Feature Article

The Promise of Rasmus Dahlin

By Dan David, HockeyDraftCentral.com

Rasmus Dahlin

The year 1973 marked the NHL Amateur Draft's 10th anniversary, but it was only the fifth with eligibility for every major-junior graduate, as all players born in 1953 were up for grabs.

The draft was hardly a fan favorite back then. It was held on May 15, just five days after Montreal had won the Stanley Cup and three days before the upstart World Hockey Association was set to select amateurs for the first time in bulk.

Since the NHL's draft was a private affair, most picks would not even realize they had been drafted until their home phones rang, and many were unaware the draft was even happening that day. NHL teams' biggest concern was not the draft itself, but a determination to sign drafted players before the WHA could.

Hockey's bible, The Hockey News, ran only one draft-preview article -- the only national news coverage available to fans in both the U.S. and Canada. In that article, writer Bob Strumm explained why Ottawa 67's "brilliant defenseman" Denis Potvin would be the inevitable No. 1 pick:

"The Ottawa graduate can do it all and is tabbed as pro hockey's next Bobby Orr," Strumm wrote. "... From his defense position, Potvin scored 35 goals and added 88 assists in regular-season OHA play. What's more, the kid is tougher than a Russian bear on skates. The six-foot, 195-pound rearguard compiled 232 minutes in penalties in his final junior season and has become somewhat of a legend across the country."

This was surely the first time that a draft-eligible junior defenseman was referred to as a "legend" in print. Orr had missed being draft-eligible by a couple of years, since he was playing for the Oshawa Generals and was therefore Boston Bruins property. In the years leading up to 1973, Orr was already an NHL legend and remains one of the most transformative hockey players of all-time. To compare Potvin to Orr in 1973 was almost blasphemy.

In Potvin's case, it was a fair comparison. Orr had changed the definition of an NHL defenseman by dominating the ice in all zones and skating with a fluidity the game had never seen. Potvin offered another possibility -- Orr-like offensive production with old-time-hockey toughness in his own zone. For his first few years in the league, which coincided with Orr's all-too-rapid decline, Potvin turned heads with his raw talent alone. Llike his emerging Islanders team, Potvin made it clear that he could thrive in any style of game. He gave that team its identity.

Forget about the his five postseason First Team All-Star selections, his four Stanley Cup championships, and three Norris Trophies. These are just the spoils of a Hall of Fame career. What mattered most -- particularly in his early NHL years -- was the rate at which Potvin scored goals. It was a rate never before seen. Orr had come into the league and scored 45 goals in his first three seasons. Potvin had 69 over that span, including his career-high 31 goals in 1975-76. He retired as the only NHL defenseman to score 300 goals and 1,000 points.

Just as Orr's magic was his ability to take over a game, Potvin's was his ability to put up points at the same time he was shutting down the opposition's top forwards.

In the 45 years since Potvin came into the league, 11 defenseman have been picked No. 1 overall in the draft, and none has come close to having the impact that either Orr or Potvin had on their position. And while players such as Ray Bourque, Paul Coffey, Nick Lidstrom, etc. were certainly great, they were only following a trail blazed by both Orr and Potvin.

The only current player who has offered new ways of thinking about the defenseman's role is Erik Karlsson, who takes risks that no one else in his skates would have taken and often manages to take over games because of it.

Karlsson has opened a door to a style of play that can be as revolutionary as Orr's and Potvin's. But he did not come into the league with the size and skill necessary to develop that style to its full potential. As great as he is, he leaves the sense that a player with better physical tools could do even more -- particularly in terms of scoring goals.

Rasmus Dahlin Sabres jeseyAnd now, in 2018, that player appears to have arrived in Karlsson's countryman Rasmus Dahlin.

It is not a stretch to project that Dahlin will revolutionize his position in the same way that Orr and Potvin did. He will be all over the ice like Orr. He will be a physical force like Potvin. Best of all, he will take all of Karlsson's risks and make the vast majority of them pay off. Dahlin has a hockey sense that might be greater than that of a young Orr or Potvin.

Karlsson, meanwhile, has already declared Dahlin a better player than he was at the same age. Comparing defensemen to forwards is not fair, but Dahlin's hockey sense rivals what Wayne Gretzky brought to the NHK. In other words, this is a player who will think the game two or three steps ahead of everyone else on the ice, which gives him a huge advantage.

The Buffalo Sabres won more than a draft lottery in April. Just like the Islanders in 1973, they won the privilege of having a legend wear their uniform. It might take him a couple of years, but he will get there and inevitably become the keystone of great Sabres success. Buffalo's long wait for the Stanley Cup -- an even longer wait than Washington's -- should end within the next 10 years if the Sabres figure out how to grow a team around Dahlin in the same way the Islanders did it with Potvin.

Is all of this praise for Dahlin way over the top? Perhaps. But there has not been No. 1 pick defenseman since Potvin who has merited such confidence in future stardom. Watch his highlights below over and over again, and then remind yourself that he is doing this at age 17.

When Wayne Gretzky entered the NHL, no one could conceive of what he would do in his career. Everyone knew he was special, but he went beyond all expectations. Consider Dahlin the defenseman's version of Gretzky -- a player who is special now and capable of achievements we can't even imagine.

We are in a different world from 1973. The draft is a huge deal, and the world will be watching it. But in some ways it feels like 1973 all over again. We know that a generational defenseman will go No. 1 to the team with the previous year's worst record. That feels just about right. Hockey fans should be both excited and thankful that a player with such potential has arrived at a moment that has not seen his like in at least 45 years.