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Penguins retire Jaromir Jagr’s iconic No. 68

Penguins retire Jaromir Jagr's iconic No. 68

There were jokes. And laughter. And catharsis.

Just no tears. At least none from Jaromir Jagr. Maybe because they were unnecessary when the Pittsburgh Penguins retired his iconic No. 68 on Sunday.

The look on Jagr’s face, the subtle catch in his voice, the smile that remains boyish even at 52 said it all.

No matter where the NHL’s second all-time leading scorer has gone during a professional odyssey that’s spanned 30-plus years and three continents, Jagr has long understood where his hockey home is: the place where he arrived in 1990 as a teenager from eastern Europe shrouded in mystery, armed with a mullet that became his trademark and the kind of prodigious talent that eventually made him one of the game’s all-time greats.

“You ask anybody in the world, Czech, Europe and you say `Jaromir Jagr’ they’re going to say Pittsburgh Penguins,” Jagr said before a 40-minute on-ice ceremony that ended with his jersey being raised to the rafters at PPG Paints Arena alongside mentor and Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux’s No. 66 and Michel Brière’s No. 21.

Surrounded by his mother and former Penguins executives and players — Lemieux included — Jagr never broke down as he feared he might. Instead, the franchise’s fourth all-time leading scorer let his 10-minute speech serve as the exclamation point on a weekend in which he reconnected with the city to which he is forever linked.

“The 11 years I was here was amazing,” Jagr said. “Probably the best years of my life. So thank you for that.”

Jagr’s journey from Kladno, Czech Republic — where he still plays for the team he owns even as he drifts toward his mid-50s — for a celebration that seemed remote at times was years in the making.

Typically not one for sentiment, Jagr made it a point to drink it all in. He swapped stories with former teammates during an event on Friday. He practiced with the current Penguins on Saturday — pointing out, “I was pretty good let me tell you” — before spending Saturday night alongside Lemieux, Jagr’s idol-turned-running mate while leading the club to a pair of Stanley Cup titles in 1991 and 1992.

Yet even on a day — officially “Jaromir Jagr Day” in Pittsburgh — there were still hints of the iconoclast whose passion for the game he’s helped redefine…

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