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He seems to stand the typical two inches below his listed NHL height of 5-foot-8. Leave the shoulder pads on and you can almost believe his listed weight of 175 -- though he discusses that number lightly. "Well, I'm listed at that, but I'm actually closer to about 190 now," Carolina's little big man Arturs Irbe said. "No, really. I'm not talking fatter here, I just bulk up a little."
When you put together an expansion team, it's almost a given that victories will be few and far between; satisfaction comes in the development of young players. Then there's Atlanta. Although it was obvious from the expansion draft that GM Don Waddell was populating this construction project with young workers -- the Thrashers have several rookies playing regular roles -- it's the development of top organizational prospect Patrik Stefan which might have some people worried. The No. 1 overall pick in the 1999 draft has gone 16 straight games without a a goal and has all of one goal in his last 44 games. As to what that means for the future? Possibly nothing. With five goals and 25 points in 70 games, there's little reason to believe those won't be the numbers he ends his first season with. But the 19-year-old Stefan is trying to put on a happy face. "This was the first time in my career I had to think about defense," said Stefan, who played parts of two seasons professionally in the IHL, which is why the Thrashers thought he'd be further along offensively than he is. "It was a tough beginning, but I feel I learned a lot." Thrashers coach Curt Fraser indicated Stefan might have a little more to learn. "He's hesitates a lot on the ice," Fraser said. "He wants to be good defensively, but it's taking away offensively from us. I tell him he has to be better offensively. He has to use his legs -- speed, second and third efforts. That's what he has to bring to his game. "He's trying to do it at both ends. But right now he's stuck in the middle, and he's not doing it at either end." Stuck in the middle and no place to go? Not quite. In fact, Stefan says he'll return to his native Czech Republic this summer and arrange skating classes with a favorite teacher by the name of Jaromir Jagr. "I'm only 19," said Stefan, "I have lots of time." By the way, 1998 No. 1 overall pick Vincent Lecavalier, also 19, scored his 24th goal of the season Tuesday to lift Tampa Bay to a victory over Boston. Ready, aim ... Fore! Is longtime Islanders broadcaster Jiggs McDonald, who now does radio play-by-play in South Florida, trying to get back into television? People were wondering that at a recent Panthers team golf tournament, when McDonald lined up a shot, then out of the corner of his eye saw TV play-by-play guy Jeff Rimer. Suddenly, Jiggs shanked a wedge, which screamed right into Rimer's shoulder and knocked him out of his golf cart. "It was my best shot of the day," McDonald said proudly. "(Analyst Randy) Moller kept telling me all day, 'Keep your head down! Keep your head down!' I finally kept my head down and I hit Rimer. It was a great shot." Like a trooper afraid to be replaced, Rimer -- sporting a huge welt on his shoulder and still hurting from it -- went before the cameras at Wednesday's Panthers game. Still, Jiggs didn't feel any sympathy for him. "His golf etiquette is not good," McDonald said of Rimer. "He's supposed to be behind me, but he's sitting on the right-hand side of the course. And I'm a lefty. So he was trying to get hit." Said Rimer: "On the advice of my attorney, I cannot comment." Marvelous Gardens With Air Canada Centre, the Maple Leafs organization showed it had the right priorities in mind when it came to building a hockey building. The tradition of the Original Six club is prevalent throughout the building, and unlike newer arenas in places like Boston, Tampa and Philadelphia, the Air Canada Centre is spacious ... and its ice stays frozen, too. Now officials in Toronto have gone one step better and ensured the rescue of Maple Leaf Gardens. The historic rink, Maple Leafs' dressing room and between 3,000 and 4,000 lower bowl seats will be incorporated into the redevelopment plans the Leafs' parent company began exploring last autumn. Three developers currently bidding on the project all incorporated the ice and seats into their respective commercial-residential-entertainment development plans. What's more, the rink would still serve as the Maple Leafs' primary practice rink. So a few years down the road, shoppers will be able to stop for coffee at mall-side tables, and watch the Leafs practice. The old college-level try Since goalie Zac Bierk is apparently healthy enough to mercifully guide Tampa Bay into another early summer, hockey fans appear to be deprived of another chance to see a would-be hero in action. They'll have to wait for another day in the ever-unpredictable dreams of young coach Steve Ludzik to see their favorite goalie, that kid called Dieter Kochan. In case you didn't know, this 25-year-old goalie had been working in the United Hockey League -- kind of beer league softball for pro hockey -- earlier this year when the desperate, injury-ridden Lightning signed him ... and put him right into a game against the defending Stanley Cup champion Dallas Stars last Tuesday. Uh, surprisingly, Kochan allowed three goals on his first six shots faced. He was yanked just long enough to have former starter Cloutier get hurt. When reinserted, Kochan stopped 11of the 12 shots the bored Stars bothered to take in a 4-2 win. "This is a hell of a league to bring a goalie into," Dallas coach Ken Hitchcock said. "We never even heard of his name. We didn't know what he was." So who is this guy? Kochan, a former fourth-round pick of the Canucks and Northern Michigan University alum, had stops over the past three years for teams like the Louisville Riverfrogs (ECHL) and B.C. Icemen (UHL), not to mention winging it through Grand Rapids (IHL), Springfield (AHL) and Orlando (IHL) before making the big time this season. His numbers got better as he moved up in competition, but then, the NHL isn't exactly a training ground. Not even in Tampa. "There were a number of teams interested, so we figured we had to move quickly," GM Rick Dudley said. "We would've signed him no matter what. You can never have too many goalies." They've proven that. Eastern shorts "Sometimes, Stephane is like a volcano. He just erupted at the wrong time," -- Pat Brisson, agent for Rangers defenseman Stephane Quintal, after the club suspended his client for "conduct detrimental to the team" after Quintal said in an interview with French language paper La Presse that he'd like to play in Montreal next year. Rob Parent covers the NHL for the Delaware County (Pa.) Times. His NHL East column appears every week on ESPN.com. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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