After commissioner Gary Bettman announced Tuesday that the NHL is considering a temporary realignment for the upcoming season, theScore decided to create three realignment options the league could explore.
With Canada's 14-day quarantine rules still in effect (despite an ongoing pilot project), it's not surprising that Bettman hinted an all-Canadian division may be inevitable in 2020-21. But how would that affect the rest of the NHL?
There are a few important things to keep in mind here. Bettman specifically said having teams travel "from Florida to California may not make sense," so we've eliminated inter-conference regular-season games. These realignment proposals are designed to align time zones and reduce travel as much as possible - even if teams are playing in short-term hubs for 10-12 days at a time, as Bettman revealed.
For the purposes of this exercise, we assumed the league will stage a 48-game regular season, which is reportedly the shortest campaign it's considering. Bettman also said he hopes to have the playoffs finished before July, so anything more than 48 games seems challenging with a Jan. 1 target start date. The NHL ran a 48-game season during the lockout-shortened 2012-13 campaign, so there's familiarity.
Here are our three realignment options:
4 divisions
East
South Central
West
Canada
Boston
Carolina
Anaheim
Calgary
Buffalo
Chicago
Arizona
Edmonton
New Jersey
Columbus
Colorado
Montreal
NY Islanders
Detroit
Dallas
Ottawa
NY Rangers
Florida
Los Angeles
Toronto
Philadelphia
St. Louis
Minnesota
Vancouver
Pittsburgh
Nashville
San Jose
Winnipeg
Washington
Tampa Bay
Vegas
U.S. teams play each divisional opponent six-to-seven times. The top four teams in each division make the playoffs.
Canadian teams play each divisional opponent eight times. The top four teams make the playoffs.
The East and West divisions are nicely split geographically, but the South Central is a bit of a mishmash. It features three teams on Central Time - the Blackhawks, Predators, and Blues - and five on Eastern Time.
The only competitive imbalance comes in the West division, where at least one of the Ducks, Coyotes, Kings, Wild, and Sharks would make the playoffs. All five of those clubs finished in the bottom third of the league in points percentage last season.
5 divisions
Atlantic
Metro
Central
Pacific
Canada
Boston
New Jersey
Chicago
Anaheim
Calgary
Buffalo
NY Islanders
Dallas
Arizona
Edmonton
Carolina
NY Rangers
Detroit
Colorado
Montreal
Columbus
Pittsburgh
Minnesota
Los Angeles
Ottawa
Florida
Philadelphia
Nashville
San Jose
Toronto
Tampa Bay
Washington
St. Louis
Vegas
Vancouver
Winnipeg
U.S. teams play each divisional opponent 9-10 times. The top three teams in each division make the playoffs.
Canadian teams play each divisional opponent eight times. The top four teams make the playoffs.
This configuration offers a far better geographic split than the four-division option. The Red Wings draw the short straw as the only team in the Central Division on Eastern Time, with the other five using Central Time. Detroit could easily switch with the Blue Jackets, though, as both teams were in the Western Conference before the league realigned for the 2013-14 campaign.
The most glaring competitive imbalance once again comes in the western-most division - the Pacific. The Avalanche and Golden Knights are elite, but the other four teams are mediocre at best.
3 conferences, 8 divisions
Eastern Conference
Northeast
Metro
Southeast
Buffalo
New Jersey
Carolina
Boston
NY Islanders
Columbus
Pittsburgh
NY Rangers
Florida
Washington
Philadelphia
Tampa Bay
Teams play divisional opponents eight times each and out-of-division opponents three times each. Division winners clinch playoff spots, while the remaining top three teams in the conference earn wild-card spots.
Western Conference
Central
Mid-West
Pacific
Chicago
Arizona
Anaheim
Detroit
Colorado
Los Angeles
Nashville
Dallas
San Jose
St. Louis
Minnesota
Vegas
Teams play divisional opponents eight times each and out-of-division opponents three times each. Division winners clinch playoff spots, while the remaining top three teams in the conference earn wild-card spots.
Canadian Conference
Canada East
Canada West
Montreal
Calgary
Ottawa
Edmonton
Toronto
Vancouver
Winnipeg
Canada East teams play divisional opponents 12 times each and Canada West clubs six times each.
Canada West teams play divisional opponents 10 times each and Canada East clubs six times each.
Division winners clinch playoff spots, while the remaining top two teams in the conference earn wild-card spots.
