The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Emerging on the big stage

‘Hidden gems’ of the Predators emerge in 2017 post-season

- BY JONAS SIEGEL

The Nashville Predators were named after the sabre-toothed tiger bones discovered underneath their future arena in 1971. The creature had been extinct for at least 10,000 years.

It took 20 years, ages in hockey terms, for the franchise to finally reach the Western Conference final, and the spotlight has unearthed some of the team’s bestkept secrets. Swedish speedster Viktor Arvidsson, P.K. Subban running mate Mattias Ekholm and Ryan Ellis, the highly decorated former first round pick who’s averaging more 24 minutes per-game in the playoffs, have emerged on the big stage.

“I don’t think there’s near the press coverage that other teams may have, which I guess results in hidden gems so to say,” said Ellis, who sports a brown beard likely longer than all others this spring.

In the case of Ellis, it’s more of a re-emergence.

The Hamilton native was a point-producing machine on the Windsor Spitfires squad that briefly ripped apart the Ontario Hockey League with back-toback Memorial Cup wins. He had 89 points in 57 games in his draft year, besting the next closest defenders — Subban, who played for Belleville, and future Washington Capital John Carlson, who was with London — by 13 points.

The Preds grabbed him with the 11th overall pick in 2009, but over his first three seasons in the NHL, Ellis scratched out only a supporting role — he averaged 14-16 minutes — on a Nashville defence loaded with aces like Shea Weber, Ryan Suter, Seth Jones and Roman Josi.

Opportunit­y eventually opened up. Suter left for Minnesota via free agency; Weber was dealt for Subban and Jones was traded to Columbus for Ryan Johansen — a move made because Ellis and Ekholm were deemed ready to assume greater roles, general manager David Poile said at the time.

Ellis, who had career-highs with 16 goals, 38 points and an average of almost 24 minutes during the regular season, credits his emergence to the Peter Laviolette-led coaching staff, which replaced Barry Trotz, the only coach in franchise history, in 2014. Laviolette’s up-tempo style has found a fit with Ellis — a slick puck-mover and transporte­r — “but the biggest thing, I think, is just the trust that the coaches have given me and the opportunit­y as well.”

“I’d never really received that until they got here,” said Ellis, who’s signed for two more seasons at a mild US$2.5 million cap hit. “My game kind of took off from that belief in them and the chance they gave me.”

Because he was such a prolific point-producer before he came to the NHL, Ellis believes he had to shed the perception that he was a weak defensive player. He’s probably the weakest link among the current top four defenders on the Preds, but he managed to lead the club with 137 blocked shots during the regular season, adding 34 more so far in the playoffs.

Ellis’ breakout didn’t really come this spring or even this season. It was last year that truly stepped into a more prominent role, playing mostly beside Ekholm, another one of the Preds’ “hidden gems”.

Plucked from a tier-2 Swedish league with 102nd overall pick in that same 2009 draft as Ellis, the 26-year-old Swede has been effectivel­y combating top lines alongside Subban in the postseason.

Then there’s Arvidsson, another late draft weekend steal and third member of the dangerous Nashville top line, which also includes Johansen and Filip Forsberg. Arvidsson was the oldest player picked at the 2014 draft (he was 21), plucked 112th overall by the Preds from the Swedish Hockey League.

The 24-year-old tied for the team lead with a career-high 31 goals and 61 points this season - he kills penalties too - before adding another seven points in 12 playoff games, including a pair of assists in Nashville’s Game 2 defeat in Anaheim on Sunday night (the series is tied 1-1).

“Really, our team as a whole and all the players on it have been continuous­ly getting better and better every year,” Ellis said.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Nashville Predators defenseman Ryan Ellis shoots and scores against the St. Louis Blues during Game 2 of an NHL second-round playoff series on April 28 in St. Louis.
AP PHOTO Nashville Predators defenseman Ryan Ellis shoots and scores against the St. Louis Blues during Game 2 of an NHL second-round playoff series on April 28 in St. Louis.

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