GLENDALE, Ariz. – They will pour through the turnstiles, all of these faces from Auston Matthews‘s present and past.
His parents, Brian and Ema, and his grandparents, Bobby and Beverly. But also more distant relatives and friends and former hockey coaches and kids that now look up to the only guy who ever grew up going to Arizona Coyotes games before becoming a NHL star.
"Pretty much my whole family," Matthews said when asked who he expects to see during Thursday’s much-anticipated visit to Gila River Arena. "It’s probably going to be a packed house."
The Coyotes long ago surpassed their average number of tickets sold (12,867) for the Toronto Maple Leafs sole visit of the season. As of Thursday morning, they were still holding out hopes of reaching 17,125 – a sellout – with Matthews and Co. in town.
Matthews openly acknowledges that this is more than just another game on the schedule for him. He doesn’t even mind all the hoopla that accompanies it.
"No, not at all," he said. "I love coming back."
His only other game here came last Dec. 23 and he was sent out to take the opening faceoff against Shane Doan, one of his childhood idols. The memory that most stands out in his mind about that night is seeing all of the signs in warmups and people wearing blue and white Matthews sweaters – something that is becoming increasingly common for every game he plays.
Matthews spent the Christmas break recharging his batteries at the family home in nearby Scottsdale, where his mother provided a steady stream of home-cooked meals while he enjoyed a break from the snow and cold in Toronto.
It’s been a difficult second season despite the obvious growth in his game. He missed four games with a suspected back injury in November and six more with concussion-like symptoms earlier this month, returning with a goal and an assist at Madison Square Garden in a win over the Rangers right before the break.
Even while taking the NHL by storm – his 54 goals since entering the league are fifth-best during that span – Matthews has needed to learn some lessons along the way.
"I think you find that things are a little easy in the beginning or they’re not as hard [as expected], and then the league adjusts and you kind of have to adjust back," he said. "So it’s just kind of a constant battle. That’s why it’s the NHL, that’s why it’s not easy. It definitely motivates you to come to work every day and work hard, just so you can be better."
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The expectations are rising around him. Matthews is playing about a minute more per game this season and the fortunes of the 22-14-1 Leafs rest heavily on his shoulders – just as they do for all marquee No. 1 centres.
In Matthews, veteran teammate Patrick Marleau sees a little bit of Joe Sakic because of his ability to deceptively make quick turns in the corner and how quickly he shoots the puck. But at six-foot-three, he’s much bigger than Sakic and yet is still as elusive for opponents.
"For Matts to do it, being such a big body, is pretty special," said Marleau. "I think the way he handles the puck and can get pucks back. He stays on it. That’s something you don’t see at such a young age."
The fact he was raised here, far away from a traditional hockey hotbed, shaped his development. He didn’t always play on teams growing up and focused instead on skills work with coach Boris Dorozhenko, who will watch Thursday’s game from the same suite as Brian and Ema Matthews.
It wasn’t until he arrived at the U.S. national development program a little more than four years ago that Matthews started being talked about as a star in the making.
"It’s a bit surprising, but then, I think when you look at it in another way – where somebody has a passion and has a love for it then they’ll do whatever it takes," said Marleau. "I think coming from a place where it’s not common you know how much extra work you have to put in. I think that’s probably helped him along."
Tape II Tape Ryan Dixon and Rory Boylen go deep on pucks with a mix of facts and fun, leaning on a varied group of hockey voices to give their take on the country’s most beloved game.
His life in Arizona and Toronto couldn’t be any more different. There’s the climate and the atmosphere, obviously, but for Matthews there’s also the matter of privacy.
Here he is no different than any other 20-year-old young man – free to roam through the mall or go to dinner or play a casual round of golf without being bothered. During hockey season in Toronto, where he’s quickly become the face of the franchise, every trip out of the condo has the potential to devolve into a swarm of selfie and autograph requests.
Still, he’s handled life in the fishbowl about as well as anyone could. Leafs coach Mike Babcock credits his parents and his upbringing for making that possible.
"I mean it’s like anything: If the team’s going to be no good and you’re not going to play good, it’s going to be a tough place for you," said Babcock. "But if you’re going to be good and the team’s going to be good I think it can be an unbelievable spot. I don’t know what it’s like to be Auston Matthews, obviously, at his age with what he’s going through right now, but I think it’s got to be a pretty special place to be.
