The Tampa Bay Lightning sustained their first big loss Thursday, and the season hasn’t even started.
Andrei Vasilevskiy, their all-world goalie, had back surgery Thursday morning, a microdiscectomy to address a lumbar disk herniation, and will be out for about the first two months of the regular season.
"We fully expect him to make a full recovery and for him to be back to being his old self," general manager Julien BriseBois said. "It's going to take some time."
Vasilevskiy is the Lightning's most important player. Time is not their friend, not with the competition in the Atlantic Division.
There are as many as seven teams in division that appear to be legitimate contenders to reach the Stanley Cup Playoffs, with the emergence of the Buffalo Sabres, Ottawa Senators and Detroit Red Wings, plus the Toronto Maple Leafs, Boston Bruins, Florida Panthers and Lightning, who all made it last season.
The Panthers got in last season as the second wild card in the Eastern Conference with 92 points. The Sabres had 91. So did the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Senators had 86.
Points lost early in the season are incredibly hard to find later, and the two things going against the Lightning with less than two weeks to go before the season begins are: 1) They won't have Vasilevskiy; 2) Their depth behind him is among the thinnest in the NHL.
Vasilevskiy is first in the NHL in wins (245) and second in games played (385) since 2016-17. The three goalies behind Vasilevskiy on Tampa Bay's current depth chart, Jonas Johansson, Hugo Alnefelt and Matt Tomkins, have played a combined 36 NHL games.
Johansson, who is 28, has played in 35, including three with the Colorado Avalanche last season.
Alnefelt, 22, is a prospect who has played one NHL game, with Tampa Bay in 2021-22. Tomkins, 29, played in Sweden the past two seasons, the American Hockey League and the ECHL before that. He has no NHL experience.
"For the time being we're going to go with the guys we have here," BriseBois said. "We still have five preseason games so that gives us time to get our goalies some reps, for us to get even more familiar with them and for them to get familiar with the players playing in front of them so they can read the play, anticipate and perform at a high level."