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Getting To Know: Neil Sheehy

Mark Malinowski, The Hockey News, 2011-10-16


Status: NHL defenseman from 1984-1992 with Calgary, Hartford, Washington. He had 65 points in 379 career NHL games. Sheehy is currently an NHL player agent.

Ht: 6-foot-2 Wt: 214 pounds

DOB: Feb. 9, 1960 In: Fort Frances, Ont.

First Hockey Memory: "Going to the outdoor rink with my brother and carrying my hockey equipment in a pillowcase (laughs)."

Nicknames: “‘Harv’ from Colin Patterson, because I went to Harvard. I tried to dub him 'Clark' because he went to Clarkson, but it didn't stick. 'Shee Cat' - from Terry Crisp.”

Hobbies/Leisure Activities: “I have nine children, so I guess looking after kids. Family and job is pretty well taking up my days."

Favorite Movies: "Braveheart."

Hockey Inspirations: "Probably my brother Tim, who won three high school championships in Minnesota and played in four championship games. He went on to play on the Olympic team that silver medaled in Sapporo, Japan."

First Job: "Pedaling newspapers - the International Falls Daily Journal."

First Car: "1968 Mercury Cougar (white)."

Favorite Ice Cream Flavor: "Mint chocolate chip."

Current Car: "BMW X5."

Greatest Sports Moment: "Beating the great Edmonton Oilers in Game 7 in Northlands Coliseum in Edmonton. They were the two-time defending Stanley Cup champs."

Most Painful Moment: "I never looked at any hockey experience as painful...it was just great experiences. Maybe having back-to-back injuries - breaking my ankle and leg and then herniating a disc in my lower back. Knowing the career was coming to an end. (How did you break the leg and ankle?) In a fight in Orlando for an exhibition game. During the fight my leg snapped. Just broke. (Against who?) Mike Hartman."

Favorite Uniforms: "I would have to say...I just love the traditional Boston Bruins. Either Boston or Chicago Blackhawks. "

Closest Hockey Friends: "Gary Suter."

Funniest Players Encountered: "A guy by the name of Charlie Bourgeois. A great, great guy. Extremely funny."

Toughest Competitors: "Certainly Mark Messier. And which Sutter was the captain of St. Louis? (Brian.) Brian Sutter was a warrior. And then - those guys were tough competitors - then the other would be Behn Wilson. He was a tough guy."

Most Memorable Goal: "This is a good story actually. I forget his first name. He played in Vancouver and St. Louis. (Dave Lowry.) Yes. He was chirpin' me. I said, 'Let's go, let's fight.' Lowry didn't want to fight. He said, 'Why would I fight you? You're the last guy that would ever score a goal.' This was right before the faceoff. Then after the faceoff, the puck comes to me, I carried it in and shot it and scored. All the guys come to me to celebrate. I'm looking for Lowry. (I said), 'Wanna fight now!? I'm the last guy to score a goal!' The timing was impeccable. The game was in St. Louis. (Remember his reaction?) He said, 'Boy, are you cocky.' Cocky? Let's fight now. The last guy to score a goal! But we never fought."

Last Book Read: "Whatever Happened To Penny Candy by Richard Mabure."

Funny Hockey Memory: "Teammates play jokes, practical jokes. When you're on plane trips or bus trips, if you fall asleep, they put shaving cream on the top of your head. If you fall asleep and your mouth is open, they put things in it. One time we took a charter from Calgary to another city, I don't remember which one. Paul Baxter was my teammate. I woke up and my shoe was gone. And I was the last one on the plane. But I looked and found my shoe in the cabinet. But I wanted to find who the culprit was, who took my shoe. I got off the plane and hopped on one leg to the bus. All the guys are hootin' and hollerin' - I don't have my shoe. The bus is ready to roll. Hold on! Paul Baxter said, 'You don't have your shoe?' Paul Baxter stops the bus. He goes back on the plane. I yelled to everyone, 'Here's my shoe.' Then Baxter comes back on the bus and they're all hootin' and hollerin' at him. Laughter at his expense. It showed to me he was a good teammate. He didn't let the bus go off. He actually stopped the bus; he didn't want me to lose my shoe. It was one of those moments when the whole team had a lot of belly laughs."

Embarrassing Hockey Memory: "There was a new blade called 'Switch-Its.' You could unscrew it and slip on a Rollerblade. I knew the guy who invented it. I was wearing it in the NHL. I went to hit a guy in Los Angeles. I fell on the ice. I go to get up and there's no blade on my one skate. I'm in the corner, telling the referee to blow the whistle but he didn't. I'm at the glass - there's a guy looking and pointing at me - Sylvester Stallone. He's laughing. I stand up on one leg. I kinda knock on the glass and kinda wave at him. I had to awkwardly walk off the ice with one blade to our bench, which was on the opposite side. That was kind of embarrassing."

Strangest Game: "Probably, Miracle Monday in St. Louis. After we beat Edmonton in the playoffs, St. Louis was waiting for us. They won the first game in Calgary. We came back. It was Game 6 in St. Louis and we were up 5-2 with about eight minutes to go. It looked like we were going to win it. But they got one goal, then a second goal, then they tied it up and won in overtime. They staved off elimination. We had to go back to Calgary for Game 7, to see who would play in the final. They call it Miracle Monday in St. Louis. That St. Louis Budweiser song rang in our heads all the way back to Calgary."

Favorite Sport Outside Hockey: "Hockey. Is there really any other sport?"

Favorite Players To Watch: "I love to watch Sidney Crosby, obviously, when he's playing. I love to watch Zach Parise. I love to watch Ryan Suter. The guys I like to watch most are my clients: Ryan Suter is my client. Ryan Carter. Jake Dowell in Dallas. Jack Hillen and Colin Wilson in Nashville. Matt Niskanen and Craig Adams in Pittsburgh. Jason Blake in Anaheim. Toby Peterson in Dallas. Lubomir Visnovsky in Anaheim. Nick Leddy in Chicago. Matt Reid in Philadelphia. Drew Stafford in Buffalo. Kyle Okposo with New York Islanders."

Personality Qualities Most Admired: "Honesty and loyalty."


Dean
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Craig Rivet happy to keep playing hockey

David Shoalts, Globe and Mail, October 17, 2011


Former NHL defenceman Craig Rivet was featured in an item in Monday’s Look Ahead page and there is a much longer piece on him that is worth pursuing.

Rivet, who finished off a four-year contract worth $14-million (all currency U.S.) last season and found no NHL takers for his services, is now making $850 a week in the ECHL, two rungs below the big league. But he says he couldn’t be happier.

My pal Bucky Gleason of The Buffalo News has the story and it’s a good read. It’s also a look at a bit of a phenomenon in recent years, the athlete who can comfortably finish out his playing days at a lower level without the pressure to perform that comes with a job in the NHL because he has no financial worries.

Back in the day, a staple of the sports writing game was the feature on the washed-up big leaguer who fell all the way down to the low minor leagues. Those stories were all about the quiet desperation of an aging player who wanted to get back to the big time and the big money.

Hockey was slower to come to the big money than the other professional sports. But in the last 15 years or so there’s been a rise in what you could call the leisure class – ex-players who don’t need to earn a living when their NHL career ends.

Funny thing, though. People like Rivet are still relatively rare, those who play simply for the fun of it. While there are quite a few ex-NHLers playing in the American Hockey League, almost all of them are playing out the final years of a big-money contract an NHL general manager gave them. There are also lots playing in the European leagues but the money there is much better than in the ECHL, where the average salary is $620 a week.


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Former NHLer Ron Stern wants to help players adjust to life after pro hockey

By Mike Boone, Postmedia News, October 17, 2011


What happens to professional hockey players after the cheering stops?

Much ink and airtime have been expended on post-mortem speculation as to what bedevilled Derek Boogaard, Rick Rypien and Wade Belak. We may never know which demons dropped their gloves with the deceased NHL tough guys, but a common thread is the difficulty of facing life after hockey - and that is not a problem restricted to enforcers.

Ron Stern is a former NHL heavyweight. The six-foot, 195-pound Stern took on all comers and amassed more than 2,000 penalty minutes in 12 seasons with Vancouver, Calgary and San Jose.

During a phone conversation from his home in Calgary, Stern said most retired players take three to five years to find something they enjoy doing. A period of “emotional transition” can be difficult.

“Some guys get divorced and lose more than half of their money,” Stern says. “They get into drinking because they're unhappy, or drugs. They get into some sort of depression.

“It's the same challenge for wives. They're used to a certain lifestyle. The player is never around, she can do what she wants. Retirement changes the whole environment.

“The kids wonder, ‘why is dad so grouchy?' It's because he doesn't know what to do when he grows up.”

Three years ago, Stern got involved in Octane Mentoring, a program aimed at pro athletes. Recently, through former teammate Jim Peplinski, Stern hooked up with remBrand Sports, a “coaching/mentoring program built by athletes for athletes with a vision of helping athletes transition from ‘the locker-room to the board room.' ”

RBS works with active athletes to establish an off-ice identity through philanthropy, speaking engagements, etc. The goal, Stern says, is to help a player develop “what he wants to be known as, who he wants to tie himself to.”

The combination of mentoring and branding advice aims to prevent players from finding themselves at a loss after hockey.

Stern is 44. He grew up St. Adolphe d'Howard, Que., and played junior hockey in Longueuil, Que., before being drafted by Vancouver in 1986.

Seven seasons in Calgary were the lengthiest stop on Stern's NHL tour. After a back injury forced his retirement in 2000, he worked briefly in investment banking in San Jose before moving back to Canada and finding a job in sales for Precision Drilling, a Calgary company that services the oil and gas exploration industries.

“You've had a coach for 25 years,” he says of his adjustment to civilian lifestyle. “The coach has told you when to eat, when to drink, how hard to work, when to go to sleep and what to do.

“It's a simple game to play: you work hard, you listen, you learn and you keep doing what they ask you to do.”

Retirement means the end of that routine. The readjustment can be difficult for someone who punched a factory clock for 40 years, and it can be particularly challenging for someone who is 35 to 40 years old and accustomed to the high-flying life of a professional hockey player.

“You kind of lose your sense of direction,” Stern says.

He took courses and tried investment banking in San Jose and Calgary before deciding it wasn't his thing. Stern had friends in the oil and gas industry. He made some phone calls, expressed a willingness to learn the business and landed on his feet, doing something he enjoys.

But it's not hockey. Former players who are out of the game - as opposed to the fortunate few who get into coaching or scouting - can find themselves missing the camaraderie of the dressing room and a support system that extends beyond team management.

“You've always had a lawyer, you've always had an accountant and a financial planner,” Stern said. “If you needed it, you had a psychologist or therapist. There's always someone there, but there's no one who pulls all those things together.

“If I'm struggling in hockey, keep missing the net - and I did that a lot in my career - you can stay out late at practice and work on it. You do extra work three days in a row and you can feel good about yourself going into a game.

“In the corporate world, the goals tend to be a lot further out. You might want to be the CEO, but that's a way longer process and you have to put the pieces of the puzzle together in order to get there.”

There are resources.

The NHLPA and teams' alumni organizations run various life-after-hockey programs to ease and guide a player's transition to civilian life. Stern thinks players need help in navigating the maze of resources and developing a plan for what to do with the rest of their lives. There are questions to be answered.

“Do I need to go back to school? Do I want to?” he says. “Am I going to be passionate about starting a business degree at 35 and getting it at 39?

“What gets you out of bed every morning excited about going to work?”


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Tootoo growin' up

By DEREK VAN DIEST, QMI Agency, Oct 17 2011


EDMONTON - Jordin Tootoo’s career has at times been more akin to a rollercoaster than a train.

The Nashville Predators winger has come a long way since making his debut as the first person of Inuit decent to play in the National Hockey League.

The road hasn’t always been smooth, but heading into this season, Tootoo finds himself in a better place both on and off the ice.

“When Jordin came into the league, he was a big impact, run around, energy type of player,” said Predators head coach Barry Trotz. “He now has a bit more reliable game, he has a little bit more structure to his game, he has more dependability.

“What we are allowing him to do is grow as a player, but before he could grow as a player, he had to get his life in order and he did that. To me that’s the toughest thing that anybody has to do in their life, he had to change 360 and if you talk to Jordin, he’s very proud that he was able to do that. When you’re not in order, it’s tough to get through to people. It was tough to get through to him. But there’s a difference now, his antics are different and therefore his actions are better.”

Last season the product of Rankin Inlet, Nunavut, realized he needed help battling inner demons and voluntarily checked himself into the NHL’s substance abuse program to conquer an alcohol problem.

He came back a different person and a different player.

“It’s like a computer, he got the clutter out and defragged, now he can grow and the memory bank is working really well and he processes well and his game is growing,” said Trotz. “He’s always had a skill level, when he played in Brandon, he was offensive player that also had that ability to break you in half when he hit you.

“He still has that ability and his game is growing. He’s a player that you have to watch in the next couple of years and see where he takes it.”

Tootoo, 28, was selected by the Predators in the fourth round — 98 overall — of the 2001 NHL Entry Draft.

Always a fan favourite as a member of the WHL’s Brandon Wheat Kings, his popularity peaked as a member of the Canadian World Junior team, earning the ‘Tootoo Train’ nickname due to his penchant for running over opponents.

In Nashville fans still blow train whistles every time he’s on the ice.

Tootoo made his debut with the Predators at the start of the 2003-2004 season.

Last year he scored eight goals and collected 10 assists in 54 games before going into the substance abuse program. He rejoined the Predators in the playoffs.

Tootoo went into Monday’s game against the Oilers with an assist in four games. He went in as a different player from the one that used to simply run around the ice looking for the big hit.

“As the years go on, you mature as a player and obviously the game has changed a little bit,” Tootoo said. “For me personally, there is always things to work on. For me, it’s about being patient with the puck. I know I have the ability to be effective with without the puck.

“My foundation is being a physical presence, I’m not going to shy away from that. At the same time, you have to pick and chose your spots. I realize that and fortunately, I have the ability where I can utilize other aspects of my game as well.”


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Reconstruction project:
Komisarek has shown signs of improvement this season for the Maple Leafs.



Michael Grange, Sportsnet.ca, October 17 2011


After a disappointing season, The Building decided to renovate.

At 6-foot-3 and somewhere between 240 and 250 pounds, Mike Komisarek's nickname was both obvious and -- in theory --complimentary.

Tough to move. Like hitting a building. Big. All the good stuff.

But the corollary wasn't thought through perhaps, or at least maybe it was the rare hockey nickname tinged with a sly dose of irony.

Komisarek's a building all right, as in: stands still, hard to go through but easy enough to go around; that kind of thing.

Not necessarily ideal qualities for a defenseman in the go-go NHL.

The Toronto Maple Leafs season-opening winning streak was snapped at three as they lost 3-2 in overtime to the Colorado Avalanche at the Air Canada Centre, but the reconstruction of Komisarek's career continues.

One of the big positives on Monday night? He wasn't on the ice when head coach Ron Wilson's impromptu pairing of Cody Franson and John-Michael Liles (they'd never played together in a 4-on-4 situation) got tied up in their own end and allowed Colarado's David Jones to sneak in behind them to score the winner on James Reimer who was out-dueled by his former teammate and mentor Jean-Sebastien Giguere.

Maybe he should have been out there -- a thought that would have been banished a season ago.

In general, Komisarek's been holding his own on the crowded Leafs blue line, where the fierce competition has put training camp favourite Jake Gardiner in the press box the last two games in place of Franson.

It's a scenario that will remain fluid until someone gets hurt or a trade is made..

Komisarek's 23 shifts and 15:40 minutes of ice time were a far-cry from Dion Phaneuf's game-high 28:04, but it put him ahead of Luke Schenn who lagged behind Leafs defenders with just 14:21 minutes of ice time.

With the Leafs trailing 2-1 heading into the third period, it figured Wilson would turn to his more offensive-minded rear guards and away from Komisarek, or Schenn for that matter.

