Impress coach? Czech
Humel catches eye of Ftorek at camp
WILMINGTON - Two weeks from today, a new NHL season about to begin, the Bruins will board their charter flight to Minnesota for their Oct. 11 opener with the Wild.
If Ivan Huml is aboard, there could an unexpected stopover in Michigan for a, shall we say, family gathering.
''He's got that bit of wolverine in him,'' coach Robbie Ftorek said yesterday, noting Huml's carnivorous attitude on the ice. ''If you hit him, he'll hunt you down. He has that burr to his game, and you know, I think that's a good quality.''
Be it in Michigan, home state of the wolverine, Massachusetts, or Minnesota, there is room in every NHL lineup for someone who hunts the puck. In his two years with the AHL Providence Bruins, the 21-year-old Huml has shown an emerging scoring touch, and his 47 points last season included 28 goals - tops on the Baby Bruins. Tonight, when the Bruins face the Canadiens in an exhibition game in Halifax, Nova Scotia, he'll be skating left wing on the club's No. 1 line with Joe Thornton and Glen Murray.
''I don't play perfect European hockey,'' offered Huml, at first not fully grasping the compliment Ftorek intended with his ''wolverine'' remark. ''I left home four years ago, and I'd say my style has changed. I've adjusted a little bit to North American hockey.''
If he were walking along Commonwealth Avenue on a sunny autumn afternoon, the blue-eyed, baby-faced Huml easily would pass as a Boston College or Boston University freshman. The truth is, the well-spoken Czech forward left high school nearly two years early to come to Canada in the fall of 1998 for a chance to turn hockey into a career. He hadn't been drafted. He didn't have the promise of being, say, a top-10 pick in the June 2000 draft. All he had when he packed his bags in Kladno - home of NHL superstar Jaromir Jagr - was the hope that a couple of years of lower-level (Tier 2) Canadian junior hockey could turn into a chance at making the big time.
''Now this is my third training camp with Boston,'' said Huml, selected by the Bruins as the 59th pick in the 2000 draft. ''Three years ago, I was around 180 pounds ... and every year is different for me. I'm around 200 pounds now, a little stronger, and the two years of AHL experience have helped me. I feel a little more prepared.''
First line is not a realistic dream for Huml, at least not as long as Sergei Samsonov still wears the spoked-B. But there are openings on the wing in Boston, and the versatile Huml can play on either side. Yesterday's practice session had him riding with Michal Grosek and Jozef Stumpel, the makings of an all-European trio that could provide Ftorek with a fairly skilled and creative No. 2 line come opening night.
''Everyone who is still here remains in the mix,'' said Ftorek, for the moment unwilling to rate any of his rookies' chances of making a home in the Hub of Hockey this season. ''If you are still here, we have every intention of giving you the opportunity to make the team - or take yourself off the team.''
Candidates with sharp teeth and cunning sense around the net don't get special consideration, but they certainly draw attention. Now about halfway through training camp, the Bruins wouldn't have Huml working on such a skilled line if they didn't feel he had at least a chance of coming out of September as one of their top eight wingers. He's hardly a finished product, but he is enough of a work in progress to merit a little more work and a longer look.
Huml spends part of his summers playing on Team Jagr, a touring squad based in Kladno that faces a lot of elite Czech squads in charity games around the Czech Republic. Some of his teammates include Roman Hamrlik, Martin Rucinsky, Petr Nedved, and Martin Havlat, as well as Jagr, the Capitals' high-scoring winger.
''It's about 90 percent of the Czech national team,'' said Huml. ''It's a great team to practice with, a bunch of hard-working guys. And growing up in Kladno, I watched Jagr for years - he's 10 years older than me - and I'm always trying to copy his style. He's so good, his strength and his shooting and his passing. I try to copy a little bit of everything he does.''
There isn't much of the wolverine in Jagr of course, but not every predator is found at the same link in the food chain. Even if he has only a tiny bit of Jagr in him, the new kid from Kladno could be quite a catch for Causeway.
