They’re going for it — again

Walking into Ball Arena at 4:30 p.m., the silence creates a comforting hum. A few steps later, the eyes shift to the ceiling where three hockey championship banners hang above Section 362. For most organizations, they would provide a long look back into comfort and goosebumps. For the Avs, they provide a longer gaze forward.

The banners represent motivation, direction. They are a compass. This point was driven home Wednesday morning with a sledgehammer. In 30 minutes, the Avs showed they remain all-in. Again.

The two most important days in a professional sports season are when it starts and the trade deadline when we find out what those in charge really think of their team. The Avs “why” is refreshing. There might as well have been a neon sign flashing above the scoreboard Wednesday that read: “We care.” In an industry, where reasons come camouflaged as excuses, the Avs’ stance warms the heart like an open campfire.

They are not paying their best players to go away (see Arenado, Nolan) or absorbing an $85 million dead salary cap hit to move on from the artist formerly known as Russell Wilson.

The Avs are hunting with a singular vision. Even if that means admitting a mistake.

They acquired Buffalo Sabres forward Casey Mittelstadt and Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Sean Walker in two separate deals, shades of when they landed Artturi Lehkonen and Josh Manson two years ago. That season ended with a parade.

As long as Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar dot the roster, the Avs commentary never shifts toward the future. It’s about now.

They addressed areas of concern, made the team better than it was Tuesday. It came with pain. The Avs shipped off promising defenseman Bo Byram for Mittelstadt. Acquiring a functional second-line center became a glaring need, impossible to ignore.

Ryan Johansen was a bust. The Avs might have been better off with a Jonas Brother. Something was off. Or never on. He was a dial-up skater on a fiber optics team. Johansen had to go as did Bo to land his replacement.

“It wasn’t working,” Avs general manager Chris MacFarland admitted Wednesday night. “Bo was a special player. He helped us immensely. I’d be lying if I said it didn’t put a pit in my stomach because it did. But I felt it was the right move at this time for the club.”

Everybody, it seems, loved Bo. Hard not to given his contributions to the 2022 run and his potential. But was he better this season? It’s easier to make an argument that he regressed.

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