06 October, 2008

Category Archives: Player Profiles

Boyd Gordon’s Summer School

Craig Laughlin, Zoe Pellowitz, Boyd Gordon - photo courtesty Vic Ignacio - Washington Capitals Fan ClubHow exactly does an NHLer spend his summer preparing for the rigors of the NHL’s 82 games-plus season? We know vaguely that many of them retain the services of personal trainers, that they skate a fair bit with other NHLers in informal gatherings at rinks across North America, and that few sit around indolent all summer chugging beers (hockey bloggers fill in capably in that task). Specifically, though, how do these remarkable athletes train and prepare for their lengthy immersion in the planet’s fastest, roughest, and, come playoff time, most grueling team sport? It’s a question I wanted to pose to a Capitals’ player this summer, and with the help of Capitals’ Director of Media Relations Nate Ewell this week, I was able to.

When I first learned that Boyd Gordon had arrived back in D.C. in the first week of August, I was startled. Western Canadian Caps have historically trained back home in Western Canada and arrived in town much closer to the start of September’s training camp. But far from cutting short his offseason training regimen, Gordon told me that he’d completed a demanding training schedule in Vancouver, of fully three months, in British Columbia’s mountains and at a fitness facility among the likes of Trevor Linden and Kris Beech. Now he was back in D.C. to continue his preparations for the upcoming season  largely because so many of his Caps’ teammates want to start skating together well in advance of camp. Beginning next week, Gordon told me, a healthy contingent of Caps will be skating together out at Kettler Capitals five times a week, in “hour-and-a-half, maybe hour-and-forty-five [minute]” conditioning stints featuring “drills, scrimmaging . . . and then the [serious] skating.”

I got fatigued just listening to Gordon’s description of “running mountains” in Vancouver for three months and then getting serious on the ice out at Kettler this month. On Wednesday Gordon was giving Caps’ broadcaster Craig Laughlin a hand with the instruction of 25 or so summer camp Mites on the Kettler ice. I began my inquiry of him wondering when he individually transitioned from the rest and relaxation NHLers needed after completing the bruises-and-bone-battering slate of last season to the get-serious-about-next-season training regimen.

“I don’t usually take that much time off from working out,” he told me. “I had surgery on my ankle at the end of last season and took off four weeks. The ankle feels great,” he claimed.

“So about four weeks off with the surgery, but then I get stir crazy.”

Vancouver has some pretty serious mountains and hills, and apparently Gordon views their variety and severity as a training lure. He is also drawn to British Columbia’s temperate summers.

“It’s cool, you don’t have to get up early to go running and stuff. Every day’s different. You go five days a week, sometimes four depending on how early in the summer [it is].”

The fatigued-from-listening blogger interrupted to inquire about the possibility of training-free weekends. Beers with buddies . . . a furlough from the fitness frenzy. Weekends, Gordon assured me, are for recovery and a bit of a mental break.

“Every guy’s different [in specific fitness routine], but June [workouts], it’s almost exclusively off ice,” he explained. Gordon spent his June pumping his legs up the British Columbia peaks and working with equipment and weights at a Vancouver facility frequented by pro hockey players. Summer’s schedule for NHLers appears designed to deliver them to September training camp emerged from fitness routines that improve their overall strength and conditioning but also address areas of need in their physical development. But the programs also have to guard against training extremes that could burn out or injure the players. Continue reading ›

Mathieu Perreault: Lightning in a (8-oz.) Bottle

Perreault and Backstrom - photo by sk84fun_dcThirty minutes prior to Friday night’s Rookie Camp scrimmage Drummondville, Quebec native Matheiu Perreault could be seen standing behind the players’ benches, not yet in gear, twirling his hockey stick with a puck seemingly taped to his blade. I say seemingly because over the course of four or five minutes the puck never ever moved from the center of the blade curve. He’d whirl his stick with rapid wrist action, rapid eye movement motion almost, and never lose control of his prized possession. For a few brief seconds it appeared as if the puck defied gravity with the blade curved toward the floor. It was a magical spectacle.

