Höglander's career has taken him from his minor hockey days in Malå, Sweden, a small lakeside town of 2,000 known for its ski slopes and fishing, all the way to becoming a core member of the Canucks in his first NHL season. Not only has that journey involved getting accustomed to a new country, a new language and a new group of teammates but doing so in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic.
And to his credit, the 20-year-old winger has faced the adversity with a smile. "I'm really proud of myself, I've worked hard to be in this situation," Höglander said at the start of the season. "It feels amazing to be on the ice and be with the team now."
The NHL baptism the former 2019 second round draft pick has experienced is certainly not the same one his linemate Tanner Pearson got as a freshman. Pearson famously broke into the league in 2013-14 with the Los Angeles Kings, becoming an integral piece of the team's second Stanley Cup victory. In the eight years since, he's witnessed the first steps of many young hockey stars, including Höglander's.
"I think it's really different. Just the fact that you can't hang out with the guys or just do something inside with each other," Pearson said. "I remember when we played [before the pandemic], we had a pretty good crew that went out together a lot. But I think he's handled it pretty well."
In the average NHL rookie season, players have all the time they need to get accustomed to a new roster; both on the ice with an 82 game schedule and off of it through family dinners, team activities and shared hotel rooms on the road. The challenges of playing hockey during a worldwide pandemic caused all of those familiar plans to be modified or outright cut by the NHL for safety purposes.
Before his arrival in Vancouver for the abbreviated season, Höglander suited up in 23 games for Rögle BK of the Swedish Hockey League, an opportunity that simply wouldn't have been possible in a normal year. By the time Canucks' training camp began in January, Höglander already had his feet under him and was skating in midseason form.
And despite the current restrictions, Pearson and the rest of the Canucks have done what they can to make sure the kid they affectionately call "Höggy' enjoys his time in Vancouver. "I think it's just about talking to him a lot," Pearson said. "Obviously, the only place we can really hang out is at the rink. So making sure that everything's going well not just here, but at home too. How he's coping with not being able to do a lot."
Even without all the usual chances to get to know his new teammates, Höglander still made an instant impression on them. "He's a real nice kid," Pearson said. "He doesn't talk a whole lot. But on the ice, he's definitely a little water bug out there. He plays hard, and he's not afraid to go to the dirty areas to chip in."
While Höglander has been adjusting to learning a new language in Vancouver, he's let his play do all the talking for him. In his very first game as a Canuck, he pounced on a rebound and knocked the puck past Oilers goalie Mikko Koskinen for his first NHL goal; one of the bigger highlights in a rookie campaign that will likely see him finish top-five in team scoring.