As a Pittsburgh Penguins assistant coach, Mike Yeo saw the very best of Dany Heatley in an Ottawa Senators uniform.
During Yeo's first four years with Pittsburgh, Heatley scored 180 goals, including 50 twice. So the Wild coach understood the type of goal-scoring threat that he was receiving when the Wild and San Jose Sharks swapped Martin Havlat for Heatley two Julys ago.
"You're scared to death of the guy when he's on the ice," Yeo said.
Still, Yeo had to be a little wary. After all, he didn't know Heatley personally, and he was arriving with the baggage of previously asking out of two cities (Atlanta and Ottawa) and refusing to be traded to another (Edmonton).
But after getting to know Heatley, after seeing how respected a fixture he is in the Wild dressing room and how important of a leader he has become, Yeo wants to alter Heatley's reputation among some fans and media members.
"You hear these things that were said about him before coming here and it's undeserving and it's something that I will definitely work to change because it's not fair," Yeo said. "The guy is an unbelievable guy. He's a great pro, he's a great teammate, he's extremely coachable, he comes to the rink with a great attitude every day and he's a warrior."
Heatley, 32, has played 82 games in five of the past seven years and six times in a 10-year career. He and Kyle Brodziak were the only members of the Wild who played in all 82 games last season, and for "half a year, he was doing it on one knee," Yeo said.
"There's injuries that'll keep you out and there's most of them that you can play through," Heatley said. "I feel good now, and that's the bottom line."