Showing posts with label Jaromir Jagr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jaromir Jagr. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Jagr to Oiltown?



By David Staples 02-10-2009

ITEM: Visnovsky out, Jagr in, source says.

A source close to Czech hockey ace Jaromir Jagr says that Jagr is close to finalizing negotiations with the Edmonton Oilers, reports Euro-hockey expert Peter Adler.

The source would not say when Jagr would report to Edmonton, how much he would be paid, or how long he would sign for. Jagr is now playing with Omsk in the financially-troubled Kontinental Hockey League.

With news that Lubomir Visnovsky will be out for the season with an injury, the Oilers now have several million dollars free to spend under the salary cap.

Many Oilers fan have long complained that Ales Hemsky hasn't had a proper scoring star at his side.

It appears that Oilers hockey boss Kevin Lowe is about to address this issue.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The KHL Superstar


In Omsk, the transcontinental gap matters little. With more than 10,000 fans screaming at the top of their lungs, communication is rendered moot. As the final seconds tick by, and both clubs express a level of hustle, stick work and hunger worthy of any match in North America, one man towers above all others: Jaromir Jagr. In Omsk, a black-collar city of 1.2 million souls, where the oil flares burn all night, marking the edge of town and the promise of the future, Jagr, the superstar who until midsummer reigned as the captain of the New York Rangers and a winner of nearly every trophy in the National Hockey League, now rules what he calls “the big ice.”

More...

Friday, July 4, 2008

Jaromir waves goodbye to the NHL


It appears Jaromir Jagr's days in the National Hockey League are over.

The Russian hockey team Avangard Omsk announced it has signed the former New York Rangers star and Jagr's agent, Pat Brisson, confirmed the move Friday afternoon.

"Jaromir signed a letter of intent with the Avangard Omsk Hockey team of the Russian CHL on or about 3am EST this morning. I won't comment on the terms of the agreement at this time.It was a very difficult but personal decision to make in light of the many NHL teams interested in his services. He is grateful to the NHL and especially the Rangers in recent years."

Local and international media are reporting that Jagr will be paid $35 million for two years. There is also reportedly an option for a third season.

Rangers general manager Glen Sather said Thursday the club could no longer wait for Jagr to decide where he wanted to play and signed former Vancouver captain Markus Naslund to replace him.

"I gave him the information that we are going to move on at this time. I couldn't wait any longer," Sather said in a conference call Thursday.

Jagr, who tallied 25 goals and 46 assists for the Blueshirts last season, also played for Avangard during the NHL's lockout season in 2004-05.

An eight-time NHL All-Star and 1999 Hart Trophy winner as the league's MVP, Jagr has registered 646 goals and 963 assists in 1,273 NHL games with Pittsburgh, Washington and the Rangers.

The Czech Republic native was also a part of two Stanley Cup winners in 1991 and 1992 with the Penguins.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Broadway Jags


Jaromir Jage felt the love from Rangers fans during the playoffs. He has been feeling it from Russia for months, what with Anatoli Bardin, the GM of the Omsk-Avangard team, having courted him heavily.

But what Jagr appears to be waiting for is some sort of comparable affection from Rangers GM Glen Sather. Jagr told the Daily News again Thursday that his first choice is to return to the Rangers for next season but he is not sure whether the feeling is mutual.

"Do I have an offer from Russia? Probably," Jagr said, refusing to discuss details of what Bardin promised him when he flew to New York to meet with him and with Sather on March 30.

But when asked whether it was now a case of seeing whether the Rangers would match the offer or come close, Jagr replied: "No, it's not that at all. I just want to know if I feel any interest from New York. That's what I want to know first.

"I told (the Omsk representatives) I didn't want to talk to anybody before I talked to the Rangers. They know that."

Jagr, 36, just returned to New York from a vacation in Mexico. He hasn't spoken with Sather since May 7, when the Rangers broke for the summer. And he hasn't been in touch with his agents, Pat Brisson and J.P. Barry.

"I didn't talk to them in a while - probably they were concerned with (Sidney) Crosby during the playoffs," Jagr said, referring to another of his agents' high-profile clients. "Probably, they're going to talk to Glen right away now."

Still, rumors have been flying about where Jagr will play next season - his contract expires June 30 - and how much Omsk-Avangard offered him. Bardin maintains that reports of a Russian Super League salary cap-busting offer in excess of $12 million per season were greatly exaggerated.

