|
| |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|
Light and Lively Rick Nash, a precocious 18-year-old ticketed for stardom in the NHL, enjoys keeping things loosePosted: Thursday June 20, 2002 3:07 PMBy Daniel G. Habib
Nash was the OHL rookie of the year in 2000-01 (a team-high 31 goals, plus 35 assists) and had similar numbers (32 goals, 40 assists) this season. Last fall he was ranked second among North American skaters by the NHL's Central Scouting, behind defenseman Jay Bouwmeester of the Western Hockey League's Medicine Hat Tigers. Nash, who is 6'3" and 195 pounds, has a versatile game; he is a deft puckhandler with a wicked snap shot who also exhibits finesse around the net. As Nash's body matures -- he has gained 25 pounds over the past two years -- the grind side of his game will improve. "He'll take the body," Hunter says. "He'll take a good run at somebody if he sees the team needs it. Obviously he wants to score, but if I tell him, 'Rick, we need you to play defense,' he'll do it, and he'll go down and block shots too." Nash was the youngest member of the Canadian national team that took the silver medal at the World Junior Championships in Pardubice, Czech Republic, in January, turning heads while skating on the third or fourth lines. He added to his résumé when he engineered eighth-seeded London's upset of the Plymouth Whalers, the league's best regular-season team, in the OHL playoffs that began in March. In six games against Plymouth, Nash led his club with six goals and 10 points. "He really matured in the postseason," says Detroit Red Wings assistant G.M. Jim Nill. "He became a leader. Everybody knows his skill level -- he has a good feel for the ice, he sees the goal and the seams so well -- but put that together with his leadership, and that's why he's going to be a top pick." Nash's growing profile, however, has not changed him. "He's so humble," says Knights winger Logan Hunter, the coach's nephew who has shared a billet in London with Nash for two seasons. "With all the attention he gets, you'd think his head would get big like some other guys', but he's not like that." Off the ice Nash spends time playing video games and pool, bowling, driving his 2002 Monte Carlo and pulling pranks on his teammates. "Rick does a pretty good impression of our assistant coach, Jacques Beaulieu, so right at the trade deadline he was calling kids and telling them they'd been traded," Logan Hunter says. "Had some of them going pretty good." Nash, who is probably a couple of years away from being an impact NHL player, can't wait for the draft in nearby Toronto, to which he's bringing a contingent of 50 family members and friends. "You always dream of playing in the NHL, but I didn't realize it was a possibility until this year," Nash says. "Then I started thinking, I could do this for a living?" Issue date: June 24, 2002
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||