"You need some offence in that situation," said Wilson. "You're not looking for plays off the glass."

Playing it off the glass is a specialty of Komisarek's, part of the keep-it-simple-style when he plays at his best.

Whether that's great value for a seven-year veteran in the midst of a five-year, $22.5 million contract is another matter. The deal is cited so often as an example of Leaf president Brian Burke's folly that it's become a stand-alone adjective.

Say you're trying to describe a piece of furniture that overfills a room and serves no useful purpose -- just compare it to Komisarek's contract and everyone will instantly understand.

But after four games the contract known as Komisarek is showing some signs of being a hockey player again. The result, he says, of an off-season spent trying to get quicker and smaller.

Sometimes it looked like the renovation had paid dividends, like when he raced the length of the ice in the second period to knock Joakim Lindstrom off the puck as he was in deep on Reimer.

Other times he looked as rooted as ever, as when rookie Gabriel Landeskog raced by him so quickly Komisarek got his feet tangled on his pivot and was on his back about the time that Landeskog was breaking in on Reimer, who made the second-period stop.

His nickname is a little less apt this year, he feels, because he got out of the weight room and onto the soccer fields and running tracks in Long Island this past summer.

"I wanted to get back to being more of an athlete," he said

After skating in the mornings he and a group of local NHL players, college players and minor-league pros would gather behind Hauppage High School for sprints, hurdles, and plyometrics before taking sides for footie.

"Soccer was the first sport I played," he said. "I played indoor soccer; I played year-round. We played a ton this past summer, at least two, three times a week."

And unlike his on-ice persona, Komisarek's not just a thumper in cleats.

"You'd be surprised," he said of his soccer skills. "I can dish it out there."

Among the themes of the early part of the season to date is how Leafs head coach Ron Wilson is going to sort through the traffic jam of defencemen he has on his blue line.

So far Komisarek has emerged from last year's doghouse with regular appearances on the penalty kill and as the steadying veteran hand alongside Franson, who replaced Gardiner in the lineup again on Monday night.

"He's a good player, it doesn't take long to figure out where he's going to move out there and I think we play well together," said Franson.

He's hardly perfect, and as furniture goes he still looks a bit less then you'd expect for the $4.5 million cap hit he represents this season and the next two to come. But Komisarek insists he remains a worthy reclamation project deserving of a place on a Leafs blueline, which remains a group that's still a work-in-progress.

"I want to return to the dominant force I was a few years ago," he says. "I'm definitely not there yet but I want to be key contributor on a playoff team and I feel like I'm headed in that direction."


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Kennedy: Nineteen-year-old draft makes little sense

Ryan Kennedy, The Hockey News, 2011-10-19


Bob Nicholson made a lot of waves this weekend when he brought up the idea of the NHL going to a 19-year-old draft and though I believe the Hockey Canada president has the best of intentions, I still don’t see the point.

Some have claimed Nicholson simply wants the Canadian League and, by extension, Canada’s world junior team, to benefit from an extra year of service from stars such as Ryan Nugent-Hopkins or Jeff Skinner. But an examination of what Nicholson is actually proposing puts that fire out quickly.

For legal reasons (see Ken Linseman’s WHA lawsuit), the NHL can’t ban 18-year-olds from service and Nicholson has noted an exceptional player – or perhaps all 30 kids picked in the first round of the draft – would be exempted from the age hike.

Which kind of brings the whole notion into question. Under this new system, Nugent-Hopkins and Skinner would still have been NHL rookies at 18. Really, the crackdown would only affect a player such as Ryan O’Reilly, who beat the odds in 2009 by going from the second round of the draft straight to the Colorado Avalanche.

O’Reilly, in fact, is the perfect example of why this proposal is flawed. The Colorado center earned his roster spot thanks to dogged two-way play, earning a defensive role on the team’s third line and helping the young Avs to a surprise berth in the playoffs. Despite his youth, he was trusted with nearly 17 minutes of ice time a game – about a minute less on average than fellow 18-year-old Matt Duchene, who also did big things for Colorado that year.

The fact is the NHL is already governed by a process that sends teens back to junior if they’re not ready – it’s called natural selection. Jonathan Huberdeau looks like a world-beater with a great future as a member of the Florida Panthers, but GM Dale Tallon also saw a kid who needs to pack on some meat to his frame. No worries. Huberdeau simply returned to the Quebec League’s Saint John Sea Dogs, who become a very real possibility to repeat as Memorial Cup champs thanks to his return, as well as welcoming back fellow first-rounders Nathan Beaulieu and Zack Phillips to the fold.

Smart GMs know when to bring a kid along. The New Jersey Devils, for example, have mined the NCAA for talent to great success over the years both via draft and free agency and have a pretty simple policy to ensure the best odds of success: “We never encourage a player to leave college early,” said GM Lou Lamoriello.

To be sure, players have been rushed to the NHL. But much like overpayment in free agency, you cannot save owners and GMs from themselves. In general, draft selections are getting much better as time goes on and that will help the process. This year, seven of the top eight picks (Huberdeau was the exception at No. 3) made their team’s opening season rosters. Ryan Strome of the Islanders didn’t end up playing, but New York rightly felt the atmosphere-soaking would help in the long run before he was returned to junior.

Go back to 2006 and a top five of Erik Johnson, Jordan Staal, Jonathan Toews, Nicklas Backstrom and Phil Kessel still looks pretty solid. But delve further and you’ll come across the 1989 draft, when the first nine defensemen taken were Adam Bennett, Doug Zmolek, Jason Herter, Jason Marshall, Linsay Vallis, Kevin Haller, Jason Soules, Jamie Heward and Steve Bancroft. The first blueliner taken in the second round? Adam Foote. Nicklas Lidstrom was taken in the third round that year, 53rd overall. Back in 1985, the first three centers selected were Dan Gratton, Ryan Stewart and Glen Seabrooke. Joe Nieuwendyk went 27th that year.

So let’s just accept that with players getting better prepared for the NHL life at an earlier age and teams getting better at choosing the truly elite, things are probably fine when it comes to the draft age.


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Changing demographics a warning sign for NHL

QMI Agency, Oct 19 2011



NHL hockey teams need to keep an eye on Canada's changing demographics, as new immigrants and an aging population boost the popularity of games such as soccer and baseball, the Conference Board of Canada said in a report.

It is the latest in a Conference Board series called Playing in the Big League, which looks at what it takes for a professional sports team to make money.

All professional sports leagues need to be aware of how demographics and consumer tastes are evolving in their markets, the report said. For example, NHL teams may need to tweak their marketing to retain older fans, who may be turned off by the speed and violence of the game, it said.

Likewise, they need to recognize the increasingly large immigrant population, especially in large cities such as Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal. About 40% of Toronto residents were born outside of the country.

"For many, soccer is their team sport," said the report. "Ignoring the demographic reality today could hurt the financial viability of professional sports teams in the future."

Strong management and quality facilities are also key factors that can contribute to a team's financial success.

The report points to the Ottawa Rough Riders as an example of how poor management helped bring down a successful sports franchise. The team's winning streak began to fade in the late 1970s, and they had their last winning season in 1979.

"While many of the elements for on- and off-field success remained in place into the 1980s, looking back, it is clear to see that the changes in ownership and management during this period were turning points for the franchise," the report said.

The club eventually folded in 1996.

Location is also a major key to success, the report said. The lack of a baseball-specific stadium wasn't the only factor in the demise of the Montreal Expos, but it did play a part, the report said.

The team was playing in Montreal's Olympic Stadium, which was not designed for the sport. The crowd was far from the field and the sightlines were poor.

However, when it comes to financial performance, a winning team may be the best boost for the bottom line.

"People love a winner, and putting together a competitive team will sustain and grow fan interest," the report said, adding even non-fans will enjoy the atmosphere a winning team generates within a community.


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Juniors deserve slice of the money pie

By RYAN PYETTE, QMI Agency, Oct 19 2011


It's fitting the Canadian Hockey League announced a sponsorship agreement with a big bank this week.

Because it's time to pay its players.

There's no longer any reason to hide behind the facade of amateurism since the NCAA saw through that many moons ago. The time has come for the kids to be compensated for the entertainment, time and risk they invest into making the OHL, QMJHL and WHL the best pipeline of big-league hockey talent in the world.

Thirty years ago, it probably wasn't feasible for a lot of mom-and-pop team owners to pony up the dough and stay afloat.

But the junior hockey world today, as overseen by David Branch, is big business.

Most of its owners are wealthy and some teams are more profitable and valuable than clubs in the American Hockey League, and most certainly, the minor pros.

That old stipend of $50 a week to players is a joke in today's game.

The players don't just help their teams by scoring goals or preventing them. They are recruited to meet with fans, shill for sponsors, perform for scouts, speak to a hungrier media, visit school children and hospitals, submit to drug testing and forego potentially lucrative summer jobs so that they can pay personal trainers to get them ready for the upcoming season.

On the whim of one GM who needs one more power forward for a Memorial Cup run or another who wants a few more draft picks, they can be uprooted from school and shipped to another club to start over again.

They are also subject to career-ending injuries -- just like the pros, only minus the hefty paycheques.

Now, it can be argued the players get compensated for their services in a roundabout way when their agents negotiate scholarship packages with teams before setting foot on CHL ice.

But that's where the money becomes a shell game.

There are strings attached to that cash.

The pro dream can only be pursued for 18 months before the education dollars agreement is rescinded. There are some teams -- though the owners obviously won't admit to it publicly -- who pay the way for some former players to go to school because the clock had already struck midnight on their CHL deal.

There are residency limits on your scholarship. If you're a U.S. player, want to go to a program at Penn State and live in Ann Arbor, Mich., you're going to get tuition, books and fees for the closest institution (in that case, University of Michigan).

The OHL claims to ante up for all post-secondary schooling while their older players are still in the league. But with his hockey schedule, what skater has time for more than a course or two?

Then, there are players who simply won't be heading to school when they're done. That's their choice.

But say they played five years in the OHL? Shouldn't they have earned a little something for their sacrifices to put a down payment on a house?

The simple answer is to make the school money guaranteed.

Give a kid the scholarship maximum $7,600 for each full season played. If you're paying 25 guys, that's $190,000 per team, but more if you sign U.S. players. The league and owners can afford it.

If they can't, sell or slash the stick budget and go back to wood. That will put a dent in the expenses.

Cynics look at the more lucrative teams and say: "They've been paying star players for years. What would change?'

Well, prove it. Hire a forensic accountant. And if everyone's getting something, isn't that better than some kids getting nothing?

A couple of years ago at the Memorial Cup in Rimouski, a handful of star players on the host team zipped around town in cars with their names and numbers on them.

Some might look at that as a violation. Others might see great advertising.

For the players, it should be viewed as a nice place to start.


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Out of the playoffs in November?

Gregg Drinnan, Taking Note, Oct 18 2011


As play resumed in the WHL on Tuesday, the Calgary Hitmen and Lethbridge Hurricanes were five points out of the Eastern Conference’s last playoff spot.

Is it already too late? One might think not so, at least not this early into the season. After all, the Hitmen had played seven games, the Hurricanes 12.

However, with the advent of the three-point game, it would seem that conventional thinking is beginning to change.

Elliotte Friedman of Hockey Night in Canada leads his weekly blog entry with thoughts on the subject.

———

Friedman begins:

A few years ago, I was chatting with a GM about a team that started the NHL season very nicely.

"I believe in the 10-game rule," he snorted. "You don't get a true sense of a team in the first 10 games. I don't put too much into a hot or cold start."

Well, he's modified that stance — slightly.

"With the three-point games, teams can't win the Stanley Cup in the first 10 games of the season," he said. "But they sure can lose it that quickly."

———

Friedman then spent some time working with the NHL standings in seasons since the lockout. What he learned is frightful if you’re on a team that falls too far off the pace in the early going.

He used Nov. 1 as the cutoff date and discovered that if a team is more than three points out of a playoff spot at that point the chances are slim that it will make up the lost ground.

Two teams were able to do it; 27 others failed. That’s right . . . 27!

“The Buffalo Sabres were four points in arrears on Nov. 1, 2011,” Friedman writes. “But that's absolutely cozy compared to the Calgary Flames, who were seven back on Nov. 1, 2007. Those recoveries are impressive, considering 27 other clubs failed to make the playoffs in the past six seasons when falling four points behind by that date.

“So, that's something to keep an eye on. If your team is two wins out of the playoffs at the beginning of November, the three-point games give it a seven per cent chance of recovery.”

Friedman’s weekly piece — and it should be a must visit for hockey fans — is right here.

———

For what it’s worth, I went back to the WHL standings over the last four seasons to see what was what as of Nov. 1. Yes, it is a small sample size, but that is as long as the present playoff format has been in play.

Over those four seasons, 12 teams were at least four points out of a playoff spot on Nov. 1. Only two — the Spokane Chiefs and Kelowna Rockets, both last season — were able to climb out of the hole and qualify for the playoffs.

Last season, on Nov. 1, Spokane was four points and Kelowna six out of eighth place in the Western Conference.

On Nov. 1, 2007, there were four teams at least four points back — Portland in the Western Conference; Prince Albert, Red Deer and Saskatoon in Eastern Conference. Not one of those four teams qualified for postseason play.

It will be interesting to see what the standings look like on Nov. 1 of this year and then to look back at season’s end and see what’s what.


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SJHL eyeing new western championship

Estevan Mercury Sports, October 19, 2011


It has long been rumoured that the SJHL would be part of a new venture taking the four western Junior A hockey leagues out of the RBC Cup and into a new western championship.

The Mercury has obtained a document outlining the strategic plan for such a move, to begin in time for the 2012-13 season.

Phone calls to SJHL president Bill Chow were not returned.

The proposed new format would see the four leagues – the BCHL, AJHL, SJHL and MJHL – governed under the terms of the Junior A Supplement and would allow them to begin their regular season later in September, ending in March.

According to the document, a major reason for the change is to get away from Hockey Canada’s overbearing rules for hosting tournaments, which restrict profit for the host community by forcing them to change most or all of their advertising to Hockey Canada sponsors.

The document cites “Hockey Canada exclusivities” and “administrative fees for event management” among the reasons for taking this initiative.

It also stipulates that the leagues would maintain their membership in the CJAHL as well as the World Junior A Challenge and annual prospects game.

It also says that the four western leagues “shall remain open to the principle of a national championship if the dates and format can be worked out.”

The schedule proposed in the strategic plan would see the western championship played during the first week in May, with an equal rotation among the four leagues.

The proposed format would also do away with the current regional championships, the ANAVET Cup for Saskatchewan and Manitoba, and the Doyle Cup for Alberta and B.C.

A section of the plan titled “threats” lists possible resistance from Hockey Canada and its sponsors, particularly RBC, and push back from the eastern leagues, as items to consider.

A running theme throughout the strategic plan is putting teams on strong economic standing, with part of the mission statement aimed at “creating economic wealth and team stability.”

The proposal includes a plan to hold the inaugural western championship in May 2013 and, within the next two or three years, finalize the rotation for the first four years, through 2016, with the event being hosted by each of the four leagues in that time.


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Getting better with age: Under Nicholson's proposal, the top players in the draft will need an exemption or they will have to wait a year.

Patrick King | October 20, 2011


Bob Nicholson doesn't have to look too far to find support for his proposal to move the draft age back a year.

The president of Hockey Canada presented a nine-page document to the National Hockey League Players' Association outlining reasons it would be beneficial to change the eligible age of the draft on the weekend. As the biggest feeder league to the NHL, the response from teams in the Canadian Hockey League appears in favour of the new proposal, even if it does open itself up to new conversations.

"I think there's merit to what Bob's talking about," said Bob Tory, general manager of the Tri-City Americans. "He's looking at the big picture on the process of development and making sure that maybe we can develop better players not only for world junior teams, but for the NHL as well."

