Demko feels 'normal' again: Vancouver Canucks goaltending prospect Thatcher Demko is ready for the adjustment he'll need to take when he begins his professional career with Utica in the American Hockey League this season.
Demko, fully recovered from hip surgery he had last summer, went 27-8-4 with a 1.88 goals-against average and .935 save percentage as a junior at Boston College in Hockey East in 2015-16. He had 10 shutouts, breaking the school record set by former New Jersey Devils goalie
Cory Schneider
, was a finalist for the Hobey Baker Award as the top player in college hockey and won the Mike Richter Award as the top NCAA goaltender, leading them to the Frozen Four.
"I feel like I'm ready to go; I feel ready for a pro season, which is something I probably couldn't have said two years ago," Demko, 20, said. "I think one of the biggest things about turning pro is probably the adjustment because older guys have been in these situations and know how to handle themselves. I think that's one thing the AHL is great for. You learn the pro lifestyle, how to play at that level, develop and try to make the team as soon as possible."
If there's one thing Demko (6-4, 192) learned during the rehabilitation process was patience.
"Every ounce of my being wanted to be on the ice and it's tough," Demko said. "Some days you wake up and you feel awesome but that's just how recovering is. You feel so good you say, 'OK, I could probably skate today,' but you know you still have three weeks until you are allowed back on the ice."
Demko, selected in the second round (No. 36) by the Canucks in the 2014 NHL Draft, signed a three-year entry-level contract on April 20. He felt the time off the ice was beneficial.
"It's a demanding sport and that's the nature of it, so when I resumed skating I had that fire again," he said. "When you miss something and that's all you think about, all you want, all you need, that's when you come back bigger and stronger than you were before. That's how I feel now."