Photo Credit: Our very own Alana Guerriero
Noah Cates says, “I think just getting bigger, faster, and a little quicker,” when asked what he needed to improve this offseason at exit interviews. He put in the work, and for his efforts Cates is now on the cusp making the Flyers outright out of camp:
“He’s a coach’s dream.” – Ian Laperrière said following the Flyers first pre-season tilt
“He does everything right,” Laperrière continued. “He doesn’t cheat. He plays the right way and coachable. How can you not like a guy like that? I don’t know Torts much but I know every coach likes players like that. His brother is playing great too. Jackson, I wouldn’t but him out of the race either. He came in camp in tip-top shape and came in camp to make the team. I’m sure they trained together. They’re tight. They’re always together and it’s fun to watch. Noah is a pleasure to just see what he does, the little things that you don’t see, a super goal by beating a guy one-on-one or score a great goal. He does the little things that coaches like.”
Getting bigger, stronger, faster are common goals for young prospects to make it at the next level. For Cates, he had one heck of a showing in a small sample size to think he could at the very least compete in the Fall for a full-time spot with the Flyers out of Training Camp. His line of Owen Tippett and Morgan Frost became the Flyers most consistent line during the latter parts of the season. It’s hard to envision that line being separated this season, but it all depends on John Tortorella’s vision.
“It was obviously big going into the summer, and next training camp, knowing what to expect and what the pace is like, and different things like that was I think kind of the question mark,” Cates said when asked if gaining this NHL experience was helpful. “What I was focused on was the pace of the game. Definitely didn’t think I was out of place, but I think I could improve this summer and get to playing a little faster. Be able to generate a little more.”
He has skated well, is confident and poised while joining the big club. Cates creates turnovers in the neutral zone by suffocating his opponents, and sealing their gaps. This is a highly underrated area of his game. Throughout his collegiate career he was very good at forcing turnovers in the neutral zone, thus creating an odd man rust the other way. He has taken nothing for granted, and is relishing the moment.
The young 23-year-old in Cates logged an average of 13:15 of ice time, finished with five goals and four assists in 16 games played at the NHL level, to include one power play goal, registered 21 hits, forced 10 takeaways, and blocked six shots a small sample size with the Flyers. Not a bad start to his NHL career by any means, “I think that’s a big part of my game,” Cates said in response if the team needs to get harder to play against. “It’s little things. It’s stopping on pucks, having a good stick. Being physical. Not blowing guys up. Just kind of little things that you don’t like when players do to you, you’ve got to do to them. I think that’s a huge part of my game. Just the kind of things that I need to bring to the table on stopping those pucks and little stick details.”
One of the main reasons he is an NHL caliber player, and should be considered as such is his skating. He skates very well, and that also gives him a physical edge to his game. Cates impressed in his short stint with the Flyers, and this should give him momentum to make this club outright. Tortorella has vowed to “Play the kids,”
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Haha, tortorella vows to play the kids. Guess what, he lies also. There will only be kids in the lineup because of injuries. And define kids? Guys who are 25 are not kids anymore. The average retirement age in the nhl is 28. Its wonderful we may and I say may of ffg sound a 3rd line player in cates. Can we get a nhl caliber 1st line?