Now that the 2024-25 NHL season has concluded, it’s time to hand out grades for how each team did based on preseason expectations and results, along with the overall play of the clubs. For instance, a team that had no expectations entering the season and ended up making the playoffs will get a good grade.
For this series, among teams that didn’t make the playoffs, we will go from the bottom of the league to the highest-finishing team that was just outside of the playoffs, and for playoff-clinching teams, we will go from the first team eliminated to the Stanley Cup champions.
Table of Contents
16th: New Jersey Devils

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
The Devils overcame adversity throughout the course of the season to make the playoffs. Their resiliency was on display, even after losing Jack Hughes for the year in March, that they stayed in the hunt and made the dance. Their other stars produced stellar seasons: Jesper Bratt had 88 points and Nico Hischier tallied 35 goals, both of them leading the team in their respective categories.
But the main part of their improvement from last season was because of who was in net. General manager Tom Fitzgerald addressed that position in the offseason by acquiring Jacob Markström, who was solid in the regular season, and stepped up his game the most in the playoffs as one of the best netminders during the first round of the playoffs.
Head coach Sheldon Keefe put together a solid structure on the team that got everyone to buy into it, even when times were tough. With a fully healthy lineup, they should feel good with where they are at heading into the 2026 NHL Season.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
The injury bug caught up to them. And it’s not just Hughes, who went down in March. The defensive core was hurt the most from the injury bug, and it started with Dougie Hamilton and Jonas Siegenthaler missing significant time in the regular season before returning in time for the playoffs. With Jack Hughes out, they didn’t have any expectations for the playoffs.
And throughout the playoff run, their defensemen were getting hurt, one by one. Brenden Dillon, Luke Hughes and Johnathan Kovacevic all missed the remainder of the first round series against the Hurricanes. Markström could only do so much to keep the team afloat.
New Jersey didn’t help themselves. They didn’t score on the power play during their first round loss and averaged just 1.75 goals per game. The surprising part is that their penalty kill, which finished second in the regular season, struggled immensely, with a 69.2% kill rate. Their bottom six was brutal too.
In a way, it’s hard to determine them given how injured they were. How much better would they have been had it not been for the injuries? This is the question that will never be truly answered. Fitzgerald didn’t do much at the trade deadline, where he made minor moves such as adding defensive defenseman Brian Dumoulin and third line center Cody Glass, but missed out on acquiring Brayden Schenn.
Expectations for Next Season
There are several things that Fitzgerald must figure out. The biggest priority is to extend Luke Hughes and to figure out his next contract. Then comes who will be Markström’s backup goaltender. They likely do not have enough cap space to re-sign Jake Allen, and they’re likely going to let him walk in free agency. The worry is if Nico Daws is truly ready for full-time backup duties.
Fitzgerald must spend NHL free agency filling the roster with skaters that can help revitalize the offense. Five of their veterans will hit free agency, and a pair of RFAs in Glass and Nolan Foote. They cannot choose to stand pat in free agency, and they have scoring threats up and down the lineup instead of being a top-heavy team.
The main pieces of the core will be back for the most part next season, so if they make the necessary signings of the offseason, they can be on track to be a top contender in the Metropolitan Division again.
Final Grade: C+
15th: Montreal Canadiens

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
After the Four Nations Break ended, the Canadiens had just a 2% chance of making the playoffs. It came down to the wire, but they were the last team in the Eastern Conference field, which is no small feat, especially after they stumbled out of the gates to begin the season. After beating the Sabres on November 11th, they went 36-22-9 the rest of the way.
This wouldn’t be possible without the strong performances of their top players. Nick Suzuki showed that he is a legitimate top line centreman, and his linemate, Cole Caufield, emerged into a true finisher. Lane Hutson won the Calder Trophy after tying Larry Murphy’s rookie assist record, and Ivan Demidov made his surprise debut late in the season and made an instant impact. Strong contributions from Juraj Slafkovský, Patrik Laine and Jake Evans helped out a lot.
