Connect with us

Published

on

Now that the 2025 MLB trade deadline is behind us, it’s the perfect time for our final team-by-team MLB prospect rankings big board update of the season. The top 10 prospects for all 30 teams are updated below — with deadline additions included.

What has changed since our last in-season list update?

Here are the rankings for your favorite team, along with what to know for this month and who we expect to reach the majors next. Players in the big leagues are eligible for this update as MLB rookie eligibility rules apply here — 130 at-bats, 50 innings pitched or 45 days on the active roster. All 30 of these lists have been updated regularly throughout the season.

Jump to team:

American League
ATH | BAL | BOS | CHW | CLE
DET | HOU | KC | LAA | MIN
NYY | SEA | TB | TEX | TOR

National League
ARI | ATL | CHC | CIN | COL
LAD | MIA | MIL | NYM | PHI
PIT | SD | SF | STL | WSH

AL East

What changed this season: Coby Mayo graduated and the back half of the preseason top 10 had bad seasons. On the bright side, the O’s made the most of having the biggest draft pool by adding Irish, Aloy, de Brun, and Bodine. My pick-to-click Gibson delivered while George and Mejia also took huge steps forward.

Who could debut next: Beavers seems likely to get a look before the season ends.


What changed this season: A lot! The triumvirate of Roman Anthony, Marcelo Mayer and Kristian Campbell all graduated. I got a lot of flack before the season for being the low guy on Campbell (“attention-seeking behavior” a few called it) despite being the high guy on him in the 2023 draft, but weirdly nobody came back to apologize. Arias and Tolle emerged while Garcia, Early, Gonzales, Clarke and Soto also took steps forward. Witherspoon was added in the draft and James Tibbs was added then subtracted via trade.

Who could debut next: Garcia is probably next since he’s on the 40-man roster, but Tolle, Early and David Sandlin could all get the call if a starting pitcher is needed first.


What changed this season: This system’s depth has been depleted by trades. Jones, Schlittler and Lagrange have all made real progress this year, but the list bottoms out quickly: Hampton and Lalane have thrown a combined 12 innings this season. Kilby was the Yankees’ top pick in the draft. Jasson Dominguez and Will Warren graduated from the preseason list.

Who could debut next: Jones needs to be added to the 40-man roster this winter, so he should get the call next among players on this list who haven’t debuted yet.


What changed this season: Chandler Simpson and Mason Montgomery graduated this year while Areinamo was the notable prospect added at the deadline, and Pierce and Summerhill headlined the draft haul. Gillen has emerged while most of the top prospects in the system plateaued a bit, and Brayden Taylor has had a rough year.

Who could debut next: Williams is quite obviously next up and he needs to be added to the 40-man this winter, so a September call-up seems likely.


What changed this season: The 2024 draft pitching class was fantastic, landing Yesavage, King and the third-best prospect traded at the deadline, another top 100 prospect in Khal Stephen (Now with Cleveland). The Jays also traded Kendry Rojas and Juaron Watts-Brown from their pitching depth at the deadline, but will add Tiedemann and Bloss next season when both are scheduled to come back from elbow surgery. This year’s draft was more position-player focused with Parker, Cook, Blaine Bullard and Tim Piasentin.

Who could debut next: Yesavage seems next from this group as he has sliced through the minors like a knife through hot butter.

AL Central

What changed this season: Montgomery and Schultz started the season as the top two prospects and ended at No. 1 and No. 3, but had rocky seasons. Montgomery is about to graduate, started really slow and fell down the list, but is now raking in the big leagues. Schultz is having trouble throwing strikes, as is Smith and if this continues next season, it’ll be time to worry. Bonemer has been really good, Wolkow is hitting more than I expected, and I liked the draft additions of Carlson and Fauske.

Who could debut next: Gonzalez is in Triple-A, so I’ll bet on him debuting before Smith and Schultz starting throwing more strikes and get promoted twice.


What changed this season: Largely the same group of about 15 names was shuffled a bit from the preseason list, with no major graduations — but the addition of Stephen at the deadline and Laviolette in the draft. Kayfus and Doughty have both been arrow-up this season.

Who could debut next: Messick seems overdue to get a big league look and will need to be added to the 40-man this winter anyway.


What changed this season: McGonigle continued to progress, now in the mix for the top prospect in the sport. The top six names have all made steady progress this year amid a number of graduations: Jackson Jobe, Trey Sweeney, Jace Jung, Dillon Dingler, and Brant Hurter. Oliveto, Yost and Witherspoon were all added in the draft, and no one that was close to the top 10 was traded at the deadline.

Who could debut next: Lee is in Triple-A and needs to be added to the 40-man roster this winter, so he could get a September look.


What changed this season: Jac Caglianone and Noah Cameron graduated but otherwise this list is pretty similar to the preseason list, with a slight shuffle, the emergence of Chourio and some draftees added. Hammond, Gamble and Lombardi led that draft haul in July.

Who could debut next: Jensen is in Triple-A and needs to be added to the 40-man in the winter, so he has a shot to get a look in September.


What changed this season: Tait, Abel and Rojas were the headliners from a deadline teardown, and Keaschall is back from injury and probably will graduate in the next month. Prielipp continues to progress now that he’s fully healthy. Keep an eye on high-variance draftees Riley Quick and Quentin Young.

Who could debut next: Rodriguez is in Triple-A and on the 40-man roster so he’ll probably be next to come up, though Prielipp needs to be added to the 40-man this winter and could get a September look.

AL West

What changed this season: The A’s continue to move young players to the big league team, graduating Nick Kurtz, Jacob Wilson, Denzel Clarke, Max Muncy and J.T. Ginn this year, with Morales, Perkins and Colby Thomas (just missed) also in the majors but still with prospect status.

De Vries was the prize of the deadline while Arnold’s slide was one of the big surprises of the draft, and Jump’s, ahem, rise up prospect lists is one of the bigger adjustments from last year’s draft. Lastly, Morii is a very interesting prospect and somewhat unprecedented as a two-way player signed out of a Japanese high school for a seven figure bonus.

Who could debut next: Nett (needs to be added to the 40-man this winter) and Jump (dealing) are the best two candidates.


What changed this season: Cam Smith, Colton Gordon, Shay Whitcomb and Zach Dezenzo graduated this season. Matthews took a step forward this year while Powell, Alvarez and Janek have had nice pro debuts. Neyens, Mitchell, Frey, and 2B Nick Monistere (just missed the list) were the top prospects acquired in the draft. Chase Jaworsky and Esmil Valencia were traded at the deadline to acquire Jesus Sanchez.

Who could debut next: Nobody on the list will debut later this year, but Miguel Ullola, just off the list, has a shot to get a look in September.


What changed this season: The draft haul this year was unique, with the Angels going well under slot to land Bremner then spreading those savings to land prep arms — Johnny Slawinski, Robert Mitchell, C.J. Gray, Talon Haley and Luke Lacourse. Slawinski is the best of the group and ranks 11th on the team list. Lugo and Guzman are both arrow-up among position players, and Gregory-Alford and Johnson are both arrow-up among 2024 pitching draftees.

Who could debut next: Rada and Klassen both have a shot to be up in the first half next year, as does Shores if he’s pushed in a relief role.


What changed this season: Cole Young, Logan Evans and Ben Williamson all graduated this season while Tyler Locklear, Brandyn Garcia, Juan Burgos, Ashton Izzi, Jeter Martinez and Hunter Cranton were the top prospects Seattle traded at the deadline. The farm was replenished by landing Anderson, Stevenson and Nick Becker (just missed) in the draft and with arrow-up performances this spring by Sloan, Arroyo, and Montes.

Who could debut next: Ford is in Triple-A and needs to be added to the 40-man this winter, so he makes sense to be called up next.


