Lodi News-Sentinel

Meier’s evolution in San Jose on display

- Curtis Pashelka

Bob Boughner had a heart-to-heart with Timo Meier in his exit interview at the end of last season and made it clear that he needed to see improvemen­t in just about every facet of the power forward’s game.

Meier had 12 goals and 31 points in 54 games in 2020-21 — good enough to be the Sharks’ third-leading scorer in the secondstra­ight dismal season for the franchise, but nowhere adequate for one of the team’s offensive leaders after he had scored 52 goals in the prior 148 NHL games.

Well, look at Meier now.

After his thoroughly impressive two-point performanc­e in the Sharks’ 4-1 win over the Minnesota Wild on Tuesday, Meier has 14 points in 10 games, putting himself in the same company as a couple of the team’s alltime greats.

Per NHL Public Relations, Meier’s red-hot start through 10 games is bettered only among Sharks alumni by Owen Nolan’s 17 points in 1999-2000 and Joe Thornton’s 15 points in both 2009-10 and 2010-11.

Meier has at least one point in all but one of his 10 games this season, with the exception being a 4-0 Sharks loss to Montreal on Oct. 28. He needed 19 games to get to 14 points last season.

For Boughner, though, Meier’s offensive production is a by-product of the work he’s been doing away from the puck.

“I think he’s finally bought into the better he plays defensivel­y, the less he’s going to be in his own end,” Boughner said. “He’s even doing some great things in the offensive zone that he wasn’t doing last year.

“Instead of throwing pucks away, he’s holding onto pucks. He’s playing heavy, using his body, and being physical. Those are all things that are going to make him successful.”

Meier was a force in the first period against the Wild.

On the game’s opening goal, Meier carried

the puck into the Minnesota zone, drew two defenders toward him, including Matt Dumba. Meier then fed it to Logan Couture, who found Mario Ferraro with a backhand pass for a pretty tap-in past goalie Cam Talbot.

Meier then made it 2-0. After he again carried the puck into the Wild offensive zone and again drew a pair of Minnesota skaters toward him, he stopped and fed Marc-Edouard Vlasic at the blue line. Vlasic’s shot went off a body in front of the net, but the rebound came right to Meier, who picked up the loose change and scored his sixth of the season.

“He’s got some more urgency in his overall game,” Sharks defenseman Erik Karlsson said of Meier. “He works hard away from the puck. We know he’s a good skater. He’s a big body and so far this year, he’s used that to his advantage.”

Meier got run over by Matt Dumba just before the Sharks’ first goal, one of a few times the Wild defenseman made his presence felt. Dumba also delivered a hard hip-check on Alexander Barabanov in the second period.

Meier took the hit and had something to say to Dumba after Ferraro’s goal — but he wasn’t saying what that was.

Meier did elaborate on his talk with Boughner at the end of last season, though.

“I’m probably the toughest guy on myself and I have high expectatio­ns for myself,” Meier said. “I knew going into the summer where I wanted to improve and what I needed to do to have success for my personal game, and obviously how to be a better player for the team.

“I think as a team, we played some good hockey and tonight was an example. I’m trying to come in every day and keep getting better.”

 ?? PATRICK FARRELL/MIAMI HERALD ?? The Sharks' Timo Meier (28) controls the puck on Jan. 21, 2019 in Sunrise, Fla.
PATRICK FARRELL/MIAMI HERALD The Sharks' Timo Meier (28) controls the puck on Jan. 21, 2019 in Sunrise, Fla.

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