Tag Archive: Chicago Blackhawks


He was a legendary on-ice brawler who fought personal battles with booze, drugs and the law — then found redemption in good deeds and the hearts of his children.

Former Detroit Red Wing Bob Probert, 45, who had a home in Lakeshore, died suddenly Monday after collapsing in a boat on Lake St. Clair.

“He was largely misunderstood,” said Patrick Ducharme, who represented Probert for more than two decades as his agent and criminal lawyer. “Beneath that tough exterior that he demonstrated in his NHL career was really a very timid, shy, not very outgoing person. He largely wanted to do good things, and when he was sober and thinking straight, he did some tremendous things.”
Close friend Rick Rogow said Probert was boating with his children, father-in-law and mother-in-law on Lake St. Clair when he developed “severe chest pain” and collapsed around 2 p.m. Father-in-law Dan Parkinson, Cornwall’s police chief, performed CPR in a desperate attempt to save him.

A witness on the scene, who asked not to be identified, said Probert looked like he was fixing something on his Bombardier Speedster 200 boat.

“He was fixing the trim or something, stood up and then collapsed,” the witness said.

Neighbours on shore rushed to Probert’s side after seeing the retired hockey player’s family calling for help. The OPP’s forensic identification unit was on scene briefly examining Probert’s blue and white Seadoo sport boat.

A next door neighbour said EMS “were already working on him in the boat and were working on him for a while” before transporting him to Windsor Regional Hospital.

Rogow and Parkinson held a brief news conference Monday evening at Windsor Regional Hospital. They didn’t take questions from the media.

“This is a tragedy for the family,” said Parkinson.

“This was totally unexpected. Bob lost the fight of his life this afternoon.”

Probert’s death is similar to that of his father, a former Windsor police officer, who died of a heart attack at age 41. He leaves behind his wife Dani and four young children: Brogan, Tierney, and twins Jack and Declyn.

“Bob was a part of our very first NHL draft class that also included Steve Yzerman, Joe Kocur, Petr Klima and Stu Grimson,” Detroit Red Wings owner Mike Ilitch said in a statement. “Bob was always there for his teammates and was one of the toughest men to ever play in the NHL. He was also one of the kindest, most colourful and beloved players Detroit has ever known. We are very saddened by his passing and our thoughts and prayers go out to Bob’s family.”

Ducharme said there’s been a lot of focus on Probert’s tough-guy image and his personal struggles, but there was a much sweeter side to the big brawler.

He once donated a “significant amount of money” so a sick young boy could fly to Los Angeles for an expensive medical procedure.

“He helped save a little boy’s life,” said Ducharme. “And he wanted to do so anonymously. He didn’t want anybody to know about it. He did that out of the goodness of his heart and because he was a good person.”

Probert had visited Canadian troops in Afghanistan and did charitable work including raising money through playing old-timer hockey.

But, particularly in his younger days, Probert’s darker side often got the upper hand. He was arrested in 1989 for trying to smuggle cocaine into the U.S.

“He had his demons over the years,” said Ducharme. “And when the demons would flare up, all manner of good behaviour and thoughtfulness and sensitivity went out the window as he struggled with those demons.”

Ducharme first met Probert when the hockey player was charged with several offences related to drunk driving, assaulting police and resisting arrest.

Ilitch, Jim Devellano, then the Red Wings general manager, and captain Steve Yzerman walked Probert into Ducharme’s office.

“He had hired another lawyer who said there was no question he was going to go to jail,” said Ducharme. “They asked if they thought I could keep him out of jail. Ever the optimist, I said I had no doubt I could keep him out of jail.”

Ducharme got Probert to plead guilty to a more minor offence, and did keep him out of jail.

“From then on, I became a part of his life,” said Ducharme. “It was at times a lot of fun. I used to say to him he took me to the highs and lows of life, from signing multimillion dollar contracts to trying to explain cocaine in his pocket while he was passed out on a street corner. It had every kind of bend and dip you can imagine.”

Ducharme said Probert’s love for his children was the main reason he refused to let his weaknesses overpower him.

“He had four beautiful children and he loved them very much,” said Ducharme. “Part of his struggles to maintain sobriety were really struggles to maintain his relationship with his children.”

