Calgary Herald

‘Unsung’ Silfverber­g a bargain for Ducks

- JIM MATHESON GETTY IMAGES jmatheson@postmedia.com twitter.com/NHLbyMatty

When Randy Carlyle was between NHL jobs before landing his current position as the Ducks head coach, he hung around Anaheim’s Honda Center and acted more like a scout than an unemployed bench boss.

He absolutely loved Ducks winger Jakob Silfverber­g.

“I was sitting in the press box and watching Silfverber­g, and he reminded me of Daniel Alfredsson,” said Carlyle, who game-planned against the former Ottawa Senators captain while coaching the Toronto Maple Leafs.

“He had the same kind of demeanour. He was very good on the defensive side, and he found ways to provide offence.”

Alfredsson is now high up the management food chain with the Senators and Silfverber­g has six playoff goals this spring for the Ducks, only one behind Pittsburgh Penguins rookie sensation Jake Guentzel heading into Monday’s action.

Silfverber­g, who skates on a forward line with Ryan Kesler and Andrew Cogliano, has scored in each of the three games against the Oilers, totalling four in all.

He scored twice and added an assist in Sunday’s 6-3 win in Edmonton.

Silfverber­g has eight points in the 2017 playoffs, and has 31 in his last 30 playoff games going back three springs.

Silfverber­g was gobsmacked to hear the Alfredsson comparison, though. And not just because they’re both right hand-shooting Swedes who play right-wing.

“Huge compliment. I got a chance to play one season with Alfie in Ottawa,” said Silfverber­g, who was traded to Anaheim from Ottawa in the 2013 Bobby Ryan deal.

“Being drafted by the Senators, I looked up to him. Super humble guy. I played with him in the Olympics (at Sochi in 2014), and at the World Cup last September. He was one of the mentors we had for Sweden.”

Ryan is good, but even if he has seven points during this stirring playoff run for Ottawa, he’s always left people wanting more with his skill set and size.

Not so for Silfverber­g, the 39th player taken in the 2009 draft.

He’s been a defensive presence for years on right wing but he’s gone from scoring 13 goals to 20 to 23 the last three seasons.

“He’s an unsung hockey player, and we’re very, very fortunate to have him. He can do a lot of things,” said Carlyle.

Silfverber­g can check, defend (plus 33 the past three years), and score. He’s on the first power play unit.

He’s also a bargain at $3.75 million per year for three more years.

He’s definitely high up on the Ducks’ list of seven protected forwards for the Las Vegas expansion draft, and today, only Getzlaf and Kesler are better.

Cogliano, Kesler and Silfverber­g have been on a line together for two years now, an eternity in the game-by-game jockeying coaches do nowadays.

“He’s flown under the radar and he’s got the type of shot that makes people pay,” said Cogliano.

 ??  ?? Anaheim’s Jakob Silfverber­g tries to get off a backhander at Oilers goalie Cam Talbot during Game 2. Silfverber­g has six goals in the playoffs, including four against the Oilers.
Anaheim’s Jakob Silfverber­g tries to get off a backhander at Oilers goalie Cam Talbot during Game 2. Silfverber­g has six goals in the playoffs, including four against the Oilers.

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