Mark Recchi dares to mention Evgeni Malkin in
the same sentence as the one player in Pittsburgh Penguins history
to whom almost no one is ever compared.
Yes, No. 66.
Malkin won't play his first shift, take his first shot, make his
first pass until the Penguins face the New Jersey Devils on
Wednesday. That didn't prevent Recchi and Sidney Crosby from
bringing up the same name _ Mario Lemieux _ when they were asked how
good the 20-year-old Russian centre is.
``He's really good. He's going to be scary good,'' Recchi said
Tuesday. ``I hate to bring up this comparison, but I don't think
we've seen anybody with his size who can skate like him and do as
much as him. He's as close to Mario as we're going to see for a long
time.''
Recchi wasn't suggesting the six-foot-four Malkin will threaten
to score 200 points in a season or average nearly two points per
game for his career as Lemieux did before retiring in January for
the second time.
Rather, it is how Malkin plays the game that, to Recchi, makes
him resemble Lemieux. The uncanny ability to see a play develop
before it occurs. To put a pass directly onto a stick through heavy
traffic. To improvise and create a goal when there seems to be no
possibility of doing so.
``Obviously, some people have tried to pass that torch along to
other people, but the way he skates and sees the ice, he's the whole
package,'' Recchi said.
Maybe a slightly taller version of Crosby, who had 102 points in
his rookie year at age 18 last season?
``He's going to surprise people with how good he is,'' forward
Colby Armstrong said. ``He's got confidence with the puck, he's a
smooth skater, he makes things happen with the puck, he can score.
It seems like he scores every time he shoots on net (in practice).''
Malkin's NHL debut was delayed nearly a month by a dislocated
left shoulder that occurred when he and teammate John LeClair
collided behind the net during a Sept. 20 exhibition game. Malkin's
recovery time was slightly faster than expected, and the Penguins
have gone 2-2 without him.
They expect to be better now that he is playing, though there
will be some nervousness on their part until Malkin shows he can
take hits on his left shoulder without reinjuring it.
``My arm is in good shape, so everything is good. I just want to
play hockey,'' said Malkin, speaking through an interpreter,
defenceman Sergei Gonchar.
For now, Malkin will centre the No. 2 line with Ryan Malone at
left wing and Recchi on his right.
Crosby and Malkin likely will play together on the power play,
where the Penguins are 12th in the NHL with a 19.2 per cent
conversion rate.
``I'm thinking selfishly, but I can't wait to play with him,''
Crosby said. ``When you get a chance to play with someone like that,
it's like it was with Mario _ you don't know what's going to happen,
but you know you're going to create something. With a creative mind
like that, you don't know what to expect and it makes for an element
of surprise.''
Malkin was the No. 2 pick in the 2004 draft, one spot behind
fellow Russian star Alexander Ovechkin. Malkin played last season
for Magnitogorsk of the Russian Super League, but sneaked away from
that team in August and made his way to the United States so he
could play in the NHL.
Gonchar, who played with Ovechkin and Malkin on Russia's Olympic
team last winter, said it is difficult to compare the two because
their games are dissimilar. Ovechkin was the rookie of the year last
season with 106 points for Washington.
``My personal feeling is Ovechkin is going to be like Pavel Bure,
who's going to score a lot of goals and shoot the puck a lot,''
Gonchar said. ``Evgeni, I see him as a Sergei Fedorov who plays well
in both ends of the ice and kills penalties. He can do it all. He
can score. He can create offence. He'll be there for you in an
every-game situation. So it's really hard to say who is better.''
© The Canadian Press, 2007