Head Coach Trotz labels him a puck transporter, someone who can move the puck up the ice either with a good, heady pass, or by wheeling it up the ice himself. Toews' skating is Nick Leddy-esque and has been his foundation. It's what won him the fastest skater competition at the 2017 AHL All-Star Classic. It's what gets him up the ice offensively and gets him out of jams the other way. Sometimes he's a little too smooth for his own good, like the time he negated a Cal Clutterbuck goal in Boston by being an inch offside. It was, of course, Toews who started the rush off a defensive zone draw.
"His skating is allowing him to do things that other people struggle to do," Trotz said. "He makes it look real efficient and he's got a good sense of his ability to process and read what his options are. And he executes really well."
Toews has made a nice transition to the NHL. He's got 11 points (4G, 7A) in his first 26 games. He's formed an effective pairing with Scott Mayfield, a more physical, defensive partner, the type of ying-yang duo Trotz likes to have on the back end.
"The chemistry is there. I think it started in training camp," Mayfield said. "Once we started playing more games here, it really started to evolve. I definitely think we have that, I can get in the corners and be physical, take a hit, give a hit, get the puck loose and if I get it over to him, he gets to skate and move it out. So far it's just worked out really well."
The Dallas game was a surreal moment for Toews, who had his parents, Werner and Tammy, brother Nolan and fiancé Kerry fly in for his NHL debut. That was his welcome to the NHL moment, and it was nice to be able to share it with the people who helped lead him to the doorstep.
"Just having my parents and family there, just a cool experience to share it with them. That's when I was like, 'wow, this is real' and pretty cool," Toews said.