McLaineTC

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. -- Wild prospects closed out the Traverse City Prospects Tournament with its best record since 2010 with a 3-2 win against the Chicago Blackhawks Tuesday in the third-place game at Centre Ice Arena.
Darian Pilon, Alexander Khovanov and Mitch McLain scored goals for the Wild, which finished the weekend with a 3-1 record, its best since going 4-0 and winning the tournament eight years ago.
The Wild built a 2-0 lead after 20 minutes on goals by Pilon and Khovanov that came seven minutes apart.

McLain, the former Bowling Green University star, made it 3-0 at 6:48 of the third on a pass from Darian's twin brother, Drake Pilon. Both McLain and Drake Pilon finished with two-point contests.
Chicago put together its best stretch of the game early in the third when Graham Knott and Radovan Bondra scored goals 2 1/2 minutes apart to close the gap to one goal.
Wild goaltender Dereck Baribeau made the lead stand up by stopping 23 of 25 shots for his first win in four career starts in Traverse City dating back to last year.

Dan's Three Stars in Traverse City

1 - Jordan Greenway
Perhaps the Wild's best player in Traverse City didn't even suit up for the final two games, as Jordan Greenway accomplished everything team management was hoping he would.
Greenway was a force in Traverse City, displaying unmatched strength on his skates and with the puck on his stick He scored one goal and assisted on two others in the first two games of the tournament, before taking a seat for the final two days.
"Both games, he was very good," said Wild General Manager Paul Fenton. "He was impressive. I loved the way he played the game, thought the game. He used his size to his advantage, created scoring opportunities."
Greenway is expected to compete for an NHL roster spot once training camp commences in St. Paul on Friday.
"I think it was a good start for him to get these two games," Fenton said. "Now we'll see how he does in training camp."
2 - Kaapo Kahkonen
Goaltender Kaapo Kahkonen will play his first season of North American hockey and got off on the right foot in Traverse City, backstopping the Wild to a pair of wins.
Kahkonen finished the tournament with a 2.89 goals-against average and a .914 save percentage but his numbers don't tell the whole story.
In a 5-4 shootout win against Dallas on Monday, Kahkonen stoned the Stars on five separate breakaways during the third period and overtime, including one penalty shot, then closed the door on both shootout attempts to secure the win.
Overall, Kahkonen stopped 64 of the 70 shots he faced in two games.
"I really liked the way he met pucks and fought through, especially," Fenton said. "In these tournaments, there's so much traffic in between, and bodies and you can't find where pucks are. But he did a great job of fighting through, finding the puck and controlling his rebounds."
The Finnish netminder, selected by the Wild in the fourth round of the 2014 NHL Draft, is expected to compete for a job in Iowa, potentially as a backup, or get significant time with the Allen Americans of the ECHL.
3 - Gerry Fitzgerald
Fitzgerald was never a prodigious scorer in his four years at Bemidji State University -- he never tallied more than 26 points in four years with the Beavers -- but was outstanding in 16 games with Iowa late in the year last spring.
The 25-year-old centerman came to Traverse City with little to prove after signing an AHL contract over the summer, but was Minnesota's best offensive producer during the weekend.
Not only did Fitzgerald lead the Wild in points, he was consistently producing grade-A chances on a line with Greenway and Ivan Lodnia for the first two games, with Lodnia and Mason Shaw in the third game and with Shaw and Mathieu Foget in the third-place game.
"His smarts, his quickness, his vision ... I think he's shown very well for himself," Fenton said.
Fitzgerald's goal against Detroit on Friday ended up the game winner and he also had the primary assist on Fogut's goal against Dallas that tied the game with under a minute to play in the third period, forcing overtime. The Wild would go on to win in a shootout.
Iowa had success with diminutive forwards last season, as Sam Anas and Justin Kloos each had outstanding campaigns in Des Moines. Fitzgerald -- all 5-foot-8, 174 pounds of him -- appears primed to follow in their footsteps this season.
More from Traverse City:
- Greenway begins push for NHL job - Shaw comes full circle in Traverse City return - Q&A with Wild Assistant GM Tom Kurvers - Army ready for another crack as head coach