"He always finds himself in the right positions to get the puck and get a good shot off," Nugent-Hopkins said. "I just have to have my head up and make sure I'm looking for him out there and not try to force anything to him and get some chemistry early if we play together."
Perhaps the biggest flex point in the blueprint for Tippett has been at third-line centre thanks to a trove of bodies - either battle-proven players remaining from last year, rookies fighting for a spot, or players brought in during the off-season - to compete, fill and thrive offensively in the bottom half of the lineup.
"There's a whole list of guys there," he continued. "I've talked about trying JJ (Khaira) there a bit. Now Sheahan comes in and might change that a little bit. Haas, Marody, Malone is a solid player there, so there's a cast of players that are going to go in there. I don't look at it as a number three, I look at it as we have a top six and a bottom six and we might have a couple of our bottom two lines geared a bit different - one's maybe a little heavier line and one maybe a little bit quicker that has the ability to score.
"It always looks good on paper in the summer and you go figure out the pieces as you go through to see how they fit, but I like our mix at the bottom. We just have to figure out where everybody fits."
Sometimes all that's needed is a little bit of reshuffling, as referenced in Tippett's hope of returning defenceman Kris Russell to his natural left side after experimenting on the right in recent years.
"I'd like to get him to the left side," he said. "I've always been a big left-right guy, but some of that is determined by the players you have. I've seen more left shots be able to play right than I have right on the left.
"Lubomir Visnovsky, who was here a while ago, was one of those guys and I had him in LA. He was a better player on the right than he was on the left, but most of the time you look at the simplicity of moving the puck and the feet position dictating a lot of things happening on that right side when you're on your off side."
In the crease, Tippett hopes to use both Mike Smith and Mikko Koskinen equally or until one eventually shines through as the club's number-one goaltender.
"They know there's competition. It's already started in practices," he said. "I know Smitty well and I've watched a lot of Koskinen on tape. I told them both that I hope they each play 41 games well. If they do that, we'll be fine."