ST. LOUIS -- Suddenly, the St. Louis Blues have a lot of
important ice time to fill.
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| Pronger |
Chris Pronger, the NHL MVP and team captain, usually plays about
half the game. He underwent arthroscopic surgery for torn
cartilage in his left knee Tuesday and will miss 4-to-6 weeks.
"Everybody gets a little more time," general manager Larry
Pleau said. "The ones that are able to jump up, it's a chance for
them."
Pronger is averaging 28 minutes after leading the NHL with 30
minutes a game last season. He has six goals and a team-leading 35
assists and is plus-18 for the Blues, who are second overall in the
standings with 67 points.
"I may have to take a vacation to get away and not have to
watch much hockey for a while," Pronger said before the surgery. "Maybe come back
when I'm ready to skate and get back in the flow. It's never any
fun having to watch games from up top."
Canucks defenseman Ed Jovanovski was chosen by the NHL on Tuesday to replace Pronger on the North America All-Star team for the Feb. 4 All-Star Game.
Pronger, who also won the Norris Trophy as the NHL's best
defenseman last season, was injured when he made a check against
Nashville at home Jan. 4 and teammate Tyson Nash accidentally
banged into him.
He played nine games before he and the team decided on surgery. On Sunday, he played more than 30 minutes in a 3-1 loss at Nashville, then opted for surgery.
"Management wanted me to get it done now," Pronger said. "The type of pain I've been feeling has gradually gotten worse, and I think the longer I wait, the more it would affect my knee and possibly my play.
"Now is probably the best time to get it taken care of, so I'll
have a month and a half before the playoffs."
Pleau said it was the smart thing to do.
"He can play with it, but why take a chance of damaging the
knee?" Pleau said. "We're not two weeks from the playoff
starting, so this is the team to get it repaired so he can get it
healthy."
An MRI Friday showed torn cartilage. Pronger and the team
decided he could play two more games before having the operation.
He said the injury hindered him more off the ice than on -- getting
in and out of his car, for instance.
"It's funny, some of the things you'd think would bother it don't," Pronger said. "Mainly, when I'm skating it doesn't really bother it.
That included Sunday, his last game.
"Once the game starts, you don't really pay attention,"
Pronger said. "In warmups it's a little creaky, but once you get
playing those things go to the back of your mind and you're more
worried about playing than doing anything else."
Coach Joel Quenneville said Alexander Khavanov probably will get
more work, taking Pronger's duties on the power play and penalty
killing.
Jeff Finley, Todd Reirden and Vladimir Chebaturkin also could
help fill the void, but there will be no increased workload for
37-year-old Al MacInnis, who's been playing about 27 minutes a
game.
Pronger joins forwards Pavol Demitra (eye), Michal Handzus
(abdominal surgery) and Lubos Bartecko (high ankle sprain), plus defenseman Sean Hill (groin) on the Blues' injury list.
Demitra, who led the team in scoring last season, is expected
back from a bruised retina after the All-Star Game. Handzus is out
at least another month and the return of the other two is uncertain.
"We can feel sorry for ourselves for 24 hours," Pleau said.
"After that, we move on."
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