Oroville Mercury-Register

Sharks avoiding ‘temptation’ with top prospects, but for how long?

Could use spark but young talent will stay in AHL

- By Curtis Pashelka

Few NHL teams are in greater need of a shot in the arm right now than the San Jose Sharks.

Losers of five of their last six games, the Sharks are simply running out of time if they want to try and get back into the playoff race. Maybe, with a 7-13-4 record after Sunday’s 4-3 loss to the Vancouver Canucks, that die has already been cast.

Just don’t expect the Sharks to call up one of their top prospects from the AHL to perhaps provide a spark, or even shake things up a bit. For now, barring a trade or more injuries, the answer for the Sharks, if one exists, has to come from within the four walls of the team’s dressing room.

“We don’t want to bring someone up, because it just really does not do anybody any good,” Sharks coach David Quinn said last week.

“I know that temptation, and I know that the fans and everybody want a new young player in the lineup. But you’ve got to be discipline­d as an organizati­on to do what’s right for the prospect and for the longterm impact on your organizati­on.”

The Sharks right now have injuries to defenseman Mario Ferraro (lower body), forward Nico Sturm (upper body), and goalie James Reimer (lower body).

Ferraro is out for at least

another week but will travel with the team as it begins a four-game road trip on Tuesday in Montreal. It remains unclear when Sturm and Reimer, also on injured reserve, might be able to play again.

In response to the injuries, the Sharks recalled goalie Aaron Dell, defenseman Scott Harrington and forward Jeffrey Viel from the Barracuda. The kids on the AHL team were left in San Jose.

But if the Sharks’ season continues on its downward trajectory, there likely will come a point when some of their top prospects, such as forwards William Eklund, Thomas Bordeleau, and Tristen Robins, get a look at the NHL level.

That’s not unusual, as there came a time over the last three years when the Sharks wanted to get a look at some of the organizati­on’s younger players once they fell out of playoff contention. Usually, that took place after the trade deadline, as

some forwards, defensemen and even a goalie or two got a taste of the NHL.

Few of those players, though, had the upsides of Bordeleau and Robins, drafted in the second round in 2020, or Eklund, who was taken seventh overall in 2021. Bordeleau and Robins both have 11 points after 18 and 16 games with the Barracuda, respective­ly, and Eklund, after a so-so start, has two goals and four assists in his last six AHL games.

Surely one of these players could help shake up a forward group that has been the same since the start of the season, no? Maybe provide a push from underneath? Disrupt the status quo?

“We’d love to have that,” extra push, Quinn said. “We talk, I wouldn’t say daily, but frequently, about what we have in the minors and who can come up here and make people a little uncomforta­ble. That’s something that this organizati­on’s continuing to build towards.

“We feel good about some guys down there for sure that, eventually, at the right time, will be able to make an impact for us.”

For now, the Sharks need more from some of their depth forwards, players who have had success earlier in their careers.

Nick Bonino, who has averaged 15 goals per season over the last nine years, has three assists in 21 games, although he had two assists Sunday. Oskar Lindblom, who had 26 points in 76 games last season, has one assist in his last 17 games and four assists for the year.

Evgeny Svechnikov and Steven Lorentz have gone without a point in their last six and seven games, respective­ly.

Still, even though those players have had slow starts from an offensive standpoint, they’re not going anywhere right now. From the Sharks’ perspectiv­e, the developmen­t of the younger players is too important.

“Mike (Grier) and I have talked about this. It can be really detrimenta­l to call someone up who’s not ready. It really can,” Quinn said. “I don’t think enough people pay attention to the players that have suffered for that. I think they hang on to the guys that have been called up and have an impact and are successful.

“Well, I guarantee you, if everybody did a study, the guys that have been hurt by being called up too early is way more glaring.”

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The San Jose Sharks’ Thomas Bordeleau waits for a faceoff against the Los Angeles Kings during a preseason game in September.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The San Jose Sharks’ Thomas Bordeleau waits for a faceoff against the Los Angeles Kings during a preseason game in September.

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