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FRASER: THE CALL ON BOURQUE'S EMPTY NET GOAL

Kerry Fraser, TSN.CA, Oct 20 2011


Hi Kerry, I have something of a technical question for you.

During the Colorado-Calgary game on Wednesday night, Calgary had a 3-2 lead, and with the clock ticking down, Colorado goalie J. S. Giguere headed to the bench for an extra attacker. Calgary's Rene Bourque found himself on a clear-cut breakaway with an empty net in front of him, but before he could shoot the puck into the gaping cage, he was tripped from behind by a Colorado player.

The referee signaled a penalty but the play continued. Calgary's Olli Jokinen then collected the puck and put it in the net. However, it was ruled that because Bourque had been on an empty-net breakaway, he was automatically awarded the goal - his second of the night.

My question is: if that's the rule, then why was the play allowed to continue after the ref had already decided it was a trip, and therefore an automatically-awarded goal? Shouldn't the ref have immediately blown his whistle, stopped play, and awarded the goal? This situation is unlike any other delayed penalty, where allowing the fouled team to continue play could be to their benefit. All this did was confuse the fans, who clearly saw Jokinen score a goal that wound up being credited to Bourque.

What's the rationale behind this?

Joey Lindstrom
Calgary, AB


Joey:

'Technically Speaking,' play should have been immediately stopped by referee Don Van Massenhoven under rule 57.4 and a goal awarded to Rene Bourque. Let me give you a "play-by-play" possibility from within the referee's helmet as to perhaps why the whistle didn't immediately blow.

All aspects of this play directly applied to the language of the rule. Bourque, who was 'in control of the puck, in the neutral or attacking zone with no opposition between him and the opposing goal and when goalkeeper J.S. Giguere had been removed from the ice, was tripped or otherwise fouled by Colorado defenceman, Kyle Quincey thus preventing a reasonable scoring opportunity.'

Referee Van Massenhoven immediately raised his arm to identify the infraction and I fully believe was prepared to kill the play and award the goal but instead allowed Bourque to push the puck from his knees toward the gaping cage. Once the puck hit the side of the goal frame and prior to Olli Jokinen depositing the puck in the net, Van Massenhoven is clearly visible blowing his whistle and motioning into the net to award a goal to Rene Bourque. With the 'award,' Bourque (who hails from Lac La Biche, Alberta) notched his second goal of the contest and fifth of the season. (I just love the name of that town and had to share it with you!)

So why would referee Van Massenhoven delay the call to allow Rene Bourque the unnecessary courtesy of sliding the puck over the goal line? I've been in the same situation and did exactly the same thing that Van Mass did last night.

While my rational might appear as 'creative finance' to you, my thought process in that moment was to allow an extra second or two for the fouled player to finish the play on his own. He fought hard to put himself in that position and the thrill of "denting the twine" and the celebration that follows the scoring a goal is part of our hockey culture and history of the game. While the end result will be the same (a goal) I wanted let the player to have his moment to shine in front of the fans and not impose myself in that instant. Perhaps even subconsciously, I hoped to avoid any need to explain why a goal was going up on the clock when the puck never entered the net since this type of play doesn't happen very often. Put the puck in the net and any questions are eliminated.

While offering you my honest account of this thought process I am prepared to get blasted in your blog comments for not just following the letter of the rule. After all, the rule is the rule isn't it? You're right - I'm wrong.

But since you asked, let me share with you a goal that I was about to award in 1979 in an American Hockey League game in Binghamton but instead allowed the player to put the puck in biscuit in the basket.

With a minute remaining in the game and the visiting team up by one goal the Binghamton Dusters had removed their goalkeeper for an extra skater. Binghamton turned the puck over and an attacking player had a clear breakaway on the open net. There wasn't a Duster within 60 feet and a sure goal was imminent. As the attacking player was about to cross the Binghamton blue line the Duster enforcer, who was sitting on the end of the bench and hadn't taken a shift throughout the entire game, came flying off the bench without his stick and gloves. (I was surprised the guy even had his skates laced up at that point in the game) I thought, oh-oh, this "nut-bar" is going to jump the attacking player and start a brawl.

Just as the enforcer got within punching range of the puck handler he threw his hands in the hand and screamed - "HAAAAH"! It surprised and likely scared the hell out of the poor guy enough to cause him to mishandle the puck. I was shocked but pleasantly surprised that a physical attack hadn't ensued. At this point I should have awarded a goal but instead I allowed the player to slide the puck into the empty cage followed by his goal scoring celebration.

Having just completed a tour of Western Canada in September with my friends the Hanson Brothers you might think the play I just described was right out of their movie, Slap Shot. I can assure you it happened just the way I described it and is consistent with the crazy things that occurred in minor professional hockey during that era of the game.

Oh, I almost forgot to mention who that "nut bar-enforcer" from the Binghamton Dusters was. It was none other than my former colleague and friend Paul Stewart who eventually saw the error in his ways and crossed over to our other side. Stewy worked over 1,000 games as an NHL referee and is now the Referee-in-Chief for both the men and women officials of the ECAC Division 1 hockey. The Stew-Cat is not near as frightening in this position as he was that night in Binghamton.

And the player he tried to scare? None other than 1980 Olympic gold medal winner Dave Silk.


Dean
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DREGER: NHL TEAMS CONSIDER AHL OVERHAUL

DARREN DREGER, TSN, Oct 27 2011


Sources tell TSN several NHL western conference teams are involved in ongoing discussions to improve the geographic challenges some teams face in trying to develop their players from afar.

Los Angeles, Anaheim, San Jose, Phoenix, Colorado, Vancouver, Edmonton and Calgary attended a private meeting with NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly earlier this month, where the group conceptually talked about the introduction of a western wing to the American Hockey League to ease the burden of travel on prospect players, as well as provide NHL teams with a more hands on approach in day to day development.

Most in that group are content with their existing AHL partnerships; however, there are some who who like to see change and are considering a more extreme approach if necessary.

The possibility of creating an entirely new league primarily based to serve some of the NHL's pacific and northwest division teams has also been suggested by some involved.

Sources say the main group intends to hire outside counsel to thoroughly investigate all existing partnership agreements and building lease commitments with existing AHL affiliates to get a clear view of how realistic such a drastic move is, within the next 2-3 years.

American Hockey League president and CEO, David Andrews, tells TSN he is aware of the ongoing discussions that have taken place at the NHL level and says he has made it clear he is willing to work to create a true western division and help facilitate such a move.

Although the AHL has trimmed its schedule from 80 games to 76 this season to eliminate the instances where teams were burdened by playing four games in five days, the view of the NHL clubs most interested in change, or intrigued by the concept of starting a new league; is based on the belief that their players aren't being properly developed because of the American Hockey League grind, limited practice schedules, and the fact most of the farm teams are thousands of kilometres away from their NHL cities as illustrated below.

Syracuse, NY to Anaheim --- 3,745km
Manchester, NH to Los Angeles --- 4,143km
Worcester, Mass to San Jose --- 4,263km
Portland, Maine to Phoenix --- 3,773km
Cleveland to Denver --- 1,974km

While the National Hockey League is sensitive to the concerns of their western based teams, the league also feels a deep sense of loyalty to the American Hockey League and recognizes, like each NHL partner, the AHL is operating a business and has certain scheduling necessities to ensure operating costs are covered.

It should also be noted, most NHL teams remain firmly in support of the American Hockey League and don't want to be part of either a public or private campaign that may poison their relationships with their AHL partners.

Some involved in the process remain highly skeptical a new league will spawn from the latest round of discussions, primarily because of the enormous expense required to start up what would have to be a minimum 5 or 6 team loop. The more practical and likely solution is the introduction of a true western division...more geographically friendly for the clubs most impacted by the existing issues.

While this latest attempt to improve affiliate conditions may be far more extreme, in terms of the potential of an entirely new league, the idea of an AHL western division was originally introduced by Brian Burke during his time as general manager of the Anaheim Ducks.

Burke's push was fueled by the logistical hurdles his players had to endure to get to Anaheim from Portland, Maine, which included all day travel.

Burke's effort to garner enough support to urge the AHL to reshape its divisions and affiliate cities fizzled, but issues remain and the quest to find a solution has once again become a priority.


Dean
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'Proud' Pearn responds to firing

BY RYAN DIXON, SPORTSNET STAFF, October 28, 2011


Perry Pearn holds no bitterness toward the Montreal Canadiens organization, but as a proud hockey man, the disappointment in his voice is obvious while discussing Canadiens GM Pierre Gauthier’s decision to dismiss him on Wednesday.

Pearn had just begun his third season as an assistant on the Habs’ bench when Gauthier axed him only a couple hours before Montreal’s game against the Philadelphia Flyers that night.

"To be let go this early is tough to take," says Pearn when reached by Sportsnet magazine on Friday morning. "I understand, but there’s always going to be… I’m a proud person, I think I’m good at what I do, so I can’t help but be disappointed that what’s happened has happened."

Pearn was in charge of Montreal’s struggling special teams, just one of the deficiencies of a banged-up club that had a 1-5-2 record the day he was fired.

"Do I think it’s my fault the Montreal Canadiens had a bad start?" Pearn asks. "I’ll take my share of the responsibility. Our power play wasn’t as good as it should be; our penalty-killing wasn’t as good as we wanted it to be. But to say I’m the only reason we had a bad start, no, I don’t accept that.

"And I’m sure that’s not the point of me being let go, is that it was all my fault. It was a way of sending a wake-up call to everybody that things had to change."

The message, for the time being anyway, seems to have worked, as the Canadiens have won twice since Gauthier’s startling decision, which initially drew heat for its abruptness.

"I guess if you’re sitting today from the general manager’s standpoint, he would have an argument it worked," Pearn says of his dismissal. "They won the last two games."

Pearn says he learned of his firing in a one-on-one meeting with Gauthier.

"At 3 o’clock on Wednesday we were all focused on trying to win a hockey game," he explains. "By 5 o’clock, all the circumstances had changed."

Gauthier’s public statements in terms of his rationale for the move have been vague, leading most to conclude that Pearn was the sacrificial lamb for a club that was off to its worst start since 1941-42. Pearn, who might stay with the organization in another capacity, declines to give specific insight into to the conversation he had with Gauthier.

"Those are private things within the organization," Pearn says. "The organization has been really good with me. It’s a disappointing circumstance for everybody, but I’ll take my responsibility for the way the team started. If you ask me, ‘Do I think we could have gotten things straightened out with me being part of it?’ Yes, I do, but I understand that’s not my decision."

Pearn, who is good friends with Habs coach Jacques Martin and previously worked with him in Ottawa, points out signs that the Canadiens may not have been as bad as their record indicated on the day he was fired. Montreal was stonewalled by two separate 40-save performances, first by Buffalo’s Ryan Miller on Oct. 18, then again on Monday by Florida’s Jacob Markstrom.

Pearn also has a history of working on winning staffs: he and Martin made the playoffs each of the eight years they were in Ottawa, the New York Rangers clubs he was a part of from 2005-06 to 2008-09 all qualified for the postseason, as has Montreal in the past two seasons. It’s difficult for Pearn not to contemplate how things might have been different had he been granted a bit more time.

"That always becomes the question," Pearn says. "Would the Montreal Canadiens have beaten Boston (Thursday) night and Philadelphia on Wednesday if I’d have been there? You don’t know. We were sort of poised to make that move… because we hadn’t played terrible."

With the Canadiens playing the past two nights, Pearn says he hasn’t had a chance to chat with Martin, but he assumes his old buddy had his back on this one.

"I’m sure he was (in my corner)," Pearn says. "We’ll get our chance to talk about it."

Pearn plans to sit down with Gauthier to discuss what kind of role he might be able to perform for the Canadiens for the duration of the season. He says he holds no ill will toward the franchise and is proud of his work in helping the club reach the Eastern Conference final in 2010 and nearly knock out the eventual Stanley Cup champion Bruins last spring in a tight seven-game first-round loss.

"I had two good years here," he says, "successful years given the competitive nature of our team in the playoffs.