"His skillset comes with a burden in some ways, I guess, but on the other side of that’s pretty special, too. I think a lot of people would like to be Auston Matthews."
So the crowd was obviously torn when Matthews, taking a pass from William Nylander — who’d slashed through centre ice with windburn speed — simultaneously toe-dragged the puck and got off the snap, beating rookie netminder Scott Wedgewood over the glove. An instinctive leap to their feet by the in-house audience, because their native son had given them a goal worthy of framing, segueing with some confusion to no, wait, he just scored against us.
Demurral to the contrary notwithstanding, Auston Matthews had clearly so much wanted to make a yang-dang-doodle impression in front of his family, his friends, all the devotees who’ve taken a personal, proprietary interest in this hockey genius from the desert ’hood, returning to their midst for only the second time in his NHL career, and it hardly matters that he did so wearing a Maple Leafs jersey.
The boy from the Valley, face split with an ear-to-ear grin — partly in pleasure, partly in relief — had just elated/pained habitués of the Gila River Arena with a beauty of a snap wrist shot against the home side, his hometown team.
(Which squats astride the Arizona/Nevada border, for those thinking we’ve got our U.S. geography all muddled up.)
Toronto was ahead 2-0 at that point, midway through the first period here Thursday night, a slam-bam 20 minutes of hockey. They were up 3-0 by 11:27, Mitch Marner turning the light red a mere 27 seconds after Matthews’ dead-eye aim found the back of the net. Leading 11-2 in shots also, then BOOM, 11-9 in shots and 3-2 on the scoreboard, this time the Coyotes double-fisting, beating Freddie Andersen one minute and seven seconds apart.
“It was a great feeling, definitely one I’ll remember, a pretty special goal,” Matthews said afterwards, once the Leafs had laid on a 7-4 pounding against the Coyotes. “Willie had a good give-and-go there. When he drives the middle like that, it creates a lot of space for me. I was just able to kind of pull it around the guy, make a little bit of a screen, and sneak it past him.”
Somewhere in the thick of that goal-scoring chaos, the Leafs also lost Nazem Kadri, felled by an elbow to the head and never seen again as coach Mike Babcock juggled his lines to compensate.
Settled down, fleetingly, before Toronto erupted for another brace of goals, just 10 seconds apart this time, the Leafs ultimately galloping out of Dodge — well, the suburbs of Phoenix — with the W, second win in a row bracketed around the Christmas break, before flying off to Denver for the middle gig on a three-stop road swing that concludes in Las Vegas on New Year’s Eve.
A six-shooter gunfight that might make the Toronto bench boss’ head explode. We’ll get to the relevant goal episodes shortly. But about Matthews . . . because the past couple of days had been all about The Chronicles of Auston.
The crowd couldn’t begrudge Matthews his moment, not really, as emotions were all topsy-turvy conflicted, except there was the 20-year-old from Scottsdale, the most renowned American-born sophomore hockey player west of the Pecos, circa 2018 (almost), and it was almost like he did it for them as well as to them, you know?
It was Toronto’s second and final meeting with the ’Yotes this season, Matthews’ second engagement at his quasi-local rink, though he’d never actually played here before Toronto’s visit a year ago, settling for an assist last December in the visitors’ 4-1 win. Didn’t pop on that scoresheet though. Even more insignificant just this past Nov. 20, when the Coyotes hauled off a 4-1 victory at the Air Canada Centre.
Matthews had been dismayed with himself afterwards. But it’s a common occurrence, trying too hard, swinging for the fences, to mix our sports metaphors.
Babcock had been asked, after the morning skate, whether he was concerned about Matthews striving to put on a show for fans. “I don’t know, if you go back to the last time, it wasn’t very good. So just play the game and things will work out.
“He’s a good player, he’s going to want to play hard. They know who he is too, so they’re going to try to do what they can to make sure he isn’t a factor in the game. That’s what he faces each and every night. But we win as a group.”
There’s not actually a whole lot of nostalgia hanging from this arena’s rafters for Matthews. The joint is pretty alien to him, at least as a bona-fide NHLer. But there were countless games as a youngster when he sat there, like every other fan in the house, and watched. Before anonymity got stripped away by precocious talent, from youth hockey to the U.S. national team to No. 1 draft pick.
