"I'm pretty excited," Saad said.
"Center is usually one of the best players on the ice and you
get to come up the middle and you have to play well defensively. It's
going to be something new for me, but I usually pride myself on
playing well defensively, so hopefully that can help out. That's
probably going to be one of the biggest things [playing center] is
working on that, but that just comes with time and putting in the
work. The rest of it is being aware out there, but faceoffs is
something you need to work at. Center is a smart player on the ice,"
Saad said. "It's going to take an adjustment, but it's
definitely part of it and I'm looking forward to the challenge. It's
always good to be diverse and be able to play whatever positions.
Hopefully I can add this to my game."
Quenneville first hinted at the move while
wrapping up the team's prospects camp, when he told reporters Handzus
wouldn't automatically start with Sharp and Hossa. He then named Saad
as the leading candidate at that position during the annual fan
convention a few weeks later. Asked about it during training camp,
the coach who's led the Blackhawks to a pair of Stanley Cup titles in
2010 and '13 explained his reasoning a little more. Now it's just a
matter of watching the experiment unfold. Two years ago,
Quenneville's idea was to give Kane an extended run in the middle of
that line, a move that started out decently enough but fizzled out
over the course of the season. Last year it was former center Dave
Bolland's turn; that also looked OK for a stretch before
dissolving thanks to his extended injury absence heading into the
Stanley Cup Playoffs. Now it's Saad's turn. After losing his
left-wing spot on the top line during the postseason, he was replaced
midway through by newly re-signed power forward Bryan
Bickell, this experiment is also the best way to get Saad back
into the top six forwards. As a rookie, Saad had 10 goals and 17
assists in 47 regular-season games, along with a plus-17 rating. He
scored a goal and had five assists in the postseason. The hope now is
that Saad's comfort and skill with the puck on his stick speeds the
transition to center, where he's lacking only experience. Having
Sharp and Hossa on each side should also ease the transition.
"I think that versatility in playing more
than one or two positions up front gives us more depth over time and
sometimes, on a need basis, you've got to try different guys in
different situations," Quenneville said. "We're in a
position now where we still have some other guys who we know can play
in that situation, [like] Handzus, Shaw, Kruger and some other
options. I just think that [Saad] can play with top players and he
has that ability to still get better in his game."
"I would hope so," said Sharp, a sniper with playmaking hands. "I thought we had a couple good [scrimmage] games at Notre Dame [to start camp]. Whether that's a line to start the season, who knows at this point? But if it is, then we'll do our best to help him out. I thought he had a great season as a left winger last year, but it says a lot for Brandon that the coaches are willing to slide him over there and try it out."
No comments:
Post a Comment