Colorado (29-8-3) has won seven in a row, is 17-1-1 in its past 19 games, tied with the Florida Panthers and Tampa Bay Lightning for the NHL lead with 61 points and has its sights squarely set on winning the Stanley Cup for the first time since 2001. Despite winning the Presidents' Trophy as the top regular-season team in the NHL by going 39-13-4 last season, the Avalanche lost to the Vegas Golden Knights in six games in the best-of-7 Stanley Cup Second Round.
The most significant change Colorado made following that defeat was acquiring Kuemper in a trade with the Arizona Coyotes on July 28 after Philipp Grubauer, a finalist for the Vezina Trophy given to the top goalie in the NHL, left to sign with the expansion Seattle Kraken. The Avalanche gave up a lot to get Kuemper, sending a first-round pick in the 2022 NHL Draft, a conditional third-round pick in the 2024 NHL Draft and defenseman Connor Timmins to Arizona.
That will put the spotlight squarely on Kuemper when the playoffs begin.
"No question, when you're on a team that has Stanley Cup aspirations and you're a Stanley Cup favorite, that comes part and parcel with that," said ESPN and NHL Network analyst Kevin Weekes, a retired NHL goalie. "So that is a huge opportunity for him. This is the best opportunity he's had."
In 19 postseason games with the Minnesota Wild and Coyotes in his first nine NHL seasons, Kuemper is 7-6 with a 2.86 GAA, .913 save percentage and one shutout. His most recent taste of the playoffs came in 2020 when he helped the Coyotes defeat the Nashville Predators in four games in the best-of-5 Stanley Cup Qualifiers before a five-game loss to the Avalanche in the Western Conference First Round.
"Any chance you get to play in the playoffs, that's kind of what you grow up dreaming about and that's the most fun time of the year to be playing hockey," Kuemper said. "So for an opportunity like that, obviously, we've got to have a good regular season here, but things are going well so far."
It's been an adjustment for Kuemper playing behind the Avalanche after coming from the Coyotes, who had less offensive talent and played a tight-checking game focused on limiting scoring chances against.
"With all their skill and their talent, and they do have an outstanding defensive corps, but they are going to yield chances," Weekes said. "It's not like they're playing kitty bar the door, but you are going to see some Grade A chances, and he is a good enough goalie that when he sees them, he can make a lot of saves. That's something that Grubauer did. He was a Vezina Trophy finalist. And he's equally capable of doing that."