Times Colonist

Motte modern-day grinder for the Canucks

- BEN KUZMA

CHICAGO — Tyler Motte knows it would take a Chelsea Dagger — an actual knife and not the burlesque dancer depicted in the popular sporting anthem — to kill a commitment to return the Chicago Blackhawks to a place of NHL prominence.

The former Blackhawks forward also knows these guys are not those guys — that superskill­ed and incredibly willed bunch that won the Stanley Cup in 2010, 2013 and 2015 — because they got long in the tooth and were slow to transition to a youthorien­ted game.

However, Motte knows something else about these Hawks, who have won five straight games and are three points back of the final Western Conference wildcard playoff spot.

“They’ve got quite a few in that room who have won in the playoffs and they’re still hungry,” said the Vancouver Canucks’ fourthline right winger, who was a fourth-round pick of the Blackhawks in 2013 and played 33 NHL games three years later before being traded to Columbus.

“In my rookie year, every day I tried to take everything you can and take it to heart, whether it was coming from [Joel] Quennevill­e or [Patrick] Kane or Jonathan [Toews].

“You have a lot of respect for the players and Quennevill­e going in. He was pretty calm and collected in the room, but he wasn’t afraid to get on a guy when he needed to. He knew how to control the room from a respect point and push the group in the right direction.”

Quennevill­e is gone, but Kane and Toews have arrived again to spark the drive to get the Madhouse On Madison jumping again. Kane was second in league scoring after 52 games with 78 points (32-46), while Toews has turned back the clock and ramped up his resolve with 53 points (23-30) to crack the top 30 in scoring.

The Blackhawks also have a dozen players 23 years of age or younger, so they’re getting the job done in the standings and with a transition­ing roster. As for Motte, being traded twice and with his third NHL club at age 23 can do one of two things. It can either heighten the resolve to prove a small winger can thrive in what is usually a big man’s role — bumping and grinding on the fourth line — or shrink from the challenge.

Ten years ago, it would have been tough for Motte to beat the stigma that you had to be 6-foot-2 and 220 pounds to pound away in a fourth-line role. Listed at 5-foot10 and 192 pounds, the St. Clair, Michigan, native and University of Michigan standout is a fast and fearless forechecke­r and a trendsette­r.

“A lot of guys have paved the way to get me to this point,” said Motte, who has a career-high 14 points (7-7) in 52 games this season and had a 32-goal NCAA season. “The game has changed a little bit. It’s gone to skill and speed, which helps me.

“I feel I can play and skate with some of the best, even with the size difference. It doesn’t get in my head at all. I just play my game.”

That game includes leading the Canucks in hits, and Motte is third among club forward in blocked shots and take-aways to become a roster staple with Jay Beagle and various left wingers.

“Some people might be surprised because of my size, but that’s been my game,” added Motte. “And it’s pretty clear my role on a lot of nights is to make the other team’s night hard — whether hard on the body or hard in the D-zone or finishing checks.

“It’s just kind of snowballed here as we’ve got it going. It’s not where I go out every night and say I want four or five hits, but if the opportunit­y is there, I’m going to take it.”

Motte had 56 points (32-24) in his final season with the powerhouse Wolverines, whose roster included current NHL standouts Kyle Connor, Zach Werenski and J.T. Compher. But they dropped the 2016 regional final 5-2 to eventual national champion North Dakota, a dominant team that included Brock Boeser and Troy Stecher.

Most important, Motte got life lessons on and off the ice from legendary Michigan coach Red Berenson.

“One of his things is, you have more time than you think with the puck — especially your first couple of years in college against bigger and older guys,” recalled Motte. “Some players are a little jumpy and it can be the same at this level. You should take a moment to make a play and sometimes you rush it.

“I took every opportunit­y with the little things and just the passion he had for the game.”

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