Evgeni Malkin and James Neal are world-class players, and someone from the Pittsburgh Penguins is going to have the enviable opportunity to skate on a line with them this season. The favorite as training camp approaches is Beau Bennett, a player who had zero experience as a professional hockey player before 2012-13 and 47 games at the collegiate level before that. Bennett had three goals and 14 points in 26 games as a rookie, and most importantly did not look out of place when on the ice with some of Pittsburgh's stars.
"We had a scrimmage just before the season
started and he had the chance to play with better players,"
Penguins GM Ray
Shero said. "He jumped out, and he showed he had the
ability to think the game at that level. You can play him anywhere in
your lineup. He has the ability and hockey sense to do that."
Bennett is listed at 6-foot-2, 207 pounds, and
won't turn 22 years old until late November. He was a first-round
pick (No. 20) in the 2010 NHL Draft, but missed all but 10 games of
his sophomore season, in 2010-11, at the University of Denver because
of injury. He left school after two years and began his professional
career in the American Hockey League last fall. He had seven goals
and 28 points in 39 games for Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, the Penguins'
American Hockey League affiliate.
"He hadn't played a lot of hockey prior to
turning pro," Penguins coach Dan
Bylsma said. "He didn't play a lot his sophomore season,
and I think he really benefitted from the lockout, going down to
Wilkes-Barre, playing a lot of games and learning the pro game. He
showed he can play in certain areas of the rink, like in the
defensive end and in the corners. Then, when he did have a chance in
the National Hockey League, he showed that it wasn't just his skill
and his hands and his hockey sense. He could be depended on to hold
onto the puck, and he could be depended on to play defense for us. He
did that."
Bennett isn't exceptionally fast but he is smart
and smooth. He's not afraid to hang on to the puck for an extra split
second to find an opening, and some of his flashes of creativity are
glimpses of elite potential.
"He's almost more of a pass-first player,"
Shero said. "I'd like to see him get more of a shoot-first
mentality, but that seems to be the way guys are sometimes."
If Bennett is going to play with Malkin and Neal,
looking to pass the puck might not be such a bad idea; those two
combined for 90 goals in 2011-12. Bennett's passing ability could
allow him to rack up plenty of points during his second NHL season.
"I think he really grew in the first half
of last year while playing for Wilkes-Barre," Bylsma said.
"He played 26 games for us, and showed what he could do
power-play-wise, what he could do making plays with the puck. I think
there is an opportunity for Beau, and I think he's capable of adding
in that regard on our top six with our skilled players. I think he's
going to surprise a lot of people by the end of the year with how he
can help our team."
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