Arizona Coyotes 2015-16 Season Primer

Arizona Coyotes

Next up in our 2015-16 NHL season primer series – the Arizona Coyotes.

2014-15 Record: 24-50-8, 56 points (Last Place in Pacific Division and 29th overall)
2014-15 Outcome: Missed playoffs

Total Cap hit: $57,574,704
Total Salary: $53,007,444
Salary Cap Space: $13,825,296
Source: Generel Fanager

In: John Scott, LW (FA – SJ), Derek Smith, D (FA-Europe), Alex Grant, D (FA – Ott), Dakota Mermis, D (FA), Dustin Jeffrey, C/LW (FA – NYI), Antoine Vermette, C (FA – Chi), Anders Lindback, G (FA – Buf), Zbynek Michalek, D (FA – StL), Steve Downie, RW/LW (FA – Pit), Brad Richardson, C/W (FA – Van), Boyd Gordon, C (T – Edm), Nicklas Grossmann, D (T – Phi), Chris Pronger, D (T – Phi), Matthias Plachta, C/W (FA-Europe)

Out: Tye McGinn, LW/RW (FA – TB, Mark Visentin, G (FA-Minors), Justin Hodgman, C/RW (FA – StL), John Moore, D (FA – NJ), Mark Arcobello, W/C (FA – Tor), Mike McKenna, G (FA – FLA), Viktor Tikhonov, C/W (FA – Chi), Lauri Korpikoski, RW/LW (T – Edm), Sam Gagner, RW/C (T – Phi), Alexandre Bolduc, C/LW (FA-Europe), Patrick McNeill, D (FA-Europe)
Source: Sports Forecaster

The Arizona Coyotes spent their financially disparaged years following Jerry Moyes’ bankruptcy scandal operating above expectations. The team met with incredible success while on a budget due to luck and hard work, but the 2014-2015 season finally saw their numbers fall back to Earth.

Under new ownership, the Pacific Division club plans to build a perennial cup contender — but they’re trying to do it the right way, which means drafting and developing with patience (and no shortage of pain). That means the 2015-2016 season will be mediocre at best, and downright bad at worst.

Of course, that’s not to say there isn’t plenty to look forward to for the Pacific Division club this year. Their defense is going to be one of the most fun to watch, with a game-changing player in Oliver Ekman-Larsson leading an intriguing young defensive corps with a smattering of first rounders (Connor Murphy, Brandon Gormley) and recently acquired prospects like Philip Samuelsson and Klas Dahlbeck. Michael Stone is shaping up to potentially be the physically dominant top-four pairing defenseman that teams like the Chicago Blackhawks covet. Stone’s possession stats were among some of Arizona’s best in the 2014-2015 campaign. There’s always room for a player like Dakota Mermis to earn himself a good, long look at the NHL level.

On offense, it’s still hard to tell how the Coyotes will perform. Their best-case scenario will be to have a season like the Calgary Flames did last year, where a young Sean Monahan and rookie Johnny Gaudreau managed to serve as a true top line despite expectations that they would need time to develop into that kind of pairing. Realistically, this won’t happen for Arizona just yet — but keep an eye out for whomever among their young prospect corps manages to earn a spot on the NHL roster. Max Domi is garnering attention around the league in his first season as a pro, and the possibility to see him and Anthony Duclair sharing a line — especially if the duo are given gentle giant Martin Hanzal as their pivot — could be what steals the team a few wins they aren’t expected to earn based on stat line projections. Watching to see where sophomore forward Tobias Rieder settles in with the lineup could be pivotal, as well. If he proves to be a true two-way talent in Arizona’s middle six, they’ll have an Andrew Cogliano-esque player who’s only 22; as the rest of their forward prospects develop and move into the NHL, he could be an integral part of their rebuild.

Goaltending, like with Anaheim, will be the biggest question mark.

Both Mike Smith and Anders Lindback have very little to show for their NHL careers in the name of consistency. They each saw massive regression when playing for the Tampa Bay Lightning, coming off seasons with good goaltending coaching (Smith from the Stars and Andy Moog, Lindback from the Predators with Mitch Korn) and going to a controversial mentor in  Frantz Jean for at least a portion of their careers. Each netminder had career seasons upon leaving Tampa Bay — Lindback finding his bounce-back in Buffalo, Smith in Arizona — and they’re each looking to find consistency next year. Whether they can do that or not remains to be seen, but they will have possibly the biggest impact on the team of all the question marks leading up to the year.

