Jason Spezza: Ottawa's newest hero
Through the entire Dany Heatley trade debacle, one player has been relatively quiet: Jason Spezza. (Although not as quiet as Heatley himself.) As Heatley's linemate and close friend, Spezza will certainly be affected by Heatley's trade demand on the ice, and if I were a betting man, I'd stake a lot on it affecting Spezza off the ice, as well. The two players signed long-term contract extensions within days of one another early in the 2007-08 season, looking forward to being two foundational players in the Ottawa Senators future. Heatley is obviously no longer interested, but Spezza seems as committed as ever despite whathis good friend has done.
On Thursday, Spezza spoke out on the issue, and it sure sounded like he was part of this team through thick or thin:
I just hope that this doesn't stall our organization. We want to move forward, and if he wants to come back, then we'll accept him back and we'll be a good team with him. But if he doesn't want to be here, he has to let us make a move and get some players to replace him.
--Jason Spezza
Defenders of Heatley have cited the criticism he'd taken as a reason for his trade demand, but no one's taken more criticism in recent memory than Spezza. And yet, it's Giggles who's all for the team moving forward, and Heatley's calling it quits at the first sign of adversity. It's just yin and yang; For every villain that's made, there has to be a hero of equal but opposite magnitude on the other end of the spectrum. When Alexei Yashin was killing his goodwill in the community, Daniel Alfredsson kept his head down and was Ottawa's focussed leader. Now it looks like Spezza will be the next Alfredsson, and it's a role that he should excel in.
An interesting comparison between the two situations was brought up in Don Brennan's column for the Ottawa Sun on the weekend. The same way Heatley was given an 'A' and the leadership responsibilities that come with it over arguably better candidates--Brennan mentions Mike Fisher as one, although recent events show that Spezza could very well be another--so was Yashin made the captain of the 1998-99 Ottawa Senators, despite the fact that Alfredsson was so much more captainly. In both instances, the honourifics meant to placate the star players and demonstrate the value they possess with the franchise. In both instances, it failed--Yashin held out on the final year of his contract, and Heatley has demanded a trade.
Contrary to Spezza, Heatley had been relatively immune to criticism during much of his time in Ottawa, probably because of his international hockey resume and his ability to score goals in the regular season. Very few questioned Heatley's defensive laziness and softness on the puck, while simultaneously berading Spezza. It may be because Senators fans haven't spent as much time focussing on the weaknesses in Heatley's game, but whatever the reason, Spezza's been criticized since he started with the team, from staunch criticism out of coach Jacques Martin's mouth to intense hostility from some fans. Yet Spezza remains committed to his team, while Heatley has taken issue with the tiniest slight from his coach and demanded a trade because of it.
Jason Spezza is an incredible talent, despite the fact that he was snubbed for the Canadian Olympic squad. The knock on his game is that he has no defensive accountability, he makes blind passes at inopportune times in poor spots, and he's soft on the puck--all flaws that follow an 'immature' hockey player interested more in the glory of offence than the chores of defence.
In my opinion, these flaws stem as much from Spezza's ability to use Heatley as a crutch as they do from an inherent character flaw in Spezza's personality. For virtually his entire time as a full-time NHLer, Spezza has had Heatley on his wing, stick loaded and ready to fire a one-timer. Four seasons of such reliance would inevitably build habits, but no coach has had the guts to split the two up and keep them that way for any significant period of time.
In both memorable exceptions to Heatley and Spezza playing together, Spezza's been demoted, and forced to "play his way" back onto the top line. One was midway through the 2006-07 season, where Spezza quickly became the go-to player on the team with Heatley and Alfredsson out of the lineup and excelled in the role. There were also various points this season, particularly the first-unit powerplay Heatley felt so slighted to be left off of. Spezza can play without Heatley, and may very well play better if he's using his creativity to come up with new plays rather than ways to force old ones.
Whether or not Heatley is traded, his relationship with Spezza will have a new dimension to it. And, at least for the immediate future, Heatley's selfishness will be offset by Spezza's commitment to the team. And we will love him for it.
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Spezza is the new Alfie
I love Spezza on this team! Nobody has put up with more criticism in their career in Ottawa and stuck around to answer the questions. Heatley’s abuse hasn’t come close to what Spezza takes in the papers, radio, web, etc. I’m hoping that if Murray does go get his top six forward, it is one with speed and skill and a finishing touch that can keep up with Spezza. Perhaps one of the problems in finding a third linemate for him and Heater in the past is that the two were lazy and didn’t use the third player. With Heatley gone, I’m curious to see how much Spezza can do and I think he’s up to the challenge.