What changed this season: Kumar Rocker, Jack Leiter and Alejandro Osuna graduated from the preseason top 10; Rosario has sat out the season after elbow surgery and Santos hasn’t pitched much this year. Fien, Owens and Russell headlined the incoming group from the draft and Fitz-Gerald and Scarborough were sleepers from recent classes emerging this season.

Who could debut next: Davalillo needs to be added to the 40-man this winter, so I could see him getting a call-up down the stretch.

NL East

What’s changed this season? Drake Baldwin and A.J. Smith-Shawver graduated while Caminiti rose and Fuentes had a breakout year despite mixed results in his big league debut. Southisene, McKenzie and Lodise were added in the draft and there wasn’t an impactful deadline deal, so there wasn’t as much movement as in other farm systems.

Who could debut next: With Fuentes, Alvarez and Waldrep already having debuted, there might not be another prospect debut until next season, but Ritchie seems next up having just matriculated to Triple-A.


What changed this season: White continued his ascent up the top 100 while Snelling’s stuff came back to life after being acquired at last year’s deadline and he’s now back in the top 100. Arquette and Cannarella were the top two picks from the draft while Defrank emerged as a power arm in the low minors and Marsee is going wild in his first taste of the big leagues.

Who could debut next: Mack, Acosta and Snelling are all in Triple-A, and I’d rank their debut dates in that order since Mack needs to be added to the 40-man this winter and Acosta is already on the 40-man.


What changed this season: Ronny Mauricio and Luisangel Acuna graduated while Drew Gilbert and Jesus Baez were the top prospects traded at the deadline as the Mets gear up for a playoff run. The top of this system is tightly packed with the top five almost interchangeable at this point. Ewing, Benge, Reimer, Tong and McLean have all been arrow-up in a notable way this year.

Who could debut next: Six players on this list are in Triple-A, haven’t debuted yet, and don’t need to be added to the 40-man until after next season. I’ll rank them in this order: Tong, McLean, Williams, Clifford, Benge and Sproat.


What changed this season: The most notable riser in the system was Mick Abel, who was packaged with Eduardo Tait in a deadline trade to land Jhoan Duran. Painter has been solid in his return from two full regular seasons without an appearance. Wood was one of the best values in the first round of the draft, with the concerns being durability and reliever risk — but he could move quickly. Escobar has probably been the second-most notable breakout in the system behind Abel.

Who could debut next: Painter needs to be added to the 40-man roster in the winter, so he would make sense as a September call-up.


What changed this season: Dylan Crews and Brady House have graduated from the preseason top 10, and Cavalli could join them soon. Willits, Petry, Harmon and James headlined the 2025 draft group while Dickerson and King are the best prospects from the Nats’ 2024 draft. Sykora had his second surgery of the year (hip, now elbow) and figures to sit out all of next season but fits in the top half of the top 100 when healthy. Susana could be a star if he can throw more strikes.

Who could debut next: There’s not a good candidate on this list as Clemmey, Susana or King would seem to be next and I’m not sure any of them even debuts next season. Christian Franklin and Jake Bennett both just missed the list and both need to be added to the 40-man this winter.

NL Central

What changed this season: Matt Shaw and Cade Horton graduated while Caissie and Wiggins took a step forward. I liked the approach to the draft, landing Conrad, Hartshorn, Kane Kepley and Kaleb Wing (both just missed the list). Only secondary and tertiary players were traded at the deadline, to the chagrin of some fans.

Who could debut next: Caissie seems likely to get an extended look after being called up this week and possibly as a long-term replacement for Kyle Tucker.


What changed this season: The first three on this list are tightly packed, and Lowder’s injury-affected season has allowed Stewart and Duno to sneak up on him as Collier’s injury also kept him from moving up. Sammy Stafura and Adam Serwinowski were both traded at the deadline just after Hall and Watson were added in the draft. Lewis is flashing huge tools in his pro debut but still has a ways to go.

Who could debut next: Stewart is in Triple-A and might hit his way to the big leagues even though he isn’t on the 40-man and doesn’t need to be added this winter.


What changed this season: Jacob Misiorowski just graduated with one of the more notable big league debuts in recent memory — right up there with Paul Skenes. Made and Pena both had breakout DSL seasons last year and will finish this season in High-A as 18-year-olds who are headlining the system. Adams continues to grow his sleeper bona fides while Fischer and Payne were the top picks from the past two drafts.

Who could debut next: Quero is on the 40-man and in Triple-A, so he should get a look when there’s a need at catcher.


What changed this season: Griffin went from the highest-variance prospect in the 2024 draft to in the running for the top prospect in the sport in 12 months. Griffin, Hernandez and Sanford (along with Levi Sterling, who just missed) were the top picks from the past two drafts while Stafura and Flores were the headliners of their deadline haul. Mike Burrows and Braxton Ashcraft both were on the preseason list and graduated this year.

Who could debut next: I’ve been waiting for Chandler’s call-up for months, but he hasn’t been pitching well his last half-dozen starts or so, so that keeps getting delayed. Chandler, Barco and Flores all need to be added to the 40-man this winter, so it would make sense for them to get looks in September.


What changed this season: The pitching at the top of the system hasn’t had the best year: Hjerpe sat out the season after elbow surgery and Roby also had surgery last month while Hence and Mathews both had slow starts to the season. Doyle was the top pick in the draft and helps to beef up that group. Rodriguez was a revelation this year while Baez and Jordan were the top prospects acquired at the deadline.

Who could debut next: Wetherholt’s protection timeline doesn’t necessitate calling him up anytime soon, but he’s really good and he’s in Triple-A so you could justify it. Same goes for Doyle if he’s used in shorter stints.

NL West

What changed this season: Crisantes’ season was cut short because of a shoulder injury while the top three 2024 draftees Caldwell, Waldschmidt and Dix took big steps forward. There was a fresh infusion of talent with Cunningham and Forbes headlining the 2025 draft group while Locklear and Drake headline the deadline return.

Who could debut next: Drake was just acquired in the Merrill Kelly trade and needs to be added to the 40-man this winter, so he could get a look in September.


What changed this season: Chase Dollander and Adael Amador both graduated to less than excellent big league performances. Holliday was a big win for the organization in the draft and I liked the additions of Middleton and Belyeu with their next picks. Riggio and LHP Griffin Herring (just missed) were nice additions at the deadline. Karros took a nice step forward and got a call-up recently while the other names stagnated a bit.

Who could debut next: Carson Palmquist is in Triple-A and on the 40-man roster but just missed the list. Riggio has a shot to be a call-up early next season.


What changed this season: Roki Sasaki, Dalton Rushing and Justin Wrobleski graduated while Sirota is the player who took a huge step forward after being acquired in January from the Reds. James Tibbs was acquired at the deadline for Dustin May, and the top draftees from both this year and last year just missed the list: Charles Davalan, Zach Root, Kellon Lindsey and Chase Harlan.

Who could debut next: I don’t think anyone new from this list will debut this season, but De Paula, Hope, Sirota and Ferris all have a shot to come up next year.


What changed this season: If you thought the Yankees hollowed out their system with a number of trades, you ain’t seen nothing. Leodalis De Vries, Braden Nett, Boston Bateman and Cobb Hightower were the headliners dealt at this deadline while Quintana was the notable incoming prospect. Schoolcraft and Harvey were the top players added in this year’s draft with Ryan Wideman and Michael Salina next up but just missing the list.

Who could debut next: Mendez seems to be next up and he needs to be added to the 40-man this winter, so the Padres might want to get his feet wet in low-leverage situations.


What changed this season: Gonzalez and Level have emerged as the next standout talents produced by the international scouting group while Gilbert and Tidwell were the top prospects acquired at the deadline, and Kilen was the Giants’ top pick in the draft. Other than that, this system has mostly been a shuffling of the top names from the preseason list with Gutierrez the main player emerging to join this group.

