The individual Rangers player who above all would need a successful night is of course Mika.He had an extremely difficult time against the Jets on Tuesday and as some of you have seen and already discussed in the track, he told us after practice yesterday that he has never been through anything more difficult.It also emerged that the sequence against the Jets when he disappeared into the locker room did not, as I thought, have anything to do with a sprained foot; he needed to get out to get some breath.That doesn't sound good. On the contrary, it sounds like some kind of hint of an anxiety attack in the middle of the match and if it has gone that far help is needed, I know that only too well from my own experience.Hopefully it's still no worse than he says he can trick himself into not thinking dark thoughts and going out and playing as usual, but anxiety is anxiety. Anxiety takes over and dictates and ultimately controls every thought and outmaneuvers every emotion, and if there are 18,000 people sitting around booing every mistake, and a whole gallery of thinkers in the media just waiting to scalp the problems, it's fueled by a Category 5 hurricane is fueled by the boiling hot waters of the Gulf of Mexico in late August.Anyone who says it's just a matter of "biting down" - and thinks it should be easier when the sufferer earns a lot of money - doesn't understand anything, especially not about mental health.That said, we really have to hope that Mika can steer into the light on his own - but it's also important to know that asking for help is not a defeat.On the contrary, sometimes it is necessary.