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Ottawa Senators defenseman Chris Wideman (right) and right wing Curtis Lazar wait for a faceoff in the third period during a game between the St. Louis Blues and the Ottawa Senators on Monday, Jan. 4, 2016, at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis. Photo by C

For Chaminade product Wideman, it's off to Russia to continue pro hockey career

By Jim Thomas - STLtoday.com, 06/15/20, 12:45AM CDT

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With his NHL career stalled, Chris Wideman faced nothing but uncertainty as the league’s coronavirus pause approached its third month.

Original Article - From www.STLtoday.com

With his NHL career stalled, Chris Wideman faced nothing but uncertainty as the league’s coronavirus pause approached its third month.

After spending this season with the San Diego Gulls of the American Hockey League, his one-year, two-way contract with the Anaheim Ducks expired.

So why not go to Russia?

Wideman, a St. Louisan who played high school hockey at Chaminade College Prep, agreed to terms on a one-year deal this month with the Nizhny Novgorod Torpedo of the Kontinental Hockey League.

“The KHL’s the second-best league in the world, so for me, it’s a great challenge and a new opportunity,” Wideman told the Post-Dispatch. “Something that just made sense for me right now.”

A fourth-round pick by the Ottawa Senators in 2009, Wideman spent the next four seasons playing college hockey at Miami (Ohio), helping the RedHawks to a pair of Frozen Four appearances. Three seasons with Ottawa’s AHL affiliate in Binghamton (N.Y.) followed — he was AHL defenseman of the year for the 2014-15 season. Then came the move up to the NHL in 2015-16.

A good-skating defenseman, Wideman appeared to have a home in Ottawa, playing a combined 140 games over the ’15-16 and ’16-17 seasons, with 11 goals, 19 assists and a plus-11. The 2016-17 Senators reached the Eastern Conference finals, losing to eventual Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh in seven games.

In between those Ottawa seasons he played for Team USA in the 2016 World Championship, the fourth-leading scorer on a team that included the likes of Auston Matthews, Kyle Connor, Dylan Larkin and St. Louisan Pat Maroon.

But things took a turn for the worse when Wideman sustained a season-ending hamstring injury in a Nov. 16, 2017 contest against Pittsburgh. He needed surgery, and his career hasn’t been the same since.

“It’s a devastating injury and probably a potential career-ender,” Wideman said. “The staff was awesome, getting me back in shape and ready for the next season. When training camp started in September, I was probably at 75-percent capacity and I just didn’t know it.

“I didn’t really feel like I was ready to go until about December. ... I can’t even believe I was playing before that. So it took a little while longer than I thought it would, and you don’t have your legs under you.

“It’s the best league in the world. You gotta be able to skate and I believe that’s one of my assets. So it was tough. The hamstring feels good now. I’ve just been working my (butt) off for another opportunity.”

During a tumultuous 2018-19 season, Wideman was traded three times: from Ottawa to Edmonton, Edmonton to Florida, and then to Pittsburgh. He also had two AHL stints in there, for Springfield (Mass.) and Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (Pa.)