Who could debut next: Eldridge is next up, but it seems as if the time might not be until next season.

Continue Reading

Sports

Takeaways: What’s ahead for Oklahoma, Indiana, Penn State and more

Published

on

By

Takeaways: What's ahead for Oklahoma, Indiana, Penn State and more

Week 7 in college football did not disappoint. There were several blockbuster matchups, and some previously undefeated teams were dealt their first losses.

No. 7 Indiana traveled to No. 3 Oregon for a game between two undefeated Big Ten teams and snapped the Ducks’ 18-game home winning streak, sending Oregon down five spots in this week’s AP Poll. The Hoosiers, on the other hand, have shown they’re the real deal and in the hunt for another shot at the national championship after last season’s early exit from the College Football Playoff. Meanwhile, in the Cotton Bowl, the return of quarterback John Mateer didn’t help No. 6 Oklahoma, which fell from the ranks of the unbeaten at the hands of Texas.

And with things going from bad to worse for Penn State after its third straight loss Saturday, the school fired James Franklin on Sunday after 12 seasons as its head coach.

What’s ahead for the Hoosiers as they chase a first-round bye in the playoff? What’s next for the Nittany Lions after their coaching change? And how does Oklahoma bounce back after a rough rivalry loss that may have exposed some issues that need to be addressed?

Our college football experts break down key storylines and takeaways from Week 7.

Jump to:
Indiana’s CFP chances | Franklin’s future
No buyout is too high | Watch out for Washington
Here comes Navy | A new star at USC?
Oklahoma’s offense

Indiana is better than last season — and capable of a deeper playoff run

At the midpoint of the season, no team has made a bigger playoff statement than Indiana. The Hoosiers tried to announce their arrival on the national stage with last season’s playoff appearance, but doubts lingered after an early exit. They tried to reassert themselves with a historic 63-10 beatdown of Illinois, but the Illini aren’t Ohio State or Oregon. And then the Hoosiers beat Oregon — by double digits — in Autzen Stadium, where the Ducks hadn’t lost in 18 straight games. Indiana forced Heisman Trophy hopeful quarterback Dante Moore into two interceptions and sacked him six times.

With the win, the Hoosiers catapulted into the top five and into program lore, positioning themselves not only for a run at the Big Ten title, but for a first-round bye as a top-four playoff team. Indiana doesn’t play Ohio State during the regular season, but it can face the Buckeyes in the conference championship game if the Hoosiers keep winning. And if Indiana’s only loss this season is to the selection committee’s No. 1 team and the Big Ten champs, the Hoosiers could still earn a top-four seed because those spots are no longer reserved for conference champions. If Indiana can beat Oregon, though, it can also beat Ohio State. — Heather Dinich


Franklin’s firing marks a first in highly pressurized CFP era

Penn State’s firing of coach James Franklin on Sunday was an absolute stunner, and also not a stunner. And yeah, still a stunner.

The unsurprising part about Franklin’s ouster, halfway through his 12th season at Penn State, was how clear the stakes had become this fall. Penn State had to start winning games and ultimately win some type of championship — Big Ten or national. After bringing back the nucleus of a team that played for the Big Ten title and was a play away from the national championship game, anything less would be a major disappointment.

I thought that if Penn State fell short and finished 10-3 or worse, Franklin could possibly look to move on. Things had run their course for him in Happy Valley. He would have gone out with a very good tenure without enough truly notable accomplishments.

The still-stunning part is that it came to an outright firing, especially to the tune of nearly $50 million remaining to be paid on his contract. The Oregon loss stung Penn State unlike other big-game defeats under Franklin. The Nittany Lions then looked completely lost against inferior opponents UCLA and Northwestern. The postgame malaise Saturday night suggested Franklin knew the end was coming before he got the news from athletic director Pat Kraft on Sunday.

But the finality of it all is still jarring and also indicative of the stakes that exist in the CFP era. As an industry source noted Sunday, Auburn and LSU waited at least a season before firing national-championship-winning coaches Gene Chizik and Ed Orgeron. Coaches can now reach the national semifinal and be fired halfway through the ensuing season. That’s wild.

What happens next for Franklin and Penn State will be fascinating, but it’s clear few coaches are safe in such a big-money, all-in sport. — Adam Rittenberg


No buyout is too high

There was a belief, at least among some FBS coaches, that athletic directors and universities would be less likely to fire a coach because the buyouts were going to be too high in the NIL era.

“They want the money for NIL,” Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin told me earlier this month. “But also because of the contracts. It’s great for coaches, but it’s the problem [agent] Jimmy Sexton created. These contracts [have] so much guaranteed money that now they’re like, ‘Whoa, we want to fire him, but we don’t want to pay $50 million.'”

Kiffin, it should be noted, is one of several high-profile coaches represented by Sexton.

“Not only have you got to pay him, you’ve got to pay his assistants,” Kiffin continued, “and then you have to go out and buy another team because everybody’s going to transfer within 30 days once the coach is fired, depending on the next coach you get.”

Obviously, that’s still not the case after Penn State canned Franklin and will pay his buyout of roughly $49 million, which is the second biggest in college football history, behind only the $76 million that Texas A&M doled out to Jimbo Fisher.

It’s not even November, and there are already seven head coaching openings, and all but one of them at Power 4 conference schools: Arkansas, Oklahoma State, Oregon State, Penn State, Stanford, UCLA and Virginia Tech.

Thanks to NIL and the transfer portal, the head coach, even a successful one, is no longer irreplaceable. Will one of those schools finally step up and say, “Enough is enough?” — Mark Schlabach


Don’t miss Demond Williams Jr.

One of the best individual performances of the week came late Friday night in Seattle, where Washington quarterback Demond Williams Jr. became just the 16th player in FBS history to throw for at least 400 yards and rush for at least 100 yards in the same game. The last Big Ten quarterback to achieve the feat was Northwestern’s Zak Kustok in 2001 against Bowling Green.

Williams has been outstanding all season. He ranks No. 5 nationally in Total QBR (86.1) with his worst game coming in a 24-6 loss to Ohio State and the country’s best defense. And even then, he still completed 18 of 22 passes against the Buckeyes for 173 yards without an interception. With Michigan, Illinois and Oregon still on the schedule, Washington has some chances to make a statement and push for a playoff spot. — Kyle Bonagura


Anchors aweigh, here comes Navy

The Midshipmen trailed Temple by a touchdown with less than a minute to play Saturday. They also faced fourth-and-1 at midfield. But then, following a convoy of lead blockers, Navy quarterback Blake Horvath sliced through the middle of the Owls defense for a 51-yard touchdown. He then tossed the winning 2-point conversion with a defender dragging him to the ground, giving Navy its first fourth-quarter comeback victory since 2021.

The Midshipmen are quietly 6-0 with the chance to make some major noise in November.

Navy travels to Notre Dame on Nov. 8 before facing South Florida (No. 19) and Memphis (No. 22) in back-to-back tilts that figure to have major American Conference title-game implications.

As it stands, the winner of the American will be the heavy favorite to grab the Group of 5 slot in the playoff. If Horvath, who has rushed and passed for 100 yards apiece in three straight games, keeps up this fourth-quarter magic, the Midshipmen could be a surprise playoff contender. — Jake Trotter


USC’s new star running back

USC might have stumbled into its new star running back.

After Waymond Jordan and Eli Sanders went down with injuries during Saturday’s matchup between the Trojans and No. 15 Michigan, Lincoln Riley had no choice but to turn to walk-on King Miller.

The redshirt freshman who didn’t see any action last season was thrust into the game and did not disappoint. Miller carried the ball 18 times Saturday and totaled 158 rushing yards and a touchdown. Every time he touched the ball, it seemed like he could go for a huge gain.

Miller had a total of only 11 carries for 152 yards in three games entering Saturday. This was more than just an unexpected breakout; it was a coming-out party.

