Nelson and Beauvillier, along with Nick Leddy, were regularly first over the boards first during the Islanders' 21 overtime regular season games. Nelson's three overtime goals were the most among the squad.
Prior to the NHL's pause issued on March 12 due to the COVID-19 outbreak, Nelson was on-pace to set a new career best in goals, though he still tied his previous career-high with 26. The 29-year-old established a career-high with his 54 points through 68 games. And during the Islanders first trip to the Eastern Conference Finals since 1993, the Warroad, Minnesota native ranked second behind linemate Josh Bailey in scoring with 18 points through 22 games. His nine goals were tied with Beavuillier for the most during the Islanders 2020 postseason run.
"Just getting him in a position where he had the trust from myself, my staff," Trotz said. "I think he's always had [trust] from his teammates, but there's a swagger or a confidence that everybody has in their growth plan as players. They all get closer to their potential at different times. With Brock, it's a slow burn of getting better and better to the point where [now], he's one of our best players."
Much of Nelson's success was alongside Beauvillier, whose overall game trended in a similar upswing. According to Natural Stat Trick, the pair skated together in all 68 regular season games last year and logged a total of 806:07 TOI together in all situations.
Beauvillier, who at 23-years-old is entering his fifth season in the NHL, set career-highs last season with 39 points and 21 assists while matching his previous career-best of 18 goals. During the postseason, the Sorel-Tracy, Quebec native totaled 14 points (9G, 5A) through 22 games.
He credited much of his recent success to altering his mindset and taking pride in his role among his teammates. In his eyes, last season was just a starting point.