MARYLAND
NEIGHTS, Mo. -- When St. Louis Blues practice ended on Friday, there
were three guys left on the ice.
And
once Dylan Holloway and Jimmy Snuggerud left, only one remained. At
the opposite end of the ice, by himself, head down, working with the
puck.
It
was defenseman Logan Mailloux.
The
22-year-old will be a healthy scratch on Saturday when the Blues
(2-2-0) host the Dallas Stars (3-1-0) on Saturday.
It’s
probably the expected outcome after Mailloux, playing in his fourth
game with the Blues this season and just his 12th
in the NHL, was a minus-4 playing 15:49 on Wednesday in an 8-3 loss
against the Chicago Blackhawks. He is a minus-7 in four games this season with no points.
Matthew
Kessel will replace Mailloux and play alongside Tyler Tucker, but the
Blues, who were hoping Mailloux would be shot out of a cannon and be
an immediate impact, has shown signs of good play, but it’s obvious
that the long-term vision has come into focus again and something
that has never been cast aside.
“When
you think about players’ development in the league, it’s always
goaltenders take the longest,” Blues
coach Jim Montgomery said.
“That’s why they play to the oldest average age. Defensemen are
second. Forwards finish the youngest, especially in the modern era.
Forwards usually at the age of 32, they’re starting to decline. For
a defenseman, it’s more like 34-35 and goaltenders, it’s more
like 37. It’s just the way it seems like it’s been.
“And
that being said, have you guys heard of Fabian Brunnstrom?
A 2008 free agent signing. Everybody wanted to sign him. First game
in the league, scored three goals. Everybody was like, ‘Here’s
the new Jari Kurri or Mats Sundin in the National Hockey League.’
You guys haven’t heard of him. There’s a reason, right? And then
there’s other guys … this is a hard league to break into,
especially at that position. We’re thinking the long game with
Logan Mailloux. Sometimes you need a reset. You go up in the press
box, watch a game, you see how much time you have, you see how to
take away time and we’re going to work with him. We have a plan and
when he gets back in the lineup, I don’t ever expect him to come
back out.”
Fans
have already voiced displeasure at the trade that brought Mailloux
from the Montreal Canadiens for Zack Bolduc, who scored in his first
three games with the Canadiens and had an assist, becoming the
seventh Canadiens player in their history to score in his first three
games with the club.
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That’s
why not only will the club make sure to nurture Mailloux on the ice
but off it as well.
“As
a coach, you have to look after everybody mentally. It’s part of
the job,” Montgomery
said.
“To be able to support these guys, sometimes you’ve got to kick
them in the rear end. You need to build them up so that they
understand that you believe in them, but ice time, I love the line
from Bobby Knight: there’s nothing that teaches people better than
ass meet bench, bench meet ass. That’s the only tool a coach has
always had to get a player’s attention when they’re not playing
to the team standard, and that’s not the case with Logan Mailloux,
but it’s often been the case at times in the past. Not with him,
but with other players.”
The
Blues won’t allow the outside noise to disrupt their overall vision
for Mailloux, who has the backing of his teammates.
“He’s
going to be a great player,” Blues
defenseman Colton Parayko
said. “You watch him skate, you watch him shoot, he’s steady,
he’s strong back there. There’s no doubt about that. I’m
looking forward to watching that guy grow and become a dominant force
back there. I have full faith in him. He’s a great player. We’re
just all looking forward to watching him grow, but at the end of the
day, it’s a group effort no matter what. That’s the bottom line.
We’re all wearing the Bluenote together.
“It’s
got to be difficult obviously going to a new team and you want to
play well and things like that. He’s a great player. I have full
confidence in him. I’m just looking forward to watching him
continue to grow and just keep building.”
Captain
Brayden Schenn said, “He's
played 11 games or 12 games,” Schenn said. “There's a lot of
pressure on him coming from outside. I believe in Logan Mailloux, we
believe in Logan Mailloux, and the organization does. I think people
are always going to look at this one-for-one. It's not a one-for-one.
It's a long-term plan, and he's a great player.
“Like
I said, he's played four games for us and it's a new organization ...
new coaching, new system, there's a lot of stuff that goes into it.
Honestly, I think he's getting ... there's no reason to put pressure
on the kid. He's young, and he's getting his feet wet, and he's going
to be a good player for a long time, and I firmly believe that.”
There
will come a time, whether it be the next game on Tuesday against the
Los Angeles Kings or even further along the line when Mailloux
returns and has that game where he figures out he belongs in the
league. The Blues know it will come tomorrow, the day after, next
month, maybe next year, whenever it happens, it will come.
“Everybody’s
different when they have that ah-hah moment,” Montgomery
said.
“His ah-hah moment hasn’t happened yet, and there’s always a
moment for every player where it’s like, ‘not only can I survive
in this league, but I can thrive in this league,’ and it’s going
to happen for him. He’s too talented, he’s too good. When I meet
with him, I always leave excited about how future’s going to be.”
Blues Making Changes Throughout Lineup For Game Saturday Against StarsBlues coach Jim Montgomery puts forward lines through blender at practice on Friday.
Kessel To Debut For Blues Saturday Against StarsDefenseman has been a healthy scratch for four games, will replace Mailloux