WEEHAWKEN, N.
Tuukka Rask Bruins Jersey .J. -- The Colorado
Avalanche say they have crunched the numbers and they are looking for offence in
Sundays NHL draft. Top prospects Nathan MacKinnon and Seth Jones insist they are
both in the dark about whose name will be called first at the Prudential Centre
in Newark., N.J. But the Avalanche are not shy about saying that they are
leaning towards MacKinnon, a forward, with their first overall pick. Jones, a
defenceman from the Portland Winterhawks, is the top-ranked North American
skater on the NHL Central Scouting list. But Rick Pracey, Colorados director of
amateur scouting, says their research shows that picking an elite forward at the
top of the draft pays dividends. Pracey notes that four of the top five scorers
this season were No. 1 overall picks in the draft (Steven Stamkos, Alex
Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby and Patrick Kane). The exception was the undrafted
Martin St. Louis. And over the last five years, some 48 to 50 per cent of the
top 20 scorers were selected in the top five of the draft. So the Avs -- who
ranked 27th in scoring this season with 116 goals -- are looking to a forward.
"Were leaning towards Nathan MacKinnon," Pracey told The Canadian Press, adding
his voice to that of Avs executive vice-president of hockey operations Joe Sakic
and new coach Patrick Roy. Colorado likes the 17-year-old MacKinnons history of
elevating his game when it counts and his ability to handle pressure. "We think
he has elite speed. We like his (hockey) sense, we like his offensive ability
and we think he comes to play," Pracey said. "His competitive nature is another
factor in his game that were fond of." Halifax Mooseheads winger Jonathan Drouin
and Finnish Elite League centre Aleksander Barkov are also on the Avs radar.
Scouts say Drouin reminds them of a young Joe Sakic, according to NHL Central
Scouting director Dan Marr. Barkov, who is coming off a shoulder injury, has
been playing against men since he was 16. The three forwards, along with Jones,
represent the cream of a crop seen as rich towards the top. Colorado has first
crack at the talent, followed by the Florida Panthers, Tampa Bay Lightning,
Nashville Predators and Carolina Hurricanes. NHL Central Scouting ranked Jones
first ahead of MacKinnon and Drouin among North American skaters. Barkov was
rated the top international prospect. Ask MacKinnon and he will tell you Drouin
is the most skilled player in the draft. "The things he can do with the puck are
pretty cool," he said. "He slows the game down, he kind of controls the tempo."
But as to who goes where Sunday, Marr said nothing would surprise him. "Its
going to be a difficult choice but its going to be a great one for their
franchise," Marr said Friday at a New Jersey media availability overlooking
Manhattan. Marr said all four could be NHL-ready. Of course, Colorados open-door
policy on its pick could be subterfuge. But Pracey repeated the franchise line,
that the Avs wanted to keep their fan base in the loop. That Jones has Denver
ties might be a factor in that transparency. The prized defenceman essentially
took up the sport in Colorado while his NBA-playing father Popeye Jones was with
the Nuggets. By pointing to MacKinnon, the Avs have played down talk of taking
the local boy. Still, Pracey had dinner with Jones in Dallas last week. Marr
sees Jones as a rare talent built for todays NHL -- smart, a fluid skater with a
good passing touch and with a big-game sensibility. Both MacKinnon and Jones are
old beyond their years, both on and off the ice. They handled the media with
aplomb Friday, having done it all before at the NHL Combine and Stanley Cup
final. Although MacKinnons Mooseheads beat Jones Hawks in the Memorial Cup
final, the two have become friends and are rooming together here. Asked about
what Jones is like away from the ice, MacKinnon mischievously offered that he is
always willing to order room service. They both say they are in the dark about
who will go where on the draft menu Sunday. MacKinnon says he is not paying
attention to draft talk, saying he doesnt want his expectations too high. The
Avs have said nothing to them, the two players said when asked. MacKinnon did
say he would look forward to working under Roy, who coached Quebec in the Quebec
Major Junior Hockey League this season. "It would be an awesome experience,"
MacKinnon said. "He develops young players very well." Colorado won the
opportunity to go first in the draft lottery, dropping Florida to second spot.
The Panthers had the worst record in the league in 2012-13 at 15-27-6, finishing
three points behind Colorado (16-25-7). The Avalanche, during their days as the
Quebec Nordiques, picked first overall three time before. They scooped up some
marquee names in Mats Sundin (1989), Owen Nolan (1990), while Eric Lindros
(1991) held out and forced a trade to Philadelphia. At No. 6, Calgary holds the
highest pick among Canadian teams. The Flames also pick 22nd (St. Louis, via the
Jay Bouwmeester deal) and 28th (Pittsburgh, Jarome Iginla trade) in the first
round. Edmonton selects seventh followed by Winnipeg at No. 13, Ottawa at No.
