Article 63K38 NHL Presidents' Trophy odds: Avalanche heavy regular-season favorites

NHL Presidents' Trophy odds: Avalanche heavy regular-season favorites

by
Todd Cordell
from on (#63K38)
Story Image

The 2022-23 NHL season begins in just a few weeks. Though some teams are still tinkering with their rosters or trying to lock up unsigned restricted free agents, most clubs are set.

With that in mind, let's examine the Presidents' Trophy picture and some teams that stand out in the race for regular-season supremacy.

TEAM ODDS
Colorado Avalanche+275
Toronto Maple Leafs+650
Carolina Hurricanes+800
Florida Panthers+1000
Tampa Bay Lightning+1000
Edmonton Oilers+1600
Vegas Golden Knights+1600
Calgary Flames+1800
Pittsburgh Penguins+1800
Minnesota Wild+2000
New York Rangers+2000
St. Louis Blues+3000
Los Angeles Kings+3300
Boston Bruins+3500
New York Islanders+3500
Washington Capitals+4000
Nashville Predators+5500
Dallas Stars+6000
Vancouver Canucks+6000
Detroit Red Wings+8000
Ottawa Senators+8000
Winnipeg Jets+8000
New Jersey Devils+15000
Columbus Blue Jackets+20000
Philadelphia Flyers+20000
Anaheim Ducks+25000
Buffalo Sabres+25000
Seattle Kraken+25000
San Jose Sharks+25000
Arizona Coyotes+30000
Chicago Blackhawks+30000
Montreal Canadiens+30000

With implied odds of nearly 27%, the Colorado Avalanche are the clear favorites to win the Presidents' Trophy. But while the defending Stanley Cup champions remain one of the league's most talented squads, their odds seem somewhat generous. Injuries played a big part, of course, but the Avalanche did not finish first in last year's regular-season standings, and they've since lost key contributors like Nazem Kadri, Andre Burakovsky, and Darcy Kuemper. Colorado is still an elite team, but this year's lineup has some question marks.

The Toronto Maple Leafs offer decent value to lead the regular season in points. Their offense is lethal, they should benefit from a full season of Mark Giordano on defense, and it seems reasonable to believe a tandem of Matt Murray and Ilya Samsonov can provide goaltending equal to or better than what Toronto got from Jack Campbell, Petr Mrazek, and Erik Kallgren last season.

Campbell's remarkably strong start a year ago masked the fact that the Maple Leafs finished 27th in five-on-five save percentage in 2021-22. The goaltending, as a whole, was not good - and Toronto still finished within striking distance of top spot.

The Carolina Hurricanes and Florida Panthers could both be destined to take a step back, at least in the regular season. Carolina made plenty of roster changes and will not have Max Pacioretty - arguably its top offseason addition - for most of the campaign. Florida, meanwhile, looks shaky on the blue line beyond Aaron Ekblad. The Panthers don't have a real No. 2 defenseman - or perhaps even a legitimate No. 3 - capable of logging heavy minutes against quality competition.

There's value in the Alberta teams. The Edmonton Oilers have a remarkably strong offense, Evan Bouchard should be ready for more responsibility on the back end, and Campbell is more likely to provide stable goaltending than the netminders who suited up for them last season.

The Calgary Flames could probably use one more middle-six forward, but they also look quite appealing. The top six is still dangerous, and the addition of MacKenzie Weegar gives Calgary one of the best defense corps in the NHL. Jacob Markstrom is a potential Vezina Trophy candidate, while Darryl Sutter remains one of the league's best head coaches. In a relatively shallow division, +1800 is an attractive price.

The New York Islanders are a team that stands out for the wrong reason. They finished 20th in points last season, and their two most notable offseason moves were firing head coach Barry Trotz and acquiring defensive defenseman Alexander Romanov. It's extremely odd to see them with the 15th-shortest odds and ranked ahead of teams like the Washington Capitals and Nashville Predators.

In terms of a team with a chance to surprise, Washington stands out. The Capitals accumulated the seventh-most points in the NHL over the last three seasons and should remain a top team after a busy summer: Dylan Strome is a strong offensive center, Connor Brown will provide more depth on the wing, and Kuemper is an upgrade in goal.

Not to mention, second-line wingers T.J. Oshie and Anthony Mantha will probably combine to play more than 81 of 162 games next season.

Backing any team with odds worse than Washington's feels like a pie-in-the-sky approach.

Todd Cordell is a sports betting writer at theScore. Be sure to follow him on Twitter @ToddCordell.

Copyright (C) 2022 Score Media Ventures Inc. All rights reserved. Certain content reproduced under license.

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://feeds.thescore.com/nhl.rss
Feed Title
Feed Link http://feeds.thescore.com/
Reply 0 comments