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Penguins Development Process Part 2: What’s Going on with Nathan Légaré?

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ByRick Buker

Apr 11, 2023

I was reading an account of the Baby Penguins’ recent 8-2 thrashing of the Bridgeport Islanders and couldn’t help but notice that forward Nathan Légaré scored two goals.

On the first, he hurtled past Isles defenseman Paul LaDue with a sudden burst of speed and smoked the goalie. On the second, he barreled into the low slot amid three defenders to bang home a loose puck. Given his shot and feisty, aggressive style of play, exactly the type of goals you think he’d score.

Of all the Pens’ prospects currently toiling down on the farm, Légaré might be the most perplexing. A prolific scorer in the Quebec League with Baie-Comeau and later Val d’Or, the 22-year-old Montreal native has mostly struggled during his two seasons in the pros. Struggles that came on the heels of a dynamic finish to his junior career when he netted 14 goals in 15 games during the 2021 President’s Cup playoffs.

Légaré endured a disappointing ‘21-22 campaign when he tallied only seven goals and 16 points in 57 games for the Baby Pens and was a frequent healthy scratch. Admitting that he wasn’t ready for the rigors of the pro game, he professed to being more mentally prepared entering this season. However, following a strong training camp and preseason he’s seen only a marginal uptick in his output…a pedestrian eight goals and 19 points in 66 games.

While it’s not like Légaré was a top-ten pick or anything, he did display plenty of promise in junior. Enough that then-GM Jim Rutherford traded up to select him in the third round of the 2019 draft with the 74th overall pick.

Given his lightning quick release, bomb of a shot and nose for the net, to say nothing of his spirited nature, it appeared the Pens might have unearthed a Jake Guentzel-type gem. Perhaps even an heir apparent to net-front demon Patric Hornqvist.

Expectations were heightened when Légaré, then 18, struck for a pair of blitzkrieg goals 23 seconds apart during an exhibition game against Columbus on September 18, 2019.

“Nathan had a great game tonight,” said Mike Sullivan afterward. “His ability to shoot the puck has been obvious and really jumped out at all of us. He can finish. He can really shoot it. And he likes to shoot it. Tonight was a great example of it. He’s had a great camp so far.”

So what went wrong? Why isn’t the young gun living up to his potential?

Wish I knew.

Could skating be an issue? Reported to have a sluggish first step in junior, it was at least part of the reason Légaré lasted until the third round of the draft. However, he worked hard over the summer of ’21 to make his stride more efficient.

Attitude? Can’t imagine that. During a prospects game last fall, he single-handedly drove the Bruins to distraction with his abrasive play, goading the Bs prospects into at least four penalties and scoring a clutch goal. He seemed to revel at being in the center of the storm.

“I was finishing my checks, going to the net and then sometimes getting under their skin,” Légaré said after the game. “Sometimes when you finish pretty hard checks, sometimes the guys on the other side are getting pissed off or stuff like that.”

Okay. How about the way he’s being used?

Hmmm. Could be on to something there. While I don’t profess to be that knowledgeable about the Baby Pens’ lineup decisions, I do know coach J.D. Forrest consistently deploys Légaré in a bottom-six role.

Perhaps he’s there on merit. But it seems an odd place to play a kid with his shot and offensive instincts. To draw an analogy, I doubt that Guentzel spent much time skating on the third line in Wilkes-Barre.

Too, the Pens have a history of trying to turn players with offensive pedigree into “all-arounders.” Our top pick (eighth overall) in 2012, defenseman Derrick Pouliot was an offensive stud coming out of junior. I remember being very impressed with his vision and puckhandling skills early on. The defensive side of his game wasn’t nearly as developed, and the Pens went to great lengths to make him a better defender. To the extent that it seemed to permanently diminish his offensive skills.

Similarly, talented sniper Daniel Sprong was used on the fourth line, a total waste of a player with his pedigree. At the time it seemed Sprong was being punished by Sullivan for Rutherford’s insistence that he “would make the team.” A couple months later the Amsterdam native was ingloriously shipped to Anaheim.

