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Penguins'
defenseman
Mark Eaton, a
free-agent acquisition from Nashville, is quite content with
not being the center of attention on his team. |
Usually, new
players to a team want to make an immediate impact. Not so for
Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman
Mark Eaton.
The 29-year-old
free agent will be happy if nobody in hockey-mad Pittsburgh knows
him after last Thursday's riveting season-opening show that included
player announcements. Eaton doesn't want the media surrounding his
stall in the dressing room after games and he doesn't want to be the
subject of sports talk radio hosts on the city's two all-sports talk
radio stations.
"The less press
the better, that's the way I like it," Eaton said.
Don't think that
Eaton is anti-social. He is among the most gregarious of the
Penguins, happy to talk to anyone that passes by his stall. Rather,
his aversion to the headlines comes from past schooling.
"I had a
coach that told me if he didn't notice me out there, I was playing
well and doing things right," he says. "That's my motto, my
philosophy for myself -- just fly under the radar."
So far, he has
followed his game plan to a tee. He had a solid pre-season and was
brilliant in the Penguins' home opener. He played nearly 20 minutes,
killed more than seven minutes of penalties, blocked a pair of shots
and finished even for the game, an emotional 4-0 win against the
rival Flyers.
Penguins goalie
Marc-Andre Fleury earned the shutout opening night, turning
aside 40 shots. Afterward, he talked about Eaton's play in front of
him, but he was certainly in the minority calling attention to Eaton
on this night.
"He did great,"
Fleury said, shaking his head in wonder for emphasis. "He was diving
everywhere, clearing rebounds, blocking shots with his head. He was
just great. He saved me a couple of times."
Granted, it is
hard for a defensive defenseman to gain notoriety anywhere among
casual fans; but that is even more difficult on a team like the
Penguins, which features young superstar
Sidney Crosby, superstar-in-waiting Evgeni Malkin and venerable
vets like
Mark Recchi and
John LeClair.
But Eaton has
arrived in Pittsburgh, signed as a free agent this summer from
Nashville, playing the simple no-frills game that has served him so
well since he broke into the NHL as an undrafted free agent with
Philadelphia back in 1999-2000 season.
Then, his lack of
a high profile might have worked against him as he was judged
expendable and traded from the Flyers the next season to Nashville
in exchange for a third-round pick.
In Nashville,
Eaton came into his own, following his game plan of being
inconspicuous through excellence, quickly developing into a
stay-at-home defender who excelled on the penalty kill and could eat
up considerable playing minutes game-in and game-out.
In 2003-04, Eaton
had a career-high 13 points and a plus-16 rating for the Predators
as they finished the climb from expansion straggler to playoff
contender. Last season, he blocked a team-high 170 shots and ranked
fifth on the team in average ice time per game, playing a tick under
20 minutes per game, as Nashville earned a top-four finish in the
Western Conference. He led Nashville's touted penalty-killing unit,
which finished fifth in the League, by playing a team-leading 5:22
per game shorthanded.
Not surprisingly,
new GM Ray Shero, the second in command in Nashville's front office
before this summer, made the signing of Eaton one of his first
moves. It did not get the same play as other summer moves, including
the selection of
Jordan Staal with the second overall pick of this summer's Entry
Draft or the free-agent deal that brought Recchi back into the fold,
but it was a solid move, nonetheless.
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Last season
with Nashville,
Mark Eaton blocked
a team-high 170 shots, and led the Predators' fifth-ranked
penalty-killing unit. |
Coach Michel
Therrien has paired Eaton with veteran defenseman
Sergei Gonchar, an offensive dynamo. Eaton's defensive
responsibility gives that top pairing the balance that Therrien
believes will key its success.
"We are
concentrating on the pairings with the defensemen," Therrien said.
"When we hired some guys from the free-agent market, we had a plan
for those guys. Like Eaton, when we went to get him, we figured he
would be a great match with Sergei. So, we put those guys together
since Day One and they've done a great job. I think the chemistry is
there and we feel comfortable with the pairing."
It is also
obvious that Therrien feels comfortable with Eaton despite the
limited personal experience he has had with the player so far.
"First of all, he
is the type of defenseman where he is not a flashy guy, but he is
always doing the right things on the ice," Therrien says. "He is
really dependable defensively. Ray Shero knew him really well in
Nashville, so you gotta give credit to Ray on that one."
As good as Eaton
is on the ice, he also believes he can bring veteran leadership to
this very young Penguin team as it tries to fight its way to
respectability. He has navigated the same difficult road during his
tenure in Nashville.
"We've certainly
joked about it a little bit in here, that I am a seasoned vet at
29," Eaton said. "But, I think that is a good thing. The young guys
that we do have, they have a year of experience, most of them. When
you are that young, with experience, you are only going to get
better. So, we expect better things out of those players this year
and also out of us as a team this year."
How much better?
That remains to be seen, but Eaton draws on his experiences with the
Predators to draw a healthy dose of optimism as they begin the long
trek toward April.
"It helps me in
some ways going through the transition years in Nashville," he
admitted. "From what I have seen, we're much further along than we
were in Nashville (in the beginning). That's a testament to the
young guys we have here.
"A lot of these
young guys here haven't had a taste of playoff NHL hockey. Once they
get that taste and once they get that scent, watch out because there
is nothing like playoff hockey and that that is what we are shooting
for."
When the Penguins
find their way to that promised land, Eaton may have to deal with
the press he so studiously avoids. But, he'll cross that bridge
happily when he comes to it.
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