“King was huge,” coach Lincoln Riley said. “He stepped up and made big plays. That was obviously really important for us with the way it went down. This is just what he does in practice. He’s a hard worker. He’s a humble guy. He cares about this team a lot. And honestly, hell, we didn’t have anyone else. But he was awesome. The moment certainly wasn’t too big for him.”

Miller’s role on this USC team is far from finished. Riley said Sanders’ injury “doesn’t look super positive in terms of the rest of the season,” while Jordan is set to miss 4-6 weeks after undergoing tightrope surgery this week, according to multiple reports.

If Saturday’s win over Michigan was any indication, the fact that Miller might just turn out to be the Trojans’ top option at running back going forward might not be a bad thing. — Paolo Uggetti


Oklahoma’s offensive stumble exposes broader concerns

Let’s start here: For the third time in four Red River Rivalry games under coach Brent Venables, Oklahoma went without a touchdown against Texas in Saturday’s 23-6 defeat.

The first two occasions came with the Sooners playing a backup quarterback in the 2022 and 2024 editions of the rivalry game. This time, Oklahoma had its starter back with John Mateer under center 17 days after undergoing surgery to repair a broken bone in his right (throwing) hand hand. But Mateer’s much-anticipated return at the Cotton Bowl promptly turned into his first flop in 2025, lowlighted by three interceptions and the Heisman Trophy hopeful’s least accurate throwing performance (20-of-38) in what has been an otherwise dazzling debut season with the Sooners.

“I was ready to go physically,” Mateer said afterward. “Mentally, I just didn’t perform. My eyes weren’t as good as they needed to be. When your quarterback doesn’t play good football, [it’s] hard to win in this league. That’s what happened.”

Mateer’s showing in Oklahoma’s gut-check defeat prompts both near- and long-term questions.

Did the Sooners rush their star passer back against Texas? Would Oklahoma have been better off giving Mateer another week to recover and handing another start to sophomore Michael Hawkins Jr.? Will the physical or mental blows of Saturday impact Mateer beyond Week 7?

More broadly, questions have to be asked about whether this Sooners offense is good enough to support an Oklahoma defense that ranks second nationally and the program’s CFP hopes in 2025. Even with Mateer at his best, the Sooners are hamstrung by a rushing attack that ranks 106th and a good-not-great receiving corps averaging 1.5 touchdowns per game, 12th best among SEC programs. In three games against power conference opponents this fall, the Sooners have averaged only 23.6 points and 323 yards of total offense.

One loss doesn’t change much about the ceiling for the Sooners’ 2025 season. But any chance of Oklahoma flirting with the 12-team field hinges on finding solutions on offense, well beyond the issues that cropped up in Mateer’s disastrous performance against Texas on Saturday. — Eli Lederman

Continue Reading

Sports

Wyshynski: Why the Avalanche will win the Cup, and where the other 31 teams finish

Published

on

By

Wyshynski: Why the Avalanche will win the Cup, and where the other 31 teams finish

The Colorado Avalanche are going to win the 2026 Stanley Cup.

I made the declaration about a month ago when pressed for a Cup pick. At the time, I thought I was being a Brooklyn hipster going against a wave of sentiment behind the Edmonton Oilers, who have lost consecutive Stanley Cup Finals; the Dallas Stars, who have lost three straight Western Conference finals; and the Vegas Golden Knights, who added Mitch Marner in the offseason.

Imagine my surprise when I looked at the ESPN hockey family’s season predictions and saw the Avalanche were in fact the chalk of a very crowded field. A hipster picker’s nightmare, indeed.

As is tradition, I revealed my Stanley Cup selection to a member of that team while at the player media tour in Las Vegas:

Me: I wanted to inform you that I’m picking you guys to win the Stanley Cup.

Avalanche star Cale Makar: I appreciate that.

Me: I also wanted to inform you that I’m not good at making Stanley Cup predictions.

Makar: Well, we’ll prove that wrong, hopefully.

I have the Avalanche winning the Cup over the Carolina Hurricanes, who are in at least their sixth attempt to break through in the Eastern Conference under coach Rod Brind’amour. I explain why below in my full 2025-26 NHL season standings predictions.

Here’s my division-by-division breakdown. Playoff teams are bolded. Good luck to all 32 teams. Hope everyone has fun out there.

ATLANTIC DIVISION

Tampa Bay Lightning
Ottawa Senators
Toronto Maple Leafs
Florida Panthers

Buffalo Sabres
Montreal Canadiens
Detroit Red Wings
Boston Bruins

There’s probably no greater example of the constant power rebalancing in the Atlantic than the fact that the Lightning haven’t finished atop the division since 2018-19. That’s despite having Nikita Kucherov, second only to Connor McDavid in points (378) over the past three seasons; Andrei Vasilevskiy, third in save percentage (.913) in that span; Victor Hedman, seventh in points among defensemen (191) and a defensive rock on which to build; and the rest of a cast that includes Brayden Point, Anthony Cirelli, Brandon Hagel and Jake Guentzel.

Oh, and behind the bench a guy named Jon Cooper, considered by everyone except Jack Adams Award voters to be the best coach in the league.

The Lightning will win the Atlantic this season handily. Kucherov’s line with Point and Guentzel averaged over four goals per 60 minutes at 5-on-5. The duo of Cirelli and Hagel produced a 61% expected goals percentage together last season. Ryan McDonagh, a true glue guy, returned to the scene of his two Stanley Cup wins and had one of the most underappreciated seasons by a defenseman in 2024-25. Tampa Bay gets full seasons of Oliver Bjorkstrand and Yanni Gourde, and 24-year-old Gage Goncalves has another gear to hit. The Bolts will have at least one new banner to raise in the rafters after this season.

One of the bottom-feeders in the Atlantic was eventually going to be full enough to rise into contention, and that ended up being the Senators, who made the playoffs last spring for the first time since 2017. They’ll continue to ascend provided the forward group cooperates.

Brady Tkachuk, growing into one of the NHL’s greatest captains, needs to get back to the mid-30s in goals — and having linemate Tim Stützle return to the 90-point plateau is key in that. Dylan Cozens already showed he’s going to be the next in the grand tradition of Buffalo Sabres’ transactional regrets after last year’s trade deadline pickup. But this season hinges on players such as Shane Pinto, Ridly Greig and Fabian Zetterlund, a trade deadline dud whom Ottawa still extended for three seasons.

The forwards being make-or-break means I’m fairly confident in the Sens’ back end. Jake Sanderson established himself as an elite top-pairing guy, which has allowed Thomas Chabot to thrive on a second pairing with Nick Jensen. Jordan Spence comes over from the Kings to significantly upgrade what Travis Hamonic gave the Sens last season. Linus Ullmark was awesome from December on last season. His crease-mate, Leevi Merilainen, could be a sneaky Calder Trophy candidate. There’s a lot to like here for coach Travis Green, who made major strides in giving this team some defensive structure last season. The Senators are adding while others in the Atlantic are subtracting.

Losing Mitch Marner means losing points in the standings for the Maple Leafs. He’s a 100-point winger who led the team in power-play points and was their best penalty-killing forward. Did that transfer over to the postseason? Absolutely not, which is why Marner deserved criticism, though perhaps not to pariah levels. But no one had a higher wins above replacement on the Leafs last regular season than Marner (2.8). I’m sure that will be celebrated when he returns to Toronto with Vegas on Jan. 23 for a game that’ll make John Tavaresreturn to Long Island as a Leaf look like a concert by The Wiggles by comparison.

The “Core Four” lost one but might have gained another. Replacing Mitch Marner with Matthew Knies appears a bit like the Ninja Turtles swapping Leonardo for Casey Jones, but Knies is primed to pop after a 29-goal campaign. The Leafs know what they have in William Nylander, who is eighth in goals scored (125) over the past three seasons, and they have him next to Tavares, who at 35 is half the player he used to be and is paid as such. If we’re going by his career cadence, Auston Matthews should score over 60 goals this season. The Leafs would probably settle for seeing the former MVP’s dangerous dominance after injuries diminished him last season. So would Team USA in the Olympic Games in February.

