The Province

A question of loyalty

Tavares’ move only underlines to players it’s a two-way street

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS mtraikos@postmedia.com @Michael_Traikos

When John Tavares decided not to re-sign with the New York Islanders, some angry fans burned his jersey in effigy and called the former No. 1 overall pick, who had spent all nine years of his career with the franchise, a fraud and a traitor and worse.

But as a player entering the final year of his own contract, Ottawa’s Matt Duchene viewed Tavares’ decision with a different set of eyes.

“He might have been a trailblaze­r,” Duchene told Postmedia at last week’s NHL Player Media Tour in Chicago. “I think in other sports when players go to other teams, there’s not the same angst against that player, because it’s just been done so many times. But for whatever reason, hockey never seems to have that. It just shows that character we have and the loyalty we show.”

Maybe it’s a Canadian thing that has to do with humility. Or maybe it’s because hockey is different from baseball or basketball.

The Oilers were a prime example that you can’t win with star talent alone. As Lou Lamoriello would say, the name on the front of the jersey is far more important than the one on the back. No player acts like they are bigger than the team. When they do, they get called out for it.

“I don’t totally agree with players choosing where they want to go,” said Predators centre Ryan Johansen. “If you’re picked by a team, drafted or whatever by an organizati­on, if a team brings you into the best level in that sport, why wouldn’t you try to win there and appreciate the opportunit­y to give everything back?”

When reminded that Columbus did not exactly show him that level of loyalty when the Blue Jackets traded him to Nashville six years after being drafted fourth overall, Johansen responded: “They just stopped believing in me. If they don’t want you, that’s their decision.”

And yet, that old-school way of thinking could be slowly leaving the game, thanks in part to Tavares taking his destiny in his own hands.

As New Jersey’s Taylor Hall said two years after being blindsided by a trade out of Edmonton, loyalty is a twoway street. “Hockey has been a sport for a long time where guys are loyal to their teams,” he said, “and I think in a lot of cases, teams aren’t as loyal to their players.”

Indeed, teams don’t hesitate to move a player who is underperfo­rming. So why shouldn’t players choose to leave a team that has failed to put a winning product on the ice?

That is what happened with Tavares. Sure, part of his decision to sign with his hometown Maple Leafs was because it had been a dream of his to play in Toronto. But at the end of the day, it had more to do with winning.

Some might call his decision a selfish one. And it was. But at the same time, maybe hockey players could use a little more of that quality when it comes to their careers.

“I didn’t try to be a trailblaze­r,” Tavares said of signing with the Maple Leafs. “I just tried to be myself. I think each player, each person and each situation has it’s own unique circumstan­ces. Certainly the system, it could take nine years, so it’s not a common thing to be a free agent. I never looked at being a trailblaze­r. I just looked at this is the situation at this point of my life and my career. I’m just going to try and handle it the right way.”

Duchene, who was drafted two spots after Tavares, shares the same agent, trainer and equipment manufactur­er. He also finds himself in a similar situation with the Senators, who like the Islanders are not in a position to contend any time soon.

“I paid attention, because you’re gathering informatio­n,” said Duchene. “Obviously, you have to take care of your personal business and obviously John did. His process was really well done and he did it really classy and with a lot of humility. I think watching him do that and what it looked like gave me an idea of what potentiall­y that could look like for me depending on what happens.”

It wasn’t just Duchene who was watching the Tavares process unfold. From Ottawa’s Erik Karlsson and Mark Stone to Columbus’ Sergei Bobrovsky and Artemi Panarin, there are a number of star players who are entering the final year of their contract.

Some, such as Dallas’ Tyler Seguin and Nashville’s Pekka Rinne, are on teams where it doesn’t make sense to move. But others, such as Duchene and Islanders winger Anders Lee, might want to look around at what else is out there.

“Who knows if it’s going to set a precedent,” said Lee, adding that the NHL is not about to follow the NBA’s example where star players from various teams join forces in free agency.

“I think we’re not there yet at all. There’s something to be said about what we have in hockey, loyalty to one team or one organizati­on. You get drafted when you’re 18 and you’re not a free agent until you’re 25 or 27 — that’s a lot of years in one spot where you’ve put down roots.”

At the same time, what happens when those roots dry up? What happens when a player who was drafted and developed by one organizati­on gets traded or a team fails to surround him with the pieces to win? Well, as Tavares showed this summer, he takes his talents elsewhere.

Don’t be surprised if many others follow his lead.

“You sit back and watch and in your head you potentiall­y think OK that’s what it could look like for me,” said Duchene. “At the end of the day, every situation is different depending on the team and the individual. There’s no cookie cutter formula. But he definitely made a statement with that.”

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? John Tavares signed with Toronto after the team that drafted him and nurtured his career didn’t surround him with enough good players to challenge for a Stanley Cup. Could Tavares’ move be the start of a trend for free agents?
POSTMEDIA NEWS John Tavares signed with Toronto after the team that drafted him and nurtured his career didn’t surround him with enough good players to challenge for a Stanley Cup. Could Tavares’ move be the start of a trend for free agents?
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