Out on the ice this week there has been a similar attachment of puck to Perreault’s stick. An emerging storyline this week, he has freshly impressed Capitals’ officials with his playmaking ability, his elite hockey sense, and particularly his knack for being in the right place at the right time in tight quarters. A player of modest stature (5 ‘8, 160-ish), Perreault shows no reluctance to go where the big bodies bang.

A year ago at this time most in hockey would have thought Perreault lucky even to be invited to the Caps’ Rookie camp this summer. His rookie year in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League with the Acadie Bathurst Titan was nice but unspectacular (18 goals, 34 assists in 62 games). His offensive production did jump a bit that postseason, but come June and the NHL Entry Draft, his size kept him on the board late. The Caps grabbed him in round six, 177th overall.

But as the final leaves were falling from trees this past autumn a strange thing was taking place back up in Acadie Bathurst: Perreault was a dominating offensive force night in and night out. He was named Q League Player of the Month for November. By Thanksgiving (ours), he’d passed his rookie year points total. Along with draft classmate Francois Bouchard he was invited to the Canadian World Junior Final Evaluation Camp in December. In midseason Caps’ General Manager George McPhee went on the CapsReport and told Mike Vogel that Perreault had received “the highest possible score” on a player’s hockey sense. He finished the 2006-07 season with 41 goals and 78 assists in 67 games, and he capped it off by winning the league’s MVP award.

He arrived in Washington for the first time this week (”It’s hot here” he complained to me), and from the opening moments of Wednesday’s opening scrimmage he displayed an elite game of deft playmaking, unrivaled puck control, and superb instincts. He scored two goals that night, and he sent flat accurate passes to teammates in every scoring sector.

Along the boards, where you might think him most vulnerable and overmatched, he actually excels, drawing defenders to him to create open space for his linemates. He wins most of his draws, many quite cleanly. He is in constant motion in the offensive zone.

But outlandish offensive numbers and hardware almost as tall as he is bear no relationship to Perreault’s shy and soft-spoken demeanor off the ice. He was frank in acknowledging how even he had no idea he was in store for an MVP quality CHL season.

He told me that last season was so spectacular that he is at pains to identify specific goals to better this season. Instead, he will focus on “improving my strength, [gaining] more speed . . . more speed.”

From McPhee’s midseason assessment to this week’s dynamic display I made a point of trying to press the GM for a bold forecast for Perreault. I didn’t want to know if McPhee thought Perreault simply NHL-destined but rather if once there he’d be an impact player.

“He’s a good player,” McPhee told me after Friday’s scrimmage. But what about an impact NHLer? “I wouldn’t be surprised at all,” he added.

NHL hockey will always have places for the undersized and overskilled and determined. Martin St. Louis or Steve Sullivan or Daniel Briere would score goals in any era. It’s too early yet to tell if Perreault’s on that kind of development arc, but he possesses in abundance hockey’s most coveted quality — game-dictating instincts and skills.
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One-timer: Mike Green

Mike Green’s WashingtonCaps.com Page
The Forecaster’s take (via TSN)

mike-green-fixed.jpg Back story: The Caps third and final selection in the 1st round of the 2004 draft, Mike Green may have had his draft stock drop due to playing on a terrible Saskatoon Blades team. He split last year between Washington and Hershey, helping the Bears win the Calder Cup and grabbing a spot on the AHL’s All-Rookie team.

How’s it look so far? It looks good. Very good. A favorite of OFB, Green’s play has been smooth, displaying the poise and confidence of a ten-year veteran. Unafraid to get involved in the offensive game and comfortable leading the breakout, Green’s smooth skating and hockey sense have been a welcome addition to a sometimes-besieged Caps’ blueline. Second only to Pothier in power play minutes amongst defenders (though Semin plays the 1st PP unit point), Green’s lack of penalty kill time reflects an area for improvement: defensive coverage.

