No car accident. I bet Rayxor is right on the money. The media says that he suddenly fell sick in his home and was taken to a hospital where he was treated for internal bleeding and liver related problems.
It doesn't matter.
The guy couldn't resist food or drink, but he was still a great athlete.
One of the best hockey players the world has seen.
You never got to see that in Vancouver. He came poorly prepared to the NHL, he never learned the language, and he couldn't handle having free access to food and drink. He still had a 0.56 PPG rate, which is half decent, but it was not what Burke was paying for. He was paying for and expecting world class, that Krutov had shown he was capable off.
I mean, look at these numbers:
Soviet league: GP438 G288 A215 TP503 PPG 1.15
The guy netted 1.15 points per game. Not in his best year. Over his career!
Sure, you may question the quality of the league, but look at how he fared in international competition:
WC: GP68 G43 A33 TP76 PPG 1.12
OG: GP22 G16 A15 TP31 PPG 1.41
CC: GP22 G14 A16 TP30 PPG 1.36
WJC GP11 G15 A10 TP25 PPG 2.27
Larionov netted 0.95 PPG in the Soviet league, 0.89 at the World Championships, 1.05 at the Olympics, 0.52 at the Canada Cup, 1.20 at the WJC and 0.80 in the NHL.
Makarov netted 1.37 in the Soviet league, 1.24 at the world championships, 1.27 at the Olympics, 1.35 at the Canada Cup, 1.64 at the WJC and 0.91 in the NHL.
Pavel Bure netted 0.77 in the Soviet league, 0.85 at the world championships, 1.00 at the Olympics, didn't play Canada Cup, 1.86 at the WJC and 1.11 in the NHL.Gretzky netted 1.40 at the World Championships, 0.67 at the Olympics, 1.86 at the Canada Cup, 2.83 at the WJC and 1.92 in the NHL.
Sure, scoring isn't everything, but I'd say Krutov was the best in the KLM line when the chips were down, in the tournaments with the toughest opposition, ie the Olympics, the WJC and the Canada Cup.
He was clearly better than Bure, but not quite as good as Gretzky.
It's too bad he didn't have Tichonov with him to Canada, to keep him in line and make sure he trained right and ate right.
At the end of his career he was playing in the second and third tier leagues of Sweden, still netting well over a point per game, but barely making it back to the bench after a shift... Of course at that level he was playing for pocket money. I heard one team he played for had a sponsor agreement with a local grocery store, which said Krutov could pick up food there for free. Before his wife arrived to join him, he'd go by the store after practice every day and pick up a cake and a six pack...
Let me just say that his game weight those days was way above what made Burke explode several years earlier.
He was back in Östersund (one of the towns he played in) this february, as the Soviet Legends faced the Three Crown Legends. Due to poor health, he couldn't play, but he took the ice and waved to a roaring crowd.
Let's hope there is plenty of cake and beer in heaven.
