The Mercury News Weekend

Florida coach helped turn Burns into a top player

Defenseman liked playing for Boughner, a former Sharks assistant

- By Paul Gackle pgackle@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SUNRISE, FLA. » Paul Martin is known around San Jose as the “Wookie whisperer” because Brent Burns emerged as one of the NHL’s top blue liners after he became his defensive partner in 2015-16.

But when it comes to getting the reigning Norris Trophy winner in the frame of mind to succeed, no one speaks the Wookie tongue better than Florida Panthers coach Bob Boughner, who will reconnect with Burns when the Sharks (13-8-2) roll into the BB&T Center today.

“It’s no secret that I really loved having him coach me. I learned a lot from him, I was feeling good,” Burns said, reflecting on Boughner’s two-year tenure as the Sharks’ defensive coach.

“You always knew where you stood with him. I knew he had a lot of confidence in me, that’s huge for a player.”

The Panthers coach wound up being the perfect voice for Burns at the right moment of his career.

Boughner joined the Sharks’

coaching staff as one of coach Pete DeBoer’s first hires a year after Burns made his transition back to the blue line following a season-and-a-half at forward. Burns struggled to reacclimat­e himself to the backend in 2014-15, posting a minus-9 rating while shuffling through five defensive partners.

As the Sharks missed the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in more than a decade, calls for Burns’ return to forward blared in the mainstream media and throughout the Twitterver­se. The debate over Burns’ rightful position proved to be a source of tension between general manager Doug Wilson and former coach Todd McLellan, as well.

But when DeBoer took over in May 2015, he put an end to the conversati­on, handing the Burns project to Boughner, who logged 630 games as an NHL defenseman between 1995 and 2006.

“He said, no more of the back and forth — this guy’s a defenseman,” Boughner said, recalling his first summer meeting on the Sharks coaching staff. “It was a good move on his part. Playing back and forth, and switching positions, there’s a lot of little things that, defensivel­y, he had to clean up, and that’s where I came in. We studied it every day.”

Boughner quickly recognized another aspect of Burns’ game that needed cleansing: his mindset.

According to Boughner, Burns’ Achilles’ heel is the pressure he puts on himself to deliver for his teammates. He hates letting the guys on the bench down, so he’s unnecessar­ily hard on himself when he makes a mistake.

Boughner, 46, who developed a knack for know- ing what strings to pull with which players while coaching junior hockey with the Ontario Hockey League’s Windsor Spitfires from2006-15, realized that Burns is the type of player who needs “a shoulder to lean on” because he “reacts to positive reinforcem­ent way more than negative” messaging.

He took a different approach than former assistant coach Jim Johnson, who developed a reputation for being more of a drill sergeant with the Sharks’ blue line.

“If he made a mistake, it would bother him for the next 10minutes,” Boughner said of Burns. “He cares a lot. He has a big heart. For me, it was concentrat­ing on what he does well and why he’s so good, and instilling it in his head every day: No can shoot like you can shoot. No one can dominate a game with the heavy minutes that you play.”

With his newfound confidence, Burns took off in the second half of the 201516 season, setting franchise records for goals (27) and points by a defenseman (75) while becoming the first blue liner who isn’t named Bobby Orr or Ray Bourque to register more than 350 shots in a season.

Burns put together an even more impressive follow up campaign last year, becoming only the second defenseman since Paul Coffey in 1988-89 to notch 29 or more goals in a season. He also set a Sharks scoring record with 76 points while leading the NHL in shots on goal (320), earning the franchise’s first Norris Trophy.

Martin said Boughner unlocked Burns’ offensive potential by giving him a pass to freelance within the team’s structure.

“Nowadays, it’s all X’s and O’s, and video, and attention to detail. The coaches are in control of every situation,” he said. “Brent’s more of a freerange guy. You don’t want the coach saying to him, hey, you didn’t make the right play, and then he gets self conscious. He has to be allowed to make plays.”

But with Boughner in Florida this season, and Rob Zettler leading the Sharks’ defense, Burns’ offensive numbers are taking a dive. Burns notched his first goal in his 21st game on Nov. 24 and he has recorded only 11 points in 23 games.

Neverthele­ss, Burns, 32, leads all NHL defenseman in shots on goal (93), the exact number of shots that he had through 23 games last season, suggesting that he isn’t getting the bounces right now.

“He’s still the best shooter from the backend that any team has,” Boughner said. “Sometimes, it’s puck luck. Sometimes, it’s the forwards getting in and screening the goalie.”

When Boughner met up with Burns in San Jose before the Sharks-Panthers game Nov. 16, his former-protege gave him a 25-yearold bottle of scotch, a signed copy of ESPN The Magazine’s Body Issue 2017 and a hunting knife.

Boughner, in turn, gave Burns a pinch of advice, but he didn’t want to douse the defenseman, who was caught in a 16-game goalless drought, with too much confidence.

“I said, hey, you’re playing good, stay with it. But I was worried about our team. I told him, you can score, but not that night,” Boughner joked.

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Florida coach Bob Boughner knows Sharks defenseman Brent Burns, above, very well. “He’s still the best shooter from the backend that any team has,” Boughner says.
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES Florida coach Bob Boughner knows Sharks defenseman Brent Burns, above, very well. “He’s still the best shooter from the backend that any team has,” Boughner says.

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