鈥楳r. Game 7鈥 scores again: The everyman at helm of Carolina Hurricanes
Carolina Hurricanes captain Justin Williams isn鈥檛 the best player on the team. But he knows how to lead the Canes to victory.
Carolina Hurricanes captain Justin Williams isn鈥檛 the best player on the team. But he knows how to lead the Canes to victory.
This is supposedly a true story.
My 20-something nephew says he saw Justin Williams, the captain of the Carolina Hurricanes hockey club, on a plane on the way home to Raleigh, North Carolina, before this season.
The Canadian winger was in grubby surfer shorts, a busted T-shirt, flip-flops, set off by a mop of wild hair and a full beard.
Sam is a huge Hurricanes fan and a fantastic hockey player, so of course I believe his impression of the three-time champ: hockey star as regular schlub.
On Wednesday, now sporting stubble and a game-day suit, the player known as 鈥淢r. Game 7鈥 laced up in another elimination match-up in Round 1 of the Stanley Cup playoffs as his wet-behind-the-ears Hurricanes squad faced the defending Stanley Cup champion Washington Capitals, all but three of whom had Game 7 experience.
On paper, 鈥淛ay Willie鈥 is a fairly average 6-foot-1-inch forward from Cobourg, Ontario, entering the twilight of a long and injury-prone career, including scoring a goal after a puck glanced off his face earlier this season.
But at the barn, the newly naturalized American is as clutch as clutch is.
Mr. Williams has more Game 7 points 鈥 15 鈥 than any other player in the history of the game. Last night, he moved ahead of Glenn Anderson for Game 7 goals, with 8. He has won the Cup three times: once with Carolina in 2006 (where he scored in Game 7) and twice with the Los Angeles Kings in 2012 and 2014, the year he won the Conn Smythe Trophy for the postseason MVP after scoring 9 goals in the playoffs.
On Wednesday night, the Canes came from behind 鈥 twice 鈥 to win in double overtime, 4-3. Mr. Williams had a winning assist. 鈥淓very single guy had a part in this,鈥 he told reporters after the game.
Maybe so, but after Wednesday, Mr. Williams鈥 legacy is sealed. The Capitals鈥 Russian winger Alex Ovechkin is a powerhouse scorer, a natural, almost profound, talent. Mr. Williams owns another kind of DNA, recognizable instantly to middle managers, line cooks, and fishermen 鈥 those of us more used to grimaces of failure than tears of victory.
鈥淵ou have to believe that you can win,鈥 Mr. Williams told a reporter before his squad squeaked into the playoffs as a wild card.
Mr. Williams鈥 most recent Game 7 experience did not go well. Playing for the Capitals two years ago, the team lost a heartbreaker in an early round. Sans Mr. Williams, the Capitals regrouped last year, and Mr. Ovechkin led the team to the title.
Last year, Mr. Williams returned to the Canes and watched two younger players be named co-captains. When his former teammate Rod Brind鈥橝mour took over the coaching job this season, he made Mr. Williams captain. The former co-captains told TV reporters they were relieved. 鈥淢y approach to the captaincy is just to be myself,鈥 he told reporters.
It worked. After the longest playoff drought in the league 鈥 10 years 鈥 the Canes advanced to Round 2.
The Caps are 5-12 all-time in Game 7s, dead last in the league. The Hurricanes are 5-0.
Mr. Brind鈥橝mour summed up the captain鈥檚 influence on the youngest squad in the playoffs: 鈥淗ey, frankly, he鈥檚 not the best player. But he knows how to win, and that鈥檚 more important.鈥
On cue, Mr. Williams scored a decisive goal on Monday to force the do-or-die. Last night, he had the key assist on the winning goal against the defending champions.
Willing his team to win, gritting it out to the last second, playing the game for its own joy 鈥 such values apparently resound in the locker room and far outside it.
鈥淚t鈥檚 quite simple,鈥 Mr. Williams told reporters before Wednesday's elimination game. 鈥淵ou learn about people when it鈥檚 win or go home, when it鈥檚 us or them. [Monday] it was us, and now it鈥檚 them too. Anything can happen next game and we鈥檙e happy to be playing it.鈥