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INSIDE THE NHL
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Even though he led the NHL with 52 goals and was tied for fourth in scoring with 86 points at week's end, the odds are against Selanne's winning the Hart. Jagr was the NHL's point leader, with 97 through Sunday, and Hasek was having one of the best seasons ever by a netminder, with 13 shutouts and a 2.09 goals-against average. As for Selanne, only four players whose teams failed to make the playoffs have been MVP (the last was Mario Lemieux of the 1987-88 Penguins). "He's had a phenomenal season," says Anaheim coach Pierre Page. "Through the down times, he hasn't let up."
With the absence of star left wing Paul Kariya, who missed the season's first 32 games in a contract dispute and who has been sidelined since Feb. 1 with postconcussion syndrome, Selanne has played with a hodgepodge of linemates and has been keyed on by opposing teams. "Trying to do damage without Paul has been a big challenge," says Selanne. Here's how he has responded: Through Sunday, Selanne was plus-12 on a team that had surrendered 55 more goals than it had scored, and he had scored 10 game-winning goals and 26.9% of Anaheim's 193 goals. Only Brett Hull, who scored 27.7% of the Blues' goals in 1991-92, has had a higher percentage of his team's output in a season. The 27-year-old Selanne, who is 6 feet and 200 pounds, is tougher in the corners than most snipers and possesses an uncommon blend of speed, explosiveness and touch. A classic Selanne moment, even though it didn't result in a goal, occurred on March 9 against the Kings. He was advancing on Rob Blakeone of the top three defensemen in the gamewho was skating backward and was in good position. But when Blake broke stride for a split second, Selanne seized the moment. He accelerated past Blake and snapped a breakaway shot on goalie Stephane Fiset. "Most guys wouldn't have even noticed my hesitation," says Blake. "He saw it, and he was gone." During and after the negotiations that resulted in Kariya's getting a two-year, $14 million contract on Dec. 10, Selanne never complained about the deal he signed in 1995, which was worth about $13 million over five seasons. Earlier this month, however, the Ducks added two years and $19.5 million to his contract. "I'm thankful they gave me the extension," he says, "but I wasn't worried, because if the only problem I have is that I'm underpaid, then things have to be pretty good." Issue date: April 20, 1998
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