Boston Herald

VIRUS CLOUDS EVALUATION AS 2020 NHL DRAFT LOOMS

- By STEVE CONROY

The NHL draft, even more than its counterpar­ts in the NFL and NBA, is a crapshoot.

Teams choose undevelope­d teenagers with the hopes that all the homework they’ve done on a particular player – the workouts, the interviews, the reference-checking – will tell them exactly who that player will be seven or eight years down the road when he hits his prime.

Needless to say, there are some misses. That’s inevitable.

But this year’s draft, whenever the league chooses to hold it, has the potential to be an even more pronounced wildcard. Because of the coronaviru­s shutdown, the annual scouting combine in Buffalo, where teams put over 100 NHL hopefuls through paces both physical and mental, has been canceled. The in-person draft itself, when teams get one more crack at interviewi­ng players and which had been scheduled to take place this year in Montreal’s Bell Centre, is also not happening.

Just when the draft — expected to be conducted remotely like the NFL draft was last month — will take place is still being debated. The league had wanted to hold it in June, before any semblance of the season’s conclusion could take place, but it’s gotten significan­t pushback from some teams. If such a scenario unfolded, the Bruins, by virtue of their perch atop the standings when play was paused, would be picking last. Picking 31st is more than palatable if your team had just won the Stanley Cup to earn that spot, not so much when you have nothing to show for it.

But no matter when the draft is going to be held, this year’s grab will present challenges like no other.

“The normal course of your calendar is disrupted,” said Bruins’ GM Don Sweeney last week. “You have late-season viewings, you have playoff stretches, the U-18s is always an important tournament at the end of the year, so yeah, you’re short viewings. Some players have been injured and they’re trying to return to play and now you don’t have a great idea of where they’re at and where their developmen­t is over the course of the year. So you’ve got some projection­s involved.”

Take the case of Hendrix Lapierre. The centerman from Chicoutimi of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League was on course to be a high first-round pick. Coming off a season in which he posted 45 points in 48 games for Chicoutimi, the 6-foot, 180-pound pivot was Team Canada’s leading scorer (3-7-10 in five games) in the Hlinka Gretzky Cup, the internatio­nal tournament held in August that is a kind of kickoff to the scouting season.

Lapierre, however, was limited to just 19 games in the Q this season due to what was thought to be concussion­s but was later diagnosed as cervical issues, according to his representa­tive Kent Hughes, who has represente­d several clients with concussion and/or cervical issues such as Patrice Bergeron, Matthew Lombardi and Ryan Clowe. Hughes said he took Lapierre to visit with renowned therapist Dan Dyrek in Florida and it was determined that he had suffered a cervical injury the prior season that had not healed. Whenever he got hit it would trigger concussion symptoms.

With the new diagnosis, Lapierre was eventually able to get back on the ice with his team and was nearing a return, hopefully ready to put his health issues in the rearview mirror. Then the world as we knew it stopped when the coronaviru­s outbreak shut down sports leagues throughout the globe.

“I think it hurts, of course,” said Hughes. “It’ll take an awfully confident team who believes so strongly in the player for him to be a top 10 pick. And I think he was a shoo-in top 10 before. He was the top pick in the Quebec league, he had a great (201819) season, he led team Canada in scoring at the Hlinka tournament. He was set up to really push here. Now, I don’t know. He’s not getting out of the first round, but if he had returned to play with the medical diagnosis that he has, if he had done well, if Chicoutimi had gone to the Memorial Cup and he continued to perform, everything that happened before would have been cast aside and he could have been whatever hecouldbe,atop5pick.”

When players are chosen on draft day, they’re often told that their draft slot is just a number and doesn’t matter anymore. What a player accomplish­es from there on out is up to the player. That’s mostly true, but not completely.

“I feel like if you’re a top 5 pick, you have nine lives,” said Hughes. “I think Ben Pouliot (who played for seven NHL teams, including the Bruins) was a great example of that, where he was really slow to mature and be ready to be an effective NHL player. But he kept getting chances because he was the fourth overall pick. If he was a similar player (picked lower) he would have been discarded pretty quickly.”

A good playoff run could make a big difference for “a late bounce” player, said Kirk Luedeke, assistant GM of the USHL’s Omaha Lancers who was a long-time talent evaluator for the Red Line Report, a scouting service.

“An example of that I’ll give you is Taylor Hall,” said Luedeke. “When the major junior playoffs started in 2010, Hall and Tyler Seguin were neck and

 ??  ?? BRUINS GM DON SWEENEY
BRUINS GM DON SWEENEY
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? HENDRIX LAPIERRE
HENDRIX LAPIERRE

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