Calling it Now: Tampa is a Serious Threat Again, Nashville has Screwed Themselves, and These facts are not Unrelated

MarkusNaslund19

Registered User
Dec 28, 2005
5,735
8,493
Looking at the Lightning between last year and this year (don't pay super focused attention on the line combos for last year, I'm going off of memory as an out of town fan).
Lightning 2023-24

LWCRW
Brandon HagelBrayden PointNikita Kucherov [A]
Steven StamkosAnthony CirelliAnthony Duclair
Michael EyssimontNick PaulConor Sheary
Tyler MotteLuke GlendeningTanner Jeannot
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched:


LDRD
Victor Hedman [C]Darren Raddysh
Mikhail SergachevErik Černák
Calvin DeHaanNick Perbix
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched:


G
Andrei Vasilevskiy
Jonas Johansson
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched:
Really thin on D.

Aging.

One dimensional. Only Hedman and Cernak to do the defensive heavy lifting.

Amazing top line and Stamkos a serious powerplay threat, but second line not particularly threatening.

Sergachev's injury hurt things.

Honestly, I thought Kucherov should have won the Hart Trophy as his insane year kept them afloat but they were, unfortunately, clearly paper tigers as soon as they ran into teams with a strong first line to go along with depth.


---

So let's look at the changes:

The primary ones are the following:


Traded Sergachev for J.J. Moser who is less polished offensively but more of the two way style they need and, importantly, much much cheaper as an option than Sergachev, along with Conor Geekie who gives them size, youth, and playmaking below the top line at a really really nice cap hit.

Let Stamkos go as his 5-5 contributions cratered.


And most importantly, with their cap savings they added Guentzel who is incredibly underrated as a serious top line threat and incredible facilitator to elite elite talent. He's always where he's supposed to be, a fantastic finisher, great at finding space, and great at smart one-touch passes to create space.

And they added the incredibly underrated Ryan McDonagh whom the Predators let go of in part to acquire the flashier name in Stamkos.

I firmly believe that McDonagh is a top 5 defensive D in this league.

When my Canucks played the Predators in the first round, there were people who lamented how our team looked less dominant than they wanted and our stars weren't as productive as we hoped, except in spurts, we generated very few shots etc.
I wasn't shocked because they had the combined shutdown talents of McDonagh and Ryan O'Reilly.

Letting go of the stoutness of McDonagh for the flashiness (and redundance) of two right handed snipers in Marchessault and Stamkos is going to hurt the Predators, but I'll get to that.

For now, look at this roster and tell me it's not remarkably better balanced than that of the year before.

Incredible single off-season surgery by Julien Brisebois.

At the deadline I'm sure they'd like to bring in one more second line winger or something to that effect, and maybe a veteran #5 D. But I think this roster is a serious threat to make some hay.

I'm not saying they're in the top 5 cup contenders, but they're not far from that whereas last year I had the distinct impression I was looking at a setting sun.


Versus 2024-25
:bolts (7 - 4 - 0)

LWCRW
Jake GuentzelBrayden PointNikita Kucherov [A]
Brandon HagelAnthony CirelliConor Geekie
Michael EyssimontNick PaulMitchell Chaffee
Zemgus GirgensonsLuke GlendeningCam Atkinson
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched:


LDRD
Victor Hedman [C]J.J. Moser
Ryan McDonagh [A]Erik Černák
Emil LillebergNick Perbix
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched: Darren Raddysh


G
Andrei Vasilevskiy
Jonas Johansson
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched:







Then we get to Nashville.

I'm not going to list last year's Predators roster because I'm running out of time to make this post before I need to sleep.

But lest we forget, Nashville entered last season with the feeling being that this might finally be their time to bottom out and accrue high draft picks to finally add some elite young forward skill to their lunch pail roster.

Then they weren't allowed to go to a concert which unlocked some strange voodoo that made them rattle off a crazy winning streak and become quite a formidable team.

Now, I'm not arguing that they should have intentionally tanked this season, I don't think a team's culture really recovers from that (see Sabres: Buffalo), but I think that they should have stuck with that identity of all-hands on deck, lunch pail gang, and seen if their youth really was being served.