Martin St. Louis also deserves a lot of credit for taking them to this point, and his confidence is a major boost to exceed expectations, which they did. He said that the priority was learning how to win, and how to perform under pressure.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
Their scoring was top-heavy during the regular season, and when the playoffs came around, it was visible. Beating the Capitals was going to be an uphill battle, and it was a lot harder when they didn’t have a lot of offensive firepower outside of Suzuki, Caufield and Hutson, with the lone exception being Christian Dvorak.
The other issue is their goaltending situation. Sam Montembeault was injured when he was reaching for the back of his left leg at the midway mark of Game 3. Jakub Dobeš replaced him for the rest of the series, who was solid in the 16 games he played in the 2024-25 NHL season, but losing Montembeault was a blow to their chances. Communication between the defense and goaltending faltered as a result.
Postseason experience was clearly lacking from them, and Washington capitalized on every mistake Montreal made, which is expected from a veteran team with proven winners. There were several areas in which the Canadiens impressed at: Their power play and their special teams. However, there were key areas in which they were lacking, such as on the faceoff dot. This year is a learning experience year for the Canadiens, and they can learn from this to take the next steps for next season.
Expectations for Next Season
General manager Kent Hughes has handled this rebuild as a step-by-step process, so don’t expect him to use this playoff appearance to start fast-tracking all of a sudden. Montreal has two picks in each of the first two rounds of this Draft, and those selections are going to be huge for them as they continue stockpiling young talent in getting this franchise to the next step.
Two areas that the Habs need to address is goaltending and depth. Hughes will need to look at the situation in net, though with a free agent signee to support Montembeault while Dobeš develops his game. Depth-wise, Hughes acquired Laine to boost the scoring, and he did add 20 goals, but he played just 52 games. The Habs need him to stay healthy, because Suzuki, Caufield and Hutson can’t carry the offense again, especially in the playoffs.
The Habs are going to be in a highly contested playoff fight, but they just happen to be in the league’s most competitive division in the Atlantic. They have to make the necessary changes this offseason to give them a boost to the next tier of playoff contention.
Final Grade: A
14th: Tampa Bay Lightning

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
The Lightning were expected to be one of the top powerhouses in the 2024-25 NHL season, and they showed that with a league-leading offense, where they averaged 3.56 goals per game. Their power play once again was top 5 (25.9%), and Nikita Kucherov paced the league in total points (121). Without Steven Stamkos, they put together another stellar season, and Victor Hedman had another elite season anchoring both the blueline and the penalty kill.
The main core was still around at every area, and that includes their lights out goaltending, which was lights out once again. Andrei Vasilevskiy was a finalist for the Vezina Trophy with a .921 save percentage and a 2.18 GAA, and head coach Jon Cooper, the league’s longest-tenured head coach, got them through the roughest stretches of the season, and the Bolts were resiliency.
The supporting cast stepped up in a huge way, and it gave the front office the belief that they can contend at the deadline. Not only with Kucherov and his NHL MVP-like numbers, but also with three other 80-point players in Brayden Point, Brandon Hagel and Jake Guentzel. It all resulted in an 8th consecutive postseason appearance.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
They were expected to dominate in the playoffs on the offensive side. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen for them, as they averaged the second-fewest goals per game among all 16 NHL playoff teams (2.25), only ahead of the Devils. Kucherov was noticeably absent in the playoffs, being held without a goal in the first four games against the Panthers, and the power play was a measly 2 for 18.
Running into the Panthers gave them the added negative of having to deal with the physical attributes of Florida, which included when Matthew Tkachuk made a thunderous hit on Jake Guentzel, and with the Bolts losing Brandon Hagel twice—first to a suspension in Game 3 and then to Aaron Ekblad elbowing him. It didn’t help that Oliver Bjorkstrand was injured before the playoffs and didn’t suit up in the postseason.
The other part of the story is that they were often getting in their own way, especially defensively. During the regular season, the Lightning were an average team at their own end, but in the playoffs, it was painful to watch. The Lightning had a 2-1 lead in Game 4, scoring twice in 11 seconds, and were moments away from tying the series at two games apiece, but then they gave up two goals in 11 seconds. The Lightning has several opportunities to capitalize, and they didn’t make the most of it.
