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Power Rankings: More O, more surprises equal better product

 

Updated April 9

Eleven teams finished with more than 100 points, four of the six divisions had new champions and the last of 16 playoff berths was not decided until the final day. Even then, it required a shootout.

The Sabres give their fans a big season and high hopes for the playoffs. (AP)  
The Sabres give their fans a big season and high hopes for the playoffs. (AP)  
Can you say wide open? The NHL does whenever it can to describe the evolution of its product since the lockout, and that's one of things you can actually take at face value from the league powers that be. Collectively, NHL coaches might have found a way to reduce scoring minimally, but as two 50-goal scorers, seven 100-point players and seven more with at least 90 points would suggest, there is still enough emphasis on offense and attacking play around to keep the game headed in the direction the league wants.

The result of these new-age changes, of course, is unpredictability. It was the case throughout a season in which last year's two Stanley Cup finalists ended up missing the playoffs, and it should continue through this postseason. That isn't a bad thing. Much like last year, there are potential title cases to be made for any of the 16 contenders if their individual seasons are examined in detail.

At various times this season, for example, deep teams like Anaheim, Buffalo and Nashville have been far enough above the pack enough to start thinking about booking hotels for the Finals. All of them head to the playoffs with realistic chances to win, but so do clubs like Calgary, Vancouver and New Jersey that can offset less overall talent with goaltenders who can steal a game or series. Then there are teams like Detroit, Ottawa and San Jose, familiar regular-season powerhouses that looked title worthy on most nights, and upstarts like Minnesota and Pittsburgh, which came on strong in the second half and can't be dismissed.

And none of that will matter when the playoffs begin.

Here are the final Power Rankings for the regular season:

Power Rankings
CurrentTeamPrevious
1Bruins · Trends1
Boston hit its stride early and rarely stumbled under the smart coaching of Claude Julien. The Bruins can score and enter the playoffs as the only team with fewer than 200 goals allowed.
2Sharks · Trends2
A first Presidents' Trophy will only mean something to the league's best home team if it turns out to be a stepping stone for a first deep playoff run.
3Red Wings · Trends3
Detroit often looked like the reigning Cup champs this season, but not lately. Maybe they can flip the switch, but both goalies have sub-.900 save percentages.
4Penguins · Trends7
Everything about Pittsburgh's season before the coaching change and the deadline acquisitions is irrelevant. These Penguins are a fine-tuned version of last spring's Stanley Cup finalists.
5Capitals · Trends4
Ovechkin and company will have to provide enough fireworks to overcome a defense that is vulnerable. Can a team run and gun its way to a Stanley Cup in this day and age?
6Canucks · Trends10
No one out West has played better over the past few months than the Canucks, who will ride a very hot Roberto Luongo into the playoffs. Vancouver won the Northwest after being 13 points back in January.
7Blackhawks · Trends8
Nikolai Khabibulin is playing like someone in his contract year should and the kids are alright again after going through a rough stretch last month. Starting the playoffs at home is a bonus.
8Ducks · Trends6
A strong finish got them to the playoffs, and with Francois Beauchemin back, they've got the best blue line in the business. This is the dark-horse team in the West.
9Hurricanes · Trends5
A sloppy finish cost Carolina a shot at the fourth seed, but the Hurricanes' late-season surge wasn't a fluke and Cam Ward is playing like a Conn Smythe winner again.
10Flyers · Trends11
At one point this season, the Flyers had a 13-1-3 stretch, but they've been a .500 team since the trade deadline. So they're an enigma heading to the playoffs, a team that could get to the Finals or get bounced in Round 1.
11Devils · Trends9
The wheels seemed to come off after Martin Brodeur set his wins record in March. A couple of meaningless late wins won't convince anyone the Devils have fixed things.
12Blue Jackets · Trends14
They have the league's worst power play and allowed more goals than they scored, yet the Jackets still found a way into the playoffs because rookie sensation Steve Mason always gives them a chance to win.
13Rangers · Trends18
The Rangers earned their playoff spot by winning the games they had to, mainly because Henrik Lundqvist came up very big. But he'll need help for New York to make any kind of run.
14Blues · Trends15
The Blues officially claimed the feel-good story of the year title last week by grabbing a playoff spot with their roster full of fuzzy-faced kids. St. Louis could be dangerous playing without the pressure of expectations.
15Flames · Trends13
The impact of Calgary's implosion hasn't muted because the Flames are in the playoffs. But the Flames have been borderline awful for the past six weeks and they are pretty banged up heading into the playoffs.
16Canadiens · Trends12
Montreal backed into the playoffs last week, which temporarily saved the organization from another major embarrassment in a season that has already gone down in flames.
17Sabres · Trends19
A second consecutive season without the playoffs. Buffalo was competitive but was done in by Ryan Miller's untimely injury.
18Panthers · Trends17
Much progress this season under rookie coach Peter DeBoer, but not enough to overcome a punchless offense and too many bad goals against Tomas Vokoun.
19Wild · Trends20
Things would have probably been different had Marian Gaborik been there all season. At least Minnesota got an idea about what it will be like next season.
20Predators · Trends16
The Predators stayed in the playoff race longer than they should have and seemed to have set themselves up in goal for the next few seasons with Pekka Rinne.
21Oilers · Trends21
Edmonton placed a lot of hope -- probably too much -- on several young players and it backfired this season. Long-time coach Craig MacTavish could pay the price.
22Senators · Trends23
Here is a microcosm of how Ottawa's season went: Sniper Dany Heatley scored four times in his first three games, stayed healthy and still finished one shy of a fourth straight 40-goal season.
23Thrashers · Trends22
A strong finish and some good young pieces give the Thrashers some hope, although that's getting a bid old for a franchise that has been in only four playoff games.
24Kings · Trends25
Their development process got a lot further than expected this season and the Kings have the cap space to add big pieces over this summer. They could produce a quick turnaround next year.
25Coyotes · Trends26
Can we say Phoenix took a step forward this season? Not really, but the bigger concern surrounds the team's future in the desert.
26Stars · Trends24
Too many key injuries to deal with, especially in a season that had off-ice distractions and Marty Turco far from his best.
27Maple Leafs · Trends27
Now that the season is over the Brian Burke era will really begin.
28Lightning · Trends28
All kinds of questions for the Bolts heading into the summer, but the biggest is whether Vincent Lecavalier will be back.
29Avalanche · Trends29
All signs are pointing to Patrick Roy becoming coach of the Avs after their worst season in Colorado.
30Islanders · Trends30
The prize for an awful season will come at the draft when New York gets either John Tavares or Victor Hedman.
 

 
 
 
 
Wes Goldstein
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