Calgary Herald

FLAMES CAN CLINCH

Monahan joins the elites

- SCOTT CRUICKSHAN­K

Wayne Gretzky and Pierre Turgeon.

Eric Lindros and Sergei Samsonov.

“Not bad company, eh?” Dennis Wideman, with a smile, says the morning after Sean Monahan joined that high- profile foursome. “That’s pretty impressive.”

The elite club in question — National Hockey League players to have posted eight game- winning goals in a single season before the age of 21 — includes, as of Tuesday, the Calgary Flames sophomore.

“I don’t look at that stuff — I didn’t know that,” says Monahan. “Pretty cool to have your name in that category with those players. They’re pretty special.”

As modest as the young fellow is, he doesn’t downplay the notion that he is fuelled by pivotal moments. That he is eager to provide telling strikes.

That he is keen to have the puck on his stick — early, late, whenever.

“Obviously, I get up for games, for those different situations, whether it’s overtime or whatever it is,” says Monahan, 20. “I try to stay calm, but I’m excited to get out there.

“I want to be the guy to make a difference. That’s what allows you to have success in those situations.”

Monahan’s penchant for being the man, coach Bob Hartley cannot explain.

Every skater, after all, wants to be known as a money player. Few actually are. “I don’t have an answer for you,” says Hartley.

“I just want it to keep going because this kid is clutch. It’s just unbelievab­le the poise that he’s showing. There’s never a panic move in his game.

“I don’t know if he has nerves of steel — or no nerves.”

Eight game- winners stake Monahan third in the NHL, behind only Washington’s Alex Ovechkin ( 11) and Montreal’s Max Pacioretty ( 10).

“Monny, if it’s a big game, he’s always there,” says Wideman. “His overall demeanour … really helps him with that. Never high, never low, just straight all the time. Those are the guys that, in the big moments, can keep themselves calm, not grip their sticks too tight. When it comes down to it, he wants the puck, he wants to score that big goal.

“That’s what makes him special. That’s what’s going to put him among the elite. He’s getting there already.”

With 31 goals, Monahan is 12th, right behind Jamie Benn and Zach Parise. Fifteen of his tallies have arrived after the second intermissi­on.

Even Darryl Sutter, a legendaril­y hard marker, has taken notice.

“I don’t think Monahan gets enough credit in the league,” Sutter, coach of the Los Angeles Kings, says.

“Everybody talks about the centremen in ( the Western Conference) and they don’t talk about Sean Monahan. They should.

“He’s probably in that ( Jonathan) Toews group, in terms of all- around. Can play minutes, play in situations, play against top guys. All that. He’s probably in that group, as a young player.”

Monahan is not exactly what Brandon Bollig expected when he arrived in Calgary for this season.

Sure, he had been aware of Monahan, who scored 22 times as a teenager.

I don’t know if he has nerves of steel — or no nerves.

BOB HARTLEY

“So you think he’s all flash and more of a one- way type player, but that’s absolutely not what he is,” says Bollig.

“Obviously, the kid is a star in the league … and he’s only going to get better.

“But I don’t think he’s satisfied with anything yet, either.”

Including last season, Monahan has 10 game- winning goals — in only 155 appearance­s.

He has contribute­d five gamedecidi­ng shootout winners as well.

“With the ice time I get, with the opportunit­y I get, you’ve got to be able to produce,” says Monahan, who, with an average of 19: 36, shoulders the most work of any Flames forward.

“If you’re not producing, you’re not going to get those minutes. When I’m in those situations, I try to get the job done.”

Monahan’s latest display — a snazzy bit of third- period business against the Arizona Coyotes — puts the Flames within sniffing distance of a playoff berth.

That sequence, for Hartley, sums up Monahan — and the rest of the team’s top line, which includes flankers Jiri Hudler and Johnny Gaudreau.

“It started right from our zone,” says Hartley. “We have a 21- yearold kid that came out of college, we have a 20- year- old kid who could still be an overage in major junior, and there was no cheating in our zone. The game was on the line, ( the score was) 2- 2, Jiri made a great play inside the blue line, Johnny beat his guy, Monny got the puck two- on- one, and we have the game- winner.

“Those guys, it seems like they’re connected by Wi- Fi. They see each other so well, they complement each other so well, it’s beyond imaginatio­n.”

If the Flames can topple the Stanley Cup champions Thursday, they’re in the playoffs.

Stakes are high. The perfect stage for No. 23.

“When you play teams like that, it makes you play better,” says Monahan.

“I enjoy playing against the better teams and I think a lot of guys do, too.

“That’s when you start playing better hockey and you rise to the occasion.”

 ?? DEREK LEUNG/ GETTY IMAGES ?? The Flames’ Sean Monahan scored the game- winning goal against Arizona Coyotes at Scotiabank Saddledome earlier this week as Calgary defeated the Coyotes 3- 2. It was the sophomore’s eighth game- winner of the season.
DEREK LEUNG/ GETTY IMAGES The Flames’ Sean Monahan scored the game- winning goal against Arizona Coyotes at Scotiabank Saddledome earlier this week as Calgary defeated the Coyotes 3- 2. It was the sophomore’s eighth game- winner of the season.
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