Former hockey foe Craig Muni said he also saw Probert’s children bring out his softer side when they became teammates in retirement for a number of NHL alumni games, including a few in Windsor.

“When we came to Windsor he would be in the dressing room with his family, wife and kids and he would take them out for a skate,” Muni said from Buffalo. “He was a good guy and a family man.”

Probert — a former all-star who played 935 NHL games and scored the last goal at Maple Leaf Gardens — may have had a gentle hand with his children, but his on-ice opponents didn’t receive the same courtesy.

Muni, who played against Probert many times with teams including the Chicago Blackhawks, Buffalo Sabres, Edmonton Oilers and Toronto Maple Leafs, said Probert was “tough” to face. But it wasn’t just for his fists.

“He was absolutely one of the toughest players to ever play in the NHL,” said the three-time Stanley Cup winner. “But he could play. He had good hands, a great skater, had speed, could shoot, could score. He was a pure power forward.”

Former Wings teammate and unofficial “Bruise Brother” Joe Kocur, also known to strike fear into the hearts of opponents whenever the referee yelled “let em go,” often helped Probert deliver the pain. But he also said Probert was more than a brawler.

“This is a very sad day for Red Wings fans as we have lost one of the toughest players, best power forwards and all-around great guys who ever wore the winged wheel,” he said.

“My favourite memory of Bob would be sitting down before a game, going over the opposing lineup and picking and choosing who would go first and if the goalie would be safe or not. It was great to be able to go out on the ice knowing that he had my back and I had his. He was like the brother I never had.”

© Copyright (c) The Windsor Star

DETROIT (AP)—Retired hockey enforcer Bob Probert, as adept with his fists as with a stick in a 16-season career with the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks, died Monday after suffering chest pains while boating with his family. He was 45.

“Bob lost the fight of his life this afternoon,” said Probert’s father-in-law, Dan Parkinson, a police officer who performed CPR before Probert was rushed to Ontario’s Windsor Regional Medical Center.

Probert was on a boat in Lake St. Clair with his wife, children and in-laws when he “developed severe chest pains” Monday, family friend Rich Rogow told a Monday evening news conference at the medical center.

“This is a tragedy for the family,” Parkinson said. “We ask that you respect their privacy at this time.”

Probert, who struggled to overcome drinking problems during his time in the NHL, played for the Red Wings in 1985-1994 and for the Blackhawks in 1995-2002.

“Bob was a part of our very first NHL Draft class that also included Steve Yzerman, Joe Kocur, Petr Klima and Stu Grimson,” Red Wings owners Mike and Marian Ilitch said in a statement. “Bob was always there for his teammates and was one of the toughest men to ever play in the NHL.

“He also was one of the kindest, most colorful, and beloved players Detroit has ever known.”

Blackhawks president John McDonough said the organziation’s “thoughts and prayers are with the entire Probert family.”

“Bob will always be a member of the Blackhawks family and his memory will live on through our fans,” McDonough said in a statement.

The Windsor native had 384 points (163 goals, 221 assists) in 935 career regular-season games with Detroit and Chicago. His 3,300 career penalty minutes rank sixth in NHL history.

“Bob was a guy that started as a strictly tough guy but made himself a player,” former Toronto maple Leafs enforcer Wendel Clark told Canadian Press. “Off the ice, everything was a whole different story. He was one of the good guys and he’d do anything for anybody.”

Probert was charged several times with driving under the influence while playing for Detroit. He also was caught trying to carry cocaine from Canada into the U.S. in 1989 and served a six-month federal prison sentence.

The Blackhawks honored Probert with a Bob Probert Heritage Night on Feb. 22, 2009, at the United Center, and he dropped the ceremonial puck before Game 3 of the 2009 Western Conference Final between Detroit and Chicago.

No funeral arrangements were immediately made. Probert is survived by his wife and four children.

CHICAGO (AP)—The Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks have signed free agent defenseman John Scott to a two-year contract.

The 6-foot-8, 258-pound Scott played in 51 games for the Minnesota Wild last season with a goal and an assist, along with 90 penalty minutes. He played 20 games for the Wild the previous season with one assist.

Scott was signed by the Wild as a free agent on Dec. 31, 2006.