"I’m not hanging my head in shame by any stretch of the imagination. I do think I’ve had a positive impact in lots of areas in terms of helping the team become a little bit better than it was the day we arrived."


Dean
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FRASER: WHY NOT LET THE PLAYERS 'GO AT IT' AND FIGHT?

KERRY FRASER, TSN.CA, 10/28/2011


Hi Kerry,

In Thursday night's Canadiens-Bruins game, P.K. Subban and Brad Marchand went at each other twice in the second period. The first time, each got two for holding but we could see they were ready to go at it. The second time, they got out of their penalty boxes and the linemen jumped in to separate them again - giving them each a delay of game penalty. It wasn't until they skated back out after the two minutes that they FINALLY got a chance to dance and they each got their five for fighting.

My question is: As an official, you could probably see as the game progressed, they were wanting to drop the gloves. Why not let them go at it the first time, let their frustrations and emotions out and save both players and teams the time and hassle so they can finally play some hockey?

Andrew,
Toronto


Andrew: You have a very valid point since fighting is allowed in our game; at least for the time being! Once P.K. Subban and Brad Marchand stepped out of the penalty box following their initial coincidental holding minor infractions it only took six seconds for them to return to the box with delay of game penalties and them just two seconds after stepping on the ice for play to be stopped for the eventual fight.

Delaying the inevitable might seem like a senseless and futile exercise performed by the linesmen which can cause unnecessary delay and turn the game into a "side-show" as we saw in this case. 'Player protection' however is the primary reason why the linesmen are instructed to flex their muscles in an attempt to prevent fights wherever possible, aside from it being just part of their job description. (Is anyone laughing out loud yet?) That's right, player protection!

This philosophy and League instruction to the linesmen goes back many years when the there was no instigator penalty and bare knuckle policing also allowed for a team to take an opposing star player off the ice for at least five minutes or more. Even if the star was a willing combatant or forced to drop the gloves to save face, the team lost the services of that player for his time served in the box. The player also ran the risk of breaking a hand and ending up on the injury shelf which happened on more than one occasion.

A classic example of a star player who was more than willing and could go toe-to-toe with the best of them was former Leafs captain Wendel Clark. He was fearless and threw a right hand like a jackhammer. While I never saw him lose a fight I believe Wendel was far more valuable on the ice than watching from the penalty box.

Team general managers also complained when their skilled players were forced to fight and became injured as the linesmen stood back and either let it happen or didn't intervene quickly enough if their player was taking a beating. It was also used a ploy to have a star player ejected from the game.

In my first trip to the Stanley Cup playoffs (1982-83) I worked Game 3 in the best of five series between the Chicago Blackhawks and Blues in St. Louis. The Blues needed a win to avoid a series sweep and force another game back in Chicago. A secondary fight was instigated by a St. Louis 4th line player as a ploy to have Hawk star Al Secord ejected from the game after an initial fight broke out early in the third period. Secord, like Clark, was always a willing, tough combatant but in this case did everything he could to avoid be ejected. In the end the gloves came off and Al attended to business. (Under the rules at the time, players involved in a secondary fight were to receive an automatic game misconduct regardless of which player was deemed to instigate the fight.)

As John D'Amico was escorting the Hawk star off the ice with his game misconduct penalty, Secord gave the St. Louis fans what J.D. termed to be an obscene gesture. D'Amico, a proud Italian and legendary Hockey Hall of Fame linesman, insisted that I assess an additional game misconduct for Secord's gesture. Knowing that a second game misconduct assessment would incur an automatic one game suspension I pleaded with John to reconsider. J.D. would have none of it and said he would assess it himself if I didn't!

Secord was suspended for the next game in Chicago and my telephone rang the moment I walked into the house after returning from St. Louis. Scotty Morrison, NHL Referee-in-Chief, had already received an early Sunday morning call from Bill Wirtz, owner of the Blackhawks and Chairman of the NHL Board of Governors. Scotty was hot and wanted to know what in hell would cause me to assess a second game misconduct that resulted in the automatic suspension to Al Secord. (I fired Denis Savard out of that game and he picked up an automatic one game suspension as well so the Hawks were going to be without their top two players. Needless to say that was last assignment in my first playoff season despite the fact the Hawks won game 4 back in Chicago and eliminated the Blues.)

All of the linemen, past and present, take this part of their job very seriously and do their very best to prevent player injury and provide protection to the players; sometimes even at their own peril. D'Amico and Kevin Collins were two linesmen that would enter altercations on their own in an attempt to break it up before fights ever got underway. Many nights I worked with John D'Amico he would have more blood on his face than the players fighting as he would take shots to protect the guy he had in hand.

Collins took a direct hit right between the eyes one night in Philadelphia that split him wide open. This didn't dissuade these guys from continuing to jump in quickly. Just ask the Flyers fan that while giving Tie Domi the business from behind the safety of the plexi-glass behind the penalty box found himself up close and personal inside the box with Tie when the glass caved in. Domi started thumping the guy but was quickly joined by linesman Collins to form a tag-team as they both the player and official got their shots in. The Flyers fan became something of a local hero for taking one for the team.

One night in Maple Leaf Gardens just before the playoffs, linesman Leon Stickle took the player protection issue to excess. As things were starting to heat up 'Big Stick' grabbed Jimmy 'Crack' Corn and bulldogged the Leaf player to the ice right at center ice. I heard a terrible yelp from Jim Corn after Leon landed on the player and separated his shoulder that put him out for 6 weeks and the playoffs! (The Maple Leafs made the playoffs that season. No, it wasn't 1993.)

Finally, I learned my lesson about saying the three most feared words a ref can say to a player that really doesn't want to fight; those words are, "Let 'em go!"

It was in the late 1970's and in one particular game I was really getting tired of seeing players enter a scrum and yap at one another from between the protection of the linesmen. Finally I had enough and told the two linemen to step aside. I then said to the two 'yappers', "If you guys want to fight go ahead and fight." The one player said
to the other one, "You wanna go?" The other guy said, "Sure, let's go."

Well they not only fought, but everybody on the ice joined in including the goalkeepers. The benches then emptied and the brawl lasted a good 20 minutes! I sat up writing a game report until 2:30 in the morning. That was the last time I promoted a fight and was content to allow the linesmen to intervene whenever possible and "protect" the players.

I took the long way around it Andrew but I hope you might better understand why linesmen Scott Driscoll and Matt MacPherson did their very best to prevent the inevitable between P.K. Subban of the Canadiens and Brad Marchand of the Bruins.


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Ovechkin is both class clown and head of the class

MATTHEW SEKERES, Globe and Mail, Oct. 28, 2011


Alexander Ovechkin is not only one of the best players in hockey, he’s also the greatest showman in the NHL.

Take the Washington Capitals practice at Rogers Arena on Friday, in advance of a Saturday game against the Vancouver Canucks, where Ovechkin spent most of his downtime heckling injured teammate Mike Green, who was in the stands beside general manager George McPhee.

Ovechkin wouldn’t let it go as the two men spoke. He wouldn’t reveal what the inside joke was about, but it’s a good guess he was ribbing Green about sucking up to the boss.

“Mike Green!” he bellowed for all to hear, drawing so much attention to Green and McPhee that the latter put his arm around the former, and everybody had a good laugh.

Of course, the Capitals have been doing nothing but laughing – and offering gap-toothed smiles – these days, after a spectacular start to the 2011-12 season. Washington won seven consecutive games before falling 2-1 Thursday to the upstart Edmonton Oilers, the Capitals’ first loss of the season.

But while Ovechkin and the Caps are off to a flying start, Vancouver has not been kind to No. 8.

Two years ago, in just his second regular-season game at the Canucks’ home arena, Ovechkin was held off the scoresheet, not registering a shot on goal until late in the third period. A few months later, playing for Russia at the 2010 Olympics, Ovechkin recorded four points in four games, and delivered a hellacious hit on Jaromir Jagr of the Czech Republic, but his country went meekly into the night, embarrassed 7-3 by Canada in an elimination game.

“My job is to play hockey,” Ovechkin said when asked if Vancouver hockey fans had seen the best of him. “I’m not a clown who makes jokes and [does] funny things. But if I can [entertain] than I’m going to do it, so we’ll see what happens.”

Neither head coach is anxious is to see what happens in this contest between the defending Western Conference champions and an Eastern Conference heavyweight.

Vancouver’s Alain Vigneault spent his news briefing talking about how balanced the Capitals have been this season, using four lines and six defencemen far more than they have in years past.

He said one way of beating Washington previously was to catch one of its lines – read Ovechkin’s – on an extra-long shift and take advantage of tired skaters. Now, Vigneault said, the Capitals are able to play at a frenetic pace that challenges defencemen because they have fresher skaters jumping over the boards.

Vigneault said the marquee value of Saturday’s game “got our attention” and predicted that the Canucks would have to play their best game of the season in order to win. The Canucks have had a blasé start to the season, and seemed disinterested in losses to the Oilers and St. Louis Blues this week.

“I think it’s good,” captain Henrik Sedin said of facing Washington. “It’s going to bring everyone up to the level where we need to be. Otherwise, it’s going to be embarrassing.”

Washington’s Bruce Boudreau was equally skittish about facing a team he likened to a wounded animal.

“I hate it when you’re playing a great team that has lost two in a row, and that’s what we’re doing,” Boudreau said. “We’re nervous, because they’re mad. It’s going to be a tremendous test.”


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Manitoba is big enough for Jets and Wheat Kings

By Tim Wharnsby, CBC Sports, October 28, 2011


The Brandon Wheat Kings have been one of Canada's cornerstone junior hockey franchises for a long time.

The club's roots on the Manitoba hockey scene can be traced back to 1936. They won eight Turnbull Cups as provincial junior champs between 1939 and 1964. They have made five appearances in the Memorial Cup, the most recent when they played host to the prestigious event in 2010.

But with the hysteria that has surrounded the Winnipeg Jets' comeback we wondered if the Wheat Kings have been affected by the return of the NHL to Manitoba.

"If you ask me in three months, six months or a year, we would have a better idea," Wheat Kings owner and general manager Kelly McCrimmon said. "We're excited and happy for everyone that they're back. But we'll have a better sense as how captive Manitoba will remain as we go along."

Brandon is two hours and 15 minutes west along the Trans-Canada Highway from Winnipeg. What the Wheat Kings can measure is that their season-ticket sales have slightly dwindled. Besides the Jets return, another contributing factor was the record-setting floods in the Brandon region last spring and in the early part of the summer.

In terms of season-ticket sales, the Wheat Kings had 3,192 a year ago, compared to 3,035 this season. Average attendance has gone from 4,279 last to 4,099 through four games this season. The 8-4-1 Wheat Kings played their first home game on Friday against the Moose Jaw Warriors since a season-high seven-game road trip.

McCrimmon, a former Wheat Kings forward in late 1970s and early 1980s, bought in as a minority owner in 1992 and became the sole owner in 2000. He and his front-office staff did their due diligence as to why the slight seven per cent drop in season-ticket sales.

"What we found was less than 10 [per cent] did not renew because of the Jets," said McCrimmon, whose older brother Brad, 52, was killed in the tragic plane crash of the Russian hockey team Lokomotiv Yaroslavl last month. Brad was in his first season as the team's head coach.

The Wheat Kings have yet to play a home game on the same night of a Jets' game, whether home or away. The first occasion will be on Saturday, when the Jets visit the Tampa Bay Lightning, and Brandon plays host to the Edmonton Oil Kings.

The first time they play home games on the same evening won't be until Dec. 13, and after that, only seven more times in the regular season.

The good news for the Wheat Kings is that the team's corporate sponsorship has increased slightly, and with the swift sellout of Jets' season tickets last summer has made the availability of tickets sparse for the rest of the province.

However, because Jets' merchandise has been in demand, the Wheat Kings can expect the sales of their team souvenirs to decrease.

But this junior franchise is not complaining.

"In general terms, the Jets coming back has generated excitement in the entire province of Manitoba across the board," McCrimmon said. "You look at the Blue Bombers, they not only have had a strong season on the field but their attendance has been solid, too [with seven consecutive sellouts].