The new proposal would indicate junior teams would have a tighter grasp on their players and obtain three years of service, as opposed to just two under the current rules. The outlined proposal, however, also includes an opportunity for the very best players to achieve "exceptional player" status, similarly to how the Ontario Hockey League instituted such status in 2005 to allow John Tavares to play in the league at 15.

In many cases, 18-year-olds are not making the jump straight into the NHL with the exception of players drafted first-overall. Many of those players end up playing immediately, which would not be excluded under the new proposal. In that sense, nothing would really change for the few junior franchises that are already losing 18-year-olds to the NHL.

"If you're drafting early and you're drafting a kid in the top of your junior draft, in many cases you're planning that he's not going to be with you in his 19-year-old year," explained George Burnett, head coach and general manager of the Belleville Bulls. "It's certainly a big adjustment and a hole to fill when you lose them at 18."

"It's a tremendous blow to a junior team when you lose an underage (18-year-old) player because you can't replace them," Tory added. "Those guys are your best player and they sell tickets for you."

The possibility of having three years of service from a top player will always be embraced by a junior team. But it's also practically a moot point for a junior team in most cases, since most of the players that leave junior for pro early are 19 and not 18. Only the very best make the jump at 18, and those players would fall under the exceptional player status anyways.

By moving the draft back a year, even then the change wouldn't be dramatic for junior teams that are consistently losing players at 19. The Windsor Spitfires, for example, lost two last season with Taylor Hall and Cam Fowler. Three years earlier, Josh Bailey left at 19.

"If you move it all the way to three years, you might as well move it to four and we'd have Hall and Fowler last year," Spitfires general manager Warren Rychel said. "If it was a four-year draft, then you wouldn't lose anybody."

Saying that, Rychel isn't suggesting adding another year to the one proposed by Nicholson. Although his team could benefit from the new proposal, he didn't feel a change was necessary to the current system. As a former scout with the Phoenix Coyotes, he doesn't believe much changes in evaluating talent for the NHL in that year.

"One extra year doesn't matter," he said. "Two does for sure."

And that, of course, may be one of the main reasons in changing the draft age. It's easy to look back on the draft's mistakes. Every team has at least one they'd love to take a mulligan on.

"It will be good for NHL teams because I think that will increase the value of their draft," explained Andre Tourigny, head coach and general manager of the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies. "They will make less mistakes. I think it could be good for everybody."

Many of those mistakes come in the form of rushing players. Nicholson mentioned how this new proposal could slow the process down and give players a better chance at making an impact once they do become regular NHLers.

"I'd like to see a study of how many 19-year-olds played in the NHL and then were in the American league at 20 or 21," Tory said.

Bailey would fall into that group after spending 11 games in Bridgeport last season. As would James Wright, who made the jump to Tampa Bay in 2009, only to find his way back to junior. Now he's a regular AHLer.

Besides the obvious advantages for junior teams, another advantage would be for the players, who are not yet old enough to drink in most provinces, let alone the United States, at the time they're drafted.

"What will help is to keep the player on the edge for an extra year," Tourigny said. "We might keep the motivation for the player higher."

"Hockey's a very difficult game," Tory added. "It's very difficult to make a living at and that's why they make a very good living because they need to learn how to deal with adversity in hockey and it's constant.

"They want to get there so quickly they don't realize that there's steps involved in the process that would allow them to get there as a better player and a more complete player. We seem to be fast-tracking everything we do in society now and I don't know if that's the best situation."

A more concrete, three-year window in junior will never be shooed away by those in the CHL. Hall repeatedly talked about his late birth-date, which enabled him to play three years in Windsor, as an advantage for him.

Would Hall have been in the NHL at 18 if he was born two months earlier? Without a doubt.

"Selfishly from the junior side, it's a tremendous opportunity for stabilizing your franchise when you have elite players that you know are going to be there at 18, but plan for them not to be there at 19," Burnett said.

"If you've proven all you can in junior hockey after three years and an NHL team steps up and drafts you in the top 10, you're all set," Rychel said.

As much as losing a player like Steven Stamkos or Ryan Nugent-Hopkins can be devastating for a junior franchise -- two examples of players that made the jump at 18 -- it's clear they're the exception to the rule.

"There's always going to be those elite players that I don't think should be denied that opportunity if in fact they're ready," Tory said. "You can also make just as many arguments of guys who went on at 19 and ended up in the American league at 20 or 21 that probably weren't ready and probably went too early."

It's far from a perfect system, but the new proposal appears to be well-received by most in the junior world.


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NHL takes small step toward solving its TV problem in Europe

David Shoalts, Globe and Mail, October 20, 2011


The NHL took a small step toward solving its TV problem in Europe Thursday, with the emphasis on small.

The league announced it has reached an agreement with Modern Times Group, a television company based in Stockholm, to show all NHL regular-season and playoff games in Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway. But hockey fans in continental Europe and Russia remain without access to games on television two weeks after the season started and they continue to express their outrage on the social networks.

While the multi-year agreement with MTG is good news for the large number of fans in Scandinavia, there is a catch. Most of the games will be shown on pay-TV channels operated by MTG and only “certain games” will be available on free channels, according to an NHL press release.

At this point, the only way for European fans outside of the Nordic countries to watch NHL games is on their computers if they subscribe to the league’s video-streaming service.

The problem started when the NHL, figuring it could make lots more money from European television, did not renew its deal with ESPN America when it expired after last season. The U.S. cable television giant was the only carrier for all European countries.

Instead, the NHL formed a partnership with two companies, Medge Consulting and Advisers Media International. Neither company owns television networks or stations but both were to act as third parties selling the NHL rights in Europe, Africa and the Middle East to a variety of television networks.

This meant the NHL went from a single outlet in those regions, ESPN, to different outlets in almost every country, which also meant negotiating multiple deals. Naturally, the process dragged on and now only the Nordic countries have the games on TV and other European and Russian fans are steaming.

The idea from the NHL’s side was to tailor each television package to each region. So if a few NHL teams had lots of Swedish players, more games from those teams would be shown in Sweden.

Also, ESPN often showed NHL games only on cable packages that cost more for the viewer. In addition to wanting more money for its rights, the NHL was also hoping carriers in some countries would put at least some games on cheaper or free channels.

But the complexity of doing multiple deals left the NHL without anything to offer its European fans once the season started. At this point, it’s not clear when those fans will get to legally watch hockey on anything other than their computers.


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Barilko's plane finally arrives home

KEN PAGAN, QMI Agency, Oct 20 2011


COCHRANE, Ont. -- Sandra Cattarello, 71, is resting against a fallen tree perhaps sheared by the single-engine floatplane — now scattered before her eyes — which carried her cousin 60 years ago.

It is a well-deserved rest. She just completed a challenging two-hour trek through more than a kilometre of deep muskeg and thick spruce forest in cold wind and rain.

Cattarello came to the middle of remote bush 80 km north of Cochrane on a once-in-a-lifetime excursion with 15 others. She has just finished leading the group in prayer, honouring the two men who died here in 1951.

The first family member to ever visit the crash site, tears roll down her cheek as she speaks of the pain her family endured with the tragic loss of her cousin, Bill Barilko.

“It’s very sentimental and I’m glad I came,” Cattarello says, her voice quivering. “It’s very sad. I was 11 years old when this happened and we often wonder how his hockey career would have gone.

“For the family, it was quite amazing when they did finally make the discovery of the plane. For his mother, it was very good, because we were able to bring closure to it. Today is very significant and yet, it’s sad.”

As an 11-year-old in September 1951, Cattarello gathered each day with family and friends at Porcupine Lake, waiting for the 24-year-old Barilko to return home from a fishing trip near the James Bay coast with Timmins dentist Henry Hudson.

Barilko, at the height of his fame after his overtime goal won the Stanley Cup for the Toronto Maple Leafs four months earlier, was due to return on a stormy Sunday evening, Aug. 26, 1951.

But the yellow, single-engine Fairchild piloted by Hudson never arrived. Barilko and Hudson simply vanished.

Their disappearance sparked the largest aviation search in Canadian history, involving 38 Royal Canadian Air Force planes and 270 personnel, extending into October 1951.

“We’d go down to the lake on our bicycles to meet the planes coming in,” says Cattarello, whose father, Carlo, was one of Barilko’s first hockey coaches. “At the time, we really thought maybe they stopped at a lake somewhere and they would be found.”

The plane’s wreckage wasn’t discovered until June 7, 1962 — six weeks after the Leafs won their next Stanley Cup — bringing an end to a mystery that had gripped all of Canada.

The skeletal remains of Barilko and Hudson, still strapped into the seats, were recovered and laid to rest, providing some closure for heartbroken family and friends.

But the plane’s wreckage remained untouched in the remote forest for 60 years, even though there were requests from aviation museums.

Until Oct. 16, 2011.

Shortly before 10 p.m., in another solemn ceremony, the Barilko/Hudson plane arrived home to Porcupine Lake.

* * *

One of few remaining family members from Barilko’s generation, Cattarello was a central figure among the group of 16 who made the journey to the crash site. (Barilko’s sister, Anne Klisanich of Toronto, now 81, was not able to come.)

The excursion, co-ordinated by Expedition Helicopters of Cochrane, was intended to bring in some surviving family and friends before wreckage was hoisted out of the site.

Why bring home the plane?

Aside from “bringing the last of Billy home,” according to Bill Hughes, a businessman and former WHA goalie who financed the excursion, it is about Northern pride and preserving an important piece of history.

With a Timmins Sports Heritage Hall of Fame in the planning stages for the city’s 2012 centennial, there are plans to create a Barilko exhibit to preserve, celebrate and convey the Barilko story to future generations.

Hockey in Timmins and throughout Northern Ontario is on the decline and perhaps the Barilko story can restore some Northern pride.

Hall of Fame committee chairman Wayne Bozzer was part of the excursion, while Timmins videographer Kevin Vincent captured the day from start to finish for a documentary, alongside historical author Richard Buell.

“This is all part of what we hope to accomplish as far as planting the seed, where kids coming out of Northern Ontario feel good about coming out of Northern Ontario,” Hughes, a Kirkland Lake native, said in a heartfelt address to the group at the crash site. “I think the North does something to us and I know it’s good.

“And Bill Barilko exemplified that with a Northern spirit he carried with him famously. Hopefully, through telling our stories and the stories of people in our past, we will affect in a positive way the kids coming out of Northern Ontario.”

* * *

Getting to the wreckage is not easy. Expedition Helicopters pilot Chad Calaiezzi started out in Cochrane with a group of five that included Timmins Mayor Tom Laughren.

Two other groups of five are shuttled in from Island Falls, the nearest point accessible by road, 21 km to the southwest.

There is a reason it took 11 years to discover the wreckage and another 43 years before the site was marked and protected during a separate excursion in 2005 — this is very rough, thick terrain.

Once all 16 are assembled in a cleared swamp area more than a kilometre away, Calaiezzi uses GPS to guide the group to the wreckage.

It is a two-hour struggle through the bush. With every step, each foot sinks several inches into the soft, sometimes knee-deep muskeg. It is the type of frontier in which voices are required to locate a person five metres away, even in broad daylight.

The Northern elements are also harsh, with Mother Nature delivering swirling winds, blowing rain and light snow in a 90-minute span.

Six of the group of 16 carry an axe or hatchet to clear a path.

Archie Chenier, 86, a friend of Hudson and a frequent passenger in the same plane, uses a Sher-Wood hockey stick as a cane.

Retired Timmins dentist John Shaw, 77 — who eventually took over Hudson’s dental office and ultimately spearheaded this final excursion because of his great interest in the story — shares experiences from his first trek in 2005, when the site was marked and protected with officials from the Tembec forestry company.

Calaiezzi is the first to reach the wreckage.

One pontoon sticks out of the ground at an angle, leaning against a tree. The other is in pieces. The engine is only partially imbedded in the ground, surrounded by twisted pieces of frame. Some well-preserved yellow fabric is still visible.

It appears the plane crashed facing northeast, perhaps a death spiral down to earth after running out of gas in 45 mile-per-hour headwinds.

Archie Chenier can share a few theories about that.

* * *

Chenier accompanied Hudson on many similar fly-in fishing trips, living through his own scares in Hudson’s plane.

A few summers before the Barilko crash, Chenier and Hudson had a close call in the same area, running out of gas approaching Cochrane. Chenier urged Hudson to put the plane down on Lillabelle Lake, and the plane sputtered out of gas on the approach.

In 1949, shortly after takeoff from Hudson’s cottage on Lake Temagami, the engine burst into flames and Chenier helped Hudson put the plane back down safely.

Chenier was supposed to be Hudson’s passenger on the ill-fated trip in August 1951, but had to back out because of work.

Hudson had to find someone to take Chenier’s place, someone who had the weekend off. He found Barilko, who had one more weekend of summer before heading back to Toronto for Leafs’ camp.

Barilko had never flown in Hudson’s plane.

Chenier said Hudson was a brave pilot who would have benefited from having a voice of reason alongside him.

“He had no fear in his conscience when it came to judgment while flying,” Chenier said in a recent interview. “I claim, had I been on the trip, and with the storm clouds they described, I might have said, ‘Henry, let’s sit it out for awhile.’ Because he listened to me. Why he did, I don’t know.”

* * *

When all 16 have reached the site, Shaw consecrates the area in honour of the two men who died here.

After Cattarello leads the group in prayer, many take time to themselves, coming to grips with the surreal surroundings.

Soon, one group of seven begins the return journey through the bush, which will be a three-hour hike.

Others, including Laughren, Timmins’ workhorse mayor, prepare some wreckage to be lifted out. Within the hour, Calaiezzi returns with the helicopter and long line, hoisting out the pontoons and dropping the load at Island Falls. He returns an hour later to lift out the engine and other wreckage.

“The whole expedition’s been amazing,” Cattarello says before leaving the site. “It’s nice the way they did the ceremony here and it would be nice if they can have this in a museum.”

* * *

By sundown, a flatbed trailer is loaded with wreckage at Island Falls, but there is one final stop.

Mike Mitchell, a former Porcupine Minor Hockey volunteer, and Mike Mulryan, a longtime Timmins coach, bring the floats to a boat launch at Porcupine Lake, completing the plane’s intended journey.

Mitchell backs the flatbed down to the water as Mulryan and Shaw pour cups of water over the pontoons.

The water is poured from Tim Hortons coffee cups.

It was Horton, from Cochrane, who eventually replaced Barilko on the Maple Leafs blueline in 1952, helping the Leafs win four more Stanley Cups.

Who knows how things would have turned out if Barilko, already with four Stanley Cups at age 24, had arrived at Porcupine Lake on Aug. 26, 1951?

The Hudson/Barilko plane finally made it home on Oct. 16, 2011.

The 16 who took part in the excursion, ranging from age 36 to 86, did so because they share the same Northern spirit that Barilko came to define.

They hope their efforts will ensure Barilko’s story will endure and inspire.


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GRETZKY: OILERS AND KINGS MADE FRONT OFFICE JOB OFFERS

TSN.CA STAFF, 10/20/2011



When Wayne Gretzky severed ties with the Phoenix Coyotes in 2009, hockey fans were left to wonder whether the Great One would ever return to the game in an executive role.

While the now 50-year-old Gretzky remains a free agent of sorts, it appears there is interest from a number of clubs in bringing the league's all-time leading scorer back to the game as a member of their front office.

"Edmonton and Los Angeles have been really great to me and I have a nice relationship with both Kevin [Lowe] and the Oilers and obviously Dean Lombardi and the Kings, and I'm really honest with them. Right now, it's not the time for me to jump back into the game," explained Gretzky.

"I've always kind of been the same way when I was a player, when I was a coach, when I was in management. You have to give it your full effort. It's a 24-hour a day job, 12 months a year. Right now I don't have that sort of energy or passion to do that. I'm really just enjoying when they periodically call me or I'll call them and we'll just talk hockey."

