Nova Scotia

Halifax Mooseheads winger joins elite company as he hits century club

Jordan Dumais' two goals and three assists in the team's last regular season home game brought his season points total to 104, making him just the eighth player in franchise history to score 100 points or more in a season.

Jordan Dumais is only the third 17-year-old to score more than 100 points in a season in franchise history

Jordan Dumais of the Halifax Mooseheads is one point away from tying the team's scoring record for 17-year-olds. He has 104 points and two games left in his season. (Trevor MacMillan/Halifax Mooseheads )

A Halifax Mooseheads winger is breathing rarified air after netting five points in Saturday's 5-3 win against the Baie-Comeau Drakkar.

Jordan Dumais' two goals and three assists in the team's last regular season home game brought his season points total to 104, making him just the eighth player in franchise history to score 100 points or more in a season.

Dumais said the stat was in the back of his mind, but he had other priorities when the puck dropped at Scotiabank Centre on Saturday.

"I was just trying to win the game," Dumais said, adding that the team is in a tight playoff race. "Our team's playing well now so that helps, obviously."

The five-point effort also brings the L'Île-Bizard, Que, native's point total level with Nikolaj Ehlers' in 2013-14 and within one of Jonathan Drouin's 105 in 2012-13. Dumais now joins the two Mooseheads-turned-NHLers as one of only three 17-year-olds in the club's history to hit the century mark.

With two games left in the regular season, Dumais said he's confident he can surpass Drouin's historic season.

"I'd be pretty disappointed if I didn't get one or two points in my next two games," Dumais said. "But yeah, I mean, it'd be cool if I did pass it."

Dumais is now third in Quebec Major Junior Hockey League scoring behind Joshua Roy of the Sherbrooke Phoenix and William Dufour of the Saint John Sea Dogs.

Rising draft stock

Mooseheads head coach Sylvain Favreau said Dumais's 100th point was inevitable given his recent hot streak — he's recorded 32 points over his last 10 games — and the number of games that remained before Saturday.

"I think, you know, the full body of work speaks for itself," Favreau said. "Jordan is a guy that [has] a high compete level and outworks his opponents game in and game out."

NHL Central Scouting has Dumais ranked 72nd among North American draft-eligible skaters and projected him as a third round pick in their mid-term rankings released in January. But Favreau said the right-winger is making a strong case to outperform the rankings come July's draft.

NHL players Nikolaj Ehlers, left, and Jonathan Drouin are the only former Mooseheads who scored more than 100 points in a season for the team as 17-year-olds. (Claus Andersen/Getty Images/Emilee Chinn/Getty Images)

"Jordan was not really high on the radar to start the season just because he took a different route to the Quebec league," he said, noting Dumais went to prep school in the United States instead of playing midget AAA like most players in the QMJHL.

"Smaller-type players, like Drouin — and the list can go on — in the NHL, they're having a lot of success."

Favreau said the NHL has adapted to favour smaller, skilled players like Dumais, who stands 5-9 and weighs 165 pounds, according to the team's website.

Gathering momentum before playoffs

After losing many games in March, Favreau said the team turned a corner this month and he hopes they carry that momentum into the playoffs.

"This is the first time that we've had five straight wins all year," he said. "We're gonna be using the last two games of the season to fine-tune a couple things and make sure that we're ready."

Dumais gave much of the credit for the team's recent turnaround to his linemates. Along with Dumais, the team's top line features captain Elliot Desnoyers and rookie Mathieu Cataford.

"Cataford jumped on our line a few games ago and as a 16-year-old he's definitely very mature and ... showing up to play every single game," Dumais said, adding that Desnoyer's leadership has been instrumental to the line's success.

The Mooseheads are sitting in fifth place in the QMJHL's Eastern Conference, out of reach of the fourth-ranked Acadie-Bathurst Titan. But just three points behind the Mooseheads are the Rimouski Océanic, who have four games left.