Throughout the first decade of the
Lightning's existence Alexander Selivanov was the closest thing the
Lightning had to a sniper. From his debut in 1994 to his trade to
Edmonton in 1999 the Russian-born winger scored 78 goals in 304 games. For me, however, he will always be remembered for three
things:
- Having his Mercedes repossessed during a practice.
- Marrying the General Manager's daughter
- Scoring the playoff overtime goal in the team's first playoff home game in history.
And yes, that is the order I remember
them in.
The Car:
In 1998-99 the Lightning were not a
very good team. Their record peaked at 6-6-2 on November 8th.
. On November 10th they would lose 10-2 to the New York
Rangers (I was there!) which plummeted them into a nine game losing
streak. A 2-1 win against Edmonton on December 4th would
break the streak but they would go ahead and lose 15 of their next 19
games to...umm...fall out of contention.
They won only 19 games. Their “best”
goalie was Corey Schwab and he had 8 wins and 3.52 GAA. Darcy Tucker
of all people led them in scoring with 43 points. The highest
plus/minus was +1 by a Andrei “Skippy” Skopintsev who somehow
managed that while playing in 19 games for a team that gave up a
league-leading 292 goals.
Their head coach/general manager was
literally illiterate and helping his wife deal with cancer. Their
captain, John Cullen and pro scout, Peter Mahovlich, were also
battling cancer. Forward Benoit Hogue had to leave the team for a
bit because his sister had been murdered in Montreal.
It was not a good year.
On a quiet Thursday in October,
Selivanov had his $80,000 Mercedes repossessed from the parking lot
of the Ice Palace. Despite making a reported $1.5 million that year
he had somehow missed a couple of payments on the car. He blamed it
on moving to a new address and not notifying the bank. Man, life
sucked before online payments.
The Wife:
Flashback to a few years prior and
Selivanov was having a great year. Despite being a Russian in a
small market hockey town with no other Russians on the team he was
playing well on the ice. In his first full season in the NHL,
Selivanov's team leading 31 goals propelled the Lightning into the
playoffs for the first time in their history. He looked like the
dynamic, if sometimes inconsistent, scoring forward that could be a
breakout star for the team.
Off the ice his life improved quite
dramatically as well. In October of 1996 he married a girl named
Carrie. Her last name happened to be Esposito. Which was the same
name of the Lightning's General Manager Phil. Which wasn't really a
coincidence since she was his daughter. She was also the Director of
Team Services for the Lightning. Which kind of conflicted with a “no
fraternizing with the players” rule he had set up with his
employees.
Esposito didn't punish his daughter for
marrying a Russian by trading him away (although I wouldn't have put
it past him if he had a decent deal on the table). However, a
couple of inconsistent seasons in a row (he would score a total of 31
goals in the next two seasons) and a large contract extension would
lead to acrimony from his critics and the nickname Alex Son-in-law-ov
was born. See, people could be assholes even before Twitter.
Esposito would soon be removed as
General Manager and in January of 1999 Selivanov would be shipped out
to Edmonton in a trade that netted the Lightning the legendary
Alexandre Daigle. Carrie Esposito would follow Alex around for the
next decade plus as his hockey career took him to Columbus, Germany
and Russia. Unfortunately in 2012, at the age of 43, Carrie passed
away from an abdominal aneurysm.
The Goal:
The early Tampa Bay Lightning teams
were not great, but they weren't horrible. During the first three
seasons of their existence they finished 6th in their
division twice and 7th once. As an expansion team in the
90s they were built through other teams castoffs and high draft picks
so some struggle was expected, but they were improving as a
franchise.
In the 1995-96 they finally made the
playoffs. They finished with a franchise best 38 wins (a number that
wouldn't be bested until the Stanley Cup year of 2003-04). They won
three out of their last four games in the season to snatch the 8th
see in the Eastern Conference away from the defending Stanley Cup
Champion New Jersey Devil.
Their reward for the best season in
franchise history? A match-up with the powerhouse Philadelphia
Flyers. Not many gave Tampa a chance against the Flyers when the
series started. After all, what chance should an upstart, sunbelt
hockey team have against a team with Eric Lindros, John LeClair, Ron
Hextall and Rod “The Bod” Brind'Amour? Plus the Lightning had an
injured goalie in Daren Puppa who was playing with a bad back, an
injured Brian Bradley who missed all of Game 2, oh and young
defenseman Roman Hamrlik announced that he hated playing for coach
Terry Crisp after the Lightning got shellacked 7-3 in Game 1.
Game 2 was a different story as the
Lightning took advantage of some injuries to the Flyers to win 2-1 in
overtime and send the series to Tampa tied at a game a piece.
Selivanov had tied the game in the second period and Brian Bellows
won it in overtime.
Game 3 was back in Tampa. In a
converted baseball stadium then known as the ThunderDome, 25,945 fans
watched the Lightning battle back from 3-1 and 4-3 deficits to send
the game into overtime. Then, 2 minutes into overtime Selivanov
scored the game winner.
There are several great things about
this goal.
Selivanov throwing a check at the blue
line to keep the puck in the zone
Brian Bradley's pass to Bill Houlder.
And you thought cross-ice passes were a recent Lightning phenomenon.
Houlder's great fake and then horrible
pass. Watch the slow-motion replay. He sold the slapshot and then
fired that puck right into Selivanov's skates.
Selivanov getting mugged by Dale
Hawerchuck as he skated in front of the net. Late 90s hockey at its
obstructioniest best.
The sheer noise from the crowd after
the goal. That would have been awesome to be a part of.
Sadly that would the high water point
for the series and the organization for the next few years. Puppa's
back broke down and he couldn't carry the team any more. The Flyers
won Game 4 in front of a NHL record 28,183 fan to tie the series.
They would win the next two games as well, ending the series in six
games. Would things have been different if Puppa didn't have the back
of an 85-year-old man? Possibly.
The organization would fall on hard
times after that playoff season. Owners would change, coaches would
change, Selivanov would be traded, games would be lost. Many, many
games would be lost. And for Lightning fans sitting through three
straight seasons of under 20-win seasons. There was one lonely banner
that hung in the Ice Palace. It wasn't a Stanley Cup banner, or a
conference title banner or even a division banner. It was a banner
celebrating the record crowd.
And we had the memory of Selivanov's
goal. For most organizations that would be barely a footnote in a
team's history. Heck even more recent Lightning fans probably don't
rate it in their top five memories,but for a generation of Lightning
fans that will be one of the greatest moments in Lightning history.
Selivanov would have a good season in
Edmonton before falling out of their graces. He would play one
season in Columbus before moving on to the KHL and German leagues. He
last played in the Netherlands in 2011-12 before retiring. He had
been coaching in the KHL with HC Admiral Vladivostok but does not
currently appear on their website.
The Card:
I don't have many of the 1997-98 Pacific Omega cards. I picked this one up in a Zistle trade where the other guy was super generous and sent me a box of Lightning cards in exchange for a couple of extra Topps Heritage cards I had.
I like the horizontal design, but the borders are a little too wide on the side. The next year's design was much better (see the Vinny card on my last post). I also like the Rob Zamuner cameo in the background.
The back of the card has no stats but mentions Selivanov scoring two goals in 39 seconds against the Flyers in November of 1997.
1 comment:
I can't believe I'd never heard the Alex Son-in-law-of story before, that is so great. As is the Mercedes story. Really enjoyable post, thanks!
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