"For us, the Jets have helped generate a hockey buzz. There is a good chance hockey fans standing around the water cooler in Manitoba are talking either about the Jets or the Wheat Kings."


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Trading places an eye-opener for Paul Romanuk:
Canadian sports broadcaster enjoying life and work in London


By Matthew Black, Special to The Vancouver Sun, October 28, 2011


LONDON — It’s a bright, sunny day but instead of being wired into an NHL press box somewhere, one of Canada’s most famous hockey voices is half a world away from the action.

Across from the crowds emerging out of the Covent Garden tube station, Paul Romanuk stood outside a pub and basked in the heat of a rare cloudless day in London.

Staking out a space in the sun to down a cold pint on a warm day isn’t the only small English tradition he’s taken to.

Inside, he spoke of ‘football’ not soccer and ‘punters’ instead of fans without the awkward cadence typical of a North American. And, his familiar Ontario twang remained unblemished by any trace of an English accent as he griped about the tube service and dreary weather.

But fitting in with a new culture and city wasn’t always as effortless as it now appears.

“You know you’re in trouble when you arrive in a country and the sport you’ve worked on all your life is referred to as ‘ice’ hockey,” he said. “It’s not on the radar … any more than rugby or cricket are in Canada.”

Six years ago, Romanuk and his wife Kari re-located from Ontario after her job as an executive with Coca-Cola transferred her across the Atlantic.

The couple had frequently vacationed in the British capital, and enjoyed the city’s culture and history, but had never seriously considered moving there.

He left behind a reputation as one of the country’s most popular sports broadcasters as well as his job as the radio play-by-play voice of the Toronto Raptors.

“It was a tough decision because I loved that job. It was very enjoyable. But … [it was a] once in a lifetime opportunity, a great opportunity for my wife and her career. So, we decided to go for it.”

Despite establishing himself after working 11 World Junior Hockey Championships and a dozen seasons broadcasting the National Hockey League for TSN, he had to rely on hard work more than his reputation to get started in his new hometown.

“I felt that 20 years of working the Canadian market would have more traction than it did over here. I wasn’t naive enough to think that I was going to have the same amount of success here that I did in Canada,” he said. “It definitely was tough to sort of get going.”

Today, he can most frequently be heard calling hockey as well as basketball, baseball and other North American-style sports for the Eurosport TV network.

He’s also produced video and online content for the International Ice Hockey Federation and written for various North American newspapers and magazines.

The 25th edition of his Hockey Superstars series of children’s books was also published earlier this summer.

“It’s been very different working in a different sports culture, different business culture, different media culture … I wouldn’t trade it. It’s been a real eye-opener. Everyone should do it,” he said.

In Canada, he’s now best known as the voice of the holiday-season Spengler Cup tournament. This year will mark the 10th time that Romanuk has called the Swiss-based event.

“The thing I really love about that tournament and the players is, it’s by and large a bunch of guys who wouldn’t otherwise get to wear the [national] jersey,” he said. “And I get a little slice of Canadiana every Christmas.”

The south London resident still follows the North American sports scene and checks in on his old NHL beat through his Twitter account.

Away from sports, he revels in the music and entertainment possibilities London affords.

He recalled a 2009 weekend when Blur played before 55,000 fans in Hyde Park on Friday, Madonna performed across town the next evening and the Wimbledon tennis tournament wrapped up on the following Sunday afternoon.

“With the exception of New York City, we don’t get that in North America,” he said.

He and his wife are also frequent patrons of London’s theatre scene, taking in shows as often as three times a month.

“The best theatre in the English-speaking world,” he said after listing productions like Jerusalem and Enron as some of his favourites.

Despite enjoying his time abroad, Romanuk said he plans on eventually returning to the sunny skies and hot summers that he misses most from his native Ontario.

“We will go back to Canada, without question, because there’s no place like home,” he said.

“Whether we’re here another couple of years, another five years … I don’t know. We don’t really have an exit plan at this point, but we’ll look back on it as a good experience.”


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A touch of hockey history in a WHL game

Gregg Drinnan, TAKING NOTE Blog, October 29 2011


There was a little bit of hockey history involved in a game in Swift Current on Friday night.

Trevor Cox, a 16-year-old forward from Surrey, B.C., scored his first WHL goal for the Medicine Hat Tigers.

Cox, playing his seventh game of the season, scored at 12:46 of the first period, giving the Tigers a 1-0 lead in a game they would lose, 3-2.

Cox, who wasn’t selected in the 2010 bantam draft, was added to the Tigers’ list and made the team in training camp prior to this season. He was the leading scorer with the Valley West Hawks of the B.C. Major Midget Hockey League last season. They play out of Langley, Surrey and Cloverdale on the Lower Mainland. In fact, Trevor’s twin brother, Matt, is playing with the Hawks this season.
And now for the history part of this . . .

The Cox boys are great grandsons of the late, great Fred (Cyclone) Taylor, who played for, among other teams, the Vancouver Millionaires, who won the 1915 Stanley Cup. Yes, the Millionaires are the only Vancouver team to have won the Stanley Cup. Taylor scored six of the Millionaires’ 26 goals as they swept the visiting Ottawa Senators — 6-2, 8-3 and 12-3 — in the 1915 final.

Taylor, considered one of the greatest players of hockey’s early days, was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1947. He died on June 9, 1979.

The Cox boys also are nephews of Mark Taylor, who played three games for the Kamloops Chiefs in 1975-76 and then moved on to the U of North Dakota Fighting Sioux, with whom he won the NCAA’s championship in the spring of 1980.

Taylor later played 209 NHL games, split among the Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins and Washington Capitals. He was a sixth-round pick by the Flyers in the NHL’s 1978 draft.

For more on Cyclone Taylor and the Cox brothers, check out this story from Peter Mansbridge of CBC’s The National. It was done last spring during the Vancouver Canucks’ playoff run. (Check out Mark Taylor wearing Cooperall's with the Philadelphia Flyers!)

http://www.cbc.ca/video/#/News/TV_Shows/The_National/1233408557/ID=1964057707


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NHL brain trust juggling player gear debates

By ERIC FRANCIS, QMI Agency, Oct 30 2011



CALGARY - The age-old visor debate was re-ignited last week when Chris Pronger took a stick in his unprotected eye.

And while many wondered aloud if they should even feel sorry for a player who suffers such an injury without wearing a visor, team, league and NHLPA officials are debating equipment issues of their own.

Governors have seen the prototype shoulder pads designed by Rob Blake, Mathieu Schneider and Brendan Shanahan and are happy with the smaller, form-fitting pads, which feature high-density foam instead of hard-cap plastic.

“Both sides want this,” said Blake, who is helping Shanahan oversee player safety.

The league is also working on pushing neck guards, cut-proof underwear, Kevlar socks, longer gloves and wrist guards on the players in an effort to try stopping preventable injuries.

“Our objectives are the same because injured players are not good for anybody,” one governor said.

As for the visors, the NHLPA has educated players to let them know it’s safer to wear them.

Yet an NHLPA representative said the “majority” still want the option.

The belief is that all of the above will eventually be used and largely mandated.

It’s all just part of the evolution of the game.

SERVE AND PROTECT

The latest trend amongst players has an increasing number of them wearing clear plastic skate protectors.

Trainers in almost every city are urging all players — but mostly defencemen and penalty killers — to wear the custom-fit protectors that slide over the skate and strap on.

Some teams are buying in (10 Leafs wear them) while only a handful in cities like Pittsburgh, Minnesota and Calgary sport them.

Penguins forward Craig Adams said he started wearing them after teammate Jordan Staal’s foot was cut after being stepped on more than a year ago.

He got his custom-fit in Montreal, but Blake says the league is looking at streamlining the skate protectors, too.

Players who wear them say they don’t notice them at all until they help cushion the blow of a blocked shot.

REALIGN SIGNS

One governor referred to the realignment voting as a very “selfish process” that revolved almost entirely on teams’ travel schedules. Word is commissioner Gary Bettman may very well have to push for a more complicated divisional realignment than simply moving Winnipeg to the West and bringing Detroit back east.

Instead, the movement now revolves around having teams in four divisions with the playoff playdowns in each division first. Each team would play home and home games against each team outside its division.

Flames president Ken King said the possibility of an All-Canadian division was “romantic but not practical.”

The goal is to have this resolved at the governors’ meetings in Pebble Beach in December, and 20 of the 30 governors need to buy in to whatever the league decides.

KIDS ARE ALRIGHT

Eighteen-year-olds Brett Connolly, Eric Gudbranson, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Gabriel Landeskog all survived their “nine-game tryouts” to stay in the NHL. Meanwhile, the Minnesota Wild opted to sit Kelowna Rockets winger Brett Bulmer last night instead of having him play his 10th game.

Wild GM Chuck Fletcher told the Calgary Sun Saturday the 10-game mark “doesn’t mean anything” to him as it simply means the first year of a player’s three-year entry-level deal starts.

He said the 40-game mark is more significant as it then means a player can be unrestricted at age 26 instead of 27.

Fact is, keeping a player as an 18-year-old can actually save a team money in the long run because his stats could be weaker his first year, hurting his case on his second contract. As long as Bulmer is contributing and remaining confident he’ll stay.


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New owner re-charges Lightning

By Ken Wiebe, QMI Agency, Oct 30 2011


Since taking over as owner of the Tampa Bay Lightning, Jeff Vinick has brought stability, made an important hire and is doing everything in his power to establish a positive environment around the franchise.

The big move was hiring Steve Yzerman to run the hockey operations as general manager, but Vinick was receiving all kinds of praise on Saturday for the things he’s doing off the ice as well.

“He’s really stabilized the organization,” said Yzerman, the longtime Detroit Red Wings captain and Hockey Hall of Famer. “There was uncertainty in the ownership, as far as who was going to own it. He came in and stabilized that immediately. He wants people that are proud to wear the jersey and proud to work for the organization.

“He’s made a lot of changes in the organization and in the community to show the fan base that he’s serious about running a first-class organization and is committed to winning. The community has really bought in and he’s had a tremendous impact.”

The efforts haven’t gone unnoticed.

“Mr. Vinick has done so much for Tampa,” Lightning captain Vincent Lecavalier said. “It’s definitely a world-class organization and I’m proud to be part of it.”

With one of his first decisions in the big chair, Yzerman made a very important call of his own, hiring the up-and-coming Guy Boucher as his first head coach.

“We’re a very organized, very disciplined team,” Yzerman said. “Guy is a very demanding coach. Our players feel they’re playing within a system and they’re really challenged by him. He’s an excellent coach, he’s very innovative and he’s a great person. Our players have responded really well to him.”

Boucher had an immediate impact, instilling a solid structure and guiding his team to the Eastern Conference final in his first season.

“He’s very positive and he talks to everybody. A lot of coaches don’t talk to players and I think that’s probably the worst thing you can do,” Lecavalier said. “You know what you have to do when you go on the ice. You’re not wondering what the coach wants. When you’re struggling, he’ll talk to you and when you’re doing well, he’ll tell you ‘don’t get overconfident.’

“Some coaches are good motivators but they’re not good at Xs and Os. Guy is very balanced and he’s sharp in every aspect.”


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Before I made it: Joel Ward

With Kevin Kennedy, The Hockey News, 2011-10-29


I started playing hockey because I wanted to follow my two older brothers. They were friends with Kevin Weekes and I would try and join the local road hockey game. They followed him into ice hockey and I just kind of tagged along to the rink. I made most of my friends playing road hockey. That’s where it all starts.

I played my house league hockey at Oriole Arena in Toronto back in the day, but probably spent more time on the outdoor rink beside Pleasentview Arena. Both rinks were close to my house and I still go back to the area once in a while for some summer hockey.

My most memorable experience was making the select team in my house league and I also remember the first time I was cut from that team. I remember one year when I was in Atom ‘AA’ playing for the Hillcrest Summits we won the city championship and that was the first time I’d ever won any big thing. I played there for two years and honestly I have a lot of great memories of playing with that team. I played with a lot of great guys back then. The whole year was fun. We had a lot of team parties and we won a lot of games. It’s one of the few years I have a clear memory of.