An eight-division system works for the NFL, so why not use it in the NHL for a season? This would seemingly be the fairest option, as it features the most non-divisional games and doesn't favor weak divisions as heavily as the other proposals.
But more non-divisional games could mean more travel, and that's something the NHL likely doesn't want. This specific alignment would also be even more unfair for the Red Wings: Detroit would be the only team playing opponents more than two time zones away.
Welcome to the theScore's NHL logo countdown. This list examines logos that date back to the inception of the Original Six and includes the main emblem for all 32 current teams, 11 clubs that moved or changed their name, and seven whose logo has undergone a significant redesign. Only primary ones were considered.
The five-part series concludes with the top 10 on Friday. Let's continue with Nos. 40-31.
40. New York Islanders (1995-97)
There's no in-between for the Islanders' "Highliner" era: You're either fully on board with the nostalgia or you can't shake the feeling of staring at a box of fish sticks. Regardless of where you stand, the incorporation of teal deserves props for at least being creative.
39. Atlanta Flames
For whatever reason, Atlanta's flaming "A" doesn't quite work as well as Calgary's flaming "C." The colors definitely pop, but the design lacks inspiration and doesn't hold up when it's not crested on a jersey.
38. Carolina Hurricanes
Realistically, how many ways can a hurricane be artistically depicted? Carolina would likely tell you that options are limited, as the club has rocked this underwhelming swirly design as its primary crest since relocating from Hartford in the late '90s.
37. Florida Panthers
The Panthers downgraded when they switched to this logo for the 2016-17 season. The old one was much more intimidating and ferocious.
36. Arizona Coyotes
The desert colors are slick, but the logo itself is literally just a Coyote head. For an organization that used to own one of the most artistic and unique looks in hockey, the Coyotes' modern crest is very dull.
35. Nashville Predators
There are all sorts of animal predators to choose from, so why a saber-toothed tiger? Apparently, a fang and foreleg bone of one of these prehistoric beasts was found in a cave just below the entrance of Nashville's old First American Center 26 years before the team's unveiling in September 1997. The logo is certainly fierce-looking, but it's somewhat lacking in creativity.
34. Atlanta Thrashers
The brown thrasher is the state bird of Georgia and was the inspiration behind Atlanta's team name and logo. The bird is described as aggressive and defensive, an identity the Thrashers surely hoped to replicate.
33. New York Islanders
The Islanders' original logo is easily better than the aforementioned Highliner one. The map of Nassau and Suffolk counties is a nice touch behind the New York-sized "NY," and incorporating a stick and puck is always a nice touch.
32. Vancouver Canucks
The orca breaching out of the water is a tribute to British Columbia's West Coast heritage, and presenting it as a "C" ties things together very nicely. The contrasting shades of blue also work well, and while it's not the best logo the organization has dawned, the Canucks don't have to worry about rebranding for the foreseeable future.
31. Los Angeles Kings (1967-75)
The Kings seem unlikely to shift away from their black and silver color scheme anytime soon, but we love the purple and gold. It's far more exciting and unique. This team logo, which never appeared on the front of a jersey, ranks 10 spots higher than Los Angeles' current one. Perhaps it will return in an alternate uniform someday.
The Boston Bruins are "full steam ahead" with netminder Tuukka Rask for the upcoming campaign, according to head coach Bruce Cassidy.
"I think everything that happened in the bubble has been addressed, dealt with," Cassidy said Wednesday, according to NHL.com's Amalie Benjamin. "We're moving on, getting ready to win next year. That includes our goaltender."
Rask opted out of the league's return in August following Game 2 against the Carolina Hurricanes to tend to a family emergency. The Finnish goaltender received support from the organization and his teammates after making the decision.
Cassidy said Rask's absence affected the team mentally before the Tampa Bay Lightning eliminated the Bruins in five games. The 55-year-old bench boss believes the 2020 Vezina Trophy finalist is excited to get back and compete.
"... I think he just wants to get back in the net and play hockey and play well and give us a chance to win," Cassidy said.
"Probably nobody more excited on our team to (be) getting back in there," he added. "I would assume that Tuukka would sort of say 'hey, I'm still the goalie I was last year and I'm ready to go. Family's good, I'm good. Everyone's in a good place. Let's play hockey.'"
Rask is entering the final year of his current deal and will become an unrestricted free agent after the season. The 33-year-old has spent all 13 campaigns of his career with the Bruins, and Rask said in October he wouldn't want to play anywhere else.