Expectations for Next Season
Time is running out on the Lightning’s contention window. However, their performance in the regular season had them gunning for an Atlantic Division title. They’re not going to completely fall off the face of the map, especially since Guentzel is going to enter the second year of his seven-year deal, and Kucherov is still in his prime.
The questions now is that, with the cap space they have, can general manager Julien BriseBois find ways to boost the Lightning? He started by signing Yanni Gourde to a six-year, $14 million deal that carries a $2.33 million cap hit. But is it enough? Does BriseBois change things up to improve Tampa Bay’s chances when the times are most important? He’s mortgaged a lot of the team’s future to keeping the contention window open for as much as possible, so will he be aggressive in doing it again?
They have just three picks in the first five rounds of this year’s NHL Draft, and BriseBois will have to be careful with negotiations to push the chips. The only UFA of note is right-shot defenseman Nick Perbix, but he’d want to consider shoring up the scoring depth. Adding a true backup goaltender will be huge, as Vasilevskiy does not need to be forced into huge workloads.
Final Grade: B
13th: Ottawa Senators

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
The Senators have had a solid young core for a few years, but they needed to take that next step in making the NHL playoffs, which they did, ending an eight-year absence. Improvements on defense and in goal got this rebuild to an end, with Nick Jensen paired next to Thomas Chabot, a more natural improvement on the defense core, and also strengthened the net with Linus Ullmark, who finally gives them a legitimate netminder that they can rely on. Not to mention they did get several season-saving performances from third-string goalie Leevi Meriläinen.
Ottawa showed they can be a stingy defensive team, and they bought into the structure that first-year head coach Travis Green paved, and never backed down from it. Jake Sanderson emerged as a complete two-way defenseman, and Artem Zub complemented him as his stay-at-home partner. Tyler Kleven and Nikolas Matinpalo found a home as the team’s third pairing and thrived.
And the young stars, including Sanderson, Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stützle, all took the next step in growing their games, and the playoff experience they got should be heavily valuable to them and the rest of the core. Acquiring Dylan Cozens from the Sabres was also huge to boosting the top six. While they fell to the Maple Leafs in six games, they played like a team that had nothing left to lose when they entered the postseason. The foundation of this team is on the upwards trend.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
Now that they made the playoffs, they’ve found out the hard way that the NHL postseason is a different animal. It comes naturally with every young team once they make it there first. But throughout the season, they were average offensively, as they’ve scored less than three goals per game, and it dried up further in the playoffs (two goals per game).
Defense and goaltending, which have normally been reliable for them throughout the season, were letdowns in the playoffs. Ullmark wasn’t necessarily that bad, but he had a .880 save percentage and a 2.84 GAA in six playoff games. The penalty killing, however, was a weakness all season long for them. A unit that killed off 77.7% of their penalties was worse off in the playoffs (68.8%).
At 5-on-5, they’re solid on defense, but they have to find a way to bring a solid offensive game to match those defensive efforts. It’s not like they were close to eliminating the Maple Leafs, because three of the games in this series were decided in overtime, with Toronto taking two of three. By the time Ottawa won their overtime game, they were already in a 3-0 series hole, which was a byproduct of them not taking advantage of Toronto’s miscues.
Expectations for Next Season
There are several crucial decisions to make for the Senators. They already got started by re-signing Fabian Zetterlund to a three-year deal worth $4.275 million annually. The priority, however, is Claude Giroux. He’s been a crucial part of his hometown team’s lineup ever since he arrived in the summer of 2022. If he decides to continue playing, Ottawa should do everything to keep him, as he continues to provide valuable depth and leadership.
There will be several forwards that will leave in free agency, so Ottawa could be active to bolster the bottom six so that they can complement their scoring threats. The Sens worked to be in a position where they don’t have a lot of gaps to fill, and while they don’t need to make a big splash in free agency, all they have to do is make the smart additions. One of which being who fills in the backup goaltender spot, as Anton Forsberg is a UFA.
