How Avalanche’s “Jersey boys” have bonded on, off the ice

Miles Wood and Tomas Tatar just could not believe what they were hearing.

Here they were, sitting with one New Jersey’s own, Ross Colton, and one of the Garden State’s native sons did not know about the Pulaski Highway. Wood and Tatar peppered Colton with questions and chirps while the three of them removed their equipment after a morning skate in Pittsburgh last month.

If it wasn’t all just good-natured needling of one of their teammates, the shock and utter disappointment in their voices would have seemed quite sincere.

“We were teasing him,” Tatar said. “We thought as a (New Jersey) homeboy, he should probably know that.”

Wood, Tatar and Colton are all first-year members of the  Avalanche. They share a simple connection – Wood and Tatar both played for the New Jersey Devils before arriving in Denver. Colton grew up in Robbinsville, N.J., and was a Devils fans as a kid.

They began their first season with the Avalanche on a line together. While Colton and Wood have mostly remained together on the team’s third line, Tatar has moved around.

Regardless, they have all bonded. Colorado’s three “Jersey boys” all live in the same building together in Cherry Creek. And they’re all part of a newfound level of depth up front that the Avs hope propels them on a second deep postseason run in three years.

“I’ve just sort of gravitated toward them off the ice,” Colton said. “… It’s nice that we can carpool. They’re both really good guys who have been around the league for a while, so just gaining some chemistry and becoming friends has been cool.

“I wasn’t that young, but I watched Miles play for the Devils for a while. Tomas has been a great player for a long time, so it’s cool to be in the room with them and see how they carry themselves off the ice and how that translates to onto the ice with success.”

Wood spent the past 10 seasons in the New Jersey organization, and the past seven driving from Hoboken to Newark, where the Devils played at Prudential Center. For years, he drove over the General Pulaski Skyway, a bridge that has helped commuters cross the Hackensack and Passaic rivers since 1932.

Tatar joined the Devils two years ago, and he became familiar with the roads around northern New Jersey as well. Colton’s hometown of Robbinsville is not in that part of the state. It’s just east of Trenton, which looks like a lot like what outsiders might call “central New Jersey” unless they have experience with residents of the state and know that using that phrase is just asking for an argument.

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