Chicago Sun-Times

For winger, no Larm, no foul

Despite gaudy stats, ex- Hawk unfazed his jersey isn’t retired

- BY MARK LAZERUS Staff Reporter | RICK STEWART/ GETTY IMAGES

The only players to score more goals in a Blackhawks sweater than Steve Larmer are Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita. The only Hawks to post more points than Larmer are Mikita, Hull and Denis Savard. The only Hawks player to score more game- winning goals than Larmer is Jonathan Toews.

It’s not a question of whether Larmer’s jersey should be hanging from the United Center rafters, but rather, what’s taking so long? With 406 goals and 517 assists in 11 full seasons with the Hawks, including five 40- goal seasons and a career- high 101 points in 1990- 91, Larmer is indisputab­ly one of the greatest players in Hawks history.

Well, one guy can dispute it: Larmer himself. He said he has never been approached about having his No. 28 retired, and he doesn’t really feel it belongs up there.

“I think that really is reserved for very special people,” Larmer said Friday night, shortly before taking the ice in full uniform for the national anthem as part of the Hawks’ “One Last Shift” ceremony. “I think that the numbers that they have retired up there are the ones that should be.’’

When told there’s long been an online push to have his jersey retired, Larmer said, “Thank you, but I think that Bobby Hull and Tony Esposito and Denis Savard and Keith Magnuson and Pierre Pilote are kind of in a league of their own.”

Larmer isn’t around the team nearly as often as some other former greats, but it has nothing to do with any bad feelings from his departure from Chicago, when he was sent to the Whalers and then on to the Rangers. The old regime under Bill Wirtz was famous for icy relationsh­ips with players both during and after their Hawks careers.

But Larmer said his general absence— he has been to a few fan convention­s and had a ceremony in his honor in 2008, but that’s about it— is all about geography. He lives in Peterborou­gh, Ontario, and has a 13- year- old stepson who plays hockey.

“It’s always been great,” he said. “Things happen. It’s not like you’re going to dwell on the past. I’m not one to hold grudges or be angry for a long period of time. It is what it is. I had 12 great years.”

It worked out for the best. Larmer won his only Stanley Cup in 1993- 94, in his first of two seasons with the Rangers.

“We went to the finals in 1992 and we lost to Pittsburgh, and that stung deeply,” he said. “That stuck withme for a year and a half. I couldn’t let it go. It was always in the back of my mind. The neat thing about going to New York is it gave me another chance to play with some great players and have that opportunit­y to win and finally get over that hump.”

 ??  ?? Steve Larmer, who was honored Friday, is fourth on the Hawks’ all- time list for points and third for goals.
Steve Larmer, who was honored Friday, is fourth on the Hawks’ all- time list for points and third for goals.

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