We let Phil (Kessel) be Phil. But we couldn’t let Daniel be Daniel. (FYI: Seattle’s reaping the benefits of doing so.)

Sullivan and his staff tried mightily to push defenseman John Marino into a more offensive role last season, which visibly took him out of his comfort zone and made him less effective defensively.

Marino’s doing just fine in New Jersey (plus-19), letting the offense come as a result of his solid defensive game.

Perhaps none of this applies to Légaré. Maybe he’s exactly what he’s showing himself to be. Nathan wouldn’t be the first junior scoring star, especially from the Quebec League, to fall short of the mark in the pros.

Then again?

Win and We’re In

The Islanders and Panthers both faltered last night, opening the door for the Pens to make the playoffs. Incredibly, the Isles lost in regulation to the injury-depleted Capitals, 5-2, while the Panthers fell in overtime to the Maple Leafs, 2-1.

Now we just need to do our part. Win out against the bottom-feeding Blackhawks and Blue Jackets and we’re in.

Front-runners in the Connor Bedard sweepstakes, the woebegone Hawks are in the midst of a ghastly 1-11 free fall. The Jackets haven’t been much better (1-7 in their past eight games).

So why don’t I feel more confident?

Because these are our lead-blowing, play-down-to-their-competition Penguies, that’s why.

Oh well. Win, lose or draw, it sure does make for an exciting finish to the season.

GO PENS!!!

2 thoughts on “Penguins Development Process Part 2: What’s Going on with Nathan Légaré?”
  1. Rick
    Again, and I said this on many ocassions I put this on Hextall. Coming in as a new GM and
    promising to add size and toughness he never had the backbone to give Sullivan an
    ultimatum which I believe was inevitible for the Pen’s future success. He was on either
    onboard with the roster as is, or he supported Sullivans approach to speed and under
    sized players. Hextall had the power to demand they go in a different direction. The sad
    thing here is Hextall will be fired and Sullivan will remain Head Coach.

  2. Hey Rick,

    You know my thoughts. I have expressed them enough. No one will ever know whether or not Legare would have made any other NHL roster since he has only been in Pgh. Perhaps he wasn’t ready for the rigors of professional hockey as you quote him, when he stepped out of the Jrs but he was part of the only effective line his 1st NHL preseason (playing with Lafferty and Bjorkqvist) but with that start and the fact that the “Rigors of Professional Hockey” wouldn’t have kicked in until at least December if not February. So, neither of those excuses explain why Legare was almost immediately buried in the bottom 6 of WBS.

    Could it be as you suggest Sullivan’s desire to turn thoroughbreds into plough horses as you also suggest? (“Turn him into an all-arounder”) Well that sounds closer to the truth.

    However, I suspect that it is only part of the answer. I would suggest that trying to defang the kid is at least as much, if not more the factor for Legare’s burial in the bottom 6 of WBS. A player can take all the careless high sticking penalties or retaliatory penalties in critical situations if their name is Simon or E-Rod, they want and not suffer any consequence, but don’t get aggressive, even if you draw far more Penalties than you take, else you will draw the ire and glare from Sully and then get press box time or a trip to WBS.

    I have to say that the only thing more frustrating about the Penguins, than their current struggles is the defense of the Coach by fans who refuse to look critically at a Coach who was fired after only 2 seasons in Boston and whose only sure means of avoiding a 5th strait 1st round loss would be to lose the last 2 regular season games and bow out before another embarrassment. Sullivan hides himself behind a record established by Crosby, Malkin, Letang, Fleury, Murray, Kessell, Guentzel, Hornqvist, Kunitz, Cole, and Bonino. Now half of those players are gone and even if they weren’t they are all in the twilight of their careers, we are seeing just how pedestrian our Coach is. He no longer has the best W% in the regular season or playoffs as his numbers keep dropping.

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