Penguins rookie Jake Guentzel has become an NHL playoff big shot

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The Penguins’ Jake Guentzel (center) celebrates a goal with teammates during the first period of Game 2 against the Predators. | Gene J. Puskar/AP

As both a father and long-time hockey coach, Mike Guentzel always has felt compelled to prod his son Jake about the strength of his shot.

“I say, ‘Show me you can shoot the puck,’ ” Mike said. “I give him a hard time all the time, [don’t just] score one off your stick, deflection, or shin pad. Show me you can shoot one in.”

Penguins rookie Jake Guentzel, 22, has proved this postseason to his dad, and everyone in the hockey world, that he can rip a shot into the net and score in a variety of other ways.

Heading into Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Saturday, Guentzel is the leading playoff scorer with 12 goals (on 42 shots) in 21 games. He has tallied the game-winner in each of the first two games to help the Penguins take a 2-0 lead in the final against the Predators.

“If you saw this coming, you’ve got a super crystal ball,” his Nebraska-Omaha college coach Dean Blais told USA Today.

It’s not that people didn’t have faith in Guentzel’s pro potential. But no one, including the Penguins, expected him to have this level of impact this fast.

“It’s crazy,” Jake Guentzel said. “You can’t even put into words what it feels like.”

Guentzel was a 5-10, 153-pound center for the United States Hockey League’s Sioux City Musketeers when the Penguins drafted him in the third round in 2013.

This year, he could become the first rookie to finish as the leading NHL playoff goal scorer. He’s three goals ahead of everyone else. He’s only two goals short of Dino Ciccarelli’s rookie record of 14 playoff goals.

“If this keeps up, he could be the Conn Smythe Trophy winner,” Blais said.

If Guentzel did that, he would become the first non-goalie rookie to win the award.

One reason why Guentzel, now 5-11, 185 pounds, has enjoyed instant success is that he has improved his shot and the quickness of his release. Guentzel also had 16 goals in 40 regular-season games.

“Jake is a pass-first guy,” Blais said. “I’m sure Sidney told him when you get the shot take it, this is not a league for over-passing. We are not the Russians of the old days.”

Blais said he used to tell Guentzel often in practice, “When the shot is there, you have to take it. You have to be able to score from 15-20 feet. Great players do that.”

In Game 1, Guentzel whistled a game-winner over Pekka Rinne from about 22 feet.

“He has acquired that release in the last couple of years,” Mike Guentzel said. “It has coincided with his strength development.”

What makes Guentzel’s goal total more impressive is that in these playoffs he has endured an eight-game goal slump. Penguins coach Mike Sullivan at one point considered making him a healthy scratch.

Instead, Sullivan sat him down for a talk, and Guentzel responded with three goals in his first two games in the Final.

“If he just plays the game the right way, winning puck battles, taking what the game gives you, his instincts will take over,” Sullivan said.

Because this is Guentzel’s first professional season, he’s still adjusting to the longer, more demanding NHL schedule. Sullivan explains Guentzel’s latest surge as “getting a bit of a second wind.”

Guentzel is back on the Penguins’ top line with Sidney Crosby.

“He’s really smart.” Crosby said. “He’s got really good hockey sense. He’s around the net all of the time. He knows when to get out of there and find the soft area for a pass.”

Blais calls Guentzel’s hockey sense “world class.”

“He has always been able to think his way around the ice, like Crosby, [Wayne] Gretzky, Zach Parise,” Blais said.

Guentzel grew up in a hockey family. Mike Guentzel is an associate coach at the University of Minnesota. His older brother, Gabe, played in the German League this season, and another brother, Ryan, played at Notre Dame and then briefly in Europe a few years back.

Mike Guentzel said his son is “old school” in his desire to learn from watching others.

“He likes to watch and observe other players,” Guentzel said. “You can’t tell me that he’s not watching Crosby and others to see how they work. He’s a throwback to my era when we would watch guys on TV and try to emulate them.”

Mike Guentzel said it’s never easy sorting out when he should be advising his son as a father and when he should imparting the hockey knowledge he has garnered in more than three decades of coaching.

“There are times I will say, ‘You have to be better in the defensive zone or along the wall.’ That’s the coaching part,” he said. “Other times, there’s parenting part. You have to have a feel for it.”

Guentzel talks often with his son, but he also consults with his other sons to see if they believe Jake is handling everything well.

“One of my kids tells, me, ‘Dad, Jake is in the NHL,’ ” Mike said, laughing. “I think Jake is smart enough to figure out when he’s playing well and when he’s not.”

Follow me on Twitter @ByKevinAllen.

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