There is still half of the 2018-19 NHL season remaining,
but the first half has given us a pretty good look at who the contenders are
going to be for the major individual awards. There is sure to be another strong
and passionate argument for what value means in the MVP race, the Norris and
Vezina Trophy races are going to be extremely tight, and Barry Trotz is trying
to follow up his Stanley Cup-winning campaign in Washington with a Coach of the
Year Award with the New York Islanders. Just about the only major award race
that does not look to be all that competitive at this point is for Rookie of
the Year, which a young superstar in Vancouver is running away with. Here we
take a look at five midseason contenders for the Hart Trophy (league MVP),
Norris Trophy (top defender), Vezina Trophy (top goalie), Calder Trophy (Rookie
of the Year) and Jack Adam Award (Coach of the Year) at the midway marker of
the season.
NIKITA
KUCHEROV, TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING (HART TROPHY, MVP)
Nikita Kucherov is currently the best player on the Tampa
Bay Lightning, which also happens to currently be the NHL's best team. He has
gone on an absolutely incredible run offensively to climb to the top of the NHL
scoring and has been as electrifying and dominant as any other player in the
league. This is not a new development. He has been near the top of the NHL for
about three years now and can be borderline unstoppable when he gets rolling
the way he has been throughout the first half of the 2018-19 NHL season. He
will almost certainly have to hold off Connor McDavid for the scoring title (he
was not able to do that a year ago), but even if he does not end the season as
the NHL's leading scorer he is going to be somewhere near the top of the list.
That will almost certainly make him a finalist for the award, given how great
the Lightning have been from the start.
NATHAN
MACKINNON, COLORADO AVALANCHE (HART TROPHY, MVP)
The Colorado Avalanche could probably have three Hart
Trophy candidates, and all of them play on the team's top line. That is going
to be the problem for MVP voters, as they try to differentiate the
contributions among Nathan MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen and Gabriel Landeskog.
They all work together perfectly as a trio and all do their own share of the
heavy lifting for a team that has almost nothing after those three. I think my
preference might be to lean toward MacKinnon since he is the center on that
group, scores more goals and does more to generate shots. Really, though, you
cannot go wrong with any of them.
JOHNNY
GAUDREAU, CALGARY FLAMES (HART TROPHY, MVP)
Johnny Gaudreau is the argument for why teams shouldn't
get hung up on a player's height or weight. Find the players who are talented
and can put the puck in the net. He might be one of the smallest players in the
league, but he is also one of the most productive, most exciting and best
players in the world. He is the engine that drives the Flames and is on track
for a monster season. With Calgary rocketing toward the top of the NHL standings,
that is going to make him an MVP contender.
ALEX
OVECHKIN, WASHINGTON CAPITALS (HART TROPHY, MVP)
I thought Alex Ovechkin deserved more consideration for
the MVP a year ago, given how good he was for a team that was, once again, a
Stanley Cup contender. He is even better this season for a team that is again a
Stanley Cup contender and literally just won the Stanley Cup. He has already
won the MVP award three different times, and a fourth would put him in some
pretty exclusive company. Only Wayne Gretzky, Gordie Howe and Eddie Shore have
won it four times.
CONNOR
MCDAVID, EDMONTON OILERS (HART TROPHY, MVP)
This is going to be annoying again: the argument that is
going to be centered on the MVP debate as it relates to what it means and
value. There is no player in the NHL who does more for his team than what
Connor McDavid does for the Edmonton Oilers. He contributes to more than half
of their goals, he is the only thing that keeps them from being the
unquestioned worst team in the league, and it is not his fault the front office
has assembled such a bad team around him. If the Oilers miss the playoffs, he
will probably have no chance to win the award (again) even though he truly is
the league's most valuable player. Value is value no matter what happens around
the player.
KRIS
LETANG, PITTSBURGH PENGUINS (NORRIS TROPHY)
Kris Letang's 2017-18 season was probably one of the
worst of his NHL career. He was coming back from another significant injury
that had made him miss half of the 2016-17 season as well as the entire
postseason (when the Pittsburgh Penguins won a second consecutive Stanley Cup),
and he was never really 100 percent last year. He has come back in 2018-19 with
what might be at this point the best season of his NHL career. He has been a
constant workhorse for the Penguins all season and has dominated all three
zones and all situations. There is a strong argument to be made that he has
been their best overall player this season, even ahead of captain Sidney Crosby
(who also has been remarkable for them this season). He has been a finalist for
the Norris Trophy once before and could find himself there again this
season.
MARK
GIORDANO, CALGARY FLAMES (NORRIS TROPHY)
Mark Giordano is one of the NHL's great success stories,
going from an undrafted free agent and developing into one of the best
all-around defenders in the league. He has been one of the most underrated
players for several years now and is finally getting some recognition for his
play now that he is the centerpiece of the Calgary Flames' turnaround. The
Flames are one of the best teams in the league through the first half of the
2018-19 season, and Giordano has been one of the biggest factors in that
development. He might be the front-runner for the Norris Trophy at the halfway
point.
