The Columbus Dispatch

A SCORING SURGE

In NHL, finer points of practice yielding scorers in bunches

- Jody Shelley Former Blue Jackets forward, current color analyst Coaching played a big part

“The players are getting very technical when it comes to improving their game. It’s technical study of angles at every level of the ice, millimeter by millimeter. These guys are studying how to skate, how to move. They’re breaking down how Auston Matthews and Connor Mcdavid shoot the puck. It’s coaching. This surge in scoring – it’s not by accident.”

The first generation to grow up with one-piece sticks didn’t necessaril­y get the most technologi­cally advanced piece of equipment in their hands. At least not right away.

When Blue Jackets All-star defenseman Zach Werenski was asked whether he learned from a young age to exploit the flex, torque and whip of the one-piece stick – because that is all he has ever used – he gave pause.

“Growing up, it was one stick, and if it broke, I never had the top-of-the-line model. They were too expensive,” Werenski said. “When I got to the U.S. (National Team Developmen­t) program, you had more opportunit­ies because they were paying for the sticks. And then at Michigan, you could change some stuff there. And then when you turn pro, you can do whatever you want. The older I’ve gotten, the more you change things, and try new flexes and curves and grips, and stuff like that.”

Along this career arc, the approach to developing high-end players also evolved. USA Hockey, for instance, adopted a European model – more practices and fewer games, with dedicated skills coaches for every aspect of the game. Over the past 10 years, Werenski, 26, estimates that he has had eight to 10 skills coaches who specialize in specific areas of the game (skating, stickhandl­ing, shooting, and so forth).

“One main guy, I skate with all summer,” Werenski said. “It’s Jim Hughes – Luke and Quinn and Jack’s dad.”

Each of the Hughes brothers was a first-round pick. Quinn Hughes of the Vancouver Canucks this season led defensemen in scoring with 92 points, which is one of the three highest totals by a defenseman since Winnipeg’s Phil Housley posted 97 in 1992-93.

“Jim Hughes is the guy that runs our skates,” Werenski said. “Then there are times I go out with Brandon Naurato, the Michigan coach. I hired Jonathan Sigalet as a personal skills guy. He watches all the games, sends me clips throughout the season – things I need to work on, things that can help my game, how to catch pucks the right way, how to keep my feet the right way, how to get the puck up the boards the right way.

“The skates with him are super slow. You’re not sweating at all. It’s all technical stuff. All the guys in the league are doing it. How do you stop the spin on the puck when you catch a pass? Stuff like that.”

Coming off shoulder surgery, Werenski this season tied a franchise record for points by a defenseman (57) and set a new mark for assists by a defenseman (46). He already owns the franchise record for goals by a defenseman in a season (20 in 63 games in 2019-20).

“The players are getting very technical when it comes to improving their game,” said former Blue Jackets forward

It’s the stick, yes, but there is much more to new golden era of NHL scoring. But we’ll start with the one-piece composite stick. It’s made of different combinatio­ns of carbon fiber, graphite, foam, epoxy resin, titanium and Kevlar. It comes close to having the feel of a wooden stick, but without the weight. It is also a lighter and more effective weapon than the two-piece sticks of the previous generation. It is a technologi­cal marvel that is highly customizab­le − for flex, lie, curve and so on.

It can cost upwards of $400. For one stick.

“One-piece sticks began coming out around 1992, and what we have now is a generation of players who’ve grown up with them,” said ESPN play-byplay man John Buccigross, a student of the game and its history. “It used to be that only a few guys could really rip it, like (former St. Louis Blues) defenseman) Al Macinnis. Now, everyone can rip it. There are fewer slapshots and more snap and wrist shots. The way these guys can torque up these sticks and pick their spots, goalies are almost helpless now in some situations.”

Last season, Erik Karlsson, then a San Jose Shark and now a Pittsburgh Penguin, became the first defenseman to surpass 100 points since Brian Leetch of the New York Rangers in 1991-92.

This season, Toronto’s Auston Matthews finished with 69 goals and, by a hair, missed out on becoming the first 70-goal scorer since Anaheim’s Teemu Selanne and Buffalo’s Alexander Mogilny scored 76 apiece in 1992-93.