Trending Up

Tobias Rieder (LW/RW) – At 22, Tobias Rieder was one of the brightest spots on a pretty dismal Coyotes roster in 2014-2015 — and he’s poised to only get better next year. The former fourth round pick has already shown flashes of being one of the most effective two-way forwards in the NHL, and that’s pretty rare for a rookie who also manages to score and hold his own against top competition. In a less-than-ideal year to make the lineup for the majority of the season, Rieder took his unexpected top six role and played it with all the confidence and efficiency of a tenured vet.

This summer was likely spent by Rieder focusing on improving his shooting accuracy, something that made the smart, wily winger (who’s versatile enough to play all three forward positions, something the Coyotes took advantage of) a 13-goal scorer instead of a potential 20-goal guy. If his abnormally (6.9%) low shooting percentage goes up at all, his style of play indicates that he’ll see all of his numbers go up — and as the rookie who set a league record for the shortest time between consecutive short-handed goals last year, that’s good news.

Connor Murphy (RD) – Using Connor Murphy here is kind of cheating, because half of Arizona’s defensive corps are trending up. It’s likely that Murphy will be the blue liner who sees the most improvement over his first full NHL season. Like with Rieder, the lanky right shot defenseman had to spend his first pro year adjusting on a pretty underperforming roster.

Murphy’s game, when he was focused and thriving, was top four pairing material. If he can establish some consistency and work on improving his decision-making, when it comes to puck play vs. physical intimidation, he could finish out the 2015-2016 campaign looking like a bona fide NHL talent. The raw materials are certainly there, and both he and Rieder are in their final years of their ELCs — look for both skaters to show why they deserve more than just a show-me bridge deal.

Trending Down

Shane Doan (RW) – It’s hard to say that Shane Doan is ‘trending down’, because Captain Coyote is ageless in the eyes of the Phoenix community. It’s becoming more and more clear, though, that the veteran winger is nearing the end of his career arc on the ice — and it’s showing in both his scoring and his energy levels.

Doan is still in fantastic shape, and the role he played last season — a physical, demanding presence who sheltered linemate Tobias Rieder during plays to give the younger skater a chance to establish his game — was exactly what the team needed. Long-time Coyotes fans remember Doan, though, as the guy who nearly always scored 25-30 goals a season. Now, he’s closer to the 10-15 goal range, and that’s a hard pill to swallow.

This is the last year of Doan’s contract, and there’s been speculation that the 38-year old veteran will potentially look to spend a year trying to win a Stanley Cup. That could still happen, but in a crucial turn-around year, the Coyotes have made it pretty clear that the long-tenured captain will stick around to help transition the team and usher in a new group of young leaders. That’s still valuable — but on the ice, Doan is still a diminishing value player.

Antoine Vermette (C) – The addition of Antoine Vermette in the off-season was partially a move to solidify the team’s middle six centre depth until their pivot prospects are able to hold their own at the NHL level, but most of what he brings to the table is security for the fans. Coming off his first Stanley Cup championship, the 32-year old veteran is a familiar face and a great locker room presence to have around what could be one of the youngest and most transitional rosters in the NHL next year.

When it comes to the renowned two-way talent that Vermette has always been cited for, though, the veteran centre lacks the punch he used to pack. His defensive game has slipped a bit, even relative to his on-ice teammates in Arizona. His scoring is there, but the consistency no longer is. Many are excited to see him back in Arizona after scoring a slew of game-winning goals during the playoffs this spring, but a third or fourth line role (and a healthy scratch for a handful of games) suggest that Vermette won’t be capable of playing the role it seems people perceive him as being capable of playing.

That’s not to say that Vermette isn’t still a capable NHLer; by all accounts, he certainly is. As mentioned above, he’s also still a great voice to have in the locker room and a comforting presence for a fanbase that needs its share of comforts — but when it comes to players that we can expect to underperform next year, this is certainly one of them.

