The Province

Scout insists prospect Kole Lind is ‘smart hockey player’

Smart winger’s ability to overcome mono and Team Canada cut bodes well for Canucks

- Jason Botchford jbotchford@postmedia.com twitter.com/botchford

In the midst of a rebuild, the lifeblood of the Vancouver Canucks is their prospects. This series checks out the top 10 prospects in the team’s system who have yet to get a shot to be NHL regulars. At No. 6 is Kole Lind

Kole Lind

Age: 19, Oct. 16, 1998

Position: Right Wing

Hometown: Shaunavon, Saskatchew­an

Height: 6-1

Weight: 178 pounds

Drafted: Round 2, No. 33 overall 2017 NHL Entry Draft

Scoring: 39 goals and 56 assists in 58 games for the Kelowna Rockets of the WHL

If Elias Pettersson is really going to save the Canucks offence, he’s going to need help.

Lots of it.

Enter Kole Lind, the forward who was at the centre of one of the Canucks’ most memorable moments at the 2017 NHL Entry Draft.

In a miked up clip segment from that draft produced by the team, Vancouver GM Jim Benning is shown wondering this at the end of the first round:

“Why isn’t anyone taking Kole Lind?”

Benning would help take care of that early in the second round when the Canucks took the high upside winger because, in part, the organizati­on thought he could help Pettersson.

“He’s proven he can score and he’s a smart hockey player,” said Judd Brackett, the Canucks director of amateur scouting. “Part of the draw at the draft was that his hockey sense was on a level that we thought he’d be able to play with other high end players, someone like a Pettersson. “He had terrific year.”

He did, but it was a trying one too. Lind’s season was disrupted by a couple things out of his control. One was a case of mononucleo­sis and the other was the disappoint­ment

of not making Team Canada’s World junior team. How smoothly he overcame both setbacks was impressive.

“Mono really just doesn’t effect the physical side of things, there’s a mental side too, and he had obviously put in a lot of work during the summer which helped him battle through it,” said Jason Smith, the head coach of the Lind’s Kelowna Rockets. “His fitness level from the day he was drafted was a sign of maturity and growth and it really helped him when he got sick.

“He missed a stretch but it didn’t drag on. He came back and he was right back into it.”

The time he was out didn’t impact his season at all.

But Lind’s signature moment this year came after he was cut from

Team Canada in what was his last chance to play in the World Juniors tournament. In his first three games back with Kelowna, he exploded with eight points.

“He handled that with character and with confidence and pride,” Smith said. “He took it as this, if you’re getting an opportunit­y to get invited to that camp, you’re doing lots of good things.

“Sure, it’s a kick in the butt when you don’t make it but he wanted to get right back, get back on the horse and play and it was awesome for our group.”

In Lind, Smith sees a player with a lot of offensive talent and suggests the Canucks did well to get that kind of player in the second round.

“He’s an elite offensive player and he has huge upside to his game,”

Smith said. “His game is still growing and I don’t think it’s anywhere near to where it’s going to get to.

“I can’t really speak for the (Canucks), but it was probably great for them. They got a great piece, a player who is still growing and getting better.”

Smith underscore­d a couple of skills Lind has which suggest that the Canucks were on to something when they saw a young man who could play with Pettersson down the road.

“He has vision and poise with the puck. His ability to pass the puck and shoot the puck are at a very high level at a young age. The guys who can handle the pu ck like he can without staring down at the ice all the time have a lot of opportunit­y to have success with the pace of

the game now,” Smith said. “If you can see the play develop before anyone else can, you have a pretty good chance to complete the play. He has that ability. He sees the ice really well.

“He can also shoot the puck from numerous positions on the ice and he can do it when he’s moving at full speed and it doesn’t matter if he’s off the front foot or back foot or side foot.

“He’s also got a competitiv­e nature to him. He wants to have success. Those are the traits that are going to allow him to have success offensivel­y. His game will round out as he continues to work at being at a 200foot player and having more awareness which will help him defend.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Kole Lind, right, had an outstandin­g season for the WHL’s Kelowna Rockets, despite missing part of the year with a case of mononucleo­sis. The Vancouver Canucks consider themselves lucky to have grabbed Lind in the second round at last year’s draft.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Kole Lind, right, had an outstandin­g season for the WHL’s Kelowna Rockets, despite missing part of the year with a case of mononucleo­sis. The Vancouver Canucks consider themselves lucky to have grabbed Lind in the second round at last year’s draft.
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