Gretzky recognized the possibility that he may never return in an executive capacity, citing other former legends like Gordie Howe and Bobby Orr who are around the game but not involved with a particular team.

"Never is a long time, but right now I don't see it on the horizon," said Gretzky. "I have good friends in the game from some teams and the league is always good to me and of course with my relationship with Team Canada and Bob Nicholson, we're always talking hockey. But I don't really have a passion right now to make a full-time commitment to get back in the trenches."

It's been two years since Gretzky stood behind the bench as head coach and head of hockey operations for the Coyotes and in that time he has watched many of the players he once shared the ice with step into executive positions.

Gretzky's former teammate Mark Messier is now the assistant to president and general manager Glen Sather in New York, Steve Yzerman has become the general manager of the Tampa Bay Lightning, and most recently Brendan Shanahan has joined the league as the Senior Vice-President of Player Safety and Hockey Operations.

Shanahan earns a high grade in Gretzky's eyes for his work as league disciplinarian early in the season, but he acknowledges that Shanahan has one of the most difficult jobs in hockey.

"First of all, I wouldn't want his job or responsibility for anything," joked Gretzky. "It's like running for politics; when you're the President or Prime Minister no matter what you do you're going to upset half the people. You're in a never-win situation."

In addition to Shanahan's work, the fact that players are taking responsibility for their actions now and encouraging suspensions is a significant step in Gretzky's mind.

"In the 1980's, 1990's and even the early 2000's, you were always fighting for one less game of a suspension because it would cost the player a lot of money," explained Gretzky. "I think the Players' Association has done a really nice job saying 'We're putting this responsibility in the hands of the referees, the league and the union and if a guy does something silly we want him suspended and we don't want this to continue in our game.'"

As important as it is to make the game safer, Gretzky remains a traditionalist when it comes to the sport and despite excelling as a former finesse player himself, he still believes that the physical aspect of the game needs to stay in tact.

"It's hard to win a Stanley Cup because mentally, physically and emotionally you're drained by the end of the season. You talk to the Boston Bruins and they'll tell you physically how demanding it was. That's always going to be part of our game and it always should be part of our game. The physical aspect has to stay in there," Gretzky stated.

With the game evolving and the players becoming faster and stronger, Gretzky also admits that some of the milestones he reached in his career would be much more difficult to attain today.

"The defence and the goaltending of the players today is so much more advanced than it was in the 1980's. That's not a knock against anybody in the 1980's, it's just a fact of life, the players are better today. They're better athletically.

"Would I be able to ratchet 200 points? Probably not. Because it's a different game," said Gretzky, who hit the 200-point mark in four separate seasons. "Partly because the scenario. I was with the right team, the right players, the right coach, and at the time, the right era."

Gretzky sees a similar situation brewing in Edmonton now with a slew of young talent across their roster, led by this year's first overall pick Ryan Nugent-Hopkins.

"I really believe he's one of the best young players we've seen come into the game in a long time," said Gretzky. "And the great thing for him is he has two other young guys in Taylor Hall and [Jordan] Eberle that are really outstanding players and really good young men and they are in the right scenario."

As Gretzky enjoys his days not having to worry about wins and losses, its clear hockey is never far away from the Great One. While offers to join front offices may be on the table, it seems as though Gretzky, as always, is one step ahead of the game and ready to make a play when the time is right.


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WHL: Back on the bus; the Dub’s longest road trips

Neate Sager, Yahoo! Sports, Oct 20 2011


In junior hockey, it is an article of faith that the Western Hockey League breeds the toughest players — and looking at the schedule, it's not hard to see why.

Pointing out the WHL's 22 teams, spread between Brandon, Man., and Portland, Ore., are more far-flung than their counterparts to the east is a little obvious. You mean there's more distance between major cities in Western Canada? Tell us more, Professor. However, it seems like something that can't be fully appreciated unless you've had to live that life and perhaps it cannot be fully appreciated until you look at some of the lengthy road swings teams in the Dub will endure, experience and perhaps enjoy this season.

This was in part inspired by the Portland Winterhawks, who tomorrow will begin a nine-game, 17-day trip to Alberta and British Columbia. They'll cover some 4,200 km on the trip.

Originally, the road trip was supposed to be six games through the Western Hockey League's Central Division, but [coach-GM Mike] Johnston and management added one game at Kamloops and two at Kelowna to the end of the journey, rather than schedule two long bus rides for those games in British Columbia later in the season.

... The road schedule: Friday, Edmonton; Saturday, Red Deer; Tuesday, Calgary; Wednesday, Medicine Hat; Oct. 28, Lethbridge; Oct. 29, Kootenay; Nov. 2, Kamloops; Nov. 4-5, Kelowna.

... "I've never been on a road trip like this," defenseman William Wrenn says. "I'm looking forward to it.

"I think it'll be good and bad. It's obviously a long time, a lot of hours on the bus. I'm sure some of it will be a drag. I definitely think it will be good. We have some new faces here, young guys, and just to be around each other more — I really think the more you get to know somebody off the ice, the better you'll play with them on the ice." (Portland Tribune)

I've never been on a road trip like this ... and Wrenn's from Alaska.

A couple of teams have already had their massive swings. The aforementioned Brandon Wheat Kings are 3-2-0-0 thus far on a seven-game, 13-day swing through the Western Conference. The Prince George Cougars, who log more travel miles than any Canadian Hockey League team, also were on the road for seven. Here's five more long trips other teams will look forward to:

9 games in 16 days — Kootenay Ice, Nov. 19-Dec. 4

The Cranbrook, B.C.-based Ice are often the buffer between the Eastern and Western conferences, so presumably they often get teams either at the beginning or end of a road trip. Here's the tradeoff. The Ice have a stretch of games that begins with a ferry ride to Victoria, B.C., to play the Royals and ends all the way in Swift Current.

Suggested road trip movie — Due Date.

9 in 16 — Everett Silvertips, Oct. 22-Nov. 6

Teams in the U.S. Division have a tough deal with travel. Everett, which has won just two of its first 10 games, starts out with some in-state games this weekend vs. Seattle and Spokane, then head north to Alberta for five games in a row. The trip is so long they'll actually play the Spokane Chiefs twice. Also, pursuant to the previous paragraph, there's a game in Kootenay.

Suggested road trip movie — Planes, Trains and Automobiles.

8 in 16 — Moose Jaw Warriors, Dec. 30-Jan. 14

Nice way to start the second half after the holiday break. The Warriors will host Edmonton in their first post-Christmas game, then it's two weeks of playing away from home. The bulk of it is a six-game swing to the Pacific Northwest and (where else?) Kootenay, followed by another bus trip to play back-to-backs vs. Calgary and Medicine Hat.

Suggested road trip movie — National Lampoon's Vacation.

8 in 13 — Red Deer Rebels, Feb. 17-29

This is actually two trips in one. The Rebels have a four-game swing through British Columbia that includes a schlep up to Prince George, then go home for a couple of days to rest, then head east across the Prairies to play four more game. As if not having Ryan Nugent-Hopkins was not daunting enough!

Suggested road trip movie — Dumb and Dumber.

6 in 9 — Seattle Thunderbirds, Nov. 4-12

The Thunderbirds' six-game swing through Alberta includes playing on back-to-back nights twice. Not exactly a winning proposition. Guess where the last stop is on the trip? (Hint: rhymes with ootenay.)
Suggested road trip movie — Road Trip.


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Son of Rod Stewart and Rachel Hunter making name for self with Spokane Chiefs:
Rookie hockey forward plays down famous roots


Dave Trimmer, The Spokesman-Review, Oct 20 2011


Of all the opportunities Liam Stewart has had, the one he grabbed and held on to with an unmistakable passion is hockey.

“The atmosphere around the room, stepping on the ice every day, I just love it,” the Spokane Chiefs’ rookie forward said. “I love scoring. I love the aggressiveness of it. It’s just a lot of fun. And it’s different from what both my parents did.”

According to Stewart, his dad is a soccer guy and his mom is a rugby fan.

That would be rock music icon Rod Stewart, who is from England, and supermodel Rachel Hunter, who is from New Zealand. They divorced in 2006.

“I’m privileged to have parents like that,” their son said. “I’ve traveled the world, (but) I never thought of myself different than anyone in the room. I’ve never been too cocky about it, or talked about it.”

At a very young age he strived to be an individual.

“I’ve always wanted to carve my own path,” said Stewart, who was born in London. “I didn’t want to be Rod Stewart’s son who really does nothing. … I wanted to do my own thing, get out of California, meet new people, like the boys.”

“In the room” and “the boys” are so connected to hockey, it’s hard to imagine that Stewart grew up in Southern California, or that he considers himself “a New Zealand kind of guy.” Laid-back is in sharp contrast to his presence on the ice.

“He’s got upside,” Chiefs coach Don Nachbaur said. “He’s got good size, skates real well, he’s an intelligent player. He’s a committed athlete. That’s a key word, he’s an athlete.”

The attitude of the 6-foot-1, 180-pounder, who just turned 17 last month, also impressed the demanding coach.

“He’s a great teammate, he’s a good friend. He’s just another one of the guys,” Nachbaur said. “That speaks volumes of who he is. He’s a down-to-earth young man. You look at his background, who his mum and dad are, he’s obviously very proud of that, but he’s here to be his own man, his own person.”

Despite the California roots, Stewart’s hockey flame was lit on the other side of the country.

“When I was like 3 or 4, I was in New York for one of my dad’s shows and I went to a Rangers game,” he said. “From then on I told my mom I wanted to do that. The next day I was skating, not playing hockey, just free skating. That’s how it started.”

That isn’t quite the same scenario his mother recounted, but older sister Renee was into skating.

“Virtually from 5 until now, he’s been playing hockey,” Hunter said. “I think it’s an incredible sport. It’s an amazing family environment for a child to grow up in.”

She altered her schedule for all the demands on a hockey parent and has seen her son flourish.

“As a parent, if your kid has a smile on their face and they’re happy, that’s all I want for my kid,” she said.

Stewart played his way up the ladder and earned an invitation to a WHL identification camp.

Although he wasn’t selected in the Bantam draft, he was asked to attend the Chiefs’ camp, where he promptly turned heads by winning the 1½-mile run.

“That was very impressive,” general manager Tim Speltz said. “His fitness test was unbelievable, which tells you there’s an athlete there or a guy who’s worked very hard.”

With a strong camp as a 15-year-old, he was put on Spokane’s 50-player list. When he returned last fall, however, he had a minor injury, so he was sent back to Junior Kings, where he had an outstanding season.

“When they said I was a year away, I put a lot of work in, hoping to make the team,” said Stewart, who was recently cleared to play for the Great Britain National Program. “Luckily, I did. … The WHL just sounded a lot better, a better route for me to go, more games played than the college game.”

Stewart considers himself a defense-first forward like his confidant, Los Angeles Kings forward Jarrett Stoll, who dated his mom. In Stewart’s first game, he was on the penalty kill unit and got plenty of ice time as the third-line center. He was injured by illegal hit in the second game and missed the next four.

Still, that was enough to know he was in the right place.

“I love it,” he said. “I didn’t think I was going to make it this far. You get what you put in, all the hard work.”

“No question he can be a good junior,” Speltz said. “The question is, can he keep taking the steps and be a pro. The commitment he’s shown so far, everything he’s done, he wants to be a player.”

His mother, who was on the cover of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue twice and more recently on “Dancing with the Stars,” just wants to be a hockey mom.

“Like any hockey mom from western Canada … very committed,” Speltz said. “A very classy lady in all the dealings we’ve had.”

“She’s a great hockey mom, yeah, but I don’t think she really knows the game,” Liam said. “She knows a few rules, that’s about it.”

Hunter didn’t hesitate to follow her son to Spokane and has rented with an open-end lease.

“I love it up there,” she said. “I want to be a part of it as much as I can. … to see him reaching his goal and his dream. Seeing all the kids, because it’s such a team sport … is what’s really impressive and cool. You do what you can with your kids. Liam’s as happy as anything up there.”

Though he has tunnel vision for hockey, Stewart is going to be in the shadow of his famous parents for a long time. He’s prepared.

“I’ve had it for pretty much my whole life,” he said. “I just kind of blank that stuff out. When I was younger it bothered me. … I just say I’m not different than you are.

“They gave me advice, but there’s nothing they can really do about it. It’s on me.”


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Campbell: Hockey Canada residency rules must change

Ken Campbell, The Hockey News, 2011-10-21


While researching a book I’m currently working on, I recently had Sunday morning coffee with a fellow by the name of Carlo Cimetta. He’s one of these Type A guys who knows what he wants and is prepared to do everything within acceptable boundaries to get it.

Six years ago, when his son Matthew was just 10 years old, Cimetta wanted to give him the opportunity to play for the Toronto Red Wings of the Greater Toronto Hockey League. The fact he lived in Sarnia, which is 253 kilometres (or 157 miles) from Toronto, did nothing to deter him. But in order to make it work, Cimetta had to secure releases from his home association and every one of the 13 that stand between Sarnia and Toronto.

Cimetta made it work, but if one of those minor hockey associations had refused, his son would have either been forced to play there or his plan to play in Toronto would have been scuttled. So, Cimetta would drive to Toronto every weekend and stay two nights in a hotel so his son could play with the Red Wings. Every Wednesday, Cimetta would put his son and Bo Horvat, who lived about 100 kilometres away and was also playing for the Red Wings, through their paces at an arena in Sarnia at $125 an hour.

Two years later, Cimetta rented a house across the border in Port Huron, Mich., and lived there with Matthew while his wife and two daughters stayed in Sarnia so his son could be eligible to play for the renowned Detroit Honeybaked program. And things have worked out all right. Matthew was taken in the eighth round of the Ontario League draft by the Sarnia Sting, but intends to play at Cornell University in two years. Horvat, meanwhile, was the London Knights’ first round pick in the draft last spring.

Now, feel free to question the sanity of a guy who would go to such lengths to have his son play for one program when there was already a perfectly fine Triple-A organization right in his backyard. But in almost any other realm aside from minor hockey, Cimetta would have had every right to do what he did without having to answer to anyone.

But because of Hockey Canada’s arcane residency rules, Cimetta was subject to the whims of 14 minor hockey associations, any one of which would have been completely within its rights to refuse to release his son Matthew. Imagine what would happen if post-secondary institutions operated the same way. A kid who is bright enough for Harvard would be stuck at the Podunk Community College simply because he lives in Podunk. Talented dancers who wanted to join Canada’s National Ballet School in Toronto would be forced to continue to go down the street to take lessons from the retired lady who rents out the church basement every Saturday morning.

Those days of socialist rule should be coming to an end. At its annual meeting in Montreal, Hockey Canada’s board of directors committed to six priorities, one of which was, “To spirit the attitude and create mechanisms in player movement to facilitate flexibility within the game reflecting the needs of the modern player and family.”

That won’t trigger Hockey Canada to tear down its borders immediately, but it’s a very positive first step.

The residency rules have been supported by the courts on several occasions, including a novel attempt to have them removed in 2004 based on the idea that minor hockey is a business and to not allow a player to play where he or she wishes is discriminatory and in violation of the United Nations’ Convention on the Rights of the Child. Apparently, in the eyes of the courts, the Chicken Little notion that tearing down boundaries will somehow kill minor hockey in small towns trumps basic rights of the individual.

But it’s wrong. It gives too much power to the minor hockey associations that are sometimes looking out for their own interests instead of the players’. You’d be surprised how many of them won’t grant releases to players who think they can develop better elsewhere. It’s petty, discriminatory and unreasonable. And if saner heads prevail, it will stop some day.

Hockey Canada is also taking steps toward offering parents and players more options. One idea is to parse the season up into four segments and allow players to play anywhere from one to four of them, leaving them time to pursue other interests while keeping them under Hockey Canada’s umbrella.