Trade Deadline Outlook:

For the Coyotes, nearly everyone can go.

Of course, some players likely won’t go. It’s hard to say that a player is unmovable, something that Grantland’s Sean McIndoe touched on earlier in the season (can be read here) — if the Edmonton Oilers want to give up Taylor Hall, Connor McDavid, Cam Talbot, and Darnell Nurse for Oliver Ekman-Larsson and a first round pick, it would be crazy to say no — but guys like Ekman-Larsson, Rieder, Max Domi, Christian Dvorak, and Dylan Strome probably aren’t going anywhere.

Any player with only one year left on his deal, though, has to be considered as a potentially movable piece. Kyle Chipchura? If a team wants him, he could easily be gone by Spring. Craig Cunningham? Tough to admit it, but probably the same. It seems probable that one of Cunningham or Shinnimin will head elsewhere if a team wants them, since they play a largely similar role for the team. If a team out there is crazy enough to want Nicklas Grossman, even he could head out. Don’t be surprised if an improved Anders Lindback is moved if they can get some value.

The most intriguing position to watch at the deadline, though, will be the team’s blue line.

Brandon Gormley is on a last-chance prove it deal with the Coyotes, who insisted on inking him to his qualifying offer in order to stay with the team this year. He lost his roster spot to AHL mainstay Andrew Campbell last year, and that raised a lot of warning flags. If the 23 year old defenseman can’t find a way to stick with the team long-term, he could very easily be sent elsewhere.

If the team ends up playing above their expected level, though, don’t be surprised if the Coyotes become buyers to an extent. If it looks like they could be a bubble team, they have more than enough in the cupboard among their prospects to make a move in order to finish the season a few places higher than they need. The team is determined to show that they’re staying in the desert, and they’ve got a fanbase that deserves the best season possible without sacrificing the rebuild — if they have a Calgary-esque season (or even a Florida-esque season), expect the team to address that.

Written by Catherine Silverman, who can be found on twitter @CataCarryOn

Potential line combinations, defensive pairings, and goalies.

Mikkel Boedker – Antoine Vermette – Shane Doan
Max Domi – Martin Hanzal – Anthony Duclair
Steve Downie – Boyd Gordon – Tobias Rieder
Kyle Chipchura – Joe Vitale – Brad Richardson
Craig Cunningham

Oliver Ekman-Larsson – Zbynek Michalek
Nicklas Grossman – Michael Stone
Connor Murphy – Klas Dahlbeck
Brandon Gormley

