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Dylan Strome gets the call: Arizona Coyotes prospect has earned belated chance to shine in the NHL



Twice sent back to junior and unable to earn a spot with the last-place team in the NHL, there might have been a temptation earlier this season to question whether Dylan Strome should have been a No. 3 overall pick.

There wasn’t necessarily anything wrong with his development. But compared to others, it sure looked that way.

Mitch Marner, who was selected one spot below Strome in 2015, was coming off a season in which he scored 61 points in 77 games and was named to the All-Rookie Team. Noah Hanifin, who was selected fifth overall, already had close to 200 games under his belt. Even Clayton Keller, selected by the Coyotes a year after Strome, was among the NHL’s scoring leaders.

Strome, meanwhile, had played in nine career games. He had no goals and one assist.

It was frustrating. You can tell yourself all day long that that everyone’s path to the NHL is different. But it can be difficult to convince yourself that the winding road you’re on is leading anywhere when others around you are enjoying success and you’re stuck in the minors.

“You try not to worry about it,” Strome said in a phone interview with Postmedia News, “but every day you’re hoping you get called. Just keep going day by day and keep working hard and hope you get the call-up at some point. I had some talks with the coach and thought it might be a possibility.”

On Monday, Strome finally got the call-up he was waiting for. It was out of recognition more than necessity. The 20-year-old, who was named the AHL’s player of the week for the second time this season, has scored eight goals and 26 points in 15 games for the Tucson Roadrunners.

Heading into Tuesday night’s game against the Edmonton Oilers, Strome will try to continue that success at the NHL level. But more importantly, the late-bloomer will try to show that like Mark Scheifele before him, the wait was worth it.

“That’s someone you can use as an example,” Strome said of Scheifele, a seventh-overall pick in 2011 who was twice sent down to junior and took another two years before becoming an impact player in the NHL. “You look at how good he’s playing right now. Everyone’s path is different. It’s about finding yours.”

Not everyone makes the seamless jump from the draft floor to the NHL. For every Connor McDavid and Auston Matthews who make it look it easy is a Scheifele or Nikita Kucherov who develop at a much slower pace. It’s difficult to remember now, but five years ago some were questioning whether Scheifele would ever make an impact at the NHL level. Today, he’s grown into a top-10 scorer and an elite centre.

“I was on the (TSN) panel one night — it was right around the end of camp and Mark got returned for the second time to junior — and the question was ‘Is Mark Scheifele going to be a bust?’” said Jets head coach Paul Maurice. “And I remember thinking, ‘He’s going back to play junior because he’s supposed to.’ The pressure those guys are under to come in at 18, 19 and be great is so immense. And if they’re not, it’s ‘What’s going on here?’”

Strome, whose older brother Ryan also spent two years in junior and some time in the AHL before making the full-time jump, has been telling himself that not everyone’s path to the NHL is a straight line. Some players need time to get bigger and stronger or quicker and faster. In Strome’s situation, he needed to do both. Selected after McDavid and Jack Eichel went No. 1 and 2 in the 2015 draft, he went back to junior and scored 111 points in 56 games in 2015-16. The following year, he scored 75 points in 35 games and led the Erie Otters to the Memorial Cup.

For the past two months, the 6-foot-3 and 185-pound centre has been using his size and newfound speed to overpower opponents at the AHL level, where he was on a line with 2015 first-round picks Lawson Crouse (11th overall) and Nick Merkley (30th).

“Why rush him?” said Coyotes GM John Chayka. “In the past, we’ve traded away good prospects. That doesn’t work. We’ve rushed good prospects. That doesn’t work either. So as an organization, at some point you have to learn and say we’ve taken our lumps and now we have to do this the right way and be patient.”

Strome is also trying to be patient. He’s got a lot of catching up to do when it comes to reaching Marner’s point totals. But so did Scheifele when he finally broke into the league. Today, only three players from his draft class — Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Gabriel Landeskog and Kucherov — have scored more points than him. And the gap is still shrinking.

“You can’t look at other people,” said Strome. “You just got to worry about yourself and worry about what you can do to get better, and I think if you do that, you’re going to find success eventually. You can’t worry about what other people are doing and what successes they’re having. You have to go on your own path and every path’s different.

“Hopefully I can stay up here forever now, and that’s my goal. We’ll keep working towards that and see how it goes.”

Email: mtraikos@postmedia.com | Twitter: @michael_traikos



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