USA TODAY International Edition

Knights, Canadiens, Jets might sustain hot starts

- Jace Evans, Mike Brehm and Jimmy Hascup – Mike Brehm

The start of every NHL season is sure to bring surprises.

Some teams get off to unexpected hot starts.

Teams that were pegged to contend can sometimes stumble out of the gate.

Less than 10 games in, we’re very much still in the “small sample size” portion of the season. Some hot starters will inevitably come crashing back to Earth. Some slow- starting squads will shake off the rust and soon kick it into high gear.

But some of what we’re seeing is real, too.

With that in mind, our NHL roundtable question this week is: Which team’s hot start to the season isn’t a fluke?

Vegas Golden Knights: The Golden Knights entered the year as a Stanley Cup contender, and the early returns ( 51- 1, first in the West Division) have not disappoint­ed. ( Of note, four of the seven games were against the Arizona Coyotes.) They rank in the top half of the league in scoring and goals against. Mark Stone is looking like a very, very early MVP candidate ( two goals, 11 points), Max Pacioretty is tied for the league lead in goals ( six) and Shea Theodore has seven points, good for third in the league among defensemen. Vegas was set to play its second game in a row with general manager Kelly McCrimmon behind the bench because the coaching staff was self- isolating “out of an abundance of caution” after someone on the staff tested positive for COVID- 19, but Thursday’s contest was postponed.

– Jimmy Hascup Montreal Canadiens: The Habs and

Washington Capitals are the only teams that have played more than three games and have yet to lose in regulation. The early key for Montreal? The highest- scoring offense in the NHL ( 4.89 goals per game), paced by shrewd free agent acquisitio­n Tyler Toffoli ( five goals, three assists in six games). Now the Canadiens probably won’t score nearly five goals per game the whole season ... but it certainly doesn’t seem like their scoring is going to dry up completely. Montreal has the benefit of playing this season exclusivel­y against its fellow Canadian teams, the worst of which – Ottawa, Edmonton and Vancouver – generally look like a mess on defense and the best of which – Toronto and Winnipeg – are hardly known as shutdown units. Factor in that Carey Price probably isn’t going to post a sub-. 900 save percentage all season ... it seems likely we’ll be seeing Montreal in the postseason.

– Jace Evans Winnipeg Jets: It’s rare to see three unhappy players as part of one trade, but the Jets’ deal with the Blue Jackets could help Winnipeg build on its 5- 2 start. Newcomer Pierre- Luc Dubois, whose father is on the Manitoba Moose’s coaching staff, will give the Jets solid depth at center with Mark Scheifele and Paul Stastny once he clears quarantine. Patrik Laine and Jack Roslovic are gone in the trade, but Laine was hurt and Roslovic was unsigned. Resurgent Nikolaj Ehlers and breakout Andrew Copp join Blake Wheeler and Scheifele in leading the NHL’s second- ranked ( goals per game) offense. With reigning Vezina Trophy winner Connor Hellebuyck in net, the Jets could make some noise in the North Division.

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