MORGAN
RIELLY, TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (NORRIS TROPHY)
The Toronto Maple Leafs aren't really known for being a
great defensive team, but they do have one of the league's best at the position
in Morgan Rielly. He is putting up monstrous numbers this season as part of the
high-powered attack in Toronto and is at the top of pretty much every major
offensive category for defenders. He may not have been selected to the 2019 NHL
All-Star Game, but he will probably have to settle for being a finalist for the
Norris Trophy (barring injury). He may even win it.
SETH
JONES, COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS (NORRIS TROPHY)
Seth Jones just missed being a finalist a year ago (he
finished in fourth place in the voting), but there seems to be a strong push
for him this season. He has become the Columbus Blue Jackets' best defender and
one of the best all-around defenders in the league due to his combination of
game-breaking offense and shutdown defense. He does absolutely everything and
does it as well as anyone else in the league at his position.
ERIK
KARLSSON, SAN JOSE SHARKS (NORRIS TROPHY)
Erik Karlsson took some heat early in the season because
his offensive numbers were not up to the same level we had seen in recent
years. But he was still controlling play when he was on the ice and playing at
a Norris Trophy level. Now the point production is there to match it. He is
already a two-time Norris Trophy winner, a two-time runner-up and is going to
be in the discussion again this season. He and teammate Brent Burns are both
going to make a strong argument for the award and are going to make the Sharks
an extremely difficult team to have to face in the playoffs. He is trying to
become just the ninth defender in league history to win the Norris Trophy three
different times.
JOHN
GIBSON, ANAHEIM DUCKS (VEZINA TROPHY)
He might even have an argument for the league MVP award.
John Gibson has been the single biggest reason the Anaheim Ducks have been even
somewhat competitive this season in the face of injuries and a system that has
seem them get crushed on the shots and scoring-chance charts from the start of
the season. When he is healthy, he is one of the best goaltenders in the league
and has been for a few years now. This season might be the best he has ever
played in the NHL.
PEKKA
RINNE, NASHVILLE PREDATORS (VEZINA TROPHY)
Pekka Rinne is trying to become the first player since
Martin Brodeur to win back-to-back Vezina Trophies. After winning the 2017-18
award with one of the best seasons of his career, Rinne has been just as
dominant this season for the Nashville Predators. He had a .920 save percentage
through the first half of the season and three shutouts in his first 30 starts.
For a while it looked like his career was starting to decline, but he has
bounced back in a huge way the past two years. He is a big reason the Predators
are once again one of the top Stanley Cup contenders in the NHL.
ANDREI
VASILEVSKIY, TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING (VEZINA TROPHY)
Andrei Vasilevskiy was a finalist for the award a year
ago and has been just as good this season. The only thing that has held him
back has been the fact that he missed a month due to injury while the Tampa Bay
Lightning continued to win in his absence. That does not take away from his
value, though. It just makes the Lightning that much better when he is in the
lineup.
FREDERIK
ANDERSEN, TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS
He is an underrated part of the Toronto Maple Leafs'
core. They still have some issues defensively and lean on Frederik Andersen
heavily to keep opponents off the board, and if he has shown anything over the
past two years, it is that he can take on a huge workload over the course of
the regular season and play at a consistently high level. He may not have the
high-end potential of a John Gibson or Andrei Vasilevskiy, but he is rarely the
reason the Maple Leafs lose. He always gives his team a chance and can play a
ton of minutes.
ROBIN
LEHNER, NEW YORK ISLANDERS (VEZINA TROPHY
This is kind of a dark horse pick, but Robin Lehner has
been the single biggest factor in the New York Islanders' surprising
performance this season. Barry Trotz and the new coaching staff will get most
of the attention, but Lehner posting a .927 save percentage through the first
half of the season has been the single biggest factor the Islanders have been a
potential playoff team this season.
ELIAS
PETTERSSON, VANCOUVER CANUCKS (ROOKIE OF THE YEAR)
Right now the Rookie of the Year Award seems to be Elias
Pettersson's to lose. There has not been a more impactful rookie anywhere in
the NHL, and there really has not been anyone close to him. He has been a
one-man highlight reel all season and completely changed the short-term (and
perhaps even long-term) trajectory of the Vancouver Canucks rebuild. Even
though they have won fewer games than any team in the NHL over the past three
full seasons, they still never ended up picking higher than fifth in the draft,
and they were fortunate enough to be able to grab an impact talent like
Pettersson.
