This is actually copied and pasted from our IIHF World Championship blog, but it’s been a long day – only 12 hours at the rink today, though – and I have nothing left in my brain. So, I’ll do what I actually like doing best: I quote myself.
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QUEBEC CITY – “Hey,” he says, “what did you think about our line last night?”
He, Petri Skriko, former NHLer and a three-time World Championship player for Finland, flashes a very happy smile. As he should because “their line” was simply amazing the night before. The line is Russian’s Alexander Semin – Sergei Fedorov – Alexander Ovechkin, the “Washington line”.
Skriko is the Washington Capitals’ pro scout these days, and in Quebec City to scan the best of the international hockey before heading out to Halifax to check out the rest of the teams.
Ironically, when Skriko himself was drafted to the NHL – as 157th player, on round 8 – by the Vancouver Canucks, he was never scouted. By a pro scout, anyway.
“I had a teammate called Stu Ostlund on my team, SaiPa, in the Finnish league. He was finishing up his career and when he went back home after the season, he told the Canucks about me, and they just went ahead and picked me.
“The year after, I was elected tournament MVP in the World Juniors. When I then signed my first contract, the GM took me to his office and showed me a sign he had had made. On it, was my face and a text, ‘I AM A GENIUS’,” Skriko told me, laughing.
“Too bad he wasn’t there anymore when it was time to renegotiate my contract.”