“It definitely brings back some memories of being at the rink and going to games,” Matthews had observed earlier. “It’s always fun to come back here and play in your hometown. The game means a lot to you personally, because you’re in your hometown.”
Scouring for detail nuggets, we note that the Leafs’ most prized possession was driven to the rink Thursday morning by his dad, just like in youthful days of yore. And that Matthews, who spent the Christmas break at the Scottsdale homestead, didn’t check into the team’s hotel on Wednesday evening, preferring to spend one more night at the family casa, in his old bedroom, which may or may not still have ’Yotes memorabilia on the walls. But he didn’t bother to tune in what turned out to a be a 3-1 Arizona win over the Avalanche — a return engagement, in Denver, following last week’s old-time hockey melee between the clubs, which featured match penalties, game misconduct ejections and one very cheap sucker-punch delivered to the face of Colorado rookie Sam Girard by career Neanderthal Zac Rinaldo. (Suspended on Wednesday for six games, his sixth disciplinary felony from the league, thus not in the lineup to potentially molest Leafs.)
Anyway, despite all his pronouncements about Coyote-fondness over the past couple of days, Matthews didn’t bother to watch a team that includes two of his close friends from U.S. national team shared history — Clayton Keller and Christian Dvorak, both key components in Arizona rising from the desert ashes at some point in the future, scraping off the league last-place gunk from the bottom of their skates.
“I was just at home with my family, enjoying that because I don’t get much of it. Play enough and watch enough hockey and video throughout the year.”
Got more video tutoring Thursday too, as the Leafs were forced to revisit their sluggish loss last month.
“We went over the video this morning,” he said. “They worked hard. That’s what they do. We’ll look back at the video once or twice more before we go out there. It’s important we do a better job than we did last time.”
Their bottom-feeding notwithstanding, the ’Yotes — marginally stabilized with a one-year extension on their arena contract for next season, when just about everyone thought they were bound for downtown Phoenix and a rink which thus far exists only in the imagination — are not without talent. “Good skating team,” observed Matthews. “They move the puck well with a lot of speed. That’s one of their strengths. We have to be prepared for that and be ready to play 60 because last time we weren’t good enough.”
This time, they were good enough all right, albeit with some gobsmacking defensive lapses and a goalie, in Andersen, seemingly all of a sudden incapable of controlling rebounds. Although, if you’re going to have that kind of gifting performance, best to do it while your mates are shooting out the lights.
Inspired performance, too, from a pair of Matthews’ fellow sophs, Marner and Nylander, each highly improved over the past fortnight, on the heels of misery in October and November.
Marner in particular continues to dazzle, notching his fifth goal of the season with a one-timer wrist shot, stretching his points streak to four games, then deftly orchestrating both of Patrick Marleau’s goals in the second frame: the first a PPG tip-in of a Marner pass, the second a deke and backhand off a one-timer pass from Marner right onto Marleau’s stick. He in-and-out bamboozled Wedgewood, flipping it over his pad.
Marner is obviously picking up where he left off before the Christmas hiatus, following a break-out spectacle in the Next Century game last Tuesday.
“That’s a big play for our power play,” explained Marner later of Marleau’s goal No. 1. “It’s been working so hopefully it just keeps going that way. That second one, Leo (Komarov) made a fantastic pass to me through to the middle. Lucky enough I got it to Pat and he made no mistake with it.”
On his own goal, Marner manager to stay upright and get the shot off while being practically ambushed. “I just felt back pressure. When (the puck) came to me I got cross-checked. It was a great play by Boze (Tyler Bozak) and JVR (James van Riemsdyk) to get it to me.’’
Even more beauteous as a stand-alone showpiece was how Nylander stripped the puck off usually stalwart D-man Oliver Ekman-Larsson at the blue line, blazing his way towards the net and deking to the backhand — the kind of goal so rarely seen these days. Unassisted, his eighth on the season.
Zach Hyman got the whole ball rolling at 8:55 of the first period, also unassisted and with Andreas Borgman cooling his heels in the penalty box for interference — the Leafs’ second short-handed goal of the 2017-18 campaign. Connor Brown polished it off at the other end of the game with an open-netter with just over two minutes left in regulation.
