NHL Western Conference 2015-16: Puck Daddy’s predictions
The Eastern Conference prognostications are in; now it’s time to predict how the Western Conference will finish in the 2015-16 NHL season, with “predict” of course meaning “throw rhetorical darts in the hopes that at least one of these teams makes us look semi-intelligent.”
Will the Blues rule the Central again? Can the Flames, Jets and Canucks surprise again? According to our panel, maybe and mostly no!
[Yahoo Fantasy Hockey: Sign up for a league today]
Your esteemed panel: Greg Wyshynski, NHL editor, Puck Daddy; Sean Leahy, editor, Puck Daddy; Jen Neale, editor, Puck Daddy; Josh Cooper, editor, Puck Daddy; Ryan Lambert, lead columnist, Puck Daddy; Darryl “Dobber” Dobbs, fantasy columnist, Puck Daddy; Sam McCaig, NHL editor/columnist, Yahoo Sports.
Also, check out our predictions for this season’s NHL Awards and some predictions on trends and players like Connor McDavid.
Read previews for all 30 NHL teams this season here.
OK, now it's time for the West!
Greg Wyshynski, Editor, Puck Daddy
Central Division | Pacific Division |
St. Louis Blues | Anaheim Ducks |
Dallas Stars | San Jose Sharks |
Chicago Blackhawks | Calgary Flames |
Nashville Predators | Los Angeles Kings |
Minnesota Wild | Edmonton Oilers |
Winnipeg Jets | Vancouver Canucks |
Colorado Avalanche | Arizona Coyotes |
Guess we should start with the obvious: No, I don’t have the Minnesota Wild making the playoffs.
Which, incidentally, was disheartening when I saw four NHL.com writers selecting them to win the division. But someone in the Central is taking a step back, and my faith in Devan Dubnyk is a little shakier than yours apparently. (Also not a huge fan of what they have up the middle, and that’s where you win or lose in this conference.)
The Blues capture the Central, and then will probably fail in the postseason. I really like the Stars taking the leap this season, with the influx of veteran talent augmenting Seguin and (a hopefully healthy) Benn.
Over in the Pacific, the California teams all make the cut, as the Sharks (under Peter DeBoer, whose best seasons are his earliest) and the Kings (just too talented, with a kick in the rear from Lucic) return to form. Meanwhile, the Flames maintain their form, avoiding the swoon other poor possession playoff teams suffered thanks to a blue line neither the Leafs or the Avalanche had during their collapses.
Sean Leahy, Editor, Puck Daddy
Central Division | Pacific Division |
St. Louis Blues | Anaheim Ducks |
Chicago Blackhawks | Los Angeles Kings |
Dallas Stars | Calgary Flames |
Nashville Predators | San Jose Sharks |
Winnipeg Jets | Vancouver Canucks |
Minnesota Wild | Edmonton Oilers |
Colorado Avalanche | Arizona Coyotes |
This will finally be the season where the Stars are able to live up to the hype. GM Jim Nill has rebuilt that team into one of the most exciting to watch on a regular basis. The offensive talent is great, as we know, and they should be competent enough defensively and in net to get back into the postseason.
[Play Yahoo Daily Fantasy and get a 100% deposit bonus with your first deposit]
Another hearty welcome back to the playoffs is in order for the Sharks. This season almost has a "last chance saloon" vibe to it for their veteran core. And we all know how successful Peter DeBoer is in his first seasons behind the bench for new teams.
Jen Neale, Editor, Puck Daddy
Central Division | Pacific Division |
Dallas Stars | Anaheim Ducks |
Chicago Blackhawks | Los Angeles Kings |
St. Louis Blues | Calgary Flames |
Minnesota Wild | San Jose Sharks |
Nashville Predators | Edmonton Oilers |
Winnipeg Jets | Vancouver Canucks |
Colorado Avalanche | Arizona Coyotes |
Unless there is some sort of glitch in the matrix for a second straight year, the Sharks and Kings make their triumphant return to the post-season. Calgary is expected to regress but I believe they’re better than they were last year.
Chicago, still good despite “the distraction” and player losses. St. Louis, will be good in the regular season, but expect Hitchcock to be fired if they’re not - or even if they are and don’t win it all. Dallas is legitimately scary and have hedged their goaltending worries by bringing in Antti Niemi.
