Ottawa Citizen

Modano’s long trip to the Hall of Fame

American star was naive about life in Saskatchew­an when he arrived

- STEPHEN WHYNO

Mike Modano was all ready to play for coach Pat Burns and the Hull Olympiques. Only one problem: One summer night in 1986, the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League team called him to say they were drafting Joe Suk instead.

A week later, the Prince Albert Raiders of the Western Hockey League came knocking. While Suk played for the Central Hockey League’s Macon Whoopee and the ECHL’s Louisville Riverfrogs, Modano went to northern Saskatchew­an to take a cold but strong path to the NHL and eventually the Hockey Hall of Fame.

“A city of 23,000 and minus-40 degrees for eight months out of the year was something that I’d never been exposed to,” said Modano, who grew up suburban Detroit. “I didn’t care where Prince Albert was. I was going to go play and have fun.

“Good thing I was 15 not knowing anything about Prince Albert, pretty naive of that town.”

Modano grew into a blue-chip prospect in Prince Albert, playing for Rick Wilson and Peter Anholt. He had 47 goals and 80 assists in his draft year when he went first overall to the Minnesota North Stars and finished with 294 points in 176 WHL games.

“It was a great league, great preparatio­n for the next step for the NHL,” Modano said. “Don’t regret a minute of my decision to go up there. Certainly was a big part of my life at that time.”

Getting passed over by Hull was one of very few bumps in the road for Modano, who grew into a six- foot-three golden boy with the look of a movie star and the skill of a Hockey Hall of Famer. He holds the record for most goals (561) and points (1,374) by an Americanbo­rn player, won the World Cup of Hockey in 1996 and then the Stanley Cup in 1999 with the Dallas Stars.

Modano considers his longevity — 1,499 games over 21 seasons — a major reason why he’s going into the Hall of Fame Monday as part of the class of 2014.

“I was just lucky enough to play a long time, accumulate­d some decent stats to get recognized, and being American I think it had a little bit to do with it,” Modano said Friday. “Hopefully I had some impact on the game in the U.S. and put some good years together, strung some years together that put me in a position to maybe be talked about.”

When his fellow inductees talk about Modano, they rave. During a fan forum Saturday, Modano, Peter Forsberg, Dominik Hasek, Rob Blake and Mike Modano poked plenty of fun at each other.

Modano seemed exempt from the chirping.

“I’d like to say something bad about him,” Forsberg said. “I’d like to come up with a bad story about him. It’s hard. It’s only good things. Obviously he was an unbelievab­le player.”

Referee Bill McCreary, who will also be inducted Monday, called Modano the “ultimate leader” but also noted that he “he passed (the puck) so damn hard his teammates couldn’t receive it.”

Maybe that had something to do with his lifetime practice habits. Modano said youth coaches always had him skating with the puck, something he continued into the NHL that drove coaches Bob Gainey and Ken Hitchcock crazy when they wanted to bag-skate their team.

But it paid off. Hasek said he always had to be aware of Modano on the ice and marvelled at his speed.

“I always thought there was speed and then there was speed with the puck,” Modano said. “I always thought if a guy can go a high speed with the puck, that made him even more dangerous than a guy without the puck.”

When Modano reached top speed, that’s when teammates and opponents noticed his trademark look.

“We used to joke on the bench, he’s probably one of the only players that ever played that his jersey kind of blew in the wind when he skated,” Blake said. “That’s how smooth and how effortless he looked.” It was by design. “I told my trainer I didn’t like the sleeves tight on the jersey, so I was like, ‘Bump me up a size on the jersey,’ and that whole trademark kind of came about,” Modano said.

From the start of his junior-hockey career, Modano played in only four places: Prince Albert, Minnesota, Dallas and Detroit, where he went home to join the Red Wings for his final season.

Modano’s mother made ice in the family’s backyard in Michigan when he was growing up and he played non-stop. But Prince Albert, the small city 90 minutes north of Saskatoon, was the place that gave him a taste of hockey as a way of life.

“The passion and the excitement that the Canadians had for the game of hockey I would’ve never been exposed to in Detroit as much as I was in Prince Albert,” Modano said. “It allowed me to have a growth, a love for the game, while I was up there playing.”

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Mike Modano credits his time in Saskatchew­an as crucial to his developmen­t.
BRUCE BENNETT/ GETTY IMAGES Mike Modano credits his time in Saskatchew­an as crucial to his developmen­t.

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