Las Vegas Review-Journal

Knights opt for skill in draft

Glass, Suzuki, Brannstrom provide speed, offensive flair

- By Steve Carp Las Vegas Review-journal

CHICAGO — They got the player they wanted.

The Golden Knights, looking for a scoring center with their first selection as a franchise in the NHL Entry Draft, had the chance to take the player some hockey insiders say could be one of the best of this draft.

Cody Glass, an 18-year-old who had 94 points for the Portland Winter Hawks last season, had his name called by Knights general manager George Mcphee on Friday as the NHL’S newest team unveiled the No. 6 overall pick at the United Center to a mixture of cheers and boos.

“I’m excited,” Glass said. “It’s an honor to be the first player picked, and I really liked the people in the Vegas organizati­on. They made me feel very comfortabl­e. They showed a lot of interest, and they were open and pleasant. I can’t wait to get there.”

He won’t have long to wait. The team’s developmen­t camp begins Tuesday at the Las Vegas Ice Center, and Glass plans to participat­e. So will Nick Suzuki, a 17-year-old center from the Owen Sound Attack who was taken at No. 13 with the pick the Knights obtained from Columbus through Winnipeg in the expansion draft.

DRAFT

The tears began to well in Jeff Glass’ eyes when he spoke about his mother, Judy, who before dying last August helped him raise Cody and his older brother, Matthew. The father had envisioned this moment for his youngest son, thought about it more and more as Cody’s skill continued to blossom, but life had not allowed him the confidence to truly believe these types of amazing dreams really can come true.

“The boys knew we never had much, and they never asked for much,” Jeff said. “I gave them as much as I could. They’re great kids. I couldn’t have asked for better kids.

“I don’t think (Cody) would have developed as much had he not been able to play in the top junior leagues. My mother helped with that. It was worth every penny — and it was a lot of pennies. He wouldn’t be here without all she did for us.

“I tell them to live every day, to take nothing for granted. It was really tough at times, but our hearts are full. We’re blessed. Money isn’t everything. Family is.”

He’s a postal worker who began raising the boys on his own since he and his wife divorced in 2010, a father who placed his sons on the ice shortly after they could walk, wiped away their tears when they fell and told them to try again.

He always told them to try. He always encouraged them to persevere.

The Knights were high enough on Glass that a deal was in place to trade up if general manager George Mcphee thought they might lose him. Mcphee never had to make it, and in turn received a player who led the Portland Winterhawk­s of the Western Hockey League with 32 goals and 94 points in 69 games last season.

“It’s hard to find these kind of players,” Mcphee said. “They don’t grow on trees. They’re not low-hanging fruit. (Glass) is super smart, super skilled.

“That’s a very close family, and the kid couldn’t be more humble. His father did a hell of a job raising those kids. You don’t want kids to go through some of the things they did, but if it happens early in life, you hope they can bounce back and be stronger for it.

“He’s a wonderful young man of high, high character. Sometimes, (life’s struggles) make you a better hockey player. When all heck is breaking loose in a game and you can stay steady, you’re usually the one that prevails.”

Winnipeg is the capital and largest city of Manitoba, where the Red and Assiniboin­e Rivers meet and you can’t drive a block along Jeff Glass’ postal route and not see an outside rink, where young boys skate and dream those amazing dreams of making the NHL.

Cody Glass figures the last time he

cried on ice was when he was 4 and his father kept lifting him up and telling him to try again, a memory on Friday that widened a smile already seeming to stretch from here to the Canadian border.

He probably will return to his

WHL team next season as his body and game continue to develop, his goal to be on the Knights roster by the time he’s 19. But the moment on Friday was for all those years with his father and brother, the latter having stopped playing after a concussion and now studying to become a doctor.

It was also for the grandmothe­r Cody was able to see one final time after being cut from Team Canada last summer, in his eyes a blessing for getting home before she died.

“I wish so much she was here, but I know she’s watching and will always be proud of me,” Cody said. “The road my father and brother and I went through … being here with them to see the smiles on their faces tonight was unbelievab­le.

“I had to mature a lot quicker than maybe I thought I would, but I think it all made me a better hockey player and person. I know that I’m going to make the NHL one day, and I know I will play many games in a Knights jersey.”

An aspiring doctor and a firstround NHL draft pick.

Jeff Glass gave his sons a fine chance in life, all right, and his is the sort of successful story that all the money in the world can’t buy.

Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-4618. He can be heard on ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @edgraney on Twitter.

 ?? David Banks ?? USA Today The Golden Knights’ first pick, center Cody Glass, is congratula­ted by general manager George Mcphee, left, after being taken sixth overall in the NHL Entry Draft.
David Banks USA Today The Golden Knights’ first pick, center Cody Glass, is congratula­ted by general manager George Mcphee, left, after being taken sixth overall in the NHL Entry Draft.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Jeff Glass
Father of Golden Knights draft pick Cody Glass
Jeff Glass Father of Golden Knights draft pick Cody Glass

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States