Their youth looks mostly like middle sixers in Novak, Evangelista, Parssinen, and maybe even Tomasino.

There's nobody to really knock your socks off. But if they built around that identity and either watched some of their youth exceed expectations, or else crater a bit and get good picks, I think that was the move.

But the Predators were entirely seduced by their strong run, and decided to become massive buyers with an average age of their core 7 or 8 players approaching 33-34 years old.

Here is there roster this year:
:nashville (3 - 6 - 1)

LWCRW
Filip Forsberg [A]Ryan O'Reilly [A]Jonathan Marchessault
Steven StamkosColton SissonsGustav Nyquist
Juuso PärssinenTommy NovakLuke Evangelista
Zachary L'HeureuxMichael McCarronCole Smith
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched: Philip Tomasino, Mark Jankowski


LDRD
Brady SkjeiRoman Josi [C]
Jérémy LauzonAlexandre Carrier
Marc Del GaizoLuke Schenn
Injured/Unavailable: Spencer Stastney
Scratched: Dante Fabbro


G
Juuse Saros
Scott Wedgewood
Injured/Unavailable:
Scratched:

Forsberg is a really underrated, truly elite player. If he played his career in a Canadian city with more offensive talent his name would be every where.

So why did the Predators TRIPLE DOWN on players of a similar player type in Marchessault and Stamkos.

RIght handed shoot first players who are going to want to play the left flank on the powerplay, and require someone to get them the puck.

And who is supposed to get them the puck?

Josi is a superstar, but an offensive D isn't enough when there is an absolute dearth of playmaking forwards. Nyquist is a nice puckmover who had a career year, but he's a winger and tends to be a second liner in his most effective years.

Ryan O'Reilly is a solid center, good two way with pretty good vision, but nobody is mistaking him for a first line playmaking option on a good team.

I, and everyone else, like and appreciate Colton Scissons as a player who is tough to play against and is a good soldier. But if he's your second line center, he's probably the 32nd best 2nd line center in the league when it comes to vision and playmaking.


The Predators:

Let McDonagh go to add Stamkos (aging, low calorie pp scorer at this point), Marchessault (aging, redundant with Forsberg and Stamkos), and Skjei who is fine as a puckmover but was protected by Carolina's peculiar system and can't carry McDonagh's jock strap when it comes to playing a pure, tough as nails, shutdown style.

And further, with the moves the Predators made giving big money to these three, as well as jettisoning Askarov and re-signing Saros to a big, long, contract. For the Predators it has to work out NOW. They basically have the next three seasons for anything to take place even optimistically before ending up in cap hell with a bunch of 35 year olds and going the way of the San Jose Sharks.

It's starting to look like the 'good years' for this revamped core of Nashville may not even happen for this flawed and unbalanced roster.

-

To reiterate my thesis Tampa did incredible surgery to refresh their status as a serious cup threat, while Nashville went all-in on a mirage and are now absolutely screwed for the foreseeable future.


-

These are all my takes as an out of town fan who loves following the entire league but will freely admit that I don't know as much about each team as the most knowledgeable of their respective die-hards do.

So what say you? Am I on to something or do you think Tampa is worse than I think? Do you think this is a blip and Nashville is gearing up for a run of dominance?

Curious to hear everyone's thoughts.
 

HockeyVirus

Woll stan.
Nov 15, 2020
19,186
29,337
I just feel like their key guys are too old to be counted on for 82 + 16. McD, Hedman, Vasi, have all shown their age the last few years. While still being incredible, they have slowed down.

We'll see it's a long season
 
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Nogatco Rd

Pierre-Luc Dubas
Apr 3, 2021
2,692
4,992
Trotz can’t be pleased with what he’s seeing

IMG_6777.jpeg
 
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JoVel

HFBoards Sponsor
Sponsor
Jan 23, 2017
20,105
28,158
They'll be clearly behind the biggest Cup favorites but I wouldn't be shocked if this is the best Tampa team post 2022.
 