Mike Smith
Anders Lindback

FORWARDS HT/WT BIRTHDATE ACQUIRED
Mikkel Boedker (LW/RW) 6’0″/211lbs 12/16/1989 Phx ’08 (1/8)
Michael Bunting (LW) 5’11″/174lbs 9/17/1995 Ari ’14 (4/117)
Kyle Chipchura (W/C) 6’2″/203lbs 2/19/1986 FA ’11
Craig Cunningham (W/C) 5’10″/184lbs 9/13/1990 W-Bos ’15
Laurent Dauphin (C) 6’0″/180lbs 3/27/1995 Phx ’13 (2/39)
Shane Doan (RW) 6’1″/223lbs 10/10/1976 Wpg ’95 (1/7)
Max Domi (LW/C) 5’10″/198lbs 3/2/1995 Phx ’13 (1/12)
Steve Downie (RW/LW) 5’11″/191lbs 4/3/1987 FA ’15
Anthony Duclair (RW/LW) 5’11″/185lbs 8/26/1995 T-NYR ’15
Christian Dvorak (LW) 6’0″/187lbs 2/2/1996 Ari ’14 (2/58)
Hunter Fejes (LW) 6’1″/190lbs 5/31/1994 Phx ’12 (6/178)
Jared Fiegl (LW) 6’1″/206lbs 1/23/1996 Ari ’14 (7/191)
Christian Fischer (RW/C) 6’1″/212lbs 4/15/1997 Ari ’15 (2/32)
Conor Garland (RW) 5’8″/163lbs 3/11/1996 Ari ’15 (5/123)
Tyler Gaudet (C) 6’3″/205lbs 4/4/1993 S-Phx ’13
Boyd Gordon (C) 6’0″/200lbs 10/19/1983 T-Edm ’15
Martin Hanzal (C) 6’6″/226lbs 2/20/1987 Phx ’05 (1/17)
Dustin Jeffrey (C/LW) 6’1″/205lbs 2/27/1988 FA ’15
Anton Karlsson (LW/RW) 6’1″/187lbs 8/3/1996 Ari ’14 (3/87)
Anton Krysanov (C) 6’3″/198lbs 3/25/1987 Phx ’05 (5/148)
Zac Larraza (LW) 6’2″/194lbs 2/25/1993 Phx ’11 (7/196)
Lucas Lessio (LW) 6’1″/212lbs 1/23/1993 Phx ’11 (2/56)
Maxim Letunov (C) 6’2″/155lbs 2/20/1996 T-StL ’15
Jens Looke (RW) 6’1″/180lbs 4/11/1997 Ari ’15 (3/83)
Ryan MacInnis (C/LW) 6’3″/182lbs 2/14/1996 Ari ’14 (2/43)
Jordan Martinook (LW/C) 6’0″/202lbs 7/25/1992 Phx ’12 (2/58)
Nick Merkley (C/RW) 5’11″/191lbs 5/23/1997 Ari ’15 (1/30)
Daniel O’Donoghue (C/LW) 6’5″/200lbs 1/28/1991 S-Phx ’14
Brendan Perlini (LW) 6’2″/212lbs 4/27/1996 Ari ’14 (1/12)
Matthias Plachta (C/W) 6’2″/218lbs 5/16/1991 S-Ari ’15
Brad Richardson (C/W) 6’0″/197lbs 2/4/1985 FA ’15
Tobias Rieder (LW) 5’11″/185lbs 1/10/1993 T-Edm ’13
Henrik Samuelsson (RW/C) 6’3″/210lbs 2/7/1994 Phx ’12 (1/27)
John Scott (LW) 6’8″/260lbs 9/26/1982 FA ’15
Eric Selleck (LW) 6’2″/208lbs 10/20/1987 T-Fla ’14
Brendan Shinnimin (C) 5’10″/185lbs 1/7/1991 FA ’12
Jedd Soleway (C) 6’2″/208lbs 5/12/1994 Phx ’13 (7/193)
Dylan Strome (C/LW) 6’3″/185lbs 3/7/1997 Ari ’15 (1/3)
Jordan Szwarz (RW) 5’11″/200lbs 5/14/1991 Phx ’09 (4/97)
Antoine Vermette (C) 6’1″/198lbs 7/20/1982 FA ’15
Joe Vitale (C/RW) 5’11″/205lbs 8/20/1985 FA ’14
Brendan Warren (LW) 6’0″/191lbs 5/7/1997 Ari ’15 (3/81)
DEFENSEMEN HT/WT BIRTHDATE ACQUIRED
Kyle Capobianco (D) 6’1″/178lbs 8/13/1997 Ari ’15 (3/63)
Connor Clifton (D) 5’11″/175lbs 4/28/1995 Phx ’13 (5/133)
Klas Dahlbeck (D) 6’3″/207lbs 7/6/1991 T-Chi ’15
Oliver Ekman-Larsson (D) 6’2″/200lbs 7/17/1991 Phx ’09 (1/6)
Maxim Goncharov (D) 6’3″/215lbs 6/15/1989 Phx ’07 (5/123)
Brandon Gormley (D) 6’2″/196lbs 2/18/1992 Phx ’10 (1/13)
Alex Grant (D) 6’4″/205lbs 1/20/1989 FA ’15
Nicklas Grossmann (D) 6’4″/230lbs 1/22/1985 T-Phi ’15
Justin Hache (D) 6’2″/202lbs 1/10/1994 Phx ’12 (7/208)
Rhett Holland (D) 6’2″/220lbs 9/25/1993 Phx ’12 (4/102)
Dysin Mayo (D) 6’0″/185lbs 8/17/1996 Ari ’14 (5/133)
James Melindy (D) 6’3″/203lbs 12/11/1993 Phx ’12 (3/88)
Dakota Mermis (D) 5’11″/192lbs 1/5/1994 S-Ari ’15
Zbynek Michalek (D) 6’2″/210lbs 12/23/1982 FA ’15
Connor Murphy (D) 6’4″/212lbs 3/26/1993 Phx ’11 (1/20)
Chris Pronger (D) 6’6″/220lbs 10/10/1974 T-Phi ’15
Dylan Reese (D) 6’1″/205lbs 8/29/1984 FA ’14
Philip Samuelsson (D) 6’2″/194lbs 7/26/1991 T-Pit ’14
Derek Smith (D) 6’1″/197lbs 10/13/1984 FA ’15
Michael Stone (D) 6’3″/210lbs 6/7/1990 Phx ’08 (3/69)
David Westlund (D) 6’3″/207lbs 2/5/1995 Ari ’14 (6/163)
GOALIES HT/WT BIRTHDATE ACQUIRED
Louis Domingue (G) 6’3″/210lbs 3/6/1992 Phx ’10 (5/138)
Adin Hill (G) 6’4″/198lbs 5/11/1996 Ari ’15 (3/76)
Erik Kallgren (G) 5’11″/157lbs 10/14/1996 Ari ’15 (7/183)
Marek Langhamer (G) 6’2″/184lbs 7/22/1994 Phx ’12 (7/184)
Anders Lindback (G) 6’6″/215lbs 5/3/1988 FA ’15
Mike Smith (G) 6’4″/215lbs 3/22/1982 FA ’11
Niklas Treutle (G) 6’2″/185lbs 4/29/1991 S-Ari ’12