17, Toronto at No. 21, Vancouver at No. 24 and Montreal at No. 25. Like Calgary,
Columbus has three first round-picks -- its own at No. 14, the Rangers 19th pick
(from the Rick Nash trade) and L.A.s 28th pick (from the Jeff Carter deal).
Buffalo (eighth and 16th) and Dallas (10th and 19th) have two first-round picks
apiece, meaning four teams -- Buffalo, Calgary, Columbus and Dallas -- control
one-third of the first round going into the draft. That combined with the
decrease in salary cap for next season could lead to deals ahead of Sunday.
Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds defenceman Darnell Nurse is also expected to go
high. Marr sees him as having a bit of Shea Webber in him. Nurse, the son of
former CFL receiver Richard Nurse and nephew to former NFL quarterback Donovan
McNabb, says he has pondered over who might take him. But he added ultimately it
doesnt matter. "Id like to play anywhere in the NHL," said Nurse, who grew up a
Devils fan. "Thats the honest truth." The goalie crop is seen as thin but not
without talent. Marr enthused about Halifaxs Zachary Fucale, citing his mental
toughness.
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Redskins.DENVER – Even a six-game win streak isnt enough to ease the nerves of a
head coach. “Coaches never breathe easy,” said Randy Carlyle with a chuckle
after his team pulled out an unlikely 5-2 win in Colorado. Make it six straight
for the Maple Leafs, who despite the challenges of the blistering Avalanche –
one regulation loss in the previous 10, thin air of the Mile High City, and
third game in four nights, managed to overcome with two points in the second
tilt of a four-game road trip. The primary components of the win streak stood
tall yet again. There was more terrific goaltending, this time from
James Reimer, who stopped 35 of 37 Avalanche flurries. There was continued
dominance from Phil Kessel, who extended his wild point streak to seven games
with a pair of goals. There was another quick strike in the opening frame. And
there was another fine special teams outing, the Leafs scoring again on the
power-play while halting a scorching Colorado man advantage in all four
opportunities. Sunny times roll on in the dead of winter for a once
victory-challenged squad. “Theres a lot more life in the room,” said
Dion Phaneuf after the latest victory. “Weve got a confidence in our dressing
room right now that we feel good about ourselves. And thats a good feeling for a
team.” Its been eight years since a Toronto club won six in a row, the last run
coming during the 2005-06 season. This streak was especially unforeseen
considering how dour the scene looked less than two weeks earlier and really for
the better part of the season. The Leafs had just four wins in regulation during
a stretch of two months and had dropped four consecutive games in the early days
of 2014, including a pair of disastrous blowout losses to the Rangers and
Hurricanes. But from those ashes has risen an unlikely string of victories –
including four in regulation in this run alone – some good fortune aligning with
good goaltending, strong special teams and elevated performance from some of the
teams top guns, notably Kessel and the top line. “It was a tough stretch,” said
Kessel, who has 26 goals on the year, “but we stayed positive and we fought our
way out of it and were on a pretty good roll right now.” Five Points 1. En Fuego
About the hottest hes ever been as an NHL player, Phil Kessel added two more
points to a scorching seven-game point streak. Kessel, who scored twice against
the Avalanche and now has goals in four straight games, has six goals and 14
points during the sizzling run. “Hes a mutant almost,” Morgan Rielly beamed to
the Leaf Report during Tuesdays game. “Hes just scoring. Hes getting points. Hes
happy. Hes flying around out there so its been great. Hes one of the top players
in the world and hes proving it.” Kessel managed the two markers, but could have
ended up with three or four considering the dozen or so opportunities he had on
this night. He scored his first on a breakaway, beating Semyon Varlomov
far-side, adding another on a rebound opportunity. “What did he have like 12
shots on goal tonight,” van Riemsdyk said of his linemate, who managed eight
shots. “It was pretty incredible the display he put on.” “I couldve had a bunch
tonight,” Kessel agreed. “I missed some good chances.” 2. Scoring First With the
first of two goals from Kessel – a stretch pass from Dion Phaneuf feeding the
winger – Toronto scored first for the fifth time during their rare six-game win
streak, a point of emphasis for a team thats been outscored in first periods all
season. “That was a big thing weve been keying on is having better starts,” said
Tyler Bozak on Tuesday morning. “When you get that first goal the odds say that
youve got a way better chance of winning so thats something that we want to do
as much as we can.” Scoring first against the Avalanche was especially
important. Colorado entered the night with 25-1-3 record when they landed the
games first goal. And though the Leafs didnt exactly storm out of the gate –
they were being outshot 11-2 at one point, no doubt stung by the altitude – they
did manage to hang in, mostly due to the early efforts of James Reimer. “Reims
stood tall for us,” said Carlyle of Reimer, who won his second straight start.
