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NHL West
Friday, November 3
Phoenix needs to clean up
ugly mess with Tkachuk




It's one thing to be stranded in Raleigh, N.C.

Quite another to be stuck there.

"This eases my mind ... a little bit," admitted Keith Tkachuk, upon hearing the news that Keith Primeau had been dispatched to Philly, ending (for the moment) speculation that the Coyote captain was on his way out of Phoenix.

Keith Tkachuk
Keith Tkachuk wants to stay with the Coyotes, but he may not get his wish.
Ironic, then, that Tkachuk and the 'Yotes were in Raleigh -- Primeau's old holdout grounds -- a few days later, as a record snowfall of 30 inches socked the area and left them all feeling on the brink of madness, a bit like Jack Nicholson in The Shining.

But the Tkachuk issue is not going to go away. No matter how much general manager Bobby Smith might like it to. Privately, Tkachuk, arguably the NHL's best power forward, still feels he's going to be dealt, and Smith's reticence in making a very loud, very public statement to the contrary -- the most he'll say, rather indifferently, is that the Flyers-Hurricanes deal should "end all speculation" -- continues to fuel the fire.

"I don't have a say in where I go," said Tkachuk. "Who knows what their plans are. Now that he's traded really doesn't change things. Bobby Smith has to do what he has to do. I can't read his mind. If he wants to trade one of his best players, then he has to live with it."

Clearly, the decision to sever ties with Tkachuk is a contract dump. The ownership situation in Phoenix with Richard Burke is far from resolved. Is the franchise more enticing to prospective buyers with Tkachuk in the lineup, or his contract out of the way?

From all the trade talk, both verified and unsubstantiated, it would appear the latter.

While stressing he can't tell Tkachuk or any other player that they won't be traded, Smith adds in the same breath, "I think he'll be with us for the rest of the season."

Hardly a ringing endorsement.

Without doubt, Smith is in tough. It's almost impossible to trade a star for what your paying public perceives as equal value. A perfect example is Al Coates and the Theoren Fleury deal a year ago. In retrospect, Fleury was cut loose by the Avs for nothing in return, while Calgary has emerging defenseman Robyn Regehr and the truculent Rene Corbet on the ice, contributing. So now it looks like a brainstorm. Well, at the time of the transaction, Coates was vilified in Calgary.

Making a Tkachuk transaction even more difficult is his salary, which jumps $4 million to $8.3 million next season. When Hurricanes owner Peter Karmanos saw that, talks with Phoenix were off. "The Tkachuk contract," he declared, "is stupid."

There aren't many places likely to take on such a financial burden.

It is a very, very delicate matter, unloading an asset such as Keith Tkachuk.

Still, it's time to fish or cut bait, Bobby:

Close a deal, or put your captain's mind at ease.

It's absolute suicide to have your 1 or 1A player in a public tiff with management. The stench of dissatisfaction begins to permeate the dressing room. Bobby Hull's famous line "Play hurt? Hell, they won't play with hurt feelings anymore!" remains remarkably fresh and current. That a first-year NHL head coach, Bobby Francis, has thus far been able to play the old shell game with the egos and frailties of those involved and keep the ship on course should guarantee him a Jack Adams Trophy bid.

Thus far, being the operative words.

The situation is poison.

Rest of the West:
  • Oscar Levant, virtuoso pianist, raconteur, hypochondriac and world-class curmudgeon, once quipped of politicians and their stance on tough issues: "They'll doublecross that bridge when they come to it." Insightful, considering the Canadian government's 48-hour flip-flop on federal subsidies for Canadian-based NHL teams. The Liberals insist a furious public backlash to the plan forced them to withdraw. So, when did the government start listening the electorate, anyway? The last time any Canadian went into a store, he still had to pay the evil seven percent Goods and Services Tax, instituted by another party in another regime quite a few years ago.

    Suddenly the fed -- who are expecting a $95 billion budget surplus over the next five years by the way -- are getting mighty prudent with our money. Why, just a day or so before they turtled worse than Ulf Samuelsson on the subsidy issue, Human Resources Minister Jane Stewart admitted that an audit had shown up to 97 percent of $3 billion in federal grants had been mismanaged. And why is it that when the fed dutifully dole out tax subsidies and shelters to the oil industry, which is populated by billionaires not just measly hockey-type millionaires, there's not a peep of protest (despite prices at the pumps edging constantly upwards). But mention pro hockey teams and some farmer from Saskatchewan jumps up and down complaining about last year's harvest.

