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Taylor vs. Tyler? We have a new leader

Your Honour: The hockey jury may wish to change its mind. Remember the "Taylor vs.


Your Honour: The hockey jury may wish to change its mind.

Remember the "Taylor vs. Tyler" hysteria leading up to the 2010 National Hockey League entry draft and the feeling that the poor Boston Bruins were the big losers when Edmonton Oilers, picking first, grabbed Taylor Hall, thus winning the biggest prize in the draft pool?

Some win. Some loss for Boston, which wound up with the consolation prize, Tyler Seguin. It felt like winning a plastic replica when first prize was a cherry red Corvette.

Poor, poor Boston. Stuck with Seguin. At the time, the hockey world was ostensibly sending letters of sympathy to Bruins general manager Peter Chiarelli for losing out on the majestic Hall, a player some were calling a one-in-a-decade star.

That was then. This is now. Those people doing cartwheels down Nashua Street in Beantown? Chiarelli, Bruins coach Claude Julien and the thousands of Bruins fans who some days feel like the Chicago Bulls did in 1984 when Sam Bowie was picked No. 2 (behind Hakeem Olajuwon) by Portland in the NBA draft and the Bulls, choosing third, were saddled with a North Carolina collegian by the name of Michael Jordan. Perhaps you've heard of him.

Hall entered the NHL with the blaring of trumpets and superstar predictions. Seguin sat on the Bruins bench a lot, and played third- and fourth-line minutes. Hall finished with 22 goals in 65 games before breaking an ankle in March to finish his season. Seguin managed just 11 goals in 74 games. But oh, by the way, Seguin won a Stanley Cup while playing a far more prominent role in the playoffs; Hall's Oilers missed the post-season.

Year two? Seguin has been dazzling. He leads the Bruins in goals and points (11 and 21) in the first 18 games. As of Nov. 19, he led all NHL forwards in plus-minus with a plus-17. He is Bruins' offensive spark on a squad that will likely contend again for the Cup.

"I think we knew he'd be a good player for us this year, but no doubt, he's probably playing even better than we expected," Julien told Steve Conroy of Bostonherald.com.

And Hall? Still getting plenty of minutes, still a great player, but with only six goals (including a hat trick) in the first one-fifth of Edmonton's season. Maybe the pressure of trying to live up to 小蓝视频 the No. 1 pick is weighing on him. Maybe 小蓝视频 No. 2 has motivated Seguin to try just a little bit harder.


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