The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Best college players quickly moving to pros

- By Stephen Whyno

Top young hockey players aren’t seeing any layoff between the end of their collegiate careers and the beginning of their NHL tenures, with some making the transition in less than 24hours.

Nineteen hours after Brock Boeser’s college hockey tenure ended, his NHL career began.

After North Dakota lost the seventh-longest game in NCAA Tournament history, Boeser traveled back to campus, told coaches and teammates he had decided to turn pro and the next morning boarded a flight from Grand Forks to Minneapoli­s. He signed his first NHL contract, got a crash course from the coaching staff and was in the Vancouver Canucks’ lineup against his hometown Minnesota Wild with family and friends watching.

The Canucks brought his parents into the locker room to read the starting lineup, and his father, Duke, got the chance to say, “Starting on right wing, I can’t believe it, Brock Boeser!” His son then scored a goal in his unfor- gettable debut.

Boeser’s 19-hour whirlwind is an extreme example, but going directly from college to the NHL within days is now the norm as teams see benefits outweighin­g the risks.

The Coyotes played top prospect Clayton Keller two days after Boston University was eliminated from the NCAA tourney. The Buffalo Sabres signed free agent C.J. Smith and the New Jersey Devils signed Michael Kapla soon after UMass-Lowell was out. Elsewhere, the Avalanche injected some youth into their miserable season by bringing in firstround pick Tyson Jost from North Dakota, and the Canucks inked free agent Griffen Molino out of Western Michigan.

“It gives thema chance to get some games underneath their belt to kind of get accustomed to the speed and the size of NHL players,” Vancouver general manager Jim Benning said. “I think the players now, they’re so smart and they’re so wellcoache­d that they understand different systems and once they’re explained to them, they pick them up pretty fast.”

How and why college players jump right into NHL action is different on a caseby-case basis. For Boeser, Keller and Jost, it is about getting acclimated to the best league in the world at the end of the season with dividends potentiall­y paying off in training camp and beyond.

College free agents can get the jump on the next contract. Competitio­n for some of these undrafted players is so fierce that TSN analyst Craig Button called it the “price of doing business” to sign a player, thrown him onto the ice and “burn” a year of his entrylevel contract. The Blackhawks’ Kyle Baun (2015) and the Devils’ Miles Wood and Steve Santini and Jets’ Brandon Tanev last year are just a fewof the many examples.

“Sometimes it’s the bottom line between getting a guy and not getting a guy,” said New Jersey general manager Ray Shero, who didn’t have the luxury of salary-cap space to sign and play college free agents during his time in Pittsburgh. “A lot of times it’s going to come down to a number of teams chasing the same guy, and if a team’s willing to put the kid in the NHL right away, that could be the tipping point.”

Burn a year of an entrylevel contract puts a player one step closer to more money with a new deal. For teams, it’s a chance to add a top, young player without spending a draft pick. Shero and other GMs noted they still have a player’s rights as a restricted free agent and would rather add the talent now and worry about the next deal later.

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