The Province

Humble hotshot taking the NHL by storm

High-scoring Canucks winger Boeser already drawing rookie comparison­s to Pavel Bure, even in the Big Apple

- Ben Kuzma bkuzma@postmedia.com Twitter.com/benkuzma

NEW YORK — It has come to this with Brock Boeser.

Hail a New York City cab, watch television in the back seat and his name scrolls across the bottom of the screen on the NBC Sports feed: “Boeser channels Bure, leads NHL rookie scoring.”

With 22 points in 20 games after Friday’s night’s loss to the New Jersey Devils — including at least one goal in four consecutiv­e outings to match the first-year feats of Pavel Bure and Jason King — the Canucks’ winger is drawing accolades across the league.

He’s even become a big deal in the Big Apple.

Eleven goals, including six in his last four games, and 15 goals in 28 outings since joining the Canucks last March will do that. Keep this up and those Prince Charming flowing locks might light up one of those giant screens in Times Square.

Coaches, analysts, teammates and the opposition rave about the manner in which the mild-mannered right winger processes the game. They gush over the way he buys time, they marvel at how he threads passes in traffic and finds seams to unleash that hard and accurate shot.

It’s reached a point where the opposition wonders what kind of stick and flex Boeser uses because the 20-year-old seems to have found all the answers.

Boeser is good enough to use a 90 flex on his composite shaft. To you and me that may not mean much, but to players looking for any kind of shooting edge in velocity and accuracy, it means everything.

It means Boeser has the strength and skill to not only get a lot on his shot, it also means the solid 6-foot1, 191-pound winger can pick corners because of the Patrick Kanelike curve on his blade. That only enhances his natural ability that’s reflected in a 20.8 shooting percentage.

None of this microscopi­c investigat­ion of what make Boeser tick surprises New Jersey Devils’ rookie Will Butcher.

Butcher, who leads rookie defencemen in scoring with 16 points (2-14) in his first 21 games, played at the University of Denver. There he faced Boeser, the hotshot University of North Dakota sniper who owned the best release in college hockey.

So to Butcher, who uses an 85 flex stick because he was breaking those with a lower flex, the selection for Boeser makes perfect sense.

“To use a 90 stick and still be snapping the puck like that, you have to be a pretty strong guy,” said Butcher. “And I know that from playing against him in college, because he used to take one-timers. We thought it was a good night when we held him to one or two goals.

“He had an NHL shot then, and when a guy gets hot and gains confidence, a lot of good stuff starts to happen.”

Sure, but did he have NHL stamped on him in college?

“I’d say 100 per cent,” said Butcher. “It was his mind for the game, but he also had the best shot in our conference and in the NCAA. He could pick corners and shoot from anywhere — he was always a threat, no matter what.”

Run the stick stuff by Boeser and you get that shrug of the shoulders.

He feels the 90 flex allows him to handle the puck better and get shots away quicker.

“I don’t like a stick that’s too whippy, but I do like to feel a little whip,” said Boeser. “If I have too much, I just feel that my shot just isn’t the same.”

His early success could easily derail Boeser if he didn’t have the right attitude and willingnes­s to improve on a daily basis. There are even ‘The Flow’ T-shirts to benefit the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Boeser bought one.

“I think that’s pretty funny, honestly. It’s cool,” he said with a chuckle. “And so is donating money.

“But I know that, if you get too confident, it can turn in a hurry if you don’t produce.

“I just try to stay level-headed and the guys do a good job of making sure I don’t get too confident.”

Canucks coach Travis Green knows Boeser dipped a bit after scoring a hat trick against Pittsburgh on Nov. 4. But the rookie didn’t start cheating or getting down on himself. He worked harder. And that resonated with his coaches and teammates.

“You can have rooms where players don’t like that a young guy is getting the spotlight,” said Green. “With our room, they’re happy for him, because he helps us win. And it’s how he acts and why veterans allow him to do his thing.

“Brock is very humble about it and that’s extremely important. The team is the biggest thing.”

Troy Stecher knows what makes his former North Dakota teammate tick and how to keep him grounded.

“We like to give him a hard time and have fun with it,” said Stecher, who is returning from a knee injury.

“The Flow, The Shrek, the Prince Charming look.

“His freshman year was my junior year. We won it all and he led our team with 60 points (42 games) which is unheard of in college.”

 ?? — AP FILES ?? With an assist in Friday night’s 3-2 loss to the Devils, Canucks rookie Brock Boeser improved his current scoring streak to 22 points in the last 20 games.
— AP FILES With an assist in Friday night’s 3-2 loss to the Devils, Canucks rookie Brock Boeser improved his current scoring streak to 22 points in the last 20 games.

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