The NHL is getting creative in exploring its options for the 2020-21 season.
While the league is looking for ways to have teams play in their own buildings, it's also discussed using short-term hubs and temporarily realigning the divisions to reduce travel amid the coronavirus pandemic, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said Tuesday.
"You'll play for 10-12 days," Bettman said of the potential hub system, according to NHL.com's Nicholas J. Cotsonika. "You'll play a bunch of games without traveling. You'll go back, go home for a week, be with your family. We'll have our testing protocols and all the other things you need.
"It's not going to be quite as effective as a bubble, but we think we can, if we go this route, minimize the risks to the extent practical and sensible. And so that's one of the things that we're talking about."
With the Canada-United States border closed to nonessential travel, a division including all the Canadian teams is another possible adjustment.
"Obviously, we're not going to move all seven Canadian franchises south of the 49th parallel, and so we have to look at alternative ways to play," Bettman said.
He added, "As it relates to the travel issue, which is obviously the great unknown, we may have to temporarily realign to deal with geography, and that may make sense, because having some of our teams travel from Florida to California may not make sense."
The NHL is targeting Jan. 1 as the start date for the 2020-21 campaign and reportedly won't consider playing less than a 48-game season. Bettman, who previously said he'd prefer to avoid playing in the summer, says he's focused on getting back to the league's usual calendar.
"While we're in the middle of working on our return to play as well, which I hope to have put to bed soon, our goal is to get back to a normal schedule starting (next) fall and being done before July on a longer-term basis," Bettman said. "That is the goal."
The NHL and NHLPA each need to agree upon any potential plan as they did for the 2020 return to play.
The two sides have stayed in touch over the offseason and the lack of significant progress on a new agreement is nothing to be concerned over, Drance and Dhaliwal add.
The 2020-21 campaign will be the final season of Pettersson's entry-level contract and he's eligible for an extension at any point. However, the Canucks appear willing to take their time on a new pact for the 21-year-old as they navigate through the ramifications of a flat salary cap for the foreseeable future.
General manager Jim Benning said earlier in November that the pandemic is currently affecting the Canucks' financial flexibility when it comes to awarding head coach Travis Green a contract extension.
Vancouver is projected to have over $24 million in salary cap space before the 2021-22 season, and the club will also need to ink defenseman Quinn Hughes to a new deal by then.
Pettersson's next deal could easily reach over $10 million per season, with the left-handed shooter averaging 0.92 points per game across his first two seasons. The young Swedish sniper, who has a Calder Trophy on his resume, also registered 18 points in 17 games this past summer in his first taste of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
This is the second half of a two-part series ranking all 31 NHL teams by tiers for the 2020-21 season. Part 1, which addresses the bottom 14 teams, was published Monday.
This is an annual exercise conducted after the dust has settled on the draft and free agency. The tiers are based on projections for the 2020-21 season only, not the long-term trajectories of each franchise. Lastly, keep in mind the timing. We're all awaiting word on the 2020-21 NHL season, which means there's runway for teams before rosters need to be finalized.
Moderately dangerous (4th tier)
Possible playoff teams unlikely to go on deep run
Calgary Flames
"Solid" is the word that comes to mind regarding the 2020-21 Flames. They're a high-floor team (make the playoffs, probably?) whose ceiling is limited (win a round or two, at best?). Landing stud goalie Jacob Markstrom in free agency was massive; he'll be a huge help over the short and long terms. Otherwise, the roster is unexceptional: above-average top-six forwards, above-average top-four defense, decent but unspectacular depth at both positions. The playoff history of this team during Johnny Gaudreau's six-year tenure (two total series wins) doesn't inspire a ton of confidence. The Flames fit - solidly - into the fourth tier.
Trendline: Stuck in middle
2019
2018
Previous tiers
3rd
4th
Columbus Blue Jackets
Anybody with half a hockey brain could have guessed what Columbus general manager Jarmo Kekalainen would attempt to do this offseason: Find. More. Goals. The John Tortorella-coached squad is routinely one of the top defensive outfits in the NHL, but it finished last season tied for 27th in team offense. Acquiring free-wheeling playmaker Max Domi should help the cause. Domi will find a home down the middle behind young star Pierre-Luc Dubois - who's currently unsigned - while 37-year-old former Minnesota Wild captain Mikko Koivu, added on a cheap one-year deal, will fill the third-line center role.
