DENVER – Gabriel Landeskog was a surprising pick as the Colorado Avalanche captain last season, but he showed what kind of leader he is in his first NHL playoff game.
Landeskog set the early tone Thursday for his team in Game 1 of its Western Conference quarterfinal series with the Wild, which the Avalanche won 5-4 in overtime. His goal at 13 minutes, 14 seconds of the first period gave Colorado a 1-0 lead.
"It kind of gets that monkey off your back, especially coming in Game 1," Landeskog said, referring to scoring the first goal. "You want to come out and be that presence out there. For me, that's playing physical and scoring a goal."
He showed his physical side when he delivered a big hit on Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin just before his goal. Landeskog said that helped settle any nerves he felt at the start.
"A lot of people when they go into a game are nervous, they say take a hit or give a hit. That's kind of the mentality," Landeskog said. "You get roughed up and you get right into it. That was the feeling tonight."
Landeskog quickly proved he was deserving of being named captain at age 19, becoming the youngest captain in NHL history just 15 months after he was the second pick in the 2011 NHL entry draft.
There were older and safer picks for the position — Paul Stastny, Erik Johnson and Matt Duchene were established young veterans — but what might have looked like a gimmicky choice at the time turned out to be the right one.
"Even at 18 years old, he was comfortable speaking up and he showed a lot of character and leadership," said Jean-Sebastien Giguere, Colorado's 36-year-old backup goaltender. "It was the right move at the time."