Vancouver Sun

Boeser goes back to where it all started in St. Paul

Canucks return to St. Paul, where winger had big NHL debut before friendly crowd

- JASON BOTCHFORD jbotchford@postmedia.com twitter.com/ botchford

Lots of room remains for the legend of Brock Boeser to grow.

When he’s out in Vancouver with friend and teammate Jake Virtanen, it’s nearly always Virtanen who gets noticed first.

“They know him more than me,” Boeser said.

Virtanen said: “It’s just because I’m a hometown guy. They do recognize him after a bit.”

We predict that is going to change.

When Boeser’s new coach was asked this week how he scored all his goals, Travis Green winced just a little. Boeser only has two. I know, it feels like a lot more to me, too.

That will also change soon. “He’s a good young hockey player, but it may be a little early to start describing how he scores goals,” Green said.

He’s not wrong. People have to be careful not to get ahead of themselves. But Boeser is good enough to be a Calder Trophy candidate and it’s been a long time since the Canucks had someone you could write that about.

Boeser has only played 15 NHL games, but boy, those 15 games have been good.

On Monday, the native of suburban Burnsville, Minn., returned home. It’s here where it all started and it’s here where people will refer to when retelling his story.

His NHL debut in March seemed ripped from folklore. One day his college team was eliminated in a double-overtime game. The next, he was scoring the game-winning goal for the Canucks in front of his parents, aunts, uncles and cousins.

Oh, and his grandmothe­r. There were these images of him that night embracing her and it was about the sweetest thing you ever saw in a hockey arena.

“I was running on a lot of adrenalin,” Boeser said. “That night, I was exhausted when I started coming down from the adrenalin high. It was an awesome moment.”

It sure was, and nothing may ever match it. But Tuesday is the encore, and what a curtain call it’s setting up to be.

When Boeser hits the Xcel Energy ice again, he will do so triumphant­ly. The season may have started with him benched for two games, but now he leads the Canucks in points with six and shot attempts with 25.

The Canucks have controlled 53.91 per cent of the shot attempts

when Boeser is on the ice. The only forwards with a higher ratio are the Sedin twins.

Boeser has had a positive impact in key possession stats, including shot-attempts for and against, which is a pretty good sign he’s doing a lot of the little things right. Just wait until coaches figure out how to use him on the power play.

His off-season determinat­ion to get quicker, notably his first step or two, has seemed to help make up some ground against opponents who gave him problems with speed at the end of last year.

“It blew my mind (last year) how fast everyone was out there,” Boeser said. “I think once I get up to speed, my speed is good, but it’s just getting there.

“That was a huge thing I worked on in the summer. I’m still working on that today. It has made a difference already.”

So, he’s a little faster, and he’s a little stronger. He’s also a little more mature, having navigated his way through his first Vancouver public firestorm. Things were lit when Green made the unpopular decision to scratch him for the opening two games.

“People I saw were very supportive,” Boeser said. “They told me they couldn’t wait to see me play and they said they hoped I get in soon.”

They got their wish. Through it all, Boeser handled it beautifull­y, which is no surprise to those who know him best.

His dad has Parkinson’s. He lost a good friend in a fatal car crash. His mom worked multiple jobs to support the family. Not playing a couple games?

“I guarantee you he just used the whole situation as motivation,” Troy Stecher, a college and pro teammate, said recently before he injured his knee and was sent back to Vancouver for testing.

“He’s a pretty mature kid. He’s been through a lot in his life. This is one of those times where I just told him to relate this to life. You’ve overcome so much if you don’t just look at the hockey part.”

That’s true, but if you do look at the hockey part these days, it’s difficult not to love what you see.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Vancouver Canucks right wing Brock Boeser, from Burnsville, Minn., learned the sport in the self-proclaimed State of Hockey. When he cracked the NHL in March, he did so against the Minnesota Wild with his friends and family in the stands.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Vancouver Canucks right wing Brock Boeser, from Burnsville, Minn., learned the sport in the self-proclaimed State of Hockey. When he cracked the NHL in March, he did so against the Minnesota Wild with his friends and family in the stands.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada