Whether it comes from a friend or just a random beer-leaguer who used to play pickup hockey at the Handke Pit, Nate Prosser hears this weekly: "Out of all the kids growing up in Elk River, I can't believe you're the one that made it."
Prosser's reply: "Tell me about it."
The always-smiling Prosser — walking on air after becoming the first defenseman in Wild history to score back-to-back game-winners — never takes for granted any morning he gets to walk into an NHL locker room. That's because a decade ago nobody could have predicted that the kid even his brother, Luke, says was a "little runt everyone disregarded" would make a living playing hockey.
"I was the late bloomer. I didn't go through puberty until late," Nate says matter of factly. "I was never close to making any selection teams. I was never the guy who was a higher-skilled defenseman or anything like that in the state.
"Everyone just pushed me aside. 'Maybe you'll make it to college, maybe not. Too slow. Too small.' "
Prosser isn't exaggerating.
"I was probably 5-2, 5-3 until I grew like a foot when I was a junior in high school," said Prosser, 27.
He still remembers piling into his dad's minivan with buddies for long road trips to Grand Rapids and Fargo and Brandon, Manitoba. Everyone who played hockey as a kid has similar fond memories: overtaking a motel's pool, learning to play poker with change, playing knee hockey in the hallways.
But then the real hockey games would start and Prosser's father and AAA coach, Chris, would "be scared for me. We'd be playing against guys who have beards and I'm the little guy out there trying to get better. He feared for me."
Slowly Prosser, now 6-2, grew as a player. He got invited to junior hockey tryout camps, and halfway through his senior year at Elk River, Sioux Falls of the U.S. Hockey League asked if he would consider leaving.