Now in his first year in North America, Chinakhov is still settling in, and it's evident. The English has a long way to go, and it's fair to say Columbus is a whole different world than what he's used to in his hometown of Omsk in Siberia. He's also making adjustments at work, as Chinakhov has to get used to the demanding rigors of playing in the world's toughest hockey league at 20 years old.
But everything that happened in that locker room shows the process is coming along nicely -- and that there's a lot more excitement to come from the team's 2020 first-round pick.
"I'm good because I live alone by myself and I try to learn something new every day, so it's good for me," Chinakhov said last week through interpreter Vladislav Gavrikov. "I try to have some fun."
On the ice, that's been happening. Chinakhov had quite a week last week, not only scoring his first career goal with that huge tally to tie the Red Wings but a game later earning the Blue Jackets a point in the standings by clinching a shootout win at Arizona.
The goals felt like they were coming, as Chinakhov has not looked out of place on a line with Sillinger and veteran Jakub Voracek since moving up to replace Patrik Laine when he was injured Nov. 3 at Colorado. While there have been the usual teaching points and inconsistencies any rookie is bound to go through, there also have been scoring chances aplenty and moments where you can tell his hockey IQ and skill are off the charts.
On the score sheet, Chinakhov has the goal and three helpers for four points in his first 12 NHL games, not to mention his shootout tally. Dig a little deeper and there's some more encouraging signs -- including an average of 2.0 shots on goal and 3.4 shot attempts per game, meaning he's not afraid to put the puck on net -- and head coach Brad Larsen has praised his general play way from the puck as the season has gone on.
"He's come in and I think he's trying to play the right way," Oliver Bjorkstrand said. "Obviously when you're young, a lot of times it's hard understanding the right way to play, but I think he's doing a lot of good things. Most of the time, he's making the right plays at the right times and not trying to do too much. Whenever he has a chance to make a skill play, he makes it and makes some nice plays.
"He could have a few goals already, he's just gotten a little bit unlucky, but I'm impressed by him."
But at the end of the day, scorers want to score, and getting his first career goal was good for the confidence of Chinakhov. With the Jackets down 3-2 late in the game against the Red Wings, Voracek played Chinakhov alone into the offensive zone, and before Detroit goalie Thomas Greiss could even move, the Russian forward unleashed a bullet of a shot that went through the legs to tie the game.