Thrashers' Hossa a superstar minus the All-Star name
By Wes Goldstein | CBS SportsLine.com Staff Writer
The consensus around the Atlanta Thrashers is that Marian Hossa lacks an ego.
Good thing.
Hossa is arguably the NHL's best player and has been a scoring star since debuting as a teenager in 1998 with the Ottawa Senators, so he's certainly entitled to one. It just would be tough to stroke in an area that fawns first and foremost over Michael Vick and is only slowly warming to the improved product on the ice.
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| Blessed with size, speed and strength, Marian Hossa is a complete player. (Getty Images) |
And that's all well and good to him. Hossa got used to taking a back seat during his years in Ottawa, where his annual 30-goal seasons tended to be overshadowed by Alexei Yashin, Daniel Alfredsson and others, and now finds himself quite comfortable in that role with the Atlanta Thrashers.
"In Ottawa, he was a little younger so he was not the man there, but everyone who played them knew how explosive a player he was," said linemate Bobby Holik. "He didn't get the recognition some of the other guys did, but that's fine for him because he's a humble guy who doesn't invite attention."
At least off the ice. On it, no one has been more front and center for the upstart Thrashers this season than Hossa, who has 20 goals and 39 points in 28 games and is one of the main reasons Atlanta is riding a six-game winning streak and leading the Southeast Division.
"He reminds me a lot of Jags," said Thrashers center Steve Rucchin, who played with Jaromir Jagr on the New York Rangers last season. "They are two of the best players in the world, but it's one thing to be that player and another to go out and actually do it on a nightly basis.
"He's a guy who knows he's going to get the other team's best defensive guys each night and he still finds a way to get it done."
The way a go-to guy should. It's a role that Hossa says he relishes with Atlanta.
"Definitely," Hossa said. "On Ottawa we had lots of skill guys, even on defense, there were guys who could take charge.
"We have good talent here too, but right now I feel I'm one of those guys people look at and I try to be one of the leaders."
Versatility is helping him in that regard. Hossa, a shifty 6-foot-1, 210-pound package of breakaway speed and brute strength, has always been thought of primarily as an offensive player, but with the Thrashers, the big wing has proven able to play without the puck as well.



