Last season was the least excited I was going into a season in nearly a couple decades, since EJ was drafted I'd say. I'm feeling about the same this year, but with more hope that we will see a bit more progression and NHL presence from the new young talent the Blues have drafted. I also think there is a higher chance we'll see a trade big enough to get excited about. It could be for a draft pick, but I'd get excited about another 1st.
My excitement level is higher than last year. Not in the sense that my
team expectations are higher, but there are more guys/spots in the bottom/middle NHL roster that intrigue me.
I'm more excited than the forward youth than I was last year. I was excited to keep watching Neighbours grow last season, but the level of which he exceeded my expectations has increased my excitement level for him entering this year. I had basically no expectation that Bolduc/Dean/Dvorsky would compete for NHL roster spots entering camp last year. I think Bolduc has a very strong chance to make the NHL team this year. Dvorsky has a more feasible path than Bolduc did last year, and Dean has a greater chance than he did last year. Last year my excitement about the 'kids' at the NHL level was limited to them simply making the team and potentially establishing themselves as full-time NHLers. As we sit here today, I see way more opportunity to earn (and hopefully succeed in) greater roles.
There is also more intrigue and excitement in the middle/bottom of the D group for me. We came out of camp last year with Krug, Scandella, Bortz, Tucker, and Perunovich all on the opening night roster. We have the same top 3 as last year, but some combo of Suter, Kessel, Joseph, Perunovich, and Tucker will make up the bottom 4-5 D spots this year (assuming Krug starts the year on IR). I count 4 guys pushing to become part of the medium-to-long term plan compared to 2 last year. I'm more excited about Kessel entering camp this year than I was either of Tucker/Perunovich last year. Krug's injury gives Perunovich more of an opening to try and stick as a bottom pair, PP1 specialist. Joseph has already been much more of a legit NHL guy than either of Perunovich/Tucker had been entering last year. The D isn't getting 'fixed' this year, but we have more guys competing for jobs to be part of that solution than we did last year.
At both forward and D, this feels like less of a stop gap year than 2023/24. I see fewer guys where we are just waiting out a contract and more young/mid 20s guys who could potentially be contributors in the medium/long term.
As for the veteran forward lottery tickets (who are more likely stop gaps), I'm about as excited for the Faksa, Texier, M Joseph, Kappy group as I was the Hayes, Vrana, Kappy, Blais group last year. I don't see anyone with the 'primary trigger man on PP1' upside that Vrana had, but I also see higher floors and playstyles that better suit a team-D identity we need to build.
I was really excited about Hofer last year, but I'm equally excited this year. My excitement last year was to see if Hofer could be a legit NHL guy through 25-30 NHL starts. Mission accomplished. But now I'm excited to see how many more starts he could take from Binner. To his credit, Binner had a hell of a year last year and showed that Hofer isn't just taking the job by default. I think we are in for a real battle for the future of the crease this year.
Last year very much felt like a stop gap with little of our medium-to-long term development taking place at the NHL level. Given where our prospect pool was at when the wheels fell off in 2022/23, this made sense. But there should be more youth this year and greater responsibilities for the youth that did stick in the NHL last year. This year might still be a stop gap to get Snuggy, and the last 2 draft classes of prospects more development time outside of the NHL. But even if that's how you view it, there should be lot more NHL development of early-mid 20s guys going on than last year.