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Candid Jagr up for challenge

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35 comments

Candid Jagr up for challenge

POSTED: Saturday, July 2, 2011, 3:38 PM
Jagr wants to win in Philadelphia. ( Petr David Josek)

JAROMIR JAGR wanted to make one thing clear.

Despite the appearance of an overinflated price tag - when he signed with the Flyers yesterday for $3.3 million after Pittsburgh withdrew a $2 million offer - Jagr didn’t come to Philadelphia for the money.

“There were a lot more teams with a higher offer than Philadelphia,” Jagr said in a candid conference call with reporters on Saturday.

His plan, instead, seems to be a well-calculated one.

Jagr liked that the Flyers made a “great move with the goalies.” He knew that their defense was solid from talking on the phone with Chris Pronger. He liked that they are “good offensively.” 

Most of all, though, Jagr examined the Flyers’ roster enough to know that he could play alongside centers Danny Briere and Claude Giroux, who are both right-handed.

Jagr wants to be the Flyers’ solution to their anemic power play, which finished 19th out of 30 teams last season. Jagr has 181 power play goals and 345 power play assists in his storied career, which last left him 9th all-time on the NHL points list. He is within striking distance this season of Joe Sakic for the 8th spot.

“I like to play power play on the right side, and I think because they’re right-handed, they like to play on the other side,” Jagr said. “I think it would be a problem if I would play in Pittsburgh with [Sidney] Crosby or [Evgeni] Malkin, left handed, and have to play on the other side, when I’ve played all my life on the right side. I don’t think I would be able to play there.  Or if I go to Detroit, with [Pavel] Datsyuk and [Henrik] Zetterberg, they’re left-handed and they play on the boards where I used to play at.”

For that, Jagr didn’t seem worried about damaging the relationship he had with Penguins owner and former teammate Mario Lemieux, despite reports that he had promised Lemieux to play in Pittsburgh.

Jagr’s agent, former Flyers defenseman Petr Svoboda, even went as far as saying early on Friday morning that his client’s “heart belonged in Pittsburgh.”

Both Detroit and Pittsburgh dropped their offers early on Friday when they sensed there was another team in the mix.

“I didn’t promise anybody anything, that I was going back.  The Penguins seemed like I did something wrong or something bad, and I don’t think I did something bad.  If they feel like that, I cannot change their minds.  I was a free agent, and I had my chance to pick wherever I think is best for me.  I have the option to pick.

“If I hurt somebody, I apologize, I didn’t mean it, but this is my life and I want to make the choice.”

Loyalty doesn’t seem to be an issue. Jagr said his reason for not returning to the NHL during the past three years was to honor his three-year contract with Avangard Omsk of Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League. He said NHL teams tried to lure him back every summer.

He even apologized in advance, saying he could answer questions better in his native Czech tongue or even Russian, having seldom used English in the last three years.

“I just made the decision and stayed with it,” Jagr said. “That’s what I promised them.  Three years ago with the free agency, we couldn’t make any deals with [Rangers GM] Glen Sather.  So like I promised, I signed with Avangard Omsk.  But right after I signed, there were very good offers from the NHL.  But I told myself I’m not going to look back, because I already did what I did.  It was kind of tough to leave, because then I saw there was more interest from the NHL, but I had already made the promise. 

“I know for some people it might be just words, but for me, I’m very religious, I know it would bite me a little later.  I know that.  That’s the way the word works.”

Jagr, 39, answered simply when asked about his goal for next season, in which he specifically asked for a one-year deal in case he wasn’t thrilled with his destination. He isn’t concerned about the pressure to perform in Philadelphia. He isn’t worried about damaging his own reputation as a star player who played too long.

Jagr said he still playing thanks to the hard working guys like Rick Tocchet, Paul Coffey and Kevin Stevens whom he watched as a 20-something in Pittsburgh.

“If I play bad and people criticize me, that’s fine,” Jagr said. “If the things were only about myself, I’m not worried about it.”

Instead, Jagr said he didn’t want fans to “criticize the people who brought me to Philadelphia.” Jagr doesn’t want to “let somebody down” who believed in him.

“I have only one goal, and that’s making people happy,” Jagr said. “To make them happy, to those people who believe I can be good.  That’s my goal.  If I make them happy, I’ll be happy.”

