DETROIT -- The Detroit Red Wings will retire Sergei Fedorov’s No. 91 on Monday. Some feel the honor is long overdue. Others thought they’d never see the day. In the end, it will be a special moment for the team, the fans and Fedorov himself.
Fedorov will take his place in the rafters at Little Caesars Arena before a game against the Carolina Hurricanes (7 p.m. ET; FDSNDET, FDSNSO), of all teams, because of his important place in Detroit history. The Red Wings nabbed the center in the fourth round (No. 74) of the 1989 NHL Draft, when teams were afraid to take players from the Soviet Union, figuring they couldn’t get them to North America.
In a story out of a spy novel, the Red Wings helped Fedorov defect in 1990. He became part of their famous Russian Five and helped them win the Stanley Cup in 1997, 1998 and 2002. He won the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player in 1994, plus the Selke Trophy as the League’s best defensive forward in 1994 and 1996.
Although Detroit has had many great players over the years, Fedorov is the only one who has won the Hart with the Red Wings since Gordie Howe won it for the sixth and final time in 1963.
The Red Wings hoped Fedorov would spend his entire career in Detroit, like teammates Nicklas Lidstrom and Steve Yzerman would do. But here’s the hard part: Fedorov chose to leave -- not once, but twice.
After winning the Cup in 1997, Fedorov held out as a restricted free agent for the first 59 games of the 1997-98 season and signed a six-year, $38 million offer sheet with the Hurricanes, then owned by Peter Karmanos, a rival of Detroit owner Mike Ilitch. The Red Wings matched the offer sheet and ended up having to pay Fedorov $28 million in salary and bonuses that season. Fedorov helped them repeat as champions.
Detroit defeated Carolina in the Stanley Cup Final to hoist the Cup again in 2002, and Ilitch personally offered Fedorov a five-year, $50 million contract during the 2002-03 season. Fedorov declined. After they were swept by the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim in the first round in 2003, the Red Wings offered Fedorov a four-year, $40 million contract. Again, Fedorov declined.
Ilitch compared his relationship with Fedorov to one between a man and a woman.
“Sometimes the man or the woman loves each other maybe more than the other one does, and you think that you maybe have a closer and a better association than you really do,” Ilitch said then. “I always thought we were really close.”


















