The Ducks ranked next-to-last in the NHL on the power play last season (14.7 percent) and were 26th on the penalty kill (77.0 percent). They allowed at least one power-play goal in 36 of 71 games and at least two in 12 games, and their 27 power-play goals were the fewest in the NHL. Henrique's five power-play goals led the Ducks, and he tied for the Anaheim lead with nine power-play points, the fewest by any team leader.
One player who could help is defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk, who signed a three-year contract Oct. 9. He scored seven power-play points (one goal, six assists) for the Tampa Bay Lightning last season but scored at least 25 in four straight seasons from 2014-17 and should be on the first power-play unit.
"Obviously, the power-play numbers speak for itself," Murray said. "It makes us better in those areas. [Shattenkirk is] just very, very smart. He moves the puck, he gets the puck up the ice to the forwards. In today's game, you've got to get it up to your forwards. We've got to get it in some of our young kids' hands."