Laine signed a four-year, $34.8 million contract of his own as a restricted free agent July 22, giving him peace of mind.
"Hopefully now I can just relax, not in a bad way," he said, "but just playing more relaxed and at the same time work as hard as I've ever worked and approach it that way and hopefully get some more freedom out there and don't have to worry about that stuff."
Laine said he wanted to pick it up even more in the offseason. He looks thinner, though that could be his new, close-cropped haircut.
"I've [gotten] so many chirps over the years for my hair, so I decided to cut it off, and we'll go with this," Laine said. "It's more aerodynamic, so I'll be hopefully quicker out there."
Seriously, though.
"Hopefully I got thinner," Laine said. "Hopefully it's not just the hair."
Asked if he's in the best shape of his life, the 24-year-old said, "I would say so."
The Blue Jackets have noticed, all the way up to president of hockey operations John Davidson, who said, "It's like he's fired up about making a statement."
Werenski said Laine dominated informal skates.
"I've never seen Patty look this good," Werenski said. "He had a good summer. He's scoring on every shot. He's shooting with confidence. He's making plays with confidence. I think if you throw Johnny in there with him, [Gaudreau] can get him the puck as much as he gets other guys the puck. I can see [Laine] scoring 50, like, no problems."
Informal skates are one thing. NHL games are another.
But there is so much potential at even strength and on the power play. Laine said the Blue Jackets already are talking about who will play where on the power play, and the coaches are giving the players a lot of responsibility and freedom to lead it themselves.
"Obviously, [Laine is] a really, really smart player," Gaudreau said. "He can see the ice really, really well, and his shot's just off the charts. I kind of see myself as a pass-first guy, so hopefully I can find him somewhere in the slot or in the zone, and it'll probably go in if he has a second or two to get the shot off."
That's the plan. Now it's up to them to make it happen.
"On paper, you would think it should work, and obviously, I'm hoping for that as well," Laine said. "But like I've always said, good players always find a way to make it work, and I still consider myself as an all right player, so I'm sure we can find a way to make it work."