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  • Bogosian Is Eager To Please

    BOGOSIAN IS EAGER TO PLEASE;
    By Steve Hummer

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    October 12, 2008 Sunday

    Into the fray: The Thrashers defenseman has moved fast and hopes
    to stick.

    The Zach Bogosian timeline is stuck on fast-forward, the images
    jumping from childhood to manhood in flickers and flashes.

    It was only four years ago that a 14-year-old kid not much wider than
    the stick he carried showed up at prep school to begin his formal
    hockey education. That first year, Bogosian felt blessed if he got
    more than one shift a game.

    Two years ago, just 16, he already was facing older, more experienced
    players in junior hockey, with the Peterborough (Ontario) Petes.

    This May, he danced at his girlfriend's prom, himself taking high
    school classes online while preparing for the NHL draft. He's still
    one science credit shy of a high school diploma.

    Friday night, just 1:23 into the opener against Washington, the
    Thrashers' prized first-round draftee hopped onto the ice for his
    first authentic NHL game. Bogosian's maiden shift will not be a story
    to tell his grandchildren one day. Almost immediately he gave up the
    puck at the Thrashers' end and drew his first penalty --- holding ---
    while trying to recover. All in a forgettable 29 seconds.

    He would acquire a second penalty to begin the second period---
    or at his tender age, do they call it being in time out?

    In the game's final 20 seconds, Bogosian was in the mix again,
    embroiled in his first big-league hockey fight. Boxing way out of his
    weight class, he squared up against Donald Brashear, the Capitals'
    237-pound veteran, and, as a parting gift, got a nice red streak
    across his left cheek.

    There's a reason 18-year-old defensemen are rarer in the NHL than
    heat stroke. Youth is not well served at that position, and Bogosian
    is nothing if not young.

    "Kind of strange to think about it. Four years ago, I was sitting in
    a classroom in ninth grade," Bogosian said.

    "I knew what I wanted. I knew I'd probably have to grow up faster
    than a lot of kids. Now I'm 18, and I still have to grow up a lot
    faster than other people. But I don't mind it."

    A nine-game test

    Uh, coach, do you realize one of your defensemen was at the prom five
    months ago?

    "Is that right?" the Thrashers John Anderson said, fashioning a
    smirk. "Didja ask him what color dress he wore?"

    Clearly, if Bogosian sticks with the Thrashers this year, he won't
    earn a letter jacket from the team. He's a long way from high school,
    in distance if not in time. The message is clear: Grow up, double-time.

    Asked to learn more angles to the game, defensemen generally take
    longer to ripen than forwards.

    "It's extremely difficult. You're not really prepared to play defense
    at the college and junior levels," Thrashers new defenseman Mathieu
    Schneider said. He's 39 now, and he broke into the NHL half a lifetime
    ago, back when Bogosian was a zygote. "It takes a lot of patience,
    a lot of thinking. It takes most defensemen three, four, five years
    to really hit their stride in this league."

    The Thrashers have nine games to decide whether Bogosian is better
    served doing his apprenticeship in the NHL or playing more minutes
    back in junior hockey. The clock on his three-year contract and free
    agent eligibility doesn't start until after that.

    While Bogosian displayed a deft passing touch and a keen instinct
    during the preseason, there are no guarantees.

    The kid has prepared accordingly. Bogosian has spent the preseason in
    Atlanta living out of a hotel near the team's Duluth training facility
    and bumming rides from teammates. He gave his old car to his brother
    Aaron, a sophomore forward at St. Lawrence University in New York.

    "I want to make sure everything falls into place before I start
    treating myself," said Bogosian, displaying a defenseman's conservative
    nature.

    He comes in to this job interview with some great recommendations. For
    a young man who grew up in a fairly secluded fringe of New York ---
    you can throw a Loonie from Massena across the St. Lawrence into
    Quebec --- he has quickly gotten to know all the right people.

    He wears No. 4, the same as the greatest defenseman, former Boston
    Bruin Bobby Orr. Pure coincidence. When he was a kid picking out
    numbers, he didn't know Orr from Pee Wee Herman. And now, guess who
    is Bogosian's agent? Not Pee Wee.

    "Zach just kept improving and improving," said Orr, who first caught
    sight of Bogosian about three years ago. "Now he's a very strong
    skater who can pass it or shoot it well. He can really jump into the
    play. And that's what it's all about today."

    Another Bruins icon, defenseman Ray Bourque, coached Bogosian briefly
    when his son played at the same prep school, the Cushing Academy in
    Ashburnham, Mass. It was as if the role models were taking a number
    to serve the kid.

    All advice is welcomed, because the adjustments are plentiful. For one,
    Atlanta has been a culture shock. This transient place has nothing
    in common with where and how Bogosian grew up.

    Long way from Massena

    The Bogosians have been in Massena (population 13,000) since 1923,
    when Zach's great-grandfather made his way there from Armenia at the
    age of 16, escaping a genocide campaign by the Turks.

    Bogosian heritage is his cross to bear, literally --- beneath the
    Thrashers sweater is a tattoo of an ornate Armenian cross running a
    shoulder blade's length.

    Zach's parents still live and work on the same block that Stephen
    Bogosian settled in two generations before. When Ike, a former safety
    at Syracuse, goes to work, he walks one door down to his cleaning
    business. Zach's mother, Vicky, is a hairdresser who works out of
    the home.

    Meanwhile in Atlanta, the Thrashers require Bogosian to eventually
    become the Armenian hammer on their vulnerable defense. Friday was
    only one small, choppy stride in that direction. But the moment reeked
    of personal significance.

    The skinny 7-year-old who was playing up with the 11s and 12s was
    playing up again. Making an NHL team was the theme of Bogosian's every
    childhood dream. And here it was in his grasp, realized so quickly.

    What came before seemed only like flashes and flickers.

    All those miles logged in the family car to get him to some youth
    game. There always was another game to play.

    All the emotions that erupted after dropping off a last-born son at
    prep school for the first time. Bogosian said he never once felt a
    twinge of homesickness when he had to leave home at 14 to chase a
    hockey future. But it was never that easy on his parents. "It was a
    six-hour drive home [from Cushing Prep to Massena], and I sobbed for
    six hours," said Vicky, not exactly the hockey mom portrait of a pit
    bull in lipstick.

    And all the work and sacrificed fragments of youth that were given to
    a game. Summers weren't for vacations at the lake. For the past two,
    Bogosian arose at 6 a.m. five times a week to drive 90 minutes to an
    Ottawa gym for specialized workouts. He weighed 160 pounds when he
    began the program. He goes 200 now.

    Thinking back on everything, little wonder earlier this week Bogosian
    said, "It's kind of a surreal thing. It's almost like you just can't
    believe that you're here."

    But that's about all the reverie he'll allow. There is a schedule
    to keep.

    "I want it to happen so badly; I'm going to do everything I can to
    stick," he said. "If I play good, and keep working hard, things will
    fall into place. It does make me work harder knowing I have nine games
    to show that I belong, and I'm going to do everything in my power to
    do that."
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