Waterloo Region Record

Former Oiler Hall embraces a starring role with the Devils

- DAVE CALDWELL The New York Times

NEWARK, N.J. — Around this time last year, the New Jersey Devils missed the National Hockey League playoffs for the fifth season in a row, rummaging for 70 points, worst in the Eastern Conference. General manager Ray Shero was determined to end the dismal streak.

“The team I had was my responsibi­lity,” Shero said recently, “and I never wanted that to happen again.”

So in individual post-season meetings, Shero asked each player if he really wanted to be on the team. If not, Shero would trade him. He even made the offer to Taylor Hall, the star forward whom Shero had acquired only 10 months earlier.

Hall had a disappoint­ing first season in New Jersey, scoring 20 goals in 72 games. He had been traded from Edmonton, where he had spent six seasons after the Oilers drafted him first overall in 2010. Worse for him, Edmonton made the playoffs last year.

“He said he expected more of me as a player, and I said, ‘Yeah, I’m going to be better,’” Hall said of his meeting with Shero. “I think he understood it took awhile for me to get used to things here. The biggest thing I took from it was that he still believed in me. And that’s a great thing for a player to hear.”

Shero and Hall said the meeting was not necessaril­y a catalyst for Hall’s sensationa­l, MVPcaliber regular season, in which he led the Devils with 39 goals and 54 assists and lifted them to the playoffs. But it did flip a page. Hall was motivated to start over.

“It was a long summer,” he said. “It gives you a chance to refresh. When I started looking at everything, I just started looking at the positives. We have a great arena; the practice facility is right here. I have a coach and a GM who believed in me. We were really starting to put some pieces together that we could be a really competitiv­e team.”

The Devils (44-28-9) face the Tampa Bay Lightning (54-23-5), the top team in the East, in the first round of the playoffs, beginning Thursday. The Devils won 10 of 13 games from March 10 to last Thursday, when they held off Toronto to earn the playoff berth. Hall, the left winger on the Devils’ top line, had nine goals and 10 assists in those games.

Hall, 26, scored 132 goals in 381 games in six seasons in Edmonton, but the Oilers never had a winning record, losing 138 more games than they won. They finished higher than fifth in their division just once.

Still, Hall was stunned to be traded in June 2016. The Oilers had drafted the elite centre Connor McDavid first overall in 2015, and Hall thought he could be McDavid’s linemate for years. Then Hall was gone, traded for defenceman Adam Larsson.

The Devils caught a break last April when they won the draft lottery after finishing with the fifth-worst record in the NHL. That enabled them to choose between two centres who were 18 then, Nico Hischier and Nolan Patrick.

Shero took Hischier, who was put on a line with Hall at midseason. The two players have complement­ed each other perhaps more than expected, and Hischier finished with 19 goals and 32 assists.

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