General manager Steve Staios can go a number of ways in free agency and/or on the trade market. But the Senators can absolutely compete for a playoff spot next season. While the first round exit was disappointing, the sky is the limit for Ottawa next season. The frustrations will only fuel the fire to show that this is truly the start of a new era of NHL hockey in Canada’s capital.
Final Grade: B+
12th: Minnesota Wild

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
The Wild deserve a lot of credit for making the NHL playoffs while dealing without Kirill Kaprizov for a large chunk of the season. Before his injury in December, they were one of the best teams in the league, scoring a lot of goals in tandem with a strong defensive structure and goaltending crease where they can come out on top in tight games.
If you were to tell someone that Kaprizov would miss 41 games, Joel Eriksson Ek 36 games, and Jonas Brodin 32 games, and the Wild would still make the playoffs, nobody would have believed that. But it all came down to the very end, when Eriksson Ek scored with 22 seconds left in regulation to force overtime against the Ducks, on Minnesota’s final game of the regular season.
Those injuries forced the Wild to rely on their defensive identity and stellar goaltending from Filip Gustavsson to get the first wild card spot in the Western Conference. Plus, consider that this was the last year of the major buyout years of Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, which hurts them a lot in the salary cap situation. With what they went through this season, making the playoffs was a huge accomplishment.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
Unfortunately, their ability to win close games fizzled away in the NHL playoffs. While they did take two games against the Golden Knights, the one thing that allowed them to make the playoffs was also the one thing that doomed them in the playoffs for their 8th first round exit in the last 10 years, solidifying them as the first team in all four North American professional sports to accomplish this dreaded feat.
What makes this first round exit more bizarre and painful is that they won 18 of 28 one-goal games in the regular season. However, all three of their one-goal games in this series were all losses, two in overtime, and all three losses coming consecutively to close off the series.
While it stings now, with the worst parts of the Suter and Parise buyouts coming to an end, the Wild may not be that far away from making a serious push and making it past not only the first round, but also the second round.
Expectations for Next Season
And with the worst parts of the buyouts coming to an end, it gives Minnesota lots of cap space. But this is a very crucial point of their franchise in which they have the space necessary to bolster a roster that relied a lot on homegrown talent, which includes Kaprizov and Matt Boldy.
The major question is about the Marco Rossi front. He is disgruntled with his utilization and is not happy with being a fourth line center. His trajectory projects him as a top-six center, and while he did have 14 points through February, March and April after having that amount of points in January, one could argue that the problem isn’t his scoring output. The problem is who was placed on the lineup in front of him and his deployment: He had the third-fewest minutes per game of any Wild player entering Game 6 of the first round of the NHL playoffs, despite having three points all series.
Having over $20 million in cap space will make Minnesota an intriguing team to watch this summer. How they use this money will set the expectations for the season. That gives them an added sense of belief that they can get additional offensive help to keep pace in a very competitive Central Division, with the path that they can give opponents a run for their money come April and May.
Final Grade: B
11th: Los Angeles Kings

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
Considering that many expected the Kings to regress, a season where they tied a franchise-record 48 wins and 105 points. They’re one of the best defensive teams in the league, and they overcame adversity where they lost Drew Doughty to a preseason injury and lost Matt Roy to free agency. The veterans on the team continue leading the way, the young players have elevated their games, and all their additions have been key to taking them back to the NHL playoffs.
Even with Doughty returning for the second half of the season just ahead of the Four Nations Face-Off, the Kings finally have a reliable goaltender in Darcy Kuemper, and he thrust himself back into the Vezina Trophy conversation, where he finished as a finalist for the award. 14 players had more than 20 points, and they had the best home record in the league (31-6-4)—better than the Presidents’ Trophy winning Winnipeg Jets.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
The bad news is that they can’t get past their boogeyman. For the fourth consecutive year, they lost to the Oilers in the first round, and each series loss is even more painful than the last one.
Ahead of this series, there was the impression that this could finally be the year they overcome their playoff demons. That belief was reinforced when they won their first two games by scoring six goals in each of the two matches. Many believed that they can finally get the job done and win a playoff series for the first time since their Stanley Cup championship in 2014. But after four consecutive losses to close the series, there are many question marks surrounding them.