Growing up I loved going to a rink called Chesswood Arena. My brothers would play there on Friday nights against the Toronto Red Wings and I’d try and tag along even if they were kind of late. The rink had all the best video games and bubble hockey. They also had great chicken wings at a restaurant called “The Penalty Box.”

When I was in peewee, I played for the North York Canadians and I had a coach from the Czech Republic. He was very intense, but that was the first time I realized that I could actually do something with this game. He taught me discipline.


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Winning hockey and $4 tickets bring Florida fans out

Paul Waldie, Globe and Mail, Oct. 30, 2011


Tickets can be had for as little as $4 (all currency U.S.) and football will always be king, but there are signs hockey is making something of a come back in Florida.

After years in the doldrums, Florida’s two NHL teams are not only winning again, they both have owners who actually seem to care about their fans.

In Tampa, Lightning owner Jeff Vinik has just spent $40-million renovating the St. Pete Times Forum. The new features include a giant pipe organ, padded seats, cup holders and special coils that shoot lightning bolts from the ceiling when the team scores. Vinik, a hedge fund manager, paid for the upgrades himself and has said he won’t seek reimbursement from Hillsborough County, which owns the facility.

Vinik also owns part of the Boston Red Sox and the Liverpool soccer club in England but he has said hockey is his first love. He’s been showing his love to fans ever since he bought the Lightning in 2010 for about $100-million. He started by wooing hockey great Steve Yzerman to become the Lightning’s general manager. Yzerman quickly hired up-and-coming coach Guy Boucher, brought in goalie Dwyane Roloson and shored up the defence with Eric Brewer. Together with established stars Vincent Lecavalier and Martin St. Louis, the Lightning came within one win of making the Stanley Cup final last season.

“Mr. Vinik has done so much for Tampa and for hockey,” Lecavalier said before the Lightning beat the Winnipeg Jets 1-0 on Saturday. “It’s definitely a world-class organization and I’m proud to part of it.”

Fans have taken notice as well. The Lightning have had near capacity crowds for each of their five home games so far this season and on Saturday the arena was packed, noisy and excited.

“It has really been a full change,” forward Ryan Malone said. “When you go out, even now to the grocery store, you see the effects in the community and people come up to you. … Hockey is coming back. The guys who were here in 2004 when they won [the Stanley Cup] said it was a crazy hockey atmosphere and I think it has definitely been that way since our playoff run last year.”

Further south, the Florida Panthers sorted out their ownership a couple of years ago, leaving local businessmen Cliff Viner and Stu Siegel in charge. This year, they launched a massive overhaul of the team, introduced a new flashy marketing program and hired coach Kevin Dineen. The club hopes those changes, along with the NBA lockout and the sagging fortunes of the Miami Dolphins and University of Miami football program, will help attract new hockey fans.

The Jets play the Panthers in Sunrise Monday.

“In light of the marketplace right now, this is our opportunity to grab the attention of casual sports fans – who we haven’t been able to penetrate,” club president Michael Yormak told reporters before the team’s home opener on Oct. 15.

The Panthers created a local buzz by bringing in 16 new players, including Ed Jovonovski, for his second tour with the team, Brian Campbell, Kris Versteeg and Jose Theodore. And while the team’s home opener against the Lightning wasn’t quite a sell out, it was considered one of the most exciting in years, ending with a Panther victory in a shootout.

Best of all for the Lightning and the Panthers – they are winning. The Lightning are 5-4-2 and the Panthers 6-4-0, giving both teams 12 points.

There are still many challenges ahead. Florida’s economy is sluggish and the housing market stuck, leaving many fans strapped for cash. Tickets are also not hard to come by.

Barely three hours before the Lightning-Jets game on Saturday, some tickets were going for as little as $5 on various Internet ticket sites. Tickets for the Panthers-Jets match Monday were priced as low as $4. By contrast, the asking price for the cheapest ticket to the Panthers’ game in Winnipeg next month is $119.


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Realignment plus 30 Thoughts

Elliotte Friedman, CBC Sports, October 31, 2011


Spent some time on Sunday reading my Twitter feed, the Puck Daddy comments section and LetsGoPens.com. The stuff you guys are saying publicly about significant realignment is pretty similar to what teams are saying privately. You either really love it, passionately hate it or just decide, "I can deal with it."

In this discussion on Hot Stove on Saturday night you can see a chart with the new divisions. It's the last group, the one that says "I can deal with it" that is going to decide what happens.

(Think of them as "conferences" instead of divisions. You play home-and-home against every team in the other three; the rest inside your group. The first two rounds of playoffs stay inside your "conference" as well. I do believe Detroit will stay with Chicago and not move to Toronto's side, but I'm not 100 per cent positive.)

If Commissioner Bettman wants to push this through, he needs 20 votes when the Board of Governors convenes December 5 at Pebble Beach. (Easy place to get work done, I know.) Weeks ago this proposal was going nowhere. "Dead," one executive described it.

But things have changed. Understand that the vast majority of Western clubs want this to happen. They are tired of watching their Eastern brethren get all those extra days at home, spend so little time on planes and never leave their time zones after January.

And it's not just about the regular season. They want fewer cross-country flights in the playoffs, too.

So let's work backwards. Bettman needs 20 votes. There are 15 teams in the West. I can't say with certainty that he has all of them in his pocket, but if he doesn't, it's close. So, how many Eastern teams does he need? Five? Six? Maybe eight?

Can he get those votes? If he needs eight, it's barely half the conference. One team confirmed it has changed its mind (although, in return, said it did not want to be identified). "The next month is all about arm-twisting," one source said. And, it will happen at the ownership level.

Now, a couple of good questions people raised:

Q: What about Detroit's proposal to go west only once?

A: Well, here are the questions: How many teams will make only one trip instead of two? And, who do you play those extra games against? Because if, say, 10 teams are affected, and they play two extra times against everyone in their division, aren't you pretty much going Bettman's way anyway?

Q: Why not just switch Detroit and Winnipeg?

A: Well, we all know how everyone wants a piece of the Red Wings. Too valuable a visitor. And you're not helping Columbus and Nashville (same issues, especially when it comes to late-night TV viewing).

Q: OK, genius, how about...(some combination of Winnipeg, Nashville, Minnesota, Detroit, Dallas)

A: Guarantee, in whatever combination you put together, you have either one American team with four Canadians (not happening) or Dallas still in the Pacific. And the Stars are a very big part of this. Their travel is really bad as a member of the Pacific Division. Bettman listens to owners. For the last couple of years, the Stars really haven't had one. Now, it looks like they will (Tom Gagliardi).

The team looks good, but still needs momentum off the ice. Moving it into a more centralized time zone would really help. (So would moving them back into Reunion Arena, one of the great places to watch an NHL game.) The league is well aware of that.

Q: What about Phoenix?

A: You got me there... no one can answer that yet.

Q: Don't you want to see the Penguins play the Flyers six times a year?

A: Absolutely. And I understand why the Penguins are against this. The Washington Capitals felt their move out of the old Patrick Division was incredibly damaging to them. Some Penguins fans suggested moving the Florida teams or Carolina around instead. Maybe there will be some changes, who knows? But, not everyone is guaranteed to be a winner in this.

Back when I used to cover baseball, one Blue Jays executive explained how Bud Selig got what he wanted. He would build consensus behind the scenes, feel out who was on his side and try to sway the teams in the middle. He never brought anything to a vote until he knew he was going to win. And when he knew he was going to win, he would phone dissenting owners and say, "Look, I've got the votes. Are you willing to work with us on making this a best-case scenario for you?"

If the answer was yes, Selig would help those teams as much as possible. If the answer was no, he rammed it through anyway. I'm not sure if Bettman's going to pull this off. But he's closer than he was three weeks ago.

30 THOUGHTS

1. Another possibility: Next season starts one week later, so some of the U.S.-based teams spend a little less time battling for eyeballs with football and baseball.

2. Free PR tip for Gagliardi: get Jamie Benn signed. Joe Nieuwendyk was honoured before the game Saturday (for his upcoming Hall of Fame induction) and got a loud cheer when he said his son's goal "is to be on a line with Jamie Benn someday."

3. When you're a little thin on the blueline, two things can save you: great goaltending and players who stick to the system. We can all see what Nikolai Khabibulin's doing, but Edmonton is really getting that second thing. It doesn't hurt, one scout said, that this is also a team committed to working hard.

4. Want proof? Blocked shots. Last season, the Oilers were 21st with 571. So far, they are third with 184. That's a difference of nine per game. When you allow 30 shots a night, like Edmonton does, that really helps.

5. What was David Booth wearing during his After Hours appearance with Scott Oake and Craig Simpson? A sleep watch, of course. Vancouver indoctrinates these guys quickly.

6. I'm not the kind of person who really likes being told what to do, so if I was an NHL player and someone ordered me to wear a visor, I'd probably resist. As a non-partisan third party, though, I can't help but side with the GMs who want to eliminate "preventable injuries." There is so much at stake. Philadelphia won't win the Cup without Chris Pronger. Then there's the money. Not only salary, but also playoff revenues and how performance at that time of year determines next season's ticket sales.

7. We're talking Kevlar socks and long-wristed gloves, too. If Jason Pominville is wearing a sturdier stocking in Game 5 of Buffalo's first-round series against Philly, do the Sabres beat the Flyers? Teams pay for the equipment and don't get final say on what gets used. There's something wrong with that picture.

8. Pronger was asked about his stance on visors and said, "You don't want to know my stance. That's for another day." Translation: I don't want to wear one, partially because of the things I do on the ice.

9. Last summer, the Montreal Canadiens hired two new assistant coaches, Randy Ladouceur and Randy Cunneyworth. They were given two-year contracts. The holdover, Perry Pearn, had one year remaining on his deal. GM Pierre Gauthier decided to extend Pearn by another season so everyone was in the same situation. If they thought he was a bad coach, they wouldn't have done that.

10. The one thing Gauthier deserves credit for was not making a panic deal that hurt the franchise long-term. He was trying to get a forward (in addition to Petteri Nokelainen) and a defenceman. Unable to do so, it looks like he felt he needed to show he was doing something. Coaches around the league were furious. ("No respect...We're sacrificial lambs.") I was surprised by the number who were disappointed because the Canadiens are considered the NHL's "class" franchise - even if the move worked in the short term.

11. Here's a good question a couple of people asked: let's say, for argument's sake, the Canadiens did decide to fire Jacques Martin. Who is the replacement? It's not so clear-cut. They've had several chances to hire Bob Hartley (now in Europe). There's Marc Crawford, who dabbles "en francais." Their AHL coach is Clement Jodoin, although there's some question as to whether or not he's ready for the firestorm. Would they ask Bob Gainey?

12. Saw Columbus in Buffalo last week, and the toughest challenge with that team is it expects the worst to happen. They played pretty well and got a good break to tie it 2-2. Three minutes later Patrick Kaleta bounces one off Rick Nash for the winner. The Blue Jackets collectively sagged after that. (Nash buried his face in the ice, as if defeated.) "Fear freezes you," head coach Scott Arniel said. Maybe the win over Anaheim will change that.

13. Mentioned the Ken Hitchcock rumours last week, but they continue even though the principals keep denying them. Is this some kind of weird attempt from ownership to motivate the team?

14. Hotstove traitor Pierre LeBrun quoted Wayne Gretzky last week as saying he was unlikely to play in the Winter Classic alumni game. Don't be surprised if the Rangers (Glen Sather, Mark Messier, etc.) at least try to persuade him otherwise.

15. Peter Chiarelli is one of those GMs who constantly checks the market, seeing who is available or who might be. But the sense is he wasn't looking to make a move, primarily out of loyalty to the players who ended Boston's 38-year Stanley Cup drought. Will back-to-back losses to Montreal change that?

16. One thing definitely happening with the Bruins? Opposing coaches are ordering their players not to engage them after the whistle. No team feeds off those scrums/battles/fights more than Boston (and its fans).

