By Tony Ambrogio
TORONTO – “Prove People Wrong.”
It’s written on Jeremy Bracco’s green bracelet he
wears on his right wrist. It’s a motto the Toronto Maple Leafs draft pick has
been living by his entire hockey career.
“It’s just something I go by,” said Bracco, from Freeport
New York. “New York is not a hockey hotbed. It’s a motto a lot of us New York guys
come by. It’s a lot of fun to have that in the back of your mind when you’re
playing.”
Bracco scored a goal in Team U.S.A’s 6-1 opening night
victory over Latvia at the World Junior Hockey Championship on Boxing Day. The
Leafs second round pick in 2015 (61st overall) played his first game
at the Air Canada Centre, in what may be his future NHL home. The moment wasn’t
lost on him.
“You realize the history and what it means to be a
Toronto Maple Leaf and the people here. It is pretty special for me and
hopefully I can be here in years to come. It’s pretty cool to get my first taste
of it.”
Bracco is listed at 5-foot-10 and the comparisons to a
player chosen by Toronto 57 picks earlier are inevitable. Mitch Marner, the
fourth overall pick in 2015 is listed at 5-foot-11. He has burst onto the scene
in his rookie campaign in the NHL. Bracco has taken notice.
“Everybody is going to have their doubts about you.
You got to prove you can play compared to a guy who is 6-foot-5 and has to prove
he can’t play.”
“Great energy, great puck mover and he can shoot. He has
the ability to play offence for us. We think he’s deadly on the power play,”
said Team U.S.A. coach Bob Motzko. “He has the brains and he has the skills.”
For the 19 year-old Bracco, this is his first trip to
this event. He was cut on Christmas Eve as a 17 year-old. Last year he wasn’t
invited to the U.S. camp.
“To come out this year and to get one early was real
nice. To have the coach have confidence in me and put me on the power play it’s
a good feeling for sure.”
With the Ontario Hockey League’s Kitchener Rangers,
Bracco had a 26 game point streak come to an end just before joining the
American team. It is the second longest streak in franchise history. In the
final game of the streak, he scored the overtime game winner against Kingston.
“(After I scored) the boys were yelling ‘streak’ so
that was a lot of fun,” said Bracco who is in the fifth in OHL scoring with 17
goals and 34 assists in 27 games.
Still, it’s his size that some can’t overlook. Bracco
will continue to do his best to prove people wrong.
“It’s not about motivation, anybody that wants to be a
player can be motivated when you step on the ice. It’s what you do when people
aren’t around, that’s what separates guys.”
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