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Looking up and down the Hershey Bears' roster from top to bottom as they launch their quest for the Calder Cup, there are a few things that are very evident and jump right out.
The goaltending is rock solid with youngsters Vitek Vanecek and Ilya Samsonov, both of whom were members of 20-win club in the regular season and are surely destined for regular NHL duty in the future.
On the backline are Tyler "Tough as Nails" Lewington, who has grown from being a rough around the edges fringe player into a solid defender who gives opposing players headaches and body aches, and veteran Aaron "Assist Machine" Ness, who collected 50 helpers in the regular season and causes headaches for the opposition with his outstanding skating ability.
Up front, Riley Barber and Mike Sgarbossa are both established AHL snipers who reached the 30-goal in the regular season and grabbed the goal scoring headlines.
But it's the veteran centerman, Jayson Megna, who often gets overshadowed by his teammates but never goes unnoticed by the opposition, who is the glue that helps bring all together with his versatility and lead-by-example style of play.
Megna, who has played a combined 113 games in the NHL with the Pittsburgh Penguins, Vancouver Canucks and New York Rangers, signed with the Bears' parent club the Washington Capitals last summer. He made the Caps out of training camp, but was ultimately assigned to the Bears early in the season before appearing in any games with them.
After arriving in Chocolatetown, Megna became a roster mainstay, appearing in every regular season game after he arrived, with the exception of the meaningless season finale in which he sat out along with many other roster regulars.
Despite often being put into a checking role by the coaching staff, where his focus is more on stopping the opposition from scoring, the crafty Megna, who possesses a smooth skating stride and an abundance of speed, still found a nose for the net in garnering 20 goals for the Bears, a mark that he says means a lot to him.
"This one of the toughest leagues in the world to score goals in,” said Megna, whose career high is 26 set in 2014-15 with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. "When you get 20, it says a lot about your team and your linemates, and I’m very happy to have achieved that mark this season."
Not possessing a particularly hard shot but obviously a pair of soft hands, Megna is normally positioned just outside the crease area where he is often seen dueling in intense one-on-one battles for position with burly blueliners who often outsize him. This all means there is normally a heavy price to pay for each of the career high eight times he lit the lamp on the PP, but even in enduring the pain to reach the new personal high, he still was right back down to ice level, acknowledging it as a team effort and attributing his increased production to more ice time and capitalizing on more chances than he has in the past when afforded extra-man time.
Stick on the ice, Megna prepares to net his 20th. Photo by: Cory Lyons Twitter: @CoryLyonsAHL Instagram: @corylyonsphoto |
On the other side of the special team coin, Megna is also heavily counted upon to shut down the opposition power play on the penalty kill. It would figure that with a PK unit that features him along with fellow speedsters Beck Malenstyn, Shane Gersich and Nathan Walker, that the Bears would have registered more than three shorties on the season.
Megna's speed backs off a Bridgeport defender. Photo by: Cory Lyons Twitter: @CoryLyonsAHL Instagram: @corylyonsphoto |
The Bears' regular season, from a first half free-fall, to a steady and, at times, meteoric second half rise has been well documented, but it's a merely a memory now as they enter the post-season.
"The odds surely were not in our favor after the first half of our season, but we had a belief that things would get better, and if we stuck to the game plan and started to get to the place where we knew we could play, we would have success. That 17-game run is certainly one of the craziest runs I’ve ever been on. It was a special year, it was a lot of things that I haven’t seen in my career, and I’ve been around for seven years. We have a really special group in here and we have great things ahead of us,” said Megna, hungry for his first playoff action since the spring of 2015.
Think it’s foolish to think that if at the end of this post-season journey that the Bears are about to embark on culminates with them capturing their 12th Calder Cup with Jayson "Man in the Middle” Megna leading the charge? If so, ponder this, who would have been foolish enough a few months ago to gamble that they would even be on this playoff road that will ultimately end with the crowning of the Calder Cup Champion?
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