Cooley flew on a private jet from Montreal to Phoenix, where he sat at a press conference between Armstrong and Arizona's other first-round picks: center Conor Geekie (No. 11) and defenseman Maveric Lamoureux (No. 29). Then he got a dose of reality at Coyotes development camp, from the physical testing off the ice to the competition on the ice.
His biggest takeaway?
"I just think how hard it is to crack the lineup in the NHL, how hard guys go and how much stronger I need to get too," Cooley said. "A year in college could really help. Just keep developing, and then I think I'll be ready."
Cooley (5-foot-10, 180 pounds) returned home to the Pittsburgh area and skated at the Pittsburgh Penguins' practice facility in Cranberry, Pennsylvania. He shared the ice with several NHL players, including Vancouver Canucks forward J.T. Miller, New York Rangers center Vincent Trocheck and Anaheim Ducks goalie John Gibson, who has shown Cooley how hard it is to score at the sport's highest level. Cooley said Gibson leaves him hardly any net, then whips out his glove to make quick saves.
"Obviously goalies in the NHL are really good, so working on getting my shot a little harder, a little more accurate too," Cooley said.
United States coach Nate Leman said Cooley made a lot of plays against Slovakia on Dec. 26, leading him to think Cooley would be relied upon by the end of the tournament, which has been rescheduled and will start fresh more than seven months later. NHL Network will provide
complete coverage of the tournament
.
Cooley made an impression starting at his first practice of the National Junior Evaluation Camp.
"He's poised with the puck," Leaman said. "He's strong, can make a lot of plays, and he's willing to defend too. He's going to play a lot for us."