Makar played in the NCAA Frozen Four championship game last season for UMass-Amherst. Days later, he was playing in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the Avalanche against the Calgary Flames, his hometown team.
But never once on any of those stages did Makar seem fazed. The pressure of trying to have a great game at Air Force in front of a national television audience, his father said, certainly shouldn't be a factor either.
"It's just the way he's always been, the upbringing, the ability to handle himself and live in the moment," Gary Makar said. "The mountain air, he seems pretty excited about that, but as far as pressure, I don't think it'll be a blip."
Makar's even-keeled personality and approach have been his calling cards throughout his rise to NHL, and part of the reason why if you ask anyone associated with the Avalanche they can't help but gush about the rookie and his future.
"How much time do you have?" defenseman Ian Cole said. "There's a lot of stuff. His skating is world class, but also great vision, great hockey sense, smart, analytical in the sense that he's always adjusting and looking at plays and trying to get better, and just a very mature kid. For how young he is and how inexperienced he is, I guess, game-wise, very mature and makes adjustments as quick as just about anybody I've seen."