Regina Leader-Post

CIRELLI JOINS SELKE CONVERSATI­ON

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS Toronto

The Connor Mcdavid of defensive forwards.

That was the comparison Tampa Bay Lightning head coach Jon Cooper used in describing Anthony Cirelli. It was a nod to Cirelli’s impressive two-way game as much as it was his age.

As a second-year forward, Mcdavid was just 20 years old when he took over the league and won his first Hart Trophy.

This year, Cirelli is trying to do something perhaps even more impressive: convince voters that he’s mature enough to win the Frank J. Selke Trophy in just his second season in the league.

“Obviously, the guys who have won in the past are some unbelievab­le players,” said the 22-year-old centre. “Some really big names that have for sure been in this league for a while. Great two-way players. I just kind of play my game and focus on my team. If it ends up happening, it happens. If not, just keep on going and just continue to get better at my game.”

In a lot of ways, winning the award is out of Cirelli’s control.

The Selke, which is often based more on intangible­s and a player’s reputation in the league than actual defensive statistics, is sort of a lifetime achievemen­t award for two-way forwards. It’s not good enough to be defensivel­y responsibl­e for one season.

You have to do it for consecutiv­e years. In some cases, you have to do it for an entire decade.

Patrice Bergeron, who has his name on the Selke a record four times, didn’t win his first trophy until his seventh season in the league. Jonathan Toews was in his sixth year when he won. And it took Anze Kopitar and Ryan O’reilly 10 long years before they were finally recognized.

So the fact that Cirelli finished 11th in voting as a 21-year-old last season — he was the only rookie to receive a first-place vote — was a sign the criteria could be changing.

“It has become a little bit of a young stars’ league,” said Cooper. “I think it’s no different, whether you’re Connor Mcdavid and you’re filling the net, or you’re Anthony Cirelli and you’re checking.”

Cirelli had 19 goals and 39 points, along with a plus-25 rating last season.

In 67 games this season, he has 16 goals and 44 points, as well as a plus-28 rating.

He also is averaging the fifthmost minutes among forwards in short-handed situations. And he ranks 20th in the league with 52 take-aways, against just 24 giveaways this season. Of the players ranked in the top 35 in take-aways, only O’reilly and Pierre-edouard Bellemare have fewer giveaways.

It was a stolen puck in a game against the New York Islanders last month — what teammate Victor Hedman jokingly described as a “panic play” and others were calling the theft of the year — that put Cirelli in the conversati­on for the Selke Trophy.

Mathew Barzal, who was fresh off beating Mcdavid in the fastest skater competitio­n at the all-star game’s skills competitio­n, had just taken a pass while skating through the neutral zone with no one but the goalie in front of him. It looked like he was going to cruise to an easy breakaway. But that was before Cirelli, who was a stride or two behind, put his head down and gave chase, eventually stripping Barzal of the puck.

The most impressive part was that there was no penalty called on the play.

“His skating ability allows him to recover on plays,” said Lightning defenceman Kevin Shattenkir­k. “But his strength on his stick — he bears down on pucks — in 50-50 battles is really something that, for a player at his age to be doing, that’s really unbelievab­le stuff. You know when he goes into a corner, nine times out of 10 he’s going to come out of there with the puck.”

Cirelli’s maturity without the puck has elevated him to the top line alongside Nikita Kucherov, or allows the Lightning to load up a forward line with Kucherov,

Brayden Point and Steven Stamkos.

For Cirelli, playing a 200foot game is a necessity. After all, Tampa Bay has plenty of players who can fill the net. But the third-round pick, who had seven points in seven games for Canada at the 2017 world juniors, realized early on in his career that, if he wanted to earn a spot on the team, he would have to do so by keeping the puck out of his own net.

“I knew that if I wanted to be effective, I had to do that (focus on defence), because I’m not just out there trying to score goals,” said Cirelli, a Toronto native. “I think it’s helped my game a lot and helped me get where I am today.”

It’s also helping him get recognized.

Chances are Cirelli won’t sway voters from casting a ballot for Philadelph­ia’s Sean Couturier, Bergeron or O’reilly. But if he keeps this up for another year or two, who knows what could happen?

“Being in Toronto right now, and the fact that you’re asking me that is a good sign, because that means people are noticing,” said Cooper.

“I’ve had a front-row seat for it for a long time, and I agree with you, it’s a little bit of a pay your dues kind of award. But I would anticipate that he’ll be in that conversati­on sooner rather than later.”

 ?? JOHN E. SOKOLOWSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Leafs defender Travis Dermott keeps his eye on the puck as Tampa Bay Lightning forward Pat Maroon crashes into Toronto goalie Frederik Andersen during action on Tuesday night at Scotiabank Arena. Visit leaderpost.com/sports for the game story.
JOHN E. SOKOLOWSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS Leafs defender Travis Dermott keeps his eye on the puck as Tampa Bay Lightning forward Pat Maroon crashes into Toronto goalie Frederik Andersen during action on Tuesday night at Scotiabank Arena. Visit leaderpost.com/sports for the game story.
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