Josh Archibald, on a puck that bounce-rebounded off Andersen, Brendan Perlini — son of a cup-of-coffee Leaf, Fred Perlini in the early ’80s — Jordan Martinook and hotshot rookie Christian Fischer, Auston’s good buddy from Team USA junior days, tallied for the ’Yotes.
The first time Auston Matthews met Mike Babcock, he was starstruck, except not for the reason you might think.
To reach the Red Wings' coaches office at the old Joe Louis Arena, a hallway winds past the visitor's locker room, which on this particular game day in November 2014 had been occupied by the Flyers. Matthews, then 17 and playing for USA Hockey's National Team Development Program, watched morning practice and was on his way to introduce himself to Babcock with teammate Matthew Tkachuk and coach Don Granato when they became sidetracked.
There was Claude Giroux, the Flyers' captain, leaning against the wall, talking on his cell phone. And in an instant, the little kid inside Matthews took hold.
FACES OF 2018: Matthews one of the breakout stars for the new year
"Auston right away taps me and goes, 'Coach, that’s Claude Giroux! Can I get a picture? Can I get a picture?'" Granato recalled. "We’re a good 50 feet away. I grab him by the arm and say don’t you dare take your phone out. You know where you’re at? It’s not picture area down here."
Giroux was then and is now an NHL star, a goal scorer, which is what Matthews wanted to become. So you can understand if shaking hands with Babcock, all parties unaware of its prophetic meaning at the time, was the second-best thing that happened to Matthews that day.
“I can tell you he might have still been thinking about Giroux," Granato laughed.
Granato shared this memory, among others, as a glimpse into the formative years of a hockey-playing prodigy whose meteoric rise from Arizona captivated those around the sport, first with USA Hockey and, later, the NHL. Back then, as coach of the U.S. under-18 team, he was one of many at the NTDP who helped a teenaged Matthews harness his sky-high potential as the future face of hockey in America, a reality that will soon arrive, if it hasn't already.
You know the story: The dynamic center went on to become the No. 1 overall pick in the 2016 draft. He scored four goals in a record-breaking NHL debut, an appropriate start to the best (40 goals, 69 points) rookie season in the Maple Leafs' 100-year history, and ran away with the Calder Trophy. And his union with Babcock in Toronto flipped the city's woebegone Stanley Cup hopes overnight.
For a player who's accomplished so much, so soon, Matthews still has work to do. So what are fair expectations?
MORE: Hall of Famer Mike Modano marvels at Auston Matthews' skill
'A six-tool guy'
A few weeks before that fateful first meeting with Babcock, Matthews and the NTDP played an exhibition against the University of Michigan, a team that included Dylan Larkin, Zach Hyman, J.T. Compher, Tyler Motte and Zach Werenski. Babcock was in Ann Arbor for the game to watch Larkin, the Red Wings' 15th overall draft pick the spring prior, but had been hearing second-hand stories about Matthews' talent from assistant coach Tony Granato, Don's older brother.
"The guy he (Babcock) walked out of there most impressed with was a kid who was a junior in high school playing against Division I guys," Don Granato said.
By this point, Matthews had already been the subject of many Granato phone calls.
The brothers, both deeply rooted with USA Hockey, kept in touch about all things NTDP. But from the time Don Granato first watched Matthews as a 15-year-old trying out for a spot in the program, practicing with players two years his senior, he noticed Matthews stood out for more than his big frame and sheer talent.
“I said, Ton, I think we’ve got a kid who’s going to be as good as or better than Sidney Crosby," Granato said. "He said, 'Are you out of your mind? You’ve had him for one week.' And I said I know. I’ve had him long enough to tell you. I think this kid has a chance to be as good as Sidney Crosby and I think he’s going to be the next American first overall (draft pick). … He remembers it so well because he thought I was crazy."
Hyperbole or not, Matthews carried himself like the greats who came before him: humble but confident, calm but competitive, with the sort of internal drive that challenges even the coaching staff to keep up. And then there was the size (6-2, 190), speed and creativity, all jaw-dropping for any teenage player.
It helped Matthews excel against older competition while with the NTDP and at the 2015 and 2016 World Junior Championship. In between, he played — and put up gaudy numbers — for Zurich SC in Switzerland's top professional league, a 17-year-old dominating veteran pros.
