Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Best decision they ever made’

Stastny brothers defected 40 years ago to change NHL

- By David Schoen Contact David Schoen at dschoen@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5203. Follow @ Davidschoe­nlvrj on Twitter.

Paul Stastny texted his father, Peter, on Monday wishing him a happy anniversar­y. The Golden Knights center was a day early.

“He corrected me, ‘No, no, no, it was early in the morning on this day,’” Paul Stastny said on a videoconfe­rence call.

Aug. 25 remains an important date in hockey history, and Tuesday marked the 40th anniversar­y of the daring defection from the former Czechoslov­akia by Anton and Peter Stastny.

Rather than getting on the bus after a late-night team dinner at the 1980 European Cup championsh­ip, the Stastny brothers jumped in a red Mercedes that rushed them and Peter’s wife, Darina, from Innsbruck, Austria, to Vienna.

The three were escorted to the Canadian embassy and landed in Montreal that evening. Anton and Peter Stastny signed with the Quebec Nordiques the following day, and older brother Marian joined a year later.

Peter Stastny went on to win rookie of the year in 1981, and earned the nickname “Peter the Great.” He finished his career with 1,239 points and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1998.

During the decade of the 1980s, only Wayne Gretzky had more points than Peter Stastny.

More important, the Stastnys blazed the trail for Eastern European hockey players in the NHL.

“Anyone that doesn’t understand it, I think (it’s) someone taking a risk to leave his family and then taking a chance with his wife that was nine months pregnant just to give us, myself and my brother and my two sisters, a chance to live in freedom and do what we want,” Paul Stastny

said.

“We count our blessings every day. I think (Peter) counts his blessings every day, and if you ask him and you ask Anton and the wives — my aunt and my mom — I think it was the biggest and best decision they ever made.”

Krebs close to debut?

Forward Peyton Krebs, the team’s first-round pick in 2019, was spotted taking warmups before Game 5 of the Western Conference quarterfin­als against Chicago.

But coach Pete Deboer said that

wasn’t a ploy.

Krebs, 19, continues to impress the coaching staff while working with the Knights’ taxi squad in Edmonton, Alberta.

“If you’re dressed for warmup, then there’s a chance that you might play,” Deboer said. “I think he’s made a big impression on us through camp.

“If he dressed in warmup, it wasn’t to give a young guy the thrill of an experience. It was because he’s worked his way into a spot where we would stick him into the lineup if we got to a point where we had to.”

Sweat shop

Knights defenseman Nate Schmidt logged a team-high 17:40 of ice time through the first two periods of Game 1 against Vancouver, including 9:02 in the opening period.

And with some added humidity in Rogers Place, Schmidt apparently needed some extra deodorant to combat the extra perspirati­on.

“Usually I don’t go through my shirt in the first period. But it was hot,” Schmidt said. “The first period, I was leaking.”

 ?? Jacques Boissinot The Associated Press ?? Former Quebec Nordiques and brothers Anton, Peter and Marian Stastny, from left, defected from Czechoslov­akia in 1980, opening the door for Eastern Europeans.
Jacques Boissinot The Associated Press Former Quebec Nordiques and brothers Anton, Peter and Marian Stastny, from left, defected from Czechoslov­akia in 1980, opening the door for Eastern Europeans.
 ?? Vegas Golden Knights ?? Golden Knights Paul Stastny, left, shown with his father, Peter Stastny.
Vegas Golden Knights Golden Knights Paul Stastny, left, shown with his father, Peter Stastny.

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