OTB 5.6 CBJ COL

Here is the May 6 edition of Dan Rosen's weekly mailbag. If you have a question, tweet it to @drosennhl and use #OvertheBoards.

Which team do you think will benefit the most if the season starts again? Then who do you think will benefit the least? -- @AMatthews1921

The Columbus Blue Jackets and Colorado Avalanche benefit the most. Sorry, I know you asked for one, but I'm copping out and giving two because choosing between them is near impossible. It's all because of health. Columbus and Colorado were significantly banged up before the season was paused March 12 due to concerns surrounding the coronavirus, and each should have close to a full lineup if and when the season returns. We're talking about significant players back in the lineups too.

The Blue Jackets will have defenseman Seth Jones and forward Oliver Bjorkstrand back from their ankle injuries. Each is skating, and if the Stanley Cup Playoffs were being played right now, Jones and Bjorkstrand would most likely be in the lineup. Forward Alexandre Texier, who has been out since Dec. 31 because of a lumbar stress fracture, would also most likely be playing. Forward Cam Atkinson, who was dealing with an ankle injury when the season was paused, will certainly be available. It's also possible defenseman Dean Kukan (knee) will be back. And although it's not likely that forwards Brandon Dubinsky (wrist) and Josh Anderson (shoulder surgery) will return in time to play this season, the number of skaters who will be back should make Columbus a dangerous opponent. In addition, the Blue Jackets signed goalies Joonas Korpisalo and Elvis Merzlikins each to a two-year contract, giving them peace of mind.

NYR@CBJ: Merzlikins slides across to stone Zibanejad

The Avalanche were without top-six forwards Nathan MacKinnon (lower body), Mikko Rantanen (upper body), Nazem Kadri (lower body) and Andre Burakovsky (lower body), along with depth forward Matt Calvert (lower body) and goalie Philipp Grubauer (lower body) when the season was paused. Assuming they're all back, the Avalanche will be healthy, talented and hungry, a trio of ingredients that I think could be enough to get past the St. Louis Blues in the Central Division (Colorado was two points back when season was paused).

I can't pick a specific team that will not benefit from this pause, but I have written in a previous mailbag that I am leery of some of the older teams in the NHL and how quickly they can bounce back. I'd put the Blues, Capitals and Vegas Golden Knights in that category. Each has a roster with an average age of at least 28 years old. The Blue Jackets' average age is 26, the Avalanche's is 27.

Which current player reminds you most of Peter Forsberg? -- @DavidDugan77

Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin, Edmonton Oilers center Leon Draisaitl, Buffalo Sabres center Jack Eichel, New York Rangers center Mika Zibanejad, and Nashville Predators forward Filip Forsberg.

All five would probably grumble or laugh, or both, if I told them they compare to Peter Forsberg. It's a high honor to be mentioned in the same breath with a player who averaged 1.25 points per game during an NHL career cut short by injuries. Forsberg scored 825 points (249 goals, 636 assists) in 708 games, won the Calder Trophy (1995), the Hart Trophy and Art Ross Trophy (each in 2003), and was named an NHL First Team All-Star three times (1998, 1999, 2003). He also won the Stanley Cup twice (1996, 2001) and averaged 1.13 points per game in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, scoring 171 points (64 goals, 107 assists) in 151 games.

But Malkin, Draisaitl, Eichel, Zibanejad and Filip Forsberg all have the type of complete game that Peter Forsberg had in his prime. Their skill is among the best in the NHL. They each have a terrific shot along with a nose for the net. They set up goals with 20/20 vision. They see all the angles. They play with intelligence. They can play with finesse or power. They can play in the defensive zone.

Among the five, though, Malkin compares most favorably if you look at statistics and awards. He is averaging 1.19 points per game in his NHL career (1,076 points in 907 games), has won the Hart Trophy (2012), the Art Ross Trophy twice (2009, 2012), the Calder Trophy (2007), the Conn Smythe Trophy (2009), and is a three-time Stanley Cup champion (2009, 2016, 2017). He's also been named an NHL First Team All-Star three times (2008, 2009, 2012).