Jagr, however, insists that money is not the issue. He mentioned how much his girlfriend, Czech-born model Inna Puhajkova, loves New York.

"She doesn't say anything," Jagr cracked. But then he conceded: "Probably, she wants to stay here."

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Ranger Rumblings


JAROMIR Jagr wasn't joking when on breakup day he said his first choice was to play next season for the Rangers. And Glen Sather wasn't kidding, either, those times the last few months when he said he wanted No. 68 back on Broadway in 2008-09.

For Slap Shots has learned that Jagr's agent and Sather are expected to commence negotiations this week after preliminary discussions in which both sides exchanged words of love, if not vows of 'til death do they part, at least not yet.

"Jags would like to stay, he doesn't want to leave New York, and Slats has told me that he feels the same way," Pat Brisson, who with J.P. Barry represents Jagr, said by phone on Friday night. "We're going to begin to talk about a contract in the next week or so.

"Jags feels good about himself as a player and about what he and the Rangers can accomplish together."

If the Rangers and Jagr do in fact reach an agreement on what almost would certainly be a one-year, bonus-laden contract, management then will have committed to more than just Jagr the player. Management will have committed to Year Four of the post-lockout Jagr Era while postponing a new chapter headlined by Chris Drury and Scott Gomez.

For if Jagr continues to be the epicenter of the Rangers' universe, the centers that came last summer at a cost of more than $7M a year a man must be supporting actors.

If the commitment is made to Jagr, Drury then would either revert to his unfulfilling post as third-line center or shift to Gomez's left side. Neither is the role envisioned for the Big Moment Kid when he signed last July 1, and neither is the role likely to bring out his best.

At the same time, the money and cap space spent to retain Jagr would diminish the likelihood of the Blueshirts landing an accomplished sniper to complement Gomez. When the Rangers decided Gomez was worth $50M over seven years, no one envisioned him earning that money as a second-line center without a go-to partner.

Is Brandon Dubinsky ready to thrive in the demanding role of Jagr's first-line center from Day 1 of a sophomore year in which much will be expected of him? Or are he and the Rangers both better served with Dubinsky as a third-line pivot in the image of, say, Jordan Staal, whose shutdown ability in Game 5 played a major role in Pittsburgh's victory?

If a commitment is made to Jagr, then does that imply commitments to Martin Straka and Michal Rozsival, the latter of whom was the team's most disappointing player down the stretch and in the playoffs? Should the Rangers then acquire a center for the short-term who sees the game the way Michael Nylander does?

Does Robert Lang, on the final year of an over-35 contract at a guaranteed $4M, make sense?

Remember this: Jagr's numbers didn't suffer this season because he was pacing himself; Jagr's numbers suffered because he could not acclimate himself to Gomez or Drury after his idyllic marriage to Nylander was torn asunder.

And if the Rangers commit now to Jagr at some cost to Drury and Gomez, then doesn't last summer's call not to give Nylander the deal that would have kept him on Broadway appear terribly misguided?

Jagr had the fifth most even-strength ice-time among NHL forwards this season, trailing Martin St. Louis, Alex Ovechkin, Vincent Lecavalier and Jarome Iginla. He has dominated the Rangers' landscape since the end of the lockout.

Whose guarantee actually was bolder, Mark Messier's pledged Game 6 victory against the Devils in 1994 or Jagr's vow on the first day of training camp that the 2005-06 Rangers would make the playoffs after seven straight misses?

*

Kevin Lowe wasn't selling when Rangers inquired at deadline about Edmonton's puck-rushing and power playable defenseman Joni Pitkanen, but Sather is expected to go back after the 24-year-old restricted free agent who earned $2.4M last year.

If the Rangers are not sizing up a jersey for Brooks Orpik, then Jeff Beukeboom had better be coming back, instead.

The good news (if you're not Philadelphia) is that cap issues might well prevent the Flyers from matching an offer sheet to imposing 23-year-old power forward Jeff Carter.

The good news is that compensation for a contract worth up to approximately $5.2M per is only one No. 1, one No. 2 and one No. 3, surely an equitable price to pay if you're a team a) drafting in the bottom half of the pool; b) that doesn't draft well; or, c) both, meaning you're the Devils.

The bad news is you're going to be paying $5.2M a year to Jeff Carter at this stage of his career.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Keith Tkachuk has a great agent


From The Hockey News...

