National Post

CHASING BOBBY ORR

SHARKS’ BURNS HAS A CHANCE TO DO SOMETHING NOT SEEN SINCE BOBBY ORR

- Michael Traikos mtraikos@ postmedia. com twitter. com/ Michael_ Traikos

When they first me t , Brent Burns wasn’t yet a caveman. He didn’t have hair like Chewbacca or a ZZ Top beard. His skin, which is now covered in colourful ink, was completely clean of tattoos. More than 20 years ago, the only teeth Burns was missing were the baby ones taken by the tooth fairy.

Still, as far as first impression­s go, Jari Byrski thought the eight-year-old looked like a beast — and not in a good way.

“He wasn’t a very elegant skater,” Byrski, a Torontobas­ed hockey skill coach, said of Burns. “He was bent over like a hunchback towards the ice. A lot of people said, ‘ he’s a good hustler, but he’ll never be a pro player.’”

Byrski did not see the next Bobby Orr in Burns. He didn’t even see someone who could skate backwards well enough to play defence. But over the years, that changed.

Byrski, who has worked with a collection of NHL stars including Jason Spezza, Steven Stamkos and Jeff Skinner, has called the San Jose Sharks defenceman one of his greatest students. Others might have been more skilled or talented, but what Burns lacked in natural grace he made up for with a tireless work ethic, a willingnes­s to learn and what Byrski de- scribes as a “zest for life.”

“The thing with Brent is he was always about energy,” said Byrski. “I’m not talking about a crazy kid not paying attention. Absolutely not. When he set out to do something, he did it the right way and didn’t go halfway. He was all in. I remember saying it doesn’t matter what he does in life, he will be good at it. If he’s a soldier, he’s going to be a five-star general. If he’s an electricia­n, he will be the president of the electrical associatio­n. That’s how I felt about Brent.”

Burns gave himself to hockey. And so it’s not entirely surprising the 31-year-old, who was drafted in the first round as a forward and was converted to a defenceman as a rookie with the Minnesota Wild, has grown up to become the best in the world at his position.

In terms of offensive production, it’s not even close.

A year ago, Ottawa’s Erik Karlsson notched 82 points in 82 games. Burns has managed to up the ante with 64 points in 60 games. Heading into Thursday’s games, he had 30 more points than Montreal’s Shea Weber, the second- highest goal- scoring defenceman. He has more goals (27) than the entire defence corps for the Buffalo Sabres and Vancouver Canucks combined (25).

Burns has as many goals as Alex Ovechkin and was ranked third in the Art Ross Trophy race — four back of l eader Connor McDavid. With a plus-22 rating — 20 of his goals and 45 of his points have come in even- strength situations — it’s a foregone conclusion that Burns will win the Norris Trophy as the league’s best defenceman.

The only question is whether he also will win the Art Ross Trophy, becoming the only defenceman since Bobby Orr (1970, 1975) to do so and the first defenceman since Chris Pronger (2000) to win the Hart Trophy.

“Do I have an appreciati­on for guys who do the stuff that I can’t do? Absolutely,” Pronger said of Burns at last month’s All- Star Game. “To score 20 goals at the all-star break is pretty impressive. Erik Karlsson getting 80 points in the league with where it’s at is also impressive, so the talent and skill level that takes is something else.”

Talent and skill only get you so far. And while Burns might come off a bit careless with his off- ice grooming habits, it might be because he puts so much focus into what he does on the ice. Like Karlsson, Burns has transforme­d the defence position into a sort of hybrid fourth forward.

“Right now, he’s the best offensive defenceman in the league,” Sharks head coach Peter DeBoer said at the AllStar Game. “And he’s not giving up his defensive responsibi­lities to do it.”

It’s not just his skating that has improved over the years. Burns, who has taken a league-high 242 shots, has always had a cannon for a shot. But in the last several years, he has shortened the fuse to the point where goalies barely have any time to react to the blast.

“I tell the kids all the time that they don’t have to shoot the puck 120 mph like Zdeno Chara,” said North Bay Battalion head coach Stan Butler, who coached Burns for one year in the Ontario Hockey League. “You look at Burns and he’s throwing knucklebal­ls at the net and he scores, because guys can’t block them and they get through with traffic. He’s a master at that.”

The secret behind that quick release is a drill Byrski came up with in the early 1990s that helped players with catching and releasing shots off a bad pass. At first, Byrski banked pucks off a wooden board, changing the angles to keep players off guard. Then he swapped the wood for a piece of Plexiglas, because the puck bounced off it faster.

Byrski said Burns loved the drill, repeating it until he couldn’t grip his stick.

“The players never get a perfect pass,” said Byrski. “It forces you to make body adjustment­s. You’ll be taking shots off balance and not in the most comfortabl­e position. It’s a challenge to get it off as quickly as possible.”

A couple of years ago, Burns told Byrski he wanted the passes to be even faster, more unpredicta­ble. So Byrski found a thick strip of rubber that replicated passes that bounced off the ice.

“It’s interestin­g how he evolved that,” Byrski said of Burns’ shot. “Imagine the smarts behind that, because it’s not about the power as much as it is about placement and quick release. He’s taking the puck quickly. That’s years and years of work.”

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 ?? CHRIS CARLSON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The San Jose Sharks’ Brent Burns is chasing an Art Ross Trophy, which hasn’t been won by a blue-liner since 1975.
CHRIS CARLSON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The San Jose Sharks’ Brent Burns is chasing an Art Ross Trophy, which hasn’t been won by a blue-liner since 1975.
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