Canadiens: LJ Mooney May Be Small, But He Plays Big

   

Over the three days that the Montreal Canadiens’ development camp lasted, fourth-round pick and 133rd overall selection LJ Mooney stood out to me. It wasn’t because he was only 5-foot-7 and 157 pounds; no, it was because of how intensely he played on the ice. He skated with Gallagher-like determination or Hutson-like intensity when trying to recover a puck that had just been stolen from him.

Martin Lapointe said post-draft that they were trying to hit a homerun when they selected Mooney in the fourth round despite his small frame, because the talent and the skills were there to make him a much earlier selection. Those words came back to me while watching him, and it made sense.

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Since then, I came across a scouting report written by Elite Prospects’ USHL/NCAA scout Sebastian High (with an assist from @HabsOnReddit), and it was an interesting read, especially considering how vital size and physicality turned out to be in the playoffs this past season.

High praised the impressive level of violence in his play, and that he had no qualms launching himself into players that were a foot taller and 50 pounds heavier than himself, he even called him a pint-sized hurricane to deal with.

 

Of course, like most, if not every, 18-year-old prospect, Mooney is not a finished product, and High did cover his downsides. Most notable was the fact that he tends to try the impossible play, the Hail Mary passes. To me, that’s not overly worrying. Lane Hutson had a tendency to try too hard when he first joined the Canadiens, but he learned to pick his spots in time, and the Canadiens are the type of team that will allow for growing pains, especially under Martin St-Louis.

It used to be that if you made a mistake in Montreal, Michel Therrien or Claude Julien would sit you on the bench, and you’d spend the rest of the game with a front-row seat to watch the action. This is no longer the case. Not for young players learning in any case, it takes quite a few occurrences for the coach to crack the whip.

High even concludes by saying that the prospect will need to work on numerous aspects of his game in college, but that there's a path, even if it’s a narrow one, to a top-six role in the NHL. Encouraging words to say the least, but it’s now all down to the play and how hard he’ll be willing to work in college, but watching him at development camp made it abundantly clear that there is nothing to worry about there. Mooney said it himself; he uses his side, and the fact that people doubt him serves as motivation to work harder and prove them wrong. That’s always been a winning formula.