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How many goals can Connor McDavid score, former Edmonton Oilers prospect Dylan Wells inks NHL deal and more

Frank Seravalli: “When you look at McDavid and where he’s at, 11 goals in 10 games, the pace is ridiculous. But my question for you as he has yet to hit the 50-goal mark in his NHL career, what’s a realistic expectation for goals for McDavid this season?”

Mike McKenna: “I think 50 is going to happen, for sure. I think 60 is probably what we’re looking at as a high watermark. This is taking a lot into account. He’s only scored 44 as his previous high. And I said only We’d obviously all take a 44-goal scorer in the NHL.

But I look at how he’s playing and it’s not all on his shoulders. It’s not all on the rush, it’s in different scenarios, it’s on the power play, and it’s at 5-on-5. You look at the goals last night, it’s a 2-on-1 that he rolls his wrists over when he’s looking to pass and ends up shooting five-hole and completely fools Juuse Saros.

He’s doing it in a lot of different ways but it’s still in bursts. He’s got six goals in his last three games and he’s had spans where he goes a little dry on the goal-scoring front. So I think 60 might be as high as we’re going to see. Do you have a different opinion on it?”

Seravalli: “I think you’re right in the same wheelhouse as I am. I’m thinking he’s going to finish somewhere between 55 and 58, which is an enormous step forward for a guy who, as you mentioned, had previously only hit 44 as a career-high.

I just look at how easy it is. You mentioned he always scores in bunches, I looked back at last season, and he only had one hat trick and six two-goal games. That’s 15 that were scored in bunches, which means he was a really consistent goal-getter in terms of one, one, one, one. I feel like there’s a bigger outburst there he’s had this season.

And as you mentioned, he’s scoring in all of these different ways. It just looks easy. He’s in the right place at the right time. Goals and opportunities are created off the rush and then that power play which could be clicking at a historic level when it’s all said and done given the talent that’s on the ice.

Why can’t he have an Auston Matthews-like number this season? There’s nothing that would preclude him from doing something like that.”

McKenna: “A lot of it also comes from his defensive play. He’s been way harder playing pucks in his own zone, he’s not just a one-dimensional player. He’s turning into a force all across the ice and, ultimately, that gives him the puck more often and more chances to score.”