Last season, THN sounded the alarm that numbers of kids playing hockey in Canada are going down and there could be 30,000 fewer playing the game within five years. Making the season shorter and more affordable is one good way to get those numbers back up. So is offering players and parents more freedom to choose non-contact hockey if they wish, which is another one of Hockey Canada’s priorities in 2011-12. Those will help attract players and keep them in the game.

And dismantling the archaic residency rules will make it more equitable for the ones who do decide to keep playing.


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Before I made it: Deryk Engelland

With Kevin Kennedy, The Hockey News, 2011-10-22


The first time I skated was in my backyard in Leduc, Alta. My dad was a welder and even though he transferred around a lot with work, he still found the time to build a rink for us in the backyard wherever we lived. We moved to Mayerthorpe, Alta., when I was in Grade 3 and stayed to Grade 6 when we moved to Chetwynd, B.C., where we settled down.

I’d say both my mom and dad are responsible for getting me into hockey. My mom was a big hockey fan and my dad was a big soccer player and I think he got into hockey because of my mom. I played a little soccer as a kid, but I wasn’t very good - too much running for me.

My first year playing hockey in Chetwynd was peewee and I remember we played all our games in Alberta because it was a lot closer than any towns with teams in B.C. We won the Alberta League, but we couldn’t go to the Provincial Championships because it was at the same time as the Alberta final.

When I wasn’t playing hockey we used to camp a lot in the summers. We’d ride four-wheelers, go fishing and hunting, that kind of stuff. I snowboarded a little bit in the winter, but not so much anymore. Actually, I probably haven’t snowboarded since I was in junior. If I didn’t make it playing hockey, I would probably be doing some kind of trade apprenticeship somewhere. I love working with my hands and I’d probably still be in Chetwynd - a big manufacturing town.

The day I first got called up from the minors, we’d just finished a game at home in Wilkes-Barre, Penn., and we were leaving that night to go on a road trip. The coach called me in after the game and told me the good news. Within 45 minutes I was in a car on my way to Philadelphia. I stayed the night there and probably got three hours of sleep before getting up at 4:00 a.m. to catch a flight to San Jose. Alex Goligoski wasn’t feeling well, but he ended up playing that game, so I watched from the press box. I got into the next game in Boston and was able to get a few friends to fly in from Las Vegas to watch. Unfortunately, my dad was going overseas on a job the next week and also had a big moose hunt planned so he couldn’t make it.

My first shift was with Brooks Orpik and on the second shift he got hurt, so we had to go with five defensemen for the rest of that game. I ended up making my rounds through the rotation, partnering with everyone. I think it was better to just get thrown right into it and not have too much time to think.

Now, I live in Las Vegas where I met my wife when I played for the "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Las_Vegas_Wranglers"Las Vegas Wranglers of the ECHL. She was out there studying for her masters and it’s a great place to live because the weather is always nice. Even though I’m not living in Chetwynd anymore I still spend time there and am very close with my family. My dad doesn’t really give me advice anymore, but when I call home after games they always have 10-15 people at the house watching.


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Rosati and Tkaczuk: Player perspectives

By Daniel Tkaczuk and Mike Rosati, The Hockey NEws, 2011-10-23


The game of hockey is quick. Players and goaltenders need to have the skills to correctly read the play, identify their options and execute. Many situations arise on the ice and the following is a view into the thought process that goes into a play by both the player and the goaltender.

Game Situation: There is a breakdown in the corner as the defenseman falls down and the puck carrier has enough time to take it towards the net.

PLAYER’S PERSPECTIVE – DANIEL TKACZUK
"Once the player has beaten his man in coverage it is important that his first instinct is to get his feet moving and take the puck to the net for a scoring chance. Defenders also tend to take penalties when they have to reach to recover from poor positioning or a teammate’s lost battle.”

GOALIE’S PERSPECTIVE – MIKE ROSATI

“At this moment the goalie will simply identify a breakdown has occurred.”

TKACZUK
"Once the player is moving towards the net he should make a quick note of the secondary situation. How much space does he have to take the puck to the net? Where are his teammates? Is the goalie going to be able to make an aggressive challenge? The player has to be able to read the situation quickly and act. Every situation differs slightly and a player must be able to make a quick judgment call based on the options presented.”

ROSATI
“Before positioning himself on the puck carrier, the goalie must quickly recognize which way the player shoots in order to position himself accordingly. Also, he needs to determine if a pass option is available in front of the net.”

TKACZUK
"The player now has two options - drive to the net or pass. If he decides to drive to and possibly across the net, he must read the goalie. Is the goalie small? Is he right or left handed? Can the player jam it short side? Can he pull it around to the far side? Five hole? Can he use his ‘go to’ move?”

ROSATI
“If the player is taking it to the net alone and his stick is to the middle of the ice, the goalie needs to step off his post line, front the shooter and protect the long corner. He must also defend and deny that player as much space as possible cutting across the top of the crease.

If the shooter’s stick-blade position is closer to the goal line, the goalie needs to be a little more patient on his post and not allow the shooter to pull him away too early. The natural shot for this player is short side. As long as the goalie remains patient, the player will have no shot.

If the shooter attempts to pull to the backhand, the goalie must be aggressive either with an active stick or strong slide to deny the attacker ice.”

TKACZUK
“If the player sees an open teammate he must decide: is it worth a try for a back-door or one-timer pass? Does the teammate shoot left or right? How far away from the net is he? How much weight can the player put on the pass? What fake can the player use to make the goalie think he is shooting? A player must be able to take advantage and use teammates where necessary. Sometimes they can even be used solely as a decoy to bait the goalie into staying deeper inside the net and giving the shooter more options.”

ROSATI
“Knowing there is a pass option, the goalie needs to first communicate with his defenseman. In this situation the goalie must respect the pass. We have to remember the puck carrier coming out of the corner does not have a great shooting angle, so there is no need for the goalie to overplay him with positioning.

By playing a little shallower here, the goalie maintains good position against the shot and a higher percentage for success against the pass as well.

He must load his foot against the post in order to get a strong push into his butterfly slide directly towards the stick of the player receiving the pass.”

TKACZUK
“ Now the player must execute. He has analyzed the situation, made a choice in a split second and needs his skills to take over to stick the puck into the back of the net!”

ROSATI
“The goalie has identified and analyzed every scenario. He needs to be able to do this at the speed of the game. If he is late in his decision-making, he will be beaten on the play. If he is confident with his analysis, remains patient and allows the play to come to him, he is destined for success.”

SUMMARY
The game of hockey is complex - a lot happens in a split second. Skaters and goalies must be able to quickly react, make decisions and execute as the play constantly changes. Through training a skater and goaltender can improve their thought process, skill and overall hockey sense to succeed in the various situations that come up in a game.


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Daum enjoys Austrian adventure

By Jim Matheson, edmontonjournal.com, October 22, 2011


EDMONTON - Rob Daum is coaching in Austria, in a league with no borders.

“Six Austrian teams, two in Slovenia and one (each) in Hungary, Croatia and the Czech Republic,” said the former University of Alberta Golden Bears/Edmonton Oilers farm-team coach, who is located in “eishockey”-mad Linz, a beautiful Austrian city of 190,000. People know who he is when he’s walking the streets looking for a knoedel (dumpling), even if his command of German — the official language — is somewhat spotty if he wants to talk about the Black Wings of the Erste Bank Eishockey Liga.

Daum was also recently named an assistant coach of the Austrian national team, assisting St. Albert native and 1984 Oilers draft pick Emanuel Viveiros, who coaches in Klagenfurt. Daum wasn’t quite sure what he was getting into when he accepted the post in Linz after being out of work for a year, but it’s been an eye-opener. His club has dropped only two of 12 league games, both to the Czech team from Znojmo, and was unbeaten in five exhibitions. It’s the best team in the league, on paper, although you would have to be a hockey junkie to know who former American Hockey League players Rob Hisey (Springfield Falcons), Danny Irmen and Curtis Murphy (both Houston Aeros) are. Those are three of Daum’s best players in a league where the average take-home salary for imports is between 45,000 and 65,000 euros. Plus the free car, apartment, insurance and health expenses.

Pierre Page coaches in Salzburg, the signature Austrian league franchise with the big payroll (there’s no salary cap). One-time Oilers farmhand/draft pick defenceman Doug Lynch plays there. They’re owned by the folks who make Red Bull. Viveiros is in Klagenfurt, which, along with Salzburg, has the top Austrian players and Jared Spurgeon’s brother Tyler. Former Oilers player and assistant coach Kevin Primeau coaches a team in Hungary, where, incidentally, Daum’s Golden Bears’ successor Eric Thurston is living these days. Thurston is running Hungary’s under-20 national program after taking a leave from the Bears.

“The offer (from the Austrian national team) caught me off-guard. It’s a great opportunity for a different experience. Manny Viveiros has been in Europe for 20 years and because he’s from Edmonton (he was traded to the Minnesota North Stars along with Marc Habscheid for Gord Sherven and Don Biggs in 1985), he’s familiar with my background a little bit, I guess,” said Daum. “They’re not in the A (international) pool now, but what they want to do is get back to that pool for the Olympics in Russia (2014). We have a tournament in November in Hungary, one in Klagenfurt in December and the B pool championship in Slovenia in mid April.”

Slovenia keeps looking for another Anze Kopitar, but they don’t grow on trees.

“I, uh, haven’t seen one,” laughed Daum.

Same with Thomas Vanek. Not many of those in Austria, either.

“I would say the Austrian league is a higher calibre than the East Coast Hockey League but not as good as the American league. We also played a lot of games against the DEL (Germany’s Deutsche Eishockey Liga) teams in pre-season and fared well,” said Daum, who coached Minnesota’s AHL farm squad in Houston before joining the Oilers organization. He coached their affiliate in Springfield and was also Craig MacTavish’s NHL assistant for a year. He was also a pro scout for the NHL team.

He signed a two-year deal with Linz (club option on the second season and a window to return to North America if he gets a job by the middle of next July). It doesn’t have to be a pro offer to leave. He could, for instance, take a Western Hockey League coach-GM job if one came up, but that’s then. Now is Linz.

They play on Tuesdays, Fridays and Sundays in the Austrian League, a 40-game schedule. It’s a bus league. There are only two nights where the team will stay in a hotel on the road. It’s bus in, bus out, home by midnight after games.

“Our farthest trip is to Zagreb in Croatia, five hours.”

Linz is in the foothills, but there’s lots of travel through the mountains. “The drive from Klagenfurt to Salzburg, that’s impressive. Really impressive,” he said.

What’s hockey night in Linz like?

“It’s insane. It’s like a soccer crowd, from the time they get into the building to the time they leave they’re chanting, singing. It’s electric the whole game, it’s an event for them,” said Daum. “Nothing that compares to North America (pro hockey). The building seats about 4,000 and there aren’t many empty seats on game nights. Every inch of the arena, you can put a person into it.”

Who’s Hot: James Neal has seven goals in the Penguins’ first nine games. He only had one in 20 games for Pittsburgh last year after being traded from the Dallas Stars.

Who’s Not: R.J. Umberger, the Columbus Blue Jackets assistant captain, has one assist in seven games and is minus 3.

Marquee Matchups:

Tuesday and Thursday: Double dip of the Pens and New York Islanders after all the ugly fights and nasty words last year,

Thursday: Alex Ovechkin is here with the Washington Capitals. It’s a rare visit from one of the hottest NHL clubs.

Western Conference:

Nashville coach Barry Trotz swears the Predators are set up to re-sign their Big Three — Shea Weber, Ryan Suter and Pekka Rinne — not just one or two of them. They only have $21 million committed for 10 players for next year. “We’re lean and mean now. We’re young (the youngest team in the league),” said Trotz. The question is whether they will try and sign their Group 2 free-agent captain Weber first, who’ll command more money, or do they go with Weber’s hugely underrated defence partner Suter and the goalie Rinne, a Vezina finalist last year (both unrestricted July 1), before him? “It’s a catch-22. If you want to sign a big-time forward, the first thing they say is, ‘Is Weber staying? Is Suter staying?’ Is Rinne?’ It’s the old chicken and the egg scenario. I know this summer we were looking at some players but the first thing they said was, ‘Are those guys staying? If so, I’ll sign.” They moved centre Matthew Lombardi to the Toronto Maple Leafs last summer to clear up his $3.5-million contract to have the dough when Weber went to arbitration. “Part of it was Matthew’s money (this year and next) but we were doubting if he’d make it back this year (concussion), or, say, by Christmas. It was easier to replace Lombardi. I mean, we don’t get (Mike) Fisher last year if Lombardi isn’t hurt.” The Leafs wanted defenceman Cody Franson if Lombardi couldn’t play. As it turns out, Lombardi is playing, while Franson is a No. 6-7 guy.

This ’n’ that:

• The Blue Jackets are getting nary a drop from R.J. Umberger and Antoine Vermette to support Rick Nash, Jeff Carter (now out with a broken foot) and Vinny Prospal. Vermette is most likely to be traded if things don’t turn around soon with young Derick Brassard (two goals) No. 2.

• Phoenix Coyotes’ Kyle Turris is the highest profile (OK, highest draft pick — third overall in 2007) to hold out in the last while, but people keep wondering where his head is. “He’s playing for a team that’s owned by the league. You think they care if he’s not playing and not being paid? There’s 29 other teams looking for a competitive edge, too,” said one former NHL general manager.

• It looks like Dallas GM Joe Nieuwendyk pulled off a huge heist getting goalie Kari Lehtonen from the former Atlanta Thrashers for defenceman Ivan Vishnevskiy, who’s playing in Moscow for Oblast Atlant, and Barrie Colts centre Ivan Telgin. The Finn Lehtonen finally got in shape, got healthy and he’s the hottest goaltender in the league (6-0, .957 save percentage). He looks like the No. 2 pick in the 2002 draft now.

• Global TV’s Kevin Karius, who’s obviously a hockey junkie, fired off an email to say four current NHL coaches — Mike Yeo (Minnesota Wild), Dave Tippett (Phoenix Coyotes), Scott Arniel (Columbus) and Kevin Dineen (Florida Panthers) — all played on the 1994-95 Houston (AHL) Aeros. What are the odds of that?.

• Hard-luck Colorado Avalanche forward Peter Mueller is out again indefinitely with concussion symptoms. He’s a top-six forward when healthy.

• Slow start for Matt Duchene in Avs land. They’re a little concerned that he’s not working hard enough when he doesn’t have the puck.

• Jeff Carter’s broken foot is the same one he had repaired with a plate inserted in 2010 when he was in Philadelphia, in case you’re wondering. Is he out a week? Three? Who knows?.

• The Wings have been very happy with their third defence pairing of young Jakub Kindl and Jonathan Ericsson, which means free-agent signee Mike Commodore will be their seventh guy when he gets back shortly from his sprained knee.

• The St. Louis Blues would rather play Brian Elliott — who didn’t pan out for the Ottawa Senators or the Avalanche — than Jaroslav Halak. That’s not a good sign for Halak, who had an .835 save percentage at last look.

Eastern Conference

Pulling for Sid

Edmonton Oilers defenceman Ryan Whitney badly wants to see Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby back where he belongs on the ice, but he wonders how opponents will play him. “There will be guys who don’t want to hit him at the start, believe me. Who wants to be the guy who buries Sid again?” said Whitney, his former Penguins teammate. “Nobody wants to be the guy, because they’ll be ripped apart. There are some idiots out there, guys who’d love to crush him, I’m sure, but everybody’s pretty much a fan of Sid. Guys on other teams are always saying, ‘Did you see what he did last night?’ ”

A long wait

Here we’re worrying whether 18-year-old Ryan Nugent-Hopkins will stick on the Oilers roster past the nine-game trial period, but not everybody is the Chosen One. Take Bracken Kearns, who is 30 and played his first NHL game Thursday for the Florida Panthers. His dad Dennis was 26 when he got to the bigs with the Vancouver Canucks, as a teammate of Panthers GM Dale Tallon, so he knows all about waiting your turn. Kearns, who once represented Canada in the world junior golf championship in San Diego when he was 16 and living in Vancouver, is a nice story. The forward was captain of the University of Calgary Dinos when Rob Daum was coaching the University of Alberta Golden Bears, graduating with a degree in economics in 2005. What did he do with that economics degree?

“I jumped at $450 a week to play in Toledo in the East Coast League. No cellphone, no car, not a single bill. Felt like a fortune,” said Bracken.

There have been 10 players who have made their NHL debut 30 or older since the lockout, so it’s pretty rare stuff. Bracken has played for the farm teams of the Nashville Predators, Chicago Blackhawks and Phoenix Coyotes in the American Hockey League and also in the East Coast Hockey League. That’s a lot of bus rides. “I never thought it was terribly realistic I’d play in the NHL, although it was certainly my dream,” said Bracken, who played 6- minutes against Buffalo Thursday, getting in the last six minutes of pre-game warm-up after rushing to the rink. When the call came that he was coming up to the Panthers, he barely had time to catch his breath.

“I was making my pre-game meal … chicken noodle soup, pasta and salad in San Antonio and they said I had 45 minutes to get the flight,” he said.

He almost forgot to turn off the stove as he was running out the door. “I was panicking. Didn’t want to miss the plane,” he said.

He played 428 games in the minors before one in the NHL. No wonder he was excited. He says he never did eat.

How long is he staying? “They don’t tell you much. I’m taking this day-by-day and hoping for the best,” he said.

This ’n’ that:

• Montreal Canadiens’ Andrei Markov, when he isn’t on crutches or in a walking boot, is one of the NHL’s top 20 defencemen, but can somebody tell me what possessed the Habs to give him another $5.75 million for three years when he had only played 60 of 190 games (including playoffs) over the preceding two season because he had a tendon sliced in his foot, then tore his anterior cruciate ligament in his knee. I know they badly miss his smarts, but he’s 33 in December and at what point do they say, “You know, medically, this might not be such a good idea?”’ He has played seven of the Habs’ last 96 games.

• Scott Hartnell has been playing on the third line making $4.2 million in Philadelphia, not good time or fiscal management, and he was the only one of Flyers forwards against the Washington Capitals on Thursday who wasn’t on either the power play or penalty kill. They wouldn’t be adverse to moving him, but he makes too much and has a no-trade clause.

• Everybody’s damning goalie Tomas Vokoun for only taking $1.5 million to play for the Caps, but it’s not like teams were lining up to sign him this summer. He turned down the Panthers’ $8-million, three-year offer, in part because he was tired of losing and Colorado and Phoenix were lukewarm.

• Why is everybody decrying the Winnipeg Jets’ slow start? It’s basically the same team that was in Atlanta, where two of their top three scorers were defencemen (Dustin Byfuglien and Tobias Enstrom) last year and their leading point-producer was captain Andrew Ladd with 59 points. Billionaire owner David Thomson didn’t give GM Kevin Cheveldayoff a blank cheque to spend $10 million on Christian Ehrhoff or go after Ville Leino as they did in Buffalo. Their big off-season deal was trading for Eric Fehr, the former Capitals forward who’s from Winkler, Man.

• The Ottawa Senators aren’t getting much out of their veteran back-end guys Chris Phillips, Filip Kuba and especially Sergei Gonchar, he of the $16.5-million (three years, two left) contract. Gonchar is untraceable. Phillips, a heart-and-soul Sen is just struggling. They’ve been trying to move Kuba’s $3.7-million contract for some time, but he’s hurt too much. Their youngsters David Rundblad, Jared Cowan and Erik Karlsson have been fine.

• Oops dept.: In a Corey Potter story this week, I said Marc Staal had made the New York Rangers out of junior, but he went back to Sudbury after being drafted in Round 1 in 2005, for a couple of years.

By the numbers:

513 Consecutive games for Jay Bouwmeester. That’s over six years, folks.

430 Nick Lidstrom’s plus rating through his NHL career.

6 Sheldon Souray’s plus rating this year in Dallas

He Said It:

“He was horrible, just horrible.”

Preds’ coach Barry Trotz when asked about high-risk Swedish rookie D-man Mattias Ekholm against Vancouver, a couple of days before he was sent back to Sweden.

Matty’s Short Shifts:

• OK, I know there was some bad blood between Glen Sather and the Edmonton Investors Group before he left for the New York Rangers, but it makes absolutely no sense that he doesn’t have a banner hanging from the rafters along with Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier, Paul Coffey and the rest by now. What are they waiting for? So what if he’s working for another team?

• Daryl Katz made a pitch to Gretzky to come and work with the Oilers in some capacity (adviser, training camp consultant?) when Gretzky was here for the Kinsmen Legends dinner a few weeks back. Gretzky keeps saying he’s happy being a fan and not working for an NHL team or the league. As I wrote before, GM Dean Lombardi in Los Angeles was also sounding out people last year about whether Gretzky would like to do something with the Kings. Nothing came of it. The problem with being Wayne Gretzky is you can’t walk into an NHL rink and sit there anonymously. People always want a piece of his time.

• Goalie Steve Mason looks a lot closer to Jim Carey than Carey Price these days in depths-of-despair Columbus after winning the Calder Trophy with 10 shutouts in 2009. Jim Carey was here today and gone tomorrow after his Vezina Trophy with the Washington Capitals in 1996. “Mason gives up three a game, hardly ever two, and there’s often one bad goal,” said one NHL executive. He should have spent last year in the minors.

• Adam Larsson, who was No. 2 on the Oilers’ draft list last June behind Ryan-Nugent Hopkins, has been rock-solid for the New Jersey Devils at 18. “He’s their best defenceman. Twenty-four minutes a game. People were looking for things wrong with him before the draft after two years in the Swedish Elite League,” said one Western Conference executive.

• Brad MacGregor, the Oilers head of corporate sales and once an Oilers farmhand after graduating from Boston University, was caught completely off-guard when told Monday afternoon they were eliminating his position. “I’ve spent about half my life with this organization, and before that with my dad (Bruce) working for them. The Oilers are a big part of my world. My kids (daughter Kennedy, 12 and son Bruce, 10), too. They took it harder than I thought they would,” said MacGregor, 48, who started in sales in 1989. His dad Bruce, the former NHL winger, used to be the Oilers assistant GM.

• It is too early to say the Senators have the best shot in the first pick in the draft lottery next June (the Sarnia Sting’s speedy Russian-born winger Nail Yakupov?) I feel bad for a good man, rookie head coach Paul MacLean, who’s at the wheel of this leaky ship in choppy seas. Hopefully, the same fate doesn’t befall him as another MacLean, John, last year in Jersey, when he finally got his first chance at a head job.

• Who does Jordan Eberle play like? “Reminds me a lot of Joey Mullen. Same size, same great release,” said Coates, of the Hall of Famer Mullen, who scored 502 goals. Can’t argue with that comparison.

• Former Oilers assistant coach Wayne Fleming, who had surgery on a brain tumour last season while working for the Tampa Bay Lightning, is back at his home in Calgary, recuperating with his family there. “He’s battling hard and making progress every day, with great support from Tampa. He’s staying really positive,” said his good friend Ken Hitchcock, who spent three days with the vastly underappreciated Fleming a short time ago. “He’s one of those special coaches with a good feel. Some guys know the Xs and Os but they don’t have a feel for what happened,” said Hitchcock.

• I agree with TSN’s Darren Dreger that Rene Bourque would fetch something attractive because he’s a top six forward if the Calgary Flames wanted to move him, likely for a defenceman. Bourque has a very affordable cap hit of $3.33 million for five more years, but he’s only 29. Bourque is a bit streaky, but the Dallas Stars were able to swap James Neal, who isn’t as good, for Pittsburgh Penguins defenceman Alex Goligoski last year. Bourque would bring back at least that.

• The Oilers are saying all the right things about Gilbert Brule being in their plans — he is a good kid with a solid work ethic when he can stay healthy — but his chances of playing again here are slim. To bring him back from the Oklahoma City Barons of the American Hockey League, he’d be going on re-entry waivers where another team can get him for half price. Somebody’s going to grab him at $700,000 or $800,000 as a fourth-line guy. The Canucks have shown interest. The Rangers, too.

• Former Oilers farmhand Martin Gerber is the backup goalie in Vaxjo in the Swedish Elite League, probably not what he had in mind. He has played two of 12 games. Per Hallberg is the No. 1 ’tender. Liam Reddox has six points in 12 games, same as former Oklahoma City farmhand Brad Moran in Vaxjo. If you’re a Rob Schremp fan, he’s 15th in league scoring with nine points in 12 games for the Markus Naslund/Peter Forsberg MoDo team.

• One of the reasons local boy Jared Spurgeon is so good at about 170 pounds and five-foot-nine: he uses a long stick. He used it to sweep the puck to safety on a dandy toe-drag move by Eberle Thursday in the Minnesota Wild game. He’s not going to win any physical battles with, say, Ryan Getzlaf down low, but he uses his stick to poke a lot of pucks away. “You get Getzlaf down low, it doesn’t matter who you are, he’s tough. But if you’ve got a big heart and you’re smart enough, you find a way,” said Wild GM Chuck Fletcher, who feels luck smiled on his club when they got the free-agent Spurgeon. “We only brought him in last year (on a tryout) to try to win the prospects tournament at Traverse City (Mich.).”

• When told he was on pace for 90 points, Edmonton Oil Kings Slovak-born defenceman Martin Gernat blanched. “Maybe I can get 50,” said the Oilers fifth-round draft pick last June. Fifty is a lot for a D-man in junior these days, but it pales to the times of Hawgie Hockey in Kamloops. The St. Albert native Greg Hawgood had 119 and 138-point seasons playing for Hitchcock in Kamloops.

• Best draft prospect in the Alberta Junior Hockey League might be Sherwood Park Crusaders forward Peter Quenneville, who is related to Chicago Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville and leads the AJHL in scoring. He’s committed to Quinnipiac University in Connecticut, where Oilers draft pick Kellen Jones and former AJHL star Reese Rolheiser play.


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Canucks look to rekindle transition game

MATTHEW SEKERES, Globe and Mail, Oct. 23, 2011


The way Kevin Bieksa sees it, the Vancouver Canucks should be attacking with four skaters every time they skate toward the opponent’s end.

Bieksa and Dan Hamhuis formed one of the NHL’s best defensive pairings last season, but they were quickly split when the Canucks got off to a slow start in 2011-12. Bieksa now teams with the like-minded Keith Ballard, who similarly shines at skating into the rush and joining forwards deep in the offensive zone.

Christian Ehrhoff, a free-agent loss to the Buffalo Sabres, brought 50 points last season by doing likewise, and leading Vancouver’s power play. This year, the team needs to replace Ehrhoff’s production from the blueline, and for Bieksa, that means he and Ballard have green lights.

“It seems like one of us is always up in the play and it’s been a lot of fun,” Bieksa said. “Between the two of us, at least one of us should be in the rush every single time. That’s the way we feel.

“We both like to skate, we both like to get up there. So, one guy has been going every shift, and it has worked out well for us. It has generated a lot of chances.”

While Bieksa highlights the upside, there remains a downside involving too many odd-man rushes against because one of them is caught in enemy territory. He and Ballard are a combined minus-12 on the season, although that has more to do with defensive zone coverage.

“Sometimes it’s easier to play together when you think the same,” Ballard said. “Both of us are good enough skaters to get back, and when you can do that, you can get up in the play.”

Should these pairings pay off, than Bieksa and Ballard would likely be the No. 2 unit, with Hamhuis and Alexander Edler commanding the heaviest minutes.

In one respect, their partnership is one of the steady-eddie Hamhuis and the would-be steady Eddy. Hamhuis is the team’s best defensive defenceman, while Edler has the most all-round upside. At times, he is the full package. Other times, he seems out of sorts.

He has been moved to the right side of the ice, which may seem subtle, but comes with adjustments. The Canucks are challenging Edler, while giving him a security-blanket partner in Hamhuis, the team’s best stay-at-home type.

“I think [Edler] is more comfortable on that left side, but I’m liking the balance with those defensive pairs right now,” coach Alain Vigneault said. “Hopefully, as he gets more experience on the right side, he might get better.”

Edler has dabbled on the right side, but he played almost exclusively on the left flank last year. Last Thursday, in a 5-1 victory over the Nashville Predators, the 25-year-old Swede looked tentative and unsure of his position, even in a two-point night.

“When they’re coming down on the rush, on the left side, you have the stick out to shut off the middle a little easier,” Edler said. “There are a lot of things to get used to on the right side ... [but] a lot of times, when you get the puck in the offensive zone, you have your stick on the ice and are pretty much ready to shoot every time.”

Edler said Hamhuis’s reliability should allow him to explore more offence, and if it all gels, then a big beneficiary will be 37-year-old Sami Salo. The Canucks talked about managing his ice time this season, but he has five points in eight games and his booming point shot, which scored the game-winning goal Saturday in a 3-2 victory over the Minnesota Wild, is still a big weapon to a power play that must replace Mikael Samuelsson on the right point.

Serving on the third pair limits Salo’s even-strength shifts, and allows him to log more minutes on special teams. The Canucks traded Samuelsson, who played on the first power-play unit, and winger Marco Sturm to the Florida Panthers for left wing David Booth Saturday, so Salo will be counted on to fill Samuelsson’s power-play role.


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Paul Kelly on the state of junior hockey

Sportsnet Staff, October 25, 2011


Paul Kelly, executive director of College Hockey Inc., says that he and many others support Hockey Canada president Bob Nicholson’s proposed rule change that has the hockey world buzzing.

Nicholson recently suggested that the NHL should change the age of draft eligibility from 18 to 19 (excluding players chosen in the first round).

Kelly and those in favour of the rule change argue that the NHL and NHLPA need to examine what's best for young players and the game of hockey.

"From the standpoint of helping the sport as a whole, across the globe and at all levels of hockey -- junior, college, pro -- I think it makes a lot of sense," Kelly said.

"Take last year's draft, how many 18-year olds from last spring's draft are still on NHL rosters today? The answer is six."

Kelly said that the change wouldn't affect a blue chip prospect's chances of making the NHL at 18, and that it could be beneficial to the league's veteran players.

"You're always going to have a handful of guys that are so exceptional that they can play at the age of 18. But for the most part it's a rare kid that can crack into the National Hockey League until he's 19, 20, 21, perhaps 22," Kelly said.

"On the other end, the NHLPA has a responsibility to represent all players, prospective future players and existing players. By raising the draft age one year, you're in fact helping a segment of your membership. You're giving some of the more senior guys in the league an opportunity to extend their career at least another year."

The issue will ultimately be decided by the NHL and NHLPA, but Kelly insists it's the right move.

"On behalf of the colleges in the United States, the 58 programs that I represent, they strongly favour the proposal advanced by Bob Nicholson," Kelly added.

Another issue Kelly addressed is the accusation that some Canadian CHL players reneged on agreements they had to play for U.S. college programs after certain CHL franchises allegedly paid them to play in the CHL instead.

Kelly said that he recently spoke with CHL commissioner David Branch to discuss this issue. According to Kelly, both he and Branch agreed that it is not a widespread problem and they believe it can be resolved and eradicated.

"I do think there (are) a few teams that are doing something which is off the books and not in compliance with their league rules. I don't think any of the other owners approve of that," Kelly said.

In addition to being against CHL rules, Kelly said that it is unfair to the college programs that lose out on these players, who have already committed.

"From our perspective in NCAA hockey, if a kid commits and then he breaks that commitment for, among other reasons, the fact that somebody's giving him a big bag of cash, that just shouldn't happen," Kelly added.

Kelly and Branch will meet in person in Toronto two weeks from now to further discuss this and other issues.


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HODGEMAIL: SHOULD VISOR USE BE DECIDED ONLY BY THE PLAYERS?

