Colorado
3 questions facing Colorado Avalanche

NHL.com is providing in-depth roster, prospect and fantasy analysis for each of its 32 teams from Aug. 1-Sept. 1. Today, three important questions facing the Colorado Avalanche.
[Avalanche 32 in 32: Season preview | Top prospects | Fantasy projections]
1. Can Ryan Johansen provide a boost at second-line center?
The Avalanche acquired Johansen in a trade with the Nashville Predators on June 24, hoping he can be the replacement on the second line for Nazem Kadri. Last season, Colorado didn’t come close to matching the production it got during its Stanley Cup-winning run in 2021-22 from Kadri, who signed with the Calgary Flames as a free agent last July after he had an NHL career-high 87 points (28 goals, 59 assists) in 71 games.
Johansen had surgery on his right leg and missed the final 27 games last season after he was cut by a skate blade.
“Hopefully it’ll be, by August I think, just full on normal and [I’ll] be myself,” Johansen said. “So, it’s been encouraging to have confidence with moving over that injury and moving past it all. It’s a team sport, but as an individual I know what I’m capable of and I know how I can play in this League. For me to fit in best, I think it’s just going to be me at the top of my game.”
The 31-year-old center had 28 points (12 goals, 16 assists) in 55 games with Nashville before the injury; he had 63 points (26 goals, 37 assists) in 79 games in 2021-22.
2. Will Jonathan Drouin benefit from a reunion with Nathan MacKinnon?
Drouin and MacKinnon won the Memorial Cup together with Halifax of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League in 2013, and they did it with style. MacKinnon scored a hat trick in the final game, and Drouin had five assists.
The Avalanche are hoping to rekindle that magic after signing Drouin to a one-year contract.
“It’s a low-risk, high-reward type of situation that hopefully will pay dividends for both,” general manager Chris MacFarland said.
Drouin hasn’t reached 30 points or played in more than 58 games in a season since 2018-19, his second with the Montreal Canadiens.
“There was a lot of ups and downs in my six years in Montreal, so I’m super excited to get a fresh start somewhere new,” Drouin said. “I’m just hoping to help them in any way I can and try to find my game again. I know it’s there.”
3. Can the Avalanche win without Gabriel Landeskog?
Their captain will miss the entire season after having a cartilage transplant in his right knee May 10. Questions about whether the 30-year-old forward could return last season were quite a distraction for Colorado, which will be free from those relating to Landeskog this season.
The Avalanche leaned heavily on MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen, Cale Makar and Valeri Nichushkin to win the Central Division in Landeskog’s absence. They’ll have to do again.
New additions Johansen, Drouin, Ross Colton and especially Miles Wood are expected to help.
“Not that he’s Landeskog, not many are, but that size component is something that we felt we needed to add to the mix, and he certainly does that,” MacFarland said of Wood. “He’s a good net-front guy that we feel is going to fit.”

Colorado
Will Trump move Space Command from Colorado again? State’s Republicans are “not waiting to make our case.”