The Leafs imported Matias Maccelli from Utah to help replace Marner’s points, and it still seems like a weird decision to add a guy who had six hits in 55 games to a Craig Berube team. Because everywhere you look on this roster, you’re starting to see a Craig Berube team: Nicolas Roy, acquired from Vegas in Marner’s departure, is a very solid 3C. A full season of Brandon Carlo adds to a blue line full of size and punishment in front of the goaltenders Joseph Woll and Anthony Stolarz, who made me a believer last year despite their constant injury concerns. There’s a sturdiness here that would normally lead to playoff success. The Maple Leafs’ undoing might be not having enough superstar offensive skill around it.

Speaking of talent subtractions: Can the Panthers survive without Matthew Tkachuk until at least December and without Aleksander Barkov until at least April? The answer is “in this conference, probably.” But it brings me no joy to report that the Panthers’ three-peat attempt could end with them missing the playoffs entirely, especially given how much I’ve grown to love the beach vistas and fried fish in covering their past three runs to the Stanley Cup Final.

The Panthers’ most important player this season is Sam Reinhart, full stop. Over the past two seasons playing without Barkov on his line (593:21 in 5-on-5 ice time), the Panthers had 0.75 fewer goals per 60 minutes with Reinhart on the ice while breaking even in what they scored and gave up. Coach Paul Maurice seems to favor bumping Brad Marchand up with Sam Bennett while Eetu Luostarinen and Anton “Baby Barkov” Lundell play with Reinhart during Tkachuk’s absence. When Tkachuk comes back, Reinhart, who has scored 160 goals in 321 games since joining the Panthers, will still have to drive his line in Barkov’s absence, which isn’t a given.

There’s probably something freeing for a two-time defending champ to enter a season with the pressure somewhat diminished by these injuries. The Panthers already had a “just get in” mindset for the playoffs. Now, they can hunker down, and rely on a defensive structure fortified by arguably the best top four in the conference — Aaron Ekblad and Gus Forsling, Seth Jones and Niko Mikkola — in front of Sergei Bobrovsky. GM Bill Zito kept this band together to try to become the NHL’s first dynasty with three consecutive Cups since the 1980s Islanders. With a healthy Tkachuk and Barkov, the three-peat could be within reach. But getting an invite to that playoff party will be harder than it has been since Maurice arrived in Sunrise.

The Sabres are easily the most confounding team in the Atlantic this season. They’ve regressed in the standings in consecutive seasons. Health seems to always be a concern, never more so than when Josh Norris is being relied upon as a critical center. The goaltending is more “fingers crossed” than Vezina Trophy-worthy. There are some givens — Tage Thompson‘s offensive rampage to ensure an Olympic roster spot, Rasmus Dahlin potentially being the Norris Trophy flavor of the season — but the incremental improvements GM Kevyn Adams has made to this roster don’t seem to answer its many questions.

That established, the hockey analytics community loves the Sabres this season more than data scraping in Python. Most fancy stats analysts I read have them finishing with over 90 points, with my friends at Evolving Hockey going as high as 99 points. As Jack “JFresh” Fraser writes in his season preview: “Ryan McLeod, Owen Power, Zach Benson, Alex Tuch, Josh Doan, Jason Zucker, Michael Kesselring, Conor Timmins — all pretty good to great players. This is a team that’s had abundant weak links for years and seems, maybe, to have patched them up for a change. Add in Dahlin and Thompson, who both profile like superstars, and there you go. Would I put money on it? Hell no. But it’s something to watch for.”

The Canadiens also broke out last season to qualify for the playoffs, losing to the Washington Capitals in five games. I think this talented young team takes a step back this season before an eventual leap forward. The Canadiens can’t defend. They’re a playoff team whose expected goals against last season at even strength (2.87, 31st) ranked behind the San Jose Sharks, who were disinterested in playing defense at all. They were fourth from the bottom in scoring chances allowed. I don’t think they’ve done much to remedy that. In fact, it might have gotten worse, despite all that Noah Dobson and Ivan Demidov can bring plenty to the team offensively. There’s only so much that Sam Montembeault can paper over with goaltending that saw him save 25 goals above expected last season.

The latest amendment to GM Steve Yzerman’s “Yzerplan,” which the Red Wings have executed since 2019: Finally getting John Gibson out of Anaheim for the last two years of his contract. Detroit used four goalies last season, and Cam Talbot was the only keeper. This new goalie battery on a Todd McLellan-coached team gave me pause, but not as much as Gibson’s inability to stay in the lineup does. Otherwise, it’s another season with some young bright spots — Moritz Seider, Simon Edvinsson, Lucas Raymond and hopefully Marco Kasper, or else Detroit’s in real trouble this season. The Wings don’t have the talent to make the playoffs but have enough of it to limit their lottery odds. Which is unfortunately the most palpable result of the Yzerplan.

I might be low on the Bruins here. If the defense corps is healthy in front of Jeremy Swayman, who had a proper training camp this time, they could grind out some wins for first-year coach Marco Sturm. And by “defense corps” we essentially mean Charlie McAvoy, who was limited to 50 games last season while posting his lowest points-per-60 minutes average in six seasons. But even a return to Norris contention for Charlie Mac isn’t going to turn the tide for Boston, whose overall depth is that of a team which went on a selling spree at last season’s trade deadline. David Pastrnak is now Ilya Kovalchuk on the Atlanta Thrashers: someone who’s good for 50 goals and a 100-point pace no matter who surrounds him, but in service of a basement dweller.


METROPOLITAN DIVISION

Carolina Hurricanes
New Jersey Devils
Washington Capitals
New York Rangers

Columbus Blue Jackets
New York Islanders
Pittsburgh Penguins
Philadelphia Flyers

Whereas the Atlantic Division has some upwardly mobile teams below the contenders, the Metro feels like four teams with strong playoff chances and then four teams those top four will mine for points — with one exception.

The Hurricanes are tied with the Oilers and Golden Knights for the best odds to make the playoffs on ESPN BET, which says as much about the relative strengths of the Metro and Pacific as it does about these teams. I infamously picked the Hurricanes to miss the playoffs in last year’s column, and hey, it’s not like they made it all the way to the conference finals to make me look like a total idiot. Picking them to win the Metro and the entire Eastern Conference is not an act of contrition but a tacit admission that Carolina has hit that sweet spot of veteran impact players comingling with outstanding young stars in the most consistently effective coaching system in the NHL.

What a long, strange trip it’s been for GM Eric Tulsky. He landed Jake Guentzel at the 2024 trade deadline, only to bow out in the second round and watch him leave for Tampa Bay. Still seeking that playoff scoring solution, Tulsky last season landed Taylor Hall from Chicago and Mikko Rantanen from Colorado for Martin Necas, but traded Rantanen after just 13 games because he wouldn’t commit long-term in Raleigh.

That resulted in Carolina getting Logan Stankoven, an outstanding 22-year-old forward, and a bunch of picks from Dallas. And after searching the free agent options for top-line left wing help, the Hurricanes went down a tier and signed Nikolaj Elhers from the Jets, a play-driving winger with some injury history who’s nonetheless well suited for what they do. They money they didn’t spend on Rantanen went to Ehlers and defenseman K’Andre Miller, a pending restricted free agent acquired from the Rangers partially through one of the first-rounders they received from Dallas. He joins a deep defense corps bolstered by one of the NHL’s best rookies in Alexander Nikishin.

