National Post

Tavares ready to make some noise after slow summer

Leafs star no longer new guy on roster

- Lance Hornby

Listing the concerns of the Maple Leafs as training camp looms goes something like this:

Sign Mitch Marner, mute any talk about Mike Babcock’s future, get Zach Hyman and Travis Dermott healthy, set a plan on defence with newcomers Tyson Barrie and Cody Ceci, determine a backup goalie and integrate the new assistant coaches and any other recent player additions.

What the club shouldn’t fret about is John Tavares, spared scrutiny after being as good as advertised in the first of his seven- year, US$ 77- million contract. Including playoffs, he had 49 goals and 93 points and didn’t miss a game.

While Tavares agreed Wednesday during an informal workout that he’s enjoying the calm compared to one summer ago when he was the talk of the town, that doesn’t mean he’s in cruise control.

He was certainly working up a sweat with a group of teammates, old and new, including offensive drills with Jason Spezza. Tavares is approachin­g his 11th NHL season.

“The hunger is always there, you just appreciate it more and just don’t want to take any year for granted,” Tavares said. “Careers are so short.”

Tavares skipped much of this traditiona­l August conditioni­ng at the team’s training base last year with a wedding to get through on top of a tidal wave of interest that followed his leaving the New York Islanders for his boyhood team.

Now he’s strictly channellin­g adrenalin toward the Oct. 2 season opener against Ottawa in hopes he and the 36- year- old Spezza set good examples for rookies such as Yegor Korshkov and Jeremy Bracco, who practised with the vets Wednesday.

“It’s great, it gets you excited again that camp and the season are around the corner. We want to get back at it, build off of last year ( 100 points with another first- round playoff loss), have a better ending.

“Whether it’s guys we’ve acquired who’ve already establishe­d themselves or even a lot of our prospects, it’s big. As I play more in the league, you think about when you were young and how these guys are excited to be out here with a lot of the veterans.

“It really pushes guys like myself because you see ( younger players’) developmen­t and skill set. You work with them, find ways to get better and develop chemistry, culture and an identity within the organizati­on, top to bottom, to have a team that’s going to be good a long time.”

Though both are centres, Tavares and Spezza had some nice puck exchanges Wednesday, evident of long history as summer training partners. There’s also a nice balance of sweater numbers — Tavares’s 91 and Spezza’s 19.

“I’ve known Jason a long time and have a lot of respect for him as a player and as a person,” said Tavares. “He’s great father, great family guy. His presence will be big for us in the long term, especially losing Patty (Marleau) and Ron (Hainsey).”

The hunger is always there, you just appreciate it more.

In case you forgot, the Leafs are going on 53 years without a Stanley Cup.

But for the second straight camp, they’ll benefit from players who had short summers after winning a minor- league title. After the Toronto Marlies hoisted the Calder Cup in 2018, the ECHL’S Newfoundla­nd Growlers won the Kelly Cup last season. Growlers expected at camp this year include big centre Hudson Elynuik.

“Any time you get a chance to go that far in playoffs and win a championsh­ip, it’s going to help in different areas,” said Elynuik, another early arrival to the summer skates. “Being able to get through a long regular season and still have an impact in playoffs is definitely a good sign.”

At the end, the Growlers had to travel thousands of kilometres west to play the Ohio- based Toledo Walleye in the final. They lost coach Ryane Clowe early in the season when concussion symptoms from his playing days flared up with John Snowden taking his place.

“The adversity our team faced ... that’s one of the coolest things I’ve ever done,” Elynuik said. “It was electric ( on June 4, championsh­ip night in St. John’s). Every person I’ve ever met in Newfoundla­nd is kind, open and they take people in. They have a lot of history there.”

Elynuik was an unsigned third-round draft pick of the Carolina Hurricanes before signing with the Marlies last year. His father Pat won a Memorial Cup in junior with the Western Hockey League’s Prince Albert Raiders and played 526 NHL games. In a veteran- laden Leafs farm system, the 6- foot- 5 Elynuik found his groove with the Growlers in his first pro season after 86 points in his last junior year with the WHL’S Spokane Chiefs.

Like the big trophy, all winners are supposed to get a day with the Kelly Cup, but when it was on its western Canadian leg this week, Elynuik was with the Leafs.

“We had some unreal times with it,” said Elynuik.

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John Tavares

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