Daniel
Alfredsson had spent his 18-year career with the Ottawa
Senators, the last 14 with the 'C' on his sweater. At 40, he has
had a change of heart. Alfredsson signed a one-year contract with the
Detroit Red Wings
that is reportedly worth $5.5 million on Friday. He reportedly
informed Senators general manager Bryan Murray that he will not
return during a conversation late Thursday. The Boston
Bruins also were reportedly in the running for Alfredsson, but
the fit with Detroit appears to be a good one. There is room in the
top-six with Valtteri
Filppula reportedly signing with the Tampa Bay Lightning. Daniel
Cleary and Damien
Brunner are also unrestricted free agents and may not return.
Ottawa coach Paul
MacLean coached as an assistant to Mike Babcock in Detroit for
several seasons, so Alfredsson is familiar with the systems and
language that the Red Wings use. He's also joining a roster that is
loaded with Swedish players, including Henrik
Zetterberg, Johan
Franzen, Gustav
Nyquist, Niklas
Kronwall and Jonathan
Ericsson. From a lineup perspective, Babcock might want to try
Alfredsson with Zetterberg and Nyquist or perhaps Tomas
Tatar. Babcock liked the line of Pavel
Datsyuk with Franzen and Justin
Abdelkader in the 2013 Stanley Cup Playoffs. Alfredsson has
played 1,178 games with the Senators since 1995 and racked up 1,108
points, including 26 points in 48 games in 2012-13, but he has
reached the Stanley Cup Final once (2007) and lost in five games to
the Anaheim Ducks.
He repeatedly talked about a strong passion for playing in Ottawa
because of the young, up-and-coming team led by MacLean, the Jack
Adams Award winner for 2012-13. But, perhaps, he believes the Red
Wings give him a better chance at chasing that elusive Stanley Cup
championship.
Daniel Alfredsson may be down to his final chance to win his first Stanley Cup championship. He's moving his family to Detroit to try to make it happen. Alfredsson, the now former Ottawa Senators captain, signed a one-year contract reportedly worth $5.5 million with the Detroit Red Wings on Friday to chase what he called his dream with an organization that has won the Stanley Cup four times since he came into the NHL in 1995. Alfredsson was the longest-serving captain in the NHL at 14 years and had spent his entire 17-season NHL career in Ottawa, going to the Stanley Cup Playoffs 14 times and the Stanley Cup Final in 2007. He said it wasn't until he could start talking to other teams as a free agent earlier this week that he decided moving away from Canada's capital city would give him the best chance to win the Stanley Cup.
"We had a lot of discussions here with our
family leading up to this the last few days and it pretty much came
down to a selfish decision in terms of I have not won the Stanley
Cup," Alfredsson said. "I feel with Ottawa, they're
getting closer and closer and definitely going in the right direction
and have a really bright future in front of them, but at this stage
of my career I just don't have the time to wait for that.
It's a tough decision to make and it still hasn't really
sunk in, but I feel I'm doing this for myself, I feel this is right
for me and I really like the fit with the Detroit
Red Wings."
Alfredsson, 40, played 1,178 games for the
Senators and had 1,108 points, but he reached the Cup Final one time
and lost in five games to the Anaheim
Ducks. He talked in the past about how much fun he was having
playing with the Senators as they were going through a rebuild, but
he admitted the 2013-14 season may be his last and he didn't want to
spend it as a mentor for a team that is on the cusp. Alfredsson said
he feels he can put the Red Wings over that top. "The easy
thing for me would be just to stay in Ottawa, enjoy my last year
there and retire an Ottawa Senator. It probably would have been a
great ending as well, but I'm a competitive person and I wouldn't
have felt the same drive, I think, in terms of just trying to be the
mentor and to play it out. Ottawa is going to be a good team next
year as well and I felt I needed a different challenge to do this. It
was an extremely hard decision to make, but I feel it's the right one
for me at this time."