There are some points of concern with the Canes, starting with second-line center. Jesperi Kotkaniemi hasn’t been the answer. They’ve been using Stankoven there and might still try Seth Jarvis as an internal solution. This might be where Tulsky tries to use his cap space and draft capital to improve the team before the deadline. Or perhaps that’ll be in goal, where Frederik Andersen remains dominant but a constant injury concern, with Pyotr Kochetkov yet to show he’s anything but a downgrade.

Rod Brind’Amour has led the Hurricanes to a .604 points percentage or better in six of his seven season as head coach. He has led them to the conference finals three times without ever playing for the Stanley Cup. The Canes will kick that wall down this season with a tenacious, talented group that has room for improvement.

Are the Devils keeping their powder dry for a run at Quinn Hughes? They’d be silly not to if there’s even a small chance that Vancouver trades him to “play with his brothers” before his 2027 unrestricted free agency. But the reason the Devils tinkered with the roster instead of taking big swings is likely because they like what they have already and want to see what it looks like with a healthy Jack Hughes.

They were 33-23-6 with Hughes in the lineup until his injury on March 2, creating a points cushion that enabled them to still make the playoffs despite losing 12 of their final 21 games of the season. He has been over 3.2 points per 60 minutes in each of his past four seasons. Hughes is everything for the Devils, from being their offensive engine to being the reason they just paid a 22-year-old defenseman $63 million for services yet rendered. If Luke Hughes is happy, Jack’s hopefully happy.

New Jersey has a deeply talented blue line and the goaltending tandem of Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen, who took their team save percentage from 30th to 11th. GM Tom Fitzgerald had a nice signing in former Oiler Connor Brown and has anointed Cody Glass as the third-line center to start the season. If the bottom six is better and the team has better injury luck, the Devils are poised to make noise this season. Or, failing that, just trade for Quinn, I guess.

The Capitals don’t know what the future holds for 40-year-old Alex Ovechkin, who is now the NHL’s all-time leading goal scorer at 897 and in the last year of his contract. But Capitals coach Spencer Carbery told ESPN’s “The Drop” that he’s relieved there isn’t another overriding Ovechkin story that his team is experiencing every night on the road, with “Ovi’s last season” replacing The Great Chase.

“Definitely. No doubt. If that was the case then every building you go into, especially the Western teams, it’ll be the last time definitely that he goes into those arenas,” he said.

Instead, the Capitals can remain focused on repeating their incredible 111-point campaign from last season, which saw them advance to the second round of the playoffs. GM Chris Patrick won almost every bet he made last offseason, such as with Pierre-Luc Dubois, Jakob Chychrun and Logan Thompson. Provided there’s little to no regression there, and young players such as Aliaksei Protas and Ryan Leonard progress, they’ll keep Ovechkin in contention in what could be his final NHL season.

The Rangers were messy last season, but regime change generally is. GM Chris Drury played hardball with veterans who had trade protection, resulting in captain Jacob Trouba and franchise pillar Chris Kreider flying to Anaheim and former Ranger J.T. Miller returning from Vancouver to say, “I’m the captain now.” Coach Peter Laviolette paid with his job for the Rangers’ descent from the conference finals to outside the postseason. Enter Mike Sullivan, another former Ranger (as assistant coach from 2009 to 2013), who escaped the rebuilding Penguins.

The Rangers have enough talent in the right places to overcome significant lineup holes and earn a playoff spot this season. Miller’s arrival helped pull Mika Zibanejad out of a nightmarish season. Will Cuylle is burgeoning star who’ll take over most of what Kreider was doing in the lineup. The line of Alexis Lafrenière, Artemi Panarin and Vincent Trocheck is a dependable force — and Panarin is in a contract year, too.

The Rangers need Adam Fox to recapture the magic of his Norris Trophy form, and importing Kings defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov as a free agent should do the trick. Provided Igor Shesterkin bounces back with a better structure in front of him — and he had 21.6 goals saved above expected — the Rangers should be the fourth Metro playoff team, if not much more than that.

It doesn’t get more inspiring than what the Blue Jackets did last season, finishing two points out of a playoff spot while playing through unfathomable grief. I love what they’re building in Columbus, and a wild-card spot isn’t out of the question.

It’s conceivable that Adam Fantilli, Kent Johnson and Kirill Marchenko all take another huge leap forward surrounded by an improved supporting cast — I love the Charlie Coyle addition. It’s possible that Denton Mateychuk has a breakout season on a blue line that needs more skill. But the season probably rests on the shoulder pads of 24-year-old Jet Greaves, and whether he’s good enough to wrest the crease from Elvis Merzlikins. Because someone needs to.

The combination of a CBA-mandated relaxed dress code and the post-Lou Lamoriello lift on facial hair restrictions could have the Islanders’ dressing room looking like Bonnaroo. Frankly, it’s about time this organization had an infusion of personality, and it arrives in the form of 18-year-old Matthew Schaefer. The No. 1 pick has boundless enthusiasm and charisma to spare. This is largely the same roster that Lamoriello created, which finished with 82 points last season. A full season of Mathew Barzal probably gets the Islanders slightly more than that, but not much more.

There’s no point in assessing the playoff potential of the Penguins, whose roster is like a random name generator surrounding a core of six veterans stuck in hockey purgatory under new head coach Dan Muse. The entire conversation about this team will be about what happens to that core by the trade deadline, most specifically the fates of Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.

Everyone around Sid wants the legend to remove himself from this narrative, join a Stanley Cup contender and thrive in the postseason spotlight again. But he has steadfastly dedicated himself to seeing things through in Pittsburgh as a Shein version of the Capitals’ retool around Ovechkin. I’m still optimistic that he’ll change his mind. I’m even more convinced that Malkin will move this season, especially after he cast an appreciative eye toward the fun Brad Marchand was having last season. You know, with the Florida Panthers, the team near one of Malkin’s homes in Miami and that currently has an opening for a veteran No. 1 center. Just sayin’.

The most that the Flyers can hope for this season is the continued progress of its young players as new coach Rick Tocchet power-drills fundamentals into them. They’re going to be a tough out and fun to watch, depending on how much time Trevor Zegras and Matvei Michkov are given to create content. But the Flyers aren’t likely to grab too many headlines in Philadelphia this season. The Jalen Hurts discourse can continue, uninterrupted.


CENTRAL DIVISION

Colorado Avalanche
Dallas Stars
Utah Mammoth
Winnipeg Jets

Minnesota Wild
St. Louis Blues
Nashville Predators
Chicago Blackhawks

The simplest justification for why I think the Avalanche will win the Stanley Cup is that they again have the essential building blocks for a championship team. Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar are top-five NHL players overall and one Connor McDavid away from both being the best at what they do. The Avs have their No. 2 center in Brock Nelson after years of post-Nazem Kadri searching. They have a goalie in Mackenzie Blackwood who has at least the potential to be the guy who might not win you a series but won’t lose it for you either.

(Results are pending on that last one.)

Can Martin Necas give them 75% of what Mikko Rantanen did, as was the gamble in trading their star winger last season? Can Samuel Girard and Josh Manson be the rock-solid second paring behind the ridiculously good Makar and Devon Toews? Can Gabriel Landeskog, one of last season’s most heartwarming stories that lacked a storybook ending, become Gabriel Landeskog again?

I’m saying yes to all of this. I’m also putting my faith in an aggressive front office to once again bolster this lineup before the postseason if necessary, whether incrementally or with a big swing. Say, did you hear Nathan MacKinnon grew up in Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia? I wonder if that’s relevant to any other current events in the NHL

Since winning the Stanley Cup in 2022, the Avalanche have been eliminated in the first round to Seattle, the second round to Dallas and the first round to Dallas again. That last seven-game loss to the Stars left MacKinnon “shocked” and unsure how to process it. That’s exactly what you want to hear as an Avalanche fan. Palpable disgust is what fueled MacKinnon’s first Cup win. The tank’s nearly full again.