RASMUS
DAHLIN, BUFFALO SABRES (ROOKIE OF THE YEAR)
After years of near misses in the draft lottery, the
Buffalo Sabres finally got the ping pong balls to go their way in 2018,
resulting in defender Rasmus Dahlin joining the organization. He has been
outstanding so far and has shown flashes of superstar potential. He is playing
more than 20 minutes per night and has already eclipsed the 20-point mark in
half a season. He is on track for one of the best seasons ever by an
18-year-old defender in NHL history.
MIRO
HEISKANEN, DALLAS STARS (ROOKIE OF THE YEAR)
It is really tough for defenders to get much attention in
the Rookie of the Year race, but this season there are two who should be near
the top of the list. Dallas' Miro Heiskanen is one of them. The Stars have been
so high on the 2017 No. 3 overall pick that they reportedly refused to make him
available in potential trade talks for Erik Karlsson. So far this season,
Heiskanen has been playing as a top-pairing defender, logging more than 22
minutes per night and showing plenty of offensive ability. He and John
Klingberg should be a dominant duo on defense in Dallas for the next
decade.
BRADY
TKACHUK, OTTAWA SENATORS (ROOKIE OF THE YEAR)
When the Ottawa Senators elected to hang on to their 2018
first-round pick (No. 4 overall) and instead send their 2019 pick to the
Colorado Avalanche as part of the Matt Duchene trade, it put a ton of pressure
on the organization to get it right — especially since that 2019 pick could
very well be even higher than the 2018 pick and perhaps even the top pick in
the draft (which would be disastrous for Ottawa because of how good Jack Hughes
potentially is). So far it looks like they got it right. Brady Tkachuk has been
one of the bright spots for the Senators through the first half of the 2018-19
season and has been one of the top rookies in the NHL. He had 10 goals and 10
assists through his first 33 games and made an instant impact in the Senators
lineup.
ANDREI
SVECHNIKOV, CAROLINA HURRICANES (ROOKIE OF THE YEAR)
He's a long shot at this point, but Andrei Svechnikov
still looks like he has a chance to be a core player for the Carolina
Hurricanes in their rebuild. The No. 2 overall pick in the 2018 NHL draft,
Svechnikov is one of the top rookie goal scorers in the league through the
first half of the season and is at the top of the list when it comes to shots
on goals.
JON
COOPER, TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING (COACH OF THE YEAR)
The argument against him will be that he has a ton of
talent, and the Coach of the Year Award almost always goes to someone whose
team seems to overachieve or is a surprise. That means it's a team that
probably missed the playoffs the year before or came out of nowhere to contend.
It does not usually go to coaches behind the bench of a Stanley Cup contender.
While it is true that Cooper has a ton of talent at his disposal (arguably the
deepest, most talented team in the league) that should not exclude him from the
discussion for the NHL's Coach of the Year Award.
CLAUDE
JULIEN, MONTREAL CANADIENS (COACH OF THE YEAR)
The Montreal Canadiens traded two of their best offensive
players (Max Pacioretty and Alex Galchenyuk) over the summer, they played most
of the first half of their season without their best defender (Shea Weber), and
their superstar goalie (Carey Price) has been, for lack of a better word, OK. Yet
here are the Canadiens hanging around in the playoff race with a pretty
legitimate chance to get in. Claude Julien is a highly regarded coach and will
get a ton of credit for his team's ability to compete this season.
BILL
PETERS, CALGARY FLAMES (COACH OF THE YEAR)
Before this season, Bill Peters had been a head coach for
several seasons in the NHL, but he never made the playoffs in any of them. At
the halfway point of the 2018-19 NHL season, he is behind the bench for one of
the NHL's best teams, the Calgary Flames, and would seem to be one of the
front-runners for the award for obvious reasons. Peters' past record with the
Carolina Hurricanes was never great, but his teams always played hard and with
a purpose. He just seemed to be short on talent. Now the talent is there, and
the results are starting to follow.
PHIL
HOUSLEY, BUFFALO SABRES (COACH OF THE YEAR)
He might be more of a long shot at this point because of
the way the Sabres have cooled off following their 10-game winning streak in
November. But his team has a chance to return to the playoffs for the first
time since the 2010-11 season. That is no small accomplishment for a team that
has been one of the worst in the NHL for the past five years. Is he the best
coach in the NHL? Almost certainly not. But given the team success and where it
is coming from, he is definitely going to get consideration.
BARRY
TROTZ, NEW YORK ISLANDERS (COACH OF THE YEAR)
He has all of the ingredients to be the Coach of the
Year. He leads a team that had no expectations entering the season, he took
over a team that has been bad and just lost its best player, and he has
exceeded what even the most optimistic fan could have hoped for. Oh, by the
way, he is also the reigning Stanley Cup champion coach. If his New York
Islanders make the playoffs, he will be the popular consensus among voters and
will probably, at the very least, be a finalist.
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