AP
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But through no fault of his own, Lemieux is a victim of retirement overload. We’ve seen so many great athletes retire so many times only to unretire and retire again, it’s hard to take any of them seriously.
Like birth and death, retirement used to be a one-time thing. Now, multiple retirements are as common as multiple marriages.
Lemieux himself has been part of it, having once retired for nearly four years before returning to the ice in December 2000 to continue the career that he has finally been forced to leave again — this time, he says, for good.
He’s 40 and says that the game belongs to younger and faster skaters than he is now. There’s no question he wishes he could play on, which means there’s always a slim possibility he could unretire yet again if the doctors finally fix what ails him.
That’s unlikely, but it’s there. And so it’s hard to properly grieve his passing from the sport. After all, we’ve done it once before.
Indeed, few careers have been dogged by such physical calamity as his. He’s a big man, 6-foot-4 and 230 pounds, but a body that seemed borrowed from Adonis was remarkably fragile. He had cancer. His hips gave out. And now his heart refuses to keep time properly.
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