Snuggs
Registered User
- Jun 24, 2018
- 2,975
- 1,625
Bygones be Bygones, should the organization retire the jersey? Been a defender or not retiring but when a guy admits the mistake... takes a lot of the salt/heat out of a wound.
In retrospect, he believes that decision was a mistake. He’d do it differently if life were to give him a second chance.
“Sign everything that Detroit offered and continue working calmly,” Fedorov explained to Russian website Sport-Express as to what his choice should have been. “Don’t escalate the situation.”
“I finished it like this: “I need to think about it,” Fedorov said of that contract meeting with the Red Wings. “I named a time frame – two or three weeks. But it all turned into months. I was a young man, not very knowledgeable about life. I also trusted the agents.
“My agents kept saying that they could raise my salary. But nothing changed. At some point, I completely stopped understanding what was happening in my life. Playing hockey was my only outlet. And Detroit simply removed a new contract offer from the table.”
Ultimately, Fedorov believes that there were no winners in the scenario.
“Nobody won — neither me nor the club,” Fedorov said. “There were just a lot of negative emotions, on both sides. And it ended with me leaving for Anaheim in 2003, signing a five-year contract for $40 million. Detroit initially gave (an offer of $10 million) per season.”