Keeler: Avs wasted Nathan MacKinnon’s MVP season last winter. Will they waste another waiting out Val Nichushkin, Gabe Landeskog?

The MVP deserves bet­ter than MIA.

Valeri Nichushkin, wher­ev­er he is, turns 30 in March. The Avs have learned how to live, and even thrive, with­out him. The Post­sea­son Avs have not.

Gabe Lan­deskog turns 32 next month. The replace­ment car­ti­lage in his knee turns 2 in May. He might play. He might not.

All we know for cer­tain is that Col­orado has yet to win a Stan­ley Cup with­out the ser­vices of a cap­tain who com­fort­ably skates. And prob­a­bly won’t win anoth­er until there’s a cap­tain who actu­al­ly can.

Don’t mis­un­der­stand — Landy’s come­back tale, a warrior’s grind, is inspir­ing. It’s just that the uncer­tain­ty and the sta­sis that is tat­tooed on one of the proud­est fran­chis­es in the NHL is absolute­ly maddening.

Jonathan Drouin turns 30 in March. Devon Toews turns 31 in Feb­ru­ary. Josh Man­son just turned 32.

Nathan MacK­in­non turns 30 next September.

Each win­ter, as the dark­ness falls and the snow rolls in to wres­tle with the sun­shine, the frame of Nate Dogg’s cham­pi­onship win­dow creeps ever clos­er to the sill.

The MVP deserves bet­ter than SMH.

Those Hart Tro­phy years aren’t just glorious.

They’re pre­cious.

Too pre­cious to throw away.

Too pre­cious to waste on hope (Val) and health (Gabe).

Colorado’s 2024–25 sea­son is the ulti­mate trust fall. Which would be fine, if not for the fact that Nichushkin let his team­mates — and legions of loy­al fans — crash back­ward to the Earth each of the last two springs.

“With­out those two guys, I just don’t view them as a Cup con­tender regard­less of hav­ing MacK­in­non and (Makar) in the line­up,” WBD/TNT ana­lyst Paul Bis­son­nette said ear­li­er this week when asked about Lan­deskog and Nichushkin.

“I just think that those guys are so valu­able, (giv­en) what they bring. Obvi­ous­ly, the hope is that they come back.”

Oh, the Avs are a con­tender. Any team with MacK­in­non is a con­tender, even if he has to drag a good chunk of this ros­ter into rel­e­vance by the force of his will or the thrust of his comet trail.

No. 29 hoist­ed one of the best games on the plan­et to anoth­er lev­el last sea­son, fin­ish­ing with career highs in goals (51), assists (89) and points (140) while win­ning his first Hart despite superb years from peers such as Con­nor McDavid, Aus­ton Matthews and Niki­ta Kucherov.

Giv­en all the uncer­tain­ty around him, MacK­in­non might well have to put up a third straight 100-point sea­son to keep the bur­gundy and blue ship from sink­ing into the messy West­ern Con­fer­ence mire. Not even Joe Sakic pulled that off in an Avs sweater, and Super Joe hit the cen­tu­ry mark at the age of 37 (100 points in ’06–07).

“I think that Nate is still at the begin­ning of his prime,” long­time hock­ey ana­lyst Dar­ren Pang, also with WBD/TNT, told me by phone recent­ly. “I hon­est­ly believe that we’re going to see five more years of this same (lev­el of) play from Nathan MacKinnon.”

The MVP deserves bet­ter than TBD.

Imag­ine if he had more help. Reli­able help.

I mean, yes, Sakic won his sec­ond Stan­ley Cup at 31. But as a play­er, he nev­er made it to anoth­er Final after that.

In the spring of 2001, Avs leg­end Adam Foote was 29. He won just four more post­sea­son series over sev­en more sea­sons in bur­gundy and blue, despite play­ing to age 40.

Peter Fors­berg was 27 for his sec­ond Cup lift 23 years ago. He nev­er won more than two play­off series with the Avs once he’d reached 28.

Time flies. And know this: The rest of the West isn’t wait­ing around for Gabe and Val. Or for Col­orado GM Chris Mac­Far­land to get his ducks in a row.

Edmon­ton brought in Jeff Skin­ner. Dal­las lost Joe Pavel­s­ki to retire­ment, and huz­zah, but added Bren­dan Smith, Matt Dum­ba and Ilya Lyubushkin to the defen­sive mix. Nashville snapped up Steven Stamkos and Jonathan Marches­sault. St. Louis snatched Philip Broberg and Dylan Hol­loway from Edmonton’s core. Van­cou­ver wel­comed Daniel Sprong and Jake DeBrusk. The Utah Not-Yotes trad­ed for Mikhail Ser­gachev and John Marino.

“I just think that (the Avs are) a lit­tle bit too thin and watered down through­out the line­up,” Bis­son­nette con­tin­ued. “And com­pet­ing in the West, it’s just so hard …

“You have Edmon­ton, which I think is bet­ter than Dal­las. I still view Vegas as bet­ter than (the Avs). And then, you know, there could be an argu­ment about maybe even one or two oth­er teams …

“So if those two ain’t back, I just kind of see (the Avs) as a mid­dle-of-the-pack team. And prob­a­bly, in my opin­ion, a first-round or maybe sec­ond-round exit, at best, if they can’t get that fig­ured out.”

The MVP deserves a heck of a lot bet­ter than that.

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