By John S. Condakes
Phil Kessel is becoming the real deal before our eyes. Now in his third season of professional hockey, Kessel is a budding star in the NHL and proving to doubters that he definitely has it. The Bruins have invested a lot of time in the kid ever since they took him with the fifth overall pick in the 2006 entry draft and now that time is paying dividends.
Unlike contemporaries Sydney Crosby, Alex Ovechkin and Eric Staal, Kessel has had a bit of a different experience during his first few seasons in pros. He hasn’t been asked to put the team on his back and take control, which has aided in his growth. Phil the Thrill also had a bout with testicular cancer in the 2006-2007 season and missed 11 games which cut his freshman campaign short. Ever since then, he’s been trying to get his timing back and now it’s starting to show. Through the first 19 games of this season, Kessel has a line of nine goals and five assists and is tied for second on the team in points with nine. Behind him and his team-leading nine goals, the B’s are 12-3-4. On the whole, it has been a youth movement on Causeway Street the last few seasons but the cornerstone and leader of the pack has always been Kessel.
Ever since Game Five of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals against Montreal last April, Kessel has shown his potential to be a top-tier forward in the league. B’s coach Claude Julien benched Kessel in Games Three and Four in order to motivate him. Did it ever. The young stud responded with a brilliant effort in Game Five as he created numerous scoring chances and scored his first goal of the playoffs to tie the game. The B’s never looked back and went on to force Game Six with a 5-1 thrashing of the Canadiens. In Game Six, Kessel was an absolute force potting two goals and leading the Bruins to a 5-4 victory and a decisive game seven date up in Canada. We all know how that one ended. The point is, the flashes of brilliance and teases are finally coming to fruition. It’s no longer absurd to think that Phil Kessel can’t become one of the elite players in the NHL. A player with his skill set can win games as we’ve seen him do in countless shootouts against elite goaltenders like New York’s Henrik Lundqvist and Pittsburgh’s Marc-Andre Fleury.
Scouts have been high on Kessel since he was a teenager and in his first and only season with the Golden Gophers up in Minnesota he sported a line of 18 goals and 33 assists for 51 points--51 points on a loaded Minnesota team as a freshman. Most players his age are either still busy finishing a college degree or mulling around in the lower ranks waiting for their call to the big show. There was never a doubt that Kessel’s speed, hands and hockey sense have given him the potential to be a tremendous player. What remains to be seen this season is whether or not he has the drive to take his game to the next level, but so far he seems as hungry as ever to do it.
So far this season, Kessel has used his speed much more as a weapon than in the past. He has shown that he’s not afraid to go digging in the corners for pucks and will sprint back full-speed on defense when the other team is on a fast break. In most of the games this season, Julien has paired him with fellow youngster Milan Lucic and top playmaker Marc Savard. Kessel has taken cues from both of them and their line has been one of the Bruins’ top two scoring lines thus far. Savard’s patience and creativity with the puck are two traits that have certainly rubbed off on Kessel and with Lucic the human wrecking ball out on the ice to wreak havoc on opponents’ defenders, Phil the Thrill gets just enough space to work some magic of his own.
After a full 82-game season in his second year of professional hockey, it became clear that Kessel belongs in the league. His sophomore campaign boasted a solid 19 goals with 18 assists for 37 points. He wowed crowds with his ability to dangle, skate and score and developed a knack for driving goalies insane come shootout time.
Phil the Thrill is off to his best start yet. All things considered, if the Bruins are finally going to get over the hump and win their first playoff series since 1999, they need Kessel to fulfill his potential and become the offensive juggernaut of their hopes and dreams. With Number 81 leading the way, the B’s future looks brighter than it has in years.
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