17. Brandon Worley, a really good Dallas Stars blogger, was the first to report that the team's biggest creditor (owed almost $52 million US) is a "listed affiliate of the NHL." I understand the league didn't want anyone knowing it was helping the Stars when it was running the Coyotes, so it used legalese to deny it in an interview with Ron MacLean two years ago. But when the truth comes out, people remember.

18. One more note about Dallas: there were rumblings the team was thinking of trading Brenden Morrow. I'd be shocked, but looked into it. He has a no-trade, and, unless things have changed in the last few days, he hasn't been asked to waive it.

19. Matt Stajan, healthy scratch the last two games. Even though the Flames are thin at centre. Wow.

20. Sam Carchidi of The Philadelphia Inquirer reported Monday morning that, from now on, Ilya Bryzgalov will only be talking after games in which he plays. Of course, his magnificent "I'm lost in the woods" proclamation came after a game, but let's not get in the way of a good narrative. Bryzgalov is no stranger to wild comments and his former teammates wondered how that would go down in Philly, where things wouldn't go under the radar like they did in Phoenix.

21. It should be pointed out, though, that if the Coyotes complained about one thing, it was Bryzgalov's tendency to blame defencemen for bad goals. This time, he blamed himself and no one else. That scores points on a new team.

22. A former teammate of James Neal's said that once Neal learned to "use his body to score," he'd become lethal. Neal is big and strong and is now dictating to defenders where he can go with that power.

23. That fits in Pittsburgh, where Dan Bylsma wants his top-line wingers putting themselves in positions where they can be dangerous. You don't need to carry the puck much because Evgeni Malkin and Sidney Crosby (when he returns) will do that. Mike Colligan of The Hockey Writers points out that Neal is constantly going for the top of the left circle/bottom of the right circle in the offensive zones.

24. It's important to make sure guys who need to carry the puck are partnered with those who don't mind playing without it. Look at Brad Richards and Marian Gaborik. Both love to carry it, and that doesn't necessarily work.

25. Will John Tortorella stick with Richards/Ryan Callahan/Brandon Dubinsky? That line is similar to Richards/Loui Eriksson/James Neal in Dallas, and the centreman was very productive in that setup.

26. One GM on Tortorella: "Say what you want, but the Rangers play hard for him."

27. Thought Wojtek Wolski got away with one. That elbow was sneaky dirty.

28. The reason Toronto put James Reimer on injured reserve: the CBA allows you only two 48-hour emergency goaltender recalls per season. The Maple Leafs used their first last Monday because of Reimer's injury. If they didn't formally put him on IR, they were out of that option for the rest of the season.

29. You'll remember that, a few weeks ago, Eric Francis reported on Bob Nicholson's proposal to raise the draft age to 19. NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr went through Alberta on his fall tour last week and asked to meet with Nicholson in Calgary. Still doubt the players would back something like this, but thought it was interesting they chatted about it.

30. Met a teenage Leafs fan last weekend, Lucy Rogers, who travelled from River John, NS to see her favourite team face the Penguins. (She also loves Pittsburgh, because everyone in Nova Scotia is a Sidney Crosby fan.) Lucy was born with Down Syndrome, and her love of the Leafs helped her overcome some serious shyness. Angie Andreou and Kelley Rosset at the NHL, Toronto's Pat Park and Catherine Grey and Pittsburgh's Frank Buonomo (plus players on both teams) deserve a lot of credit for allowing her to attend practice and go into the dressing rooms. You can't quantify what that means to someone.


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SABAN'S PROCESS ORIENTED GOALS
from HOOP THOUGHTS by BOB STARKEY

The following is an article written by Carl Dubois of The Advocate. It is a tremdnous look into one of the most powerful parts of the Nick Saban philosophy -- "being process driven" as opposed to being "result oriented." Carl does a great job of painting the way the 2003 National Championship Team viewed goal development. We gave this to our team yesterday:
They called them "Tiger Goals 2003." They posted them on the wall of the corridor leading from the locker room to Tiger Stadium.

They followed them and won a national championship.

LSU seniors and other leaders met before the season to compile a list of goals. That list matched the personality of coach Nick Saban, as it was process-oriented rather than result-oriented, but Saban said the players chose their 2003 goals on their own.

Half a year later, the Tigers celebrated a No. 1 ranking in the USA Today/ESPN coaches poll and a BCS national championship after a 21-14 victory over Oklahoma in the 2004 Nokia Sugar Bowl. Saban said the team's determination to live up to their goals helped them achieve their success this season.

"We started out this year saying that we might not have the leadership that we need, and we challenged everybody to be responsible for their own self-determination," Saban said. "I have never seen a group of players that were able to do that and become so close and unified in the way they did it."

LSU senior offensive tackle Rodney Reed said the Tigers wanted to set goals that were realistic. The 2002 team authored a list that was topped by the most result-oriented goal in college football: Win a national championship.

The team finished 8-5, losing four of its last six games.

A year later, the 2003 team refrained from specific outcomes on its wish list, and in so doing, created a foundation for the kind of success LSU hadn't seen since 1958. The Tigers won a national championship without expressly setting out to do so.

It was a decidedly Saban-like approach, and the proof is in the payoff.

Here, in ascending order, are the goals on the "Tiger Goals 2003" pyramid, with some reflections from Saban and his players about how the team followed them.

Team
Saban said often that the Tigers had the best chemistry of any team he's been associated with in 30 years of coaching. Players said it took many forms, and it started when they bonded during demanding offseason strength and conditioning workouts.


LSU defensive end Marcus Spears, whose 20-yard interception return for a touchdown proved to be the difference in the Sugar Bowl, used words that evoked references to the first goal on the list -- when he could have been talking about what a great play he made.

"I think the big key was it was a total team effort on the defensive side of the wall," Spears said, using a cliché but saying it with sincerity and conviction. "We didn't have one player stepping out from each other."

Not even senior tackle Chad Lavalais, a consensus All-America, tried to put himself above his teammates, Spears said.

"Even though Chad is a great player, he believed in everybody around him," Spears said, "and he believed that when he wasn't there, somebody else was going to be there (to make a play)."

Saban said the Tigers were an inclusive group, not a divisive one. Everyone on the team accepted everyone else, he said, like he'd never seen before.

"It was because of the older guys' willingness to accept the younger guys to be a part of the team," Saban said, "that made a big difference on this team."

Together Everyone Achieves More
If this goal sounds similar to the first one, that's because it is. It's instructive to note the Tigers put a lot of emphasis on goals that valued teamwork.

Freshman running back Justin Vincent said he spent a lot of time around the seniors, who earned Saban's praise by choosing not to follow sports convention and ostracize, haze or alienate newcomers. Saban said there was no class system on the team, a rarity for a large group of such diverse people.


Vincent, the Most Outstanding Player of the Sugar Bowl, said senior offensive guard Stephen Peterman typified the Tigers' belief in teamwork this season.

"He's like a great mentor," Vincent said of Peterman. "There's nothing more you could ask for in a teammate or a person. He showed me the ropes, told me to take things in stride."

LSU's offense didn't score a second-half point Sunday, but Reed was grateful the defense came to the rescue with a smothering performance against an explosive Oklahoma offense.

"All of our credit goes to our defense," Reed said. "Our defense played just lights-out and just put us in so many opportunities to be successful. I guess the offense did just enough. It was a team win, and I'm just proud as heck of everybody who was involved in it."

Trust
Saban said the players showed their faith in each other during the most trying moments of the championship game, such as when Oklahoma blocked a punt to set up a 2-yard touchdown drive that tied the game at 7-7.

"They believed in themselves, they believed in each other, and this game was no different than a lot of other games we played this year," Saban said.

Players throughout the season talked about trusting the system, trusting that if they did the work, they would see it bear fruit. The season-ending eight-game winning streak and BCS national championship proved it in a big way.

The Tigers gave credit to Saban and his staff. Implicit in their remarks was the notion they trusted the coaches because they saw how hard the coaches worked.

"I think the chancellor of LSU is happy that the coaches don't work on an hourly salary," quarterback Matt Mauck said. "That would be a lot of money. They put in a lot of effort.

"The knowledge that they pass along to us is the reason we have success."

Dominate Your Opponent Every Day
The idea is to outwork the other guy, to do something each day to get the edge, to run that extra sprint or do that extra repetition in the weight room in the hope of seeing it pay off down the road.

Before the championship game, Peterman said he's a believer in that approach, a Saban staple.

"One thing that definitely rubs off on me is his idea to dominate and create a nightmare for the other team," Peterman said. "I try to go out there every time and dominate the guy I'm going to play against. The way he preaches that all the time, it rubs off on you."

LSU uses a weightlifting program, inspired by Gayle Hatch and adapted for the Tigers by their strength coach Tommy Moffitt, that helped Tennessee and Miami win national championships four years into the system. Saban added an offseason running program featuring a brutal stretch of 26 sprints of 110 yards.

Lavalais said the strength and conditioning program is one aspect of trying to dominate your opponent every day.


"I'm not saying it's impossible to do," Lavalais said of the workouts. "You can do it, but they make it so hard to where the games come easy. There's no game I've played in that's as hard as the 110s that we run in the offseason.

"That's a testament to the coaching staff, the strength coaches. If you go out there with the mindset that you want to get better and try to kill all these sprints and the weight training we do, when it comes time for the game, it's a breeze."

Spears said the Tigers buy into the system, and it works.

Lavalais said players on other teams tell him they don't do nearly as much as the Tigers in the offseason. He smiled when he said it, then laughed, knowing it is probably a big difference-maker.

Discipline, Focus, Execution
Saban's ability to focus is almost legendary at LSU. The discipline required in long hours of work is hard for most people to sustain. Execution, he believes, is a product of repeatedly doing the work.

LSU Chancellor Mark Emmert and Athletic Director Skip Bertman said they see the Tigers as an extension of Saban's personality, and in the areas of discipline, focus and execution, they both said they've not been disappointed by the team.

Saban's team had precious few discipline problems and no embarrassing off-field incidents that put the program in a bad light. As for focus, Emmert said it starts at the top, with perhaps the best example he's ever seen.

"He is incredibly focused on the task at hand," Emmert said of Saban. "Many people work very hard. Many people work as hard as Nick does, but to stay as focused on the detail of what needs to occur and to have a systematic game plan for achieving that success is, I think, a really distinct characteristic that he has."

Finish Plays
The underlying message here is also to finish games. LSU saw a big opportunity slip away at the end of 2002 when Arkansas rallied in the final minute of the regular season for a touchdown and a 21-20 victory over the Tigers. That sent the Razorbacks, not LSU, to Atlanta for the Southeastern Conference Championship Game.

LSU was not without its mistakes this season. Replay the games on videotape and you'll find flaws. You'll also see defenders closing holes, wrapping up on a tackle and bringing the ballcarrier down, offensive linemen staying on their blocks and heading downfield to deliver another.

Wide receivers did that too.

Finishing plays and finishing games with the right competitive spirit, Saban said, is how you finish a season the right way. Few will argue with the results of an LSU team that didn't lose in eight games after Oct. 11.

Positively Affect Someone Every Day
Saban said veteran cornerback Randall Gay roomed with freshman Daniel Francis early and helped him with his struggles to learn how to play defensive back in Saban's system.

"That happened on every level of our team," Saban said. "Every older guy helped every younger guy like I've never seen."

Be A Champion
Saban couldn't have scripted it any better. The Tigers didn't wear on their sleeves their desire to win a championship. They instead were careful to emphasize the steps needed to get there.

In so doing, they won three championships: the SEC Western Division, the SEC overall title, and the BCS national championship.

Today they can walk with their heads held high as champions because for the last six months, and more, they tried every day to carry themselves as champions.

"That's the thing," Reed said in August. "You can set goals that anybody can accomplish every day, whether it's in the classroom or on the football field. If you do those things every day, follow the goals and pay attention to the details, good things will happen to you."

He was right.

   
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Hockey guru takes stats to the masses

ALLAN MAKI, Globe and Mail, Nov. 01, 2011



He admits it: He’s not the computer who wore hockey skates. Off the top of his head, he doesn’t know every game-related fact and can’t spit out a gigabyte of statistical data at the speed of a Zdeno Chara slap shot.