Jaromir Jagr is poised to become the game’s first-ever $100 million salary earner should he decide to continue his NHL career next season.

Jagr has earned $98,038,851 (U.S.) since entering the NHL in 1990-91, according to information on hockeyzoneplus.com. That’s by far the most of any player in the history of the game, although Wayne Gretzky and Mario Lemieux surely earned more than that when endorsement deals and other business ventures are factored in.

The following top 10 list shows active players who have earned the most since former union head Bob Goodenow introduced salary disclosure in 1990. Some players who were active prior to 1990 do not have those figures included in their totals, but none would have cracked the top 10. Chris Chelios, for example, is at just over $48 million, not including his seven seasons earning less than $500,000 prior to 1990.

No goalies made the top 10. The top active stoppers are Dominik Hasek ($55.9m), Martin Brodeur ($52.3m) and Curtis Joseph ($50.7m).

10. Peter Forsberg, $65.4 million

9. Chris Pronger, $66.2 million

8. Mike Modano, $70.1 million

7. Paul Kariya, $70.7 million

6. Rob Blake, $72.0 million

5. Nicklas Lidstrom, $73.1 million

4. Keith Tkachuk, $73.7 million

3. Mats Sundin, $74.0 million

2. Joe Sakic, $87.2 million

1. Jaromir Jagr, $98.0 million

Monday, May 12, 2008

Out of the Pitts


The Penguins are on the verge of something special only 14 months after it appeared the future of the franchise was in doubt.

This is a magical time for the Pittsburgh Penguins franchise.

On the ice, the Penguins are playing some of the most elegant hockey in the league, led by the twin superstar attack of Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin. Is it even fair that the same franchise can ice a team with Crosby and Malkin a decade later after having Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr on the same team?

Off the ice, the business side has never been on more solid ground. The Penguins sold out an entire season for the first time in franchise history. The club actually had to cut off season-ticket sales at 13,500 to ensure some tickets would be available for mini-plans and single games. Sunday's sellout in the second game of the Eastern Conference final against the rival Philadelphia Flyers was the 63rd consecutive sellout.

MORE...

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Jagr & Shanny looking to stay put

"First, I am going to talk to the Rangers," the 36-year-old Jagr said. "That's No. 1 option for me. I feel very comfortable here, with all the people around this organization who are nice to me. They gave me a chance to show everybody I still can play hockey. Everybody doubted me when I was playing in Washington, for whatever reason. The Rangers gave me a chance and believed in me."

continued...

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Jagr plays coy about future

Larry Brooks

I ASKED Jaromir Jagr to tell me that I was wrong, and boy did he ever. I think.

I asked No. 68 if it is wrong to interpret the fire, passion and anger he's demonstrated the last two games - as exemplified by the way he twice shouted down Sidney Crosby on Sunday, then scolded Marian Hossa for diving in Game 3 before once again raging at Crosby during a third-period review - as evidence that he has made the decision to retire as an NHL player and thus sees this as a last opportunity that is irretrievably slipping away.

More...


Friday, April 25, 2008

Big Jags talks more Pittsburgh

An interesting article with Jaromir Jagr opening up about his departure from Pittsburgh.

Globe and Mail

PITTSBURGH — If you are shooting the return of Jaromir Jagr to Pittsburgh for his first NHL playoff appearance since he left the Penguins in 2001, forget any soft-focus shots or sepia tones or the violins.

In the eyes of the Penguins fans, this is not the return of the prodigal son. There will be no fatted calf, no celebrations. Jagr will be booed every time he touches the puck for the New York Rangers just as he has every time he played at the Mellon Arena since he demanded and was granted a trade at the end of the 2000-01 season.

Pittsburgh fans have long memories. They remember his lament during that final season that he was "dying alive" in Pittsburgh and they still seethe.

MORE HERE...

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Not in Marios league...yet


By Jay Greenberg


April 24, 2008 --

Trust the guy who once rode shotgun: Nobody Jaromir Jagr has ever seen drove like Mario Lemieux.

"With all due respect for [Sidney] Crosby and [Evgeni] Malkin, I don't think they are Mario Lemieux," said Jagr, preparing to go to Pittsburgh, his first NHL home, for tomorrow's night second-round opener between the Rangers and Penguins.

"I say that with all due respect because the game has changed.

Continue HERE