The Province

Patrick has risen to the challenge

Despite setbacks, Wheat Kings centre could be the NHL’s first-overall pick this year

- Michael Traikos mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/Michael_Traikos

As far as timing goes, it was a nightmare, the kind of whyme scenario that makes people curse the hockey gods and wonder what they possibly could have done to deserve it.

In the most important year of his hockey career, Nolan Patrick was out of the lineup for three months. Due partly to injury and partly to a growth spurt — “the bones didn’t catch up to me as fast as I’d like them to,” he said — the Winnipeg native had to have shoulder surgery in the summer, forcing him to miss about half of his draft year.

At the time, Patrick thought it was the end of his season. You could forgive him for thinking his career was in jeopardy before it even began. Of course, neither of those things proved true. Patrick returned to the ice in December and finished the season with 75 points in 19 games.

“I think that kind of helped me to go through that at a young age,” Patrick said. “At the time, everyone thinks the bantam draft is the most important thing, so it was kind of good to kind of mature and go through an injury at a time when I thought it was really important.”

That was four years ago, before he was drafted fourth overall by the Brandon Wheat Kings in the Western Hockey League, and long before his latest why-me scenario.

This time, it was a lower abdomen injury that forced Patrick to miss the first three months of the season. But after scoring four points in his return to the lineup last week, the 18-yearold once again has good reason to believe he’ll end up in a good spot.

There are signs of that already. Despite missing the world junior championsh­ip and appearing in only eight games this year — six before his injury and two after it — NHL Central Scouting named Patrick the No. 1 North American skater in its latest rankings Wednesday.

“The good part for scouts is that Nolan Patrick is well known,” NHL Central Scouting’s Dan Marr told Postmedia last month.

“We’ve got two years of watching him and the good thing with him is there are no surprises. He gives you the same game, the same performanc­e, every time you see him.”

Still, the gap between No. 1 and No. 2 is shrinking, especially after Nico Hischier impressed scouts with four goals and seven points in five games for Switzerlan­d at the world juniors. The two top-ranked players will meet later this month at the CHL top prospects game in Quebec City, with Patrick and Hischier serving as captains.

“I don’t know too much about him,” Patrick said of Hischier, who before Thursday’s game had 63 points in 37 games for the Halifax Mooseheads in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. “I just saw him play at the world juniors and obviously he’s a very talented player and he’s ranked where he is for a reason, so I’m excited for that prospects game.”

Scouts have been underselli­ng this year’s NHL entry draft, mostly because there is not a player like Connor McDavid or Auston Matthews at the top. There probably isn’t a Jack Eichel or Patrik Laine, either, but players like that don’t come around often.

And there’s a lot to like about the six-foot-three 200-pound Patrick, who North American Central Scouting’s Mark Seidel called “a guy that all 30 coaches would love to have because he’s big, he’s smart and he has all the parts that you want.”

“The player pool is what it is. There will be some great players here,” said Vegas Golden Knights assistant general manager Kelly McCrimmon, who drafted Patrick when he was GM of the Wheat Kings. “With respect to Nolan Patrick, if he was drafted last year, I think he would be held in similar regard to the top players.”

We don’t know exactly what to expect of Patrick because we haven’t seen much of him this season. That’s what makes his second half so important. While no one is expecting him to score four points a game like he did in bantam, he will have to make up for lost time.

“There’s a lot of hockey to be played still,” Patrick said. “I really don’t think (about the draft) too much. I just try to play as good as I can every night and help my team win, and hopefully people appreciate that and appreciate what I have to offer.

“I’m not thinking I have to prove myself. I just try to put as much (as possible) on the table every night.”

 ?? — BRANDON SUN FILES ?? The WHL’s Nolan Patrick is No. 1on NHL Central Scouting’s latest list of North American skaters.
— BRANDON SUN FILES The WHL’s Nolan Patrick is No. 1on NHL Central Scouting’s latest list of North American skaters.
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