Many wonder if Kekalainen has more maneuvers up his sleeve, seeing as Gustav Nyquist is scheduled to miss a big chunk of 2020-21 because of shoulder surgery. Perhaps the Blue Jackets put the full-court press on free-agent winger Mike Hoffman to supplement the attack. They need finishers. Some food for thought: What should we expect from the Joonas Korpisalo-Elvis Merzlikins goalie duo?
Trendline: Rounding out
2019
2018
Previous tiers
6th
3rd
Vancouver Canucks
The Canucks have taken a small step in the wrong direction. After a breakout year filled with thrilling storylines and two playoff series wins, their starting goalie (Markstrom), a top-six winger (Tyler Toffoli), and two everyday defensemen (Chris Tanev, Troy Stecher) left via free agency. Nate Schmidt and Braden Holtby arrived to more or less replace Tanev and Markstrom. Looking strictly through a 2020-21 lens, the Canucks are worse - albeit by a small margin.
Assuming the upward trajectory continues for Elias Pettersson, Bo Horvat, J.T. Miller, and Quinn Hughes, the end product might actually look pretty close to the 2019-20 Canucks: a team very much in the hunt for a playoff spot. That description surely isn't what Vancouver fans hoped for following a transformative and exciting season, but it is the reality of the situation.
Trendline: Cautious optimism
2019
2018
Previous tiers
6th
8th
Montreal Canadiens
It's easy to like the Canadiens' offseason. Aside from the term of the contract handed out to power forward Josh Anderson, all of GM Marc Bergevin's transactions could be filed under "astute." Anderson, exchanged for Domi in a swap of two 20-something forwards, and Toffoli, a medium-sized free-agent splash, shore up the top six. Former Hurricane Joel Edmundson and Russian prospect Alexander Romanov add some oomph to the back end. Jake Allen, acquired via trade from the Blues, is an excellent backup for Carey Price.
The flurry of activity comes after a confidence-building showing in the bubbled postseason, where youngsters Nick Suzuki and Jesperi Kotkaniemi impressed. The Habs are suddenly in the mix for the best team in Canada. They are, unquestionably, the most fascinating of those seven clubs.
Trendline: Gearing up
2019
2018
Previous tiers
5th
8th
New York Islanders
In the Barry Trotz-Lou Lamoriello era, the Islanders have made the playoffs both years and won four series, earning a trip to the conference finals in the 24-team bubbled postseason. There's little reason to expect anything different in 2020-21. Trotz's style of play - keep opponents' shots to the outside, cycle the hell out of the puck in the offensive zone - perfectly suitsthe mentality of Lamoriello's stable of mostly blue-collar players. Losing top-four defenseman Devon Toews in a salary-dump trade stings, but it's not the end of the world. Meanwhile, star center Mat Barzal, a potential offer-sheet target, will eventually re-sign. The train keeps chugging in New York.
Trendline: Predictably good
2019
2018
Previous tiers
4th
7th
Philadelphia Flyers
As usual, the Flyers are hard to nail down. Based on last year's success in the regular season and their current roster, it wouldn't be crazy to suggest they're a top 10 team in the NHL. But Philadelphia is definitely in the bottom half of that list, perhaps even 10th, which means its chances of winning a Cup aren't overly high.
It feels like this team is one significant piece - even two - away from jumping from the fourth tier to the third, though that upgradecould still happen this offseason or at the trade deadline. Not helping matters: veteran defenseman Matt Niskanen's surprising retirement. GM Chuck Fletcher picked up Erik Gustafsson in response, but the offensively inclined blue-liner probably doesn't fully compensate for the loss of Niskanen.
Trendline: Back and forth
2019
2018
Previous tiers
5th
4th
Edmonton Oilers
It's going to come together for the Oilers someday … right? 2020-21 will be Connor McDavid's sixth year in the NHL, and his team - beyond superstar teammate Leon Draisaitl and a few other pieces - is once again middling. So once again, it's difficult to envision a deep playoff run for Edmonton, barring some miraculous performances from McDavid and Draisaitl. Top-pairing defenseman Oscar Klefbom is expected to miss most, if not all, of next season because of his chronic shoulder injury.
GM Ken Holland reeled in fresh faces Kyle Turris, Dominik Kahun, and Tyson Barrie on short-term deals. Settling for a Mikko Koskinen-Mike Smith duo in net, however, is a tough pill to swallow for the fan base.
