National Post (National Edition)

Passing grade for NHL rookie class

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS Postmedia News mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/Michael_Traikos

General manager Ken Holland didn’t think he would have to be forced into making this decision.

The last time the Detroit Red Wings drafted a player who made the opening night roster was third-overall pick Keith Primeau who made the jump as an 18-year-old. That was nearly three decades ago.

Since then, the franchise’s mantra has been to treat their prospects like a fine wine: don’t pop the cork until they’ve aged, sometimes for a very long time.

That was the initial plan when the Red Wings selected Michael Rasmussen with the ninth-overall pick in the 2017 NHL entry draft. With two years of junior eligibilit­y remaining, Holland expected the kid would get a quick look at training camp and then go back to the Western Hockey League where he could continue his developmen­t.

That still might happen, of course. But Rasmussen has different plans.

With three goals in four games heading into Friday night’s exhibition against the Toronto Maple Leafs at the new Little Caesars Arena, the native of Surrey, B.C. has stuck around longer than anyone in Detroit could have anticipate­d.

As crazy as it might sound coming from an organizati­on as patient with their prospects as the Red Wings, Holland said he is not ruling out the possibilit­y of keeping him in the lineup for the start of the season.

“As the competitio­n’s gotten a little stiffer, he’s probably played better than we anticipate­d,” the GM said Thursday. “I still think I’m leaning towards letting him go back and having a great year in junior. But we’ll see what happens in the next three days. I’d say right now he’s probably on the bubble. He’s played real well. Whether we send him back or start with him at this time, he’s done everything that we could have hoped and more.”

It’s not just Rasmussen who has exceeded expectatio­ns.

Last year, five players — Auston Matthews, Patrik Laine, Jesse Puljujarvi, Matthew Tkachuk and Jakob Chychrun — ended up playing past the nine-game mark when an entry-level contract kicks in. This year, there could be even more.

Nico Hischier, the No. 1 overall pick, has three goals and five points in three exhibition games for New Jersey, while fans in Philadelph­ia joked that No. 2 overall pick Nolan Patrick officially became a Flyer — and put his recent injury history to rest — by getting into a fight with Boston’s David Krejci earlier this week.

It doesn’t end there. Florida’s Owen Tippett (10th) and New York Rangers forward Filip Chytil (21st) are both expected to start the season in the NHL.

“Talent has no age,” Rangers head coach Alain Vigneault told reporters. Edmonton Oilers GM Peter Chiarelli said Kailer Yamamoto (No. 22 overall) has made a “very strong argument” to make the team after scoring five goals in four games. In other words, so much for all the talk that this was supposed to be a weak draft year.

“It’s funny every time we say that that it’s a weak draft, we start drafting players and then at the end we go, ‘Wow, this is a pretty good draft,’” Florida Panthers GM Dale Tallon said in an interview on Friday.

“Obviously, there weren’t the superstars at the front end of it. But there’s a lot of quality players all the way through to 50 or 60.”

No one is expecting that Hischier or Patrick or Tippett will do what Matthews and Laine did as rookies and score 40 or even 36 goals this season. These aren’t generation­al talents. They might not even be potential superstars. But what with the regular season less than a week away, this year’s draft class is showing that they can definitely play.

“Based on our coaches and how his camp has gone, he’ll probably be in our starting lineup,” Tallon said of Tippett, who had one assist in three games. “What I like about him is he wants the puck and he wants it in critical situations. I think his game is very well suited to the pros.”

Of course, making the opening-night roster is one thing. Sticking for the entire season is another. Tallon said Jonathan Huberdeau looked NHL-ready when he arrived to his first training camp as a third-overall pick in 2011, before “getting crushed” with a hit.

“Even though he was having a good camp, I thought it was a positive to go back and get his body stronger physically so he wouldn’t get hurt,” said Tallon.

Another factor to consider, said Holland, is whether it’s best for a player’s developmen­t to be challenged in the NHL or to dominate in junior. “We have to make a good decision, not only for the short term but the long term of Rasmussen’s career.”

That there is a decision to be made tells you one thing: this year’s prospects might be better than advertised. nationalpo­st.com

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