"I'm not as young as I once was, and throughout the whole process, you don't know what you're going to get back to," Bouwmeester said. "Everyone keeps telling you give it time and you'll be back to normal, but like anybody, as the calendar winds down to training camp, you're wishing things would speed up a little bit. The start of the year was a little bit tough because I wasn't really at a place I wished I was, but you have to work through that. It's all good now… I feel better than I have in the last couple of years."
"I can't take credit for Bouwmeester's turnaround, that's him," Blues Head Coach Craig Berube said in February in the midst of his club's franchise-record setting 11-game win streak. "This guy is an unbelievable worker. We talk about Ryan O'Reilly as a worker, but this guy is right there with him. In the gym, doing all the things he needed to do. That hip injury - other players that had that injury, that takes a year sometimes to get back to your game. He's done it in a pretty quick turnaround I think… You have to be patient, especially with a guy like that that's played that long with the character he has. It's worked out so far, he's come around, he's been a real good player for us.
"We're lucky to have him."
Bouwmeester likely won't be the only Blues player who is nominated for an NHL Award in June. Ryan O'Reilly is making a strong case for the Selke Trophy, given to the forward who demonstrates the most skill in the defensive component of the game. Jordan Binnington, who leads all goaltenders in goals-against average (1.81), ranks second in save-percentage (.930) and is just two wins shy of becoming the Blues' leader amongst rookie goaltender in wins, could be a candidate for the Calder Trophy as the League's rookie of the year. Berube, who has led the Blues from the bottom of the League to being on the verge of clinching a playoff spot, could be considered for the Jack Adams Award, given to the NHL's Coach of the Year.