Truro News

MacKenzie the NHL’s most anonymous captain

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Most of the 28 captains in the NHL this season are former allstars, scoring champs, MVPs, Conn Smythe, Rocket Richard and Norris Trophy winners, some of the best and brightest in the game. And then there’s Derek MacKenzie from the Florida Panthers, the NHL’s most anonymous captain.

MacKenzie, 35, has never been an NHL all-star, never won a major award, never even scored 10 goals in a season. His career-high for points is 23. Even Google has no idea that the Sudbury, Ont., native is now officially leading the Panthers; it still thinks it’s Willie Mitchell, who retired after last season.

But to those inside the Panthers dressing room MacKenzie is the obvious captain.

“His personalit­y is the personalit­y of a leader,” said 20-yearold Aaron Ekblad.

“Everyone expected him to be the captain,” added defenceman Steven Kampfer.

“You look outside the room and people aren’t going to think that, but everyone in this room knew it was probably going to be him.”

Florida has only ever named one captain under the age of 30:

Olli Jokinen. The club has consistent­ly picked aging veterans for the role, from Bryan McCabe in his mid-30s (2009-11) to Ed Jovanovski (2012-14) and Mitchell (2014-16) in their late 30s and now MacKenzie.

This Panthers leadership group in particular places high value on the presence of veteran leaders, even employing 39-year-old Shawn Thornton – who has yet to play a game this season – for just that purpose.

The club also signed MacKenzie, who plays about 12 minutes per game on the team’s fourth line, to a two-year contract extension this past summer, which will carry him to age 38.

MacKenzie has been around awhile, the sixth-ever pick of the Atlanta Thrashers franchise, his career never found solid NHL footing until 2010. It was then that, as a 29-yearold, he locked into a role with the Columbus Blue Jackets. MacKenzie bounced between the minors and NHL for years before that, suiting up for more than 500 American Hockey League games.

He carved out a space as a fourth-line grinder, the rugged centreman who could kill penalties, take key faceoffs and of course, provide leadership.

Panthers coach Gerard Gallant first started talking to MacKenzie about the captaincy over the summer.

He wanted someone who would make sure that things were done right for Florida, which was coming off its best season in franchise history.

“I know some teams are going with the younger guys, but over the long haul the players decide who your best captain is going to be and Derek’s the right pick for our team right now,” Gallant said.

Teammates seem to revere MacKenzie, describing him as a natural leader, example-setter and the perfect conduit between those playing the game and those coaching and managing it.

 ?? fIlE pHoto ?? Florida Panthers captain Derek MacKenzie has never been an NHL all-star, won a major award or even scored 10 goals in a season.
fIlE pHoto Florida Panthers captain Derek MacKenzie has never been an NHL all-star, won a major award or even scored 10 goals in a season.

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