Alexei Yashin

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Position Center
Shoots Right
Nickname Yash, Cashin
Height
Weight
ft 3 in (1.91 m)
220 lb (100 kg)
NHL Team
F. Teams
New York Islanders
Ottawa Senators
Nationality Flag of Russia Russia
Born November 5, 1973,
Sverdlovsk, USSR
NHL Draft 2nd overall, 1992
Ottawa Senators
Pro Career 1992 – present
Olympic medal record
Men’s Ice hockey
Silver 1998 Nagano Ice hockey
Bronze 2002 Salt Lake City Ice hockey

Alexei Valeryevich Yashin (Алексей Валерьевич Яшин, Aleksej Valer'jevič Jašin) is a professional hockey player, born in Sverdlovsk, USSR, now Yekaterinburg, Russia, on November 5, 1973. He gained his initial fame after being the first ever draft pick of the expansion Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (2nd overall in the 1992 NHL Entry Draft).

Contents

[edit] Ottawa Senators, 1993-2001

After remaining in Russia for the 1992-93 season with the Dynamo Moscow, Yashin arrived in Ottawa for the 1993-94 NHL season, the same year as Ottawa's other touted young phenom, Alexandre Daigle. Yashin soon eclipsed Daigle as the team's brightest young star, scoring 79 points in his rookie season and earning a nomination for the Calder Trophy.

Subsequent seasons saw him emerge as a star, helping Ottawa make the playoffs for the first time in 1997. In 1998, he scored a key overtime goal against the New Jersey Devils that helped the Senators secure their first ever playoff series victory.

Yashin was eventually named team captain, and the pinnacle of his career came in the 1998-99 season when he scored 94 points. Yashin was runner-up for both the Hart Trophy for the NHL's most valuable player and the Richard Trophy for the highest goal scorer. At the conclusion of the season, he was named an NHL Second Team All-Star. Despite Yashin's regular season dominance, the Senators were swept in the first round by the Buffalo Sabres.

Off the ice, however, Yashin's stay in Ottawa was tumultuous. Management initially supported Daigle, who had been picked first in the 1993 NHL Entry Draft. While they hesitated in giving Yashin a five year $4 million salary, they handed Daigle one of the largest rookie contracts and even touted him over Yashin for the Calder Trophy at the conclusion of the 1993-94 season.[1] Several nasty contract disputes developed between Yashin and the team, beginning when Yashin refused to play the start of the 1995-96 NHL season unless he was given a contract similar to the rich deal bestowed to Daigle. The holdout caused some Senators fans to sour on him. Some commentators justified Yashin's anger at being paid less than Daigle since Daigle never even approached his potential.[2] Yashin's offensive numbers exceeded Daigle's in every season they played together on the Senators.[3][4]

Tensions reached a high point after the 1998-99 season when Yashin refused to honor the final year of his contract and demanded a trade, on the advice of his agent Mark Gandler.[5] Yashin, who was coming off of an MVP-nominated season, was only receiving $3 million per year and was paid far less than other leading centres of the NHL, like Steve Yzerman and Joe Sakic who each made around $6 million.[citation needed] The Senators refused to trade Yashin and argued that his refusal to play constituted a breach of his contract. Consequently, Yashin spent the entire 1999-2000 NHL season practicing with a team in Switzerland. An NHL legal panel ruled that Yashin still owed the Senators one more season, and Yashin returned to the team for the 2000-01 season. The dispute cost Yashin the team captaincy (Daniel Alfredsson succeeded him), over $3 million salary and the respect of many fans. He soon received the nickname "Alexei Cashin."[citation needed]

In 2000-01 year, despite initially being jeered by the crowd, Yashin had a solid regular season. The Senators entered the postseason as the second seed in the Eastern Conference and were paired against the seventh-seeded Toronto Maple Leafs. However, the Leafs swept the Senators out of the playoffs. Yashin himself had a poor series, as he was unable to perform offensively while being shadowed by the Leafs' Shayne Corson. Assuming he had played his last game in Ottawa, Yashin did not attend the final team meeting of the season.[verification needed]

In 1998 Yashin had promised to give a million dollars to the National Arts Centre, the Centre's largest ever donation.[6] When the NAC learned that one of the conditions of this donation was for them to pay Yashin's parents $425,000 in consulting fees for "loosely defined" services, they balked and Yashin cancelled the deal.[7] When the press learned details of the failed deal, Yashin became especially unpopular in the city of Ottawa.

[edit] New York Islanders, 2001-Present

On draft day, 2001, Yashin was sent to the New York Islanders for defenceman Zdeno Chara, forward Bill Muckalt and the second overall draft selection, which the Senators used to draft highly-touted centerman Jason Spezza.[8] The Islanders promptly signed Yashin to an enormous 10-year, $87.5 million USD contract. Although his contract was reduced 24 percent due to the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) signed in 2005, Yashin is widely considered overpaid and virtually untradeable.[9]

Since joining the Islanders, Yashin's point production has declined. While he helped his new team make the playoffs for the first time in eight years in 2001-02, the Islanders have been unable to advance beyond the first round. The Isles bowed out to the Toronto Maple Leafs in a hard-fought seven game series in 2001-02 and then lost in five games to Ottawa in 2002-03 and the eventual champion Tampa Bay Lightning in 2003-04. Yashin's play was generally praised in 2001-02, as he carried the team's offense for stretches during the season. The following years, his mediocre point production led people both inside and outside the Islanders organization to question his effort and salary.

Prior to the 2005-06 season, the Islanders lost several key players to free agency or retirement and significantly retooled their roster. Captain Michael Peca was traded to free up room to sign free agents such as high-scoring wing Miroslav Satan.[10] Yashin succeeded Peca as team captain.[11] Journalists suggested that the team had finally been built around Yashin and would sink or swim with his performance. A common defense of Yashin's decreased offensive output had been the lack of a legitimate first line winger to play with him. Satan and Yashin showed signs of chemistry early in the season, but generally produced disappointing results. When Satan was moved off Yashin's line, his offensive output increased markedly. After the season ended with the Islanders out of the playoffs for the first time since his arrival, Yashin acknowledged that he needed to score more. Since the Islanders' season ended, there had been speculation that the team would buy out his contract and rebuild the team in a different image, but the team decided to retain him.

An article in Newsday suggested that Yashin must "make a difference" in 2006-07 or he will be bought out at the end of the season. [12] By the 20 game mark, Yashin was earning praise in the local media for the first time in recent memory, and his point totals are among the league leaders.[13] On Saturday, November 25, 2006, Yashin suffered an ankle sprain after taking a knee-to-knee hit from Matt Bradley of the Washington Capitals. The Islanders announced on November 27 that Yashin, the team's leading scorer at the time, would miss 2-4 weeks.

[edit] Miscellany

On the international stage, Yashin has represented his native Russia in the 1996 and 2004 World Cup of Hockey and the 1998 and 2002 Winter Olympics. He has won Olympic silver (1998) and bronze medals (2002). Yashin also represented Russia at the 2006 Winter Olympics.

Yashin is married to actress and model Carol Alt.[14]

[edit] See also

[edit] External Link

Player Profile on New York Islanders website

[edit] References

Preceded by:
Randy Cunneyworth
Ottawa Senators captains
1998-99
Succeeded by:
Daniel Alfredsson
Preceded by:
Michael Peca
New York Islanders captains
2005 – present
Incumbent