The first question that needs to be asked about the Stars is whether they made three straight Western Conference finals because they were coached by Pete DeBoer or because they were a three-time conference finalist that he happened to coach. We’ll find out now that DeBoer is somewhere muttering things about Jake Oettinger under his breath while Glen Gulutzan, an Oilers assistant who coached the Stars from 2011 to 2013, takes over.

The Stars are still in the sweet spot for NHL teams: productive veterans and outstanding young players and a franchise goalie combining for a Cup-worthy team. Last season saw them add a superstar in Mikko Rantanen, and anyone who watched the playoffs understands his postseason impact.

Yet Dallas has room for improvement. Teams of scientists are still trying to determine what happened to Wyatt Johnston in the 2025 playoffs, mustering four goals in 18 games with a minus-16. The Matt Duchene regression seems inevitable. They’re going to have to replace what they lost in Mikael Granlund, Mason Marchment and Evgenii Dadonov. The young standouts such as Thomas Harley, Lian Bichsel and Mavrik Bourque must continue to level up.

Again: The Dallas Stars can win the Stanley Cup this season if the mix is right and the path is friendly. One just hopes that DeBoer didn’t take their window to win with him, and that the legacy of his group is as the Western Conference’s annual bridesmaid.

The Mammoth will make the playoffs. I’m a believer that the core they’ve built there — Clayton Keller, Dylan Guenther and Logan Cooley — is trending to be the type of elite trio that powers a team to the postseason. Keller and Nick Schmaltz anchor one line. Cooley, whose ceiling increasingly looks to be a Jack Hughes-adjacent player, is in the middle of Guenther and JJ Peterka, their big offseason acquisition from the Buffalo Sabres.

It gets a wee thinner at forward after that, with more role players (Lawson Crouse, Brandon Tanev) than impact players. But that’s fine. The Mammoth don’t need to be the Florida Panthers. They just need their top two lines to be their motor.

Speaking of the Panthers, the delightful Nate Schmidt joins a Mammoth back end that was besieged by injuries last season. A full season of Sean Durzi and John Marino is essential to Utah’s success. I’m also interested in seeing if and when rookie Maveric Lamoureux, a really talented 6-foot-6 shutdown defender, makes his mark. Fingers crossed that Karel Vejmelka gives the Mammoth another strong season with a more dependable backup in Vitek Vanecek. If the back end holds up, the first Stanley Cup playoff games played in Salt Lake City await.

The Wild, Blues and Jets are all going to be in the mix for the wild cards, with maybe one team from the Pacific Division contending against them. The Central has boasted five playoff teams twice in the past four seasons.

The Jets are easily the best team of these three, and they’re my pick to make the playoffs again on the strength of Connor Hellebuyck, who rightfully won the Hart and the Vezina last season. His side quest to the Olympics means some extra physical and mental strain, but he’s going to give the Jets at least 60 games of the league’s best goaltending. He’s on that McDavid and MacKinnon level of being able to will a team into the postseason on his own.

He’ll have to be great because the team in front of him is diminished after Nikolaj Ehlers left in free agency. Maybe that would be further diminished: The Jets were 20th in 5-on-5 scoring chances last season and 13th in expected goals. Kyle Connor and Mark Scheifele combined for 80 goals last season. Without Ehlers, they need continued support from Gabriel Vilardi, and more of it from Cole Perfetti. (What Jonathan Toews gives them as a No. 2 center at this stage of his career is anyone’s guess.)

In the end, they’re solid enough defensively in front of the league’s best goaltender that this offense can get them into the playoffs, but it’s going to be a precipitous drop from last season’s 116-point campaign.

The Blues were one shot away from eliminating the Jets in Game 7 of the first round before losing in double overtime, and this is the first time I realized how ironic that must have been for Jordan Binnington after the 4 Nations Face-Off.

There’s a lot that I like about the Blues, beginning with coach Jim Montgomery. They went 35-18-7 after he abruptly took over from Drew Bannister just 22 games into the season. He got them to hunker down defensively in front of Binnington, as the Blues were fourth in NHL in goals against per 60 minutes at 5-on-5. Jimmy Snuggerud is going to be a rookie sensation and will give this team valuable secondary scoring behind the usual suspects like Robert Thomas and Jordan Kyrou. I’m not in love with the aging curve of the Blues’ top three defensemen, but there’s no question that Colton Parayko played himself back onto everyone’s radar and the team hit a new gear once GM Doug Armstrong rescued Cam Fowler from the Ducks.

I have St. Louis right on the cusp of the playoff bubble. If the Blues make it, no surprise. If they barely miss it, no surprise. Heck, if they finish second in the division, no surprise because Montgomery gets that out of teams. But Monty’s teams can also sometimes underwhelm you offensively without stars doing star things — see David Pastrnak during the coach’s time with the Bruins. The Blues don’t have that guy, and they ended up 27th in expected goals per 60 minutes last season at 5-on-5. I think they barely miss.

The Wild will spend $136 million to keep Kirill Kaprizov through 2033-34. Bold prediction: At some point during that run, the Wild will have built a Stanley Cup contender around him. You can see the broad strokes of it now. Brock Faber and Zeev Buium anchoring the defense. Jesper Wallstedt as the franchise goalie. Offense up front from Matt Boldy, Danila Yurov and … uh … is Marco Rossi officially not going to be traded?

Point being that this feels like a transition year for the Wild. I’m not a huge fan of their offensive depth beyond Kaprizov, assuming he remains healthy. Which he better be, because with him limited to 41 games last season, the Wild were the worst 5-on-5 team offensively in the NHL, with expected goals percentage 29th. That was the reason they finished minus-11 in goal differential last season, second worst among all playoff teams.

play

1:00

Wild ink Kirill Kaprizov to largest contact in NHL history

Check out the numbers behind Kirill Kaprizov’s record NHL deal.

The Predators held on to coach Andrew Brunette, not only because GM Barry Trotz believes in the offensive game he preaches, but also because the team would probably be paying him not to coach until at least 2027. He was part of those offseason additions a year ago that had us all convinced the Predators were going to be a force in the Western Conference, until it became apparent that the Lightning guessed right on Steven Stamkos‘ decline, Brady Skjei was a product of the Hurricanes’ system and Jonathan Marchessault‘s game is much better when surrounded by contender-level talent. Factor in Juuse Saros playing to below replacement level, and Nashville was cooked like Hattie B’s.

Are the Predators going to be better than 68 points this season? Undoubtedly yes if Saros has an average season and the team isn’t out of the playoff race by early December like it was last season, when it went 7-16-6 in its first 29 games. But that won’t be good enough to make the playoffs in the Central. Does Trotz need to have some tough conversations with players who have term and trade protection about the direction of this team? Or is there any way the team’s next wave — such as Matthew Wood, Fedor Svechkov and eventually Brady Martin — breaks out in time to maximize the years left on those veterans’ contracts?

Finally, some reasons to watch the Blackhawks beyond Connor Bedard, who might not spend the next seven months feeling dejected and competitively lonely. Frank Nazar is legit, although he’s going to have the same “center who should really be a winger” discourse surrounding him that Bedard does. I want to see what Sam Rinzel does as a 6-foot-4 power-play point man. The Blackhawks are going to be terrible — hopefully less so under new coach Jeff Blashill — but at least we can tune in for glimpses of the future rather than a bunch of veteran placeholders orbiting Bedard for 82 games.


PACIFIC DIVISION

Edmonton Oilers
Vegas Golden Knights
Los Angeles Kings
Vancouver Canucks

Anaheim Ducks
Calgary Flames
Seattle Kraken
San Jose Sharks

For all the fanfare about Connor McDavid forgoing free agency to re-sign with the Oilers, the fact remains that he heard their plans, looked at their roster and decided that he’s spending only the next three seasons chasing a Stanley Cup with them. Although that doesn’t inspire much confidence about the long-term prospects of the Oilers, it does mean McDavid believes there’s enough here to win in the short term.

