Top 12 NHL Contenders for the 2025 Stanley Cup
Photo credit: The Hockey News
I need to give credit where it's due to the Nashville Predators: I'd urged them for a few years to blow it up and get out of the first-round no-man's land of the mid, but they hung on just long enough to make a few moves to become exciting again.
Obviously, that starts with keeping goaltender
Juuse Saros and deciding to go with it. It's been a treat watching Barry Trotz enter his GM era and make some competitive moves that improved the roster at only draft-pick costs at the trade deadline.
10. New Jersey Devils
Very rarely is a problem so clear and a solution so simple as was the case for the 2023-24 New Jersey Devils. Even more rare was the front office not galaxy-braining it and actually providing that simple solution.
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The Devils were losing games they had no business losing because of goaltending. They were also losing games they probably had some business losing because of injuries and a weaker defensive core, but the goaltending thing was the glaring issue.
Enter
Jacob Markstrom, and while the Devils are at it, enter solid-as-they-come defenseman
Brett Pesce. Also, enter new head coach Sheldon Keefe.
With a healthy
Dougie Hamilton and some necessary improvements, the Devils should bounce back from a disappointing season.
9. Carolina Hurricanes
The Hurricanes have been a popular Cup favorite throughout the last six years in which they never missed the playoffs and made it to the Eastern Conference Final twice. But the end of that window has been looming. Getting swept twice in the ECF appearances has reeked of missed opportunity.
We knew there were major contract negotiations to deal with this offseason, so the front office gave the core one more big push to win it all together in acquiring
Jake Guentzel at the deadline. The Canes fell to the Rangers in the second round in dramatic fashion, and the tough contract decisions with minimal cap space have started rolling in this free agency period.
So far, Carolina has lost Guentzel, long-time core players Brett Pesce and
Teuvo Teravainen, Brady Skjei, and
Stefan Noesen, among others. Evgeni Kuznetsov cleared waivers Thursday to sign a deal in the KHL. They've reacquired enticing defense option
Shayne Gostisbehere, though, and added a surging
Sean Walker. They've also re-signed alternate captain
Jordan Martinook, inexpensive-yet-effective up-and-comer
Jalen Chatfield, and added
William Carrier,
Jack Roslovic,
Eric Robinson, and
Tyson Jost.
Kuznetsov off the books leaves the Canes with $13.86 million in cap space, and with Seth Jarvis and
Martin Necas to re-sign.
No matter how those negotiations shake out, the Hurricanes are returning a worse team on paper, and it's tough to see them advancing past what they've already accomplished given the circumstances and the parity around the league. That said, they're still in the conversation, Jarvis has the potential for superstardom after his breakout season, and maybe
Pyotr Kochetkov will find some magic. No one should totally count the Canes out just yet, even if the path is harder.
8. Toronto Maple Leafs
There are still a few months before training camp, but it's looking like
Mitch Marner�along with the rest of the Maple Leafs' core�is staying put. As cursed as this franchise is, and as much as it has "choked" in the postseason, objectively this is still one of the best teams in the league.
Perhaps keeping the core together and the addition of Cup-winning head coach Craig Berube will light a last-ditch fire under the core four before Marner walks in free agency next offseason.
7. Vegas Golden Knights
Is the aggressive nature of the Golden Knights finally catching up to them? If you're a Vegas fan, you'll take the quick cup and constant relevancy any day and twice on Sundays, but letting Jonathan Marchessault go unhappily, trading
Logan Thompson during an autograph session, and *gestures towards everything else over the past half-decade* might finally be catching up to them. The forward group is dwindling, and the best of the West remain ferocious.
Even so, they've got a competitive, playoff perennial team, and I don't expect them to immediately leave the conversation. I'm never leaving
Mark Stone and
Jack Eichel out of a Cup conversation, that's for certain.
6. Vancouver Canucks
The Canucks were sadly hanging by a thread for much of the 2024 playoffs, when it should've been an encore of their vibey season. Even then, it still sort of was�with random heroes and likely heroes abound, but leading scorer
Brock Boeser's illness was too much to surpass the Oilers. It was devastating to see Vezina finalist goalie
Thatcher Demko go down in the first round as well, but since he didn't rush back and took care of himself, he has gifted the team a strong opportunity to build and contend once again this season.
Run it back with some confidence, Vancouver!
5. Colorado Avalanche
Speed, strength, and a Hart Trophy winner in
Nathan MacKinnon whose spirit knows no bounds. There's nothing better to build a team on than a center who is equal parts hardworking and talented, a defenseman who is just the same, and the speed and intensity the two have cultivated. It's tough in the West, but there's a reason the Avalanche refuse to go away.
4. New York Rangers
Alexis Lafreniere's breakout season, paired with the big hitters continuing to hit big, told me everything I needed to know about the Rangers headed into next season. It's been disappointing for sure as the team and its leaders have tried to figure it all out, but it feels like Lafreniere paces the team in that way.
You've got the best goalie in the world in
Igor Shesterkin, a crew of still-productive veterans, and Vinny freaking Trocheck. It's all clicking, and Peter Laviolette will be the one to bring a Cup to Madison Square Garden�with or without
Jacob Trouba.
After a second consecutive trip to the Western Conference Final with nothing to show for it, the Dallas Stars are officially the scariest, most consistent team of all the Cupless contenders.
As their youth movement, including
Wyatt Johnston and
Logan Stankoven, keeps growing, you feel like this franchise is only moving in a positive direction.
Name one reason why the Panthers can't run it back. You can't, right?
Florida already took care of leading goal scorer
Sam Reinhart. The Panthers did let go of
Vladimir Tarasenko (who they got at a discount, and was very overpaid by the Red Wings), and
Brandon Montour (who was fairly paid by the Kraken).
Making it to the Stanley Cup Final, losing in devastating fashion, coming back and winning it all? So hot right now.
In all seriousness, it's almost more difficult to do what the Oilers did and almost come back from the brink of elimination, than to win the Cup itself.
This ranking is from Bleacher Report.
Previously on KrakenLatest
POLL |
20 JUILLET | 10 ANSWERS Top 12 NHL Contenders for the 2025 Stanley Cup Do you think the Nashville Predators will win the Stanley Cup in 2025? |
Yes | 3 | 30 % |
No | 7 | 70 % |
LIST OF POLLS |
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