Wherever Pavelski plays, he's confident he can make an impact.
"I think I've proven over the past few years that I can score some goals and I can score around the net," he said. "You know, every year is a little different as far as how teams can score and create offense. Not putting too much at stake about what happened last year, but I'm sure there will be adjustments being made here and there."
Perhaps as important was the addition of John Stevens as an assistant on July 1. Stevens, whose relationship with Montgomery dates to their playing days with Philadelphia in the American Hockey League in 1997-98, coached the Los Angeles Kings to the playoffs in his first season in 2017-18 before being fired 13 games into last season following a 4-8-1 start.
"If you look at his pedigree, he's won championships as a player and as a coach at multiple levels, and that's not something that's easy to do," Montgomery said. "I think where John is going to help us the most is going to be our 5-on-5 play, especially in the offensive zone, and on face-offs."
Those changes should complement Dallas' defense, which allowed the second-fewest goals (200) in the NHL behind the New York Islanders (191) and will again be led by goalie Ben Bishop, who was a Vezina Trophy finalist, and defensemen Miro Heiskanen and John Klingberg.