Making the cut
Fourth-line center looks to be decided in a training camp battle between Brett Howden, Kevin Rooney and rookie Morgan Barron. One could move to the wing.
The third defense pair and extra defenseman are in flux. Libor Hajek should have the inside track to win one of those jobs. Rookies K'Andre Miller and Tarmo Reunanen could push for roster spots with strong training camps. The Rangers also have veteran defensemen Brendan Smith, Jack Johnson and Anthony Bitetto.
Most intriguing addition
It doesn't get much more intriguing than the No. 1 pick. Lafreniere has been training with several Rangers players, including left wing Chris Kreider, in Connecticut since November. He appears to have a bright future after dominating at the junior level but won't be afforded the same lead-up entering his rookie season as previous top picks. There was no development camp or prospects tournaments, and now he gets a truncated training camp. The Rangers could shelter him early on by putting him on the third line behind Panarin and Kreider.
Biggest potential surprise
The Rangers are excited about Miller's high-end upside and were impressed with how he handled himself and played during training camp in July before they went to Toronto to play in the Stanley Cup Qualifiers. Miller wasn't eligible to play in Toronto because he agreed to his entry-level contract March 16, after the NHL paused season due to concerns surrounding the coronavirus, but he showed the Rangers enough that assistant general manager Chris Drury said he wouldn't be surprised if the big rookie (6-foot-5, 210 pounds) was ready to make the roster and play a lot this season.
Ready to break through
Kakko scored 23 points (10 goals, 13 assists) in 66 games as a rookie last season. But Quinn was excited about Kakko's development when the Rangers got back together in July, saying he was a different player and a different person. He thinks it was a prelude for what's to come this season. Kakko, who turns 20 on Feb. 13, is penciled into a top-six role, potentially to play on the opposite wing as Panarin.
Fantasy sleeper
Kakko fell short of lofty fantasy expectations as a rookie but will now be available much later in drafts (average draft position: 163.3) ahead of a potential reclamation season. Even with Lafreniere on the Rangers, fantasy managers should not sleep on Kakko, who has a realistic chance to play on the opposite wing of Panarin on the second line after the departure of right wing Jesper Fast (signed with Carolina Hurricanes) in free agency. -- Pete Jensen