Hoek

Legendary Poster A
May 12, 2003
11,633
9,183
Tampa, FL
Still worried about our bottom 6 which has been a black hole outside of Nick Paul. Hopefully the PP gets going too, seeing some signs of life. But the 5on5 improvement overall is encouraging.
 

MNRube

Registered User
Oct 20, 2013
6,554
3,629
They need vintage Vasi. Geekie looks really good.

Bottom 6 (4th line especially) is awful though, they need to tweak their depth forwards.
 

57special

Posting the right way since 2012.
Sep 5, 2012
49,724
21,582
MN
It's nice to see some praise come the Lightning's way but we still can't win in Minnesota. It is known
Not an issue unless both teams make the Cup final. I think TBL fans can live with that.

I've learned not to write off NSH, after years of playing in their division. A good organization, who always seem to find a way to play a tough, hard game. Just might take them a while to jell, like it did with STL in 2019.
 

aylib

Mods are lame
Mar 26, 2002
2,818
628
St. Pete, FL
Bolts now have a second line that appears to be producing, which hasn’t been the case for way too long.
Moser seems to be as good, if not better than Sergy— he is a solid two-way player and isn’t prone to regular brain cramps.
McDonagh is a good addition.
Even strength is no longer a liability.

On the minus side— Hedman is declining pretty rapidly, he is painfully slow and not as sharp nowadays.

PP is a mess.
 

Fatass

Registered User
Apr 17, 2017
23,758
15,451
Trotz should get the axe for what he did this summer. The Prefs were looking like a really good club until he went out and brought in old guys who are on the decline.
 

Adam da bomb

Registered User
May 1, 2016
13,036
10,021
Looking at the Lightning between last year and this year (don't pay super focused attention on the line combos for last year, I'm going off of memory as an out of town fan).

Really thin on D.

Aging.

One dimensional. Only Hedman and Cernak to do the defensive heavy lifting.

Amazing top line and Stamkos a serious powerplay threat, but second line not particularly threatening.

Sergachev's injury hurt things.

Honestly, I thought Kucherov should have won the Hart Trophy as his insane year kept them afloat but they were, unfortunately, clearly paper tigers as soon as they ran into teams with a strong first line to go along with depth.


---

So let's look at the changes:

The primary ones are the following:


Traded Sergachev for J.J. Moser who is less polished offensively but more of the two way style they need and, importantly, much much cheaper as an option than Sergachev, along with Conor Geekie who gives them size, youth, and playmaking below the top line at a really really nice cap hit.

Let Stamkos go as his 5-5 contributions cratered.


And most importantly, with their cap savings they added Guentzel who is incredibly underrated as a serious top line threat and incredible facilitator to elite elite talent. He's always where he's supposed to be, a fantastic finisher, great at finding space, and great at smart one-touch passes to create space.

And they added the incredibly underrated Ryan McDonagh whom the Predators let go of in part to acquire the flashier name in Stamkos.

I firmly believe that McDonagh is a top 5 defensive D in this league.

When my Canucks played the Predators in the first round, there were people who lamented how our team looked less dominant than they wanted and our stars weren't as productive as we hoped, except in spurts, we generated very few shots etc.
I wasn't shocked because they had the combined shutdown talents of McDonagh and Ryan O'Reilly.

Letting go of the stoutness of McDonagh for the flashiness (and redundance) of two right handed snipers in Marchessault and Stamkos is going to hurt the Predators, but I'll get to that.

For now, look at this roster and tell me it's not remarkably better balanced than that of the year before.

Incredible single off-season surgery by Julien Brisebois.

At the deadline I'm sure they'd like to bring in one more second line winger or something to that effect, and maybe a veteran #5 D. But I think this roster is a serious threat to make some hay.

I'm not saying they're in the top 5 cup contenders, but they're not far from that whereas last year I had the distinct impression I was looking at a setting sun.


Versus 2024-25








Then we get to Nashville.

I'm not going to list last year's Predators roster because I'm running out of time to make this post before I need to sleep.

But lest we forget, Nashville entered last season with the feeling being that this might finally be their time to bottom out and accrue high draft picks to finally add some elite young forward skill to their lunch pail roster.

