Last season, in particular, was a struggle. He showed up to Sabres development camp with a stress fracture in his ankle. The Sabres weren’t sure how he got it, but he couldn’t practice. Then Leinonen got to training camp with JYP of the Finnish elite league in August where he was competing for a spot in the lineup.
“So he misses so much time over the summer and then gets to camp and the urgency to get in the lineup is there so he goes from zero to 100 and in three weeks the stress fracture came back,” Kotyk said.
That put Leinonen out of action for three months. When he returned to the ice in November, he was, understandably, not sharp.
“Everyone’s been playing for months and now you’re putting a 19-year-old kid in a pro league to play a game,” Kotyk said. “What do you expect the result to be?”
Leinonen then broke his finger in practice, which meant more missed time. As a result, his statistics haven’t been pretty. He played only six Liiga games last season and went 0-4-1 with a .844 save percentage and 4.14 goals against average. At the U-20 level, Leinonen played four regular season games with a .871 save percentage and 3.28 goals against average. But Kotyk wasn’t getting tied up in the statistics. Sometimes he wouldn’t even look at them. He knew with inconsistent playing time, Leinonen would have up-and-down results, especially with him being so inexperienced. What he wanted to see was one of the attributes that drew the Sabres to him in the first place. His size and mobility were appealing, but so was his competitiveness in the crease. That’s what Kotyk harped on in his regular conversations with Leinonen the last couple of seasons.