First-round breakdown: Thrashers vs. Rangers
A season ago, the Rangers limped into the playoffs and were quickly swept by the rival Devils. This year's postseason features a Rangers team that has a dramatically different makeup.
In Brendan Shanahan, the Rangers have a three-time Cup winner, and Henrik Lundqvist has been sensational over the final month of the regular season. Winger Sean Avery (surprise, surprise) has been given much-deserved credit for helping turn around the Rangers' season by adding grit and timely scoring.
The Thrashers, meanwhile, will be counting on a strong veteran presence in their first playoff series. Newcomers Keith Tkachuk, Alexei Zhitnik and Eric Belanger were key to righting the Thrashers' ship and winning their first division title. GM Don Waddell gambled away a big chunk of the team's future to retool at the trade deadline. Now, he's about to find out the payoff.
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2. Atlanta's special teams. Although the Thrashers are much improved in terms of their discipline, they remain vulnerable in short-handed situations. Atlanta finished 26th in the NHL in that category, which is an improvement over much of a season when they were at, or near, dead last. Taking too many penalties against Jagr and Co. will be a death knell. The Thrashers' power play, too, has been curiously inept given the load of talent, including Marian Hossa, Ilya Kovalchuk, Slava Kozlov and Tkachuk. The Thrashers have the lowest-ranked power-play unit of any playoff team.
3. The King and the Finn. Lundqvist, as mentioned, was superlative in the latter stages of the regular season. Over a 28-game period to end the season, he gave up more than three goals just twice (in consecutive starts, it turns out). But he has a lot to prove after last spring, when he allowed 13 goals in three games and was lifted in favor of backup Kevin Weekes during the Rangers' four-game series loss to New Jersey. Lundqvist, who was battling injury during the '06 postseason, will enter this year's playoffs much improved. In some ways, Atlanta netminder Kari Lehtonen is in the same position Lundqvist was a season ago -- a top-notch, young netminder facing his first playoff action. Lehtonen, twice The Hockey News' prospect of the year, appears to have the right personality for the playoffs as he seems unfazed by bad goals. His record in the AHL playoffs was terrific, but he'll have to provide more consistency than he did at times during this season.
4. The Sean Avery factor. So much has been written and said about the abrasive forward since his arrival in New York, it prompted players to name him the most overrated player in a recent Hockey News poll. Tell that to the Montreal Canadiens and other teams Avery has tormented as the Rangers rebounded to reach the playoffs. Now, the question is whether Avery can continue to be effective without crossing the line in his first playoff appearance. Watch for him to try and needle Kovalchuk, who is susceptible to being thrown off his game.
5. The playoff experience factor. The Thrashers are in the playoffs for the first time, yet Kozlov won two Cups in Detroit, Bobby Holik won two in New Jersey, Jon Sim won a Cup in Dallas and Greg de Vries won it all with coach Bob Hartley in Colorado. Zhitnik, Tkachuk and captain Scott Mellanby all have lengthy playoff records. Yet, for many of those players, their playoff experiences occurred years ago, which brings the value of those successes into question.
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• Rangers: Ryan Callahan, 22, has six points since being recalled from Hartford of the AHL and has given the Rangers another hard-working, hard-nosed forward. After scoring 15 times and totaling 47 points a season ago, defenseman Paul Mara has just two goals and five points in 19 games as a Ranger.
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Scott Burnside is the NHL writer for ESPN.com.

