"You have to give him credit knowing, coming off the year he had, with the so-called sophomore jinx and awareness around the League that he's going to get more attention," Quenneville said. "He plays well technically, does a lot of good things in our game. If he keeps going the way he's been going, he could really be something where all of a sudden the numbers will be reflected of how good he really is."
DeBrincat said, "Everyone in this League is good, every defensive pair. Some are better than others, but you have to make quick plays no matter who you're playing against. It doesn't matter who you play. Hopefully you get around them. That's how I approach it."
Those who watched DeBrincat in Erie aren't surprised he has become a big part of the Blackhawks offense.
"Being a smaller player, people just see his stature. But really, if you're to open his body up, you'd see this giant inside," former Erie assistant coach Vince Laise said. "His competitiveness and fearlessness and tenacity, you can't measure it with what we see with our eyes."
McDavid said, "He's always been a guy who's had doubters and people who look at his size and say, 'Oh, he'll never play, or he'll never be successful.' But we saw what he did in junior and now it's translated to the NHL. For me, a guy who's seen it up close and personal, it doesn't surprise me at all."
NHL.com correspondent Dave McCarthy contributed to this report.