Then they weren't allowed to go to a concert which unlocked some strange voodoo that made them rattle off a crazy winning streak and become quite a formidable team.

Now, I'm not arguing that they should have intentionally tanked this season, I don't think a team's culture really recovers from that (see Sabres: Buffalo), but I think that they should have stuck with that identity of all-hands on deck, lunch pail gang, and seen if their youth really was being served.

Their youth looks mostly like middle sixers in Novak, Evangelista, Parssinen, and maybe even Tomasino.

There's nobody to really knock your socks off. But if they built around that identity and either watched some of their youth exceed expectations, or else crater a bit and get good picks, I think that was the move.

But the Predators were entirely seduced by their strong run, and decided to become massive buyers with an average age of their core 7 or 8 players approaching 33-34 years old.

Here is there roster this year:


Forsberg is a really underrated, truly elite player. If he played his career in a Canadian city with more offensive talent his name would be every where.

So why did the Predators TRIPLE DOWN on players of a similar player type in Marchessault and Stamkos.

RIght handed shoot first players who are going to want to play the left flank on the powerplay, and require someone to get them the puck.

And who is supposed to get them the puck?

Josi is a superstar, but an offensive D isn't enough when there is an absolute dearth of playmaking forwards. Nyquist is a nice puckmover who had a career year, but he's a winger and tends to be a second liner in his most effective years.

Ryan O'Reilly is a solid center, good two way with pretty good vision, but nobody is mistaking him for a first line playmaking option on a good team.

I, and everyone else, like and appreciate Colton Scissons as a player who is tough to play against and is a good soldier. But if he's your second line center, he's probably the 32nd best 2nd line center in the league when it comes to vision and playmaking.


The Predators:

Let McDonagh go to add Stamkos (aging, low calorie pp scorer at this point), Marchessault (aging, redundant with Forsberg and Stamkos), and Skjei who is fine as a puckmover but was protected by Carolina's peculiar system and can't carry McDonagh's jock strap when it comes to playing a pure, tough as nails, shutdown style.

And further, with the moves the Predators made giving big money to these three, as well as jettisoning Askarov and re-signing Saros to a big, long, contract. For the Predators it has to work out NOW. They basically have the next three seasons for anything to take place even optimistically before ending up in cap hell with a bunch of 35 year olds and going the way of the San Jose Sharks.

It's starting to look like the 'good years' for this revamped core of Nashville may not even happen for this flawed and unbalanced roster.

-

To reiterate my thesis Tampa did incredible surgery to refresh their status as a serious cup threat, while Nashville went all-in on a mirage and are now absolutely screwed for the foreseeable future.


-

These are all my takes as an out of town fan who loves following the entire league but will freely admit that I don't know as much about each team as the most knowledgeable of their respective die-hards do.

So what say you? Am I on to something or do you think Tampa is worse than I think? Do you think this is a blip and Nashville is gearing up for a run of dominance?

Curious to hear everyone's thoughts.
I agree with most of what you say, but, think it’s a lot easier to get a high profile in the states than Canada.
 

wingerdinger

Registered User
Oct 21, 2018
1,267
1,234
Still worried about our bottom 6 which has been a black hole outside of Nick Paul. Hopefully the PP gets going too, seeing some signs of life. But the 5on5 improvement overall is encouraging.
Chaffee been decent so far.

But a 4th line of Atkinson-Glendening and Girgensons is brutal.
 
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wmupreds

Registered User
Dec 15, 2022
1,185
1,617
I don't really blame Trotz for this past summer. McDonagh specifically asked to go back to Tampa, and with a roster that was going to be hard to tear down because of contract structures I think it was fine to use the cap space he had laying around. He didn't give up any future assets (well, Askarov, but that was a mostly unrelated situation and he got futures back).

I also don't think this team would be any better without Stamkos, Marchy and Skjei. But it doesn't help that they're misusing Stamkos. I know it's hard to swallow $8.5M for a PP specialist, but that part is in the books. Brunette is giving him way too much ice time at 5v5.
 

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