The Ukiah Daily Journal

Sharks may have found a big asset

- By Curtis Pashelka cpashelka@ bayareanew­sgroup. com

SAN JOSE >> The Sharks are having their worst season by points percentage in nearly 30 years. No NHL team has allowed more goals this year. They've had three losing streaks of at least nine games. Attendance totals have been among the smallest in the league.

It's been a hard season for all involved.

But amid the carnage, the Sharks appear to have found another piece to build around. A “big” piece.

Winger Klim Kostin scored again Monday in the Sharks' 4- 2 loss to the Seattle Kraken at SAP Center, giving him eight points in 12 games since he came to San Jose on March 8 in a trade with the Detroit Red Wings.

Kostin, at 6- foot- 4 and 232 pounds, is the Sharks' largest player and fits right into general manager Mike Grier's stated intention of building a team that's hard to play against and is in the opposition's face. Certainly, Kostin hasn't been afraid to throw his weight around, with 12 hits in his last six games.

“He's a big player. He makes plays, he's physical, he's good around the net,” Sharks defenseman Kyle Burroughs said of Kostin. “Plays with a little bit of an edge, which is fun to see. He's fit in pretty seamlessly.

“He ( has some) stink to his game and a bit of snarl, and we like that.”

“I ( don't) really like big hits. I ( don't) really like to hurt guys,” the soft- spoken Kostin said. “But when the game goes that way, we've got to answer.”

Kostin had five hits Monday in a sometimes chippy affair with the Kraken. But he's also showing a bit of the skill that made him a St. Louis Blues first- round draft pick in 2017.

After being used mostly as a fourth- liner thus far in his NHL career, Kostin is adapting to a bigger role, as he's playing with Mikael Granlund and Fabian Zetterlund on the Sharks' top line.

In the second period Monday, Kostin showed his soft hands with a deft deflection of a Marc- Edouard Vlasic shot that got past Kraken goalie Philipp Grubauer, bringing the Sharks to within one.

“He's a hockey player,” Sharks coach David Quinn said of Kostin. “He's got poise with the puck. He's not afraid to make a play. If he can't make a play, he protects it. So there's a lot to like about him.

“He's a first- round talent and is making the most of his opportunit­y.”

Kostin, 24, certainly welcomed a change of scenery after he sat out eight of nine Red Wings games before the trade deadline — even if it was to the NHL's last- place team.

“Playing with guys like ( Granlund and Zetterlund), obviously you're going to have some points, some goals, and some assists because they're good players,” Kostin said. “I just feel alive again and enjoying hockey with the Sharks.

“Just want to pay back the coaching ( staff for their) trust.”

Why do you feel alive, Kostin was asked.

“Ice time,” Kostin deadpanned, as he's averaged 14: 15 minutes per game with the Sharks compared to 8: 43 with the Red Wings.

“I really hope I can stay here and be a big part of the team,” he added. “I've really enjoyed my time here, enjoying the guys, enjoying the staff and everyone on the team.”

Kostin has one more year left on his contract that carries an average annual value of $ 2 million. He's one of nine players on the Sharks' roster right now who are 25 years old or younger.

Up front are William Eklund, Thomas Bordeleau, Filip Zadina, Zetterlund, and Givani Smith, and the younger crowd on the back end includes Mario Ferraro, Calen Addison, and Henry Thrun. More prospects are in the pipeline.

Kostin diagnosed perfectly what the Sharks ( 1749- 8) need going forward.

“We have a lot of young guys so we're missing a few, I would say, superstars that we need, like experience­d guys,” Kostin said.

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