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Selanne gets another shot in the league

By Agence France-Presse in Anaheim, California (China Daily) Updated: 2013-01-10 07:39

Finnish superstar Teemu Selanne will get a chance to play at least one more season, thanks to the end of the National Hockey League lockout.

The 42-year-old Anaheim Ducks star said in December he would likely retire if the 2012-13 NHL season was canceled because of a labour dispute.

"Last week, I said: 'You know what? Whatever happens at least we know what's going on.' Coming out today and seeing the teammates and training staff, it is a happy meeting," said Selanne at the Ducks' practice facility in Anaheim.

Selanne was speaking a day after the NHL owners and the players association ended their 113-day labor dispute in which the owners locked out the players.

"It is going to be exciting every game is going to be like a playoff game," Selanne said.

Selanne gets another shot in the league

Selanne, who was in his third NHL lockout, said earlier he would do whatever necessary to ensure the long-term health of the game. Even if that meant missing the whole season and ending his glittering 19-year career which has seen him score more than 650 career goals.

"It is funny, the last time there was a lockout it saved the end of my career. And this time it could have ended it," Selanne said.

Selanne says the 2004-05 season lockout ended up adding years to his career because it allowed him extra time to recover from knee surgery.

Selanne, dubbed the Finnish Flash, says he remembers older players making career sacrifices during the last lockout season.

"It is time again to look out for the future of this business of being a hockey player," Selanne said in December. "It is not about one or two guys. It is frustrating, but it is about the future.

"If you look at the last lockout and what kind of players' careers it cost - Mark Messier, Ron Francis, Adam Oates, Vinny Damphousse. They are unbelievable players. Those guys were there for us, the younger players. They sacrificed their seasons for us."

Early on Sunday morning, the owners and players finally agreed in principle to a new collective bargaining agreement.

The league said the new labor package, which will reportedly be for 10 years, must be "drafted and formerly approved by both parties" before it can be finalized.

Both sides continued to work on the "memorandum of understanding" on Tuesday which will be voted on by their constituents. The owners will vote on Wednesday while the players are expected to do the same on Thursday and Friday.

If everything goes as planned, training camps could begin as early as the weekend.

(China Daily 01/10/2013 page22)

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