The Arizona Republic

Kraken hope to build after poor 1st season

- Tim Booth

SEATTLE – For all the excitement and anticipati­on leading up to the first puck drop, the inaugural season for the Seattle Kraken ended up looking like nearly every other NHL expansion season from the past 30 years.

The comparison­s with the last expansion team, the Golden Knights, were inevitable and the high bar set by Vegas by winning the Western Conference in its first season almost ensured Seattle’s first outing was going be disappoint­ing at some level.

Perhaps not this disappoint­ing. There were injuries and illness – a concern about COVID-19 cases nearly derailed the first game in Vegas. Goalkeepin­g was poor early, the defense was leaky at times and scoring was up and down. The Kraken were regularly competitiv­e and only rarely overmatche­d. But it took the better part of three months for Seattle to successful­ly execute coach Dave Hakstol’s system on a consistent basis.

“Sometimes we look at two periods and we play unbelievab­le, we control the game. And then we have a lapse and everything kind of crumbles a little bit,” goalie Philipp Grubauer said. “So we need to find the structure and the belief in each other and make sure we’re consistent enough next year.”

Seattle finished 27-49-6, including a miserable nine-game losing streak in December and January and a stretch of 11 losses in 12 games in February and March. The playoffs was an afterthoug­ht even before the All-Star break.

But there were some signs of promise in the final six weeks. Seattle went 1012-0 over its final 22 games, and while it wasn’t a winning mark, it gave the Kraken something they feel they can carry into next season.

“I think we’ve showed ourselves and other people that we’re not out of place against a lot of these teams,” defenseman Jamie Oleksiak said. “Some nights we’ve been right in the game, and I think we’ve showed that we could skate with some of the best. And I think we’ve seen progress throughout the year.”

Breakout seasons

The Kraken saw several players have career years when provided an opportunit­y to have a bigger role.

The biggest breakout came from forward Jared McCann, who led Seattle in goals (27), points (50) and was rewarded with a five-year contract extension. Defenseman Vince Dunn had a career-best 28 assists and earned a spot on the power play units. Ryan Donato scored 16 goals and was playing on the top line late in the season. Defensemen Adam Larsson and Carson Soucy each had career bests in goals with eight and 10, respective­ly.

Goalie grab

Goaltendin­g was expected to be one of Seattle’s strengths with the combo of Grubauer and Chris Driedger. But injuries and defensive issues early in the season created weakness that took months to stabilize.

Grubauer’s 3.16 goals-against average was the highest of his career. Driedger wasn’t much better at 2.92.

Seattle could move forward with the pair for next season and hope a year in the system leads to better results. The Kraken could also look to make a move – most likely with Driedger – with promising young goalie Joey Daccord coming off a stellar season for Charlotte in the AHL.

Future glimpse

Seattle got a look at the future with the 10 games Matty Beniers, the first draft pick in franchise history, played at the end of the season. Beniers was an immediate upgrade to Seattle’s attack and showed why he was the No. 2 overall pick in last year’s draft.

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR/AP ?? Kraken forward Jared McCann, left, skates against Avalanche forward J.T. Compher April 20 in Seattle.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR/AP Kraken forward Jared McCann, left, skates against Avalanche forward J.T. Compher April 20 in Seattle.

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