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Why, it'd be like splitting up Bartles and James; white wine and fish; Liberace and sequins. Like separating George Gershwin's music from brother Ira's lyrics or Dennis Rodman from his nose rings. Sure, Lucy and Desi broke up. And Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. But not every celebrity union has to go by the boards, does it? From an artistic and sensibility standpoint, Anaheim's Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanne belong together. Forever. They are kindred spirits. Special individuals who alone -- but most especially as a tandem -- are capable of raising a watered-down sport whose motto shouldn't be "The Coolest Game on Earth" but rather "Hard Off the Glass!" into a realm of speed and grace.
So the rumor of their breakup caught fire in New York (where else?) and swept through an internet-driven business: Selanne, one half of the Ducks' gold-dust twins, to the New Jersey Devils for a passel of players. So the Finnish Flash officially joined a list of illustrious names from the Western Conference destined to be dealt. Alongside Keith Tkachuk and Mark Messier and Doug Gilmour. Yes, it's that time of year -- a month before the trade embargo. Annually, there's better fiction written between now and the deadline than in a comprehensive compilation of Hemingway's short stories. "When I heard it," says Kariya, asked about the Selanne rumours, "I giggled." Selanne, however, wasn't executing cartwheels of hilarity. "You can say it doesn't worry you, but in the back of your mind you wonder," he admits. "That's why for me it was important that (GM) Pierre (Gauthier) come out and make a statement. He came to me personally, too, and told me they were just rumors. That there was nothing to them. "I just want to forget about it now and concentrate on playing. We're in a playoff race, and you don't need any distractions." That, obviously, was the GM's motive in making a rare public statement of this sort. "I'm not going to answer every trade rumor," Gauthier told the Los Angeles Times. "But this one is so out of whack that it had to be addressed. It's a total fabrication. There's no way we're trading these boys. It's out of the question. They are treasures." That they are. But unless the treasures begin to reap larger dividends in the standings, opinions are apt to change. If the Ducks fail to qualify for the playoffs this year, the second in coach Craig Hartsburg's tenure, it's going to make a lot more sense to at least entertain the idea of dealing Selanne ...
"Why," asks one general manager, "if you're (the Ducks) wouldn't you want two or three good players at $1.5-$2 million, rather than one at $5-$6 million? It gives you more depth with a better chance at winning."
Kariya and Selanne remain together for an extended period of time, and there's one thing they can do to ensure it stays that way: Win. Nothing as drastic as the division, necessarily. Or the conference. Or, heaven forbid, the Cup. Just win.
Rest of the West "Is the game too violent?" he asked. "No. Is it more violent than it was? Yes. Is it dangerous? No. Hitting, physical play, is part of the game. A big part. You can't take it out of hockey. I wouldn't watch it if you did. Sure, there's a line between being physical and being dirty, and some guys cross it. But everybody's got to play this game hard." Playing hard is one thing. Being a marked man is quite another. Oh yeah," he said. "You know it's coming. You're standing there in the faceoff circle, waiting for the game to get going, you look at the guy standing next to you and you know ... as soon as they drop the puck you're going to get slashed. "Or you're going to get hit. Or cross-checked. "I'm not complaining. You get used to it. It almost becomes second nature."
"I can't imagine," he finally replies. Fair answer. In a spectacular 10-game span, the Robitaille-Stumpel-Palffy unit amassed 48 points (20 goals, 28 assists), highlighted by a 10-point evening in the Kings' 4-3 OT win over the Flames on Monday night. There's no stopping them at the moment. "I'm used to Jozef," says Palffy, obviously adapting seamlessly to life on another coast. "I played with him on the National Team in Czech. We have similar thinking. And Lucky ... well, Lucky just scores goals. As everyone knows, he knows how to go to the net, when to go to the net. "It's very good here. They didn't want me in New York, so that's fine. I'm happy." Needless to say, are the Kings.
Quick hits
Quote of the Week: 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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