Patrick Williams, TheAHL.com Features Writer
Brandt Clarke has never been one to be afraid to take chances, to push the pace.
The test of any full-time NHL defenseman, of course, is to know when to push and when to pull back. Every young blueliner – particularly a top-tier prospect like Clarke – must go through that experience. Opponents at the NHL and AHL levels can exploit some of the smallest mistakes, the most minimal hesitation, or the slightest ill-timed decision.
That is what the AHL is for, and Clarke is finding that line.
“He’s a game-breaker,” long-time AHL playmaker T.J. Tynan said of his Ontario Reign teammate. “On any shift, he can make something out of nothing, and that’s something not a lot of people can do, especially from the back end. He’s got the full package.”
Clarke’s words and delivery much resemble his on-ice play. He does both with authority, poise, and confidence.
“We believe in our group,” Clarke said heading into the Reign’s Pacific Division Finals series against Coachella Valley. “We have the utmost confidence that we can keep it rolling. We’re peaking at the right time.”
This campaign has been much more stable for Clarke than the previous year, when he played in the NHL, AHL, Ontario Hockey League and World Junior Championship tournament. The eighth overall pick by Los Angeles in the 2021 NHL Draft, Clarke was largely left to season with the Reign in 2023-24. He came out firing, launching 10 shots on goal on opening night. With elite skating, vision, and a willingness to take chances, his 36 assists led all AHL rookies, and he recorded 46 points in 50 games for the Reign. He earned an invitation to the AHL All-Star Classic, where he went a perfect 4-for-4 in the accuracy shooting event. He was voted to the 2023-24 AHL All-Rookie Team and the Second AHL All-Star Team.
And for good measure, he collected two goals and four assists in 16 NHL games with Los Angeles, with his first NHL goal being an overtime winner at Boston on Feb. 17.
Off the ice, Clarke is willing to push to make something happen as well. When the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the OHL and sidetracked his junior career, a 17-year-old Clarke packed his bags and headed to Slovakia. Playing alongside his older brother Graeme, Clarke ended up getting 26 games of action against pro-level competition.
“There have been ups and downs,” Clarke acknowledges, “but I’m just trying to work on weathering that. That’s how the pro…
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