I know it is kinda bush league to link other sites, but I actually wrote an open letter to Spezza on the weekend and it looks like we agree on his value to this team: http://anothersensblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/dear-jason-spezza.html.
Well done, Peter. I’m glad that we’re finally rallying around this guy.
Spezza
I was also very impressed that Spezza would step up and be firm with his views about Heatley. There was a ton of chat around town that Spezza was quite frustrated by the end of last season and was fine with the idea of being traded. In fact, I suspect that the prospect of losing Spezza was the last drop in a glass already full, as far as Heatley was concerned, and the motivation behind his final decision to ask for a trade.
This is only speculation, but one has to wonder whether Spezza really would have been moved if Heatley hadn’t struck first. Spezza might owe his old buddy a debt of gratitude after all. I have always thought that Murray buckled under pressure… that he didn’t move Spezza, only after issues with Heatley had escalated. Was it perhaps an attempt to stop things from getting out of control? Just a conspiracy theory to throw out there…
How do you read J. P. Barry’s comment that Heatley “wasn’t happy with the direction of the team”? This type of banter is usually code for “I think this bunch is gowing nowhere, the organization is making the wrong moves – I don’t want to spend 5 years struggling with a bad team – send me to a contender or somewhere where I can tan after practice”.
Selfish… maybe, but certainly more credible than Brennan’s version that Heatley wanted back on the first powerplay unit, or else.
I have always contended that there is WAY MORE to the Heatley story than we know and that the battle between Heatley and management got very ugly early on, then could not be repaired. I think somebody called somebody’s bluff and BAM… we’re all at the OK Corral!
All that being said, Spezza is an amazing talent and could become a great leader. That would require that he quit farting around and goofing off all the time and that he start taking things more seriously. In fact, if he was more responsible, Spezza could become much more valuable than Heatley, perhaps even produce similar numbers. He is certainly blessed with ample talent. The problem is that talent is not enough – just ask golfer John Daly.
Maybe, (like John Daly who has lost a ton of weight and who is trying to fix his career) Spezza feels as if he’s being shoved into a corner, forced to face a few key facts, left out of Team Canada’s list, and getting tired of watching the Sens go from contender to pretender… Maybe seeing his wingman bail, etc… has made him look in the mirror and grow up. I sure hope so, as a fan. John Daly waited too long by most accounts – lets hope Spezza is just getting started.
This team has put way too much stock in Fisher. He may very well be a great person, but leaders must be dominant and have more impact on the ice than Fisher is capable of providing. A guy like Alfie is a perfect example of what you need to be. A guy like Spezza has that potential, but he has lacked what Alfie (and Fisher) have – a serious ethic.
I hope Peter is right, because talent is wearing thin on this team and it will take an incredible evolution from Spezza to make up for all that has been lost under Murray’s watch.
Whoa, whoa WHOA! That's just crazy talk.
Now it looks like Spezza will be the next Alfredsson…
While I now have more respect for Giggles than I did a week ago, to suggest he’s “C” material is…um…how to put this politely…ludicrous!
I have no idea how he is in the room, but a Captain has to lead on the ice as well. Don’t know about you, Pete, but I’d rather not see an entire team of drop-passing, brain farting defensive liabilities.
Still want to keep him, mind you. My wife thinks he’s dreamy.
It might be a little ambitious to think of
But Spezza’s maturing very quickly these days. It’s taken a while, but it seems like a more well-rounded player may very well be on his way. And a captain is expected to be the team’s representative to the media, and Spezza’s about as qualified as—or more qualified than—any other Senator in that respect (giggling notwithstanding).
by Peter Raaymakers on Jul 6, 2009 3:59 PM EDT up reply actions
people finally agree with me.
spezza is our next great leader. in binghamton, he never wore a c, or an a, but he was in the other player’s minds the real leader who led by example and by sparking offense on a regular basis. he was one the most exiting play i had ever seen. I’ve always thought he could do it. beleive it or not, chris kelly was the captian during the vermette, eaves, volchenkov, spezza, kelly, langfeld, emery, pothier days. i miss those days.

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