Las Vegas Review-Journal

Adding Tavares in offseason puts spotlight on Maple Leafs

Along with Matthews, Toronto has plenty of offensive punch

- By Stephen Whyno The Associated Press

It seems like no one in the Eastern Conference wants to be considered the team to beat.

Taylor Hall relishes that his New

Jersey Devils were counted out last year before making the playoffs. Alex Ovechkin would love for all the Washington Capitals’ doubters to chime in again.

“Last year, nobody believe in us and we won the Cup,” Ovechkin said. “I hope you guys don’t believe in us again.”

There’s more outside belief in the Tampa Bay Lightning, Toronto Maple Leafs and, of course, Sidney Crosby’s Pittsburgh Penguins to come out of the East than New Jersey taking another step forward or Washington going back to the Stanley Cup Final and repeating. Perhaps that’s because the Eastern Conference is full of a mix of new challenger­s like Toronto — which added prized center John Tavares in free agency — and the familiar cast of contenders from Pittsburgh to Boston to Tampa Bay.

After back-to-back losses in the first round, Toronto made itself an instant favorite by signing Tavares. That’s fine with the Leafs’ other star center, Auston Matthews.

“Our goal is obviously to make it to the Cup finals,” Matthews said. “The expectatio­ns for us this year (after) signing John, I think that’s a good thing for our team because we have higher expectatio­ns for ourselves as well. Obviously, from the outside looking in, everybody’s looking at us signing him as we’re the team to beat. But we haven’t really accomplish­ed much yet.”

It took a decade of big expectatio­ns coming off the Capitals for them to win it all. They earned it too, coming back from an 0-2 first-round deficit to beat Columbus and going through Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay to reach the final.

The path isn’t any easier this year.

The Lightning are smack dab in the middle of perhaps their best window to win it all and have the same team back after winning the Atlantic Division. The Bruins could be dangerous once center Patrice Bergeron and defensemen Torey Krug and Brandon Carlo are healthy.

Bergeron said “the future is bright for the Bruins,” with a boatload of young talent still getting used to the NHL. The present is pretty good, too.

“This year we’re praying for a good bit of health for everyone,” Boston defenseman Charlie Mcavoy said. “When we have a healthy team, I think that we’re up there for one of the most competitiv­e teams in the league.”

Who’s out

Commission­er Gary Bettman takes pride in the turnover of playoff teams from year to year as a sign of competitiv­e balance. Three of the eight playoff teams in the East last year missed in 2016-17. Will there be more churn this time around?

It would be stunning if Washington, Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, Boston, Toronto, Philadelph­ia, Columbus and New Jersey all made it back. The Devils look like a strong candidate, but then again, they weren’t picked by anyone to be this good this quickly.

Columbus could be the largest mys- tery. The future is cloudy for winger Artemi Panarin and two-time Vezina Trophy winning goalie Sergei Bobrovsky; the Blue Jackets may have to trade one or both of them by the deadline.

Who’s in

After losing 28 of their first 47 games last season, the Panthers went 25-8-2 and missed the playoffs by one point. With newly minted captain Aleksander Barkov a year more experience­d and in the second season under coach

Bob Boughner, Florida is a good bet to return to the postseason and push someone else out.

“We showed it last year that we can beat anybody whenever we’re playing our game,” forward Vincent Trocheck said. “The second half of the season, we had the best record in the league, and that wasn’t just a fluke.”

New guys

Whether it’s St. Louis loading up on centers, San Jose trading for Erik Karlsson or Los Angeles signing Ilya Kovalchuk, a lot of talent moved West. Perhaps the East’s largest acquisitio­n was Toronto landing Tavares in free agency.

“He’s a top-10 player in the world, he’s obviously accomplish­ed a lot in his career,” Matthews said. “And he’s looking to accomplish the big one. He feels like there’s a good opportunit­y with us.”

The Penguins added defenseman

Jack Johnson, and the Flyers brought back winger James van Riemsdyk to speed up general manager Ron Hextall’s long-term building process.

“He’s patient, but at the same time, we got JVR,” Philadelph­ia captain Claude Giroux said of his GM. “It’s not that patient.”

 ?? Frank Gunn ?? The Associated Press High-scoring center John Tavares left the New York Islanders after nine seasons to sign with his hometown Maple Leafs.
Frank Gunn The Associated Press High-scoring center John Tavares left the New York Islanders after nine seasons to sign with his hometown Maple Leafs.

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