As usual, he looked dangerous with the puck, playing with pace and confidence. He was effective offensively, which wasn’t always the case in the playoffs during the talented winger’s five playoff runs with the Carolina Hurricanes. Necas set up Nazem Kadri’s power-play goal.
But his most revealing shift was in the final minute. With the Wild desperately pushing for a tying goal they probably needed to maintain a chance at winning this second-round series, Necas was on the ice for coach Jared Bednar, defending Colorado’s 3-2 lead. He read a rim-around in the defensive zone and beat Quinn Hughes to the puck inside the blue line, sidestepped the Minnesota star and passed to Avalanche linemate Nathan MacKinnon for an empty-net goal.
The move from Carolina at last season’s trade deadline has allowed Necas to grow (and get rich) and improve his reputation as a playoff performer — someone whose offensive game doesn’t shrivel when checking and intensity ramp up, someone who can be trusted defensively.
If the Avalanche eliminate the Wild in Game 5 here Wednesday, they will be halfway to the Stanley Cup. Maybe they’ll meet the Hurricanes in the final, which would be a pretty fabulous matchup.
“I feel like it’s just different now,” Necas, 27, told Sportsnet before the series shifted to Minnesota for the weekend. “Obviously, we created some chemistry here with Nate. Last year was hard, but this year it’s different. Compared to Carolina, here I’ve got way more room to shine. Obviously, Carolina had their guys and, like, I’m not saying I wasn’t one of them. But here, I’m playing on the first line, so it’s a little different.
“Everybody looks at the (points) producing side, right? That’s what everybody looks at, but I’m feeling comfortable here. I love the big-time games. It’s the same thing that you guys were asking about for the Olympics; I was excited because I love those kind of moments and games. And I think that the playoffs, it’s the same. And as the rounds go longer and longer, I like it more.”
Necas finished fourth in scoring at the Olympics in February, leading Czechia with three goals and eight points in five games.
At mid-career, Necas has been a development story for the Avalanche.
He had a breakthrough, 100-point season playing with MacKinnon and, mostly, winger Artturi Lehkonen. Gabriel Landeskog replaced the injured Lehkonen on the top line for Game 4.
Necas’ 38-goal season came after he signed an eight-year, $92-million contract extension in October. His previous highs were 28 goals and 83 points.
“Listen, some of the criticisms on Marty from his younger years prior to being here, they may have been valid,” Colorado coach Jared Bednar told reporters after Game 2 a week ago. “Marty and I talked about this. Just because something’s true one day doesn’t make it true the next, especially over time.
“Marty put in a lot of hard work to be a trusted player on our team defensively. It’s one of the talks we had when he got here, and a handful of times after that: if you’re going to play with Nate and play against the opposition’s best guys every night, I’ve got to be able to trust you. You can’t play there (just for) how good you are offensively, right? So he buys into that. The style of the players he plays with, it’s important that he’s on that line because he helps them a lot, and his game has grown. So, I think those criticisms now are invalid.”
Through eight playoff games, Necas has one goal and nine points, and an 11-3 goal differential at even strength.
In Carolina, his points production during the playoffs fell to 0.51 points per game from 0.73 in the regular season. And although Necas rode the Hurricanes’ high tide on puck possession and was never a glaring liability defensively, his shots-for percentage relative to teammates was modest, and overall, he was a minus player in the playoffs.
“Absolutely, I think he’s definitely gotten more aware of what the moment calls for when you don’t have the puck,” Landeskog, the Colorado captain, said after Monday’s morning skate. “His defensive systems and just his checking ability has gotten better and better every month, really, throughout the season. So yeah, he’s definitely becoming a trustworthy player.
“I think he’s always been, obviously, a very talented player and super gifted. The way he thinks the game, and he’s able to execute at such a high speed, not everybody can do that. But now he’s adding kind of the checking mentality to it, and that checking mindset is what you need (in the playoffs) because the margin for error is so small this time of year. He’s done a great job, and continues to be a big factor for us.”
Necas was unaware of what Bednar said about him earning trust — and dispelling the earlier knocks against him — until we told him.
“I agree with Bedsy; he helped me a lot in terms of defence,” he said. “You know, I’m going to be here for a long time, and I know that I want to play in all those situations. Obviously, I’m out there if we’re losing. But he’s been putting me out there when we’re winning, too, you know, when we’re trying to defend the lead. And obviously he has to have the trust in me to do that. So I’ve been trying to play better D. The whole coaching staff helped me a lot with it.
“It’s been cool, like, being the guy.”
Necas is one of them, for sure.
• Tuesday was a travel day for the teams, which did not practise … After getting hit in the face by teammate Devon Toews’ clearance near the end of the second period on Monday, MacKinnon returned for the third period but declined to do interviews after the game. He did tell a couple of reporters, “I got lucky,” that it was the flat side of the puck that hit him on the nose and mouth. He did not require stitches.
“If he was going to be able to get out there, he was going to be out there,” Bednar said post-game of his superstar’s return. “I don’t think that was ever in doubt. I just felt for him because I just went through that. It doesn’t feel very good, so you’re just hoping that the guy’s OK. That’s the main thing, and then you feel for him because it sucks.”
Bednar missed two games behind the Avalanche bench in April after getting hit in the face by a deflected puck during a game against the Vegas Golden Knights.