The Niagara Falls Review

Hellebuyck emerging as elite goaltender for Winnipeg

- DARRIN BAUMING

WINNIPEG — Connor Hellebuyck’s back-to-back shutouts in Games 4 and 5 highlighte­d the Winnipeg Jets’ impressive opening round of the Stanley Cup playoffs in which they eliminated the Minnesota Wild in five games.

Now, as the Jets take some time to rest and prepare for the second round, Hellebuyck’s emergence as an elite goaltender has come clearly into focus, as well as Winnipeg’s overall defensive play.

“Our team has been phenomenal this year. We’ve played such a good team defence,” said Hellebuyck on Sunday, as the Jets returned to the ice after bouncing the Wild on Friday. “You can see the trust on the ice. You can see the defencemen, when they trust me to have the shot and they take the back door. And when we have that trust in each other, it makes everyone so much better at their job.”

Coming off his matching pair of 30-save shutouts, and a recent nomination for the Vezina Trophy, the 24-year-old goaltender seems to be on an upward trajectory right as the Jets need him to be playing his best hockey.

“Maybe things aren’t always going to be this good. I’m going to have to look to the future and remember this. That this was a big building stone and a step in my career,” said the 2012 fifthround draft pick. “That I can do this, and if things falter, I have a good foundation to fall back on. And no matter what, that good foundation to fall back on is always going to to be able to be built. We’re always building for more. We put a lot of hard work into it, but now we’re here for the long term. We want to win a Stanley Cup and we’re going to continue to build our games until the very end.”

Looking back at Winnipeg’s lone loss in the series — a 6-2 defeat in Minnesota in Game 3 — head coach Paul Maurice said Hellebuyck’s play in the first round, and this season, is tied closely to his club’s overall defensive soundness.

““The entire team wasn’t right in Game 3 — our back-end included. It would have been very difficult for Connor to have a different result with what was going on in front of him, but he looked like the rest of us too. We were a step behind it. There wasn’t any real concern that he wasn’t going to bounce back the next game because our whole team would. But he’s been like that all year,” Maurice said.

Like Hellebuyck, top-pairing defenceman Josh Morrissey is also in his second full season with the Jets. Both drafted by Winnipeg — in 2012 and 2013, respective­ly — the two have begun their National Hockey League careers together, and spent time during the 2015-16 season with the American Hockey League’s Manitoba Moose.

“It’s something where the more you get to play with a goaltender, like a D-partner, the more times you go back for a puck

(and) he knows how I move differentl­y than Dustin Byfuglien does,” said Morrissey. “All those little things that you get comfortabl­e with over time. He’s such a calm goaltender in the net, you never feel flustered and it makes it easy on us.”

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