Las Vegas Review-Journal

After brief offseason, NHL back on ice

Teams open training camp this week

- By Stephen Whyno

Every offseason feels short to Philipp Grubauer, though this one was a doozy.

After playing the most games of his NHL career, the German goaltender saw his season end with Colorado in June, waited for a new contract and, by the end of July, joined the expansion Seattle franchise. He had new Kraken gear before a new place to live.

“Training camp comes around, it’s like, ‘Oh, I guess it’s time to go back now,’ ” Grubauer said. “It was an incredibly busy summer. Still looking for a house, still moving. But we love playing.”

Training camps open around North America this week after the shortest offseason in NHL history. It has been less than 80 days since the Tampa Bay Lightning hoisted the Stanley Cup — their second title in 10 months — and the league is now 32 teams strong, with everyone jumping back on the ice to do it all over again.

“It’s been short, that’s for sure,” Lightning captain Steven Stamkos said. “But I think when you win, you don’t complain about it as much because you won and you’re just kind of celebratin­g all summer.”

The summer of celebratio­n started July 7 when the Lightning wrapped up the final by beating the Montreal Canadiens in Game 5. By the time the calendar flipped to August, Seattle picked players in the expansion draft and added Grubauer in free agency, while Tampa Bay’s roster was hit because of the salary cap.

Coming off a 105-point season in just 56 games, reigning MVP Connor Mcdavid did not waste time getting back on the ice to train for another shot at the playoffs. Honing his game was more important than an extra bit of rest with an eye on Edmonton making a deep run.

“The important thing is being on the ice and skating and feeling good out there, so I try to put a lot of focus on that,” Mcdavid said.

Mcdavid’s Oilers were swept by Winnipeg in the first round, so they had more down time than others.

General manager Chuck Fletcher, who last week said Flyers players were relatively healthy after last season, announced three significan­t injuries Tuesday. Center Kevin Hayes is out 6-8 weeks after abdominal surgery; defenseman Samuel Morin is expected to miss the same amount of time after having surgery on his right knee; and prospect Wade Allison is out indefinite­ly with a sprained right ankle.

While Stamkos and the Lightning could hope that drinking from the Stanley Cup heals their playoff wounds, Montreal players who fell just short refused to wait to get back on the ice to take another shot at it. Nick Suzuki got up to speed quickly because the guys he trains with were already in midsummer form, and fellow Canadiens forward Tyler Toffoli talked himself out of a long break.

“When I got home, I started working out like a week after, where normally I would probably take three weeks-ish before I started getting back into it,” Toffoli said. “I was basically right back in the gym.”

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