TORONTO (AP) - Eric
Lindros has added the New York Rangers to the list of teams he will play
for.
The 28-year-old Lindros, a restricted free agent who
sat out last season, has sought a trade since rejecting an $8.5 million
qualifying offer from the Flyers last summer.
The former All-Star center was convinced to expand his
list after talking with Rangers general manager Glen Sather last
Thursday.
"We've been talking to the Rangers
throughout," Gord Kirke, Lindros' lawyer, said Wednesday.
"Whatever was said between Eric and Glen Sather was sufficient to
enable Glen Sather to say that he was going to have a talk with
(Philadelphia Flyers GM) Bob Clarke and see if he could get something
going with Bob Clarke."
Lindros' decision comes as potential suitors St. Louis
and Detroit made other high-profile additions to their rosters and as
another missed season begins to seem very possible. Missing the start of
the season would likely cost Lindros a spot on the Canadian Olympic team
for the 2002 Games.
The Rangers, thus far shut out in the free agency
market, have long desired Lindros. Until now, Lindros has been steadfast
in rejecting Sather's courtship because he doesn't want to anger Flyers
fans.
"Throughout this that has been a major concern of
Eric's," Kirke said of his client playing for the Flyers' Atlantic
Division rival. "That is still something about which he has great
reluctance and great discomfort.
"Eric wants to play in the National Hockey League
and if Clarke tells him that is his only chance to play, then he's got
to get by it."
The main obstacle to Lindros' return to the NHL
remains Clarke, who has demanded equal value in any deal for the
restricted free agent. Lindros' history of concussions has some teams
worried about his durability.
With the Rangers desperately needing to add an impact
player to their lineup, a deal should come easier than with the Toronto
Maple Leafs, Lindros' preferred destination.
"(Clarke) has consistently said that he thought
the Rangers was a good bet, something to look at," Kirke said.
"He has been encouraging us to look at the Rangers for some
time."
When he declared himself fit to play last November,
Lindros said he would play only for the Maple Leafs. The Leafs and
Flyers came close to a deal on a couple of occasions, but the potential
trades fell apart at the last minute, triggering angry recriminations
between Toronto GM Pat Quinn and Clarke.
When the Leafs and Flyers were unable to agree on a
deal, Lindros added the Blues, Red Wings and Washington Capitals as
possible destinations.
The Dallas Stars have also tried to recruit the
6-foot-4, 236-pound Lindros, but have been rebuffed.
Lindros hasn't played since a check from New Jersey's Scott
Stevens in Game 7 of the 2000 Eastern Conference Finals gave him his
sixth concussion 13 months ago.
Lindros scored 290 goals and had 369 assists in 486
games over eight seasons with the Flyers.
Philadelphia has signed free agent center Jeremy
Roenick to a five-year, $37.5 million deal.
If the Rangers do make a deal for Lindros, it would be
the second time they traded for him. After Lindros refused to play for
the Quebec Nordiques, who had made him the No. 1 overall pick in the
1991 entry draft, both the Flyers and Rangers claimed to have made a
deal to acquire him in 1992.
The NHL appointed an independent arbitrator, Toronto
lawyer Larry Bertuzzi, to decide the issue and he awarded Lindros to
Philadelphia.