TSN.CA Staff, 10/25/2011


It's a debate in hockey that's older than head shots and no-touch icing.

The issue is the use of visors - and it came up again after Monday's game between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Philadelphia Flyers.

In the first period, Flyers defenceman Chris Pronger and Toronto's Mikhail Grabovski sprinted for a loose puck. Grabovski slapped at the puck and his stick connected with Pronger's stick and the blade went straight up into Pronger's face.

Screaming in pain, Pronger quickly clutched his face and went straight to the dressing room. The Flyers hope their captain - who complained of blurred vision after the incident - will get back in two to three weeks depending on how the injury heals and said that he will need to wear a visor to be cleared to play.

"I think he was very scared and rightly so," GM Paul Holmgren told the Associated Press. "When something like that happens to your eye, you're worried about what's going on."

Which begs the age-old question - should Pronger (like any of his fellow NHLers who still skate on the ice with just a helmet) have worn a visor in the first place?

A lot of players feel the use of visors restrict their vision on the ice and affect their play. The league and players' association have done their best to educate them on health and equipment-related decisions, but wearing a visor is still a choice that a player makes on his own.

Is it time to take that stance a step or two further?

So here's Dave's question to you - "Should the use of visors be decided solely by the players themselves?"


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Goalie mask changes needed, plus 30 Thoughts

By Elliotte Friedman, CBC Sports, October 24, 2011


It's been almost a decade since a shot off Mike Richter's head ended his NHL career and teams are still fighting with their goalies over mask safety.

"Someone could go out there wearing Jacques Plante's mask from 1960, and there's nothing we can do about it," one GM said last week. That's true. The league and its netminders built consensus on pads, chest protectors and gloves but there is no agreement on masks.

That is going to change. And, this is one situation where the GMs are correct. In the last 10 months, $118 million worth of goalies (Rick DiPietro, Ryan Miller and Jonas Hiller) were injured by shots off the mask. (And Pekka Rinne was very lucky to escape serious damage when his was smashed in the preseason.) I understand that these goalies want to be comfortable in their equipment, but there has to be a sensible solution.

It's the most important position on the ice. And, they fought equipment changes for years, saying that the new one-piece sticks made their existence more dangerous. It defies logic, then, to allow below-standard protection around the head.

DiPietro wore one of the newer-style masks until his ill-advised decision to fight Brent Johnson last February. DiPietro's face was so damaged by the punch that he had to switch to one of the old-school Osgood/Healy masks. (The newer-style ones sit on the cheekbones and, with the plates installed into his face, it was too uncomfortable for him.)

The Islanders deny this, but word is that they tried everything to dissuade DiPietro from wearing it. Ironically, a new one with thicker interior padding was ordered, but hadn't arrived by the time Brian Rolston's shot hit him in the helmet. (Rolston's pretty dangerous. He also hit Miller.)

The NHL and its GMs want three things: an inability for sticks/pucks to get through holes in the cage; proof that the forehead/jaw of a mask can withstand the force of a Zdeno Chara blast; and a minimum of 1/2-inch foam inside the shell.

None of those things is guaranteed now. For example, it's believed goalies are shaving the foam down to as little as 1/4-inch so their eyes can be closer to the puck.

The league could also suggest approving several prototypes that goalies would be allowed to choose from. Much of the dispute surrounds the makers themselves. For example, the masks we showed on Hotstove came from Eddy Schulz, the Toronto-based maker of "Eddymasks." His product is very well-respected. Hiller's mask is made by a Swiss friend of his, and that's a real concern, because no one really has an idea of the quality control.

"This should not be about comfort," the above GM said. "This should be about safety first, and then comfort."

The GMs are determined to get this into the new CBA. but it shouldn't get to that point. The goalies have resisted change over the past several years. That attitude, however, no longer makes sense.

Their position is too important to allow improper protection.

30 THOUGHTS

1. It's not only masks that will be an issue. The GMs also want players wearing gloves with lengthier wrist protection and Kevlar-protected socks. Reason: skate-blade cuts, like the one to Mike Cammalleri in Winnipeg.

2. Plenty of rumours that Columbus ownership is considering forcing a change behind the bench -- bringing back Ken Hitchcock. The team is paying him $1.3 million on a deal ending after this season. Don't see how this would be anything but a lose-lose for everyone involved -- the players, Hitchcock, GM Scott Howson, everybody. They didn't mesh before and it's hard to see that improving in a difficult time. Good ownership would not make this kind of decision. If you're going to make a change, find a fresh voice.

3. Tough spot for James Wisniewski. Guaranteed to come under scrutiny because of the big contract, now he's coming back with the team at rock bottom. Fans will be praying for a saviour. I've written this before, but the best thing about him is that he's supremely confident in his own ability. It's clear Columbus needs that right now.

4. Anaheim/Phoenix played Sunday night with only one referee, as Steve Kozari's eyes swelled up due to an allergic reaction. (Ugh, sounds gross. Get well, Steve.) As a result, Brad Watson did the game alone. Apparently, the players loved it.

5. Take a look at David Booth's goals. You'll notice he's a catch-and-shoot player (and he's got a great shot). He rarely carries the puck, unless he's doing so to drive the net. There was a feeling in Florida that he was overthinking -- trying to do other things instead of getting it and firing. The key for the Canucks will be getting him back to that.

6. As for Booth breaking down and crying, that's not uncommon. Patrick Kane teared up when Denis Savard was fired; didn't stop him from winning a Cup with Joel Quenneville. Aaron Hill cried when traded from the Blue Jays, then hit 90 points higher in Arizona. It'll be fine.

7. Florida is trying to spin this as a trade for now, but one thing this does allow is one of their high-level prospects to play in a top-six position next year. Jonathan Huberdeau is tearing up the Quebec League and Nick Bjugstad has five goals in six games at the University of Minnesota. (Quinton Howden is another possibility, although he is battling a concussion now.)

8. Believe there was one other team sniffing around Booth. That's got Toronto written all over it, but the Maple Leafs say, "No sir."

9. October is consistently one of Roberto Luongo's worst months of the year, statistically. (Exception: his first season in Vancouver. That October was pretty good.) That's the main reason the Canucks aren't getting caught up in this early season anti-Luongo firestorm.

10. If Mike Gillis really wants to get back at The Vancouver Province, maybe the Canucks website should start running classifieds.

11. Highest phone bill in Canada? Got to be Jay Feaster's. Here's the problem: the guy who everyone would love is not available. Even if Mark Giordano didn't have a no-move clause, the Flames wouldn't trade him.

12. Remember one thing about first-year players as the 10-game mark approaches: It's about the player's 10th game, not the team's. Senators GM Bryan Murray may sit Mika Zibanejad to delay a decision. That's why it's not the end of the world if Edmonton sits Ryan Nugent-Hopkins for a night or two (and I'd be shocked if he went back to junior). If the player benefits by watching a little while being able to practice with pros, why not?

13. Only Flyers with more penalty-kill time than Sean Couturier? Kimmo Timonen, Max Talbot and Chris Pronger. He's earned trust.

14. Here's the deal with Oren Koules: Koules was involved in Matt Hulsizer's attempt to buy the Phoenix Coyotes before that deal fell apart. There are some serious questions as to whether or not the St. Louis deal will happen. "No guarantee," two different sources said. But, if it does, Koules will be a partner.

15. Koules really wants back into the NHL, but there were two concerns in Tampa. First was that he couldn't support the losses on his own. That won't be addressed until more about the partnership is understood. Second was his choice of GM. If he does take over here, he'd be smart to leave the current group in place.

16. Once in a while, Jacques Martin drops the comatose act and let's you know what he really thinks about a player. Saturday night, be snapped at a reporter who asked why Mathieu Darche was on the power-play instead of Erik Cole. "If you look at your stats last year, how many goals did Erik Cole score on the power play?" he said. (Answer: 3) Darche had two, in 23 fewer games.

17. Cole said a few weeks ago that Montreal's forecheck was an adjustment for him. The second forechecker in Carolina's system is supposed to be aggressive. Not so much in Montreal. Don't know if that's still problematic, but it's clear Cole is not having the hoped impact.

18. Two years ago, Martin had the Canadiens in the Stanley Cup semifinal. Last year, they went seven games in the first round with the eventual champion. Firing him is way too premature. But, he does have to calm down PK Subban and Josh Gorges. Their hearts are in the right place, but with the injuries on defence those guys are trying to do everything.

19. That is Montreal's biggest issue -- the beaten-up blueline. Problem is, there are so many teams looking for defensive help and, after what happened last year in Vancouver, teams want to keep their depth. St. Louis is looking and Tampa was too, especially when there was doubt about Eric Brewer's health. And, when you're drowning, other GMs are happy to throw you an anvil.

20. Totally agreed with Shea Weber being fined without a suspension. He came up with two boarding penalties in two nights before his hearing. Now, he's been warned. When you're as physical a player as he is and have no prior history, you deserve slack.

21. A member of the Avalanche organization sat down with Paul Stastny after last season and advised him to improve his foot speed. "He told me I'd be a more dangerous player," Stastny said, being better prepared to do things like charge in behind the play to create scoring chances. Stastny listened, spending the summer doing plyometrics.

22. Who was this advisor? He smiled and wouldn't say. But I'd bet his name rhymes with Moe Trakic.

23. More Gabriel Landeskog love: "You'd think he's been in the league five years," said one teammate.

24. The Red Wings showed a really interesting five-on-three power-play look last Friday against Columbus. As Niklas Kronwall held the puck at the left point, both Henrik Zetterberg and Nicklas Lidstrom lined up to his right along the blueline. Kronwall passed once and Zetterberg shot it. They tried it again, and Zetterberg let it go to Lidstrom, who shot it. Didn't score there, but it's creative and going to cause a lot of problems. Jeff Blashill, one of the new assistants, used that setup at Western Michigan.

25. Last weekend, Detroit followed the Toronto model of putting your starter against the team you should beat. The Red Wings used Jimmy Howard against Columbus and Ty Conklin in Washington. The Maple Leafs had James Reimer against Winnipeg and Jonas Gustavsson in Boston. Both won at home and lost by a combined 13-3 on the road.

26. There's some real debate about that strategy -- the biggest complaint being that you put your backup in a situation where he can't succeed. Carolina did this last year with Cam Ward. The eight games he didn't start featured six playoff teams (Kings, Flyers, Penguins, Lightning, Blackhawks and Capitals.) Of course, they rest him in Winnipeg on Saturday and blow a 2-0 lead.

27. Tomas Vokoun really showed his value in that win over Detroit. Two huge saves: one on Pavel Datysuk with the game still scoreless, one on Daniel Cleary during a Red Wings 5-on-3. It was 3-1 Washington at that time, and a Cleary goal changes the complexion of the game.

28. Capitals fans were annoyed that Detroit being on the rear end of a back-to-back was used as an excuse. Remember this: the rematch is March 19. Washington plays in Chicago the day before. Detroit plays no one.

29. Hard not to be impressed with Tim Erixon in Calgary. Played 18:12, his most this season. Booed every time he touched the puck. Didn't get rattled. If I was a Calgary fan, I'd boo him too, because I'd wish he stayed.

30. Read Steve Simmons' book on David Frost and Mike Danton (The Lost Dream) in one day. Every minor-hockey parent should, too.


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Confusion surrounds Habs' firing

By CHRIS STEVENSON, QMI Agency, Oct 26 2011


MONTREAL - Well, Perry Pearn has got some time on his hands now.

Fired as an assistant coach with the Montreal Canadiens 90 minutes before the Habs got their first home win of the season, maybe Pearn could head to one of those Occupy Wall Street protests. He could help protesters organize their power play or show them how to break out of their tented village.

Canadiens general manager Pierre Gauthier made it sound like Pearn was a victim of some kind corporate downsizing, a victim of the unjust world economy.

It had nothing to do with the Habs’ power play, ranked 29th in the league going into Wednesday's game, for which Pearn had at least shared responsibility.

It had little to do with the Canadiens’ poor start, which included an unprecedented five games at home without a win.

Gauthier sounded more like an executive at General Motors in charge of transmissions than a guy entrusted with an iconic sports and cultural institution whose performance right now has fans here running around the city like their red, white and blue hair is on fire.

“It’s more the result of a change from a global perspective, a big picture perspective. We need to be better at what we do. We need to be more efficient. In order to do that, that is one of the changes we decided to make,” said Gauthier.

OK.

The Habs were in the throes of their worst home start in history until Wednesday night’s win. Winger Max Pacioretty went from game-time decision with a sore wrist to scoring two goals and adding an assist while goaltender Carey Price played like last season's Carey Price in the 5-1 win over the Philadelphia Flyers.

Price switched back to his white pads after going 0-2-2 while playing with pads that had pink accents on them. He wore them to promote cancer awareness month. He said after the game it was strongly suggested he make the switch.

“I don’t want to say who, but it came from pretty high up,” he said.

Which, after I tweeted that quote Wednesday night, several fans insisted the call came from The Big Guy himself.

If He actually cared, even He would be shaking his head over what is going on with la Sainte Flanelle.

Firing an assistant coach -- especially one as respected as Pearn -- hardly seems like the appropriate measure given the team had actually played decently lately.

Either do nothing or go all the way. Say, "look, we haven’t had some of our best players and we’re going to stay the course. We believe in this group." Or fire head coach Jacques Martin.

Maybe it was just as simple as Pearn’s vision, his philosophy, whatever, didn’t mesh with the rest of the group.

All of it Wednesday night -- the timing, the victim, the explanation -- was a touch on the bizarre side, no?

“We’re going to function out of the box a little more than we have. This is one thing that is part of that change,” said Gauthier.

This was out of the box and out of left field.

Randy Ladouceur, promoted along with Randy Cunneyworth to assistant jobs after Kirk Muller left in the off-season, was in Pearn’s place running the defence behind the Montreal bench Wednesday night.

Gauthier backed up Martin as his coach, said his players are still on board and said top defenceman Andrei Markov will return from Florida, where he has been rehabbing his knee for the last three weeks, Friday. Gauthier said Markov could be skating with the team as early as next week.

So, Pearn -- whose teams never once failed to make the playoffs in his 14 years as an assistant (eight in Ottawa, four with the New York Rangers and two with the Habs) -- takes the tumble and all those Habs fans who wanted somebody to pay a price for their team’s horrific start got thrown a bone.

Just guessing, but for most of them, that bone had the wrong name on it.


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Should the NHL make visors mandatory?
Players on both sides of the fence


By RANDY SPORTAK, QMI Agency, Oct 26 2011


CALGARY - Niklas Hagman knows his decision to not wear a visor is nonsensical.

Yet, the Calgary Flames winger keeps playing without the protection.

"I have no good reason not to. When I wear one, it doesn't bother me at all, but for some reason, I take it off," Hagman said Wednesday. "To be honest, I should have one. I've got two eyes and have two kids and want to see them. It would be the smart thing to do, so I don't know why I don't."

The visor discussion becomes hot and heavy every year when a NHL player is injured by an errant high stick or puck to the face.

It's already happened this season, when Philadelphia Flyers captain Chris Pronger was injured Monday night when Mikhail Grabovski's stick caught him in the face.

Fortunately, Pronger is expected to make a full recovery without vision loss and return in a few weeks.

Only 10 of the 21 forwards on the current Flames roster wear visors, below the league average of 68%, according to figures released by the NHLPA.

"To me, it's really a no-brainer," said Flames centre Brendan Morrison, who wears a visor. "You're talking about your vision. Nobody ever intends to high-stick a guy, but there's a chance, so why not take away some risk if you can and protect yourself?

"If guys are saying it's to prove your tough, why not go and play without a cup on? That's tough. But why doesn't anyone play without a jock? Because it's stupid.

"I think the old-school mentality was that soft guys played with visors or European guys played with visors, but that's old-school thinking. I think we're much more aware and much more cognisant of safety in the game these days, especially with concussions at the forefront, but over the course of my career, there have been three, four, five, six guys who have had pretty serious eye injuries. My reasoning is to mitigate risk."