The yearslong fight over the permanent home of U.S. Space Command — currently in Colorado Springs but in danger of being moved to Alabama — kicked into a higher gear Thursday, as the state’s Republican members of Congress said the battle was hardly over.
“We’re not waiting to make our case,” U.S. Rep. Jeff Crank said in an early morning video call with reporters. “We’re making our case and we’re doing it right now. We’re going to continue to fight — it makes sense that it be in Colorado. It’s already in Colorado.”
Crank is a freshman who represents the 5th Congressional District where Peterson Space Force Base, home to Space Command, sits. He was joined by Reps. Lauren Boebert, Gabe Evans and Jeff Hurd, who spoke from an office at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
Members of Alabama’s congressional delegation have been spinning a different story this week, with U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers saying on a podcast that contractors are “ready to turn dirt” on a future Space Command headquarters at the Army’s Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville.
Rogers, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, told Auburn University’s “Cyber Focus” podcast Tuesday that he expected a final decision from the Trump administration this month.
“We do expect it to be announced right after the Air Force secretary is named,” he said.
President Donald Trump in January nominated former air crewman and space expert Troy Meink to lead the Air Force. He hasn’t been confirmed to the post yet.
But Colorado’s Republicans were hopeful that no move would happen.
“I’ve asked many of our senior military leaders: What is the military value of moving Space Command out of Colorado Springs?” Crank said Thursday. “And, point blank, they say there isn’t any.”
Evans, who represents Colorado’s 8th Congressional District and is an Army veteran, said he was encouraged by the fact that Trump didn’t immediately move Space Command upon taking office nearly three months ago — as was predicted by Rogers shortly after the November election.
“There were a lot of rumors swirling that this was going to be one of those first executive orders dropped on Jan. 20,” Evans said. “As we all know, there was no executive order on Day 1 talking about Space Command.”
Space Command, which is responsible for the nation’s military operations in outer space, was revived in 2019 under Trump’s first administration. Located first in Colorado Springs, it was set to move to Alabama after Trump announced that state as his selection for a permanent headquarters in the waning days of his first administration in early 2021.
But former President Joe Biden later reversed that decision and the command remained in Colorado. The Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce estimates it supports nearly 1,400 jobs and has a $1 billion impact on the local economy.
Huntsville, home to some of the earliest missiles used in the nation’s space programs, scored higher than Colorado Springs in a Government Accountability Office assessment of potential locations for the command. That same office, however, gave the selection process low marks for documentation, credibility and impartiality and said that senior U.S. officials who were interviewed conveyed that remaining in Colorado Springs “would allow U.S. Space Command to reach full operational capability as quickly as possible.”
With rising military threats from Russia and China, Boebert said Thursday that it was “even more critical for Space Command to avoid being moved across the country.”
The minimum $2 billion price tag to relocate the command would undermine the priorities the administration has set with its budget-cutting Department of Government Efficiency office.
“It really flies in the face of the DOGE operations that are taking place,” the congresswoman said on the call.
The Republican delegation on Monday sent a letter to the White House outlining Colorado’s position on the issue. They wrote that a move to Alabama “would introduce unnecessary risks, disrupt established operations and waste valuable resources.”
The state’s Democratic members of Congress, along with both of the state’s Democratic U.S. senators, have also been vocal about keeping the Space Command in Colorado.
On Thursday’s call, Crank said that with the president’s announcement during his first week back in office of the creation of the Golden Dome missile defense system — a futuristic network of U.S. weapons in space designed to destroy ground-based missiles within seconds of launch — it’s all the more critical to keep Space Command in Colorado.
“We have to have this seamless coordination between (Colorado Springs-based) Northern Command and Space Command, especially if we’re going to be successful implementing Golden Dome,” he said. “They literally share the same parking lot at Peterson Space Force Base, so I believe there would be a great loss in capability there.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Vancouver visits Colorado after Suter's 2-goal game

Vancouver Canucks (36-29-13, in the Pacific Division) vs. Colorado Avalanche (48-27-4, in the Central Division)
Denver; Thursday, 9 p.m. EDT
BOTTOM LINE: The Vancouver Canucks visit the Colorado Avalanche after Pius Suter scored two goals in the Canucks’ 6-5 overtime win over the Dallas Stars.
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Colorado is 48-27-4 overall and 26-11-3 in home games. The Avalanche have a 21-7-1 record in games they score one or more power-play goals.
Vancouver has a 36-29-13 record overall and a 20-14-6 record in road games. The Canucks have a -18 scoring differential, with 224 total goals scored and 242 allowed.
The teams meet Thursday for the third time this season. The Canucks won 3-0 in the last matchup.
TOP PERFORMERS: Cale Makar has 30 goals and 61 assists for the Avalanche. Nathan MacKinnon has five goals and seven assists over the past 10 games.
Quinn Hughes has 16 goals and 59 assists for the Canucks. Suter has scored five goals with six assists over the past 10 games.
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LAST 10 GAMES: Avalanche: 7-2-1, averaging 3.6 goals, 6.2 assists, 3.4 penalties and 7.4 penalty minutes while giving up 2.2 goals per game.
Canucks: 4-4-2, averaging 3.5 goals, 6.3 assists, 3.2 penalties and 7.4 penalty minutes while giving up 3.5 goals per game.
INJURIES: Avalanche: None listed.
Canucks: None listed.
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
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