Times Colonist

Horvat grows quickly into No.1 centre role

Versatilit­y key to young Canuck’s progress

- JASON BOTCHFORD

ST. LOUIS — If life as a typical National Hockey League player seems difficult, then life as a No. 1 centre must seem like colonizing Mars.

Consider, for a moment, the job. At the top, make sure to produce offence at even strength. You know, score goals. Oh, and have the puck a lot.

When you don’t, keep busy either shutting down the best scorers in the world or fending off the best defensive centres. Also, if it’s not too much trouble, score on the power play, kill penalties, and win most of your faceoffs. Welcome to Bo Horvat’s world. There is nothing about Horvat that suggests “kid.” He’s filled out physically, he’s accountabl­e, and he’s mature enough that if you met him and he told you he had kids in college, you’d believe it.

So, it often gets lost that Horvat is just 21 and the Canucks’ youngest regular. He’s also currently their No. 1 centre. He has arrived. You know this because opposing coaches are changing the way they defend him.

On Tuesday, Joel Quennevill­e assigned Jonathan Toews as the Horvat match. Toews won 62 per cent of his faceoffs and helped the Chicago Blackhawks control 72 per cent of the shot attempts when he was on the ice at even strength. It’s tough at the top.

Todd McLellan thought similarly in Edmonton Saturday, matching what has been his shutdown line, the one centred by Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, with Horvat.

“He’s getting those tougher matchups on his own. I don’t need to try and get them for him,” said head coach Willie Desjardins, whose Canucks take on the Blues in St. Louis tonight.

“He’ll draw one of the top two lines always now, either a really good checking line or he’ll get the top offensive line.

“It’s just the way he plays. Teams know that now. They know it’s a line they have to look at controllin­g. For example, I was hoping to play the Horvat line against Connor McDavid [in Edmonton], but they didn’t want that match, so we had to change our lines up.”

It hasn’t been easy. Horvat has gone seven games without a goal, tying his season-long goalless stretch and is controllin­g just 43 per cent of shot attempts in March. But this experience is exactly what the final few weeks of the season should be all about. Elevating Horvat has a chance to have long-term impact, something playing guys like Michael Chaput and Reid Boucher will not.

Horvat is playing more than he has all season. He is playing three to four more minutes a game now than he was in October. That was when he debuted on the fourth line. This, after leading the Canucks in points in the second half of 2015-16.

Looking back, it was one of Desjardins’ most indefensib­le lineup decisions. It also might have been a stroke of evil genius. Either that, or just luck.

But Desjardins’ decision motivated Horvat in what has been a pretty great year which, if things stay the same, will end with him leading the team in points.

“Obviously, I wanted to be at the top of the lineup. You want to be that one-two guy,” Horvat said. “At the same time, starting me there, pushed me to be better.

“It’s what lit the fire and a reason why I’ve had a good year.”

Having a good year is one thing, but this next step, the one with Horvat trying to establish himself as a No. 1 centre, is one of the steepest.

Does it ever seem like too much? “It is a lot,” Horvat said. “At the same time, as a hockey player, you want to have all of those responsibi­lities.”

 ??  ?? Bo Horvat takes a shot during the Canucks’ game in Edmonton last Saturday. The Oilers won 2-0.
Bo Horvat takes a shot during the Canucks’ game in Edmonton last Saturday. The Oilers won 2-0.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada