With three games upcoming in the Prospects Challenge for Kulich, along with fellow first-round picks Isak Rosen, Konsta Helenius, Noah Ostlund and Ryan Johnson, Leone has stressed the players can only “control what they can control.”
“You can’t control lineup decisions and things like that,” Leone said. “All they can control is have a really good day at practice tomorrow and try to be the best players in the tournament. Obviously, those guys have done it before, and I think that’s the biggest thing. Just focus on what you can control, and things play out the way they’re supposed to.”
Here are more notes from Thursday’s practice.
1) Kulich spent the second day in row skating alongside Rosen, someone he noted has been important to his growth as a player.
The two former first-round picks have spent plenty of time together in the past two years as teammates on the Amerks as well as roommates.
“It was really important that we meet each other,” Kulich said. “We try to push each other to be better players and we’re roomies again and it’s great. The relationship is better and better, and we just want to (play in the NHL).”
2) The Prospects Challenge will be Leone’s first coaching experience as a part of the Sabres organization after being hired as coach of the Amerks in June.
Leone met with his team before practice Wednesday to discuss how he wanted them to play, trying to give the group a single identity of how they will be expected play across the organization with both teams having new head coaches in Lindy Ruff and Leone.
The three qualities that Leone highlighted in how he wants his team to play were hard, smart and fast.
This was showcased at the beginning of both Wednesday’s and Thursday’s practice as Leone put his squad of 22 players right into physical play, getting bodies on bodies early on and forcing them to be physical and smart about their play, all while going at a fast pace.
3) In Thursday’s post-practice press conference, Prospal shared that the Sabres’ 2021 seventh-round pick Tyson Kozak reminds him of Tampa Bay Lightning center Anthony Cirelli when he is playing at his best.
He described Kozak as a “hard skating, forechecking, center iceman. A two-way player that “hopefully will discover a scoring touch.”
“He’s just flying around right now,” Prospal said. “(Kozak) is just coming in, he’s flying in. He’s playing a competitive, heavy game. I think he’s just…
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