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Red Wings captain Henrik Zetterberg explains why he is moving away from a big career. Traverse City, September 14, 2018.
Helene St. James, Detroit Free Press

He's snuck up on people. Both on the ice and off.

It's not that you did not see Henrik Zetterberg coming, it's because you often did not see him at all.

That he be behind the room, waiting … out of sight of the camera, before sneaking to take a pass and redirect her to the net, or if he was walking in the Somerset Mall, an invisible superstar. to blend in with the crowd.

He fainted in the same way. A larger and recognizable figure now, certainly. But a player whose game reached its peak years ago.

Zetterberg announced that he was giving up his skates Friday morning. A victim of too much back pain. This pain slowed him down in the latter part of his career and blurred the memory of his quality.

Even in his diminished state, he leaves a gaping hole. Both in the way he coached the youth of the formation and in the way he wore the "C" of his captain on his jersey.

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Ken Holland, the general manager of the team, said that he would remember Zetterberg as one of the biggest players in the history of the franchise. But he will also remember his presence in the locker room. Because he must also replace it.

"He's a guy standing," Holland said Friday morning of the training camp. "He (the only one) was answering all the questions on behalf of the team (after a defeat)."

The first time I met Zetterberg for a long conversation, it was during the winter of 2008. We sat in a dimly lit parlor at the Joe Louis Arena and each time that we were there. a teammate passed by, he stopped and made a double take. Zetterberg finally spoke to the American media himself.

Back in his native Sweden, Zetterberg was already a star, the subject of feature articles and big enough for Swedish television producers to send teams to Detroit. In fact, shortly before the interview, the hosts of a makeover show in Sweden filmed the attack of the Red Wings.

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It was an American reality TV show with IKEA to highlight the brave side of one of the best two-way hockey players in the world. But in the United States, even in Detroit, he could grab a table at his favorite restaurant in peace.

It was the year when the Wings won the Stanley Cup. Zetterberg was dominant. And yet he was not connected to Hockeytown yet. Holland had trouble understanding.

He remembers attending a luncheon earlier this season when the topic was discussed.

"It was me, Scotty Bowman, Steve Yzerman and Mike Babcock," said Holland at that time. "Someone mentioned that people feel because it's European, it's not the same thing."

He did not buy it. Sergei Federov had come from Russia. Nik Lidstrom from Sweden. Holland thought the sub-radar celebrity was more complicated.

Partly because of the nature of Zetterberg's game – he was neither particularly quick nor quick, he was not big, he was not very bright.

And partly because of his natural reluctance.

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That day, Yzerman reminded the crowd that he too had been a reluctant interview in Detroit and that he too was not always so sure of himself.

"Stevie grew up in that," said Holland, "people fell in love with him because he played loud every night and because they won."

Fans tend to react more easily to toughness, external trust and the ability to see you. And if Hockeytown had never completely fallen in love with Zetterberg, he finally kissed him.

Winning this 2008 Cup has helped. As did his incessant effort to be great.

Was he awesome?

Sometimes, absolutely. He and Pavel Datsyuk defeated Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin at the Cup. And for a while, there was no better player in either direction.

Except for Datsyuk.

It was the other shadow that Zetterberg had to go through … the brilliance of his own teammate, as well as the memory of all the Hall of Fame members he was following.

On the surface, he leaves the game with a Hall of Fame case. But it's not a lock.

You can not make fun of the legacy he left at Hockeytown.

At the highest level, he was a professional pro, a knowledgeable and instinctive player who played harder than his mount and whose understanding of the rhythms and angles of the game allowed him to flourish in a way that was not always obvious.

Or, as Holland said on Friday morning, Zetterberg helped bring "this franchise for a decade".

Even when we have not always noticed.

Contact Shawn Windsor at 313-222-6487 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @shawnwindsor.