The Province

Podkolzin working out on, and off, ice

Russian rookie says it's `just good for me' to keep improving his game and his new language

- PATRICK JOHNSTON pjohnston@postmedia.com @risingacti­on

In a season that has seen many twists and turns, including a coaching and management change, a remarkable turnaround in team play and star turns from a number of top players, one quietly consistent item has been Vasily Podkolzin being first on the ice for practice.

“Because I'm a young player,” the Russian rookie told reporters on Thursday, his first time speaking publicly since training camp and his first time without a translator.

“Work some little thing. Like maybe some shots. That's just good for me.”

Head coach Bruce Boudreau has had to chase the 20-year-old Podkolzin off the ice more than once, something the veteran coach has mentioned.

The work ethic Podkolzin has displayed all season will take him a long way, the coach said. A desire for hard work in a young power forward is something he's seen before: When Boudreau took over as Washington Capitals bench boss early in the 200708 season, a 21-year-old Alex Ovechkin was on his way to a 65-goal campaign in his third NHL season.

“I remember when I meet with Ovechkin, he said to me that Bruce can help me in my career as a player and as a person, too,” Podkolzin said. “He's a great coach. I'm happy to work with him and I hope we will work with him next season.”

The Ovechkin-Boudreau dynamic brought a smile to Podkolzin's face.

“Bruce told me something like stories of Ovechkin, and that's fun to see,” he said.

Podkolzin admitted he was struggling a little with his confidence in his early days in the NHL. He was a new player on a team that wasn't doing very well.

“I didn't know nothing,” he said. He was starting to find his confidence in the weeks before the early December firing of coach Travis Green.

“My first NHL coach, I just want to say thank you to him.”

Podkolzin seemed to mesh quickly with Boudreau, though. He has played in 77 of the Canucks' 80 games heading into the club's final two games of the 2021-22 campaign, scoring 14 goals and adding 12 assists for 26 points.

“I remember my first time, when I meet with Bruce, he told me like you're a good player. You're going to play in NHL. You're going to be a good player in this league. These words like, really, they helped me and I got real confidence,” he said.

Boudreau, for his part, has raved about the work ethic of the 10th overall pick in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft, the Canucks' most recent firstround­er.

“I have to rein him in or he'd be out there on a game day skate for an hour, an hour plus. He just loves to play. He loves to learn,” Boudreau said of Podkolzin. “When he makes a mistake, he's really hard on himself. He wants to be perfect. So you can see, if you fast-forward this three years from now, you're going to have a really good player that cares about the game and cares about how he plays.

“He's your typical power forward in today's age. He's going to go up and down the ice. He's going to get to about 220 pounds. He's a strong skater. He's just going to do the right things at the right time. He's going to be a hard guy to handle.”

The Moscow-born Podkolzin has massively improved his English. He had an English teacher in Russia, but speaking the language daily in his new home and workplace has made him feel even more comfortabl­e expressing himself.

“I think I began to feel better like after the New Year,” he said. “I began to understand coaches, the guys, teammates, and that's really fun when I can understand, that's easiest for me.”

Arturs Silovs, on emergency recall from AHL Abbotsford because of injuries to goalies Thatcher Demko and Jaroslav Halák, is Latvian but also speaks Russian and helped Podkolzin understand a few questions, but Podkolzin gave all his answers in English.

Podkolzin has been the captain on teams in the past, and with his work ethic Boudreau can see why.

“I could see him, once his English gets better and his understand­ing gets better, (plus) he feels more comfortabl­e about his own game, then I think I could see some leadership qualities coming out,” said Boudreau.

Asked what part of his game that he's improved upon that he's most proud of, Podkolzin pointed to how he's got better at winning the puck back on the forecheck and in board battles.

“The old guys talk with me every day about it,” he said.

The cultural adjustment has been hard, of course. There are no other Russians on the team, he pointed out. But he and his wife Sasha, whom he married last summer, have been able to make some friends around town.

They're big fans of taking walks around town, finding new restaurant­s and visiting Stanley Park, he said.

“Really beautiful city. I like it,” he said.

OVERTIME — Boudreau didn't rule out the possibilit­y of starting Silovs on Friday in Edmonton. The 2019 sixthround draft pick (156th overall) has split the season between AHL Abbotsford and Trois-Rivières of the ECHL.

 ?? — USA TODAY SPORTS FILES ?? Vasily Podkolzin, left, has drawn praise from coach Bruce Boudreau, who says the young Russian `he wants to be perfect.'
— USA TODAY SPORTS FILES Vasily Podkolzin, left, has drawn praise from coach Bruce Boudreau, who says the young Russian `he wants to be perfect.'
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