The Standard (St. Catharines)

Mcdavid’s drive to be the best begins off the ice

‘I see him do these skill drills ... he won’t stop until he gets it perfect’

- STEPHEN WHYNO

Christian Dedonato doesn’t see Connor Mcdavid much in the off-season, at least not until at least mid-afternoon. Mcdavid is too busy working out in the gym or staying sharp on the ice.

When the longtime friends get together to skate, surf, kick a soccer ball around or throw a baseball, Dedonato still sees an intensity in Mcdavid, now seven years into a standout if frustratin­g NHL career.

“I see him do these skill drills and he won’t stop until he gets it perfect,” Dedonato said. “Even going to throw a baseball around or surfing, everything just has to be perfect, and I think that shows on the ice and shows in his personalit­y — his commitment.”

Knowing Mcdavid for more than a decade before the two entered high school, Dedonato isn’t surprised by the success of the Edmonton Oilers captain. What he knows better than most is how much Mcdavid sacrifices off the ice in his drive to be the best player in the league.

At 25, Mcdavid is on pace to be the league’s top scorer for the fourth time and led the Oilers to a third consecutiv­e playoff appearance.

“He wants to be the best,” said Dedonato, a hockey player at Brock University who lives less than 10 minutes from Mcdavid during the off-season. “He knows it’s going to take a lot of work to be the best, and he’s been working his entire life to be the best.”

The playoffs are now his proving ground because Mcdavid has done just about everything during the regular season. He is a two-time Hart Trophy winner as league MVP, a three-time pick by his peers for the Ted Lindsay/lester B. Pearson Award as most outstandin­g player and five times has surpassed the 100-point mark.

For all those accolades, he has not reached the Stanley Cup final and the Oilers have only won one playoff series in his tenure, back in 2017.

“There’s probably a level of frustratio­n, which is natural,” said retired NHL forward Matt Hendricks, who played with Mcdavid for two seasons from 2015 to 2017. “But then, saying that, he just keeps coming out and performing the way he does every game. It’s incredible.”

Hendricks noticed right after Mcdavid was picked first in the NHL draft the so-called “Next One” wanted to put the Oilers on his shoulders and “be the focal point and the reason that they came out of those dark days.”

That has not changed. “Obviously, I want to play well and contribute to the team as much as I can,” Mcdavid said. “When I’m at my best, I contribute a lot.”

Since the Oilers fell out of a playoff position March 4, Mcdavid has averaged more than 21 minutes of ice time and put up 15 goals and 28 assists for 43 points in 25 games. They’ve won 17 of those 25 games to clinch a playoff spot.

“He’s driven to win. He has put a lot of emphasis in some of the areas that our staff when we’ve come together (recently) has put a lot of emphasis on, which is his work back to our own end,” said coach Jay Woodcroft, who was promoted from the minors when Dave Tippett was fired in February. “For me, we’re asking some of our higherminu­te players to do a lot of things and assume a little bit more responsibi­lity.”

After getting picked first in the 2015 draft, Mcdavid struggled on faceoffs. He won just 42 per cent of draws his first three seasons and is now over a 54 per cent success rate, which ranks 21st in the league.

Much of that is thanks to the work Mcdavid does in the off-season with retired forward Gary Roberts, who has become a high performanc­e trainer.

“For me it’s those characteri­stics are what separate really, really good hockey players from great hockey players,” Hendricks said. “Connor from Day 1, I knew that he had that. He has a game plan. Everything has a purpose.”

Obviously, I want to play well and contribute to the team as much as I can. When I’m at my best, I contribute a lot.

CONNOR MCDAVID

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Edmonton Oilers captain Connor Mcdavid celebrates with Tyson Barrie and Zach Hyman after scoring in the third period against the Penguins in Pittsburgh on Tuesday night. The Oilers won, 5-1.
GENE J. PUSKAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Edmonton Oilers captain Connor Mcdavid celebrates with Tyson Barrie and Zach Hyman after scoring in the third period against the Penguins in Pittsburgh on Tuesday night. The Oilers won, 5-1.

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