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 Monday, February 7
Seven of Hejduk's 24 goals game-winners
 
By Rick Sadowski
Scripps Howard News Service

 TORONTO -- Quebec Nordiques scouts never could have foreseen what was in store when they advised general manager Pierre Lacroix to take a flyer on an obscure right wing from the Czech Republic named Milan Hejduk in the 1994 NHL entry draft.

How could they? Hejduk, a skinny 18-year-old at the time, was coming off a season with Pardubice in the Czech Elite League in which he recorded a grand total of six goals and three assists in 22 games.

Milan Hejduk
Milan Hejduk has emerged as a major talent in Colorado.

That's why 86 players were selected in front of Hejduk.

Hardly the stuff of legends.

Now, six years later, Hejduk got the chance to represent the Colorado Avalanche in the 50th NHL All-Star Game on Sunday at the Air Canada Centre as a member of the World team with the likes of Pittsburgh's Jaromir Jagr, Tampa Bay's Petr Svoboda and Montreal's Martin Rucinsky.

Hejduk and the other three were members of the Czech Republic's gold-medal-winning team in the 1998 Olympics at Nagano, Japan. A fifth member, Buffalo goalie Dominik Hasek, had to bow out of Sunday's game because of a recurring groin injury.

Dallas' Roman Turek, another Czech, was chosen to replace Hasek on the roster, and New Jersey left wing Patrik Elias is taking injured Avalanche forward Peter Forsberg's spot on the team.

Add Ottawa center Radek Bonk and Atlanta defenseman Petr Buzek to the mix, and it's easy to see why the Czechs have been so dominant in recent years. They also won gold at last year's World Hockey Championships.

Avalanche defenseman Sandis Ozolinsh, who is from Latvia, was voted a starter in fan balloting.

"I know these guys pretty well, so I don't think I'm going to be nervous," Hejduk said.

Why should he be? The 5-foot-11, 185-pound forward eventually blossomed at Pardubice, totaling 52 goals in his final two years there, and gained invaluable experience playing under pressure in important international tournaments.

Hejduk might look frail and speak softly, but since joining the Avalanche a year ago, he has proved to be a hardened warrior when it comes to making a big play with a game on the line.

A Calder Trophy finalist after recording 14 goals and 34 assists in 82 regular-season games as a rookie last season, Hejduk was even better in the playoffs.

He twice scored overtime goals when the Avalanche eliminated San Jose in the first round and collected another game-winner in the second round against archrival Detroit. Hejduk's season ended in Game 4 of the Western Conference finals when he broke his collarbone on a hit by Dallas' Richard Matvichuk.

Not that the injury has caused him to be as shy in the corners as he is away from the ice. Just the opposite. Hejduk, an integral member of the Avalanche's "Kid Line" with Alex Tanguay and Chris Drury, is fearless when it comes to skating in traffic, along the boards and around the net.

He and Avalanche captain Joe Sakic are tied for the team lead in scoring with 44 points each. Sakic has played in 22 fewer games because of injuries, but Hejduk is having a remarkable season just the same.

Hejduk's 24 goals -- he is tied with Florida's Pavel Bure for 11th in the NHL -- are 10 more than he collected as a rookie, and there are still 28 regular-season games remaining. Of those goals, seven have been game-winners, tying him for third in the league with Elias and Detroit's Brendan Shanahan.

Hejduk shares the lead for score-tying goals with 10 players.

That said, Hejduk hardly expected he would be flying to Toronto on Friday with the rest of the world's best players to get ready for Sunday's game.

"Oh, no," he said. "It was really a surprise for me when they selected me ..."

Think Hejduk cares if the game is little more than an exhibition? Just being a part of it shows how far he has come in a relatively short time.

"It's a dream for every hockey player to play in the NHL and to play in the All-Star Game," Hejduk said. "It's special."

Rick Sadowski writes for the Rocky Mountain News.