Macklin Celebrini can bring the Sharks back from the dead. I’ve seen it happen before

After 82 regular season games and more than 4,000 minutes on the ice, it seems reductive to say that the San Jose Sharks’ 2023-24 season rides on Tuesday’s NHL Draft Lottery.

But, well, it does.

The Sharks might be in a top-to-bottom rebuild, but we’re now in year two of general manager Mike Grier’s plan and the Sharks don’t seem to be building towards anything.

Sure, the squad has some nice young depth pieces, but it’s also looking for a new head coach.

But what it’s really looking for is a star to guide it through this dark, dark night.

They could find one if luck (or NHL commissioner Gary Bettman’s not-so-subtle hand) goes their way Tuesday.

The Sharks have a 25.5 percent chance of landing the No. 1 overall pick, and boy, does this team need a win.

There were three players in the history of the Hobey Baker Award — college hockey’s Heisman — to win as a freshman: Hall of Famer Paul Kariya, Stanley Cup winner Jack Eichel, and Adam Fantilli, the No. 3 overall pick in last year’s draft.

Macklin Celebrini became the fourth this spring. He’s the youngest player to win the award, and he won it as the youngest player in Division 1 college hockey.

If Celebrini wants, he can have a beer at a bar this summer. So long as he’s in his native Canada, of course. He’ll turn 18 on June 13, just a few weeks before the NHL Draft, where he’ll be selected No. 1 overall.

(He was born just weeks before I started college. Isn’t getting old the best?)

He might be a kid, but Celebrini is the foundation piece for this unpinned Sharks franchise. He’s the reward for two years of suffering for Sharks fans.

And my goodness do the Sharks need to land him, because there’s no next-best thing in this year’s draft.

(Plus, do you know who his dad is?)

Last year, the Sharks missed out on a once-in-a-generation player in the draft lottery as Connor Bedard went No. 1 to the Blackhawks.

But that draft class was loaded. I maintain there were four elite, franchise-changing talents in that draft: Bedard, Fantilli, Leo Carlsson, and Matvei Michkov.

The Sharks landed the No. 4 pick in that draft and yet somehow didn’t end up with one of them.

Now, the player they did select, Will Smith, is no slouch. He led the NCAA in points this past season as a freshman. (Don’t let all this freshman success fool you, college hockey is anything but a one-and-done environment.) But Smith is not a franchise changer.

Not to put too much on the kid’s shoulders, but Celebrini is.

I grew up in Chicago as a die-hard Blackhawks fan. Forget Jeremy Roenick and Chris Chelios, I was raised on Tuomo Ruutu, Eric Daze, and Jocelyn Thibault. Hawks’ home games weren’t on local television, and the only thing I was fully convinced of in life was that so long as the Wirtz family owned the team, they would never win a Stanley Cup. It was a hopeless existence. (That might tell you something about me.)

I remember the date I felt hope — Oct. 19, 2007. It was a Wednesday.

That’s when Jonathan Toews took the puck and center ice against the Colorado Avalanche in the first few minutes of his fifth NHL game.

I was watching the Avs broadcast in my apartment in Columbia, Mo. (don’t ask how I got that feed) as Toews weaved through three Colorado players and beat goalie Jose Theodore with a goal for the ages.

“This is the kind of talent,” a giddy Avs analyst Peter McNab said. “That can bring a franchise back from dead.”

A great call.

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