Still, there are those who don't plan to wear a visor as long as it's their call.

David Moss has gone back and forth with a visor, taking it off for good a couple of seasons ago.

"I feel more comfortable without one. I feel I can see better. It's my decision," Moss said.

And the Pronger incident can't sway him.

"I think it makes your family more worried than you are," he said. "Knock on wood those accidents are rare, and you don't want it to happen, and I know visors may prevent it, but we're grown men and can make a decision."

Defenceman Mark Giordano is in the same camp, although he acknowledges there may be a time players will be forced to wear visors.

"I think it's just an individual choice. As far as I go, my biggest issue with visors is in the middle of shifts when you get snow or water or spray on it, and having to adjust to it in the middle of a shift," he said. "In saying that, I have played with one before, in Russia, the world championships, and I know you can get used to it."

It was easy for Lee Stempniak, who wore a cage in university and was encouraged to wear a visor as a rookie with the St. Louis Blues.

"Sure enough, in my first day of practice -- first intra-squad game -- I took a stick right between the eyes. It would have cut me open, but it caught me in the visor. I've never thought about it since."


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Kennedy: Mandatory visor rule is overdue

Ryan Kennedy, The Hockey News, 2011-10-26


So I’m about as hawkish as anyone in the THN office when it comes to fighting, violence and all those good things, but the visor debate doesn’t really seem like a debate anymore, does it?

The gruesome eye injury to Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Chris Pronger earlier this week provided a terrible yet perfect example of why visors should be mandatory and why the arguments against wearing one simply don’t fly.

I recognize toughness is sometimes questioned when players wear visors and peer pressure on the same topic makes a lot of young NHLers question whether or not they should wear a shield, but here’s the thing: The randomness of flying projectiles in hockey wipes out any correlation with toughness. The world’s strongest man is no match for a sniper rifle and even the biggest, nastiest hockey player – someone such as, say, Chris Pronger – can’t do anything about a puck getting deflected up the shaft of his stick or getting caught by a blade when an opponent follows through on a shot.

But clearly there is still resistance out there. As Montreal’s Travis Moen told the Globe and Mail this week, his enforcing duties with the undersized Canadiens make him pause about the visor issue: “With my role,” Moen said, “it can get in the way.”

But if visors were mandatory, every player who drops the gloves on occasion would be in the same boat. And why should only those who stick up for their teammates be exposed to the cruel physics of random puck deflections, high sticks or even skate blades when a player is upended dramatically by a collision? If you get punched in the face, it’s usually your own fault. A puck to the eye is a much different story.

Yeah, it’s tougher to fight with visors on but heck, since we’re on the subject, let’s get Bauer or Reebok on the job and figure out a solution. Maybe a visor that flips up like Dwayne Wayne’s sunglasses with the push of a button. Tearaway options are out there ­ maybe NHLers would wear those if properly educated on the product – I’m just spitballing here, I’m no design expert.

The other gripe about visors that never washed with me is how players claim they are uncomfortable wearing them. Particularly for youngsters coming into the league, they all wore visors in junior and if the players came from an NCAA background, they wore full cages or face shields. Now, a lot of NHLers put up huge points when they were teens, which is why they graduated to the Big Show in the first place. If they can do it at that level with a visor or cage on, why can’t they do it in the NHL?

And if you don’t care a lick about the well-being of players these days, be selfish and think about your own enjoyment. Losing the services of a star player because of something totally preventable would be incredibly frustrating for any fanbase, would it not?

As a matter of fact, owners and GMs should be leading the charge for visors, since it’s their fortunes that rest the most on player health. Injuries play havoc on a depth chart, so why blow the chance at a Stanley Cup because of something that can’t be accurately predicted? Because the stakes run from blindness and an end to a player’s career to a missed opportunity for playoff glory, it really doesn’t make sense to hold off on a visor mandate any longer.


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FRASER: THE REQUIREMENTS OF BEING AN NHL REFEREE

Kerry Fraser, TSN.CA, Oct 26 2011


Mr. Fraser,

What physical criteria is involved in becoming (and maintaining) an NHL on-ice official - in terms of height, weight, age, etc.? They're not exactly the overweight umpires in baseball who keep a box of donuts in the dugouts to snack on between innings (LOL).

Anxiously awaiting your reply.

Uncle Greg DiLorenzo,
Holbrook, NY



Hey 'Uncle' Greg:

I don't know if you are looking to apply for the job but here are some of the attributes that the NHL Officiating Department looks for in their recruiting efforts throughout North America and around the world as recent as last season with the hiring of 39-year-old Marcus Vinnorborg from Lijungby, Sweden.

In each of the 2,165 NHL games that I refereed, I could always count on receiving "help" from the patrons on the other side of the glass (sometimes 20,000+ strong) that fashioned themselves as experts in the art of officiating. Anyone that thinks they can fill the job requirements please forward your applications to the NHL Officiating Department in Toronto.

Every sport is very demanding to officiate; each with its own unique challenges. If you don't believe me step into our world and umpire a Little League Baseball game or if you really want to challenge your aptitude (and patience) lace up your skates and blow a whistle in a youth hockey game. The coaches and fans that attend those games can be the most biased and difficult to deal with from all levels of sport - they are called 'parents!' Sarah Palin had it right when she described the only difference between a "Hockey Mom" and a pit-bull was lipstick!

With all due respect to my colleagues in the other major sports the game of hockey is the most difficult to officiate in of all sport. Movement in an athletic shoe on firm turf, field or hardwood is much more natural than skating on a thin skate blade on ice. The very first physical requirement of the job, Greg, is that of superior skating ability. This encompasses balance, agility, mobility, foot speed forward and backwards to place yourself in the very best possible position on the ice to see play and make the best possible judgment. This skill set is a must to also avoid player and puck contact in the confined 200 x 85 foot ice surface so as to not interfere with the game flow and to provide for personal safety.

Another physical requirement beyond athleticism is what you alluded to (LOL) relative to "donuts in the dugout" which implies that a high level of physical conditioning is a must. The NHL Officiating Department, under the direction of David T. Smith, Director of Medical and Fitness sets high personal standards that each official must maintain. Specific programs are created for either rehabilitation of injury or strength and conditioning no differently than the NHL teams provide for their players. Dave Smith performed in this capacity with the New York Rangers (Stanley Cup 1994) and Florida Panthers prior to joining League management.

At the annual training camp for officials, held in September each official, under Smith's direction, completes medicals followed by a rigorous fitness test before they hit the ice. The fitness test includes a VO2 Max test on the bike, Wingate test on the bike (a leg killer), flexibility (stretch and reach), shuttle run drill, sit-ups and push-ups.

Those of us that have existing medical conditions were checked over thoroughly and completed specific tests. As an example I have no ACL in my left knee and am bone on bone following five surgeries. My right knee also has minimal cartilage remaining following three surgeries. (I am attempting to avoid a fourth surgery following a slight tear suffered in Prague, where I opened my final season (2009-10) with the Rangers and Lightning.) As a result of these medical conditions I was required to complete a computer generated leg strength/speed evaluation test on the cybex machine each training camp.

In terms of physical size it is quite obvious that hiring practices have changed considerably since Ray Scapinello, Willie Norris and I were hired in the 1970's. At 5'7" I was the tallest of all three of us! If all abilities are relatively equal, size does matter; especially with regard to the linesmen. The "twin towers" of Mike Cvik and Shane Heyer top out at 6'9" without skates and helmets. Combined with their physical strength they have a commanding view from their vantage point on the ice. While few of the linesmen possess this height all of them are very strong physically and hit the gym on a regular basis throughout the season.

To give you an idea of range in age of the elder statesman of the NHL Officials Association is linesman Dan Schachte who is 53 years old and will hit the 2,000 game plateau this season. Dan played hockey at Wisconsin for the late Bob Johnson. The only other Centurion in the linesmen's ranks is Andy McElman. The youngest linesman is newly hired, 27-year-old Matt MacPherson from Antiginish, Nova Scotia.

A total of four referees have celebrated their 50th birthday or beyond. That list includes in order of age, Paul Devorski, Denis LaRue, Don Van Massenhoven and Brad Watson. The young pup in his first year under contract is 26-year-old Graham Skilliter from La Ronge, Saskatchewan.

As Father Time marches forward it is imperative that older officials work even harder to maintain their conditioning and foot speed if they are to continue in their current capacity.

Last but not least of all I think every hockey official must know the game and understand their specific roll within it. We recognize that no one pays to watch the referee call penalties or for the linesmen to drop pucks and break up fights. That being said the officials perform a vital service by upholding and maintaining the integrity of the game and keeping the environment safe and fair by enforcing the playing rules as are handed to them by the NHL Rules Committee and Board of Governors. This involves applying a broad authority in judgment that is handed to them. As we know it can be a thankless job given the subjective scrutiny that each call can be reviewed and measure by. Most often the task is performed very well if not to perfection; albeit in the imperfect world called hockey officiating.

As each referee works hard to give the game his very best each night out I am reminded of a couple of cliches that I heard when I signed my first contract with the NHL as a 21-year-old in 1973.

The first was from Hockey Hall of Fame Referee Frank Udvari who discovered me at a referee school after playing my final season of Jr. A hockey when he said:

"You are now a referee. This is the only job where you are expected to start your first game by being perfect and to get better each game after that!"

The other was from my friend Bill Beagan, who as Commissioner of the IHL watched me work my first game in his league in Dayton, Ohio that erupted into a bench clearing brawl.

Tommy McVie was the playing coach for the Dayton Gems and I had no idea what to do in this first time situation for me. The brawl last over 20 minutes and due to my lack of experience all I assessed was two roughing minors and two fighting majors when both benches emptied and everyone on the ice was fighting including the goalkeepers.

At the conclusion of the game, commissioner Bill Beagan kindly guided me in a teaching way as to what I should do when (not if) this situation was to present itself. Before he departed the officials' room he left me with this final thought that has stuck throughout all these years when he said:

"Kerry remember this, from experience you will acquire judgment; from poor judgment you will acquire experience!"

Some just might say I was the most experienced referee in the history of the game...


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Ovie touts Oiler young guns

By ROBERT TYCHKOWSKI, QMI Agency, Oct 27 2011


EDMONTON - Alex Ovechkin knew the trio of Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Taylor Hall and Jordan Eberle had some moves, but even the most electrifying player in the league was caught off guard when he emerged from a film session Thursday morning.

“I watched the video for the first time and it’s pretty sick,” said the Capitals winger, as the Caps prepared for tonight’s marquee showdown at Rexall Place. “We’ll have to watch them pretty closely.”

Caps coach Bruce Boudreau, having a little fun with foregone conclusion that is Nugent-Hopkins staying with the Oilers this season, offered some advice to GM Steve Tambellini.

“They should send him down before tonight’s game,” he cracked. “This kid is great, what are you going to do? I’ve only seen him play live one game but he’s going to be really good.”

Boudreau, whose team can score a little bit, too, is expecting a thriller when a pair of teams with all this much offensive potential square off.

“We know they’re going to be ready to play, coming off a big win over Vancouver,” he said. “We can’t take them lightly.”

“It might be a case of who blinks,” offered Oilers coach Tom Renney, who’s looking forward to seeing how his team stacks up againt the 7-0 Caps. “We have a lot to learn still as a team, there’s no doubt about that, and we will learn a lot through tonight’s game.”

LATE HITS ... Nugent-Hopkins will accompany the team to Colorado to play his 10th game Friday.

“We’ll play the game tonight,” said Renney. “And do the right thing,”... Theo Peckham will draw in for injured defenceman Ryan Whitney and Nikolai Khabibulin will start his fourth game in a row.


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A veteran's advice:
Bill Guerin looks back at the NHL lockout with regret and realization


Michael Grange, Sportsnet.ca, October 27 2011


It seems that sooner rather than later the NBA will reach a deal with its players and lift their four-month lockout.

Watching from a distance Bill Guerin, a veteran of the NHL lockout and former NHLPA hardliner can only say it should be sooner: A season -- even a single payday -- is a terrible thing to waste.

Presuming an NBA deal gets done, the NHL will remain the only professional sports league to sit out an entire season.

Looking back Guerin, 41, is adamant that they should remain the only one.

When it comes to battles between millionaire players and their billionaire owners the players are in a fight they can't win.

"You have to fight for every percentage point, but you also have to know when to cut your losses," the 18-year NHL veteran told me over the phone. "My point is that it's not worth burning a year fighting over two per cent. Go ahead; burn the year on two per cent. That's great, but you're never going to make up that two per cent. You would be better off taking two-per cent less and making your money."

Are NBA players listening? Maybe. There are a number of issues at work in their dispute with ownership, but primarily it's about how much of the NBA's roughly $4-billion in basketball-related revenue will be shared and what means will be used to share it.

The players were getting 57 per cent of BRI (basketball related income) in their old deal and owners want them to lower their cut to 50 per cent. The players for the longest time have made 53 per cent their line in the sand until recently walking off in a huff when owners rejected their offer of 52.5 per cent (each percentage point is about $40-million annually).

Until the two sides began talking again on Wednesday with encouraging noises being made by each side, it seemed the entire season was hanging on that relatively small gap.

The thought of it makes Guerin shudder as he relives the bitter NHL lockout that sent the 2004-05 season up in smoke. He was front-and-centre as a union vice president and loyal lieutenant to then NHLPA executive director Bob Goodenow.

He was as dug in as anyone else, but now looks back with regret and realization.

"There's a partnership in the sense that we share the revenue; we're trying to grow the game, that kind of thing," Guerin says over the phone from Long Island. "But it's their league. I'm retired. It's not my league, but they're still there. They own the teams. They control what's going on, that's the bottom line."

His message to NBA players and to NHL players who may well be in a similar fight when their current deal expires after this season?

Get a deal done. Like it or not you're in a minority partnership. Focus on growing the business rather than dictating the terms, and if that means giving up more than you would like in a deal, so be it.

"If you get too stubborn and you don't want to be open minded about it, you're only hurting yourself," he says. "Better to take a little bit of a haircut than get your whole head shaved."

It's a reversal won of experience. The NHLPA splintered under the weight of a full year out of work and the looming prospect of a second season lost. At the time Guerin admits he looked down at players who split from the hard-line the union had taken against the implementation of a salary cap. No longer.

He lost a full year's salary at $6.7-million and after a season off the ice and in the boardroom he never got completely back into top playing shape the following year. His contract was bought out and that cost him another $2.3-million.

Hockey players are bred to think team first and fight for every inch of ice; get stitched up and keep playing. Pick up those teeth, give them to the trainer, and keep playing.

That mentality helped the NHLPA stay unified for longer and under greater duress than any other sports union has in recent times, but it may ultimately have cost them, as much as it pains Guerin to admit it now.

"When you're right in the middle of it, it's emotional, it's hard," he said. "Hockey players are the ultimate team players and we'll buy in and go to war, but you know what? Individual guys have to do what's right for their families and do what's right for them. To me it's playing."

The NHL's fight was over the change from a free market for player salaries to a hard salary cap in one fell swoop. In the end, they seemed to have lost everything as the owners got their hard cap and got a 24 per cent wage roll back right off the top.

But a funny thing happened: League revenues have grown and all of a sudden a journeyman like James Wisneiwski can command a $33-million over six years from the small market Columbus Blue Jackets. Budding superstars like Drew Doughty can sign a $56-million contract at age 21.

"They say think of the next generation," says Geurin. "The next generation seems to be doing okay."

Geurin is as well. He's a player development coach with the Pittsburgh Penguins. He's got time at home with his four young kids. He looked after the money he earned when he played.

He just wishes he had his lost year back. He doesn't know any NBA players personally, but he knows what they're going through and doesn't want another athlete to go through what he and his peers did.

"It's a year without the game," he says. "You think about stuff like that when you get older."


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