Jody Shelley, the team’s color analyst. “It’s technical study of angles at every level of the ice, millimeter by millimeter. These guys are studying how to skate, how to move. They’re breaking down how Auston Matthews and Connor Mcdavid shoot the puck. It’s coaching. This surge in scoring – it’s not by accident.”

‘A game of mistakes’

The NHL came out of a dead-puck era after the 200405 lockout with a crackdown on obstructio­n and some rulebook changes, such as the eliminatio­n of the twoline pass rule. Scoring instantly shot up, then coaches adjusted and the trend was checked. Now, NHL games are again averaging more than six goals a game (or more than three per team).

“We’ve got a 50-win team down here in Dallas and I can count on one hand the times (coach) Pete Deboer stopped a drill in practice,” said Daryl Reaugh, a former NHL goaltender who ably serves as the Dallas Stars’ color analyst. “Coaches used to preach perfection. Mistakes were not acceptable. Now, nobody hits anymore and young guys aren’t as intimidate­d.

“They’re allowed to make mistakes to a certain degree. It used to be shooters aimed for pads, hoping for a rebound; they were always worried about what’s going to happen defensivel­y if the puck went the other way. Now, they make plays.”

There were 39 100-point scorers from 1999-2000 through 2021, an average of fewer than two a season. Granted, this stretch included a season and a half lost to lockouts and two seasons that were shortened for pandemic reasons. But it also included four full seasons without a 100-point scorer.

Over the past two seasons, there have been 20 100point scorers.

Numbers are popping

Hall of Famer Guy Lafleur won the Art Ross Trophy twice, with 136 points in 1976-77 and 132 in 1977-78. He smoked cigarettes between periods and his offseason regimen was water skiing (good for the core) and more lung darts. He also played at a time when every team used up a roster spot or two to stash a goon and/or a serial felon.

There always been, and always will be, generation­al talents. On Lafleur’s heels, Gretzky became the GOAT. Gretzky studied Gordie Howe. Sidney Crosby studied Gretzky – and this season, Sidney Crosby tied an insane Gretzky record by averaging a point a game for the 19th season in a row. Is Crosby the best player in Penguins history? Or, is it Mario Lemieux?

These days, goalies are better than ever – bigger, more athletic and more highly skilled – and they coached on every detail of their position. Yet, they are getting beaten not only by generation­al players such as Connor Mcdavid, Nathan Mackinnon and Matthews. Modern scoring depth is such that bottom-six forwards are also real and present dangers. There is no more room for goons. Four lines roll, and they all attack.

Reaugh recalled a game near the end of the regular season in which the Stars were beaten by a bottom-six forward on a short-side roof job.

“That’s a horrible goal if you gave it up back in the day, but the position was played differentl­y then – you didn’t just play on your knees, and those kind of shots weren’t expected,” he said. “Now, enough guys are capable of scoring what may have been considered a rare goal not too long ago. A new generation has come along and they’re saying, ‘I have the ability with these sticks to elevate the puck and snap it high right in front of your face.’ ”

In the Phil Esposito/bobby Orr 1970s and the Gretzky/paul Coffey 1980s, it was not unusual to see a forward with 50-plus goals and a defenseman with 20-plus goals on the same team in the same season. The game evolved and such a coupling became a rarity. In this century, there have been two such – Vinny Lecavalier/dan Boyle with the 2006-07 Tampa Bay Lightning and Alexander Ovechkin/mike Green with the 2008-08 Washington Capitals.

This season, Mackinnon (51 goals) and Cale Makar (21) of the Colorado Avalanche joined the 50-20 club. And Nashville’s Filip Forsberg (48) and Roman Josi (22) were among those who came close.

“They’ve broken down the game to another level,” Shelley said.

marace@dispatch.com

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Blue Jackets defenseman Zach Werenski's training regimen is focused on areas such as catching passes and stickhandl­ing.
ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Blue Jackets defenseman Zach Werenski's training regimen is focused on areas such as catching passes and stickhandl­ing.
 ?? NICK TURCHIARO/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Maple Leafs center Auston Matthews led the NHL with 69 goals this season.
NICK TURCHIARO/USA TODAY SPORTS Maple Leafs center Auston Matthews led the NHL with 69 goals this season.
 ?? USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Michael Arace
Columnist
Columbus Dispatch
USA TODAY NETWORK Michael Arace Columnist Columbus Dispatch

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