Sharks' Celebrini and Smith and
Canadiens' Slafkovsky headline the NHL's next generation of stars
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[September 27, 2024]
By STEPHEN WHYNO
Juraj Slafkovsky was an NHL draft pick, just like Alex Ovechkin,
Sidney Crosby, Auston Matthews, Nathan MacKinnon, Connor McDavid and
Connor Bedard. The spotlight, however, has not been quite as bright
or the hype train as strong for him in Montreal.
“I like it that way,” Slafkovsky said.
Regardless of the attention or lack thereof, Slafkovsky is on the
vanguard of hockey's next generation of stars, along with the likes
of San Jose's Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith, Buffalo's JJ Peterka
and New Jersey's Luke Hughes.
“It’s really cool to be a part of it, and I hope I will be a part of
it,” Slafkovsky said two years after the Canadiens took him at No. 1
in 2022. “Hopefully we can do some things as the younger
generation.”
Slafkovsky, Peterka, Hughes and Quinton Byfield of the Los Angeles
Kings have been around a bit, and now is the time to show they can
be among the league's best. Newcomers like Celebrini, Smith,
Philadelphia's Matvei Michkov and even teammate Lane Hutson are
front-runners in the race for the Calder Trophy as rookie of the
year.
Macklin Celebrini
The most recent No. 1 pick does not have the so-called “generational
talent” label like Crosby, McDavid or Bedard, but he still won the
Hobey Baker Award last season at Boston University as the top
college player in the country with 64 points in 38 games.
Sharks forward William Eklund was not too familiar with Celebrini's
game until the draft, so he made it a point to check out his
highlights.
“I looked him up a little bit, and obviously he’s a great skill
guy,” Eklund said. "He's a high-caliber player, and it’s going to be
fun to see.”
BetMGM Calder Trophy odds: 4-1
Will Smith
Rivals at Boston-area schools, Smith and Celebrini are now front and
center as the faces of San Jose's rebuild.
“It's going to be a fun relationship,” said Smith, the fourth pick
in 2023 who decided to turn pro after starring last season at Boston
College. “Really cool. We were talking about it earlier just how
crazy it is that we’re on the same team now.”
Smith, a year older than Celebrini, is coming off a 71-point season,
helped the U.S. win world junior gold and played at the world
championships.
“He’s a kid that has a really bright future and a ton of talent,”
said Washington goaltender Charlie Lindgren, who was a teammate at
worlds. “A really good kid, too, and I think he’ll go in and play
for San Jose this year and I think you’ll see him do pretty well.”
BetMGM Calder Trophy odds: 5-1
Juraj Slafkovsky
The MVP of the 2022 Beijing Olympics without NHL players struggled
in his rookie year. Last season, he quintupled his production with
20 goals, 30 assists and 50 points and said, “I’m ready to start
where I finished.”
Slafkovsky in the spring signed an eight-year contract extension
worth over $60 million. Now it's up to the big Slovak forward to
earn it.
“I just want to show them that they made the right decision,”
Slafkovsky said. “I feel like the only way I can do it is showing up
every day and playing hard and being there.”
JJ Peterka
A 2020 second-round pick of the Sabres, Peterka is older at 22 but
could get a look on the first line this season after establishing
himself as a full-time NHL player and scoring 28 goals. The
Germany-born forward is in a contract year looking to get the kind
of guaranteed deal Slafkovsky and others have.
Peterka thinks the key is not putting too much pressure on himself,
especially while trying to help Buffalo end the league's longest
playoff drought.
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San Jose Sharks' Macklin Celebrini skates with the puck during a
scrimmage at the NHL hockey team's practice facility in San Jose,
Calif., Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
“I want to be put more in situations where I’m
maybe not too uncomfortable,” Peterka said. “I want to be more
responsible, more consistent. For me it’s just take the next step to
just grow as a player, as more of a complete player.”
Quinton Byfield
The 6-foot-5, 220-pound power forward is expected to play center
after getting a five-year, $31.25 million contract. He spent the
summer working on his shot to be more of a threat from further away
from the net and prefers center offensively and defensively.
“I like playing good defense and shutting down their top lines, so
when I can be in my own end kind of playing those guys down low,
that’s where I want to be,” Byfield said. “Also I don’t want to just
be on the wall standing there going up the ice. I want to be able to
use my speed and kind of demand the middle of the ice.”
Luke Hughes
A left shoulder injury from summer training could cause the Devils
defenseman to miss the start of the season. That absence should not
keep Hughes from building on a 47-point rookie year that left him
third in Calder Trophy voting.
"He’ll take another step," older brother and New Jersey teammate
Jack Hughes said. “Luke will be even more mature this year. He’ll
know the league a little bit more and know the players and he’ll
know things he can get away with and where he can capitalize on
certain things. I think he’ll have a better year offensively,
obviously, and just keep getting better.”
Matvei Michkov
The 19-year-old Russian winger is the new face of the Flyers with
the weight of the franchise's nearly five-decade Stanley Cup drought
on his shoulders. Michkov was the seventh pick in 2023, with some
teams concerned he might not be able to leave the KHL or was
under-scouted given the war in Ukraine.
Early returns are positive.
“Everyone’s really excited to have him, and when you see him on the
ice it’s pretty special and gives our team a positive boost,”
forward Owen Tippett said. “Super skilled. We’re all really excited
to have him on our side, and we’re excited to see what he can do.”
BetMGM Calder Trophy odds: 7-2
Lane Hutson
A saucer pass from Hutson during an early training camp scrimmage
that landed right on the stick blade of teammate Emil Heineman went
viral in hockey circles. It's just a taste of what the 20-year-old
defenseman might be able to do when he gets used to life in the NHL,
but he already has big expectations in Montreal.
“I haven’t proved anything yet,” Hutson said. “There’s a lot to
prove before I’m even close to a face of the team."
BetMGM Calder Trophy odds: 7-1
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AP Sports Writer Mark Anderson and freelance writer W.G. Ramirez in
Las Vegas contributed.
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