The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday- October 5, 1992 - Page 3 Lindros. Flyer forward Eric Lindros talks about his pending NHL season John Niyo tiam n Jr. ii vi WJl The most highly-touted hockey player to come out of juniors since Mario Lemieux was drafted in 1984, Eric Lindros is possibly the most controversial player since the Hanson Brothers. He has definitely been the most talked-about player over the past year and a half. First, one should know the facts: Eric Lindros played junior B hockey in 1989 for Compuware's Detroit squad. After being drafted by the junior A Soo Greyhounds in the 1990 Ontario Hockey League (OHL) entry draft, he refused to play in the Soo and contemplated a college career at Michigan. The OHL subsequently changed a rule which prohibited its teams from trading their first-round draft choices prior to those players' having begun their OHL careers. The Greyhounds traded Lindros to the Oshawa Generals and he helped the Generals win the Memorial Cup in 1991. In the 1991 National Hockey League entry draft, the Quebec Nordiques drafted Lindros first overall. He again refused to play for an organization which had drafted him and sat out the entire NHL sea- son. While sitting out, Lindros played for Team Canada in the 1991 Canada Cup and the 1992 Olympic Games in Albertville, France. On NHL draft day 1992, the Quebec Nordiques traded Lindros' rights to the Philadelphia Flyers and also to the New York Rangers. Ten days later, arbitrator Larry Bertuzzi awarded those rights to the '1 mean 1 am not the most skilled player in the world. I don't skate as fast as a lot of players. I don't finesse the puck as well as a lot of players. I don't shoot as well as a lot of players. I just get by.' Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for five players, one first-round draft choice and $15 million. Shortly thereafter, Lindros signed the highest-paying contract in the NHL at $3.5 million per season, including a $3 million signing bonus, over six years. Few knowledgeable hockey minds would dispute the talent and potential of Lindros. He is listed at 6-foot-5, 225 pounds. He can hit, skate and put the biscuit in the oven. Tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. on ESPN, Lindros will finally make his NHL debut. Daily Hockey Writer Brett Forrest spoke with the Flyer phenom recently in suburban Philadelphia. Daily: How serious were you about attending Michigan? Lindros: If I wasn't traded in ju- nior, I probably would have ended up at Michigan. But with the situa- tion I was in, I thought junior was the best way for me because I was going to be in and out of junior. I think it's slanted more towards pro, where college sets academics first and hockey second - which is great. It just was not what I was looking for. D: Now that the trade has been finalized and you are a member of the Flyers, what are your feelings for the management of the Quebec Nordiques and the team in general? L: I don't have any problem with any of the players or anyone who works for the team, except for the management and the owner. I mean he (Quebec President and part-owner Marcel Aubut) sat there and told me I would sign for $280,000 a year and love it. "You're going to be my property" sort of thing. I just didn't want to be part of somebody who treated me like a sheep. D: How anxious are you to fi- nally get on the ice for your first NHL game? L: I can't really describe it, it's unreal. It's been such a long time to get it going. Finally it's here, finally I am getting to know the city a little bit, getting to know the roads. It feels good to be a part of some- thing. We are pretty excited about this next year. I'm excited. I don't think anyone is expecting miracles. They're just expecting hard work and I think that's what we are going to give them. D: How valuable were your hockey experiences during last sea- son, when you refused to play for the Nordiques? L: Well, I went to the Olympics and I went to the Canada Cup. I think the Canada Cup was the best possible thing that ever happened to me. I truly believe that. You get in there and get to learn from a guy like Mark Messier. You get to learn the total game from a player like him. There were some great players there, but Mark Messier was the focal point of the whole thing for me. I really enjoyed the way he played. D: Do you pattern your game af- ter anyone in particular? when you make a big trade like the one I was involved in. It took out a lot of players, a lot of the nucleus of the team, but still left us a lot. We're going to have two, three great lines. There are guys here like (Rod) Brind'amour, (Mark) Recchi and (Kevjn) Dineen. I mean we're OK. D: What were your feelings to- ward the public and the media when you and your family were being portrayed as villains for not signing with Quebec? L: Everything you hear on the ra- dio or read in the press or hear in a documentary is one person's point of view. What you write as a reporter is your own point of view. Some peo- ple agreed with what I was doing, some people disagreed. I felt that the people who agreed did not vocalize it as much as the people who dis- agreed with what I did, and therefore it was blown out of proportion. I also think we were involved in a media bombardment from Quebec. I think they set up a system to really shock us and to run us through the mill for a little while. I spent $50,000 on media rela- tions last year. I had to do it and I ended up coming out in great shape. People understood, totally, what a weird and unethical businessman this guy (Aubut) is and we got away from it totally. D: Do you feel uncomfortable being 19 years old, never having played in one NHL game and making more money, per season, than any hockey player ever has? L : It's called entertainment. Hockey is entertainment. I'm not going to do the same things offen- sively as Wayne Gretzky does be- cause I am not built like Wayne Gretzky and I don't have the same tools. I am not going to be as good a skater as Paul Coffey because I am just not as good a skater. But I will bring excitement in my own way. I'll go out and I'll hit and I'll bump and grind. I'm just, like, a plug player. I just do what I can to get by and try and make other people on the team feel well so that they improve. I think this season our team is really going to come together. I think we're really going to come to- gether and have some fun. Magic returns to where he belongs The money might have had something to do with it. Almost $15 million for a season he probably won't even play. Further proof, I suppose, that he is one of the most