ST. LOUIS – Good thing for Devan Dubnyk's persistence, or he might never have become a goaltender.
Devan's dad, Barry, was a goalie as a kid. He played the position because he couldn't skate, which wasn't uncommon in those days.
At 9 years old, Devan asked his dad if he could play goal. His buddy was a goalie, and he thought the gear was cool. But Barry wanted his boy to continue to develop as a skater.
"I remember him saying no right away. He said, 'Not a chance,' " said the Wild goaltender, set to make his playoff debut Thursday night against the Blues. "But I worked on him for a while."
Father and son made a compromise. Barry was the coach, so the two agreed Devan could play every second game.
"He played the first game and we won. We put somebody else in for the second game and we lost 16-1," the father said, laughing. "Devan played the rest of the year. I'm a competitive coach, so I went with the guy that was going to give me the win."
"I've always been defensively minded," the son explained. "When I played soccer, I'd always kind of hang back and play defense, which is pretty rare for a kid because everybody wants to go score. Baseball, I loved being a catcher."
Years later, after his son was drafted by the Western Hockey League's Kamloops Blazers, Barry Dubnyk was talking to a scout who showed him a report he had done on Devan years earlier.