Sharks: San Jose is one of the NHL's highest-scoring teams in large part because of a deep and skilled group of forwards, led by first-line center Joe Thornton and right wing Joe Pavelski.
At age 36, Thornton (19 goals, 63 assists, 82 points) turned back the clock and had his best season since putting up 89 points in 2009-10. He's still one of hockey's best passers, but has become such a force defensively that he's been mentioned as a possible Selke Trophy candidate. Thornton was also one of the NHL's top point producers during the final three months of the season.
Pavelski (38-40-78), in his first season as captain, had at least 30 goals and 30 assists for the fourth time in his career and had more than 70 points for the third straight season. Pavelski has led by example on the ice, doing his best work in the tough areas in front of the net. Off the ice, he has been an even more vocal leader now that he wears the "C."
After spending time as a center earlier in the season, Tomas Hertl was moved to left wing on the top line and has thrived with Thornton and Pavelski. His 21 goals are a career high, and he's learned to take better advantage of his 6-foot-2, 215-pound body in front of the net.
The Sharks struggled early in the season in part because Logan Couture missed 30 games with a broken leg, then a thigh injury and internal bleeding. He had surgery twice. After Couture returned and became a fixture as the second-line center on Dec. 30, the Sharks went 8-2-1 in their next 11 games and began a serious playoff push. Their depth down the middle with Thornton, Couture, Patrick Marleau and Chris Tierney has created mismatches.
San Jose's forward group is much deeper than it was a year ago, enabling coach Peter DeBoer to roll four lines and keeping his top forwards fresh. The Sharks signed former Washington Capitals right wing Joel Ward during the offseason, adding a solid veteran with 517 games of NHL experience. He finished with 21 goals and 22 assists, adding valuable secondary scoring.
"I think we've got a great group in here that's capable of doing a lot of great things," Ward said. "Just excited to see what happens in the postseason. There's a lot of guys that could step up at any time."
The Sharks added veteran depth on Nov. 24 when they signed forward Dainius Zubrus, who played for DeBoer with the New Jersey Devils. They acquired forward Nick Spaling from the Toronto Maple Leafs on Feb. 22. Each can play center or wing and is comfortable skating on the fourth line or in the top six, giving DeBoer flexibility.
Joonas Donskoi, a rookie from Finland, has been a free-agent find. Donskoi is known most for his offensive skill, but he's also a responsible two-way player. Melker Karlsson got off to a slow start because of an off-season injury, but the second-year player from Sweden has rounded into shape and made an impact as a relentless puck hound.
Tommy Wingels led the forwards in hits (203) and had 54 blocked shots. Matt Nieto, who was sidelined down the stretch with a broken knuckle, is one of the fastest Sharks.