Roster chart from Sports Forecaster.

Some top Coyotes prospect lists heading into the season.

Rk myNHLTradeRumors The Hockey News Corey Pronman ESPN NHL.com
1 Max Domi Dylan Strome Dylan Strome Max Domi
2 Dylan Strome Max Domi Max Domi Anthony Duclair
3 Brendan Perlini Anthony Duclair Anthony Duclair Dylan Strome
4 Anthony Duclair Brendan Perlini Nick Merkley Christian Dvorak
5 Christian Dvorak Christian Dvorak Brendan Perlini Brandon Gormley
6 Henrik Samuelsson Brandon Gormley Christian Dvorak
7 Nick Merkley Nick Merkley Henrik Samuelsson
8 Ryan MacInnis Henrik Samuelsson Klas Dahlbeck
9 Brendan Shinnimin Christan Fischer Jens Looke
10 Klas Dahlbeck Laurent Dauphin Christan Fischer


1. Max Domi:
 Right Wing – 5′ 10″ / 200 lbs – It caught many by surprise when Domi was returned to the London Knights for the season, but in hind sight it was the right move. Arizona struggled all season and it could have had a negative impact on Domi’s confidence and development. Instead, he enjoyed a monster coming out party on one of the biggest stages at the World Junior Championship, as he led Canada to a Gold medal. While his junior career is over, don’t rule out the possibility he sees some time in the AHL adjusting to the pro game. There is no sense in rushing this blue-chip prospect until his performance demands a top-six roster spot with the NHL club.

2. Dylan Strome Center – Center – 6′ 3″ / 185 lbs – The top two selections were a foregone conclusion and everybody knew that the draft really started with pick number three. In that sense, Strome was a first overall selection. Arizona had several trade offers for the third overall selection, but elected to retain the pick and select “their guy” in Strome. He addresses an organizational need at centre perfectly, as the OHL scoring leader is a bona fide franchise calibre player. Expect Strome to be returned to Erie where he will centre last year’s rookie of the year and 2016 draft prospect Alex DeBrincat.

3. Brendan Perlini: Left Wing/Center – 6′ 2″ / 212 lbs – Perlini was so impressive in camp last year, he was in serious contention to make the team until an injury cost him his chance. He was returned to Niagara where he catapulted the struggling Ice Dogs offence, centering a dominate line with Josh Ho-Sang and Carter Verhaeghe. He already possesses NHL size, skating and shooting attributes and is a legitimate contender to crack the opening night roster. It is not so clear that he will see more than nine games and like Domi was, could easily be returned to junior. He is close.