The truth is Ralph Slate never even played hockey. He’s a data-base specialist from Springfield, Mass., who used to catalogue songs and record albums on an Atari 800 back in the day. Just for fun.

So why is it that some people started an on-line petition calling for Slate’s induction in the Hockey Hall of Fame? Because they can, and because Slate helped modernize how fans, media and even NHL team officials access their hockey information.

That’s not to say Slate’s Internet Hockey Data Base (hockeydb.com) is the be-all for everything hockey. But after 13 years of relentless service, it is regarded as a standard bearer for a generation of hockey zealots who now have multiple computer stops for everything from salary-cap dealings to hockey fights, even statistical breakdowns that show how a player has performed by month, against certain teams, you name it.

That site, hockey-reference.com, “has gone to the next generation,” said Joe Pelletier, founder of greatesthockeylegends.com and the author of eBook Pucks on the ’Net. “Users can do more with it.”

Hockeydb’s role in the cyber arena is to list past and present players and their scoring totals from the NHL to the minors and Europe. That allows NHL teams to follow prospects abroad. (Asked if he uses hockeydb.com, Detroit Red Wings assistant general manager Jim Nill replied, “Yeah, it’s a great website.”)

“There are probably four or five big websites – Eurohockey.com, hockey-reference.com,” which Slate describes as “all NHL stuff, more in-depth with arcane statistics. I’m more interested in the historical aspect.”

Slate’s interest in hockey began in his youth when he followed the Springfield Americans of the AHL. When he attended Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., Slate took to the Engineers hockey team and watched star player Joe Juneau. It was around 1991 when Slate began wondering what had happened to all the other RPI players, especially those who didn’t make it to the NHL.

Slate also thought about his grandfather, a former minor-league baseball player whose exploits couldn’t be found in the game’s bible, Total Baseball. Combining his passion for hockey with a growing knowledge in computers, Slate took a Total Baseball approach to hockey and expanded on it.

It was “the next logical step,” according to Slate, to what Ken McKenzie had done with The Hockey News and Jim Hendy with The Hockey Guide – a way to get hockey info to the masses.

“My original intent was to do a book but it would have been too big, too expensive,” said Slate, who works for ISO New England overseeing electrical grids. “Then the Internet came along and that was it.”

Slate has gotten more efficient at updating data to his site and that has allowed him to broaden its base.

“The neat thing is the old newspapers are coming online so I can look at the box scores,” he said. “I’ve been trying to compile attendance data [for different decades and leagues].”

While both Slate and Pelletier continually update their sites – putting in more hours than they care to admit – they aren’t sure what’s next for hockey and the Internet, and that has them wondering.

“The real craze now is the moneypuck statistical revolution,” admitted Pelletier, who got hooked on data as a kid after finding an old hockey card (Los Angeles Kings defenceman Barry Gibbs) at a dump in Terrace, B.C. “I’ve heard of one guy who recorded what part of the net where every single goal was scored last season [in the NHL] … I don’t know how they do that.”


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Road trips a whole different game for NHL rookie:
Nugent-Hopkins has to dress the part, but he also gets a healthy per diem, travels by planes and stays in nice hotels


Jim Matheson, edmontonjournal.com November 1, 2011



Apart from the fact that teenager Ryan Nugent-Hopkins has to look the part of an NHLer when he goes on the road now, there’s the matter of pocket money.

“I got $80 every two weeks when I played in Red Deer. I think per diem in the NHL is $98 a day. I don’t think I’ve touched much of that yet,” said the 18-year-old Edmonton Oilers centre.

Nugent-Hopkins gets more money for dinner and cabs in the National Hockey League than he got paid to play with the junior Rebels as one of the Western Hockey League’s marquee draws, and the buses go from the hotel to the rink, not down the highway to Prince Albert, Sask., or Cranbrook, B.C., in the dead of winter.

“The bus in Red Deer was a nice-looking bus, but it’s sometimes eight hours on the road and you have to play the next day,” said Nugent-Hopkins, who will be heading out on his first extended NHL road trip on Wednesday.

The Oilers will play in Los Angeles, Phoenix, Montreal, Boston, Detroit and Chicago.

“A plane is still, uh, better than a bus,” he said.

Also, nobody’s yelling at him to do his homework.

“Exactly,” said Nugent-Hopkins, whose education is now on the ice, not the classroom.

“It’s going to be interesting for me to see different buildings.”

The Oilers have had only three road games at St. Paul, Minn., Calgary and Denver. Nugent-Hopkins was drafted first overall at St. Paul, so he’s been there, done that. Calgary? He’s played there lots in junior. No big deal. He was in Denver for about 20 hours. There was no time for sight-seeing; barely enough time to see the retired jerseys of Joe Sakic and Peter Forsberg in the rafters.

He did get to see Steve Tambellini’s hotel suite, though, when the Oilers general manager had Nugent-Hopkins come up to tell him he was staying with the NHL club and not going back to Red Deer. So, Denver will always have a soft spot in his heart. The JW Marriott, especially.

“I’ve noticed the hotels are probably a little nicer in the NHL than junior,” Nugent-Hopkins said with a laugh.

Now, he’s going to four of the Original Six cities. Will he sit in the seats at Montreal’s Bell Centre before the game and eat a couple of chien chauds? Will he be looking for the octopus on the ice at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit? Is he keen on looking up, way up, to see Boston Bruins captain Zdeno Chara? How’s he going to do against Chicago Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews if he’s matched up against the Canadian Olympic hero?

It’s always interesting for young players on the road in their first NHL season, especially ones like Nugent-Hopkins. He’s taking part in the team’s “Movember” campaign, hoping to get a worthy moustache going to help raise money for prostate cancer, but he’lll probably find it easier to stickhandle past Chara than grow any hair on his lip.

“I’m hoping I have one by the time we get back from the road (on Nov. 14),” he said optimistically.

Nugent-Hopkins can expect a full-court press of media on the road since he’s in the top 10 in NHL scoring. He’s a point-a-game guy with 11 in 11 games.

But, the Oilers, as a team, have caught the fancy of the public and the media after getting absolutely no notice the last two years. That happens when you’re 7-2-2, of course, having a cadre of youngsters, Ryan Smyth back and scoring, and the best goaltending in the NHL.

“Sports Illustrated’s calling, The Hockey News, NHL Live, the NHL Network, ESPN ... that’s great for us,” said Oilers public relations director J.J. Hebert.

“I’m happy that the fans of Edmonton can be proud of their team at home or on the road ... that’s a huge part of all of this,” said coach Tom Renney. “I’m happy we have good stories to talk about with other media people around the league. I’m happy, too, that our opponents might have to pay particular attention to what might be a threat, that they’ll have to battle for two points.

“It’s a continuation of a work in progress and I hope the story continues.”

This is an acid-test month for the Oilers, who’ve had eight of their 11 games so far at Rexall Place. Not only do they have this six-game road trip, but 10 of their 14 games in November are on the road. Generally, about 80 per cent of the teams that are in the playoffs (the top eight in each conference) on the U.S. Thanksgiving weekend in late November are there in April, too.

“I honestly don’t know if I thought we’d have these results (in October), but I did know we’d have the effort, that there was some continuity from last season,” said Renney. “There’s all sorts of ebbs and flows in a season, though, and there will be on this road trip. I’m sure of that.

“We have to embrace this upcoming trip as an opportunity to see if we can sustain our work habits.”

And to keep the wins coming.

It took the Oilers until Nov. 29 to win seven games last year, 23 games into the season.


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Boudreau sends a message

By DAN DI SCIULLO, SPORTS NETWORK, Nov 2 2011



PHILADELPHIA - Bruce Boudreau has a reputation as a player's coach, albeit a foul-mouthed one for those of us who watched him chew up the scenery last year in HBO's acclaimed 24/7 series.

But, Boudreau played against type in Washington's latest game and by doing so he sent a powerful message to his team.

It happened late in the third period of Tuesday's game against the visiting Anaheim Ducks. The Capitals were trailing Anaheim by a goal with just over a minute remaining in regulation and as Boudreau prepared his team for the ensuing faceoff, superstar Alex Ovechkin stood on the ice and listened to his coach set up the play.

But, when it came time for Boudreau to send his six skaters on the ice, Ovechkin was not one of them.

It may not seem like a big deal, but it was.

Ovechkin is a two-time league MVP and possibly the most dangerous offensive player in the world. When your goalie is out for an extra attacker it's hard to fathom finding a better potential scorer to put on the ice over Ovechkin.

Instead, Boudreau went with a gut feeling, sending forwards Nicklas Backstrom, Brooks Laich, Joel Ward and Jason Chimera to the ice with defencemen Dennis Wideman and John Carlson. Boudreau's premonition came true as Backstrom tied the game with 42 seconds left in regulation.

"I was playing a hunch," Boudreau told the media on Wednesday. "That line was going so good and I thought that every time they were on the ice they had the puck in their zone. I just thought they were going to score."

Backstrom would score again to win the game in overtime. Ovechkin picked up an assist on that one, but after the game all anybody wanted to talk about was No. 8 not being on the ice at the end of regulation.

Much of the hubbub surrounded Ovechkin's reaction to being left on the bench, as he was caught by TV cameras hurling an expletive or two in his coach's direction. But Boudreau, who said he didn't hear what Ovechkin said, was glad that his captain responded the way that he did.

"I don't want him to be complacent and say 'Oh, that's nice.' So, I think that's what the idea was, not the plan, but knowing him, he's going to be upset."

For the most part, Boudreau did his best to play down Tuesday's events, taking the stance that the benching of Ovechkin was more about playing a hunch and going with hot players than proving a point. That may be true to an extent, but Boudreau also revealed that getting under Ovechkin's skin is a great way to motivate his star player and that knowledge had to play a role in the coach's controversial decision.

"Alex understands and gets it," Boudreau said. "He's a great captain that way. He gets mad because he wants to play and he wants to compete."

In the end, all of this comes back to Boudreau feeling the heat in Washington. He has brought tons of regular-season success to D.C. since taking the job in 2007, but the Capitals have not performed well in the postseason, losing in the first or second round in the four previous campaigns. Another 121-point season like Washington had in 2009-10 -- when the Capitals lost in the first round to eighth-seeded Montreal -- may not even be enough to save Boudreau's job if his team falters in the postseason yet again.

The coach has tried before to fix the club's postseason problems during the regular season and he must know that he is running out of chances to do so. Boudreau put a stronger emphasis on team defence last year, but the Caps still wound up getting swept in the second round by Tampa Bay.

That's why this year has been all about accountability and taking nothing for granted. If Boudreau can't fix his club's bad habits and make a deep playoff run then he could be looking for a job this summer.

It doesn't matter that Washington won its first seven games of this year and is currently boasting an 8-2-0 record, Boudreau knows that if he doesn't raise the stakes for his players then it could be the same old story this spring. The head coach wants all his players, including his superstar, to be on the same page at all times and he knows that sometimes actions speak louder than words.

"There's nothing to talk about," Boudreau said Wednesday when asked if he had spoken to Ovechkin about the benching. "We've all understood it, it's from day one ... I hope the message has gotten clear from July to now and I'm hoping we don't change that message. We're going to try and stay strong with it and that's the only way we're going to be successful."

Ovechkin isn't the only player to feel Boudreau's wrath this year, but his benching had to carry the most weight with his teammates. There was no better way for Boudreau to send a message to the entire team than sitting his captain and franchise player in a key situation.

That message was received by everyone, including Ovechkin.

"It's one team and it doesn't matter who you are," Ovechkin said on Wednesday. "If you want to win you have to be on the same page. Everybody."

The next time Washington is down a goal late and has pulled the goalie for an extra attacker, expect Ovie to be out on the ice. It's not good strategy to leave such a dangerous weapon on the bench when your team needs a goal, but the benching did serve a valuable one-time purpose.

Whether that purpose pays off in end is a question that won't be answered until the playoffs, but Boudreau has taught his club a valuable lesson for now.


