| Atlantic Divison
By Bob Grove
Since the NHL was realigned for the 1998-99 season, the New
Jersey Devils and Philadelphia Flyers have alternated winning
the Atlantic Division title. The Devils also won two Stanley Cups
in that span, while the Flyers twice narrowly missed a Finals
berth.
It’s the Devils’ turn this time around, but it won’t be easy
for them to get back to the top - not with the Flyers’ acquisition
of Peter Forsberg and the Penguins’ free agent shopping spree.
Here’s what you can expect from the Penguins’ division rivals
in 2005-06:
Philadelphia
The Flyers and coach Ken Hitchcock have lost four of their top
five scorers from 2003-04 in Mark Recchi, John LeClair, Tony Amonte
and Jeremy Roenick. Alexei Zhamnov and Danny Markov are gone,
too. As long as he can avoid the injuries that always seem to
plague him, Forsberg will do more than his share to make up for
those losses, as will rookies Jeff Carter and Mike Richards. Throw
in solid two-way forwards Michal Handzus and Keith Primeau and
dependable Mike Knuble and Turner Stevenson, and the only pressing
question up front is whether Simon Gagne is ready to be a consistent
performer.
The signing of Derian Hatcher, Mike Rathje and Chris Therien
gives the Flyers a huge defense, and remember that Joni Pitkanen
looks like a future star. Robert Esche is solid in goal, with
Antero Niittymaki ready to provide backup. No one will even notice
that Sami Kapanen will miss most of the first half with a shoulder
injury. This could be the Flyers’ year.
New Jersey
With health problems putting Pat Burns out and Larry Robinson
in behind the bench, there are plenty of questions about how the
gritty Devils will play the game going forward. After all, open
ice and an emphasis on skill has not exactly been their calling
card. Leading scorer Patrik Elias will miss the start of the season
with hepatitis, putting more pressure on Scott Gomez, Jeff Friesen
and the enigmatic and oft-injured Viktor Kozlov up front. Alexander
Mogilny is back to chip in and will be a factor if healthy, and
we can expect promising Zach Parise to become a regular this season.
Gone are defensemen Scott Stevens (retired) and Scott Niedermayer
(Anaheim), which means Brian Rafalski becomes the focal point
on the power play. Vladimir Malakhov and Dan McGillis have been
signed on defense, but they won’t exactly replace Stevens and
Niedermayer. Colin White and Paul Martin, however, are underappreciated
outside the Swamp.
Martin Brodeur will take care of business in goal but will be
hurt by rules restricting where goaltenders can handle the puck.
New York Islanders
The Islanders have lost Adrian Aucoin, Michael Peca, Mariusz
Czerkawski and Roman Hamrlik, which hits coach Steve Stirling
in all areas: on defense, on the checking line and on the power
play. But the team did pick up Miroslav Satan and Mike York up
front, as well as Alexei Zhitnik, Brent Sopel and Brad Lukowich
on defense. At $7.5 million between them, Satan and Zhitnik had
better pick up their play.
The big question, as always, pertains to center and captain
Alexei Yashin. The guy makes a zillion dollars a season (OK, it’s
the maximum allowed, $7.6 million) but always comes up short in
the end. This team has the speed and skill, especially with the
emergence of Trent Hunter, to be a force in the league if Yashin
ever delivered on his promise.
The defense lacks a little toughness, but goaltender Rick DiPietro
may be able to make up for those deficiencies as he develops into
one of the game’s best goaltenders.
New York Rangers
The Rangers and coach Tom Renney are in for a long season. The
fun started just before camp opened when Jaromir Jagr turned down
an appointment as captain, saying it should be a North American
player serving in that capacity in the media capital of the world.
Bobby Holik, Mark Messier and Eric Lindros are all gone, so the
leadership question is a legitimate one.
The Rangers purged most of the roster near the end of the 2003-04
season, but they don’t have enough young talent to truly take
the rebuilding road. So they’ve signed Martin Straka, Steve Rucchin,
Martin Rucinsky, Michal Rozsival, Ville Nieminen and Marek Malik
- second-line free agents at best.
Jagr will have a lot of Czechs to hang with, but he might not
enjoy playing with them every night. The defense is a disaster
waiting to happen, as it is anchored by Darius Kasparaitis (the
second-highest paid player on the team at $3.3 million) and Tom
Poti, not exactly known for their positioning.
Kevin Weekes is the No. 1 goaltender. Good luck, Kevin. |