“He’s a big guy. His edges were so good, his hands were so good," said Danton Cole, who coached Matthews in 2013-14 on the U.S. under-17 team. "... You know how they talk about baseball? A five-tool guy. Auston was kind of a six-tool guy. There just wasn’t anything he couldn’t do. You’d be watching in practice and you thought you saw everything, especially in tight area games, you’d think you’ve seen everything. But he’d score a goal, make a pass or spin out of the corner with the puck and make you shake your head."
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That brings us back to that 2014 scrimmage against UM. With Babcock in attendance, it was the perfect foreshadow for Matthews' future. He scored a goal, had four shots and was the best player on the ice, according to Granato. Babcock became coach of the Maple Leafs after the 2014-15 NHL season, stabilizing the organization along with president Brendan Shanahan and general manager Lou Lamoriello. So the game served as the first time the two crossed paths.
Shortly thereafter, Granato started taking Matthews on regular trips to the Joe, about 45 minutes from the NTDP headquarters, something he hadn't done with other players previously.
“I felt for some reason I should be doing it with him," he said. “I wanted to get him around the NHL as much as I can so it’s natural to him. He’s going to play in the NHL. I wan’t him to feel comfortable and that he belongs on Day 1, not a year later.”
Hit ’em with the four like Auston Matthews
About that Day 1.
Matthews' first NHL goal came 8 minutes and 21 seconds into his debut. He jumped on a loose puck in the slot and flung it past a lunging Senators goalie Craig Anderson. For Granato, Cole and those watching back at the NTDP, it was more of an inevitability than anything. A group text served as a real-time play-by-play forum.
“Hey, Auston got his first goal," Cole remembers writing. "It kind of shoots back and forth. I think before anything else could get out, it’s like, geez, he just got his third."
Less than six minutes later, Matthews scored again. This time it was an incredible individual effort, the sort of tight-space magic Cole had seen many times over in practice and games. Matthews pick-pocketed Mike Hoffman in the neutral zone, slipped by Senators captain Erik Karlsson and stunned Anderson, who barely had a chance to set before a quick flick of the wrist beat him five-hole. Each time, cameras panned to parents Brian and Ema, who were ecstatic.
By the time the second period closed, Matthews became the first player in history to score four goals in an NHL debut. He had more goals in the first 40 minutes of his career than yesterday's wunderkinds Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Sidney Crosby and Connor McDavid combined in their first games.
“There was probably two people more excited. That was his mom and dad, and then it was me," Granato said.
Since meeting Matthews, the most difficult part for Granato had been keeping quiet about what he already knew: Matthews was a star in the making. Like swearing to secrecy upon discovering oil in the backyard, Granato gushed only to Tony and friends outside hockey, so as to shelter Matthews from outsized expectations.
And on this night, the texts started flooding in.
Hey, you told me two years ago this kid was going to be better than so-and-so.
One came from Jeff Sauer, Granato's old coach at Wisconsin. He was watching Matthews make his debut at Granato's urging.
"He wanted to watch the Blackhawks that night and I said, Hey, coach, do me a favor and just turn on the Toronto Maple Leafs and watch this kid Auston," Granato said. "He didn’t know who he was. He knew he was the number one pick but … I said that’ll be more fun to watch than the Blackhawks tonight.”
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Matthews was an instant sensation. The Maple Leafs went 40-27-15, made the playoffs for the second time in a decade and nearly knocked off the Presidents' Trophy-winning Capitals in what would have been an upset for the ages. His four-goal debut birthed a cult classic rap song titled "Auston Matthews."
Youngest in the league,
Yes, I'm balling
This not Spalding
I'm icy b—,
First day of work,
Made you act a fool
Auston Matthews, Auston Matthews
Hit em' with the four like Auston Matthews
The talk of Toronto became the talk of Canada, surpassing even McDavid. Anyone who called themselves a hockey fan knew the story, how a kid from the desert, a product of the NHL's unpopular southern expansion, defied the odds and climbed the ladder to stardom at the center of the known hockey universe. Yet, there's a sense his notoriety everywhere else was lacking.
Next face of the NHL?
An ESPN The Magazine feature in October asked, Why isn't Auston Matthews a bigger star in the United States? The NHL's most vexing question is also one of the simplest to answer. Hockey is growing in the United States, particularly in "nontraditional" markets such as Scottsdale, Ariz., where Matthews is the shiniest of trophies for commissioner Gary Bettman. But the sport's integration into mainstream American pop culture remains stagnant, while other leagues surged and now dominate most headlines.
