Toronto Star

McDavid adds some razzle dazzle to mix

No. 1 pick should aid Oilers; Wild look like the real deal; Hawks deal with distractio­n

- STEPHEN WHYNO THE CANADIAN PRESS

A look at the Western Conference in the predicted order of finish by division (asterisk indicates wild-card playoff teams):

CENTRAL DIVISION

1. Minnesota Wild

Last season: 46-28-8, 100 points, fourth in Central, lost in division final to Chicago

Who’s gone: RW Chris Stewart, LW Matt Cooke, F Kyle Brodziak

Who’s new: D Mike Reilly Outlook: The Wild’s pace after acquiring goaltender Devan Dubnyk midway through last season portends some great things to come. Minnesota has a deep blue line from Ryan Suter down.

2. Chicago Blackhawks

Last season: 48-28-6, 102 points, third in Central, won Stanley Cup

Who’s gone: LW Brandon Saad, F Patrick Sharp, D Johnny Oduya, G Antti Raanta, C Antoine Vermette, RW Kris Versteeg, LW Daniel Carcillo, C Joakim Nordstrom, D Kimmo Timonen

Who’s new: C Artem Anisimov, D Trevor Daley, RW Marko Dano, LW Artemi Panarin, F Viktor Tikhonov

Outlook: The Patrick Kane sexual assault investigat­ion must unfold off the ice. On the ice, the Blackhawks are a little like they were in 2010-11: in the process of mixing in new players, something that could take time — even a season — to happen.

3. St. Louis Blues Last season: 51-24-7, 109 points, first in Central, lost in division semifinal to Minnesota

Who’s gone: RW T.J. Oshie, D Barret

Jackman

Who’s new: RW Troy Brouwer, F Kyle Brodziak

Outlook: The Blues hope some small tweaks make a major difference come playoff time.

4. Winnipeg Jets* Last season: 43-26-13, 99 points, fifth

in Central

Who’s gone: F Michael Frolik, LW Jiri Tlusty, RW Lee Stempniak, C Jim Slater

Who’s new: F Alexander Burmistrov, RW Nikolaj Ehlers, C Andrew Copp, F Matt Fraser

Outlook: The Jets at one point last season were missing half of their regular defence and still made the playoffs. Throw out a first-round sweep because of even more injuries and some notable departures when considerin­g this season, because Winnipeg will be just as good thanks to coach Paul Maurice.

5. Dallas Stars* Last season: 41-31-10, 92 points, sixth

in Central

Who’s gone: D Trevor Daley, LW Ryan Garbutt, G Jhonas Enroth

Who’s new: F Patrick Sharp, D Johnny Oduya, G Antti Niemi

Outlook: The return of young Valeri Nichushkin and the additions of Sharp and Oduya should make the Stars take the next step, according to GM Jim Nill.

6. Nashville Predators

Last season: 47-25-10,104 points, second in Central, lost in division semi-

final to Chicago

Who’s gone: F Matt Cullen, LW Taylor Beck, D Cody Franson, F Mike Santorelli

Who’s new: F Cody Hodgson, D Barret Jackman, RW Steve Moses

Outlook: The Peter Laviolette effect happened to the Predators as it did to the coach’s previous NHL teams, but the Central Division is probably the deepest in hockey.

7. Colorado Avalanche

Last season: 39-31-12, 90 points, seventh in Central, missed playoffs

Who’s gone: C Ryan O’Reilly, D Jan Hejda, F Daniel Briere

Who’s new: D Francois Beauchemin, C Carl Soderberg, D Nikita Zadorov, CMikhail Grigorenko, LW Blake Comeau

Outlook: The building blocks are there for future winning seasons, most notably Nathan MacKinnon and captain Gabriel Landeskog.

PACIFIC DIVISION

1. Anaheim Ducks Last season: 51-24-7, 109 points, first

in Pacific, lost in conference final to Chicago

Who’s gone: D Francois Beauchemin, LW Matt Beleskey, C Kyle Palmieri, LW Tomas Fleischman­n, RW Emerson Etem, D James Wisniewski

Who’s new: LW Carl Hagelin, D Kevin Bieksa, G Anton Khudobin, F Mike Santorelli, RW Chris Stewart, C Shawn Horcoff

Outlook: Some teams give and take in the off-season, while the Ducks just seem to get better and deeper. 2. Calgary Flames

Last season: 45-30-7, 97 points, third in Pacific, lost in division final to Anaheim Who’s gone: D Raphael Diaz Who’s new: D Dougie Hamilton, F Michael Frolik

Outlook: A healthy Mark Giordano, even with T.J. Brodie out early, plus Hamilton immediatel­y makes Calgary better. Coach of the year Bob Hartley got so much out of the young Flames last season, and he’ll do even more with bigger expectatio­ns.

3. Los Angeles Kings

Last season: 40-27-15, 95 points, fourth in Pacific, missed playoffs

Who’s gone: D Slava Voynov, RW Justin Williams, C Mike Richards, C Jarret Stoll, D Robyn Regehr, G Martin Jones, D Andrej Sekera

Who’s new: LW Milan Lucic, D Christian Ehrhoff

Outlook: There’s too much talent on the roster to think two-time Stanley Cup-champion Los Angeles will miss the playoffs for a second straight season.

4. San Jose Sharks

Last season: 40-33-9, 89 points, fifth in Pacific, missed playoffs

Who’s gone: G Antti Niemi, D Matt Irwin

Who’s new: D Paul Martin, G Martin Jones, RW Joel Ward

Outlook: The Sharks went into youth mode and now seem to be more concentrat­ed on winning in the present. That’s a good thing because Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau aren’t getting any younger.

5. Edmonton Oilers

Last season: 24-44-14, 62 points, sixth in Pacific, missed playoffs

Who’s gone: G Viktor Fasth, C Derek Roy, C Boyd Gordon

Who’s new: C Connor McDavid, D Andrej Sekera, G Cam Talbot, D Darnell Nurse, D Griffin Reinhart, D Erik Gryba, LW Lauri Korpikoski

Outlook: McDavid ushers in a new era of Oilers hockey, even if it takes a year or two to come together. This is abetter team all around, from the net out, and coach Todd McLellan will make sure the results are substantia­lly better than last season.

6. Arizona Coyotes

Last season: 24-50-8, 56 points, seventh in Pacific, missed playoffs

Who’s gone: F Sam Gagner, LW Martin Erat, LW Lauri Korpikoski, F Mark Arcobello, D John Moore

Who’s new: C Max Domi, LW Anthony Duclair, RW Steve Downie, C Antoine Vermette, G Anders Lindback, DZbynek Michalek, D Stefan Elliott, D Nicklas Grossmann, C Boyd Gordon

Outlook: Arizona won’t suddenly go from one of the worst teams in the NHL to a playoff contender, but the infusion of talent to this roster, including veterans and prospects, will help.

7. Vancouver Canucks

Last season: 48-29-5, 101 points, second in Pacific, lost in division semifinal to Calgary

Who’s gone: D Kevin Bieksa, C Nick Bonino, G Eddie Lack, F Shawn Matthias, RW Zack Kassian

Who’s new: C Brandon Sutter, D Matt Bartkowski, LW Brandon Prust

Outlook: The Canucks shook off one missed playoff appearance under John Tortorella and got back last year, but this is indeed a team in transition.

 ?? STRINGER/CANADA/REUTERS ?? No. 1 draft choice Connor McDavid will certainly help the Oilers on their climb back to respectabi­lity this season.
STRINGER/CANADA/REUTERS No. 1 draft choice Connor McDavid will certainly help the Oilers on their climb back to respectabi­lity this season.

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