was sold to
Josh Harris, who owns the Philadelphia 76ers, and David Blitzer. With
new ownership and a long-term option at goaltender in place, and with
more financial flexibility sans the Kovalchuk contract, general
manager Lou Lamoriello has the chance to return the Devils to their
consistent playoff ways. Whether or not New Jersey can get back to
the postseason in 2013-14 could depend a lot on the veteran forward
additions and if the two young Adams, Adam
Henrique and Adam
Larsson, can prove they are core-type players to build around.
Let's get this out of the way: If both goaltenders are healthy,
expect Brodeur to be given the start opening night. When there are
back-to-backs, expect Brodeur to get the home portion. That said, if
both stay healthy all season, it says here Schneider will end up
starting more games than the likely Hall of Fame member. It might be
42-40 or 45-37, but it will be more. Having two goalies remain
healthy for 82 games is not a likely scenario, though, especially
when one is Brodeur's age (41). Up front, Jagr could slide into David
Clarkson's spot on the top line. The Devils need a bounce-back
season from Henrique, and having a pair of experienced wings with a
track record of scoring goals could help him. The team's fourth line
has been together for a while now, so it is fair to expect them to
stick together. Gionta won 35.1 percent of his 390 faceoffs last
season, so Carter needs to take more draws or Gionta needs to improve
significantly. That leaves two wing spots on the third line, with a
few other players, Reid
Boucher, Stefan
Matteau, Jacob
Josefson and Mattias
Tedenby, chief among the candidates. A great camp by Loktionov,
Boucher or Matteau could push Clowe to the third line. The Devils
need more from Larsson. He and Merrill are the future on the blue
line, but New Jersey could use an impact season from each in the
present. Someone has to take Kovalchuk's place on the point during
power plays, and expect Merrill, Larsson and Harrold to have their
chances.
In: G Cory
Schneider, RW Jaromir
Jagr, LW Rostislav
Olesz, RW Michael
Ryder, LW Ryane
Clowe, LW Riley
Boychuk
Out: RW Ilya
Kovalchuk, RW Matt
D'Agostini, D Matthew
Corrente, D Henrik
Tallinder, RW David
Clarkson, RW Matt
Anderson, G Johan
Hedberg
UFAs: LW Steve
Sullivan, LW Alexei
Ponikarovsky, RW Tom
Kostopoulos
Prospects: C Reid
Boucher, LW Stefan
Matteau, D Alexander
Urbom, D Jon
Merrill, D Eric
Gelinas, RW Harri
Pesonen
Here is the projected 2013-14 lineup for the
Devils:
Forwards
Patrik
Elias - Travis
Zajac - Jaromir
Jagr
Ryane
Clowe - Adam
Henrique - Michael
Ryder
Andrei
Loktionov - Dainius
Zubrus - Rostislav
Olesz
Ryan
Carter - Stephen
Gionta - Steve
Bernier
Krys Barch
Defensemen
Andy
Greene - Adam
Larsson
Bryce
Salvador - Marek
Zidlicky
Jon
Merrill - Anton
Volchenkov
Mark
Fayne - Peter
Harrold
Goalies
Cory
Schneider Martin
Brodeur
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