That confidence from the coaching staff has been displayed in time on ice, and also in being put in key situations. Bowness had Robertson on the ice with the goalie pulled in the final minute Sunday, and Robertson whipped in a perfect shot to tie the game. He then was the first shooter in the shootout for Dallas, and he converted his chance there, as well.
Robertson had a shootout attempt earlier in the year and was stopped, so he said he studied that play, worked on a few things, and then was much better on Sunday.
"I knew what I was going to do before I came in," he said. "The first time, I came straight in and put too much pressure on myself trying to score. Going into my second time, after overlooking the other one, I was more confident in knowing what I wanted to do and picking my spot."
It was a great sign of just what a smart and calm scorer Robertson can be. Scoring goals is maybe the toughest thing an NHL player has to do, and scoring consistently puts you in a very high class of player. Stars veteran Joe Pavelski said the fact Robertson is becoming a go-to guy on the shootout is a great sign for him.
"I was actually telling him, because he was starting, that you've got to score; you've got to score early," Pavelski said. "If you score early in your career, you get off to a hot start and you tend to get to go the rest of your career. I remember one of my first couple; actually, one of my first ones. It was probably [in Dallas] against [Marty] Turco. I think it was high glove or high blocker. You remember things like that, and I think I scored my first handful, and next thing you know you are going every time."