4. Anthony Duclair: Left Wing – 5′ 11″ / 185 – Duclair was the key piece in the Keith Yandle trade and will be reunited with Max Domi, where the two looked sensational together winning Gold with team Canada at the World Juniors. Duclair was impressive in his early season audition with the Rangers before being returned to junior. He is a streaky scorer who has a tendency to endure long streaks of all-or-nothing type goal scoring.

5. Christian Dvorak: Center/Left Wing – 5′ 11″ / 185 lbs – American born Dvorak (No relation to former NHLer Radek Dvorak) is the Coyotes fastest rising star after enjoying a breakout season playing on London Knights top line with teammate Max Domi and fourth overall selection Mitch Marner. An injury the previous season cost him most of his draft year and perhaps allowed him to fly under the radar. He should be returned for a final season of junior with London who have been loading up on talent like Max Jones and Matt Tkachuk and will be Memorial Cup favorites.

Expanded Top 10 Coyotes prospects with videos and stats can be read here.

A look at the Arizona Coyotes drafting from 2010 to 2015.

2015 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 3 Dylan Strome C Erie Otters (OHL)
1 30 Nick Merkley R Kelowna Rockets (WHL)
2 32 Christian Fischer R U.S. National Development Team (USHL)
3 63 Kyle Capobianco D Sudbury Wolves (OHL)
3 76 Adin Hill G Portland Winterhawks (WHL)
3 81 Brendan Warren L U.S. National Development Team (USHL)
3 83 Jens Looke R Brynas IF Gavle (SweHL)
5 123 Conor Garland R Moncton Wildcats (QMJHL)
7 183 Erik Kallgren G Linkoping Jrs (Sweden)
2014 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 12 Brendan Perlini L Niagara IceDogs (OHL)
2 43 Ryan MacInnis F Kitchener Rangers (OHL)
2 58 Christian Dvorak F London Knights (OHL)
3 87 Anton Karlsson L Frolunda (Sweden Jrs.)
4 117 Michael Bunting L Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds (OHL)
5 133 Dysin Mayo D Edmonton Oil Kings (WHL)
6 163 David Westlund D Brynas (Sweden Jrs.)
7 191 Jared Fiegl F U.S. National Under-18 Team (USHL)
7 193 Edgars Kulda L Edmonton Oil Kings (WHL)
2013 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 12 Max Domi C London Knights (OHL)
2 39 Laurent Dauphin C Chicoutimi Sagueneens (QMJHL)
3 62 Yan-Pavel Laplante L Prince Edward Island Rocket (QMJHL)
5 133 Connor Clifton D U.S. National Development Team (USHL)
6 163 Brendan Burke G Portland Winterhawks (WHL)
7 193 Jedd Soleway C Penticton Vees (BCHL)
2012 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 27 Henrik Samuelsson C Edmonton Oil Kings (WHL)
2 58 Jordan Martinook C Vancouver Giants (WHL)
3 88 James Melindy D Moncton Wildcats (QMJHL)
4 102 Rhett Holland D Okotoks Oilers (AJHL)
5 148 Niklas Tikkinen D Blues Jrs. (Finland)
6 178 Hunter Fejes L Shattuck St. Mary’s (Minn. H.S.)
7 184 Marek Langhamer G Pardubice Jrs. (Czech Rep.)
7 208 Justin Hache D Shawinigan Cataractes (QMJHL)
2011 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 20 Connor Murphy D U.S. National Development Team (USHL)
2 51 Alexander Ruuttu F Jokerit Jrs (Finland)
2 56 Lucas Lessio L Oshawa Generals (OHL)
3 84 Harrison Ruopp D Prince Albert Raiders (WHL)
4 111 Kale Kessy L Medicine Hat Tigers (WHL)
5 141 Darian Dziurzynski L Saskatoon Blades (WHL)
6 155 Andrew Fritsch R Owen Sound Attack (OHL)
7 196 Zac Larraza F U.S. National Development Team (USHL)
2010 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 13 Brandon Gormley D Moncton Wildcats (QMJHL)
1 27 Mark Visentin G Niagara IceDogs (OHL)
2 52 Phil Lane R Brampton Battalion (OHL)
2 57 Oscar Lindberg C Skelleftea AIK (SEL)
5 138 Louis Domingue G Quebec Remparts (QMJHL)

