The Coyotes are looking for a top-four defenseman for the right side and a right wing with goal-scoring ability, and may not be done dealing. Arizona has stockpiled assets at the NHL and prospect levels to use in a trade.
Here are four reasons for optimism entering this season:
1. A little help arrives for Oliver Ekman-Larsson
The Coyotes allowed 244 goals last season (28th in the League), so their top priority was to retool the defense around Ekman-Larsson, whose 55 points (21 goals, 34 assists) were seventh among NHL defensemen.
Goligoski, 31, signed a five-year, $27.375 million contract with Arizona on June 22, six days after he was acquired in a trade with the Dallas Stars. He'll likely be paired with Connor Murphy, who signed a six-year contract on July 28 after setting NHL career highs in goals (six), assists (11), points (17) and games played (78). Schenn, the No. 5 pick in the 2008 NHL Draft, signed a two-year, $2.5 million contract on July 23.
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Video: 30 in 30: Arizona Coyotes 2016-17 season preview
2. The maturation of the 'Killer Ds'
The Coyotes had their fingers crossed that Domi and Duclair were ready, and the rookies responded with a combined 38 goals and 96 points to give Arizona two young scorers to go with 39-year-old captain Shane Doan's 28-goal season.
Arizona wants to see Domi and Duclair take the next step in development. For Domi, that includes not only production but taking more of a leadership role. Each player also can help mentor the next wave of prospects on the way.
3. The even younger guns
With Domi and Duclair established, the Coyotes have room on the roster for more additions from their highly touted farm system.
Center Dylan Strome, the No. 3 pick in the 2015 draft, came close to making the Coyotes out of training camp last season and could find himself in a top-six role. Center Christian Dvorak, coming off a 121-point season and a Memorial Cup championship as captain for London of the Ontario Hockey League, also is expected to be NHL-ready after impressing in development camp.
4. Greater organizational commitment to winning
With a shoestring scouting budget and little commitment to player development during their cost-cutting days, the Coyotes paid the price at the NHL level with a four-year playoff drought.
But a new commitment to scouting includes a retooled department headed by former NHL forward Steve Sullivan, who played 33 games for the Coyotes in 2012-13, with several strong drafts yielding talent and optimism.