The Telegram (St. John's)

The teammate who never was

Clowe shares some thoughts on Kovalchuk’s departure from the Devils

- BY BRENDAN MCCARTHY bmcc@thetelegra­m.com

Ryane Clowe was looking forward to playing with Ilya Kovalchuk, and not just for the chance to witness the Russian forward’s skills first-hand and to be part of a team that benefitted from them.

That’s not going to happen. Last week, Kovalchuk walked away from $77 million left on his 15-year contract with the New Jersey Devils. And on Monday, the Kontinenta­l Hockey League team SKA St. Petersburg announced it had signed Kovalchuk to a four-year deal.

“I don’t know him, but I’m friends with Dany Heatley and Colin White, who’ve played with (Kovalchuk) and they both say he was a great teammate,” said Clowe, the Fermeuse native who signed a free-agent contract with the Devils earlier this month.

“It was very surprising. I can understand him wanting to go back to Russia. It’s a personal choice. But we’re losing a premier player. It leaves a huge hole. I mean this is someone who plays nearly the full two minutes on power plays,” added Clowe, who signed a five-year, $24 million deal with the Devils on July 5.

When asked if he might be someone who would get some of that available power-play time, Clowe — a noted power foward —pointed out he and Kovalchuk “are different kinds of players,” but said fellow Newfoundla­nder and new Devils teammate Michael Ryder is certainly someone worth considerin­g.

“Rydes, with that right-handed shot and his quick release ... this could really bump up his time on the PP.”

Ryder inked a two-year, $7 million deal with New Jersey the same day Clowe signed on with New Jersey.

SKA did not disclose the terms of its deal with Kovalchuk in a statement Monday.

The 30-year-old Kovalchuk scored 417 goals and added 399 assists in 816 NHL games. His best seasons were in 2005-06 and 2007-08 when he scored a career-high 52 goals. He had three other 40-goal seasons.

Kovalchuk has represente­d Russia at three Winter Olympics, nine world championsh­ips, one world junior championsh­ip and the 2004 World Cup. He played with SKA during the most-recent NHL lockout.

“Like I said, this leaves a big, big void,” said Clowe.

“But Lou (Devils’ general manager Lou Lamoriello) is all about winning. With all that money available towards the salary cap, I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s already got something in mind to fill that void.”

While caught off-guard by star forward Ilya Kovalchuk’s decision to retire from the NHL and return home to Russia, New Jersey Devils coach Pete DeBoer said his team’s job this season is to prove doubters wrong.

Speaking between sessions of a rookie camp, DeBoer said the loss of the 30-year-old Kovalchuk leaves big holes on the team’s top line and specialty teams, and it will create playing time others will have to fill.

“We have to. That’s the bottom line,” DeBoer said Monday. “There’s no, ’ What can you do?’ We’re going to have to find a way. That’s going to be the mantra. The league is not going to stand still. I think I’ve used that phrase before.

“No one is going to feel sorry for you, the New Jersey Devils. When the puck drops in October, we’ve got to be ready to compete with the guys we’ve got, and we’ve got a good group of people here.”

The Devils reached the Stanley Cup finals in 2012 with Kovalchuk playing a major role, but they missed the post-season this year when they struggled in the second half of the lockout-shortened, 48game season.

The future doesn’t look bright without Kovalchuk, who walked away with $77 million left on the 15year contract he signed in 2010. His defection comes a year after Zach Parise signed with Minnesota as a free agent.

“Sure it’s different,” said DeBoer, who said he needed a day to catch his breath after Kovalchuk’s retirement from the NHL was announced on Thursday. “You take out a Parise, you take out a Kovalchuk, those are players that singlehand­edly can do some things that only a handful of players in the world can do. So we’re going to have to be a different team and have to play more of a team game.”

DeBoer knew during the season that Kovalchuk was interested in returning to Russia, but he didn’t expect a final decision last week. While obviously disappoint­ed, the coach wasn’t angry with Kovalchuk for leaving the team without its best player.

“I don’t feel that way,” DeBoer said. “Maybe I should, but I don’t. I enjoyed working with him. He was a good pro. He was a good teammate in the dressing room and he’ll be missed. That’s my feelings on it. I don’t go any deeper than that. Everybody has a personal life and personal decisions regarding their careers, and it’s not my place to be stepping into those.”

DeBoer maintained Kovalchuk never played last season like someone who didn’t want to be with the Devils or in the NHL. He scored 11 goals in 37 games.

The Devils have been active in recent weeks, signing Newfoundla­nd forwards Ryane Clowe and Michael Ryder, re-signing veteran forward Patrik Elias, and acquiring goalie Cory Schneider in a draft-day trade with Vancouver.

“I know as a staff we’re excited about the group we’ve got coming back. We’re excited about the free agents we’ve signed,” DeBoer said. “We have a lot to prove and there’s going to be a lot of doubters out there. I think we’re all prepared for that and are excited about the opportunit­y of proving people wrong.”

The problem is that none of the new players or any of the remaining ones is a star like Kovalchuk, who agreed to a four-year contract with SKA St. Petersburg of the KHL on Monday.

NHL teams without stars usually don’t win a lot of games.

“Like I said, it doesn’t change anything here,” DeBoer said. “You guys know the expectatio­ns. You know my boss. There is no taking your foot off the gas because some of these things happen.

“I mean this organizati­on has dealt with this type of thing for the last decade, you know, back to (Brian) Rafalski and (Scott) Niedermaye­r and on and on. You have got to find a way.”

The Devils have won three Stanley Cup titles, but none since 2003.

 ??  ?? Ryane Clowe
Ryane Clowe
 ?? — Photo by The Associated Press ?? In this April 20, 2013 file photo, New Jersey Devils’ coach Peter DeBoer talks to his team during an NHL hockey game against the Florida Panthers in Newark, N.J. While caught off guard by star forward Ilya Kovalchuk's decision to retire from the NHL...
— Photo by The Associated Press In this April 20, 2013 file photo, New Jersey Devils’ coach Peter DeBoer talks to his team during an NHL hockey game against the Florida Panthers in Newark, N.J. While caught off guard by star forward Ilya Kovalchuk's decision to retire from the NHL...

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