When Tyler Rollo was traded to the London Knights just three games into the 2017-18 season from the Peterborough Petes, the 20-year-old forward didn’t know what to expect with his new club. Names like Robert Thomas, Cliff Pu and Sam Miletic littered the Knights’ roster and from a team standpoint, it was one that perennially demanded success.
But like most teams in any given sport, each player is expected to play a particular role. In hockey, there’s the sniper, the playmaker, the leader – and the list goes on. What Rollo did when he came over to the Knights was buy in to the system that was already in place.
He wasn’t expected to be the team’s leading scorer or a big physical presence within their lineup. Instead, he’s found a way to fit in by flying under the radar and playing a leadership role as one of the older players on the team. And that became even more evident when the Knights moved four of their top scorers at the deadline.
Related: Knights’ Trades Leave Big Holes, Bigger Questions
That’s when Rollo was handed an ‘A’ as part of the team’s leadership team and that’s when his role as a veteran on the club really became clearer to those on the outside looking in.
Rollo: A Leader by Default?
As a guy with only 21 points in 62 games with the Petes coming over to the Knights left a lot of questions even for the team. But Rollo quickly became a go-to for Dale Hunter on the penalty kill as his speed was tool that the coaching staff could exploit.
While he only had 62 games before his Knights debut, it was more OHL experience than a number of the players already on London’s roster. Cue the leadership role. With the trades at the deadline, Rollo became one of the most veteran junior players on the team. He experienced playoff hockey with the Petes in 2016-17 and that gave him even more to share with the younger players on the team.
While the trades left a number of questions, Rollo explained that the older players on the team weren’t ready to throw in the towel on a season that surely had playoffs written all over it.
“At the start it was a little confusing for most of the guys, including myself,” he said about the team’s moves at the deadline. “But we didn’t let that get to us. Most of the veteran guys stepped in and told the young guys… we said ‘Hey, we still want to win this thing. Let’s not give up. We have great talent, we just have to work hard every game.’ And I think we did that.”
Even in the toughest times, it’s up to the veterans to play a motivational role. Rollo took on that role and found a way to help the team work their way into the fifth spot in the OHL’s Western Conference.
Once a Knight, Always a Knight
On top of accepting his role with the team, Rollo also had the responsibility of fitting into a new city with new billets and new teammates all at once. And with a building that holds roughly 9,000 fans, there’s an expectation that comes with being a Knight – one that Rollo wholeheartedly accepted upon being traded to London.
While it surely isn’t an easy thing to do, the young forward quickly found a home in London and made the best of the transition to his new club. It’s something that he’ll remember as his junior career comes to an end after the 2017-18 playoffs.
“It’s awesome,” he said about finishing his career as a Knight. “I love the city. I love the fans here and my billets and coaches and coaching staff – they’re always great to me. Obviously it sucks that it comes to an end, but I’m still going to be playing hockey so I think that’s the most important part.”
Before their final regular season game at Budweiser Gardens, the Knights’ organization honoured their over-agers in Rollo and defenceman Shane Collins. Rollo tallied a goal in the game to helping him to his best season in junior with 12 goals and 34 points. But it was the moment pre-game and the message he’ll leave behind that stood out for Rollo and his teammates.
“I’d like to say thanks for what they did for me at the beginning of the game. It means a lot. I’m sure my family appreciated it as well,” he said about the pre-game ceremony.
“It goes by fast,” said Rollo about what he told his younger teammates. “They have lots of years ahead of them, especially the guys that are 16 starting their first year. I just tell them come to the rink happy. Never take things for granted. I mean you always get the ups and downs, but at the end of it, it’s the best time of your life.”
While it may have only been one year of his short junior career, the role he’s played in helping the young squad develop is one that his teammates and the coaching staff will surely remember as Rollo takes the next step in his career. That said, he will always have a place among the London Knights.