Young netminder praises goalie coach Ian Clark after wrapping up abbreviated 2020-21 season this week in Utica, now off to Latvia for hockey worlds
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Mike DiPietro, professional goalie, has played in only five games in the last 400-plus days â but heâs not worried.
Rather, the Vancouver Canucksâ top goalie prospect says heâs made big strides.
DiPietro was at the tail end of a outstanding rookie season for the American Hockey Leagueâs Utica Comets when the COVID-19 pandemic brought life to a halt in March 2020. When playoff hockey started up again in the summer, he served as the Canucksâ No. 3 goalie but never suited up for a game.
And then again this season, DiPietro spent three months as a practice-only netminder, never seeing a shot fired in anger. Not until, finally, at the end of April, he was sent back to Utica would he play some games again.
âThe first two years have been crazy to say the least, obviously,â he said over the phone from Utica, N.Y., on Thursday.
âComing back here, my game is completely, completely different. I made some really big strides in my game even looking at video this year,â he said.
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âIt just shows you know the stuff that Iâve worked on with (Canucks goalie coach Ian Clark) and with (Utica coach Curtis Sanford) has really come to fruition and really taken hold. You can see it from a visual perspective, but also I can feel it in the net and how the game kinda slows right down and how you could be dictating the play, instead of vice versa.â
In four games with Utica this spring, the former Canada Under-20 star won three times and posted a solid .916 save percentage. He held the Rochester Americans to one goal (on 34 shots) on Wednesday, the last home game for the Comets this season and the last home game as a Vancouver Canucks affiliate.
DiPietro said it was an emotional night, given how important the city and the team was for him in finding his feet as a professional.
His first start in professional hockey came, of course, two years with the Canucks, when the injury-riddled NHL squad found itself short-staffed in net and were forced to bring DiPietro up from junior to start against the San Jose Sharks.
The always-upbeat DiPietro was shelled by the Sharks that night, surrendering three goals in his first five shots in what would be a 7-2 San Jose victory.
But almost from the get-go in Utica, DiPietro found his feet.
âThe people here in Utica, the fans, the coaching staff here, they made my transition as easy as they possibly could have and way better than I thought it would be and never imagined, and it allowed me to kind of just get my feet and get settled and then really once the season got going, last year I felt like I immersed myself in the community,â he said.
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Being in Vancouver for so long this season gave DiPietro a chance to work closely with Canucks goalie coach Ian Clark, an experience he couldnât say enough about.
âHe has the ability to recognize a goalie and knows goalies donât play the exact same way. Clarkie has allowed me to still be Michael DiPietro the goaltender who battles and competes, but also in more controlled ways, you know, having better footwork,â he said.
âA prime example is the way you track pucks. (Demko) and (Markstrom), they have the ability to do reverse tracking where both legs can touch their (goal) posts, and are able to look over their shoulders and behind the net. Because he knows just from a, physiological perspective â I canât do that â we looked at a lot of video of Jonathan Quick. Curtis Sanford and I down here in Utica have looked at a ton of video of Quick and looking at the way he reverse tracks, almost kind of brings himself inside the net to see on certain plays. He just finds solutions to problems on the horizon.
âHe doesnât force it on you, he introduces it, and he allows you to find it and make it your own,â DiPietro continued. âBut also on a day-to-day basis he finds the details in the game, and the little intricacies that make a big difference for you to be able to run smoothlyâ âhave your engine run smoothly,â as we call it â and just making sure youâre always constantly ahead of the play. Honestly, I cannot say enough great things about Ian Clark. He has helped my game in a tremendous way, and I know everybody thatâs worked with him will say the exact same thing.â
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NEXT GAME
Saturday
Vancouver Canucks vs. Edmonton Oilers
Clark is without a contract beyond this season. âIf you like working with somebody, youâd want to continue growing with them, but obviously itâs out of my out of my hands, out of my control,â said DiPietro.
On Saturday, DiPietro will travel down to New Jersey to meet up with the American-based players who are heading to Latvia for the IIHF World Championships. Canadaâs first game is vs. the host Latvians on May 21.
On Sunday theyâll fly to Latvia. Heâll be No. 3 for Canada most likely, but however it plays out heâs excited.
âI never use excuses. I never feel bad for myself. I never worry about things that I canât really control, I let other people do that,â he said. âEvery time I step on the ice, whether itâs in Utica or Vancouver or in Europe, wherever I am is an opportunity to get better. Itâs an opportunity to play the sport I love and itâs a story that will continue as I write the book of Michael DiPietro, professional hockey player. I just love the game. I donât play it for the money.â
pjohnston@postmedia.com
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