I think Jacob Peterson would be good at Jeopardy!
The Stars rookie clearly has "hockey sense," in that he reads the game well and understands puck movement and angles and the respective strengths of his linemates. But it goes deeper than that. The 22-year-old from Sweden has been able to transfer his game from a rink that is much wider and he hasn't missed a beat.
Peterson stepped into the NHL on Thursday and scored a beautiful goal to help the Stars take a 3-2 OT win against the New York Rangers.
"He played tonight like he's played all of training camp - very smart, very poised and confident with the puck," Stars head coach Rick Bowness said. "I really liked his game, but we've liked him every day since training camp. He's a good player."
But it really is more than that. Peterson came over this summer to start his career in North America and had to feel he would be living in Cedar Park and playing for the Texas Stars, but he took one practice at a time and found a way to impress the coaches. That's what management always says about young players: "Find a way to force us to put you in the lineup."
He did just that.
And then, boom, he was skating out onto the Madison Square Garden ice for his rookie lap all by himself. Even in Sweden, Peterson knew the aura of the self-proclaimed "World's Most Famous Arena," and there had to be a tinge of butterflies as he looked up at the unique roof and the massive scoreboard to take his first stride.
But instead of fear, he thought it was fun.
"I always heard about Madison Square Garden since I was a kid and knew what that was," Peterson said before the game. "Of course, it's a great feeling to do it in this arena when I knew it since I was a little kid. That's a plus to it too."
And yet, as soon as the puck dropped, he was a veteran. He didn't look out of place on a line with Roope Hintz and Joe Pavelski. He made smart plays, he read the Rangers, and he read his teammates.
"I was never worried about him," Pavelski said.
While the Stars were in control for much of the first period, they couldn't get that all-important first goal. Igor Shesterkin made some solid saves for the Rangers, and Dallas players simply didn't convert when they had some great chances. That's been an issue for this team in recent seasons.
Dallas was ninth in even-strength scoring chances last season, but 24th in even-strength goals, so finding the right touch has been a challenge. But like a skilled Jeopardy! player, Peterson read the board, made a quick decision, and cleaned up on the daily double. He saw a Rangers miscue sitting in the neutral zone and swooped in and picked up the puck. Instead of trying to force the play along the boards or dump the puck in, he swerved to the center of the ice. That allowed him an open path to the net, and once he got there, he deftly lifted a backhand shot past Shesterkin to give Dallas the first goal of the season.