In the future?
Those in the know aren’t hesitant to predict top-2 defenseman status for Green, and it’s not hard to see why. A good open-ice hitter in the WHL, Green has shown the occasional flash of physicality in the bigs, but the adjustment is still a work in progress. The biggest hurdle for Green is tightening up his defensive coverage; the way Green seems to analyze the game, that may just be a matter of experience and time. All of that is nitpicking, however, as Green seems to have a bright future ahead of him.

One-timer: Steve Eminger

Steve Eminger’s WashingtonCaps.com page
The Forecaster’s take (via TSN)

Steve Eminger - from WashingtonCaps.comBack Story: Eminger suffered a middling season last year - an ankle injury (suffered when no one was within 5 feet of him) derailed any chance at consistency. Many are expecting Eminger to make ‘the leap’ this season.

How’s it look so far? Sadly, not so good, at this point. Eminger looks nervous at times, lost at times, and flat disinterested at times. Being paired with the struggling Clymer isn’t helping, but the occasional flashes of Eminger’s true ability are more frustrating than anything - some fans are beginning to wonder when and if the talented blueliner is going to put it all together. Expecting him to play like a hardened veteran this season is too much to ask; seeing solid improvement isn’t. While things have started off rocky, there’s plenty of time to turn things around, much like Morrisonn last season.

In the future: It’s probably not over-stating things to say this is may be a make-or-break season for Eminger in Washington. Rumors persist of his unhappiness with the Caps over being sent down to Portland in 03-04, and his on-ice performance seems listless. While there’s time to get things back on track, it’s not too early to wonder if Eminger needs a fresh start in another organization.

One-timer: Ben Clymer

Ben Clymer’s WashingtonCaps.com page
The Forecaster’s take (via TSN)

Ben Clymer - Photo from WashingtonCaps.com

Back story: Signed as a UFA prior to last season, Clymer responded with solid defensive play, a physical edge, and a career-high in goals. When the Caps resigned him for three years in the offseason, it raised more than a few eyebrows amongst the Caps’ faithful.

How’s it look so far? In a move that caught many fans off-guard, Clymer switched back to defense, his original position, in training camp, and the transition to the blueline hasn’t been without its bumps. Positioning hasn’t been too bad overall, and Clymer has kept his physicality, but keeping the puck in the zone and breaking out of the zone have been problems. In Clymer’s defense, these problems have been apparent throughout the Caps’ blueline, not just him.

In the future: It appears that there are no immediate plans to move Clymer back to forward, and it’s reasonable to expect Clymer to become more comfortable on the blueline as the season progresses. He should continue to see top 4 minutes and significant power-play time.

One-timers: Chris Clark

Chris Clark’s WashingtonCaps.com page
The Forecaster’s Take (via TSN)

Chris Clark - Photo from WashingtonCaps.com

Back Story: Chris Clark was acquired by General Manager George McPhee in what might be one of his best trades. Clark is the grinder on the Caps’ top line and was named team captain for the 2006-2007 campaign. He also set a career-high in goals, assists and points last season, though it is hard not to think that Alex Ovechkin on his opposite wing might have had at least a little to do with those accomplishments.

How’s it look so far? Clark was off the Caps’ number one line to start the season, was returned there one game later, and has flourished, to the tune of 2 goals and 6 assists in the Caps’ six games played. He’s thrown his weight around, as well. A knowledgeable friend of mine has dubbed Clark his MVP for the Caps so far, and it’s hard to argue with that.

In the future? I’ll be surprised if the Ovechkin-Zubrus-Clark line is broken up at this point, as they seem to have settled down a bit in the face of the defensive pressure that Ovechkin is drawing. Clark definitely seems to be taking advantage of the lesser attention, and his start has been as good as could be hoped. Clark could well be headed for another career season, but his true value to the team is his grit, defensive play and physicality. The offense is mostly gravy.