And you're right, I do hate your favorite team.
Josh Cooper, Editor, Puck Daddy
Central Division | Pacific Division |
Dallas Stars | Anaheim Ducks |
St. Louis Blues | Los Angeles Kings |
Nashville Predators | San Jose Sharks |
Minnesota Wild | Edmonton Oilers |
Chicago Blackhawks | Calgary Flames |
Winnipeg Jets | Vancouver Canucks |
Colorado Avalanche | Arizona Coyotes |
The entire California trio will return to the playoffs a year after the San Jose Sharks and Los Angeles Kings missed the postseason in 2014-15. Both teams made solid moves in the offseason to make them competitive again.
I don’t love the rest of the division for this year as far as playoff teams. The Flames should regress, even with the moves they made thanks to a system that doesn’t accentuate puck possession. Losing Jordan Eberle early in the season will hurt the Oilers and stem their summer momentum of landing Connor McDavid in the draft.
The Blackhawks will see a regular season drop-off thanks to having to jettison a lot of their core Stanley Cup pieces, though they should still be dangerous come playoff time.
The Dallas Stars should see benefits of their two-goaltender system as they win the Central Division.
Ryan Lambert, Columnist, Puck Daddy
Central Division | Pacific Division |
Dallas Stars | Anaheim Ducks |
Chicago Blackhawks | Los Angeles Kings |
St. Louis Blues | San Jose Sharks |
Minnesota Wild | Vancouver Canucks |
Nashville Predators | Edmonton Oilers |
Winnipeg Jets | Calgary Flames |
Colorado Avalanche | Arizona Coyotes |
The Central is still a knife fight, and the Pacific is still a tire fire.
I’m not even confident that San Jose, with that goaltending situation, is necessarily better than Winnipeg, but there are plenty of free points to be had in the Pacific, and they unfortunately still let three teams per division get in.
Again, who cares? This is Anaheim’s conference to lose.
Calgary’s better but a regression in percentages in the high-leverage situations where they shot like 20 percent last year is going to cost them far more points than most people are figuring on. Edmonton takes a huge step forward even with a lengthy no-Eberle period. Vancouver misses because it’s bad, etc.
Darryl “Dobber” Dobbs, Fantasy Columnist, Puck Daddy
Central Division | Pacific Division |
Dallas Stars | Anaheim Ducks |
Minnesota Wild | Calgary Flames |
Chicago Blackhawks | Edmonton Oilers |
St. Louis Blues | Los Angeles Kings |
Winnipeg Jets | San Jose Sharks |
Nashville Predators | Vancouver Canucks |
Colorado Avalanche | Arizona Coyotes |
This one is interesting because the Central Division is so powerful that Nashville will actually have more points than Calgary or Edmonton yet the Preds won't get into the postseason because the Pacific needs three teams to represent.
Furthermore, I have the Avalanche finishing ahead of the Oilers but again - they can't get in because the Pacific needs three teams. So a team finishing 10th in the conference - the Oilers - will get into the playoffs. Go figure. But that's the Pacific this year - a weak division other than the Ducks. Vancouver will be the team to take the biggest step back, while the Oilers are the most improved.
Sam McCaig, NHL Editor, Yahoo Sports
Central Division | Pacific Division |
St. Louis Blues | Anaheim Ducks |
Chicago Blackhawks | Los Angeles Kings |
Dallas Stars | Calgary Flames |
Minnesota Wild | San Jose Sharks |
Nashville Predators | Vancouver Canucks |
Winnipeg Jets | Edmonton Oilers |
Colorado Avalanche | Arizona Coyotes |
The top seven teams in the West appear to be shoo-ins for the playoffs. The Central Division is stacked, and we like five teams – the Blues, Blackhawks, Stars, Wild and Predators – to join the Ducks and Kings from the Pacific, and we’ll go with the Flames as the third Pacific team to make it in.
The Jets and Avs – i.e. the “worst” teams in the Central Division – are both legitimate threats to crack the top eight in the West if one of the favorites falters, and the Sharks and perhaps the Canucks have a chance, too. Edmonton might be able to score but the Oilers need to prove they can keep the puck out of the net; the Coyotes are the odds-on favorite to be drafting first overall next June.
MORE FROM YAHOO SPORTS