Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Carlsson expects to make NHL debut

- By A■drew K■oll Correspond­ent

The Ducks have already faced two of the NHL's top teams, looking respectabl­e against the reigning Stanley Cup champs on their maiden voyage before upending one of the Eastern Conference finalists from last season in their home opener tonight's match against another 2023 conference finalist, the Dallas Stars, adds yet another layer of intrigue: the debut of the highest draft selection in Ducks history, Leo Carlsson.

After a loss in Vegas, a victory over Carolina and three days of preparatio­n, the Ducks will be back at Honda Center when they welcome Dallas, which fell to Vegas in last year's Western finals. Dallas also lost to Vegas in its most recent game after beating St. Louis in its opener, with both matches reaching a shootout.

The downtime came at the right moment for the Ducks as No. 2 overall pick Carlsson returned to practice after missing their first two games with a lower body injury. He is expected to appear in his first NHL game today. He will likely center the top line alongside Troy Terry and Trevor Zegras as well as log significan­t powerplay time. He is one of three No. 2 overall picks in Ducks history, the others being Bobby Ryan and Oleg Tverdovsky. Tverdovsky and Mason McTavish are the only players to be younger when they joined the Ducks than Carlsson will be Thursday.

Carlsson's delayed debut further lengthened the shadow of Chicago's Connor Bedard, the ubiquitous­ly hyped prospect who was taken just one pick before Carlsson but covered widely as if he were already light years ahead in his developmen­t. Bedard recorded a point in each of his first three games before going scoreless against Toronto on Monday.

“I don't really care, to be honest,” Carlsson, a Swede, told the Associated Press. “I think I'd rather be the underdog. Well, the second pick isn't the underdog, but I'm still not in the media and stuff like that. I feel like

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Today: Stars at Ducks, 7p.m., BSSC

that's easier, to surprise people and not let them down that way. Maybe if I was from Canada or the U.S., it would be bigger as well. But I'm comfortabl­e.”

The Ducks have had three full days off since topping the Hurricanes, 6-3, catapultin­g off a hat trick by Frank Vatrano. Vatrano and Ryan Strome have flanked McTavish thus far, and the trio has combined for nine points in two games.

“They've got a little chemistry. You can see it,” Ducks coach Greg Cronin said. “I'm big into team and big into chemistry and communicat­ion. When you have lines that are comfortabl­e with each other, you can see it on the bench, [in the way] they talk to each other.”

Against Carolina, Jackson LaCombe's assist on Pavel Mintyukov's goal gave each defenseman his first NHL point. After Jamie Drysdale, who like Cam Fowler scored two points in two games from the blue line for the Ducks, missed practice time this week, it might have opened the door for a third rookie defenseman, Tristan Luneau, to make a contributi­on. Luneau, whom Cronin described as “a stallion” during training camp, appeared to be the most likely replacemen­t for Drysdale since they are both right-handed shots with offensive ability.

Cronin said that heading into the Carolina game, he was slightly concerned about the pace of the game and how his young defenders might handle it, but in the end, he “was impressed with the way our guys skated for 60 minutes.”

Indeed there was plenty to build on in Sunday's win, which had the crowd electrifie­d and more going right than just the numbers on the scoreboard.

“I kept seeing events happen on the ice — us getting pucks back on the forecheck, controllin­g the puck on cycles, getting scoring chances in the shot, using our defenseman on the cycles — I kept thinking `no matter what happens in the game, these are events that we can sink our teeth into as a staff and create some believabil­ity,'” Cronin said.

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