Head coach Jim Hiller refused to adjust his strategies to counter the Oilers’ vaunted attack after Game 2. Despite having a commanding lead in Game 2, their subpar road record of 17-19-5 caught up to them in the postseason, but that doesn’t explain why they blew consecutive leads in Games 3 and 4 when they had control of those games. And it doesn’t explain one of the worst coaches’ challenges in recent league history, when Hiller challenged Evander Kane’s goal in Game 3 for goaltender interference after the play was reviewed for a kicking motion.
Expectations for Next Season
The bitter exit has them wondering if they’re going to use this offseason to make significant changes. Rob Blake was fired from his general manager position as the Kings hired Ken Holland to be the new GM. Many are restless with Hiller after his debacle against the Oilers, and if the Kings move on from him, that means they’ll be looking at their third head coach since February 2024.
But if they ride with him, are they going to lean towards making moves to improve a roster that hasn’t yet been able to find the formula that can get them past the first round? Anything they look to do this offseason is with the intent of not only getting past the opening round, but to figure out how they can beat the elite teams of the Western Conference.
Most of their roster will be coming back and they have the cap flexibility to improve it, too. Their UFA class is headlined by Vladislav Gavrikov and Andrei Kuzmenko, and if they can get things done with these two, it can leave them with the financial flexibility to address roster needs. However, not everything is guaranteed, but there is the expectation that the Kings will be in the contention for a playoff spot again. But what they do this summer will have a very big question: Can it lead them to a playoff series victory?
Final Grade: B
10th: Colorado Avalanche

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
To grade the Avalanche’s season, you have to split it into three separate parts. From the perspective of their regular season, they were excellent, yet their aspirations were higher than just a third-place finish in the Central Division. Yet over the course of the season, the front office made adjustments to the roster to put them in a position to improve.
In the first half of the season, they were extremely top-heavy, and general manager Chris MacFarland had concerns about the team’s supporting cast, along with the problems of a wildly inconsistent goalie tandem of Alexandar Georgiev and Justus Annunen. This prompted the front office to make a series of trades. First was a new tandem in net, and the one led by Mackenzie Blackwood and Scott Wedgewood was a heavy improvement, and then they aggressively retooled the roster on the fly at the trade deadline to make them one of the more dangerous teams heading into the NHL playoffs.
MacFarland reworked this roster to the extent of a degree that rarely is ever seen from a playoff contender: Swapping both his goaltenders, adding Brock Nelson and Charlie Coyle for center depth at the deadline, and getting a nice haul in return for Mikko Rantanen, who was disgruntled that contract extension talks were going nowhere with the Avs. Martin Necas and Jack Drury more than helped fill the void left behind by Rantanen, and the end result is a team that had many believing they could go on a run that could take them to the Stanley Cup Final.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
One could say that they were a victim of the NHL divisional playoff format, but the margin of error for the Avalanche was very slim. This was once again the case when there is a first round matchup of two teams that are Stanley Cup contenders.
Usually, opening a series with a dominating victory in Game 1 and then following it up with a shutout victory in Game 4 would mean that the Avs have what it takes to go far. But once again, the margin of error was very slim. This was especially the case in their two overtime losses in Games 2 and 3, and seeing a 2-0 lead slip in Game 7 to one of the greatest revenge arcs in league history as Rantanen had a four-point third period for the Stars: a hat trick and assisting on Wyatt Johnston’s game-winning goal.
It didn’t help that the Avalanche couldn’t convert on almost all of their power play opportunities, as they were just 3 for 22 on the man advantage in this series, and all their power play goals were scored by Nathan MacKinnon. They also couldn’t capitalize on a multitude of double minor penalties, including in Games 3 and 7. One of the differences was that Rantanen, one of their better snipers, was on the other side of this series. Cale Makar, the Norris Trophy winner this season, was a massive disappointment in this series. While he had five points in seven games, he was held off the scoresheet in four of those seven games.