His signing comes during a busy period for the Blackhawks, who have made several trades forced by the salary cap. They have traded Andrew Ladd, Dustin Byfuglien, Kris Versteeg, Ben Eager, Brent Sopel and Colin Fraser, while free agent Adam Burish signed with Dallas.

NEW YORK (AP)—The names Ilya Kovalchuk, Dan Hamhuis and Evgeni Nabokov don’t roll off the tongues of American sports fans quite like those of LeBron, D-Wade, and Dirk.

Such is life in the world of the NHL, which is also about to embark on a free-agent frenzy of its own, starting Thursday.

The NBA has cornered the attention market for weeks—even years—leading up to its high-profile free-agent shopping season because some of the biggest players in the sport are available.
“You have a very special circumstance this free agency with basketball, and I don’t think that happens frequently when you have that special of a player,” New York Islanders general manager Garth Snow said. “Wait a second? Did I just tamper with the Cleveland Cavaliers? What if we announce that we signed LeBron James?”

While there are no Gretzkys or Lemieuxs, or even players of the caliber of Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin, to be had in the hockey landscape, that doesn’t mean there is a dearth of talent in this year’s group.

“The hard part is trying to figure out who the big guys are this year,” New York Rangers general manager Glen Sather said. “You can really look at a lot of guys and say, ‘They’re the big guy’ and somebody else is saying, ‘No, he’s not the big guy.’ It’s pretty wide open at this stage.”

But probably not as open as last year when the Chicago Blackhawks seemingly came out of nowhere to snag star forward Marian Hossa, with a 12-year, $62.8 million contract on the first day of free agency.

Vancouver re-signed twins Henrik and Daniel Sedin to matching five-year, $30.5-million deals, and the Rangers lured Marian Gaborik away from Minnesota with a five-year, $37.5 million pact.

All of that happened on July 1, 2009, and all three teams could claim that the moves paid off.

After two straight failed finals appearances with Pittsburgh and Detroit, Hossa meshed well with the Blackhawks’ core of young players and helped Chicago win the Stanley Cup for the first time since 1961.

Henrik Sedin put up an NHL-best 112 points and 83 assists for the Canucks and skated off with the Hart Trophy as league MVP. And while Gaborik and the Rangers fell one win short of reaching the playoffs, the high-flying forward shook off some injury woes and had 42 goals and 86 points.

“I don’t think there is a lot of depth anywhere because the free agents over the last couple of years have been getting signed,” New Jersey Devils general manager Lou Lamoriello said. “There is certainly quality players at all areas: goaltending, defense and forwards.

“If your needs are where there is a player who can help, it’s strong. If you don’t have the need where there is a player available, you look at it the other way. I think there are some excellent players out there.”

Kovalchuk headlines the class of this year’s unrestricted free agent forwards. He finished up last season with the Devils, who pried him away from the Atlanta Thrashers once it became clear that the high-flying Russian wouldn’t re-sign with the club that drafted him.

Kovalchuk will surely draw lots of attention, but his salary demands could severely limit his options. Only a handful of teams might be able to fit him under the salary cap. Despite prolific regular-season numbers throughout his career, Kovalchuk has won only one postseason game in eight NHL seasons— including two playoff appearances.

The 27-year-old Kovalchuk turned down a 12-year, $101 million contract offer from the Thrashers before he was sent to New Jersey. He finished with 41 goals and 85 points, but the Devils were eliminated in five games by Philadelphia in the first round of the playoffs.

Lamoriello said no progress had been made in negotiations Wednesday between the Devils and Kovalchuk and leading defenseman Paul Martin, who can also be unrestricted on Thursday. However, he added that New Jersey would still be interested in the pair once they reach the open market.

“I understand the process,” Lamoriello said. “We’ll have to just wait and see.”

Maxim Afinogenov, who posted 24 goals and 61 assists in his first season in Atlanta after nine in Buffalo, will also have suitors among teams looking to spend less than the Kovalchuk market.

Next season’s salary cap will be $59.4 million, up from $56.8 million. Teams must maintain a minimum payroll of $43.4 million.

Hamhuis, whose negotiating rights were traded twice in the past 10 days to teams hoping to get him signed before Thursday, is among a solid group of available defensemen.

The Pittsburgh Penguins were the last to have the exclusive negotiating window with Hamhuis, who spent six seasons with the Nashville Predators, but couldn’t make a deal with him or with their own veteran defenseman Sergei Gonchar before Thursday.