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A family affair when the Ice face Everett
Father and son will clash on Friday night as Kootenay Ice general manager Jeff Chynoweth will face his son Ryan, a rookie with the Everett Silvertips

Trevor Crawley, Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 3, 2011



It will be a battle between father and son in a meeting of two Chynoweths on Friday night, as Ryan, a 16-year-old rookie with the Everett Silvertips, takes on his father, Jeff, president and general manager for the Kootenay Ice, when the two WHL teams face off against each other in the Rec Plex.

Ryan is the third-generation Chynoweth to get involved with the WHL, as his grandfather, Ed, created and built the modern WHL into the organization it is today, and his dad, Jeff, has held various management positions for 25 years with different teams, settling with the Ice when the franchise moved to Cranbrook 14 years ago.

It will be a weird feeling watching Ryan take on the Ice, as there will be mixed emotions between rooting for his son and cheering for the team he manages, said Jeff.

"I tell everybody, I cheer for the Everett Silvertips 71 games of the year and the one time they play the Kootenay Ice, I want the Kootenay Ice to win and nothing changes." he said. "…The best-case scenario is we win and he [Ryan] has a good game and maybe gets his first WHL goal.

"That'd be the perfect scenario; Mom would be happy, the family would be happy and I would be happy."

Ryan has grown up with a pretty unique perspective of the WHL, which gives some advantages in understanding how the league works, but at the end of the day, he's still a young 16-year-old rookie looking to create his own identity, Jeff said.

Being a young player means he will sit out of a lot of hockey games, but the first year of playing major-junior hockey is more about adjusting to the pace and the lifestyle, Jeff added.

"I think growing up around the environment, he saw a lot things that most young kids don't see because that's our profession," Jeff said.

Ryan grew up hockey-mad just like every other Canadian kid, whether it was road hockey, mini-stick hockey or shinny hockey, and he took the initiative to advance in the minor hockey system with the support of Jeff and his mom, Michele.

One of the biggest hockey lessons he's learned from his dad is patience and understanding that every player is going to have their hot and cold streaks, Ryan said.

"It's a long season and every player is going to have their peaks and valleys," Ryan said. "When you're in the valley, you want to try to climb out and when you hit that peak, you want to stay up there. You can't get frustrated when you're a 16-year-old."

Ryan, a centreman, was a second round pick by the Everett Silvertips in the 2010 WHL Draft, coming out of the Lethbridge AAA Bantam Golden Hawks and AAA Midget Hurricanes programs.

Before that, he grew up in the Cranbrook minor hockey system, playing on teams that were managed by his dad.

"We had a great group of people here growing up at a young age and those are friends you make and keep forever," said Jeff.

Making the jump to major-junior hockey hasn't been the unfamiliar experience for Ryan that it may be to other players, and he is enjoying the intensity and the focus on training and development, Ryan said.

"You get an opportunity every day to get better. You're on the ice everyday, you're with your teammates everyday," he said. "It's a lot different from minor hockey when you're practicing only two or three times a week."

Don't expect the Ice to be making any trades for the rookie Chynoweth either, as Jeff believes his son has a better opportunity to develop as a hockey player and a young man with a different WHL organization.

"I don't think it would've been fair to him or this team to have him on this hockey club," said Jeff. "As much as my wife would love to have him at home, she realizes it's best for his development to move away and we obviously couldn't be happier with the Everett Silvertips."

The Everett squad has had a slower start to their season, with four wins in 16 games, but as with every other team in the WHL, they'll be gunning to knock the reigning league champions down a few pegs when they meet on Friday.

And when asked if he will cut his dad's club any slack, Ryan laughed.

"No, not at all," he said.


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An immigrant's tale:
Bad luck is partly to blame for the end of Chad Starling's career; so is an ECHL policy that caused him to be sent back to Canada


J.P. Hoornstra, Staff Writer, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin,11/01/2011


The story of Chad Starling's hockey career already had been written when his pickup truck pulled into the U.S.-Canadian border station at Sweetgrass, Montana early in the afternoon of Sept. 29.

Starling played 503 games in the ECHL between 2000 and 2009, more than any ECHL defenseman during the decade. Last year, his third with the Reign, Starling was one of 12 players named to the league's all-decade team.

At 6-foot-6 and 205 pounds, the 31-year-old Starling looks like a typical hockey player, although his career trajectory was unusual.

While his peers from the 1999 draft class either established themselves in the NHL or moved on to their post-playing careers, Starling slugged through one of the least glamorous jobs in professional sports: A low-scoring, defensive-minded defenseman in a league known for long bus rides, three-game weekend series and sub-$20,000 annual salaries.

This was supposed to be Starling's 11th season of professional hockey. It began just like any other, with a 400-mile drive south to the border from his home in Delisle, Saskatchewan.

There, in Sweetgrass, a routine encounter threatened to re-write his legacy.

When he was greeted by Customs and Border Protection Officer Andrew Hoggan, Starling had a truck full of hockey gear, some personal belongings and a printed letter with the official Ontario Reign logo on top.

The letter was titled "RE: Application for B-1, Visitor for Business
Classification, On behalf of Chad Starling."

It began: "This letter is submitted in support of the admission of Chad Starling to the United States in B-1 Status. We have invited Chad to participate in training session with the Ontario Reign that will be held from September 27, 2011 to October 10, 2011 in Ontario, California."

Hoggan read the brief note, which was signed by head coach Jason Christie. He went to a computer to verify the information by performing a Google search on Starling's name.

Hoggan was not made available for comment but Lynn Hurst, the public affairs liaison for the station, said this is a common practice.

"If someone is claiming to be coming into the U.S. because of trying to get a visa for a sports visa or a work visa, and in order to substantiate their claim, they may Google that person's name, or Google the team, or the business that they're planning to work for," Hurst said.

What Hoggan found was a blog entry on this newspaper's website, dated July 25, 2011, indicating Starling already had re-signed with the Reign for the 2011-12 season. (Google "Chad Starling" and the blog entry still is among the top results.)

This presented a contradiction. The letter stated Starling was invited to participate in training camp, during which he "may engage in contract negotiations." However, as a simple internet search revealed, a contract already had been negotiated and signed.

To the government, that makes a big difference.

"When an athlete comes in to try out for a team, they're issued a B-1 visa, which for Canadians, there isn't any fee associated with that," Hurst said. "They come in temporarily to try out for the team. Then if they make the team, they have to adjust status to either an H-2 or a P-1."

Since Starling already "made" the team in the eyes of the government (in this case, a border guard), the B-1 visa wasn't sufficient. Hoggan filled out the U.S. Department of Homeland Security form for Withdrawal of Application for Admission.

He took Starling's photo and fingerprint and noted the explanation: "Application withdrawn in order to return back to Canada to either have a P-1 petition or proof that a contract has not been signed."

It was the first time in 11 seasons Starling had been turned around at the border.

"I called (Christie) right after and he said, 'We'll get right on that,' " he said. "I asked him how long it would take. He said no more than 10 days."

That sounded simple enough. Ten days and Starling would be back in business. Camp was two weeks long, so this wasn't a major setback. Starling was familiar with the organization, the city and the coach; even though Christie was hired by the Reign in August, Starling played for him for five seasons in Peoria and Utah from 2001-06.

Dollars and sense

But why make it difficult? Why would the letter from the Reign request a B-1 visa when Starling needed a P-1?

The answer is simple, but the logic is complicated.

To petition the U.S. government for a P-1 visa costs money - $325 to be exact, although that $325 won't get you very far.

Bob Hoffman, director of communications for the Central Hockey League, said each P-1 petition "ends up in a stack of papers. We've heard stories before of people waiting two months (to get their P-1 approved). None of our teams take that risk. Premium processing is more but it puts the paper at the top of the stack."

That's why hockey teams at every level - the NHL, ECHL and CHL - pay an additional $1,225 Premium Processing Service fee. The P-1 then gets processed within 15 calendar days; if not, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services guarantees a refund.

The Premium Processing Service can be applied to multiple P-1 petitions. So, for example, if a team has 10 players who need P-1 visas, the team can put all 10 names on a list and pay the $1,225 fee once. In the cost-conscious world of minor league sports, that means a lot.

Hoffman said the Central Hockey League has a policy of filing the petitions, and paying the extra fee, for all its P-1 eligible players 15 days before training camp begins - typically on Sept. 15 - so that each P-1 is processed in time for camp. The league also keeps an immigration attorney, Christi Hufford, on retainer to monitor the immigration status of every player.

"Once we caught an issue 10 minutes before game time with an emergency backup goaltender," Hoffman recalled. "He had work authorization in a field other than hockey. If he had taken the ice to play hockey, he would have been technically breaking the law, so he didn't play."

The ECHL has a different policy.

"It's standard procedure for players crossing the border for camp to ask for a B-1," said Joe Babik, the league's Director of Communications. The Reign apparently were abiding when Starling handed over the letter in Sweetgrass.

This policy allows ECHL teams to save money, in case a non-tryout player who needs a P-1 visa is deemed expendable during training camp and is released before playing in a game.

The policy produced a letter stating "the purpose of the tryout is to introduce Chad to the team and to learn more about him while providing him with the opportunity to get to know the Ontario Reign organization."

The blog entry on insidesocal.com Hoggan read while Starling waited in his pickup truck showed that, three months earlier, the defenseman had "re-signed for an unprecedented fourth season in Ontario."

It was this apparent contradiction of facts that got Starling turned around at the border. But this isn't the reason he never made it to California.

Bad luck

Sure enough, within 15 days after Starling was turned around at Sweetgrass, his P-1 visa petition was approved. But a lot can happen in 15 days.

Four more defensemen whom the Reign signed in the offseason were unable to play. Adrian van de Mosselaer contracted mononucleosis. Jason Fredricks and Pat Bowen went down with knee injuries. Jordan Hill got a tryout with the Manchester Monarchs of the American Hockey League and earned a contract in training camp.

Starling called Christie on the evening of Thursday, Oct. 13, one day before the Reign's first regular-season game.

"He said, 'We got your papers done.' He said, 'We need you to leave first thing tomorrow,' " Starling recalled. "I told him, 'Well, I might not be able to leave until Saturday morning because I had a full day of work planned Friday.' "

Starling said he would call Christie back once he knew he could get the day off. He did. Christie didn't answer. Starling left a message.

The season began as scheduled as the Reign lost their first game and won their second. Starling was added to the opening-day roster and officially went on 7-day injured reserve.

A classic game of phone tag played out behind the scenes.

"I got up Friday morning, called, but (Christie) didn't answer, so I left another message," Starling said. "I went to work. He didn't call back Friday. He called back Tuesday at 11 o'clock in the morning."

Out of necessity, Christie had been working the phones to find defensemen to replace Hill, van de Mosselaer, Fredricks and Bowen. By the time he did, one week into the season, Starling was eligible to come off injured reserve.

Then another roadblock emerged: There was no more room for Starling in Ontario.

"We kind of have (limited) cap room there and there's apartments," Christie said on Oct. 20. "We're only allowed so many apartments and it's hurting us because we've got so many guys injured. That's the way the ball rolls sometimes with these injuries. We've got to make sure we're going to be on top of it."

The next day, Starling was released.

Christie said it wasn't easy.

"At the end of the day it comes down to money, the cap, not being able to have space," he said. "We have to make sure we have the right budget. Coming in late like this, missing last season (Starling missed the final four months with groin injuries), it was something where a decision had to be made. For me it was a hard one because I know him. You never like to see that, especially when you have a relationship."

The feeling was mutual.

"They never did send me any papers so I could leave," Starling said. "To have it end like this, sour grapes, that sucks. But that's the way it goes."

Hard lesson learned

Starling still is in Delisle working for his family-owned business, "cleaning out septic tanks, car washes, any kind of waste basically," in a rural nook of Saskatchewan.

He is an unsigned free agent and is comfortable calling it a career.

"You never say never, if somebody needs a D-man," he said. "My plan was to take over my parents' business. Now I just speed the plan up six months."

Starling said he has no hard feelings toward his teammates. He's convinced the discrepancy between the letter he was given by the team, and the letter of the law, is the reason he's still at home.

Christie acknowledged if Starling hadn't gotten turned around at the border, "this probably never would have happened."

So something needs to change.

