Way-too-early New Jersey Devils defensive line combos prediction

The New Jersey Devils completely revamped the defense this offseason. How do we predict new head coach Sheldon Keefe will land on line combos on Opening Night?
New Jersey Devils v Washington Capitals
New Jersey Devils v Washington Capitals / Scott Taetsch/GettyImages
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
1 of 3
Next

The New Jersey Devils made wholesale changes to the defense this offseason. They sent Kevin Bahl to the Calgary Flames in the deal that solidified the goaltending. Jacob Markstrom was an essential piece, but losing a young defenseman like Kevin Bahl could hurt. Then, they made the surprising move of trading John Marino to the Utah Hockey Club. The Devils used one of the second-round picks they got in the deal to select goaltender Mikhail Yegorov with the 49th-overall pick.

Now that the Devils essentially lost two NHL defensemen for two goaltenders, they had two big holes on the defense. They also let Brendan Smith walk in free agency, lost Cal Foote after he was arrested for sexual assault, and their prospect reserves have been depleted after losing prospects Shakir Mukhamadullin, Nikita Okhotyuk, and Reilly Walsh to various trades.

However, they made multiple moves to replenish the defensive corps. They traded for Montreal Canadiens defenseman Jonathan Kovacevic, signed Brett Pesce, Brenden Dillon, and Colton White, and they re-signed Nick DeSimone and Santeri Hatakka. Let's flash forward and see where the Devils will look as far as pairings on opening night.

Predicting the New Jersey Devils defensive pairings on opening night.

Pair 1
Brenden Dillon - Dougie Hamilton

The pairing of Dougie Hamilton is very important this season. We've seen some players lose some of their impact after a torn pectoral muscle. The Devils have to find the right pairing for him, at least off the bat. The assumption is they will try Jonas Siegenthaler since that was who he spent most time with in the previous two seasons. Last year, Hamilton spent 252 5v5 minutes with Siegenthaler and just 96 with other defensemen (according to Natural Stat Trick).

Usually, we'd agree with you. Continuity is important when a player is coming back from a major injury. However, there are two major factors at play here. One, Siegenthaler was awful last season. Without Hamilton, everything was negative for Siegenthaler (xGF%, CorsiFor%, high-danger chance percentage, goals for vs. goals against, etc). The other factor is Lindy Ruff isn't here anymore. The man who made the decision to put them together is gone.

Meanwhile, the Devils did just sign Brenden Dillon to a decent deal. While some might think this was an overpay, it was necessary to give this team a complete defense. Dillon hasn't averaged over 20 minutes per night since the COVID-shortened 2019-20 season, but we think that Hamilton-Dillon doesn't need to break 20 minutes this season, at least while Hamilton plays his way back to full speed.