"I wouldn't expect anything different," Islanders assistant coach and assistant GM Doug Weight said. "He's a bit of a machine, that's where he knows he's going to get paid. He goes to the net and is tough to move. He's got great coordination around the net as well so [the injury is] not going to change his game."
Lee can help create offense even when he doesn't score just by taking away the goalie's eyes and causing havoc around the net, but he wants to hit the scoresheet as often as possible. He scored 25 goals two seasons ago, so scoring 15 last year left a bit to be desired by the Edina, Minn., native. He's hungry for more this year.
"That was kind of the toughest part - the season didn't go the way I wanted it to and the last some odd games I was finding it and was really playing well," Lee said. "To have it end not on my own terms stinks, but just bad luck and something that motivates you all summer and makes you look forward to the following year."
Lee was nearing a return during the end of the Islanders second-round series with the Tampa Bay Lightning, but gave himself some extra time to heal after the team was eliminated. He had a chance to really test it out over the summer in Da Beauty League, a summer hockey league for NHLers in Minnesota, and said everything checked out (he scored 13 points in nine games in the tune-up league). With the season less than two weeks away, Lee is both comfortable on his repaired leg - and back in front of the net.
"It's a physical game in there," Brock Nelson said. "You have to hold your ground as best you can and obviously Anders is a big kid, so he does that quite well, one of the best actually. Good on him for getting right back in there and not being afraid… we'll need him there.