Mar 22, 2021
By Matt Weller/SanDiegoGulls.com
In a season full of change and moving parts, San Diego Gulls right wing Andrew Poturalski’s hot start offered a steady, effective presence in the lineup.Â
The second-year Gull ranks among the league leaders in points and assists this season, returning to his high-level play after a disappointing first year on the west coast.
Poturalski came to San Diego as a pivotal piece of the 2019 Calder Cup champion Charlotte Checkers. The Williamsville, New York native paced postseason players in points (12-11=23), goals and plus/minus (+15), earning the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as the most valuable player of the playoffs.
âWe had a good team, especially our forwards, and he really ran the ship for us up there, especially in the playoffs,â said Gulls defenseman Trevor Carrick, Poturalskiâs teammate in Charlotte for four seasons. âBeing MVP of the playoffs just goes to show you how valuable he was.â
The Anaheim Ducks took note of the performance and signed the forward to a one-year deal on the second day of free agency in June 2019.
Things got off to a frustrating start, as his initial campaign with the Gulls was grounded by injuries before it could even take off. A broken wrist in October cost him 33 games, and a late-season knee injury put him on the shelf headed into the extended offseason.Â
âItâs extremely frustrating, but itâs part of the sport and part of our game,â said Poturalski. âYouâve got to take it with a grain of salt, keeping moving forward and take whatever positives you can out of it.â
Determined to get back to the top of his game, the University of New Hampshire product committed to a rigorous offseason program designed by the Gulls Strength and Conditioning staff. After taking some time to let his wounds heal and getting married to his wife, Haley, Poturalski went to work, strengthening his body, spending time with a skills coach and studying film of other players.Â
Like many athletes he faced unique challenges in his preparation, as the pandemic caused uncertainty in when the season would begin while nearby gyms and rinks temporarily closed their doors.
âI pretty much went through my summer training twice,â Poturalski explained. âOriginally, we thought it was going to be a fall start so you prepare for that. But once we realized it was going to be a little later, I took a week off, did a little reset and restarted it. Youâve got take your mind off things to not burnout.â
That hard work was immediately noticeable in camp and paid off early in the 2021 season.Â
âLast year, the early season injury set him back and he never really got in that groove from the success he had in Charlotte,â said Gulls assistant coach David Urquhart. âThis year, he came into camp in shape and was able to build that confidence right away. I know he puts in the time and effort to improve his game. Weâve seen it, especially on the offensive side.â
Poturalski paces the Gulls in scoring (4-14=18), assists and power-play assists (6). The sixth-year pro has points in ten of his last 14 appearances, including two career-tying three-assist nights (1-3=4 on Feb. 20 and 0-3=3 on Mar. 3). He also notched his 200th career AHL point with a helper in San Diegoâs win over Tucson Sunday.Â
âHeâs got great vision,â Urquhuart explained. âHe has the ability to put pucks into areas that some other players canât do. Itâs his passing and vision. The way our lineup has been this year, weâve needed guys to spot in the top-six in different roles. Itâs good to have a guy like that who can you play with anyone.â
With a year in the organization and familiar faces all around, Poturalski says his confidence continues to grow.
âI think it goes a long way, being familiar with everyone in the organization and what to expect,â he explained. âThen you can just focus on hockey and relax. This was the best shape Iâve ever been in coming into training camp. It feels good to have that hard work pay off.â
Those around him, including Urquhart, expect it continue paying off.
âHe has a look in his eye this year that he isnât going to be stopped.â