(And hey, cheer up, Leon Draisaitl, even though McDavid might bolt in summer 2028 and you’re signed through 2032-33. Remember: Mark Messier won the Cup after Wayne Gretzky left!)

In many ways, this is the same team that came up short against the Panthers (again) in the Stanley Cup Final, albeit one that should have a healthy Zach Hyman at some point in the next few months. GM Stan Bowman made some additions by subtraction (such as Evander Kane) and is hoping a combination of veteran additions like Andrew Mangiapane and an infusion of youth in players like Matthew Savoie can provide the secondary scoring the team needs behind Connor and Leon.

Edmonton’s top six defensemen are pretty terrific, especially with the emergence of Jake Walman. The goaltending is … well, the kind of thing that probably makes McDavid want to sign only a two-year extension. Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard, last seen being the evil of two lessers before a Stanley Cup Final elimination game, are back, and the Oilers hope former Utah goalie Connor Ingraham might be able to contribute at some point as well.

Kris Knoblauch has coached this team to a .656 points percentage in 151 regular-season games. There’s no reason to believe the Oilers can’t repeat that feat this season. On paper, this doesn’t look like a team destined for a third straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final, but it would be foolhardy to bet against McDavid and Draisaitl finding a way to get back there. And if they fall short … one down, two to go before Connor Watch begins again.

It’s a bit surprising to see the Golden Knights get so much support as a Stanley Cup favorite given that Alex Pietrangelo, their most important defenseman, will miss the season with a hip issue. But with Shea Theodore, Noah Hanifin, Brayden McNabb and Zach Whitecloud, they still have a stout top four on defense in front of Adin Hill and whoever will end up sharing the crease with him.

But the reason the Golden Knights have inspired this kind of buzz can be summed up in two words: Mitch and Marner. Imagine the feeling of being extracted from the Toronto pressure cooker to end up on Jack Eichel‘s wing — and imagine being Jack Eichel, lining up with a 100-point, 200-foot player who could elevate your game to unforeseen heights. Their line with Ivan Barbashev could reach juggernaut status. The same could be said for the Knights’ checking line: Reilly Smith and Mark Stone flanking William Karlsson. As the Panthers have shown in the past two seasons, it’s almost unfair to have a third line that good. (And that’s with no slight to the Knights’ second line, anchored by Tomas Hertl.)

The Western Conference is better when the Knights are swaggering villains. Landing Marner, the offseason’s top free agent prize, who has his share of detractors, has helped restock the bile reserves for Vegas.

I love Kings captain Anze Kopitar proclaiming that this season will be his last. Not only does it mean the NHL writ large can celebrate the legacy of one of the best two-way centers and best Slovenian player in league history — with apologies to Jan Mursak — but it means the Kings are going to be extra aggressive in trying to maximize their last year with him.

The Kings have enough offensive weaponry around Kopitar (10th in expected goals for at 5-on-5 last season) to thrive. Adrian Kempe and Kevin Fiala are both coming off 35-goal seasons, and Quinton Byfield has more to give. Imagine where their offense would have been with something better than the 27th-best power play in the NHL last season.

My concerns, beyond Jim Hiller’s atrocious decision-making in the playoffs: that the depth on their defense, including Cody Ceci and Joel Edmundson, is too ineffective and slow; that goalie Darcy Kuemper regresses from his Vezina-nominated season; and that GM Ken Holland’s peculiar first offseason as Kings GM negatively impacts the roster. But hey, he did sign Corey Perry, which obviously means the Kings will play for the Stanley Cup.

I have the Canucks in the playoffs because I’m taking the completely naïve approach that everything will work itself out. That Elias Pettersson can regain his 100-point form after a healthy offseason and with the toxins drained out of the Canucks’ locker room now that J.T. Miller is on the Rangers. That the Canucks have the good sense to pair Pettersson with a returning Brock Boeser. That Filip Chytil remains healthy enough. That Thatcher Demko remains healthy enough. That Quinn Hughes remains healthy enough and is a Norris finalist while — and this is the crucial part — wearing a Vancouver jersey this season instead of one with devil horns.

If all of these things happen, the Canucks are a playoff team. If half of them happen … well, maybe the Central gets five teams in the playoffs again this season.

In my bold predictions for the 2025-26 season, I said the Ducks would be in the playoff hunt until the last week of the race. I’m sticking to that. For better or worse, Joel Quenneville is back behind an NHL bench, and I’m confident he’s going to unlock something in players such as Leo Carlsson, Mason McTavish and Jackson LaCombe that Greg Cronin failed to unleash. It’s a heavy lift for the Ducks to go from hapless defensive sieve to playoff bubble contender, and I’m putting a lot of faith in that influx of veteran talent — Chris Kreider and Mikael Granlund included — to get this group of ducklings waddling in the right direction. Well, that and goalie Lukas Dostal continuing to progress toward franchise goaltender status.

The Flames shocked the league last season with a 96-point campaign that was a tiebreaker away from postseason qualification. They can thank Gilroy, California’s own Dustin Wolf for that, backstopping them to 29 wins in 53 games with a .910 save percentage, and finishing second in the voting for NHL rookie for the year. I’m still trying to figure out this magic trick, considering how utterly average the Flames were at 5-on-5 last season.

As has been the case since Matthew Tkachuk was traded, they’re a supporting cast in search of a star. Now they’re caught in a purgatory as some of their top names are aging out (Nazem Kadri, Mikael Backlund) while the next wave — like brilliant 19-year-old defenseman Zayne Parekh — needs some time to ripen. This could be a double-digit points decline, but the future is bright for the Flames.

I’ve seen projections that have the Kraken anywhere from 72 points to 84 points under new head coach Lane Lambert. I’ll take the lower end of that scale. I didn’t love the Kraken’s underlying offensive numbers last season (28th in expected goals for, 30th in scoring chances per 60 minutes at 5-on-5), and the Islanders were middle of the pack at best during his time as their head coach. It’s a middling team in need of a new direction under GM Jason Botterill. A robust trade deadline sale under a rising salary cap would be a good start.

Much like Macklin Celebrini had he remained at Boston University, the Sharks are entering their junior year of college. It’s still a party, it’s still a team that can be bad but fun, and we find it charming. Players such as Celebrini, Will Smith, William Eklund and Michael Misa can flaunt gaudy offensive stats without being overly concerned with their plus/minus deficit. They can spend one more year in the draft lottery — and wouldn’t Gavin McKenna look great on Celebrini’s wing? — before it’s time to graduate to something resembling playoff contention next season.

Continue Reading

Sports

Canes’ Slavin exits early vs. Flyers; status unclear

Published

on

By

Canes' Slavin exits early vs. Flyers; status unclear

RALEIGH, N.C. — The Carolina Hurricanes are preparing for a long road trip with concerns about the status of defenseman Jaccob Slavin.

He missed a large portion of the third period and all of overtime in Saturday night’s 4-3 victory against the Philadelphia Flyers.

“He’s getting looked at,” coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “We’ll know more about his status Monday. He came up a little gimpy.”

Carolina begins a six-game road trip Tuesday night at San Jose. The Hurricanes will go more than two weeks before playing again on home ice.

Slavin, 31, logged less than 4 1/2 minutes of ice time following the second period Saturday night. He was on the ice for more than 20 minutes in Carolina’s season-opening 6-3 victory over New Jersey on Thursday night.

Slavin, who didn’t play in the preseason, has appeared in more than 75 regular-season games in each of the past four seasons. He had three consecutive seasons earlier in his career when he played all 82 regular-season games.

He’s a two-time winner of the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy as the NHL’s most gentlemanly player. He signed an eight-year contract in the summer of 2024.

The Hurricanes beat Philadelphia on Seth Jarvis’ goal with 16.7 seconds left in overtime.

Continue Reading

Trending