Game On Magazine 2017 Game On Magazine - Regular Season Edition | Page 50

WHEELER’S MOVE TO CENTRE A LESSON FOR YOUNG PLAYERS BY RYAN DI T TRICK When the Winnipeg Jets lost top-line centre Mark Scheifele to a long-term injury late in the calendar year, many were left asking “what now?” The answer – in the short term, at least – was right there in front of them, and has so far proven to be a good lesson for young players everywhere looking to make more of an impact. Thirty-one-year-old Blake Wheeler has always been known as a versatile, everything-for-the-team-type player, but his history of having played all three forward positions in his prime development years has been a game-changer in what could have been a fight for survival. Wheeler, who broke into the league as a natural centre out of the University of Minnesota more than a decade ago, took over in the middle and was immediately thrust back into the spotlight as a defensive tactician while the Jets push for their first-ever Central Division title. On his wings, rookie sensation Kyle Connor and the stud sophomore, a 2017 Calder finalist, Patrik Laine, whose combined 135 games of NHL experience joined the captain’s 700-plus on one of the league’s most unlikely No. 1 forward units. The trio was not only expected to maintain, but lead the charge offensively and contribute at both ends of the ice to help fill the void left by their talented, 80-plus point pivot. That first forward has to position himself down low to either win a puck battle, retrieve the puck and make a play to the middle where the recipient of a pass can find a lane and gather speed through the neutral zone. “If it’s a winger, the centre has to adjust, read, pull back and position himself differently,” Todd Woodcroft, a “If I can just be positive with him, try to build them up, second-year assistant coach with the club, explained try to make them feel good, we can have some success. following practice in early January. “That’s the single We went out and had a good first game and gained a hardest thing to understand for a winger moving to the little confidence with each other, and that was huge,” middle – when to recognize when to go and when to let their wingers go. … We’re reading what the other team Wheeler said. is giving us and we’re seeing what pressure they’re There was little, if any, doubt they could dominate putting down. If either (Laine) or (Connor) is the first offensively if they could get the puck in the right spots one to that battle, then Blake has to get himself into in the other teams’ end, but the biggest adjustment position to accept a pass either along the wall or in the and learning curve came 200 feet south, where the middle of the ice. It’s not always go, go, go.” Jets have committed themselves more than ever to a Even so, and because of his unique and altogether dependable defensive structure. world-class skill-set, Wheeler is often the first one Teams at the pro level employ a variety of strategies to back, anyway. His speed, physicality and sheer will not only contain top-end talent in their own end, but to to win puck battles makes him the perfect candidate, quickly and effectively break the puck out and create meaning his wingers are usually the ones in charge of accepting that first pass and making a play. their own offence in transition. Lofty, indeed. For the Jets, the key to the breakout is the first forward back, or “F1.” 5 2 | GA G AME ME O ON N | R EGU L AR A R SEASON SEA SO N EDITION EDITI ON 2018 “The ability to take that puck off the wall and pop it to the middle, especially when you have someone down on top of you, that’s a real hard skill,” Woodcroft said