The Province

Gaudette’s education continuing in NHL

NCAA’s leading scorer brings strong two-way pedigree from his time at Northeaste­rn

- Ben Kuzma bkuzma@postmedia.com twitter.com/@benkuzma

Signed and sealed, but can Adam Gaudette deliver?

Dylan Sikura knows he can. The Northeaste­rn University winger, who signed an entry level contract Sunday with the Chicago Blackhawks, knows the significan­ce of his linemate reaching a three-year deal Monday with the Canucks. It carries a US$925,000 salary cap hit and includes a minor-league component at US$70,000.

The 21-year-old Gaudette not only led NCAA scoring with 60 points (30 goals, 30 assists) in 38 games, the 2015 fifth-round draft pick is a favourite to capture the Hobey Baker Award as the top collegiate player. Amid all that, the Braintree, Mass., native — he arrived in Vancouver Monday night and could play Thursday to burn the first year of his deal — captured the imaginatio­n of his teammates and the Canucks.

“He’s a good team guy — every night you know what you’re getting from him,” said Sikura. “It’s his passion for the game. He’s pretty uncanny and I don’t think there are a lot of guys in the NCAA who like putting the puck in the back of the net like he does.

“Every night he brings the heat. He leads by example in the way he plays — a full 200-foot game — and he’ll block shots and do the little things to help the team out.”

That’s music to Travis Green’s ears. The Canucks coach has preached three-zone awareness and strong play without the puck. And while it might be easier for the right-shot Gaudette to transition to the NHL as a replacemen­t for injured winger Brock Boeser, that’s not the plan. Much like Bo Horvat, the 6-foot-1, 184-pound Gaudette is a centre by trade and the Canucks will get a quick read on where his complete game is at.

“Travis wants to play with speed on the forecheck and coming back with speed and in that three-deep system, he (Gaudette) is a good fit,” Canucks general manager Jim Benning said Monday. “The details in his game are good and what’s going to make him good is that he’s got a relentless work rate.”

And a nose for the net. Aside from total-game awareness and an improving stride, Gaudette scored 56 goals in 75 games the last two NCAA seasons combined. That gets your attention. This season, he formed one of the most formidable trios with Sikura, who had 22 goals, and captain Nolan Stevens, who struck 24 times and signed an entry level deal Sunday with the St. Louis Blues.

Gaudette was also first in points per game (1.58), second in game-winning goals (five) and fourth in power-play goals (11).

“He was a big part of driving the offence and he’s an extremely hard worker and that’s what we want,” added Benning. “He’s on the first power play, he kills penalties and goes against top lines every night. When you’re expected to be the guy and are still producing, that’s a lot of responsibi­lity. He rose to the occasion.”

It made Gaudette’s contract leverage — burning a year of his deal like Boeser did a year ago — easier for Benning to digest. Gaudette could have gone back to Northeaste­rn for a fourth year and become an unrestrict­ed free agent if he didn’t reach terms here by August 2019.

That wasn’t going to happen. Gaudette is loyal to the Canucks for taking the draft chance and they needed to lock up a top prospect.

“We wanted to get him signed and get him some games,” said Benning. “He’ll know what to expect and do what he needs to do in the summer to get off to a good start next fall.”

A window on Gaudette’s world opened July 6 in the Summer Showcase at Rogers Arena. Pitted against coveted first-round draft pick Elias Pettersson before 5,000 season-ticket holders, Gaudette was hard on the forecheck, hard on Pettersson with a heavy shoulder check behind the net and hard on goalies with a twogoal effort.

“He (Pettersson) is definitely a higher pick than me, but I definitely wanted to show that I can compete at the level he’s competing at because we’re battling for the same spot,” said Gaudette. “I wanted to show everybody that I can play at the same pace that he can.”

Gaudette’s ascension mirrors many prominent U.S.-born prospects. He attended Thayer Academy in his hometown and was coached by ex-NHLer Tony Amonte. But he took his game to another level in one junior season at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in the growing United States Hockey League.

“I just learned a lot more,” said Gaudette, “It (the USHL) forced me to become quicker and helped with getting a different lifestyle. It’s all hockey and it helped me mature as a player and a person.”

How it all came to this isn’t that surprising. Gaudette’s dad played football and baseball and his mom played basketball. His younger brothers Brady and Cam played hockey for the Under-19 Boston Advantage.

“All of us were in diapers pretty much when we first went on the ice,” said Gaudette.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Northeaste­rn University forward Adam Gaudette, centre, signed an entry level deal with the Canucks Monday and will forgo another season in the NCAA after leading the nation in Division 1 scoring with 30 goals and 30 assists in 38 games.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Northeaste­rn University forward Adam Gaudette, centre, signed an entry level deal with the Canucks Monday and will forgo another season in the NCAA after leading the nation in Division 1 scoring with 30 goals and 30 assists in 38 games.
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