Vancouver Sun

BANCKS SHOWS HIS WORTH

Comets captain mentors rising stars

- ED WILLES Ewilles@postmedia.com Twitter.com/willesonsp­orts

The call came five years ago for Carter Bancks and every detail of those few days is burned into the hard drive of the Utica Comets’ captain.

There was the feeling.

“It was like everything I’d done in my life, every long bus trip, every practice, had paid off,” he said.

There was standing on the blue-line for the rendition of The Star- Spangled Banner at Chicago’s United Center.

“I’ve never had literally every hair on my body standing on end.”

And there was looking across at the Blackhawks, who would go on to win the Stanley Cup a couple months later.

“There was (Jonathan) Toews and (Patrick) Kane and Duncan Keith, guys I’d grown up admiring. It was awesome.”

Bancks was 23 that spring and there he was, a kid from Marysville, B.C., playing in The Show. It was supposed to be the start of his NHL career. It was supposed to be the start of so many good things.

And, in many ways, it was. But Bancks, a 28-year-old career minor-leaguer, now looks around the Comets’ dressing room and sees kids just beginning their journey, trying to learn to be a pro, trying to figure out how to make it in this unforgivin­g game.

Bancks’ NHL career consisted of two games at the tail-end of the 2012-13 season, but those two games will stay with him for the rest of his life.

That’s why he’d like to help those kids get that same feeling, maybe just hold on to it for a little longer.

“I try to show them how to compete every night and get ready for the next level,” said Bancks.

“I’m thrilled every time one of my teammates gets called up. I’m tuning in when they’re playing in Vancouver. It’s a different role for me and one I embrace.”

Bancks is the central plank in a Comets leadership group guiding and mentoring the NHL team’s top prospects. Jonathan Dahlen, Lukas Jasek and Kole Lind have already arrived. Another wave is expected next season.

Collective­ly, this represents the best group of prospects the Canucks have ever assembled. But their developmen­t, to a large degree, is dependent on their experience in Utica.

That’s why Bancks and others are as important in their roles as Dahlen, and others, are in theirs.

“We’re trying to find a balance between being a successful team and teaching the kids the right way,” said Comets GM Ryan Johnson. “We have to be careful we’re bringing in the right (veteran) players who are going to push the young guys the right way.”

That’s not as easy as it sounds. The Comets veterans still have NHL ambitions of their own and they’re being asked to help kids who might move ahead of them in the organizati­on.

Michael Chaput, for example, has played 135 career games in the NHL, 68 with the Canucks last year. At 26, he was the Comets’ best player in the first two games of the team’s playoff series against the Toronto Marlies but didn’t seem especially eager to discuss his mentorship role.

“We’re in the playoffs,” he said. “That’s all I worry about.”

Cole Cassels is another member of the Comets’ leadership group. At 22 he’s not old but this is also his third season with the Comets and he’s yet to break out of his role as a checking centre.

“We’re all trying to get (to the NHL) and everyone’s here to help each other,” he said. “(The younger players) can come in here and see how hard you have to work to get to the next level. They see the grind and how hard it is to get to the NHL. It can only help them.”

That, at least, is the plan. But as Bancks knows, things don’t always go according to plan.

“When you get to be my age you understand your job and how you can be the most valuable to the team,” he said.

The game, after all, has given him so much, like those memories which no one can take away from him.

I’m thrilled every time one of my teammates gets called up. I’m tuning in when they’re playing in Vancouver.

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 ?? LINDSAY A. MOGLE/UTICA COMETS ?? Carter Bancks and the Utica Comets scored a 5-2 win Wednesday in Game 3 of their series against the Toronto Marlies and trail the best-of-five series 2-1.
LINDSAY A. MOGLE/UTICA COMETS Carter Bancks and the Utica Comets scored a 5-2 win Wednesday in Game 3 of their series against the Toronto Marlies and trail the best-of-five series 2-1.
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