The Red Wings are moving into the same division as
the Senators, so to win the Stanley Cup there is a very real
possibility Alfredsson will have to go through his former team. He
said he's thought about that and said he's not worried that leaving
will tarnish his legacy in Ottawa, which includes several charities
to which he will remain committed. However, he will be expecting a
vitriolic reaction when he returns to Canadian Tire Centre.
"I expect there will be resentment and
anger from fans, as I think there definitely should be. I have my
favorite sports teams, too, and if something happens with a player
and it doesn't benefit my team, I don't like it. But I know what I've
done in Ottawa. I gave it everything I had throughout my career and
have so many people to thank. They have been almost too good to
me.This is purely a situation for me where this is about me. This is
a decision I make for myself, not for anybody else. It's all about
trying to get the Stanley Cup."
Though everything will look new in Detroit, the
systems and style of play that the Red Wings use will be somewhat
similar for Alfredsson, who spent the past two seasons playing under
2013 Jack
Adams Award winner Paul
MacLean in Ottawa. MacLean spent several seasons as an assistant
to Red Wings coach Mike Babcock in Anaheim and Detroit. Alfredsson is
going to a team that is known for being very good to Swedes. He said
he spoke to Red Wings captain Henrik
Zetterberg quite often before making his decision to sign.
Alfredsson has played with Niklas
Kronwall, Johan
Franzen and Mikael
Samuelsson on the Swedish national team.
"I just really like the way Detroit plays
hockey," Alfredsson said. "It's a puck-possession
game. It's a push-the-pace game. I just think with the personnel they
have throughout the lineup, I could come in and be of help in
different areas and be part of something really good. I know quite a
few of the guys. I know there personalities. I know how they play.
The culture of Detroit really appealed to me from all the
conversations I've had with different players that have been there."
Babcock told NHL.com he spoke with Alfredsson on
Thursday and got the sense Detroit was the front-runner. The coach
said he thinks the change in organizations will invigorate
Alfredsson. "The thing about leadership ability is when
you're Alfie's age and you go to a new situation, put yourself out
there, you bring your leadership skills, you bring your
competitiveness, but also it's new because you haven't been with them
and it's the change. All those things are exhilarating. He's going to
make our team way better."
Babcock also mentioned how Alfredsson has three
boys are who into hockey, "and Detroit is an unbelievable spot
for hockey development for young guys." Alfredsson was quite
clear his decision to leave Ottawa for Detroit was one he made for
himself, in consultation with his family, because he feels it gives
him the best chance to win the Stanley Cup. "This is a sports
decision for me, about challenging myself, to see if I can take it to
the ultimate goal in our sport, and there is no bigger prize than the
Stanley Cup. It's pretty amazing, you play 18 years in the League and
I've been in the Final once, that's the closest I have gotten. This
move is just a sports decision."
The Detroit
Red Wings made the first splash Friday by signing former Ottawa
Senators captain Daniel
Alfredsson to a one-year contract. A little more than two hours
into the free-agent signing period, the Red Wings struck again,
agreeing to a five-year contract with center Stephen
Weiss that carries a $4.9 million salary-cap charge. Weiss, 30,
joins a stable of centers in Detroit that includes Henrik
Zetterberg, Pavel
Datsyuk, Joakim
Andersson and Darren
Helm. It's likely that Red Wings coach Mike Babcock. However, the
addition of Weiss means Babcock can attempt to play Zetterberg and
Datsyuk on the same line. Andersson is also a restricted free agent.
Weiss has played his entire 11-year career with the Florida
Panthers and has 394 points in 654 games. His 2012-13 season was
cut short because of a wrist injury and he finished with just four
points and a minus-13 rating in 17 games. He was likely going to be a
target for many teams at the 2013 NHL Trade Deadline had it not been
for the injury. Weiss had 57 points in 80 games in 2011-12, helping
the Panthers reach the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time since
2000.
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