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Inside the NHL Posted: Tuesday May 14, 2002 12:46 PMThough slowed by a nagging knee injury, Steve Yzerman has the Red Wings in tune By Daniel G. Habib
Yzerman has been especially effective at critical times. After the Red Wings fell behind the Canucks two games to none with their first-round series moving to Vancouver, the usually reticent Yzerman made a brief dressing-room speech to encourage his team and then scored a wraparound goal to open the scoring in a game Detroit won 3-1. Despite his slight build and nagging injury, Yzerman doesn't hesitate to initiate contact (ask 6'4", 235-pound Vancouver winger Todd Bertuzzi, whom Yzerman nailed several times in the first round) or sacrifice his body (ask Blues defenseman Al MacInnis, whose power-play slap shot Yzerman blocked in Game 2). "He's an amazing defensive player as well," says Red Wings associate coach Barry Smith. "In his zone he's absolutely solid. If the winger's down low, he takes the point. He goes down to block shots. He battles as hard as anybody I've seen. He's played like a lion." When asked how his knee was holding up after Detroit had eliminated St. Louis last Saturday, Yzerman smiled and said, "I get hit a bunch, but that's the way it's going to be. It's fine." Behind him, in his dressing stall, was evidence to the contrary: his thick black knee brace and a garbage pail that held several feet of discarded athletic tape. Issue date: May 20, 2002
For more Inside the NHL see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, May 15. Click here to subscribe to SI.hey
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