But Draisaitl, Eichel, Zibanejad and Filip Forsberg are coming into his prime now.

Since the start of last season, Draisaitl leads the NHL with 215 points (93 goals, 122 assists) in 153 games (1.41 points per game), Eichel has 160 points (64 goals, 96 assists) in 145 games (1.10 points per game), and Zibanejad has 149 points (71 goals, 78 assists) in 139 games (1.07 points per game). Filip Forsberg has averaged 27.5 goals and 57.8 points per season since 2014-15, including 48 points (21 goals, 27 assists) in 63 games this season.

They'll probably be uncomfortable if they read this, knowing someone is comparing them to a Hockey Hall of Famer, but Malkin, Draisaitl, Eichel, Zibanejad and Filip Forsberg all deserve the comparison because of how they play the game.

Which Canadian team will be next to bring the Stanley Cup north of the border? It's been 27 years. How much longer does Canada have to wait? -- @theashcity

Canada's longest drought without a Stanley Cup champion will eventually be broken by the Toronto Maple Leafs. I hesitate to say when it will happen, but they remind me of the Washington Capitals in the early part of the Alex Ovechkin-Nicklas Backstrom era. The Capitals had great individual skill, excellent goaltending, strong coaching, an ownership willing to spend, and a smart management staff. But they were not capable of figuring out how to put it all together as a team. From 2008-17, Washington failed to break through in the playoffs and was eliminated by the Rangers, Penguins, Philadelphia Flyers, Tampa Bay Lightning and Montreal Canadiens. Among those five teams, New York and Pittsburgh proved the most trouble, eliminating Washington three times each.

The Maple Leafs have similar individual talent with forwards Auston Matthews, Mitchell Marner and William Nylander, and Frederik Andersen is a reliable goalie. Ownership clearly is not hesitant about spending to the NHL salary cap, and they have a smart management staff which is constantly adapting and embracing new information. But they haven't found an answer for the Boston Bruins, losing to them in seven games in each of the past two seasons after losing in six games to the Capitals in 2017. The Maple Leafs are still growing, just as the Capitals were during those nine seasons from 2008-17. They are learning lessons from losing, as the Capitals did. Sometimes it just takes time. I don't think it'll take Toronto as long as it took Washington, but making that prediction is a setup for failure. The Maple Leafs need to stay the course and keep building, especially at defenseman, and if they do that, I believe they'll win the Cup for the first time since 1967 and become the first team from Canada to win it since the Canadiens in 1993.

The Flyers are known for trading away talent. What are your thoughts on Carter Hart, his potential and where the Flyers could be in the near future? -- @theashcity

A frequent contributor to the mailbag, @theashcity gets another question this week.

I'm not sure that's what the Flyers are known for. They're known for being the "Broad Street Bullies." Although it's true they have traded away some talented players before they began fulfilling their potential (goalie Sergei Bobrovsky and forward Patrick Sharp immediately come to mind), they're not alone in that category. Every team has a few trades they wish they never made.

Specific to Hart, he certainly looks like the real deal to me, the goalie Flyers fans have been waiting for since Ron Hextall in the late 1980s. They didn't give Bobrovsky enough runway to become the goalie he has become. Roman Cechmanek didn't last. Neither did Robert Esche. Steve Mason was good, but never quite loved. Martin Biron was solid, but never seemed like the Flyers' first choice. The same goes for Brian Boucher. Ilya Bryzgalov never lived up to his contract, which is why it was bought out.

Hart is 21 years old and has played 74 NHL games (70 starts), going 40-26-4 with a 2.59 goals-against average and .915 save percentage. But he looks confident, fearless, and his technique is sound. He looks like he could and should be the No. 1 goalie in Philadelphia for a decade, if not longer. Hart looks like he should be the goalie who leads his team to a Stanley Cup championship, or at least puts them in position to try to win one, similar to Henrik Lundqvist with the Rangers. I say "looks like" only because he's young and we don't know for sure how everything will play out, but I'd count on the Flyers keeping him off the trading block, that's for sure.