Expectations for Next Season
This offseason is going to be a sad one for Colorado. 2025 was their best shot at getting a second Stanley Cup in the MacKinnon & Makar era, and they let the opportunities slip. Now they have to be careful in spending their limited cap, and that’s emphasized with Gabriel Landeskog’s $7 million cap hit coming back into the books, and with Brock Nelson’s three-year, $22.5 million extension that carries a $7.5 million cap hit.
Now they have just $1.2 million in cap space, and they have seven players headed to unrestricted free agency, and that list includes Jonathan Drouin, Ryan Lindgren and Joel Kiviranta. If they were to keep some of their free agents, some members of their core may have to get moved.
The main core and some of the members of their supporting cast are still intact, but what they do this summer will be huge in filling out what they have throughout the course of the 2026 season. While they’re still going to be playoff contenders, it’s fair to wonder if their Stanley Cup window has officially closed.
Final Grade: C+
9th: St. Louis Blues

What Went Right in 2024-25 NHL Season?
From the beginning of the season to the end, the Blues were an aggressive team. They went into the realm of offer sheets to not only get Dylan Holloway, but also Philip Broberg from the Oilers, and both of them have been huge additions as they both had career years. Holloway had his first 20-goal campaign and Broberg was crucial on the second pairing where he logged over 20 minutes per game.
Firing head coach Drew Bannister, who led them to a record-settting regular season, to replace him with Jim Montgomery after just 12 NHL games was another bold move right. Montgomery gave the Blues a sense of consistency and confidence that they used to make the playoffs, and transformed them into one of the best defensive teams in the league.
And trading for Cam Fowler resulted in him having one of the best seasons of his career, and he was the top performing defenseman in the first round. He was one of the best in-season acquisitions that any team has made this season, and the rewards were plentiful in advancing the retool on the fly.
One can say that the Blues were the better team throughout this series, between the onslaught of body checks, the constant puck possession, and with the confidence they’ve built throughout the series. They were arguably the hottest team in the league entering the playoffs. They weren’t supposed to be a playoff team, but they worked as hard as they could all season to not only make the dance, but also to set themselves up for the future.
What Went Wrong in 2024-25 NHL Season?
Part of the issue for the Blues is that, while they won every playoff game at their home ice at Enterprise Center, they couldn’t win a game on the road at Canada Life Centre. Their brand of hockey worked for the most part, as they never backed down and continued physically imposing their will.
Generating a combined 20 high-danger chances in Games 3 and 4 were huge, as the Blues scored a combined 11 goals against Connor Hellebuyck in those two games. In each one of the Blues’ wins, they chased Hellebuyck out of the crease, and it got the belief that they can capitalize on the woes of a goaltender whose regular season success could not translate come playoff time.
But on the other side of the equation is a team who has struggled defending at 6-on-5 situations. It’s been a constant frustration of the team throughout the season, and it caught up to them in the playoffs when they allowed two goals in the final two minutes of regulation in Game 7, including the latest game-tying goal in Game 7 NHL history (3 seconds remaining). And those weren’t just random shots on goal they gave up—the Jets got a lot more dangerous from the third period onwards.
It’s true that St. Louis had the talent and the heart to match up with the Jets. But there were times in which the Blues constantly faltered under the bright lights. That gave Winnipeg the breathing room to find the right counters and advance.
Expectations for Next Season
The Blues don’t have a lot of cap space to use for the 2025 NHL Season, but they have one pending RFA in goaltender Joel Hofer, while their only pending UFAs are Radek Faksa and Ryan Suter. However, it appears that Torey Krug’s playing days in the NHL are over, and it’s evident that he would need a major procedure to address his pre-arthritic condition on his left ankle.
Returning to the playoffs is the goal for the Blues, as well as remaining in the hunt for a spot late in the season. The Central Division still has the Jets, Stars and Avalanche as the main constants in the NHL playoff hunt, and with the Wild emerging as a potential active player in free agency. The Mammoth are also emerging into a team that’s on the hunt for an NHL playoff spot, too. There will be six teams, at the minimum, vying for a playoff spot in the Central Division next season, and the race is going to be jam-packed.
Final Grade: B+
Stats Credit: NHL.com/stats
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