In his exit meetings almost a year ago, Brooks Laich sat down with the Washington Capitals coaching staff and mapped out some of what he thought needed to change.
Already a respected veteran, Laich played the role of consultant in pointing to one player who deserved a more substantial role.
“I said that one of the guys that really impressed me and I think can play on this team is Jay Beagle,” he said. “The guy works so hard. He’s in your face, and he works so hard and he does things right.”
Even though it took a regime change to Dale Hunter and some extra time as he missed 31 games with a concussion, Beagle developed into a key contributor, especially in the first six games of their Eastern Conference quarterfinal series against the Boston Bruins.
“He’s one of the guys that’s gonna give you every ounce that he’s got every single game,” Laich said. “He’s been amazing for us. He’s done a great job on the defensive side of the puck, and then he has abilities to score goals, too. He’s been an unsung hero for us.”
No longer is Beagle on the fringe of the minor leagues or a healthy scratch. Instead, he’s thriving as an elite penalty killer, defensive stopper, shot-blocker and faceoff specialist.
“I’ve been given an opportunity with this coaching staff to play a pivotal role. They showed a lot of confidence in me and in my game,” Beagle said. “To be given the opportunity to play that role here was not something I was going to let slip through my fingers.”
Beagle has captured it by using the same kind of tireless work ethic that got him to Hershey (AHL) and then the Caps to begin with. There’s no denying, from the 26-year-old forward to his coaching staff to anyone who watches hockey, that he doesn’t have the talent of an Alexander Semin or even Laich or Troy Brouwer.
But all you have to do to figure out how he’s skating on the same ice with them, and often outperforming them, is watch him lifting or working in practice with assistant coach Jim Johnson on foot speed or with Dean Evason on faceoffs.
“He’s not going to get cheated with his work ethic,” Evason said. “Players like that have an opportunity to play a long time in this league because they’re committed to outworking an opponent who has more skill, maybe more speed, more size. But nobody will have more desire than him to compete.”
Ask anyone about Beagle, and work ethic usually is mentioned first. After a game in late February, Hunter pointed out that he’s “annoying to play against because he works too hard out there.”
Too hard?
“He grows on you,” the Caps coach said last week. “You see him in practice where he’s, you know, the hardest worker in practice. You need him to take faceoffs, and he works hard in practice.”
But Beagle needed to work harder than his counterparts just to get here. A year ago and even early on this season, his place to shine was often scratches skates where he showed off his conditioning and fitness because he wasn’t in the lineup.
The difference is Beagle getting a chance to play on a consistent basis with ample ice time.
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Stephen Whyno is the Capitals and NHL reporter for The Washington Times. You can follow him on Twitter (@SWhyno) or send him e-mail at swhyno@washingtontimes.com.
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