1967 Leaf cup winners were the 5th oldest team to win a cup, maybe we need to get older?
The Stanley Cup Finals are underway, and the draft and free agency are around the corner. While we prepare for those big movement days, bits and bobs of news are trickling in. Here are five thoughts on some of the recent news items in Leafland: Lane Lambert’s Departure The most notable...
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The Leafs entered the 2024-25 season with the seventh-oldest roster in the league before adding Scott Laughton and Brandon Carlo. An older roster can bring about some concerns, but if we look around the NHL, the “older teams” are back.
The 2024 Cup champion Florida Panthers entered last season with the oldest roster in the league. This season, the Edmonton Oilers went into the season with the league’s oldest roster. This will mark the sixth straight season that the Cup-winning team was an average age of 27+, while the average age of an NHLer this season was 28.3. Each team in the final has one regular under the age of 25 playing right now: Anton Lundell and Vasi Podkolzin (Evan Bouchard is turning 26 in October).
When the salary cap arrived after the 2004-05 lockout, some generational rookies broke into the league and lit it up. Teams went young, and we saw several young stars experience near instant success: Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, Sidney Crosby, Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews, Drew Doughty, and Anze Kopitar were all stars who won Cups early in their careers. It was not normal, and if anything, we’re now seeing young players struggle in the league.
San Jose was terrible this season with Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith. Chicago is a mess with Connor Bedard. The Habs are on the upswing, but I don’t think you’d rate Juraj Slafkovsky in the top five reasons why. Buffalo has Owen Power and Rasmus Dahlin and still hasn’t sniffed playoff action. Alexis Lafrenière is possibly on the trading block. Jack Hughes and Nico Hischier have accomplished just about nothing in a mediocre Metro Division (Hischier has made the playoffs three times in eight seasons and lost in five games in two of those postseason appearances).
Those are the first overall picks since Auston Matthews, who also hasn’t accomplished anything in the postseason.
These young players simply aren’t walking into the league and driving team success anymore. It hasn’t happened for a really long time. Connor McDavid might win his first Cup this year, and he was drafted first overall the year before Matthews. Aaron Ekblad, drafted first overall the season before McDavid, won his first Cup last spring. Before Ekblad, Nathan MacKinnon was drafted first overall in 2013 and won his Cup in 2022. That’s how long it’s generally taking, and in the aforementioned cohort, there are true generational players compared to some of the first overall picks we’ve seen of late.
With the cap rising, teams around the league will be allocating more money to veterans, and we will see far less of teams squeezing out veterans for players on ELCs. Franchises will line up this summer for free agents such as Brock Boeser, Mikael Granlund, Matt Duchene, and so on.