Trendline: Opportunities missed
2019
2018
Previous tiers
5th
5th
Scary at full potential (3rd tier)
Cup win not out of question, though a lot must fall into place
Pittsburgh Penguins
God bless Jim Rutherford. No GM provides fodder for fans and media as consistently as Rutherford, who obtained forwards Kasperi Kapanen, Colton Sceviour, Mark Jankowski, and Evan Rodrigues and defensemen Michael Matheson and Cody Ceci this offseason. Gone are Matt Murray, Patric Hornqvist, Patrick Marleau, Dominik Simon, Justin Schultz, and Jack Johnson. From an aggregate talent standpoint, it's probably a wash.
That's been the Penguins' approach for a few years: Squeeze every last ounce out of the tail end of the Sidney Crosby-Evgeni Malkin era by trying out new peripheral pieces every season. This team will make the playoffs for the 15th straight time. If 2019-20 All-Star Tristan Jarry can hold down the fort as the No. 1 goalie, look out. The long offseason will benefit Crosby, 33, Malkin, 34, and running mate Kris Letang, 33, while the early exit from the bubble should add extra fuel to the fire.
Trendline: Ever-threatening
2019
2018
Previous tiers
3rd
2nd
Toronto Maple Leafs
GM Kyle Dubas made his team wiser, nastier, and bigger by bringing in Joe Thornton, Wayne Simmonds, and Zach Bogosian this offseason. According to Dubas' critics, these moves show growth because the Leafs have been "too easy to play against" for the past few years. Toronto also signed longtime Flames defenseman T.J. Brodie, who undoubtedly upgrades the blue line. Meanwhile, homegrown wingers Kapanen and Andreas Johnsson were shipped out of town while Joey Anderson, Jimmy Vesey, and Travis Boyd were welcomed into the fold.
The revamped depth chart isn't markedly better or worse - it's just a little different. Make no mistake, the Auston Matthews-led crew will win plenty of regular-season games in 2020-21. The success or failure of this group ultimately depends on its performance in the playoffs, which is why Toronto earns a third-tier spot in these rankings. The Maple Leafs have consistently been better on paper than in the games. Time to flip the script.
Trendline: High-ceiling underachiever
2019
2018
Previous tiers
2nd
2nd
St. Louis Blues
The Blues would have landed in the second tier if they had re-signed Alex Pietrangelo, weren't in a bind up front with Vladimir Tarasenko out until at least February after his third shoulder surgery in as many years, and had some semblance of salary-cap flexibility. They're a deep, experienced hockey team only two seasons removed from winning the Cup, but they're in a few pickles. The optimistic spin: Torey Krug's presence lessens the Pietrangelo hit and a breakout season from Robert Thomas could go a long way in helping to replace Tarasenko's production. In terms of projecting regular season and playoff success, St. Louis looks to be among the best of this tier.
Trendline: Stubborn A-lister
2019
2018
Previous tiers
2nd
3rd
Boston Bruins
It feels like 2020-21 could be the beginning of the end for this iteration of the Bruins. Krug is gone, Zdeno Chara might retire, Tuukka Rask and David Krejci are both entering the final year of their contracts, and Patrice Bergeron turned 35 in July. That said, the 2019-20 Presidents' Trophy winner is still a force to be reckoned with. Signing play-driving forward Craig Smith at $3.1 million per season for three years ranks as one of the smartest moves of the offseason. Although Brad Marchand and David Pastrnak are both coming off surgeries, they're world-class players. Rask remains an upper-echelon goalie, and Charlie McAvoy is underrated and only 22. So this team can't be counted out of Cup contention. Not yet, anyway.
Trendline: Veteran savvy
2019
2018
Previous tiers
2nd
2nd
Carolina Hurricanes
The Hurricanes have been relatively inactive this offseason - and that's totally fine because Carolina has been knocking on the door for a while. The team controls the flow of play most nights and quietly boasts deep groups at forward and on defense. As for star power, Dougie Hamilton and Jaccob Slavin are two of the best blue-liners in the game; Sebastian Aho is an elite top-line center; and Andrei Svechnikov, who will surely score 50 goals one day, is due to level up again. Jordan Staal and Vincent Trocheck fill out the second and third center roles nicely, while Jesper Fast, who signed a three-year deal as a free agent, is a reasonable replacement for retiring longtime Cane Justin Williams.
The roster's only true weakness is in goal; barring a trade, Petr Mrazek and James Reimer will share the workload. If this club was located in Canada and not the Sun Belt, it'd be due for more buzz. The Hurricanes are a bit of a sleeping giant in the Eastern Conference.
