What a strange and winding road hockey's taken Mr. Ed Belfour on in his 20-year pro career.
He grew up in a small agricultural town outside of Winnipeg and played high school hockey at 15 with the Carman Cougars. After graduating, it was off to join the 'Junior A' Winkler Flyers, where Belfour played one season, was named the league's top goaltender and, well, he was on his way.
Belfour was never drafted into the NHL because he was a small-town kid way, way off the radar until he was 21 years old. That year, he went to the NCAA with the University of North Dakota, was a first-team WCHA all-star and led UND to the national title.
A little more than a year later, he was starting with the Chicago Blackhawks and he won the Vezina Trophy in his second NHL season (1990-91), just five years removed from Winkler.
At this point, he's the third most winningest netminder in NHL history, trailing only Hall of Famers Patrick Roy and Martin Brodeur.
And, now, at age 42, he's
apparently off to Leksand, Sweden, to try and push that team back into the country's elite division.
Belfour's taking some heat from
the peanut gallery for playing past his "best-before date," but I find it tough to get too down on a guy whose competitive fires still burn.
Besides, the one thing that's been woefully underreported so far is the fact that Eddie the Eagle had a pretty nice season last year in South Florida (aside from a barfight or two), and especially down the stretch after he took out Alex Auld, when he was one of the top 10 or 15 goaltenders in the NHL. Belfour posted a 14-5-4 record in his final 23 starts with the Panthers, which included a 2.70 goals-against average and .908 save percentage.
He's far from washed up and, quite likely, will be well worth the money he'll receive in Sweden.
And after where he's been, why not head out on another hockey sojourn? At the very least, he'll be a hit in the foreign press.