Winnipeg Jets: 2014-15 NHL season preview

Fans crave 1st playoff game since 1996

Image | kane-evander-620

Caption: Evander Kane has the talent to score 30 goals, and did it three season ago, but remains a polarizing figure on the Jets. (Jeff Gross/Getty Images)

This is part of our series of quick season previews for the seven Canadian-based NHL teams. We've also covered the Vancouver Canucks, Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers and Toronto Maple Leafs.

Winnipeg Jets(external link)

Last season's record: 37-35-10, 84 points, 7th out of 7 teams in Central Division, missed playoffs.
Last season's story: The arrival of Paul Maurice appeared to inject life into a moribund team as the Jets won nine of their next 11 games after the head coach was taken off the scrap heap in mid-January. But it may have been a mirage, as Winnipeg went 9-10-5 to close the season, falling well short of the playoffs again. Bright spots included 10 goals by rookie defenceman Jacob Trouba(external link) (he didn't turn 20 until mid-season), career years by forwards Blake Wheeler(external link) and Bryan Little(external link), and Dustin (external link)Byfuglien(external link)'s first 20-goal campaign as a Jet. On the other hand, people seemed ready to give up on "immature" Evander Kane(external link) (he's 23, guys), Zach Bogosian(external link) battled injuries and ineffectiveness (again) and goalie Ondrej Pavelec(external link)...was Ondrej Pavelec.
Key off-season additions: G Michael Hutchinson(external link), F Mathieu Perreault(external link), F T.J. Galiardi(external link).
Key off-season subtractions: F Al Montoya(external link), F Olli Jokinen(external link), F Devin Setoguchi(external link).
Best-case scenario: Maurice is able to coax a more structured effort from his players in his first full season behind the bench; Kane "matures" into a 30-goal scorer (he did it three seasons ago, but don't spoil the narrative); Trouba looks like a franchise defenceman in the making; second-year forward Mark Scheifele(external link) blossoms into a dependable two-way player; and the Jets win enough high-scoring games to stage the first NHL playoff game in Winnipeg since 1996.
Worst-case scenario: Another summer of relative inaction by Kevin Cheveldayoff yields the same old results, and the GM is publicly criticized by Kane before being fired. The new guy dumps Kane for 50 cents on the dollar and he flourishes with his new team as the Jets finish last in the Central again and we all lament how Winnipeg's fans deserve much, much better.