"There's a reason he was a first round pick," Montgomery said of the winger who was taken 12th overall in 2015. "The hardest thing to do is score goals, and he has that potential."
The entire lineup does. While scoring dried up late last season (Dallas finished 18th overall but was worst in the league from February on), there were mitigating factors. When Ben Bishop suffered a knee injury, the team played with less offensive confidence in front of back-up goalie Kari Lehtonen. If the forwards were concentrating on defending more, then it became a more likely scenario that they would dump the puck when they hit the neutral zone. That diminished the offensive opportunities. Likewise, the lack of attack led to fewer power plays because the team wasn't forcing the opposition to defend.
Three years ago, under head coach Lindy Ruff, the Stars got off to a good start, played with confidence, and created offensive numbers all over the ice. Dallas was first in goal scoring at 3.23 goals per game, ninth in power-play opportunities and set an NHL record with 25 empty-net goals. Because the Stars were often leading late in games, they received great scoring chances in the third period.
Not unlike a football team that has a lead and rolls up rushing yards late, a hockey team with a lead spreads the scoring around pretty well. Spezza had 33 goals in 2015-16. Cody Eakin had 16, Janmark had 15, Ales Hemsky had 13, Vernon Fiddler had 12 and Colton Sceviour posted 11.
The Stars believe if they play the right way, there is plenty of talent in the goal-scoring department and many of the depth players can strike double digits.