The NHL still lags well behind the NFL, NBA and MLB in television ratings. Presented opportunities to showcase hockey to a wider audience, like scheduling Matthews' Maple Leafs for a national U.S. broadcast or sending players to the Olympics, the league fails to act on potential benefits, coming off as out of touch with fans.
The Maple Leafs, under an organizational decree from Lamoriello, preach crest over individualism, suppressing personality. That's not unlike the culture inside most NHL locker rooms, but it's troublesome for marketing purposes, especially when an American-born star such as Matthews is cordoned off in Canada.
If Matthews, for all his plusses, has a shot at becoming the next U.S. face of the NHL, something will have to change.
SPORER: Connor McDavid, Auston Matthews and the NHL's tired rivalry obsession
That distinction currently belongs to Patrick Kane, even if the gap is closing. Before Matthews, the Blackhawks star was the last American-born player drafted first overall in 2007. They're two of seven in history, a club which started in 1983 with Brian Lawton and adds new members about twice every decade.
With an NHL scoring title, Hart Trophy and three Stanley Cups in tow, Kane has steadily climbed the list of all-time USA Hockey greats while playing in one of the NHL's biggest and most media-friendly markets. And at 29, he's far from finished. But a history of off-ice trouble and the absence of Olympic gold (he has just three goals in a pair of Olympic tours) are two blemishes on Kane's resume, leaving the door wide open for Matthews to take the mantle in short order.
“If you go down the league, there’s a lot of great players nowadays. I would say he’s definitely in the top 20 as of now," Hockey Hall of Famer Mike Modano, a fellow American No. 1 pick and one of USA Hockey's all-time greats, told Sporting News in October. "There’s some talented guys, but over time he probably will evolve into not only the best American and give Patrick Kane a run and all the stats for American-born guys.
"On the whole, given the city he’s playing in, Toronto, being American, I just think it’s got a formula for a pretty exciting career.”
Matthews won't be afforded what would have been an opportune moment to play in his first Olympics, since the NHL has banned its players from the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Imagine him skating alongside Kane. With USA Hockey's influx of young talent, would-be first-time Olympians like Jack Eichel, Johnny Gaudreau, Seth Jones and more could have made for a tantalizing blend of generations in pursuit of the Team USA's first gold medal since the 1980 "Miracle on Ice."
Granato, like any other hockey-loving American, laments the what-ifs.
In his first season as a Blackhawks assistant coach, Granato has been able to study Kane up close the last six months. And while he politely deferred when asked to compare the faces of USA Hockey old and new — "I'm not touching that one," he laughed — Granato believes it's a matter of time before Matthews gets his due.
“That’ll come with playoff success, certainly in this market here — the U.S. market. He’s well on his way to that," he said. "That’s a byproduct of what the NHL has done and the growth of the NHL in the U.S. … It’s only a matter of time, for me.
"I think he’s headed in that direction because of a combination of not only his ability, but the marketability of our game in the U.S.”
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Matthews' encore sophomore season hasn't gone off without a hitch. His point-per-game production is in line with expected growth. Most of it has been of the highlight-reel variety, making Matthews a must-watch hockey commodity on a nightly basis (for those who can). But injuries are cutting into those opportunities, first with an undisclosed upper-body ailment that sidelined him four games in November. A concussion, the scariest word in hockey, especially when it involves the game's young stars, cost Matthews another six games in December before his return just before the holiday break.
That's nothing more than a speedbump in Matthews' development. The Maple Leafs signed several veterans in the offseason, an indication their rebuild is ready to take the next step into postseason contention. And the 20-year-old is on a mission to end Toronto’s half-century Stanley Cup drought sooner rather than later.
If or when that happens remains to be seen. Matthews will wait until at least 2022 to break out on an Olympic stage, when he's 24. But in sports, where we assign faces to everything, his evolution into the role for USA Hockey — and, possibly, all of the NHL — is happening right before our eyes.
“I think he’s probably pushing on that right now," Cole said. "I don’t say that lightly. Patrick (Kane) has done some unbelievable things for the U.S. and he’s a great player, but I think where Auston’s at, if we were in the Olympics, I’d say he’d probably be the focal guy. The future of U.S. hockey.”
It's a long way from fawning over Claude Giroux.