successful businessmen around. But this isn't just about money. It is about a game, and the tremendous joy that one man brings to it and takes from it. The Magic is back, both literally and figuratively. .." I remember walking through the halls of Jenison Fieldhouse in East Lansing one day a couple of years ago. Michigan State doesn't play there anymore, though students play pickup games from time to time. But a man that many call the greatest basketball player ever has been there - running, sweating, driving the lane and flipping the ball with a turn of the head and a twitch of the wrist. And his jersey is on the wall, tucked away behind a thin pane of glass - a quiet whisper to let us know that the Magical road passed through this place. Somewhere between the high school gymnasium at Lansing Everett and the Great Western Forum in Inglewood. Looking at that jersey you can't help but realize that not far from where you stand is the driveway where little Earvin Johnson used to shovel away a patch of snow so he could practice late into the night. The driveway where he dreamed out loud of winning a world championship. He's won five of those. And has a college national title and an Olympic gold medal to boot. His storied career contains all the memories and achievements one should be allowed to have. But it shouldn't have ended the way it did. Forty-two points, 15 rebounds, 7 assists, 3 steals. That was Magic Johnson's line in the boxscore after he single-handedly beat the 76ers in Game 6 of the 1980 NBA Finals in Philadelphia for his first championship ring. He played every position that night, from point guard to center as he carried his Lakers - and that game is when they became his Lakers - in the absence of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. That he could end his first NBA season like that, and then end his last one standing at a press conference announcing he tested HIV- positive is unthinkable. Life handed him a crucible that no one deserves. He will conquer this thing, we told ourselves. He will keep smiling. But we couldn't be sure. Now, though, we find that Earvin Johnson really is something more than just another basketball player and just another entertainer. And his basketball redemption, for however long it lasts, is ours as well. There will be more "junior, junior sky hooks," like the one that beat Boston in the closing seconds in one of many memorable clashes between Boston and L.A., between Larry Bird and Magic. There will be a few more Laker fastbreaks with Magic - his head up, his finger pointing to a target only he can see, and his voice audible above everyone else's barking out commands to his eager teammates. A little bit more of the old Laker Showtime. They say tickets were selling at 10 times the normal rate the day after Magic announce his return last week. That comes as no big surprise. He was - and-is - Laker basketball. Many will say he is basketball itself. That is why last fall's terrible revelation was so disappointing to fans, and to Magic himself. "But what I'll miss most is something that might seem trivial to most people: the uniform," he wrote in a farewell article, of sorts, that appeared in a special issue of Sports Illustrated. "That sounds silly, I know. But it was always the uniform that-made me feel special ... "When I walked into the locker room on my first day as a Laker and saw my gold uniform hanging there, I cried. Off the floor I've always been Earvin. But in uniform I was Magic." If only for a proper sendoff, the Magic is back. RESTAU RANT - BAR & GATHERING PLACE OPENING SOON L: I don't think I pattern my game after anyone. I mean I am not the most skilled player in the world. I don't skate as fast as a lot of play- ers. I don't finesse the puck as well as a lot of players. I don't shoot as well as a lot of players. I just get by. D: How are you dealing with the outlandish expectations the city of Philadelphia, the NHL and all of Canada are heaping on you? L: Hey listen - we're not going to step into anything and be a dy- nasty right away. I think our goal is to be competitive this year and the following year to improve on what we've done this year. If we can con- tinue to do that, I think our job has been accomplished. I think it takes a long time to build a real good team, especially Lindros holds key to Philadelphia 'S rebirth by Brett Forrest Daily Hockey Writer "As a Flyer, you play for the em- blem on the front, not the name on the back." This is the motto which emblazons itself upon the con- sciousness of every Philadelphia Flyer as it hangs above the door of the Spectrum locker room. This one simple sentence, embodied through the years by men such as Bernie Parent, Bill Barber, Tim Kerr and Pelle Lindbergh, is found at the core of what the Flyer organization in- trinsically represents. However, after two Broad Street Bullied Stanley Cups, six Finals ap- pearances, a 35-game undefeated streak and countless other storied moments throughout their 25-year history, the Flyers have been mired in a koyaanisqatsi of sorts while en- during the worst three seasons in the past 21 years of the club. Their motto of selflessness has been shrouded in dissension. Their grand tradition has been lost through a funk of defeats. The Philadelphia Flyers for years ranked on par with the Los Angeles Raiders and Boston Celtics as one of the most respected organizations in professional sports. This image was grounded in the team's perennial winning record and in the manner in whsich the mnament trente rfommer first non-winning season in 18 years. This poor performance was fol- lowed up by three encores of even more disastrous proportions. After playing 223 playoff games over 17 years, the Flyers hit the golf course early the past three seasons. The city of Philadelphia, which has consistently been allowed to ex- pect the Flyers to bring back riches and spoils from battles won in far- off lands such as Montreal, Edmon- ton, Buffalo, Boston and Long Island, has angrily grown accus- tomed to victory-hungry slumps and glory-poor homecomings. Enthu- siastic Flyers fans have become a rare breed in Philadelphia. See LINDROS, Page 6 TAKE IT TO THE MAX! MAXIMUM OPPORTUNITY AWAITS YOU AT OUR NEW RESTAURANT! Our Managers are professionals at making sure... The Atmosphere is always fun, The Food is always fresh, The Service is always good, The Schedule is always set and The Training is designed to let you shine! Iff1 *tPV� /m;y, It you are an energetic, enthusiastic team player looking for a fun, fast-paced environment then come join our OPENING TEAM! 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