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       8 vital questions for NHL's 2nd-round playoff teams
        
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       _Narrow Game 7 wins by the Boston Bruins and Dallas Stars finalized
       the NHL's second-round playoff matchups. These key questions will
       influence what happens in the next phase of the Stanley Cup chase._
        
       **Florida Panthers**  
        _Can Barkov and Forsling put clamps on Pastrnak?_
        
       Joe Sargent / Getty Images
        
       Florida scores and defends as well as anyone. The Panthers boast
       strong goaltending and special teams. On paper, they're much scarier
       opponents than the Bruins.
        
       If the Panthers lose this series, it'll be because Sergei Bobrovsky
       gets outdueled by Jeremy Swayman; they can't convert on the power play
       (special-teams performance can be so hard to predict series to
       series); and/or they can't contain David Pastrnak, who's fresh off
       scoring in overtime of a Game 7.
        
       Pastrnak is the element the Panthers have the most control over, and
       Florida has the personnel to limit him. No. 1 center Aleksander Barkov
       and No. 1 defenseman Gustav Forsling did a masterful job of holding
       Lightning superstar Nikita Kucherov to three five-on-five assists in
       the opening round. The Panthers' shutdown guys excel at knowing when
       to defend a star forward with brute physicality and when to use hockey
       IQ and stick work. They can frustrate stars to no end.
        
       That said, Pastrnak shouldn't be discouraged entering Round 2. The
       Czech sniper scored five times in seven games in last year's Florida-
       Boston series, and the underlying data slanted heavily towards the
       Bruins during Pastrnak's five-on-five shifts. Florida will look to
       flip the script this time.
        
        **Boston Bruins**  
        _Can Coyle and Zacha make a significant impact?_
        
       China Wong / Getty Images
        
       An interesting stat circulated on social media a couple of weeks ago:
       The Bruins' top centers, Charlie Coyle and Pavel Zacha, combined for
       119 points in the regular season, which was five points clear of the
       combined total from the top centers in 2022-23, Patrice Bergeron and
       David Krejci.
        
       Impressive, right?
        
       Perhaps, but some context helped dispel the idea that the Bruins don't
       miss Bergeron and Krejci. The score was 101-76 when Boston's top
       centers were on the ice at five-on-five this year. Last year: 104-52.
       Sorry, the duo with a 67% goal rate is more impactful than the 57%
       one.
        
       The first round offered additional context, as Coyle and Zacha failed
       to contribute anything meaningful. The Bruins were 1-2 with a 47%
       expected goals rate in Coyle's five-on-five shifts, and 3-4 with a 44%
       expected goals rate in Zacha's. The centers combined for zero goals,
       four assists, 12 shots on goal, 13 blocked shots, 49 hits, five minor
       penalties, and a 45% faceoff win rate.
        
       That's not nearly good enough. Boston's forward group isn't deep, and
       the Bruins need Coyle and Zacha to step up.
        
        __
        
       **New York Rangers**  
        _Will elite special teams provide edge?_
        
       Rich Graessle / Getty Images
        
       Despite rocking similar five-on-five scoring rates, the Rangers and
       Hurricanes generate offense differently. Carolina's a forecheck team
       that dominates territorially, and New York's a rush team that only
       needs a few grade A scoring chances to convert thanks to its
       sharpshooters.
        
       Then there's special teams. Both clubs ranked in the top five in
       power-play scoring and penalty killing during the regular season, then
       continued to execute at a high level in Round 1. But does one team
       have a minor edge?
        
       Yes - and it's the Rangers. This was the case before Game 1, and New
       York delivered in the opener by scoring early in two power-play
       opportunities.
        
       A few factors tilt the scales. The Rangers have the better goalie
       (Frederik Andersen is playing well, but Igor Shesterkin's the superior
       netminder). Carolina's without one of its best penalty killers,
       injured defenseman Brett Pesce, until at least Game 3. And New York
       scored eight power-play goals in seven games the last time these teams
       faced off in the playoffs (2022 second round).
        
       That final stat may seem a bit flimsy given the two-year gap and the
       fact that an overmatched Antti Raanta was in Carolina's net. However,
       New York's top unit has just one new member in Vincent Trocheck. He,
       Mika Zibanejad, Artemi Panarin, Chris Kreider, and Adam Fox look
       primed to terrorize the Canes once again.
        
        **Carolina Hurricanes**  
        _Can Svechnikov keep asserting himself?_
        
       Josh Lavallee / Getty Images
        
       The Hurricanes acquired Jake Guentzel ahead of the trade deadline to
       inject finishing ability into a forward group primarily consisting of
       playmakers and disrupters. To go on a deep playoff run, Carolina needs
       a buzzing Guentzel.
        
       Equally important but not mentioned enough: Core members Sebastian
       Aho, Seth Jarvis, and Andrei Svechnikov must also drive the attack.
       Svechnikov, who missed the entirety of last season's run to the
       Eastern Conference Final due to injury, is especially important. He's
       a walking X-factor.
        
       And, to Svechnikov's credit, he dominated in Round 1 against the
       Islanders.
        