One-timer: Donald Brashear

Donald Brashear’s WashingtonCaps.com page
The Forecaster’s take (via TSN)

Donald Brashear - Photo from WashingtonCaps.com

Back Story: Donald Brashear is a top 10 enforcer in the league, at least, and may be in the top 2, behind Georges Laraque, and his job is simple: deter any rough stuff done unto his star player, Alex Ovechkin, and punish those who do not heed his warnings.

How’s it look so far? Well, it’s a funny thing, Brashear is also a decent, defense-minded winger — at least he has been in his first four games with Washington. He can hit with force, and has more skill than you’d think. Along with center Brian Sutherby and, most often, winger Brooks Laich, he’s part of a good defensive line for the Caps. On the enforcement side, he hasn’t gotten a major yet, though he tried to initiate some thing at home against Carolina after Tim Gleason’s kneeing penalty late in the third.

In the future? The continued thinning of the herd in respect to pure goons continues in the NHL, but Brashear is still in the league because he’s not just a goon. I’d imagine the combination of a kinder, gentler NHL and his reputation will keep Brashear’s fighting majors down in single digits, easily. If he can continue his defensive work and his physical game, however, that doesn’t mean he’s just taking up a roster spot. Indeed, those facets of his game, combined with his reputation and fighting ability, make him an valuable 4th line winger, at least. Coach Hanlon likes the way he and Sutherby are fitting together as well, and he may continue his 3rd line left wing role.

One-timer: Matt Bradley

Matt Bradley’s WashingtonCaps.com page
The Forecaster’s take (via TSN)

Matt Bradley - Photo from WashingtonCaps.com

Back Story: Bradley and the Caps agreed to a two-year deal in the off-season, to the surprise of some fans (quick shout-out to B.T. Marshall’s great salary page at Caps Corner). Bradley led the Caps in majors last season with eight.

How’s it look so far? Well, it hasn’t looked like anything yet, as Bradley has been on the shelf with a strained leg muscle. Mike Vogel reports that Bradley is expected in the line-up tonight in Minnesota.

In the future? Bradley brings size, speed, grit and a defensive bent to the ice, so it will be interesting to see if he’s paired up with fellow checker Brian Sutherby — the two, along with Ben Clymer, formed a strong defensive unit last year. Brooks Laich and Donald Brashear have both spent time on the third line, so it will be interesting to see who matches up tonight.

Bradley also has spent some time wearing the Alternate’s “A”, so it can be guessed that the Caps like the intangibles that he brings. It’s probably fair to expect 10 — 12 goals, 25 points, and some middleweight bouts from Bradley this season.

One-timer: Kris Beech

OFB starts a series of brief analyses of each player on the Caps’ big-league roster, discussing his game, what he brings to the ice, and some vague guesses as to how his season is going to work out.

Today’s player: Kris Beech

Kris Beech’s WashingtonCaps.com page
The Forecasters’ Take (via TSN)

Kris Beech - Photo from WashingtonCaps.comBack story: The former first-round pick has bounced around in his career, but the Caps’ management showed that they see good things in Beech by including him in the return for Brendan Witt at the trade deadline.

How’s it look so far? So far this season, Beech is showing more foot-speed and more willingness to play the body than previously — I think it’s fair to consider how much being part of Hershey’s Calder Cup run boosted his confidence. Good thing, too, as this is likely his last shot at the NHL full-time.

Beech will never be fleet, but the increase in his speed will help, and his noted vision on the ice found him on the power play with the Alexanders late in the game against Carolina. He delivered with a pretty cross-crease assist on Semin’s hat-trick goal, which rewarded coach Glen Hanlon’s faith in him. For now.

In the future? The Caps’ emphasis on skating and stamina really helped out Matt Pettinger last year — will Beech be able to tap into that? If so, the way will be paved for Beech’s best NHL season. The Caps have a giant hole at second-line center, and if Beech can develop some chemistry with Alexander Semin (which doesn’t look impossible after early returns), then Beech is going to play big minutes; so far he has only six seconds less power play time than Zubrus does (who, in his defense, has a knee). If Beech keeps it up, he stays in the NHL. If not, it’s off to Europe.