ClydeLee
Registered User
- Mar 23, 2012
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He had the disease affecting him in Chicago. It wasn't diagnosed but for multiple years they had no clue what it was. Which seems common for ms from what I've known.Bickell was a 20-30 point forward for 3 years before he had his great playoffs. He also returned to being a 20-30 point forward after his great playoffs. That is what he was in the NHL. A 20-30 point forward. His contract paid him as if he was a top 6 forward.
We couldn't afford to pay a bottom 6 player 4 mil a season so we had to attach Teuvo to move his contract.
If memory serves me correct (and it might not) Bickell was diagnosed with MS during his time in Carolina. He did not have the disease while he was Chicago. Chicago couldn't have traded him if he did.
This has nothing to do with Bickell and him getting MS. MS is a hell of a disease and I wish him and everyone else that has it the best. This is just about Bowman being leveraged to give a bottom 6 forward a huge contract and in the process helped close our Cup window.
He went to cycles of diagnoses that were wrong from Concussions, then they thought it was vertigo, then he got a tooth removed and they thought it was better, over and over it was an issue but undiagnosed until he said he woke up numb on half his body in Carolina. I guess some can be unaware still, but it is clear he was affected by that his last couple Chicago years.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2015/06/08/bryan-bickell-on-his-absence-i-had-vertigo/ Here he was talking about it affecting him here, but it wasn't until later he learned it was MS. But it absolutely affected him at least on 2015, when he began falling a lot randomly. He still hit a ton, like averaged 5 hits a game, was a net presence like in Seabrooks OT goal vs Nashville and others. He was always great in the playoffs, even 2011/12 too. Like he had 2 goals vs Mike Smith when we barely could score.