Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Return to sender: This ‘Elvis’ rejects shots

Blue Jackets can’t help falling in love with Latvian goalie

- By Ben Gotz Contact Ben Gotz at bgotz@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @BenSGotz on Twitter.

The Columbus Blue Jackets were an afterthoug­ht to begin the season.

They were written off, dismissed and disregarde­d after an offseason that saw them lose scorer Artemi Panarin (Rangers), goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (Panthers) and center Matt Duchene (Nashville).

Yet, the Blue Jackets entered All-Star Weekend holding the first wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference. It’s in large part because Elvis entered the building.

Coach John Tortorella has done masterful work getting his roster to buy into a grinding style that features a physical forecheck and discipline­d defense. But it works because he’s found a new goaltender to replace Bobrovsky, and rookie Elvis Merzlikins is perhaps the main reason Columbus is still afloat.

“Goaltender­s can have talent, they can be athletic and all that, but I think he has a mindset of he’s strong there mentally,” Tortorella said of his 25-year-old netminder. “A lot of things have been thrown at him here. Coming right in here when we lose (primary starter Joonas Korpisalo to injury after) not playing much. I think he’s handled himself really well.”

Merzlikins has been a revelation since replacing Korpisalo, who hasn’t played since Dec. 29 with a torn meniscus. The Riga, Latvia, native has a 2.39 goals-against average and .926 save percentage in 21 games.

Despite his limited early playing time, he ranks ninth in the NHL in goals saved above average with 10.82.

He also has shown off a personalit­y that has led Tortorella to dub him “a piece of work.” He strummed his stick like a guitar after his first career shutout against the Golden Knights on Jan. 11.

“Well, I had to. I had to do it because we are in Vegas,” said Merzlikins, who dedicated the shutout to his late father.

It was his father’s love of the former Las Vegas headliner that led to his first name, but Merzlikins said he doesn’t know too many of the icon’s songs.

“It’s really old music for my generation,” Merzlikins said.

He does know “Viva Las Vegas,” and was impressive enough against the Knights to prevent it from playing in T-Mobile Arena. It was the first victory of his current five-game winning streak, just another component of his astonishin­g season for an overlooked team.

“I wanted to see even myself what I am capable of,” Merzlikins said. “I don’t want to think about anything. I just want to play my hockey and enjoy it and try to have fun.”

Pressure on Sakic

The trade deadline should provide several NHL general managers with fascinatin­g decisions.

The league’s oft-trumpeted parity means only a few teams are truly out of the playoff picture. And several in it can’t feel secure about their positions.

So how much do young teams that have surprised like the Blue Jackets, Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers add? Is now the time to accelerate their rebuilds or should they stay the course?

The Toronto Maple Leafs and

Nashville Predators face the opposite dilemma. Their talented rosters have disappoint­ed early, so do their GMs resign their teams to their fate? Or do they use assets to improve a team that just might not be up to snuff?

Those kind of choices probably led to a restless All-Star Weekend for several executives.

 ?? Jay LaPrete The Associated Press ?? Blue Jackets goalie Elvis Merzlikins not only has the physical talent to be great, but “I think he has a mindset of he’s strong there mentally,” coach John Totorella says.
Jay LaPrete The Associated Press Blue Jackets goalie Elvis Merzlikins not only has the physical talent to be great, but “I think he has a mindset of he’s strong there mentally,” coach John Totorella says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States