Waterloo Region Record

Jets rookie Connor is natural playoff performer

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Kyle Connor has been skating on a rink in front of fans since the Winnipeg Jets forward was three years old.

But the ice wasn’t real back then, and neither were the fans.

Connor’s father had painted ice on the basement floor of their New Baltimore, Mich., home, adding more brush strokes to create a wall mural of boards and fans. Kyle would slip on a pair of Rollerblad­es and zip around.

That transition on their small, backyard rink went smoothly.

“As soon as he put on the skates, he just stood straight up and had no problem,” Joe said. “He didn’t even use a chair or nothing.”

Now 21, Kyle Connor wrapped up the National Hockey League regular season Saturday with a goal in Winnipeg’s 4-1 victory over Chicago. It was his 31st of the season, keeping him at the top of all rookie goal scorers. He added 26 assists for 57 points in 76 games.

Centre Mathew Barzal, of the New York Islanders, led all rookies in points with 85 in 82 games, including 22 goals.

Connor’s achievemen­t doesn’t really surprise his dad, an engineerin­g manager at a Michigan manufactur­er of seatbelts, airbags and steering wheels.

He first thought Kyle might have the potential to reach the NHL when his usually reserved son transforme­d on the ice at a Quebec peewee tournament in front of up to 5,000 fans.

“He was one of our better players,” said Joe, who was an assistant coach with the team. “But then when he played in front of a crowd, oh my god, he just hammed it up and just loved it. “He just took his game to another level.”

Kyle moved away from home at 15 to play junior for Youngstown in Ohio, then spent one season at the University of Michigan.

Selected by the Jets in the first round of the 2015 NHL draft (17th overall), Connor had an outstandin­g freshman season with the Wolverines. He put up an NCAA-leading 71 points in 38 games and was a finalist for the 2016 Hobey Baker Award, given to the top collegiate player.

He will get his first taste of NHL playoff hockey when the Jets take on Minnesota in the opening round this week. His family plans to watch in person, including mom Kathy, 23-yearold Brendon, 18-year-old Jacob, and 17-year-old sister Krystal.

“I think (the Jets) can definitely get to the (Western) Conference finals and anything can happen there,” Joe said.

Kyle was sent down to the AHL Manitoba Moose after 19 games last season and only returned for the Jets’ final game. This year, he played four games with the farm team before Winnipeg brought him back up when forward Mathieu Perreault was injured.

He has found a place on the top line with centre Mark Scheifele and captain Blake Wheeler.

Jets coach Paul Maurice has been impressed with Connor.

“The things that he’s doing now that are more important than the speed and the skills is his play without the puck,” Maurice said.

“(Wheeler and Scheifele) aren’t carrying Kyle anymore. He’s a piece to that line and he’s driving the pace of that. That’s what he’s learned in his year.”

“Everything happens for a reason,” Connor said. “In the long run, I think it really helped my career in developmen­t and learning the pro game. It’s so much different than college and junior hockey.”

 ??  ?? Kyle Connor
Kyle Connor

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