The package gives Colorado a work ethic as good as any team on both sides of the puck.
On defense, I see 20-year-old Cale Makar as a key player, someone who was a huge bonus when he joined Colorado in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He provided instant impact, including allowing the Avalanche to trade Tyson Barrie to the Maple Leafs for Kadri on July 1.
Makar's emergence keeps Colorado's defense dynamic. Like Makar, Samuel Girard (5-10, 170) is the modern-day, small-bodied, puck-moving defenseman. Add them to Ian Cole, Erik Johnson and Nikita Zadorov (6-6, 235), who can play large minutes against opposition big bodies, and you've got a strong group.
Including their sharp start to the season, the perception of the Avalanche is evolving. I'd say expectations are higher this season and I think it's appropriate. The Avalanche had 90 points, qualified as the second wild card into the playoffs from the Western Conference last season and reached the Western Conference Second Round, where they lost in seven games to the San Jose Sharks.
They've had that taste, and it's given them an eye-opener to what's needed ahead, an understanding on how they have to play in the new NHL. It's not necessarily about brawn but about competitiveness and getting inside and winning more puck battles and proving your toughness that way night in and night out. And all those added players will be competitive players in those areas, big assets.
It's growing in their minds that they're a more complete hockey club. It's a credit to management and their coaching staff to have had the foresight to make some changes that they felt were necessary, bringing in people who all seem to be competitive, because it's not easy to win in the NHL.
It's really hard to predict that Colorado will be able to carry a 7-1-1 pace through the season; that level isn't realistic. But it's a nice start and gives the Avalanche something to build on. They have had solid goaltending (.924 save percentage), which is important, and strong penalty killing (85.7 percent), which gives them a chance to win every game. When you don't have that, you can't win.
They have some experience and the transition they've made with moves during the offseason lead me to believe they'll be even more competitive and ready to take that next step.
And that next step is not the playoffs. It's the next 20 games, coping with a significant injury to Rantanen but continuing to build a stable, solid, reliable game and to keep moving forward.