    The hypocrisy is so thick you'd need a stick of dynamite to unstick it.

    "They just don't get it," sighs Calgary goaltender Grant Fuhr. "Players are always going to get their money. With six teams in Canada and a 40-45 percent tax rate, a conservative estimate would be $10 million going from each team to the government in taxes. A conservative estimate.

    "What are the teams talking about ... $4 million a year each? Let me see ... so they would be willing to lose $60 million in taxes a year in order not to pay out $24 million? Now THAT makes perfect sense. If teams leave, it won't be the players that suffer. It'll be the hockey fans and the people who work for the teams and around the rinks. And that's a shame.'

  • Okay, let's get this straight. Nobokov is a goalie. Nabokov also is the novelist who wrote Lolita. Well, the Nobokov who answers to Evgeni is aiming to author his own success story. And this work is non-fiction.

    "It doesn't bother me at all," says the San Jose goalie, of replacing the traded veteran Mike Vernon. "I was playing well when they called me up."

    In his first three NHL appearances, a 24-year-old from Kamenogorsk, Kazakhstan, surrendered only one goal -- put into his own net by teammate Stephane Matteau. "The game is so much quicker here (than AHL Kentucky). The guys in this league, what you think they can't do, they do. It's exciting to be here playing in the big time. It's always been my dream. Now I just want to make the most of my opportunity."

    Quick hits:
  • The Avalanche are becoming increasingly concerned that Peter Forsberg isn't getting penalty calls simply because he's so bulldog-strong on his skates. "I've got to go out there thinking they're not going to call anything," he said recently. "It's a little frustrating." Added teammate Adam Foote: "He has guys hanging onto him and they're not calling it. Other guys get calls because they fall down. Peter doesn't fall."

  • Why are the Wings struggling of late? Well, look no further than the X-Factor, or Sergei Fedorov. Critics were carping that Fedorov was a major bust last season at this time, but at Detroit's 48-game mark this year, he's actually two goals and one point behind his 'pace' of a season ago.

  • Canucks' coach Marc Crawford apologized to the paying public following a 2-1 home loss to the Nashville Predators the other night. "I'm sorry for our fans," he said. "They didn't get enough passion and emotion. Our guys should look at it like that's what's missing from our game. It can't be a question mark in our make-up." With Alexander Mogilny injured and Mark Messier playing on a sore knee, both Andrew Cassels (3 assists in 13 games) and Markus Naslund have been major disappointments. On defense, both Greg Hawgood and Chris Joseph have plummeted back to earth and Mattias Ohlund is struggling to strip off the rust of the lengthy eye-related layoff.

  • Calgary captain and D-man Steve Smith is scheduled to consult with a specialist as to the next step in a possible comeback. Smith still has numbness in his left forearm and both palms from a bruised spinal cord. And his shoulders are itchy. "It feels like someone's rubbed them with some of that pink insulation you put in your garage," is the way he explained the sensation.

  • Only time will tell if San Jose coach Darryl Sutter's decision to send a none-too-subtle message to the underachieving Niklas Sundstrom -- he was a healthy scratch in back-to-back games -- will have any effect.

  • The Wings are hoping the return of grinders Kris Draper (broken forearm) and Kirk Maltby (hernia operation, sore foot) will be enough to spark the team.

  • Don Baizley, agent for the unhappy Igor Larionov, has been given clearance by his client to renew negotiations with Detroit GM Ken Holland. The offer to Larionov went from $4.3 million for two seasons to $1.7 for the first year and an option -- $1.7 million at the club's, $1.2 at Larionov's. If this this doesn't get done in a week or 10 days, this will be the 39-year-old's swansong in Motown.

    Quote of the week:
    "What do they pay for beer here? The guy just wasted $2.50. He should've thrown water and drank the beer," -- San Jose coach Darryl Sutter, after being doused with ale in a recent game at Phoenix.

    George Johnson covers the NHL for the Calgary Sun. His Western Conference column appears every week during the season on ESPN.com.


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