Some of that may have been out of need; the Jets lost 325 man-games to injuries this season and were without center Bryan Little for all but seven games because of a head injury.
Winnipeg also struggled with a revamped defenseman group after veterans Tyler Myers (Vancouver Canucks) and Ben Chiarot (Montreal Canadiens) each left as a free agent, Jacob Trouba was traded to the New York Rangers, and Dustin Byfuglien took a leave of absence before training camp began and missed the entire season. He and the Jets agreed to a contract termination April 17.
"If you look at our team and what has happened to our team over the last little bit, we've got the Bryan Little situation and we're trying to understand what the long-term prognosis is going to be," Cheveldayoff said. "Essentially a year ago now, Dustin decided to walk away from the game. Unfortunately, we lost our No. 1 defenseman, and our No. 2 center hasn't been able to be with us since Nov. 5 of last season, when he got hurt.
"And given the decisions we had to make during the summer last year, absent of knowing any of those things we were going to be facing, we have some holes that need to be filled in our organization. We have some prospects coming. Is it fair to everybody to say, 'We'll just put those guys in?' Some people may say that's the way to go. Some people may say not."
In order to fill some of those voids, the Jets may consider trading Laine, who has scored 138 goals since entering the NHL in 2016. That is tied for seventh in the League over that four-season span; he trails Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals (181), Auston Matthews of the Toronto Maple Leafs (158), David Pastrnak of the Boston Bruins (155), Nikita Kucherov of the Tampa Bay Lightning (153), Leon Draisaitl of the Edmonton Oilers (147) and Connor McDavid of the Oilers (146).