The Devils have stayed in it all season because of Hall, who has 17 points (eight goals, nine assists) during a nine-game point streak, including six goals in a four-game goal streak.
"There's lots of talk about him in Hart Trophy consideration and things like that," Devils coach John Hynes said, "but when you look at the impact this guy has had on our team, on the organization and where we're at, it can't be close."
That's up for debate as the Hart Trophy race is as wide open as it has been in years. Hall is in the middle of it, surrounded by 5-10 legitimate, deserving candidates.
"That's for you guys [the media] to vote on," Hall said. "I just go out and play."
Hall's advantage might be his 42-point lead on Hischier for the Devils scoring lead. Without it, if Hall was, say, a 70-point player instead of a 93-point player, a 25-goal scorer instead of a 39-goal scorer, the Devils likely would be what many thought they'd be this season -- out of the playoff picture.
They're 42-25-8 with him in the lineup and 1-3-1 without him. They're 36-17-4 when he has a point, 6-8-4 when he doesn't.
"I can't imagine there's a single player more important to their team, other than maybe a goaltender, in the entire League than he is to ours," Devils defenseman Ben Lovejoy said.
It doesn't mean Hall absolutely should win the Hart Trophy, but it should be a major consideration for the voters from the Professional Hockey Writers' Association, especially since many of the other top MVP candidates have a teammate or teammates who are in the top-20 in the League in scoring or who are candidates for another trophy.
Nathan MacKinnon, fifth in the NHL with 94 points (38 goals, 56 assists) in 72 games, is immensely valuable to the Colorado Avalanche and their push for a playoff berth. But he skates with forward Mikko Rantanen, who is tied for 16th with 82 points (28 goals, 54 assists).