Anaheim Ducks 2021-22 Season Preview

2020-21 record 17-30-9, 43 points

8th in the Honda NHL West Division

Missed the postseason for the third-straight year

Additions: F Danny O’Regan, F Buddy Robinson, D Greg Pateryn, D Brogan Rafferty

Subtractions: F Andrew Agozzino (signed with OTT), F Danton Heinen (signed with PIT), F Chase De Leo (signed with NJD), F Andrew Poturalski (signed with CAR), D Haydn Fleury (expansion, SEA), D Andy Welinski (signed with CGY), G Ryan Miller (retired)

Still Unsigned: F David Backes, F Carter Rowney

Re-signed: F Max Comtois, F Ryan Getzlaf, F Max Jones, F Isac Lundestrom, F Sam Steel, D Josh Mahura

Offseason Analysis: All three California-based NHL teams missed out on the playoffs for the second year in a row (and third time overall since 1996), but there’s hope for 2/3 of the California teams in terms of turning things around a lot sooner rather than later.

Both of them happen to be in southern California.

Though the Ducks are behind the Los Angeles Kings by a year or two in both time spent in their ongoing rebuilds– as well as when they’re expected to be a playoff contender once again– Anaheim’s trending in the direction of a younger team with a tinge of experience gained from last season as Max Comtois led the way in scoring on the roster with 16-17–33 totals in 55 games.

Troy Terry solidified a spot on the NHL roster and won’t have to spend any time fluctuating back and forth between the Ducks and the San Diego Gulls (AHL) after he managed to amass 7-13–20 totals in 48 games.

Though Rickard Rakell and Jakob Silfverberg are often the subjects of trade rumors out of Anaheim, Rakell led the Ducks in assists last season with 19 helpers in 52 games, while Silfverberg had a more pedestrian season– notching 16 points in 47 games.

At the very least, they’re two veterans that head coach, Dallas Eakins, can lean on as Anaheim’s youth continues to emerge and Ryan Getzlaf’s aging body wears down over time.

That’s not to say that Getzlaf’s 17 points (five goals, 12 assists) in 48 games didn’t mean much for the Ducks, but rather that they won’t have to count on their 36-year-old captain for nearly as much as they used to get out of him– especially as his production is projected to continue to decline.

Getting a full season on defense from Jamie Drysdale is likely to be a difference maker as the 19-year-old managed to put up 3-5–8 totals in 24 games from the blue line last season in his league debut after being selected 6th overall in the 2020 NHL Draft.

His offensive contributions from the defense– at the very least as a two-way defender– should spark more rushes from a team that got stuck playing catch-up while attempting to bear hug their opponents from night-to-night in recent years.

Cam Fowler and Josh Manson are set to turn 30 during the 2021-22 season, while Kevin Shattenkirk is currently the oldest defender on the roster at 32-years-old, but Hampus Lindholm and Jacob Larsson are familiar names that are just entering the cusp of their defensive primes, so really the Ducks just need to hit the back of the net more– as if that wasn’t already evidenced enough by their minus-53 goal differential last season.

Granted, that does mean they’ll have to shore things up in their own end somewhat, but yeah, score more goals than the other team, win the game. Who would’ve thought?

Don’t overplay John Gibson in the crease (seriously, no goaltender should be facing more than, like, 55 games in an 82-game schedule) and give Anthony Stolarz a chance to be a legitimate backup goaltender in the league– something in the Ducks’ coaching staff is working for him in the last two seasons.

Gibson went 9-19-7 in 35 games with a 2.98 goals-against average, a .903 save percentage and three shutouts in that span, which was better and worse than his 20-26-5 record in 51 games in 2019-20, in which he had a 3.00 goals-against average and a .904 save percentage– as well as one shutout.

With the exception of last season’s 56-game schedule, Gibson hasn’t faced fewer than 1,500 shots against since the 2016-17 season, which featured a run to the Western Conference Final for the Ducks.

A drop in goals for production has hurt Gibson like a lack of run support spurns a starting pitcher in baseball.

Meanwhile, Stolarz took on a bigger role as Anaheim’s backup towards the tale end of the season– forcing Ryan Miller into an early retirement, even though Miller earned the honors of the last game of the season.

Stolarz put up a 4-3-0 record in eight games played and had a 2.20 goals-against average, a .926 save percentage and one shutout in that span, which was much better than Miller’s 4-8-2 record in 16 games to go with a 3.51 goals-against average and an .882 save percentage.

Ideally, Anaheim would find a way to give both Gibson and Stolarz about 41 games each to generate healthy competition, but that’s not likely– especially with Gibson’s high profile around the league as one of the better goaltenders that’s just stuck in the unfortunate rut of a rebuilding team.

Ducks General Manager, Bob Murray, had one thing to do this offseason and that was to not do anything, so he did (nothing, that is).

Let things play out on their own and Anaheim will either show forward progress or get a chance to speed up their rebuild with another top-10 draft pick in 2022.

At best they’ll be 6th in the Pacific Division and ahead of their counterparts in northern California– the San Jose Sharks. At worst they’ll be stuck in 8th.

Offseason Grade: C

If subjectivity had any influence on an offseason grade, Murray and the Ducks would get an “A” for doing what was recommended– virtually nothing. Seriously.

It’s time for Anaheim to figure out what they have, where they still need to make a few improvements and otherwise to let their youth get experience and grow in their game.

The Ducks recognize their situation and they have enough patience for now to be smart about things.

With about $14 million to spend in cap space this season, Anaheim can be a trade deadline broker flipping and retaining salary on expiring or short-term contracts while yielding the profits of prospects and draft picks– that is how you rebuild.

Even better, they’ll have about $44.4 million to spend next offseason, though with Getzlaf, Rakell, Lindholm and Manson headlining their pending-unrestricted free agent class.

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