Here's a Paul Kariya article taken [illegally, most likely] from the AP. In other news, FOX Sports has inked a 5-year deal to televise NHL games. Check your local news for more info today. ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- As the most highly touted hockey hot shot to hit California since Wayne Gretzky, Paul Kariya will get pressure from all sides. He'll even get it from his parents. Kariya, 19, will earn $6.4 million over the next three years as the player to watch on the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. He'll make his NHL debut Tuesday night against the Dallas Stars in the Ducks' second exhibition game. Kariya's parents will be watching, too, especially to make sure he finishes the college degree he started with two years at the University of Maine and continued this summer by taking classes at Simon Fraser University. ``It's something I'm very serious about and certainly something my family's very serious about,'' said Kariya, who led Maine to its first NCAA title and was the first freshman to win the Hobey Baker Award as the top college player. ``My father is a teacher and my mother is a retired teacher, so, obviously, education is very important to us and I'm going to spend the time it takes to get my degree done,'' Kariya said. ``I'm two years into my degree, so I'm at that stage where I have to choose my major and get really serious about my studies.'' In the meantime, Ducks coach Ron Wilson expects the 5-foot-7, 175-pound left wing to get seriously tested by some of the NHL's top tough guys, but it's something the coach has already planned for. ``If you look down our bench, we've got three or four missile silos and my thumb's on the button,'' Wilson said. ``So, if anybody wants to play that game, we can certainly retaliate. That doesn't necessarily mean going after the people who go after Paul Kariya, but going after their best players, too.'' ``So I don't see that being a problem.'' The Ducks, who made Kariya the fourth overall pick in the 1993 draft, don't want to ask for -- or expect -- too much right away. ``When you make more than two million dollars a year, there's going to be pressure from outside sources,'' general manager Jack Ferreira acknowledged. ``I can't control that, but we're not going to put any undue pressure on him. We'll just let him go at his own pace. ``We're not going to expect him to come in and carry this franchise, initially. Eventually, he probably will be a cornerstone of this franchise.'' Kariya's versatility is something the Ducks will exploit right away. They had the weakest power play in the NHL last season and hope Kariya can help. To prepare for that, the left-handed shooter has spent a lot of time trying to develop a right-handed shot to make him dangerous from both sides. ``Guys like Chris Chelios do it in the NHL,'' he said, ``and it's one extra thing that make add five or six more goals a year and maybe make the difference between making the playoffs or not.'' John Haeussler Univ of Michigan