Speed, youth and tenacity the keys for new-look New Jersey Devils
After five miserable seasons without playoff hockey, the New Jersey Devils recognized they needed to change.
The plodding, defensive style that had more or less defined the franchise for the better part of the last 25 years — and won the Devils three Stanley Cups in the process — was no longer the route to success in the youth- and speed-driven NHL of today.
The pivot ushered in by head coach John Hynes and general manager Ray Shero has provided some impressive early results.
Heading into Wednesday night’s action, New Jersey sits seventh in the overall standings and tied for sixth in goals per game, a far cry from past Devils teams that would often slow things down to the point where it looked like opponents were skating through quicksand.


