The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Tired of losing

Sabres centre Jack Eichel focusing on keeping fiery emotions in check

- BY JOHN WAWROW

Breaking sticks, icy stares and one-word answers made out of frustratio­n have done nothing to transform the Sabres into contenders during centre Jack Eichel’s three seasons in Buffalo.

Perhaps, Eichel has begun to realize he can’t lead by emotion alone.

“I think that’s important, obviously, not reacting, body language, staying upbeat. I think that’s part of it,” Eichel said.

“I do wear my heart on my sleeve, and I’m somebody who’s very competitiv­e. I like to win,” added Eichel, who can be as fiery his curly red hair. “This losing the last few years, I’ve never dealt with that in my life. And you kind of have to learn from it and figure out what you can do to change it.”

If that means the face of the Sabres’ needs to don a more evenkeeled persona, then the 21-yearold hopes to take the next step in emerging as a leader.

“With any experience you’re going to learn things and grow as a player, as a person,” said Eichel, noting he’s consulted with various friends and mentors on what it takes to lead.

“I’ve had a few years to learn about things and see some things that occur, and the right way to do things and the wrong way to do things,” he added. “Every day, if you come in here and work and put your head down, you do the right things, you’re a good teammate, I think the results in the games will take care of themselves.”

Eichel spoke while preparing to enter a transforma­tive season for him and potentiall­y the franchise, which has spent much of the offseason retooling a high-priced and under-achieving roster.

For Eichel, he enters a season in which his new eight-year, $80-million contract kicks in, making the No. 2 pick in the 2015 draft the highest-paid player in franchise history.

As for the Sabres, they’ve made numerous changes since finishing last for the third time in five years.

Centre Ryan O’Reilly, who acknowledg­ed a losing culture crept into the locker room, is gone after being traded to St. Louis. Buffalo’s starting over in goal with free-agent addition Carter Hutton, and Linus Ull-mark set to

make the jump from the minors.

General manager Jason Botterill also brought in a wealth of forward talent to potentiall­y play alongside Eichel by acquiring wingers Conor Sheary, Jeff Skinner and Tage Thompson in separate trades.

And then there’s No. 1 draft pick, Swedish defenceman Rasmus Dahlin, who is expected to make an immediate impact this year.

“I think it’s good for us, some fresh faces,” Eichel said. “The last few years have been pretty bad, so I think it can bring a bit of a different culture.”

They join a team built around Eichel, a swift-skating, hard-shooting centre who hasn’t yet played to his full potential due to injuries and a lack of top-line talent

around him.

In three seasons, he leads all Sabres with 73 goals and 177 points in 209 games despite missing lengthy stretches with ankle injuries in each of the last two years.

His production has failed to make a dent on a team in the midst of a franchise-worst sevenyear playoff drought.

The lack of success eats at Eichel.

A year ago, he arrived for the start of training camp by candidly saying, “I’ve proven nothing” over what he called “two mediocre seasons.”

This year, Eichel has very little more to add except to say: “You can only do so much talking. Obviously, we need to just go out and play.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Buffalo Sabres Jack Eichel celebrates a goal with his teammates during the 2018-19 NHL season.
AP PHOTO Buffalo Sabres Jack Eichel celebrates a goal with his teammates during the 2018-19 NHL season.

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