"He was one of the first [defensemen] to win a Conn Smythe in a long time and, I don't know, that just made me so happy when he won that because I feel [defensemen] get overshadowed all the time when it comes to awards like that," Los Angeles Kings defenseman Drew Doughty said. "He plays some tough minutes, he plays against other teams' top lines, he's on power plays, he's on penalty kill, he does it all."
When the Blackhawks selected Keith (6-foot-1, 192 pounds), in the second round (No. 54) of the 2002 NHL Draft, big, rugged defensemen were still the norm. What Keith lacked in size he made up for in speed and endurance.
A fitness fanatic, Keith would find, through his workouts, any edge he could gain on opponents.
"I never had a skills coach, never had a personal trainer, but I always did my own research," Keith said. "The biggest thing is I knew I wanted to get better. I knew there was a way to get quicker and faster off the ice, and I would do some of the stuff that I'd research and I'd feel better. So, it became kind of an obsession that way."
Chara, the Bruins' 41-year-old captain, has played more minutes than any active NHL player (34,564:51 in 1,427 games) since 1997-98. He said Keith's complete game is a benefit.
"I think that it's his ability to skate and playing not overall physically, but he's not backing down; he's playing his defense responsibly," Chara said. "He always has a good gap. And being productive, too. He's a smart player, making things happen, especially on the power play. But yeah, he competes. He's obviously a big reason why Chicago got those Stanley Cups."
Keith's playing time remains steady this season, leading the Blackhawks with 24:36 ice time per game, more than four minutes more than any other defenseman (Henri Jokiharju is second with 20:25 per game).