The Welland Tribune

Oilers appear to have plenty of Hart

Time on the side of voters to consider options for NHL’s top awards

- JOHN WAWROW

The Edmonton Oilers’ resurgence placed Connor McDavid back in the National Hockey League’s MVP conversati­on, along with teammate Leon Draisaitl.

Colorado’s Nathan MacKinnon and Boston’s David Pastrnak made their case, too, during a pandemic-shortened season. And don’t forget Artemi Panarin, a late entry in the discussion after the New York Rangers finished 11th in the Eastern Conference, enough to qualify for the league’s proposed 24team playoff format.

Hard as it may be to remember the last time the puck dropped March 11, the three months that have passed have provided time for awards voters to check the numbers before submitting ballots this week.

“This year, I’ve had more time than ever, honestly, because I haven’t been getting on airplanes,” joked NBC’s Pierre McGuire, who usually spends April through June hopping from one playoff matchup to another.

The only difficulty for McGuire was making projection­s on candidates because a full season wasn’t completed, and teams played an uneven number of games.

McGuire leaned toward favouring McDavid, who won the Hart in 2017, and Draisaitl by calling them “double-trouble” in helping the Oilers reach the playoffs for just the second time in 14 years. Centring separate lines, Draisaitl (43 goals and 110 points) and McDavid (37 goals and 97 points) finished 1-2 in the NHL points race.

That’s no disservice to MacKinnon, who had 35 goals and 93 points to help the Avalanche overcome a rash of injuries and finish second in the Central Division. McGuire was equally impressed with Pastrnak posting career-highs with 48 goals and 95 points despite playing just 70 games.

Though Panarin is worthy of considerat­ion, after finishing with 32 goals and 95 points, the knock on him is the Rangers season would be over if not for the expanded format.

AP hockey writers Larry Lage, John Wawrow and Stephen Whyno make their picks:

Hart Trophy

(MVP)

Draisaitl: “Led the league with a career-high 110 points in just 71 games, giving the Pacific Division-contending Oilers a second star to go along with McDavid.” — Lage.

Draisaitl: “Stepped up in his ability to play in all situations, while taking the emphasis off McDavid on a team that contended for the division title.” — Wawrow.

MacKinnon: “Had 43 more points than his next-closest Colorado teammate (rookie defender Cale Makar) and carried the Avalanche to the second spot in the Western Conference amid injuries to Gabriel Landeskog, Mikko Rantanen and both goaltender­s.” — Whyno.

Vezina Trophy

(top goalie)

Connor Hellebuyck, Winnipeg, (31-21-5, 2.57 goals-against average): “Bounced back from shaky season with a strong showing with an NHL-high six shutouts for the Jets, who have a losing record without him in net.” — Lage.

Hellebuyck: “Went 10-5-1 and allowed 34 goals in starting 16 of the Jets’ final 19 games in helping Winnipeg climb from being tied for ninth in points to seventh in the West.” — Wawrow.

Hellebuyck: “Boston’s Tuukka

Rask has the best numbers but also the stronger team in front of him and a much smaller workload, tipping the balance to Hellebuyck, who won 31 of his 58 games with a .922 save percentage.” — Whyno.

Norris Trophy

(top defenceman)

John Carlson, Washington (15 goals, 60 assists, 75 points, 69 games): “He had more points than any other defenceman, and was the world’s best on the blue line after finishing in the top five in voting the past two years.” — Lage.

Roman Josi, Nashville (16 goals, 49 assists, 65 points in 69 games): “Joined Carlson as the NHL’s only two blueliners to lead their team in points while averaging a minute more of ice time per game and finishing seventh among defenceman with a plus-22 rating.” — Wawrow.

Carlson: “Flip a coin between Carlson and Josi, and the Predators defenceman might’ve taken this had the season gone 82 games. Still, Carlson put up 10 more points and was Washington’s best player the first half of the year.” — Whyno

Calder Memorial Trophy (top rookie)

Quinn Hughes, Vancouver (eight goals, 45 assists, 53 points, 68 games): “Led rookies in points and assists, giving the Canucks a shot to make the playoffs for the first time since 2015.” — Lage.

Cale Makar, Colorado (12 goals, 38 assists, 50 points, 57 games): “The analytics might point to Hughes, but Makar passed the eye test while finishing with three fewer points in 11 fewer games while scoring four game winners (Hughes had two).” — Wawrow.

Hughes: “In a nail-biter against Makar, the Canucks defenceman and brother of Devils No. 1 pick Jack Hughes gets the nod for staying healthy and playing 68 games, skating almost a minute more each game and having a bigger impact on Vancouver.” — Whyno.

Selke Trophy

(top defensive forward) Patrice Bergeron, Boston: “Boston appears to be the NHL’s best team in part because of one of the greatest two-way players. If Bergeron wins the award for a fifth time, he will break the record set by Hall of Famer Bob Gainey.” — Lage.

Sean Couturier, Philadelph­ia: “Led the NHL by winning 59.6 per cent of faceoffs (542 of 909), finished tied for 10th with a plus-21rating while leading Flyers forwards in averaging 19 minutes and 49 seconds in ice time.” — Wawrow.

Couturier: “Slam-dunk first Selke for a guy who led the NHL in faceoff-winning percentage, averaged two minutes a game on the penalty kill and also put up 22 goals and 37 assists.” — Whyno.

Lady Byng Memorial Trophy (sportsmans­hip)

Ryan O’Reilly, St. Louis: “The 2014 Byng winner had just 10 penalty minutes this season while leading the defending Stanley Cup-champion Blues with 61 points and 49 assists.” — Lage.

O’Reilly: “Except for the grizzled beard, there’s nothing dirty about O’Reilly’s play, which nudges him ahead of Carolina’s Jaccob Slavin.” — Wawrow.

Jaccob Slavin, Carolina: “An antiquated award calls for different measures of success, but Slavin is not only gentlemanl­y off the ice, but also on it with only 10 penalty minutes while facing top opposing lines in big minutes.” — Whyno.

Jack Adams Trophy

(top coach)

John Tortorella, Columbus Blue Jackets (33-22-15): “Columbus lost Panarin, Sergei Bobrovsky and Matt Duchene in free agency and still became a playoff contender with a coach who might match Pat Burns’ record total of three Adams awards.” — Lage.

Dave Tippett, Edmonton (3725-9): “Often underrated for his eight-year stint with the talentdepl­eted Coyotes, Tippett showed how capable he was in transformi­ng the previously underachie­ving Oilers into contenders.” — Wawrow.

Tortorella: “After everyone thought the Blue Jackets would struggle from losing so many players in free agency, Columbus had a pile of injuries most of the year and still was a contender because of Tortorella.” — Whyno.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Edmonton Oilers forward Leon Draisaitl, left, with 43 goals and 110 points, appears to be the front-runner for the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player. Teammate Connor McDavid, right, is also in the conversati­on.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Edmonton Oilers forward Leon Draisaitl, left, with 43 goals and 110 points, appears to be the front-runner for the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player. Teammate Connor McDavid, right, is also in the conversati­on.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Washington defenceman John Carlson led the Capitals in scoring with 15 goals and 60 assists in 69 games.
GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Washington defenceman John Carlson led the Capitals in scoring with 15 goals and 60 assists in 69 games.
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck was 31-21-5 with a 2.57 goals-against average this season.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Winnipeg Jets goaltender Connor Hellebuyck was 31-21-5 with a 2.57 goals-against average this season.

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