Suffice to say, if Jagr can perform anywhere close to the point-per-game player we saw as recently as last year in Russia, all sides will be happy. Except Pittsburgh.

"There's no guarantees," Jagr said. "I could easily stay in Russia, make a lot more money and play 60 games. I wanted to try it. I have the feeling."

For the latest updates, follow Frank Seravalli on Twitter: @DNFlyers


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Frank Seravalli @ 3:38 PM  Permalink | 35 comments
35 comments
Comments  (35)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:16 PM, 07/02/2011
    Only downfall with the Jagr deal---it is only one year and not two or more.
    Romus
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:18 PM, 07/02/2011
    gmuny2002----sounds like sour-grapes.
    Romus
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:20 PM, 07/02/2011
    I always loved when the Pens played us, and Bundy had one job, shut down Jagr. He use to frustrate the heck out of Jagr. Fun to watch. Hopefully Jagr will represent the orange and black well, and not get frustrated when the fans demand productive play from him. My last memories of his NHL play was him looking lost and frustrated on the ice, although he did look pretty good in the Olympics.
    dogman5
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:00 PM, 07/02/2011
    Vokoun signed with the Caps for 1.5 million. Homer, you suck!!!!!!!!!!!
    Kanayd
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:12 PM, 07/02/2011
    Been reading the Pitts boards and I do see a lot of people bashing him for being a primma donna, selfish, moody, bad in the locker room, and evidently a bit of a gambler. (who loses and stiffs bookies).
    Frankly not exactly a prototype Philly player. That said, I hope Lavvy and Pronger can keep him in line. And Bob (if he remains) and he can chat in Russian all day long.
    This, of all the moves, worries me the most. I am Ok with the others though.
    Poppys
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:37 PM, 07/02/2011
    From Pittsburgh, with love....:) One day, Penguins general manager Ray Shero will thank Jaromir Jagr. Not today or next week, maybe. The wounds and anger from being used and abused by Jagr, who signed Friday with the hated Philadelphia Flyers, still are too fresh. But sometime next season. The Penguins will be competing for the Stanley Cup and an immature, erratic Jagr will be pulling his usual Operation Shutdown routine with the Flyers. You bet Shero will thank Jagr for not coming back to Pittsburgh. Let him be the Flyers' problem. They deserve each other. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11183/1157785-87-0.stm
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:14 PM, 07/02/2011
    Flyers continue to make all the wrong moves. Probably another 36 years until the next cup.
    flyigglesfly
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:23 PM, 07/02/2011
    this white boy aint gonna do NOTHIN!
    he is DONE! D-O-N-E DONE!
    please. same ole flyers. same ole flyers. same ole flyers.
    WOOT!
    depressed
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:50 PM, 07/02/2011
    Talk is cheap. Until Jagr brings it on the ice he's just a guy who is WAY over the hill and hasn't played in the NHL for 3 years.
    stinky_pete
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:02 AM, 07/03/2011
    Meh...I still think 3.5 million could've been spent better.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:32 AM, 07/03/2011
    It's "never about the money", is it?
    Mark55
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:00 AM, 07/03/2011
    why is a one year deal for jagar such a risk? to me high reward low risk. flyers will make another good move thru a trade to solidify the team!!!

    sammybeans
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:51 AM, 07/03/2011
    It's worth taking the risk. People shouldn't underestimate the skill level in the KHL. They have all the best Russian players plus a lot of talent from the rest of Europe. Indeed, due to the larger rinks the game isn't as physical but Jagr will make an impact in the new NHL playing alongside some gifted teammates, especially on the PP. On the whole, I like Homer's overhaul, he upgraded the goalies, kept the defense unit intact and shipped Carter and Richards with their monster contracts out of town after it had become clear that they are not Stanley Cup material.
    flyerdommo
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:53 AM, 07/03/2011
    Pittsburgh's a calftown that used to be a cowtown till the real cows moved west. It's a stream that used to be a river until someone diverted the water. It's a place that always despairs of being thought of in the past tense. Why would anyone go back?
    Claudio Vernight
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:57 AM, 07/03/2011
    Reminded of Pittsburgh, Tom Wolfe noted that "It's not that you can't, it's that you won't want to go home again" Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote his "Free At Last" speech the day after leaving Pittsburgh.
    Claudio Vernight


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