The Dallas Stars hung around the Stanley Cup Playoff race the past couple of seasons, only to fall apart before crossing the finish line. They did the exact opposite this season. Dallas earned its first trip to the Stanley Cup Playoffs since 2008 by going 8-4-0 its past 12 games. The Phoenix Coyotes also did their part to assist the Stars by going winless in their past six games (0-3-3), opening the door for Dallas to get the "X" next to its name in the standings after a 3-0 win Friday night against the St. Louis Blues. The Stars are the second wild-card team in the Western Conference. They will play the team with the most points in the Western Conference, the Anaheim Sucks.
This playoff berth is a long time coming for the
Stars. They lost a win-and-get-in game on the last day of the 2010-11
regular season. They lost nine of their last 12 games, including
their final five, to finish the 2011-12 season six points out of the
final playoff spot. It didn't get any better last season, when the
Stars dropped their last five games en route to another dark spring.
The constant disappointment led to sweeping changes last offseason.
Jim Nill
took over as general manager and hired Lindy
Ruff as coach. Dallas acquired Tyler
Seguin in a blockbuster trade with the Boston
Bruins. Jamie
Benn was named captain. The Stars needed to become a younger,
faster team. They needed to attack. They needed a new identity. It
was hard to imagine it could happen in one season. Quite frankly, it
didn't, because there still is plenty of work to be done in Dallas,
but the Stars found their way into the playoffs for the first time in
six years because they closed with a bang instead of a whimper.
Here are five reasons that they pulled it off:
1. Dynamic duo - Seguin needed a soft
landing after a hard fall in Boston. He got it in Dallas thanks to
Benn. They hit it off during the summer, became instant friends, and
their bond carried over onto the ice. If Benn and Seguin didn't
complement each other so well the Stars wouldn't be in the playoffs.
Seguin became better than a point-per-game player with a career-high
84 points on 37 goals and 47 assists in 79 games. Benn became a
30-goal scorer for the first time in his career. He has 34 goals and
45 assists in 81 games. One would not have happened without the
other. Benn and Seguin have scored 31 percent of Dallas' 230 goals.
They have 569 shots on goal, 22 percent of Dallas' total (2,580).
They have also helped rookie Valeri
Nichushkin's development in his first season in North America.
Nichushkin, the right wing on Dallas' top line for much of the
season, has chipped in with 14 goals and 34 points.
2. Second helping - As much as the Stars
have been paced by Benn and Seguin, their second wave of offense has
been formidable. Dallas' second line featuring Antoine
Roussel, Cody
Eakin and Ryan
Garbutt has combined for 47 goals and is a load to play against.
Since Ruff wants Seguin, Benn and Nichushkin to be in as many
offensive situations as possible, he typically will give a lot of the
defensive zone starts to Eakin, Roussel and Garbutt. That means a lot
of the time they're facing the opposition's best line. It may not be
the ideal scenario, but they've handled the responsibility well.
They're a handful to play against because of their speed. Eakin,
Garbutt and Roussel help drive the Stars' quick-transition game.
They've provided necessary secondary scoring as a result. Eakin has
35 points on 16 goals and 19 assists. Garbutt has 17 goals and 32
points, and Roussel has 29 points, but most of their offense has come
at even strength since they don't see time on the power play. Roussel
leads the Stars with 197 penalty minutes, followed by Garbutt, who
has 106.
3. Speed - Watch the Stars on any given
night it is 2 1/2 hours of fast-paced entertainment. Dallas'
relentless, aggressive attack is derived from its team speed. The
faster the Stars play, the better they are. Their team speed is a big
reason for why they're back in the playoffs. The Stars are fast and
they let teams know it from the opening faceoff to the final buzzer.
Their attacking style masks some of the mistakes they make because
they are quick to cover them up. When they can't, the Stars do get
burned, but they don't stop attacking because that's the style they
want to play and the identity Ruff wants them to have. From the
moment Ruff got to Dallas last summer he noted that team speed would
be their greatest strength. He was bang on. When the Stars are
playing the way they want to play there is very little hesitation in
their game. They get the puck and they go. Up the middle, down the
walls, the Stars attack from everywhere. It's a north-south game and
their team speed can be overwhelming. It's going to make them a
difficult team to handle in the playoffs.
4. Not Leht-ing up - Stars goalie Kari
Lehtonen has put up strong numbers in the past, including in
2011-12, when he set career-highs in goals-against average (2.33) and
save percentage (.922). The Stars didn't make the playoffs that year;
they fell six points short with 89. Lehtonen didn't help the cause,
going 1-5-0 in his last six starts with 19 goals allowed and a save
percentage of .898. This season, Lehtonen made a positive impact down
the stretch. Instead of hurting the Stars' playoff chances with
mediocre goaltending, he was a rock in the net and was a big reason
why the Stars clinched a playoff berth. Since giving up five goals
March 18 to the Pittsburgh
Penguins, his first game since sustaining a concussion 10 days
earlier, Lehtonen is 8-3-0 with two shutouts and 20 goals allowed
(.929 save percentage, 1.89 GAA). He beat the Blues twice, most
recently with a 22-save shutout Friday. Lehtonen also had a 35-save
shutout against the Washington
Crapitals. Lehtonen's strong finish shouldn't be a surprise. He
has had a successful season with 33 wins, a .919 save percentage and
2.41 GAA.
5. Defensive growth - Ruff and Nill already
knew what they had on defense with Alex
Goligoski and Trevor
Daley. Sergei
Gonchar was a solid veteran addition for the power play and
helped Russian rookie forward Nichushkin feel comfortable. The only
way the Stars were going to compete for a playoff spot this season is
if young defensemen such as Brenden
Dillon, Jordie
Benn and Kevin
Connauton showed significant growth from last season. Dillon and
Benn answered the bell. Connauton is still a work-in-progress, but he
showed glimpses of his future. Dillon, in particular, looks like he
could be a future cornerstone defenseman. He routinely faces the
opposition's top players and still winds up on the plus side. He's
big, rangy and uses his long reach well. He has learned this season
not to take himself out of the play simply for the sake of trying to
make a big hit. He's more deceptive and uses his body more. Benn is
powerful, a defensive defenseman. He has some skill, but his main job
is to protect the front of the net. Ruff trusts him because he plays
a simple, hard game. Benn's ice time climbed late in the season as
the games got tighter, and he didn't disappoint.
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