The Los Angeles Kings
The Kings are an intriguing wild card. They’ve been rebuilding the right way — with patience, smart drafting, and an emphasis on possession hockey. Quinton Byfield is blossoming into a true top-line force, and veterans like Anze Kopitar and Drew Doughty still bring invaluable leadership and playoff experience.
Los Angeles also has one of the NHL’s deepest prospect pools, giving them flexibility to add at the trade deadline if they’re in the mix. Their structure under new coaching emphasizes defense and transition speed, a blend that wins in spring. If their goaltending steadies — the biggest question mark — the Kings could go from quiet contender to full-blown playoff disruptor overnight.
The 10 best players from each NHL team: The Vegas Golden Knights
We’re in the NHL offseason — and to help you get ready for the upcoming campaign, we’ll be highlighting the top 10 players on each team over the next month. This is the Vegas Golden Knights!
The New Jersey Devils
After an up-and-down 2024–25 season, the Devils are poised for a bounce-back. Their young core — Jack Hughes, Nico Hischier, and Luke Hughes — gives them one of the NHL’s most exciting foundations.
Speed is their greatest weapon: when New Jersey pushes the pace, few teams can keep up. They’ve also added veteran depth to balance their youthful roster, addressing some of the defensive lapses that doomed them in the past.
Goaltending remains the X-factor, but if that stabilizes, the Devils have the skill and tempo to make a real playoff run. Their window is just opening — and 2026 could be the year they finally take that next step.
The Florida Panthers
The Panthers have built a modern dynasty in the making. Back-to-back Stanley Cups have proven their formula works — aggressive forecheck, relentless pace, and balanced scoring from every line. With key veterans like Aleksander Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk, and Aaron Ekblad still in their prime, Florida has the perfect mix of leadership and grit.
What makes them even scarier is that they’ve managed to stay hungry despite all the success. Head coach Paul Maurice has created a culture built on accountability, not ego. If goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky keeps delivering big-game performances, there’s no reason to think a three-peat is out of reach. The Panthers remain the team to beat.
The Tampa Bay Lightning
Never count out the Lightning. Despite losing some key pieces over the years, the championship core — Victor Hedman, Nikita Kucherov, Brayden Point, and Andrei Vasilevskiy — is still capable of elite hockey.
Tampa’s biggest advantage is muscle memory: they know exactly how to win when the pressure peaks. Coach Jon Cooper’s calm command and tactical flexibility give them an edge few others have. While age and injuries have begun to creep in, Tampa’s management always finds a way to plug holes and stay relevant.
If Vasilevskiy returns to form and the depth holds, the Lightning could easily surge back into Cup contention. Great teams never truly fade.
The Carolina Hurricanes
Few teams play a more complete, system-driven game than Carolina. Under coach Rod Brind’Amour, the Hurricanes have become a machine — disciplined, defensively airtight, and relentless in puck pursuit.
Their downfall in recent years has been goaltending inconsistency and a lack of finishing, but offseason tweaks suggest they’re addressing both.
Sebastian Aho and Andrei Svechnikov continue to anchor a deep offensive unit, while Jaccob Slavin remains one of the NHL’s most underrated defenders. What sets the Canes apart is their culture: effort never dips, and no team plays a better five-man defensive structure. If their goaltending holds up, Carolina could easily be the team that finally breaks through the Eastern logjam.
The Dallas Stars
Dallas has quietly assembled one of the deepest, most balanced rosters in the league. With Jason Robertson’s elite scoring, Miro Heiskanen’s silky two-way play, and Jake Oettinger’s game-stealing potential, the Stars check every major box. Their mix of veteran presence (Tyler Seguin, Jamie Benn) and emerging youth (Wyatt Johnston, Mavrik Bourque) gives them adaptability few others have.
Dallas’s physicality and defensive commitment make them a nightmare in seven-game series. They’ve come close in recent years but have the ingredients for a breakthrough. If Oettinger finds his top form again, Dallas could be this season’s toughest out — a team built to wear opponents down over long playoff wars.
The Colorado Avalanche
After the 2022 championship, Colorado stumbled under the weight of expectations and injuries. But the Avs remain loaded with elite talent — Nathan MacKinnon, Martin Necass, and Cale Makar form a core that’s still among the best in hockey. They’ve retooled around that trio with speed, versatility, and defensive balance. Colorado’s biggest strength is its ability to dominate puck possession and push the pace in transition.
When healthy, they can suffocate teams with their skating and pressure. If the Avalanche can avoid the injury curse that’s plagued them since their Cup win, they’ll be right back in the thick of contention — a sleeping powerhouse ready to erupt again.
The Toronto Maple Leafs
Every year, the Leafs enter the conversation — and every year, they disappoint. But 2026 might finally be the season when talent and timing align. With Auston Matthews locked in, William Nylander evolving into a true superstar, and John Tavares embracing a more veteran role, Toronto’s offense remains lethal.
The key will be defense and goaltending: if they can get consistency behind Ilya Samsonov or a new acquisition, the Leafs can finally break their narrative curse. Their front office has leaned into a tougher, more playoff-ready identity.
Toronto has all the pieces — it’s just a matter of belief. The pressure is enormous, but so is the potential payoff.
The Edmonton Oilers
The Oilers are the league’s most explosive team — and possibly the most motivated. After two straight Finals losses to Florida, Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl are entering the 2025-26 season with something to prove.
Edmonton’s power play is historically elite, but their success will hinge on improved defensive structure and goaltending consistency. General manager Ken Holland has tweaked the roster to add grit and depth, recognizing that pure skill alone won’t win in June. If Stuart Skinner or a new tandem can stabilize the crease, the Oilers could finally deliver on years of “what ifs.”
McDavid has been too close for too long — and his hunger could define the entire season.