 

 

Arizona Coyotes 2014-15 players stats

Player GP G A P +/- PIM PP SH GW S S%
Oliver Ekman-Larsson 82 23 20 43 -18 40 10 1 7 264 8.7
Keith Yandle 63 4 37 41 -32 32 2 0 0 185 2.2
Sam Gagner 81 15 26 41 -28 28 6 0 1 183 8.2
Shane Doan 79 14 22 36 -29 65 5 0 0 189 7.4
Antoine Vermette 63 13 22 35 -23 34 6 0 1 85 15.3
Martin Erat 79 9 23 32 -16 48 3 0 1 91 9.9
Mikkel Boedker 45 14 14 28 -10 6 3 0 2 79 17.7
Martin Hanzal 37 8 16 24 -1 31 1 0 3 85 9.4
Lauri Korpikoski 69 6 15 21 -27 12 5 0 1 82 7.3
Tobias Rieder 72 13 8 21 -19 14 0 3 1 189 6.9
Michael Stone 81 3 15 18 -24 60 0 0 0 144 2.1
Mark Arcobello 27 9 7 16 -4 6 1 0 2 59 15.3
Kyle Chipchura 70 4 10 14 -23 82 1 0 0 81 4.9
David Moss 60 4 8 12 -18 24 1 0 0 96 4.2
Joe Vitale 70 3 6 9 -11 36 0 0 0 55 5.5
Zbynek Michalek 53 2 6 8 -6 12 0 0 0 67 3
Connor Murphy 73 4 3 7 -27 42 0 0 0 72 5.6
B.J. Crombeen 58 3 3 6 -6 79 0 0 0 43 7
John Moore 19 1 4 5 -11 11 0 0 0 21 4.8
Lucas Lessio 26 2 3 5 -10 8 0 0 0 44 4.5
David Schlemko 20 1 3 4 -5 4 0 0 0 24 4.2
Craig Cunningham 19 1 3 4 -3 2 0 0 0 23 4.3
Brandon Gormley 27 2 2 4 -7 10 1 0 0 39 5.1
Chris Summers 17 0 3 3 -12 8 0 0 0 13 0
Rob Klinkhammer 19 3 0 3 3 4 0 0 0 23 13
Brandon Mcmillan 50 1 2 3 -18 16 0 0 0 44 2.3
Klas Dahlbeck 19 0 3 3 -7 6 0 0 0 16 0
Tye Mcginn 18 1 1 2 -1 10 0 0 0 25 4
Andrew Campbell 33 0 1 1 -13 10 0 0 0 28 0
Justin Hodgman 5 1 0 1 -2 2 1 0 0 3 33.3
Jordan Szwarz 9 1 0 1 -2 2 0 0 0 8 12.5
Brendan Shinnimin 12 0 1 1 -1 8 0 0 0 10 0
Jordan Martinook 8 0 1 1 -3 0 0 0 0 8 0
Alexandre Bolduc 3 0 0 0 -1 2 0 0 0 3 0
Dylan Reese 1 0 0 0 -1 0 0 0 0 3 0
Philip Samuelsson 4 0 0 0 -3 0 0 0 0 4 0
Henrik Samuelsson 3 0 0 0 -2 2 0 0 0 4 0
Tyler Gaudet 2 0 0 0 -1 0 0 0 0 1 0
Goalie GPI GS MIN GAA W L OT SO SA GA SV%
Mike Smith 62 61 3556 3.16 14 42 5 0 1955 187 0.904
Devan Dubnyk 19 16 1035 2.72 9 5 2 1 561 47 0.916
Louis Domingue 7 4 308 2.73 1 2 1 0 158 14 0.911
Mike Mckenna 1 1 60 5 0 1 0 0 34 5 0.853

