UNIONDALE, N.Y. - Walk into Nassau Coliseum, take a deep breath and there's a distinctive smell.
It's not a wretched smell. It's just a smell unique to the Coliseum, one that takes any Long Islander back to his youth.
Last March, after three years playing for the Calgary Flames, Eric Nystrom finally made his first visit to the Coliseum. Before playing his first game inside the arena he spent so many childhood mornings skating around with his father, Islanders legend Bob Nystrom, Eric inhaled a gigantic whiff of that Coliseum air.
"I said, 'That's Nassau Coliseum,'" the 28-year-old Nystrom said, laughing. "Who knows if we should be breathing that in, but I remember that smell from when I was a little kid. I don't know what it is, but I love it."
Nystrom, who grew up in the Long Island town of Syosset, returned home with the Wild for the first time Tuesday afternoon. After scoring a goal and an assist in last year's homecoming with the Flames, Nystrom will play in the Coliseum for the second time Wednesday night in front of scores of family and friends, including his dad, mother, Michele, and older sister, Marisa.
"He's definitely pumped," Bob Nystrom said. "He's spent many a day down there with me, and to come back and play in that building is a thrill for him and me to watch. It's not easy to come off Long Island and make it to the pros. He's worked his tail off."
Playing the Islanders is always surreal for Eric Nystrom. His dad is "Mr. Islander." Known for his feisty, tenacious play, Bob Nystrom scored clutch goals, especially in the playoffs, including the overtime winner that clinched the first of four consecutive Stanley Cups for the Isles in 1980.
"I mean, I wasn't just a fan of the team growing up," Eric Nystrom said. "I'd go down there on Saturdays with my dad and skate on the ice at 6:30 in the morning, just the two of us, with just tons of pucks. I knew all the players. I was entrenched, man."