       The 24-year-old recorded a goal and four assists while finishing first
       on the Canes in shots on goal (15), tied for second in shot attempts
       (30), and second in hits (15). Built like a truck and welcoming of the
       emotional and physical chaos of playoff hockey, he put on a clinic for
       power forwards.
        
       "It felt like every time he was on the ice he was a force. ... I
       thought he was our best player, really, throughout the five games,"
       head coach Rod Brind'Amour said to sum up Svechnikov's performance.
        
        __
        
       **Vancouver Canucks**  
        _Is best yet to come for Pettersson, Hughes?_
        
       Ric Tapia / Icon Sportswire / Getty Images
        
       Elias Pettersson's low shot count in the opening round - he put eight
       of 27 attempts on net - curbed his impact against the Predators. A
       bobbled pass in the waning minutes of a scoreless Game 6 reaffirmed
       that his timing and rhythm were off.
        
       To Pettersson's credit, he prevented a clearance later in the shift,
       slickly sidestepped a check, and helped set up Pius Suter's series-
       clinching snipe. He had three assists in the matchup, but his goal
       drought reached nine games. Brock Boeser and J.T. Miller were more
       noticeable, opportunistic, and influential.
        
       Nashville targeted Quinn Hughes for physical punishment, catching
       Vancouver's captain with a team-high 20 hits. He still produced five
       assists and set up Boeser's clutch Game 4 equalizer with a nifty puck
       retrieval and dangle. To beat the Oilers, Vancouver needs Hughes to
       dominate possession.
        
       Three Canucks goalies won games in Round 1. They advanced when rookie
       Arturs Silovs manifested a 28-save shutout. No matter who's in net,
       dynamic performances from every star would make another triumph
       possible.
        
        **Edmonton Oilers**  
        _Will they break even at even strength?_
        
       Paul Swanson / NHL / Getty Images
        
       Outrageously proficient on the power play, the Oilers also killed each
       penalty they took against the Kings. Over five games, the goal count
       was 13-13 at even strength and favored Edmonton 9-0 on special teams.
        
       Connor McDavid versus a shorthanded defense is an unfair fight. Lethal
       shooters and an expert puck-tipper, Zach Hyman, surround the greatest
       passer in the sport. Edmonton's power play might cool, but there's no
       reason to think it'll crater. That means the Oilers just need to level
       the five-on-five battle.
        
       The Hyman-McDavid-Adam Henrique top line heavily outchanced the Kings,
       while Leon Draisaitl, Evander Kane, and Dylan Holloway buried multiple
       goals. Defensively, the Oilers got burned by a few bad bounces and
       quick strikes off the counterattack, but Stuart Skinner (.910 save
       percentage, one shutout) enjoyed his best postseason round. So far,
       what's not to like?
        
        __
        
       **Dallas Stars**  
        _Can they stop Colorado's whirlwind attack?_
        
       Ethan Miller / Getty Images
        
       The Stars rallied to eliminate the Golden Knights while essentially
       deploying five defensemen. The No. 6 option, Nils Lundkvist, averaged
       2:50 of ice time in Games 3-7. He was caught flat-footed and beaten to
       the net for an easy tap-in on Vegas' only goal of the rubber match.
        
       To pick up the slack, Miro Heiskanen, Thomas Harley, Esa Lindell, and
       Chris Tanev shouldered major minutes. Tanev, a crucial trade addition,
       crushed his Stars playoff debut by helping them own 66.7% of high-
       danger shot attempts and 100% of goals (5-0) in his five-on-five
       shifts, per Natural Stat Trick. He neutralizes offense and instills
       calm.
        
       Those qualities will be tested by the Avalanche, whose relentless
       pressure, applied on the forecheck and in transition, created crises
       for Vezina Trophy shoo-in Connor Hellebuyck. The Avs' 28 goals against
       the Jets were an NHL high through five playoff games since 1995, per
       Stathead. Eight Colorado skaters tallied a point per game or better.
       To avoid being blitzed, the Stars' go-to defensemen can't get fatigued
       or rattled.
        
        **Colorado Avalanche**  
        _Will heavy workload tax Georgiev?_
        
       Jonathan Kozub / NHL / Getty Images
        
       Skeptics argue that Alexandar Georgiev led all goalies in wins this
       season because his team is a wagon.
        
       Georgiev's .897 save percentage across 62 starts was a career low. Yet
       he won 38 games while receiving the most offensive goal support in the
       NHL, relaxing as the Avalanche potted 3.61 per 60 minutes.
        
       That sounds luxurious, but Georgiev deserves credit for becoming a
       workhorse. Before joining Colorado, he averaged 26 appearances over
       five years as the backup to Rangers royalty - first Henrik Lundqvist,
       then Shesterkin. Over the past two seasons, only Hellebuyck and Juuse
       Saros spent more time in the crease than Georgiev. Counting the
       playoffs, he might have to cross the 82-game threshold to raise the
       Cup.
        
       Georgiev shook off a disastrous beginning to the Jets series to record
       a .932 denial rate in Games 2-5. His next opponent, Dallas, creates
       and converts a lot of prime scoring opportunities. With another strong
       showing, Georgiev could dispel the notion that he's Colorado's most
       exploitable - and maybe only - weakness.
        
        
        
        
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