Adding Laine, Matthias, Howden and Strait continues a theme the Jets have strived toward for several seasons: building sufficient organizational depth to ensure jobs are earned rather than handed out at training camp. Cheveldayoff inherited a significant lack of organizational depth and has worked toward stocking his farm system through the draft.
The new faces will be joined by forward Kyle Connor, the No. 17 pick in the 2015 draft who had 35 goals in 38 games at the University of Michigan last season before turning pro. Goaltender Connor Hellebuyck took over the No. 1 job when longtime incumbent Ondrej Pavelec was injured, and he will challenge for the starting job at training camp.
Defenseman Josh Morrissey, the No. 13 pick in the 2013 draft, is expected to make a strong push for an NHL job in training camp after a strong first pro season (3-19-22, 57 games) with Manitoba of the American Hockey League. Forwards Marko Dano, Nic Petan and Brandon Tanev offer further bottom-six competition.
"Competition in any and all positions is very healthy," Cheveldayoff said.
That competition has made Cheveldayoff's pitch to free agents easier.
"They know [forward] Nikolaj Ehlers, and they certainly know Patrik Laine," Cheveldayoff said. "They see those things, the youth, the plan that's in place. They know that there is a plan in place that we've been methodically trying to execute since the day that we got here. There is receptiveness to that."