A decade after using the 25th pick in the NHL entry draft to select David Pastrnak, the Bruins used it on an 18-year-old who piled up 61 goals and 66 assists in 56 games this past season for St. Andrew’s College, a prep school outside Toronto.
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LAS VEGAS — Dean Letourneau flew here with hockey bag packed, sticks bundled together with tape, fully prepared to attend his first NHL camp. He just didn’t know where.
Answer: Boston. Specifically Brighton, Monday morning.
Letourneau, a towering 6-foot-7, 214-pound center, was the Bruins’ first-round pick at No. 25 Friday night. The relatively unknown pivot will start his NCAA career this fall at Boston College; originally a Northeastern commit, he switched his allegiance to the Heights roughly a year ago. Letourneau wanted to stay in Boston, specifically in Hockey East, largely because he wanted to play in the Beanpot.
Letourneau is considered a bit of a longshot, first and foremost because of his unorthodox pedigree. Unlike the vast majority of draft picks, in particular first-rounders, he played high school hockey — at St. Andrew’s, a prep school some 30 miles north of Toronto — rather than routing to college (and the draft) via an elite junior program.
“It was kind of because of development,” said Letourneau, who grew up outside Ottawa. “I got to play 20-plus minutes a night — power play and PK — and I started every game and I finished every game. A lot of people say they don’t like the league I played in because it was a little lower competition.”
His St. Andrew’s team played U-20 clubs in Prague and in Germany and in Canada. They also played top prep schools, including Shattuck-St. Mary’s (Minn.), Mount St. Charles (R.I.), and Northwood (N.Y.).
“Our competition wasn’t as low as everyone says it is,” he added. “For me, it was the ice time. It allowed me to develop in situations that I might not have in another league or with another team. Now I’ll be used to playing in those scenarios.”
He piled up the points at St. Andrew’s, collecting 61 goals and 66 assists in 56 games. He’ll have no shot of replicating those numbers in Division 1 NCAA, acknowledged Bruins general manager Don Sweeney, but he believes Letourneau’s size will help him force his way into competitive scenarios that will help his development.
Letourneau’s height will put him at the top of the NCAA charts. Rarely, in fact, do such “talls” carve out steady work in the NHL, though there have been some great exceptions — including 6-foot-9 Zdeno Chara, the former Bruins captain.
Tage Thompson, 6-6 and ex-UConn, has turned into a top talent with the Sabres. Joe Thornton and Mario Lemieux, two of the highest-scoring centers in the game’s history, were 6-4. It’s not common to be that big and play up front, but it can lead to uncommonly good results.
“What stood out, obviously, was the frame of the player. And his skill set, to tell you the truth,” noted Sweeney, who was prepared to swap the No. 25 pick for a pair of lower ones, but was dissuaded by Letourneau being on the board. “He moves really well at that size. He’s got very, very good hands. He has an elite shot.”
It will be a “big jump” for him to go BC next season, added Sweeney.
“But the opportunity is right in front of him,” said the GM. “With [Will] Smith leaving [for San Jose], we think that’s going to be a great opportunity for Dean to continue to grow and fill in the gaps.”
Letourneau is believed to be the biggest center chosen by the Bruins in the first round since 6-foot-5 Joe Colborne, chosen 16th in 2008. Colborne was swapped to Toronto in 2011 for Tomas Kaberle, who just months later had his name etched on the Cup with what stands as the Black & Gold franchise’s most recent championship.