Nicklas Lidstrom, arguably the best defenseman of his era, will retire in a few minutes at a news conference at Joe Louis Arena. The smooth-skating, unbelievably reliable, amazingly smart, incredibly durable hockey player and consummate professional and class act retires with four Stanley Cup rings, seven Norris trophies and a Conn Smythe.
He just did everything so well. So efficient, so consistent, so good. He made being a superstar look so easy. He made being a reporter so easy.
He was a ridiculous +450. The Red Wings didn't miss the playoffs one time in Lidstrom's 20-year career. Just a sad day for Detroit, for hockey.
But as I've been saying on the radio and writing the entire second half, Lidstrom's potential retirement could throw a wrinkle in the Wild's offseason plan to heavily pursue Nashville Predators defenseman Ryan Suter -- if he becomes a free agent July 1.
It's been abundently clear for awhile that the Red Wings also plan to pursue Suter in an attempt to make him Lidstrom's heir apparent. In fact, the NHL usually scoffs at big announcements during the Finals. Patrick Roy retired during the 2003 Finals. Rick Dudley was fired out of Florida and Jacques Martin and Mike Keenan came in as a tag-team during the 2004 Finals.
I don't think it's a coincidence at all that the awkward timing in Lidstrom's announcement comes when it's been so public the last few days that the Predators and Suter are about to continue talks to see if a contract can be ironed out.
The Red Wings can't talk to Suter, but he now knows for sure that if he has any interest in playing in Detroit, there's a job opening there.
Obviously, the Red Wings would present very difficult competition for Minnesota in its pursuit of Suter. The big decision Suter would have to make is if he really wants to be the guy to replace a legend in Lidstrom. Fair or not, those would be the comparisons he'd always have to live with.