Humel catches eye of Ftorek at camp
WILMINGTON - Two weeks from today, a new NHL season about to begin, the Bruins will board their charter flight to Minnesota for their Oct. 11 opener with the Wild.
If Ivan Huml is aboard, there could an unexpected stopover in Michigan for a, shall we say, family gathering.
''He's got that bit of wolverine in him,'' coach Robbie Ftorek said yesterday, noting Huml's carnivorous attitude on the ice. ''If you hit him, he'll hunt you down. He has that burr to his game, and you know, I think that's a good quality.''
Be it in Michigan, home state of the wolverine, Massachusetts, or Minnesota, there is room in every NHL lineup for someone who hunts the puck. In his two years with the AHL Providence Bruins, the 21-year-old Huml has shown an emerging scoring touch, and his 47 points last season included 28 goals - tops on the Baby Bruins. Tonight, when the Bruins face the Canadiens in an exhibition game in Halifax, Nova Scotia, he'll be skating left wing on the club's No. 1 line with Joe Thornton and Glen Murray.
''I don't play perfect European hockey,'' offered Huml, at first not fully grasping the compliment Ftorek intended with his ''wolverine'' remark. ''I left home four years ago, and I'd say my style has changed. I've adjusted a little bit to North American hockey.''
If he were walking along Commonwealth Avenue on a sunny autumn afternoon, the blue-eyed, baby-faced Huml easily would pass as a Boston College or Boston University freshman. The truth is, the well-spoken Czech forward left high school nearly two years early to come to Canada in the fall of 1998 for a chance to turn hockey into a career. He hadn't been drafted. He didn't have the promise of being, say, a top-10 pick in the June 2000 draft. All he had when he packed his bags in Kladno - home of NHL superstar Jaromir Jagr - was the hope that a couple of years of lower-level (Tier 2) Canadian junior hockey could turn into a chance at making the big time.
''Now this is my third training camp with Boston,'' said Huml, selected by the Bruins as the 59th pick in the 2000 draft. ''Three years ago, I was around 180 pounds ... and every year is different for me. I'm around 200 pounds now, a little stronger, and the two years of AHL experience have helped me. I feel a little more prepared.''
First line is not a realistic dream for Huml, at least not as long as Sergei Samsonov still wears the spoked-B. But there are openings on the wing in Boston, and the versatile Huml can play on either side. Yesterday's practice session had him riding with Michal Grosek and Jozef Stumpel, the makings of an all-European trio that could provide Ftorek with a fairly skilled and creative No. 2 line come opening night.
''Everyone who is still here remains in the mix,'' said Ftorek, for the moment unwilling to rate any of his rookies' chances of making a home in the Hub of Hockey this season. ''If you are still here, we have every intention of giving you the opportunity to make the team - or take yourself off the team.''
Candidates with sharp teeth and cunning sense around the net don't get special consideration, but they certainly draw attention. Now about halfway through training camp, the Bruins wouldn't have Huml working on such a skilled line if they didn't feel he had at least a chance of coming out of September as one of their top eight wingers. He's hardly a finished product, but he is enough of a work in progress to merit a little more work and a longer look.
Huml spends part of his summers playing on Team Jagr, a touring squad based in Kladno that faces a lot of elite Czech squads in charity games around the Czech Republic. Some of his teammates include Roman Hamrlik, Martin Rucinsky, Petr Nedved, and Martin Havlat, as well as Jagr, the Capitals' high-scoring winger.
''It's about 90 percent of the Czech national team,'' said Huml. ''It's a great team to practice with, a bunch of hard-working guys. And growing up in Kladno, I watched Jagr for years - he's 10 years older than me - and I'm always trying to copy his style. He's so good, his strength and his shooting and his passing. I try to copy a little bit of everything he does.''
There isn't much of the wolverine in Jagr of course, but not every predator is found at the same link in the food chain. Even if he has only a tiny bit of Jagr in him, the new kid from Kladno could be quite a catch for Causeway.