Throw in Martin and Ottawa’s stay-at-home defenseman Anton Volchenkov, and teams could bolster their blue lines in a hurry.

“I think there’s a shortage of centers and a shortage of wingers,” Boston Bruins general manager Peter Chiarelli said. “I think there are a lot of defensemen. There seem to be a lot of goalies out there.”

Nabokov is the biggest name in that group, but he is nearly 35 and likely headed into the downside of his career. After Nabokov failed to get San Jose to the Stanley Cup finals during his 10 seasons there, Sharks general manager Doug Wilson decided it was time to cut the popular netminder loose.

The Sharks, however, provided the first big free agent moves by re-signing forwards Patrick Marleau and Joe Pavelski to four-year deals last week.

Where Nabokov eventually lands could begin the rush of goalie signings.

Most of that goalie attention could fall on Philadelphia, which remarkably reached the Stanley Cup finals using a combination of retread veteran goalies Michael Leighton and Brian Boucher as the No. 1 guy.

Leighton agreed to a two-year deal with the Flyers on Wednesday, but there is no guarantee that he will be given the top starting job—especially after he let in a questionable Stanley Cup-winning goal to Patrick Kane in overtime of Game 6.

Philadelphia could also look to add Nabokov, Dan Ellis or Marty Turco if the price is right for any of those veterans.

“A lot of guys have said that there isn’t the depth in a lot of areas, but if you look at the goaltenders there is a lot of free agent goaltenders,” Sather said.

AP Sports Writer Jimmy Golen in Boston contributed to this report.

ATLANTA (AP)—Craig Ramsay had to wait a decade for his next chance to be an NHL head coach. His old friend and former roommate, Rick Dudley, provided that opportunity.

Ramsay, who spent the last three years as an assistant with the Boston Bruins, was named the Atlanta Thrashers coach on Thursday. He joins Dudley, recently promoted to general manager, as the new leaders of a franchise that is starved for success.

Ramsay, 59, said he wasn’t sure he would have another chance to direct a team after a successful but short stint as an interim head coach for Philadelphia in 2000.
“It goes through your mind,” Ramsay said. “I’ve been in this business an awfully long time as a player and a coach. … You start to look at it and think maybe that opportunity won’t present itself again.

“When this came up and Rick and I got to talk, I relished the opportunity.”

Ramsay replaces John Anderson, who was fired after the Thrashers (35-34-13) missed the playoffs.

Dudley said hiring Ramsay was an easy choice. The two played together with the Buffalo Sabres and AHL Cincinnati. When Dudley was Tampa Bay’s general manager, he hired Ramsay as an assistant coach on a team that won the 2004 Stanley Cup.

“The simple truth is I’ve never had a doubt Craig could be a coach in this league from many years ago,” Dudley said. “I brought him into Tampa because he understood exactly what was needed. … There’s never been a doubt in my mind. This was something that I thought was long overdue.”

Dudley said he was looking for a coach who can teach.

“When you look for a head coach you’re looking for somebody who can bring players to their optimal level as quickly as possible, and I’ve seen him do that before,” he said.

Ramsay also was an interim head coach for Buffalo during the 1986-87 season. He also has worked as an assistant with Ottawa and Florida.

Ramsay played 14 seasons with Buffalo from 1971-85, finishing his career as a player-coach.

What makes the Thrashers, who have made only one playoff appearance, an attractive job?

“That’s pretty simple, actually,” Ramsay said. “That would be Rick Dudley. I’ve known Rick Dudley since 1971. He was my first roommate. We played together on two different occasions. I went to work for him in Tampa Bay. He put together a great product there and we won the Stanley Cup.

“I know what he can do as a hockey person. He’s one of the best in the business.”

Ramsay said he also has known Thrashers president and former general manager Don Waddell “for a long period of time.”

Dudley hired Ramsay one day after completing a trade with the Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks that brought playoff star Dustin Byfuglien, who had 11 postseason goals, to Atlanta.

The Thrashers also acquired defenseman Brent Sopel, forward Ben Eager and prospect Akim Aliu. Atlanta sent first- (24th overall) and second-round picks in this weekend’s NHL draft to Chicago, as well as forwards Marty Reasoner, Joey Crabb and Jeremy Morin.

