Anaheim Ducks
Powered by Roundtable
Patrick Present·Apr 13, 2025·Partner

Jacob Trouba Suggests Ducks Haven't Turned the Corner the Standings Indicate

Mar 20, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Jacob Trouba (65) takes a shot on goal against the Nashville Predators during the second period at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn ImagesMar 20, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Jacob Trouba (65) takes a shot on goal against the Nashville Predators during the second period at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

Much of the discussion surrounding the 2024-25 Anaheim Ducks has centered on their significant jump in the standings from the previous two seasons.

With three games remaining on their schedule, they have a 35-36-8 record and 78 points in the standings, a 19-point jump from their 2023-24 total and a 20-point jump from their 2022-23 total.

The Ducks are destined to miss out on the playoffs for a seventh consecutive season, soon to be the third-longest such streak in the NHL, but this season’s point total has given some hope for the short-term future outlook of the organization.

The Ducks acquired Jacob Trouba from the New York Rangers on Dec. 6 to boost the on and off-ice culture of the club and provide another veteran presence in a locker room littered with young, exciting talent.

Trouba (31) had spent the previous five seasons as a member of the New York Rangers, only missing the playoffs once and leading them to two Eastern Conference Finals appearances, once with an “A” on his chest in 2021-22 and once with a “C” as the organization’s captain a year ago.

He’s been in the playoffs more often than not throughout his 12-year NHL career, split between the Winnipeg Jets, Rangers, and now the Ducks. He is one of a handful of players in the Ducks’ dressing room who understands the lengths it takes a team to realize their ultimate goal of building a sustainable brand of Stanley Cup-contending hockey.

Mar 12, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Jacob Trouba takes a shot against the Utah Hockey Club during the first period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn ImagesMar 12, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Jacob Trouba takes a shot against the Utah Hockey Club during the first period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

The Ducks lost 6-1 in their most recent matchup with their closest rival, the Los Angeles Kings, on Thursday evening in LA, a game where they were outmatched for the vast majority in all three zones. Following the game, Trouba was asked if his team had turned a corner and was heading in the right direction.

“I don’t know,” Trouba said. “It’s a pretty far back corner if that’s the corner we’re trying to turn. I think there’s a lot more to be had and a lot more we can strive for.”

He was then asked a follow-up question regarding the difference between themselves and a Kings team that sits firmly in second place in the Pacific Division and had just dominated the special teams matchup by scoring three power play goals on six opportunities while surrendering zero to the Ducks on four opportunities.

“The special teams are a big part of that, but I think the battle level,” Trouba continued. “That’s something we can continue to get better at. I think it has gotten better, but there’s still another level we gotta get to.”

As a whole, the Ducks have improved the details of their game this season when compared to seasons past. There haven’t been nearly as many defensive lapses, blown assignments, miscommunications, etc., but they’re still spending far too much time in their own end of the ice where they’re consistently getting hemmed for extended stretches, bleeding shot attempts, and expelling their energy reserves necessary to manufacture counter attacks.

They’re still one of the younger teams in the NHL and their most talented players are all under 25 years old, so winning the amount of games they did will have a natural positive effect on the team’s morale. However, if they truly intend to turn a corner and build on the efforts and strides they’ve taken this season, some significant surgery may be required to their on-ice process to create a more sustainable environment and a style more conducive to the strengths of their brightest talents.

Numbers suggest that with league-average goaltending this season, the Ducks would have suffered a third consecutive season near the bottom of the NHL standings. They also suggest that with the goaltending they did receive coupled with league-average play at 5v5 and on special teams, they’d have been firmly in the playoff picture.

Trouba’s postgame comments on Thursday were one of the few times this season where a member of the Ducks organization has questioned the results and their place in the standings, rebuking the notion that they have turned a corner on their rebuild.

The upcoming offseason will be truly telling on whether the Anaheim front office shares Trouba’s view or whether they bought into the standings jump the team made this season.

1