“Thats what were asking of our goaltenders. When you get a chance to get in
there give uus what you can … Give us goaltending that you can hang your hat on.
Bobby Orr Bruins Jersey. .” 3. No Fly Zone
James van Riemsdyk took hold of the team lead with his eighth power-play goal of
the year against Colorado, redirecting yet another Cody Franson point shot
beyond Varlamov for the Leafs second goal. “JVRs got a no-fly zone,” Franson
chirped afterward. “Put it in a certain airspace its going down.” van Riemsdyk
has proven adept at the tactic of tipping pucks, a skill-set he began practicing
on the driveway of his home as a kid. That practice picked up when he reached
the NHL in Philadelphia. Flyers assistant coach Joe Mullen helped the former
University of New Hampshire star formulate a daily routine for working on it.
And now at the end of just about every on-ice workout, the 24-year-old does
exactly that. “I owe a lot of that to him because he would hammer away some
slappers at me every single day,” said van Riemsdyk of Mullen. “And then Id have
Chris Pronger breathing down my neck, getting me out there before practice
sometimes doing it. Ive worked on it a lot over the years. It comes a little bit
more naturally thanks to those guys.” 4. Offence from the D The Leafs stable of
defenders barely made a blip on the offence in the opening two months of the
season – just three goals in the first 28 games. Since that point, however,
theyve offered a much greater contribution. The group had scored at least a goal
in four consecutive games before Tuesday, totaling 17 on the year and a hearty
14 in the past 24 games. And though they didnt find the scoreboard against the
Avalanche they did manage to aid in the attack. A pair of point shots – one from
Franson on van Riemsdyks 20th of the season and one from Jake Gardiner on
Nazem Kadris 13th this season – were redirected for goals. “Our job is to get
the puck through or make plays with it up top,” said Phaneuf, who sits second on
the team with 20 points this season. “Our forwards have done a really good job
down-low of getting us the puck and giving us some time and moving it quickly up
to us [at the point]. Weve been able to get some pucks through with some good
screens and when you do that you generate chances and thats what weve had
success with.” 5. Lead Protection Third period lead protection has been a
recurring struggle for the Leafs this season – theyve been outscored 61-42 – and
one thats been tested amid the win streak. Just a night earlier in Phoenix, the
club had some difficulty protecting a big lead in the final frame –
lackadaisical at times, according to Carlyle – before pulling out an eventual
win. Again on Tuesday they were tested, but after a quick goal from
Nathan MacKinnon, which closed the gap to 4-2, the club gradually found its
bearings. “Hopefully this is a sign of growth for our group and we can continue
to go forward,” said Carlyle. “Theyve got a lot of offence,” Phaneuf said of the
high-powered Avalanche. “Theyre coming with four guys the whole time. We gave up
some chances, but really we kept a lot of it to the outside. And when they were
coming they obviously were pushing when theyre down by as many as they were. We
did a good job holding them off.” Bonus Point – Man Advantage Now ranked third
in the NHL, the Toronto power-play struck for the seventh time in the six-game
win streak. The unit has sizzled with a 31 per cent success rate during the run
(7-23). Stats-Pack 7 – Consecutive games with a point for Phil Kessel, who has
six goals and 14 points in that span. 4 – Consecutive games with at least a goal
for Kessel. .930 – Even-strength save percentage this season for James Reimer,
tied for sixth-best among NHL netminders with at least 20 starts. 4 –
Consecutive games with a point for Nazem Kadri, who has two goals and six points
in that span. 8 – Shots on goal for Kessel on Tuesday, a season-high. 19 –
Points in the past 16 games for Tyler Bozak, who had two assists against
Colorado. Special Teams Capsule PP: 1-4Season: 22.9% (4th) PK: 4-4Season: 77.8%
(27th) Quote of the Night “JVRs got a no-fly zone. Put it in a certain airspace
its going down.” -Cody Franson, on James van Riemsdyks redirection abilities. Up
Next The Leafs continue their four-game road swing in Dallas on Thursday night.
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