The fact that he made it to where he has from there is so impressive to me. It says a lot about him as a player and as a person.
Alfie and I, of course, got to see each other a lot during those Battle of Ontarios between the Maple Leafs and Senators. Ottawa had such talented teams. Think of the list of players that were there at that time: Alfie, Dany Healthy, Marian Hossa, Alexei Yashin, Zdeno Chara, Radek Bonk and Chris Phillips. The list goes on. They had such skill. Yes, we ended up winning those four head-to-head series in five years, but it was far from easy. Those were outstanding Ottawa teams.
With Alfie, he was always the constant. He would never take days off, games off, shifts off. He was the leader by example for that team. There were never any lulls in his game. He could score, he could back check, all while being the heartbeat of that franchise.
A lot was made about his fake stick toss. Years later we laugh about it. It was the heat of the battle.
To recap: On Jan. 8, 2004, he faked throwing his broken stick into the stands during a game against the Leafs in Toronto. The fans weren't happy about it and neither was our coach at the time, Pat Quinn. I was serving a one-game suspension for tossing a broken stick into the crowd the previous game, and it was Alfredsson's way of playfully rubbing it in.
That was just one example of how the Battle of Ontario could get heated sometimes.
Daniel represented what Swedish hockey was all about: Competitive, no quit, quiet leadership. He was the captain of the Senators from 1999-2013 and always carried out the honor with class.
He should be proud of all he accomplished. He came by his career honestly. And now it's fantastic that he's being inducted. I'm so thrilled for him.
At the 2016 World Cup of Hockey, he, Nick Lidstrom and I were part of the management team for the Swedish entry at the World Cup of Hockey. We had a great time, even though the team never got as far as we'd hoped.
Now, he's going to join Nick and I again, this time in the Hall.
Well deserved.