Ramsay said the 257-pound Byfuglien is “an exciting piece of what Rick is going to try to create down in Atlanta.”

“We need for him to be a factor in the offensive zone as many times as he can,” Ramsay said of the 25-year-old Byfuglien. “With his size and his talent level, he’s one of those exciting players you look at and wonder how good can he get. We have to convince him he can be the best player ever in that role.”

NEW YORK (AP)—The Pittsburgh Penguins will open a new arena, and the Chicago Blackhawks will unfurl a long-awaited championship banner in the first week of the 2010-11 NHL season.

The league said Tuesday the Blackhawks will mark their first Stanley Cup title since 1961 on Oct. 9 when they host Detroit, a fellow Original Six member.

Pittsburgh, the 2009 Cup winner, will play its first game in the CONSOL Energy Center two nights earlier on NHL opening night against defending Eastern Conference champion Philadelphia. The Penguins had played at Mellon Arena since joining the NHL in 1967.

On New Year’s Day, the Penguins host the Winter Classic against Alex Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals at Heinz Field—home of the NFL’s Steelers.

For the fourth consecutive season, the NHL also will begin with games in Europe—this time with six teams. The Carolina Hurricanes will play two games against the Minnesota Wild in Helsinki, Finland; the Columbus Blue Jackets and San Jose Sharks will have a two-game set at Stockholm, Sweden; and the Boston Bruins and Phoenix Coyotes will play a pair in Prague, Czech Republic.

Those six games will be spread over the first four days of the season.

Once those clubs return to North America they will all play on Oct. 30 when 28 of the NHL’s 30 teams will be in action on the busiest day of the season. Only Vancouver and Edmonton will be off.

The Blackhawks will host the Philadelphia Flyers on Jan. 23 in the lone rematch of this year’s Stanley Cup finals. Just one week later, the NHL All-Star game will return after a one-year break because of the Vancouver Olympics. The Carolina Hurricanes will host the 58th edition of the midseason exhibition for the first time.

The regular season will end on April 10, and the Stanley Cup playoffs will begin three days later.

LAS VEGAS (AP)—Duncan Keith of the Chicago Blackhawks has won the Norris Trophy, given to the NHL’s top defenseman.

Keith beat Los Angeles’ Drew Doughty and Washington’s Mike Green for the award Wednesday at the NHL Awards ceremony in Las Vegas.

Keith was second among defenders with a career-high 69 points. He also set career highs with 14 goals, 55 assists. He was second to Green among defensemen in points and assists.

Green had 76 points and led defensemen in goals and points a second straight season.

Doughty, 20, was trying become the second-youngest winner of the award behind Bobby Orr.

PHILADELPHIA (AP)—With the Chicago Blackhawks’ 49-year Stanley Cup drought a part of history, the Toronto Maple Leafs are now on the clock.

Since last winning the NHL championship in 1967, the Maple Leafs have seen each of their Original Six brethren hoist the Cup as well as 11 expansion teams. Toronto now has the biggest gap between titles among teams that were around the last time the Maple Leafs won it.

Toronto, which hasn’t even qualified for the playoffs the past five seasons, will have a tough enough time just getting out of the Eastern Conference where powerhouses Washington and Pittsburgh reside. The Capitals and Penguins are built on the strength of young superstars and appear set to dominate for years.
Pittsburgh has already won the Stanley Cup and had another runner-up finish since Sidney Crosby came aboard, while the Capitals’ stunning first-round knockout by Montreal will surely rile up already excitable forward Alex Ovechkin once he gets back on the ice.

The biggest surprise of this postseason isn’t that the young Blackhawks rose up to win the Cup for the first time since 1961, it’s that neither the Penguins nor Capitals reached the Eastern Conference finals. There is so much balance and parity in that the seventh-seeded Philadelphia Flyers got on a run and nearly skated off with the Cup.

It wasn’t until the second-seeded Blackhawks picked them off with a 4-3 overtime road win in Game 6 that the surprising surge ended.

That is where the story of this hockey season ceased and the look toward the next campaign began. Chances are the Blackhawks will be making stabs at multiple championships instead of counting the years between few and far between titles.

“It’s pretty crazy,” Chicago forward Patrick Kane said. “You envision this and hope for the best when you first come in, but everything we’ve been through, it’s been obviously an unbelievable year. Very exciting. It’s fun to be a part of it right now.”