Trendline: About to burst
2019
2018
Previous tiers
4th
6th
Washington Capitals
The Capitals are well-known at this point. Most of the long-term core is locked up for a few more years and GM Brian MacLellan hasn't performed any major surgery around the edges this offseason. Sure, Henrik Lundqvist arriving as the wily backup to Ilya Samsonov is cool, and Justin Schultz subbing in for Radko Gudas on the back end is interesting. Brenden Dillon's extension is team-friendly. But that's it, in part because the 2018 Cup champions have so much money tied up in their top guys.
The sticky thing about Washington is its lackluster showing in the bubbled postseason, and now Alex Ovechkin - one of the lone playoff standouts - is in the final season of his 13-year deal. Calling 2020-21 a crossroads season might be a tad dramatic, but the coming campaign does have a certain urgency. Well-respected coach Peter Laviolette provides a fresh voice behind the bench, so there should be equal amounts of motivation and pressure.
Trendline: Always contending
2019
2018
Previous tiers
3rd
2nd
Dallas Stars
The Stars are running back the same crew that captured the Western Conference title, though top center Tyler Seguin and starting goalie Ben Bishop will be sidelined until late March or early April as they recover from offseason surgeries. Let's be clear: Dallas' players, along with GM Jim Nill and head coach Rick Bowness, deserve full marks for what they accomplished in the bubbled postseason. Hit by the injury bug, they gutted out 14 playoff wins before running out of gas against Tampa Bay. Nobody can take away those accomplishments. But let's be clear again: It was a perfect storm for the Stars. They're a very good NHL team, but not a great one, so repeating or improving on their playoff feats is a daunting task in 2020-21.
Trendline: Consistent dark horse
2019
2018
Previous tiers
3rd
5th
Secondary Cup favorite (2nd tier)
Elite, battle-tested team with a few minor concerns
Vegas Golden Knights
The Golden Knights landed the biggest fish in free agency by inking Pietrangelo to a seven-year, $61.6-million deal. He's an elite blue-liner fresh off a Norris Trophy-caliber season. However, having to ship out top-four defenseman Schmidt and top-six center Paul Stastny to make room for Pietrangelo was suboptimal, and that's fundamentally why Vegas landed in its own tier below Tampa and Colorado.
Coach Pete DeBoer doesn't have a proven second-line center right now, though there is a chance rookie Cody Glass slides into that role. Shea Theodore and Marc-Andre Fleury are other 2020-21 X-factors. How much growth is left in Theodore, the breakout star of the bubbled postseason? How will Fleury perform as the 1B goalie to 1A Robin Lehner? Vegas is one of those rare teams constructed to win both in the regular season and the playoffs, and management is clearly all-in.
Trendline: Legit challengers
2019
2018
Previous tiers
3rd
3rd
Heavy Cup favorites (1st tier)
Star-studded, deep - simply a cut above the rest
Colorado Avalanche
GM Joe Sakic has been inching toward this moment since he was hired in 2014. Through masterful drafting, developing, and acquiring, the Nathan MacKinnon Avalanche have evolved into legitimate Stanley Cup favorites. Like the Lightning, Colorado's roster offers a fantastic mix of high-end talent (MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen, Gabriel Landeskog, Cale Makar) and dependable depth (Nazem Kadri, Brandon Saad, Devon Toews, Samuel Girard, etc.). The only real question mark for the Avs is in the crease, where Philipp Grubauer returns as the starter. But it could end up a moot point since Colorado possesses the firepower to dominate in every other facet of the game most nights.
Trendline: Apex reached
2019
2018
Previous tiers
4th
6th
Tampa Bay Lightning
It's tempting to look at the Lightning's salary-cap conundrum and conclude the reigning champions will regress in 2020-21. Could one or two of Tyler Johnson, Alex Killorn, Yanni Gourde, and Ondrej Palat be absent from coach Jon Cooper's lineup card on opening night? It sure seems likely given the crunch that GM Julien BriseBois is dealing with. But zoom out for a moment and it's reasonable to suggest this juggernaut can withstand a notable roster hit; the Lightning did win the Cup with Steven Stamkos sidelined for all but five playoff shifts. Tampa Bay is built to repeat, with any value lost in the offseason made up by improvements from Brayden Point, Anthony Cirelli, Mikhail Sergachev, and Erik Cernak, four players in their early 20s who still have plenty of room to grow.