NHL players prep on own before season

1/8/2013
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby (87) begins a rush up ice behind James Neal during an informal workout with a dozen of the NHL hockey team's players in Pittsburgh, Monday.
Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby (87) begins a rush up ice behind James Neal during an informal workout with a dozen of the NHL hockey team's players in Pittsburgh, Monday.

TROY, Mich. — Todd Bertuzzi hunched over, trying to catch his breath, before slowly standing up on his skates to spit and take a swig of water.

The Detroit Red Wings forward then leaned his head against a padded post during a short break toward the end of a relatively rigorous workout.

For NHL players, it's time to get ready for work.

Bertuzzi was among several Red Wings and an Edmonton Oilers defenseman who pushed it a little harder on the ice Monday because it looks as if the NHL is going to have a season after all.

Finally.

"It's just nice that it's come to an ending and now we can focus on getting ready," Bertuzzi said.

The framework of a new collective bargaining agreement was reached on the 113th day of the lockout Sunday morning. More than 24 hours later, players were working out together at rinks across North America with games on the horizon.

Informal skates led by players suddenly assumed greater urgency while lawyers work on putting a complicated deal on paper.

NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly wrote in an email to the Associated Press on Monday that the regular season likely will last 48 games, the same length of the shortened 1994-95 season after another 100-plus day lockout.

The NHL circulated a memo to teams telling them to be ready to play by Jan. 19, the date the shortened season is expected to start.

The Red Wings, though, won't have access to the Joe Louis Arena ice until Jan. 17 because it has been rented out to Ford Motor Co. for the Detroit auto show.

That may force the storied franchise to practice at the Troy Sports Center, where Red Wings and other NHL players, including Jeff Petry of the Oilers, have tried to make the most of their idle time for months.

The Minnesota Wild had the benefit of having an informal workout at their home arena in St. Paul, where nearly 20 players — including newcomers Ryan Suter and Zach Parise — skated with coach Mike Yeo was there to witness it.

"It was a different feeling walking into the rink this morning," Yeo said. "Just even to see them and have a chance to talk to them, and then get a chance to watch these guys go out on the ice, I think they look great and it's very exciting."

Suter and Parise put on their new sweaters for the first time for an on-ice workout since signing last summer as prized free agents.

"It was definitely a different feeling," said Suter, who had spent his entire career with the Nashville Predators. "But also an exciting feeling knowing that it was kind of a new start and just knowing that I'm here."

NHL players are here, there, and everywhere.

Some — including Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin — went overseas during the lockout. Ovechkin, who played for his hometown Dynamo Moscow in the Kontinental Hockey League, was welcomed back to Washington by the Capitals, who posted a picture of him on their Twitter account arriving at a local airport.

Players — teammates and opponents — who stayed at home have been getting together for months to skate, conduct on-ice drills, and work out on their own to stay in relatively good shape.

"We have a brotherhood that has only gotten stronger through all of this," Los Angeles Kings forward Kevin Westgarth said in a telephone interview from Raleigh, where he skated informally with some Carolina Hurricanes.

Penguins star Sidney Crosby and nearly a dozen teammates worked out at a suburban Pittsburgh ice rink. Crosby wore Penguins practice gear during the 90-minute workout instead of the NHLPA jersey he sported during the lockout.

The Phoenix Coyotes were wearing their jerseys as well as they welcomed some Red Wings, including goaltender Jimmy Howard, for a spirited workout at the Ice Den in Scottsdale, Ariz.

"Guys had an extra jump," Coyotes captain Shane Doan said.