Kane, along with young captain Jonathan Toews, are the two biggest reasons the Blackhawks have been able to rise from the bottom portion of the NHL standings in 2007 to the top of the heap in just three years. Toews, an Olympic and Stanley Cup champion at age 22, was chosen with the No. 3 pick in the 2006 draft. Kane was taken No. 1 overall one year later.

The influx of veteran forwards such as now three-time Cup winner John Madden, who grew up in the title-conscious world of the New Jersey Devils, and Marian Hossa proved to be enough to get Chicago over the hump after it made a trip to the West finals last year.

The Blackhawks rolled through Nashville and Vancouver before taking their biggest step by sweeping top-seeded San Jose upon their return to hockey’s final four.

Madden beamed on the ice at the Wachovia Center on Wednesday night as he was surrounded by his family in the madness of the spontaneous celebration created by Kane’s overtime goal.

Usually intense and stern, Madden smiled and spoke glowingly about his young teammates that had never experienced this thrill before.

What amazed him the most was how quickly he was embraced upon arriving in Chicago and how interested the rest of the club was in hearing his stories of past glory.

“They are a bunch of young guys and they were all ears,” Madden said.

Now they have moments to share together, starting with Friday’s victory parade in the Windy City.

“It is a special time of the year, and a special couple of days,” Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. “Having guys been there and done that helped stabilize the guys’ mindset.”

And what can be made of the Flyers?

They rode the wave of being a preseason Cup contender to a club that lost its way and fell to the bottom of the East. Their drop cost coach John Stevens his job but led to the hiring of Peter Laviolette, a 2006 champion with the Carolina Hurricanes, who arguably did his best job behind the bench with this club.

Through precision tactics, a cool demeanor and with a keen flair to motivate, Laviolette spurred the Flyers to turn their season around. They did, and clinched a playoff spot on the final day with a shootout victory over the New York Rangers in an elimination game.

The defining moment for Philadelphia will be Laviolette’s timeout in Game 7 against Boston in the second round when the Flyers trailed 3-0 in the first period after winning three straight games to stay alive. He calmed the Flyers and inspired them to rally for a 4-3 victory that made them the third NHL team to finish off the most improbable of comebacks.

Philadelphia finished two wins short of ending its own title drought that began after the second of two straight Stanley Cup championships in 1975, and now questions abound.

Are the Flyers the team that made it to the Stanley Cup finals, or are they really the flawed bunch that finished seventh in the East? Was their run a product of a favorable draw that allowed them to avoid Washington and Pittsburgh, and is goalie Michael Leighton really good enough to make them a legit challenger to raise the Cup a year from now?

“It was a good learning experience for us,” captain Mike Richards said after admitting his pain and disappointment. “I mean, you have to take out of it what it takes to win. It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever had to go through. Unfortunately it wasn’t enough.

“We went through a lot this year as a group. I can’t analyze the season right now, but when you go through stuff like that, I think it brings the group closer together.”

CHICAGO (AP)—From the first day of training camp nine months ago, the Chicago Blackhawks felt the expectations. They were everywhere, generated by championship-hungry fans and by the players themselves.

“We want to win the Stanley Cup. I think that’s what a lot of the guys are thinking,” Patrick Kane said after that first practice on a steamy September day.

The Blackhawks, led by the 21-year-old Kane and their 22-year-old captain Jonathan Toews, made it happen.

Now they will parade with their teammates on Friday through a city that is giddy because the Blackhawks have seized the Cup for the first time since 1961.
When Kane was taken with the first pick in the draft three years ago, it started the Blackhawks on their way to a remarkable rebirth. A year earlier they had chosen Toews in the first round and now they have become the faces of the franchise both on and off the ice.

At such a young age, they have won the Cup and done so in a short amount of time, accomplishing what some never do throughout their careers.

A United Center that four years ago was half empty now rocks and the Blackhawks are one of the hottest tickets in town, a re-emergence that can be attributed to the efforts of owner Rocky Wirtz and his president John McDonough, who was hired away from the Chicago Cubs.

Kane finally ended the championship drought—the longest active one in the NHL—with a game-winning goal in overtime against the Flyers.

