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Scoring champion Sidney Crosby, of the Pittsburgh Penguins, who led the NHL with 120 points, stands next to the Art Ross Trophy during awards ceremonies in Ottawa.
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Penguins' Crosby is out indefinitely

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Penguins' Crosby is out indefinitely

PITTSBURGH -- The tests indicate Sidney Crosby doesn't have a concussion. Crosby's body isn't quite so sure.

The Pittsburgh Penguins superstar said Monday he's dealing with a recurrence of concussion-like symptoms and is out indefinitely.

Crosby, who missed more than 10 months after taking shots to the head in successive games in January, hasn't played since developing a headache following a 3-1 loss to Boston last week.

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"I ended up skating the following day after with a little bit exertion and it just didn't feel right," Crosby said. "After kind of talking with everyone it was better to be cautious here and not take any chances."

The 24-year-old former MVP passed an ImPACT test -- designed to diagnose concussions -- last Wednesday but didn't travel with the team on a road trip through Philadelphia and New York over the weekend.

Instead he remained in Pittsburgh hoping to play when the Penguins host Detroit on Tuesday, but those plans were scuttled when symptoms popped up over the weekend during what he called "light exertion."

Crosby stressed it wasn't back to square one but acknowledged it could be awhile before he plays. Though he is encouraged by the ImPACT results he allowed "the ImPACT isn't everything. You've got to listen to your body on these things too."

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It's unclear if one specific hit caused the symptoms to resurface, though Crosby pointed to a first-period collision with Boston's David Krejci as significant.

Krejci was digging for the puck in front of the Pittsburgh bench when Crosby closed in. The Boston forward spun just before Crosby arrived, with Krejci's left elbow appearing to knock Crosby off-balance as play continued.

Crosby didn't miss a shift, playing more than 21 minutes as the Penguins fell to the defending Stanley Cup champions.

"I know I got hit in the head there," Crosby said. "But I felt like I was pretty good after that. I didn't feel like it was anything too major but if you look at one hit ... that was a good one."

Pittsburgh coach Dan Bylsma refused to place the blame on Krejci but on the cumulative wear-and-tear that comes over the course of a game.

Crosby has 12 points in eight games but hasn't scored since finding the net twice in his electrifying debut against the New York Islanders on Nov. 21. The Penguins are 5-2-1 this season when their captain plays but have grown accustomed to going without him over the last year.

Kings fire Murray

LOS ANGELES -- Coach Terry Murray doesn't deserve the blame for the Los Angeles Kings' terrible start to a season of high expectations, according to general manager Dean Lombardi.

Yet Lombardi decided Murray had to pay for it anyway.

Los Angeles fired Murray and replaced him with assistant coach John Stevens, who will be the underachieving club's interim head coach when the Kings open a four-game road trip Tuesday in Boston.

Murray compiled the best winning percentage (.560) of any coach in franchise history.

But he clearly has struggled to reach his club, which is mired in mediocrity. Los Angeles has lost four straight to drop to 13-12-4.

Murray is the fifth coach to be fired already this season in the always-impatient NHL. He joins St. Louis' Davis Payne, Carolina's Paul Maurice, Washington's Bruce Boudreau and Anaheim's Randy Carlyle, who was replaced by Boudreau on Nov. 30.

Murray went 139-106-30 with the Kings after taking over the club in 2008

Murray is one victory shy of 500 in a coaching career that also included stops with Washington, Florida and Philadelphia.

First Published December 13, 2011, 5:17 a.m.

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Scoring champion Sidney Crosby, of the Pittsburgh Penguins, who led the NHL with 120 points, stands next to the Art Ross Trophy during awards ceremonies in Ottawa.  (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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