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Inside Game

Inside the NHL

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Tuesday March 16, 1999 05:00 PM

This week's topics:
Mr. Everything | Bryan Trottier Saga 
Playoff Format | Bust and Bargain
In the Crease


Mr. Everything  

Blues defenseman Al MacInnis proved he's more than just a big shot

By Kostya Kennedy

Sports Illustrated

For all the talents and skills of Blues defenseman Al MacInnis -- the way he holds his position against onrushing forwards, digs the puck out of corner scrums, delivers crisp passes to start the offense up-ice -- nothing can eclipse this enduring image of him in St. Louis. It was Jan. 17, 1984, and MacInnis was a little-known Flames rookie playing on the road against the Blues. His wicked slap shot was largely responsible for getting him to the NHL, but that weapon hadn't yet registered on the radar of most fans. With 9:14 gone in the game, MacInnis, 20 years old and sapling-thin, wound up at the blue line and blasted a high shot toward St. Louis goalie Mike Liut. The puck flew at hellacious speed and struck Liut on the mask. He fell to the ice; the puck continued into the net.

The play was so remarkable that it became a staple of highlights reels, and Al MacInnis, slap shot hero, was born. "Since that play," says MacInnis, "I've been the guy with the great shot."

MacInnis's slapper, which typically travels at more than 90 mph, remains the fastest and most fearsome in the game, but it's his broad range of skills that makes him SI's choice for the Norris Trophy. At week's end MacInnis led all defensemen with 19 goals and 49 points. He was playing a staggering 28 minutes and 51 seconds per game, and his plus-26 rating, tops by far on the Blues, was seventh-best in the league. The six players with better plus-minus marks all played on teams with much higher winning percentages than St. Louis's .500. "He's our MVP and our best defenseman," says Blues general manager Larry Pleau. "He controls games for us."

The 6'2" 196-pound MacInnis prides himself on "giving the coaches the same effort every night." While many high-scoring backliners regularly sacrifice their defense to join the rush, MacInnis's lethal shot enables him to hang back and still provide offense. Occasionally, when St. Louis is scrambling in the offensive zone, MacInnis will calmly hold the puck at the blue line and opponents will tense in anticipation of his shot, affording MacInnis's teammates time to regroup. Without the puck, his positioning and knack for stepping into passing lanes and intercepting the puck enable MacInnis to defuse scoring chances before they develop.

Were this season an anomaly, he would still be our choice as the league's top defenseman. But his 1998-99 performance coupled with his pedigree -- he has played in 10 All-Star Games and finished among the top three in the Norris voting four times -- makes him a prohibitive choice for the trophy. "He hasn't won a Norris yet?" asks Lightning forward Wendel Clark, surprised. No, not yet. That should change at the awards ceremony in June.

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Bryan Trottier Saga
A High Price To Say Thanks
 

Bryan Trottier is the most popular player in Islanders history. Among the best two-way centers ever to play and the Isles' alltime leading scorer, Trottier was a heroic figure when New York won four straight Stanley Cups from 1980 through '83. Thus, when one looks to the rafters at Nassau Coliseum and sees the retired sweaters of Mike Bossy, Clark Gillies, Bob Nystrom, Denis Potvin and Bill Smith, Trottier's fabled number 19 is oddly absent. "That's always a big issue with our fans," says Islanders spokesman Chris Botta. "They want to know why we haven't had a ceremony to retire his sweater."

Last week a representative for Trottier, New Jersey businessman Tom Happle, revealed the reason: To take part in a retirement ceremony (and to make future p.r. appearances for the team), Trottier wants $3 million. The Islanders say that Happle, working on Trottier's behalf, has been trying to persuade the team to accede to this fee for more than a year. Players typically receive airfare and gifts at such events but not payment.

Happle says that Trottier, now an Avalanche assistant coach, should be handsomely compensated because the Islanders will benefit from the publicity Trottier generates. Last week Trottier, who calls Happle a "very good friend whose counsel I seek," neither confirmed nor denied the demand. He said that if there is a retirement fete, he would like to "get it done the right way."

From 1982-83 through 1989-90 Trottier was one of the five highest-paid players in the NHL, but his relationship with the Islanders soured in '90 when they decided to defer some payments owed him over a 10-year period. Trottier then was involved in several ill-fated investments, and in '94 he declared bankruptcy because he couldn't repay bank loans of some $9.5 million.

The Islanders understandably are refusing to pay his ransom. It's sad that he has fallen into dire financial straits but sadder still that the history missing from the Nassau Coliseum rafters is something only money can buy.

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Playoff Format
Change Is Not For The Better
 

Oilers general manager Glen Sather's lobbying the NHL to expand its playoff format from 16 to 20 teams is misguided. Sather reasons that the added berths might help financially disadvantaged Canadian teams by increasing their chances of picking up the additional revenue generated by home playoff dates. If the season had ended on Sunday, three of Canada's six teams -- the Canadiens, the Canucks and the Flames or Oilers, who were tied for the last spot in the West -- would have missed the postseason.

One of the best things about the league's expansion from 21 teams in 1990-91 to the 30 that will play in 2000-01 is that there are still only 16 playoff spots, making the races for them far more exciting now than when all but the five lousiest clubs advanced. Having solid teams like the Bruins and the Oilers in danger of missing the post-season legitimizes the 82-game regular season, which has enough difficulty generating interest.

Because Sather is so respected and because an expanded field would generate more money, the proposal will get consideration from the NHL owners. Forget it. Leave the playoffs as they are.

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Bust and Bargain  

BUST AND BARGAIN
COACH LARRY ROBINSON
Kings
1998-99 salary:$700,000

He didn't lift team spirit when he recently said, "I often question whether I'm a good coach." At week's end L.A. was 25-36-5, 10th in the Western Conference.
COACH JACQUES MARTIN
Senators
1998-99 salary: $426,530

He has lifted team spirit through such unorthodox methods as having players work together on Lego projects. Ottawa was 38-19-8, best in the Eastern Conference.

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Issue date: March 22, 1999

 
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