What an end to a whirlwind year for both Kane and Toews, who signed lucrative contract extensions with the Blackhawks in December—five-year deals worth $31.5 million each.

Kane had a difficult summer. In his hometown of Buffalo, he and his cousin were arrested following an altercation with a cab driver.

“It didn’t start off very good back in August. But I think sometimes you know you go through those kind of things as a young kid,” Kane said. “You can really learn from them and try to better yourself as a person and as an athlete too. Yeah, there was ups and downs.

“As far as hockey-wise, I can be pretty satisfied. I thought I had a really good year as far as, you know, Olympics, obviously, you win the Stanley Cup, it’s pretty special too. Just really unbelievable to see how things can go from so bad to so good.”

Toews was named the top forward at the Olympics games, where he helped Canada win the gold medal be beating Kane and the USA for the championship. He captured the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playoff MVP, even though he didn’t manage a goal in the six games against the Flyers, and finished the playoffs with 29 points.

Chicago’s depth was the difference in all four series.

The all-around play of Dave Bolland and Kris Versteeg, the speed of Patrick Sharp, the physical presence of 257-pound Dustin Byfuglien, the strong puck control of Marian Hossa, the defense of Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook and the emergence of first-year goalie Antti Niemi led the way. Keith even sacrificed seven teeth after being hit in the mouth by a puck during a sweep of San Jose in the conference finals.

Chicago set franchise records for wins (52) and points (112) in the regular season while finishing second to San Jose in the Western Conference.

The ride was a long one, starting with two exhibition games in Switzerland before the Blackhawks opened the season with two games against Florida in Helsinki, Finland, in October.

It was a team put together by former general manager Dale Tallon, who was demoted last summer after a clerical snafu in which offers to restricted free agents didn’t get out in time. Tallon, replaced by Stan Bowman, is now general manager of the Florida Panthers.

Bowman, the son of longtime coach Scotty Bowman, who became a team adviser, will have salary cap issues to wade through this summer. The team that returns for camp this September will have it core intact, but likely will have some different pieces.

Chicago’s big contracts include Hossa’s 12-year, $62.8 million deal and a 13-year, $72 million deal for Keith, who signed the same day as Kane and Toews. Defenseman Brian Campbell just completed the second year of an eight-year, $56.8 million contract. And goaltender Cristobal Huet, now a pricey backup, has two years left on four-year, $22.45 million deal.

Among the Blackhawks’ restricted free agents are Niklas Hjalmarrson, Andrew Ladd, Ben Eager and Niemi, who won the starting job for good in March and then went 16-6 in the playoffs.

The unrestricted free agent list includes veteran John Madden, a key penalty killer who has now been on three Stanley Cup winners, and Adam Burish.

But the Blackhawks want to savor before projecting to next season.

“We’re going to have fun with it,” said coach Joel Quenneville, who took over four games into last season and gave the team the leeway and also the discipline it needed.

“We’ll have plenty of time to sort outgoing into the summer and going into this next season,” he added. “I think we should enjoy it for a while and then go from there.”

NEW YORK (AP)—NHL television ratings have bounced back from the post-lockout doldrums—and way beyond.

The clincher of the Stanley Cup finals was the most-watched and highest-rated NHL game in 36 years. The Chicago Blackhawks’ 4-3 overtime win over the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 6, which earned them their first championship since 1961, drew a 4.7 rating and 8 share Wednesday night on NBC.

That’s the best since a 7.6/27 for Game 6 of the Boston-Philadelphia series in 1974. It was 38 percent higher than the 3.4/6 for last year’s Pittsburgh-Detroit Game 6 and 9 percent higher than the 4.3/8 for Game 7 in 2009.

The network said Thursday that the game was watched by 8.28 million viewers.

The series’ average rating was a 3.4/6, the best on network TV since Carolina-Detroit in 2002 and up 10 percent from last year.

“This has been a special year for hockey beginning with the Winter Classic continuing through the Olympics and ending with this incredibly exciting Stanley Cup final,” NBC Sports president Ken Schanzer said in a release.

Ratings represent the percentage of all homes with televisions tuned into a program. Shares represent the percentage of all homes with TVs in use at the time.

Game 6 drew a 32.8 rating and 50 share in Chicago, which means that half of all homes with televisions in use were tuned into the game.

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