A look at the Arizona Coyotes 2015-16 schedule

DATE OPP. RESULT
Fri, Oct 9 @ LA 10:30 PM ET
Sat, Oct 10 vs. Pit 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Oct 14 @ Ana 10:30 PM ET
Thu, Oct 15 vs. Min 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Oct 17 vs. Bos 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Oct 20 @ NJ 7:00 PM ET
Thu, Oct 22 @ NYR 7:00 PM ET
Sat, Oct 24 @ Ott 7:00 PM ET
Mon, Oct 26 @ Tor 7:30 PM ET
Tue, Oct 27 @ Bos 7:00 PM ET
Fri, Oct 30 vs. Van 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Nov 5 vs. Col 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Nov 7 vs. NYR 9:00 PM ET
Mon, Nov 9 @ Ana 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Nov 10 @ LA 10:30 PM ET
Thu, Nov 12 vs. Edm 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Nov 14 @ CBJ 7:00 PM ET
Mon, Nov 16 @ NYI 7:00 PM ET
Thu, Nov 19 @ Mtl 7:30 PM ET
Sat, Nov 21 @ Wpg 7:00 PM ET
Wed, Nov 25 vs. Ana 9:00 PM ET
Fri, Nov 27 vs. Cgy 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Nov 28 vs. Ott 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Dec 1 @ Nas 8:00 PM ET
Thu, Dec 3 @ Det 7:30 PM ET
Fri, Dec 4 @ Buf 7:00 PM ET
Sun, Dec 6 @ Car 5:00 PM ET
Tue, Dec 8 @ StL 8:00 PM ET
Fri, Dec 11 vs. Min 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Dec 12 vs. Car 9:00 PM ET
Thu, Dec 17 vs. CBJ 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Dec 19 vs. NYI 9:00 PM ET
Tue, Dec 22 vs. Tor 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Dec 26 vs. LA 9:00 PM ET
Sun, Dec 27 @ Col 8:00 PM ET
Tue, Dec 29 vs. Chi 9:00 PM ET
Thu, Dec 31 vs. Wpg 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Jan 2 @ Edm 4:00 PM ET
Mon, Jan 4 @ Van 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Jan 7 @ Cgy 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Jan 9 vs. Nas 9:00 PM ET
Tue, Jan 12 vs. Edm 9:00 PM ET
Thu, Jan 14 vs. Det 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Jan 16 vs. NJ 9:00 PM ET
Mon, Jan 18 vs. Buf 9:00 PM ET
Thu, Jan 21 vs. SJ 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Jan 23 vs. LA 9:00 PM ET
Mon, Jan 25 @ Min 8:30 PM ET
Tue, Jan 26 @ Wpg 8:00 PM ET
Tue, Feb 2 vs. LA 9:00 PM ET
Thu, Feb 4 vs. Chi 9:00 PM ET
Fri, Feb 5 @ Ana 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Feb 10 vs. Van 9:30 PM ET
Fri, Feb 12 vs. Cgy 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Feb 13 @ SJ 10:30 PM ET
Mon, Feb 15 vs. Mtl 9:00 PM ET
Thu, Feb 18 vs. Dal 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Feb 20 vs. StL 9:00 PM ET
Mon, Feb 22 @ Wsh 7:00 PM ET
Tue, Feb 23 @ TB 7:30 PM ET
Thu, Feb 25 @ Fla 7:30 PM ET
Sat, Feb 27 @ Phi 1:00 PM ET
Mon, Feb 29 @ Pit 7:00 PM ET
Thu, Mar 3 vs. Ana 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Mar 5 vs. Fla 9:00 PM ET
Mon, Mar 7 @ Col 9:00 PM ET
Wed, Mar 9 @ Van 10:00 PM ET
Fri, Mar 11 @ Cgy 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Mar 12 @ Edm 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Mar 17 vs. SJ 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Mar 19 vs. TB 10:00 PM ET
Sun, Mar 20 @ SJ 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Mar 22 vs. Edm 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Mar 24 vs. Dal 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Mar 26 vs. Phi 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Mar 28 vs. Cgy 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Mar 31 @ Dal 8:30 PM ET
Sat, Apr 2 vs. Wsh 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Apr 4 @ StL 8:00 PM ET
Tue, Apr 5 @ Chi 8:30 PM ET
Thu, Apr 7 @ Nas 8:00 PM ET
Sat, Apr 9 @ SJ 10:30 PM ET
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