The Columbus Dispatch

Blue Jackets

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“I don’t really read what people write,” said defenseman Zach Werenski. “Obviously, we know what people have said and things like that, but as players you can’t really read into it too much. We know what we have in that room. We’ve shown it a lot throughout the preseason.”

The Blue Jackets played eight preseason games and finished with a respectabl­e 4-3-1 record. They averaged 3.5 goals per game, a big jump from the 2.4 they averaged last season, but also allowed 3.5 per game, an increase from 3.3 last season.

Those were just preseason games, including half played with only a handful of NHL players in the lineup. Predicting anything about the Jackets’ fate in regular season off exhibition games would be foolish, but it shouldn’t be discounted entirely. There’s certainly a chance this team will score more goals than it did the past couple years, along with a chance more goals will be allowed.

After trades moved about half of the former lineup to new teams in the past year, not to mention former John Tortorella assistant Brad Larsen taking over as coach, this iteration of the Blue Jackets comes pre-packaged with a ton of uncertaint­y.

They might surprise by staying competitiv­e within the Metropolit­an Division, despite going into the season with 18-year Cole Sillinger centering the third line, or they might bottom out again.

Either way, the Jackets are going into it with positive vibes.

“We should be more excited about our group,” said Werenski, who was one of three new alternate captains named Tuesday along with new captain Boone Jenner. “We’re a fast team. A lot of young guys. It should be an exciting year for us. We have high expectatio­ns … at least I do. I know Boone does, our leadership group does. We think we can win and do some big things this year, and we’re just excited to get it going.”

Nearly everybody else disagrees. Strongly.

At fivethirtyei­ght.com, Columbus is expected to finish of 28th out of 32 teams and second-to-last in the Metropolit­an Division. The site sees the Blue Jackets finishing with 83 points, a goal differential of minus-27, a 20% chance of making the playoffs and less than 1% chance of winning the Stanley Cup.

And that’s one of the more optimistic outlets. In fact, that’s downright bullish compared to The Hockey News, Nbc.com’s Pro Hockey Talk blog, Dailyfaceo­ff.com, The Athletic and USA Today, which all say the Blue Jackets will finish last in the Metro.

The Los Angeles Times has them second-to-last in their division, 27th in the publicatio­n’s NHL power rankings grouped with teams in a category dubbed, “Wait ‘til Next Decade.”

So, it’s not pretty for the Blue Jackets outside of Columbus and not exactly picturesqu­e outside of their own facilities. But they’re not just going to throw their hands up and succumb to dire prediction­s either.

“We’re always trying to make the playoffs,” Larsen said. “If I ever stood up here and said we’re OK not making the playoffs, we’re in trouble. And if you ask the players, they want to make the playoffs … so people are going to say what they’re going to say and I can’t control the narrative on that. All I can do is try to prepare our team and that’s all we should be focusing on.”

The Arizona Coyotes are up first, a team expected to struggle even more than Columbus, followed by the expansion Seattle Kraken on Saturday. It’s the start of a new season and new era for the Blue Jackets, who see nothing but new opportunit­ies on the horizon. bhedger@dispatch.com @Brianhedge­r

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