"Being 6-[foot]-6 gives you more natural ability in terms of reach, height, but the biggest thing with being that big is you've just got to keep on working on mobility," said Bahl, selected by the Coyotes in the second round (No. 55) of the 2018 NHL Draft. "You're bigger so you need to put on more muscle. You need to put more hours in the gym until you're finished growing at 18 or 19. A lot of big guys don't have that. You see the bigger guys in the League that can move, they've got a lower-body base like nobody else."
Bahl, who weighs 230 pounds, never relied solely on size or strength to carry him. He devoted time to mobility, working with skating coach Dawn Braid in Toronto.
"A lot of young players wait to work on their skating until they go through a growth spurt and then it becomes difficult adjusting to their body," said Braid, who has worked with several NHL players, including Toronto Maple Leafs center John Tavares. "He was doing the skating during that crucial time.
"One of the big things we run into is stability through the hips. You get a lower, more compact player. You're not dealing with that issue, but when you get that extra height, all of a sudden you're dealing with all this extra leg [push] they've got to bring under the body. You end up having a lot of moving parts and it's more noticeable."
Bahl's combination of mobility and size made him attractive to the Coyotes. General manager John Chayka said his staff had Bahl ranked No. 20 on its draft board.