Players that completely checked out after getting paid

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Dany Heatley, wasn’t the same player after signing that long term deal with Ottawa

For some context, this happened prior to him signing in Ottawa:


"On September 29, 2003, Heatley was seriously injured in a car crash after he lost control of the Ferrari 360 Modena he was driving on a curved road in a residential area of Atlanta. The car struck a wall, splitting in half and ejecting Heatley and his passenger, Atlanta Thrashers' teammate Dan Snyder. Heatley suffered a broken jaw, a concussion, a bruised lung and a bruised kidney, and he tore three ligaments in his right knee. Snyder was critically injured with a skull fracture and died in the hospital of sepsis on October 5, 2003. Heatley pleaded guilty to second-degree vehicular homicide, driving too fast for conditions, failure to maintain a lane and speeding. He admitted to consuming alcohol prior to the crash, but his blood-alcohol content tested below the legal limit. He was sentenced to three years probation."
 
  • Wow
Reactions: Slaydagnar
Seeing a few Huby posts and they are off the mark. He’s been a decent defensive presence (plays the pk) and has legitimately changed his game even though the team doesn’t systematically play to his strengths. 65-70 pts isn’t great for a player his caliber, but he isn’t a guy who has “checked out” by any means
 
Jim Carey - goalie, '96 Vezina winner his first full season in the NHL. Got 4 yrs/11M. Started 17, 7 and 3 games in years 97-99

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KOLZIG: We were in the dressing room, and Dale Hunter was sitting across from us on the other side of the room. Dale was 35 at the time, and I remember Ace making a comment that he couldn’t see himself still playing hockey when he got to ‘Hunt’s’ age. Dale would play until they told him he couldn’t anymore. Ace never saw himself doing that.
The Capitals won the first two games of the playoffs against Pittsburgh, but Carey didn’t play well and was replaced by Kolzig. Carey went 0-1 with a 6.19 GAA and .744 SP, and Washington lost the series in six games.
JONES: When Jim got pulled early in the playoffs it showed that even Schoenfeld was thinking his success wasn’t as much about him as it was the way the team was playing in front of him. That was always the sense we had, and seeing that quick trigger kind of played into the way we were thinking. It all fell apart fast. I think the playoff series against Pittsburgh crushed his spirit.
ALLAIN: We were functioning on all cylinders to get the lead in the series, and the Penguins were one of those teams that figured they could ease into the playoffs and then turn it on. We were playing at our highest level, but then they kicked it up a notch, and we didn’t have an answer for that. I don’t think it was a Jim Carey thing. It was the Washington Capitals playing a superior Pittsburgh team.
JONES: He had a certain quiet confidence about him that year. Then in the playoffs, we lost against Pittsburgh like we usually did. Mario (Lemieux) and the Penguins lit him up high on his glove side. I don’t know if he was ever the same after that.
Carey was traded to Boston the following season, and he went 5-13-0 with the Bruins. He bounced between Boston and AHL Providence the year after that. His final NHL stop came in 1998-99 with the St. Louis Blues. He played three games with them.
BUTTON: I was shocked at how quickly it went south for him. I thought we were going to have a long run with him.
JONES: I don’t know that he really loved the game. I’d hate to pin somebody with that label, but I remember thinking to myself back then, “I wonder how much he really likes it?” There are some guys that just don’t enjoy it. They’re good at it or even great at it, which makes sense, but at the same time they don’t have much passion for it.
KOLZIG: I don’t think becoming an NHL player was something he looked at long term. It was more of a way to make a good salary and be able to set himself up for his post-hockey career. To each their own. I wouldn’t say he lived and died the game. He didn’t eat, sleep and breathe the game.
ALLAIN: If you ask me why he didn’t have a long career in hockey, I don’t think he enjoyed it as much as he could have. I think that was the real thing. It’s so hard to play goaltender in the NHL. It’s physically and mentally draining.
KOLZIG: Once Ace was out of hockey, he was out of hockey.


^^ eye opening quotes ... I imagine each team has 1 or 2 that look at his like a job vs dream job
 
Seeing a few Huby posts and they are off the mark. He’s been a decent defensive presence (plays the pk) and has legitimately changed his game even though the team doesn’t systematically play to his strengths. 65-70 pts isn’t great for a player his caliber, but he isn’t a guy who has “checked out” by any means
He would probably have 20-30 pts more this season if he played with a higher end centre like he had in Florida.

He's the team's leading scorer without much offense. Hard for Huberdeau to be a playmaking forward when the Flames have nobody to finish those plays.
 
What are some examples of players that were never the same after getting a big long term contract ?

Rick DiPietro ?

Is Pettersson trending in that direction right now ?
Dipietros knees got destroyed I’m pretty sure. Or maybe his groin.
 
I was 2nd row at the game last night and legit did not notice him once.

He had a slick pass on a 2 on 1 that went for a goal against Utah on Monday night. Though to be fair the 2 on 1 was the result of Utah playing like crap, so I'm not sure if you want to consider that as him doing something good, and despite Detroit kicking our asses, I also barely noticed him. Granted, it was one of those games where one team played like shit (Detroit) but the other team (Utah) played even worse.
 
He would probably have 20-30 pts more this season if he played with a higher end centre like he had in Florida.

He's the team's leading scorer without much offense. Hard for Huberdeau to be a playmaking forward when the Flames have nobody to finish those plays.
He played with Sam Bennett in Florida

People will come up with anything to explain Huberdeau’s lack of production when the reality is that he’s just declined as a player
 
He played with Sam Bennett in Florida

People will come up with anything to explain Huberdeau’s lack of production when the reality is that he’s just declined as a player

He scored approximately 30-40 power play points every year with Florida.

He scored approximately 20 power play points in his 3 seasons in Calgary.

That's most of the difference right there considering he was part of a PP that was top 5 in the NHL alongside the Oilers, Leafs, Rangers ect.
 
Clayton Stoner.

Someone on the Wild board said he drank at the bar with him and Clayton said he absolutely hated playing hockey at a high level. Makes sense cause the guy was a stud his contract year and signed with the Ducks and checked out after getting payed.
 
I don't think a lot of guys necessarily check out it's just that they signed big contracts at older ages and couldn't always maintain the same level of play or teams signed them expecting them to be better then they were previously which is always a terrible bet. I also think there are probably a lot of guys really good at hockey who played it all their lives and found they could make a really good living doing it that didn't really love the game. I grew up playing with some people that lived the game day in and day out and other guys that played it because of their parents or because of the social group. I never heard any of them ever talking about hockey or watching it though. I am sure there are guys like that in the NHL too so in a sense for them it might feel like going to the office to collect a paycheck.
 

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