The ECHL can adopt an airtight immigration policy, maybe one similar to the CHL's. Maybe the Department of Homeland Security can relax P-1 fees for minor-league sports teams who must pay the same amount as their major-league brethren.

Last week, Starling sent the following text message: "Well hopefully if u [sic] get this story done it will stop players in the future to have to go through what I did."

For now, his legacy remains only partially re-written.


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Howe times have changed: Gordie wouldn't cut it in 'new' NHL

By WES GILBERTSON, QMI Agency, Nov 4 2011



CALGARY - Gordie Howe is showing off a permanent lump on his right hand, recalling the details of one of countless slashes he absorbed during his Hall-of-Fame career.

The deed didn’t go unreturned, though.

Still a story-teller at 83, Howe pauses for a moment then pokes a reporter on the chin.

“He got it right here,” he said with a grin.

There’s a reason they called him Mr. Hockey, not Mr. Nice Guy.

Howe, the only guy to skate a shift in the pro hockey ranks in six different decades, remains as famous for his elbows and his scoring touch.

The six-time Hart Trophy winner ranks third in NHL history with 1,850 points, but he also racked up 1,685 penalty minutes, good for 91st — just behind Wendel Clark — on the all-time list.

One of his lasting legacies is the Gordie Howe hat-trick — the feat of scoring a goal, adding an assist and dropping your mitts for a fight all in the span of one game.

As Howe pointed out Thursday without even a hint of guilt, “You can’t behave on the ice.”

These days, you have no choice.

Ironically, the all-time leader in Gordie Howe hat-tricks is now the NHL’s chief disciplinarian, and Brendan Shanahan has been busy handing out bans for head-shots and other illegal hits.

It makes you wonder whether a guy like Howe could get away with any of his old tricks in what they call the ‘new’ NHL.

“He was a tough man, but there’s no chance he could play in today’s game,” said Mark Napier, who spent a decade in the big leagues and is now the president of the NHL Alumni Association.

“Back then, a lot of games weren’t televised, and if they were televised, they only had one camera. Gordie used to wait for the referee not too look, and he’d pop a guy and knock him out cold, right? Now, they’d have three cameras following him around, and Gordie would be suspended every second game. He’d have to conform to the new rules himself.

“Back then, all the guys were tough. They did have one or two enforcers — like John Ferguson — but if you couldn’t look after yourself back in those days, you couldn’t play. They all were tough guys, and they could look after themselves.”

On Thursday, Howe made a pit-stop in Calgary to promote the second annual ScotiaBank Pro-Am, a fundraising hockey tournament that raises awareness of Alzheimer’s Disease. Howe’s late wife, Colleen, had a form of the illness.

The on-ice contingent for the April 13-15 tournament in Calgary — one of four ScotiaBank Pro-Am events planned across the country — will include former Flames stars Theo Fleury, Lanny McDonald and Gary Roberts plus retired tough guys Marty McSorley and Tiger Williams skating with city recreation squads.

He won’t skate, but Howe is the undisputed headliner. Even at 83 — and 31 years removed from his last NHL contest — he remains one of the most recognizable faces in the hockey world.

According to the former Detroit Red Wings star, it wasn’t always that way.

“Nobody knew you (back when I played early in my career), because TV wasn’t around, so when they’d see you in the doorway, they’re pulling out pictures,” Howe recalled. “When you’d walk into Toronto, from Yonge Street down into the arena itself, you’d see people going through the pictures, looking and then running for an autograph. When TV came along, it really introduced hockey.”

That’s not the only thing that has changed.


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Marketing business as usual for NHL?

DAVID SHOALTS, Globe and Mail, Nov. 04, 2011


In the New York-New Jersey corridor – the heart of NBA territory – the league may be dark due to the player lockout, but there is no sign of the NHL stepping in to shine its light on disaffected basketball fans.

The New Jersey Devils, who share the Prudential Center with the New Jersey Nets, have an advertising campaign under way through their social media outlets, as well as the traditional broadcast and print ads, but there is no mention of the NBA’s labour troubles. The pitch is: come watch the Devils play because it’s a great evening’s entertainment, not because your basketball team is shut down.

As for the New York Rangers, they’re not saying anything (just like a lot of team and league executives contacted for this story). A Rangers spokesman, citing that The Madison Square Garden Company owns both the Rangers and Knicks, said they could not comment on anything to do with the NBA lockout.

John Collins, the NHL’s chief operating officer and marketing boss, declined to comment. A request for comment from NHL commissioner Gary Bettman went unanswered.

Across the continent, the Los Angeles Kings once again plastered downtown building billboards with pictures of their players. But the message is: the Kings are a good team worth watching, not that they are playing and the NBA’s Lakers and Clippers are not.

“We certainly don’t want to jump on labour issues, mainly because we’re friendly with all the professional sports teams in Los Angeles and we know what it’s like to go through that stuff,” said Chris McGowan, the Kings chief operating officer. “I also think it’s bad business strategy to plan for something that’s uncertain [like a lockout].

“An NBA lockout or another league’s lockout could last a year, or it could be over on Monday.”

Other NHL executives say while the topic was never formally discussed by owners, a conscious decision was made by the league and the teams not to capitalize on the problems of its corporate colleague.

Since the NHL has had its own lockout troubles in the past, and more could be ahead when the collective agreement expires in September of 2012, league executives say it wouldn’t be cricket to launch a marketing campaign trying to win over basketball fans. Besides, NHL teams like the Rangers, Toronto Maple Leafs, Kings and Washington Capitals are owned or partly owned by the same people who own NBA teams.

“We wouldn’t want them to do that to us and they didn’t do that to us when we were out a year [in 2004-05],” said Jim Devellano, the senior vice-president of the Detroit Red Wings.

However, with 14 NHL teams in the same city as an NBA team and 10 of them sharing an arena, some marketing experts think the hockey league is missing a great chance to attract new fans.

“I think it’s a golden opportunity for hockey,” said Mike Sprouse, chief marketing officer of Internet marketing company Epic Media Group in Chicago. “I love basketball but as a sports fan I love to go to live events. The NBA lockout has been on for four to five months and I haven’t seen one piece of marketing from the NHL trying to leverage it.”

It isn’t necessary to hammer away at the fact the NBA is shut down, Devellano says.

“Everybody in Detroit knows it’s just the Lions [of the NFL] and Red Wings playing right now,” he said. “It helps us because there’s only two teams selling tickets instead of three.”

David Carter, the executive director of the University of Southern California’s Sports Business Institute, says the NHL is still capitalizing on the NBA lockout. But it’s been done in a more subtle way than telling fans to come watch because the other guy’s theatre is closed.

For example, teams are targeting the casual fans and their families who may budget for attending three or four sports events a year. If NHL teams can land those fans for a game and show them a quality evening of entertainment, maybe they will stick to hockey in the future.

“There are also things like group events held by corporations,” Carter said. “Companies take their clients or employees to an arena for a night. They can’t trust that the NBA is operating so the NHL can go after those group outings and it’s a more subtle thing.”


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Kudos to Caps coach

By CHRIS STEVENSON, QMI Agency, Nov 4 2011


Early in the NHL season, who knew lip reading would be such a valuable skill?

First Wayne Simmonds and now it's Alex Ovechkin making noise out of earshot of the microphones.

It made me think of that Seinfeld episode when George borrows Jerry's deaf girlfriend to lip read from across the room and learn what George's freshly ex-girlfriend is saying at a party.

Only problem is between the deaf girlfriend and Kramer, they translate "sweeping together" into "sleeping together" and hilarity ensues.

I don't think there was as much confusion over what Simmonds or Ovechkin were saying.

Which brings us to Washington Capitals coach Bruce Boudreau, who left Ovechkin on the bench at the end of the game Tuesday, sparking Ovie's X-rated F-bombs (at least that's how it looked).

Boudreau is coaching like there is no tomorrow, which is probably true in his case if he doesn't find a way to get the Caps to the third round of the playoffs. He ran a boot camp (relative to past Caps training camps) and now is taking on the team's biggest star, who has a long-term deal, and not backing down.

At least Boudreau won't go quietly.

Good for him.

His actions are speaking louder than any words.

Infer what you want to infer.

UNDER THE HOOD

A look at what makes a hockey team work

One of the trends right now is players taking what would seem to be low-percentage shots on the ice from bad angles along the goal line. It wouldn't appear to be the best use of a puck possession but, according to one assistant coach, it creates trouble. Many of the big goalies in the league use the "one knee down" technique to defend the post. They put their pad closest to the puck perpendicular to the goal line against the post. This leaves them in a position to push off with the leg closest to the puck and go into the butterfly if the player with the puck decides to pass into the slot. Problem is, in that position the goaltender can't help but give up a rebound when the puck is hammered at his feet. "The other thing is, if the goaltender's technique is off by a little bit and his pad is even slightly angled, a shot into the pad is going right into the slot," a goaltending coach said.

One player said firing the puck along the goal line is near the top of the list when playing against Vancouver Canucks goaltender Roberto Luongo.


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Benching Ovechkin: The Caps get tough

By Katie Baker, Grantland. com, NOVEMBER 2, 2011


For the Washington Capitals on Tuesday night, the third line was the charm. With the Caps down 3-0 midway through the second period against the Anaheim Ducks, right wing Joel Ward netted a wrister that was set up by his linemates Brooks Laich and Jason Chimera to cut the Ducks' lead to 3-1. Three minutes later, Laich and Ward were credited with assists on a slap shot goal by defenseman Dennis Wideman. On the other end of the ice, Washington coach Bruce Boudreau took every opportunity to match up his third threesome against Anaheim's top line of Corey Perry, Ryan Getzlaf, and Bobby Ryan, and it worked: The Ducks' stars were held to just one power play goal by Perry halfway through the third.

And it was the grinding third line that helped set up Nicklas Backstrom's game-tying goal, with Chimera and Laich earning assists on Backstrom's wrist shot with 42 seconds to play. The Swede would score his second in overtime to give Washington the stirring 5-4 comeback win.

Still, for all the third line's contributions, the Capitals' biggest headlines were made by their first line winger's play — or, as it were, his lack thereof. With just over a minute remaining in regulation and the Caps down 4-3, Washington head coach Bruce Boudreau called a timeout to diagram what to do. He pulled goalie Tomas Vokoun and sent six Washington skaters out onto the ice — none of whom were named Alex Ovechkin.1 Replays later showed an incredulous Ovi glaring at Boudreau, plunking himself down on the bench, and muttering in disgust what a legion of lip-readers determined were the words "fat *censormode*." He was sent back out on the ice in overtime, and played a strong shift that resulted in the primary assist on Backstrom's game-winning goal.

http://www .youtube.com/watch?v=fbmRKVJWEB8&feature=player_embedded

"I thought the other guys were better than him and I thought there was just a chance that other guys might score the goal," Boudreau said after the game when asked about Ovi's absence on the game-tying play. "I've got to put out the guys that I think are going to score the goal and 99 percent of the time Alex is the guy I think is going to score the goal. I just didn't think Alex was going to score the goal at that time tonight. You go with your gut feeling, thinking that line is going pretty good, and I got lucky."

In the same way a basketball player or coach can be vilified for a last-second shot that rims out but praised as a clutch player or genius if the ball bounces in, Boudreau risked widespread wrath had his decision not yielded a goal. It was a bold coaching move that spoke volumes about the kind of team he and the Capitals are trying to become this season: one whose role players don't just stand aside and watch Ovi take over. One with a locker room that is not lackadaisical and a coaching staff that is not blinded by stars. One where grinders like Joel Ward, who was acquired this offseason specifically to enhance the team's checking line, and Brooks Laich, who was re-signed this summer for the same reason, are considered as integral to the team as someone like Ovechkin. Because when it comes to the all-important postseason, they almost certainly will be.

Boudreau, long questioned for a permissive attitude toward his team's better players that, many complained, resulted in too much coasting and too many costs, has wielded his power more heavily throughout this young season. He's done so with some measure of success. In the very first game of the year he sat Vokoun in favor of goaltender Michal Neuvirth, saying simply that Neuvirth had "earned it" with strong preseason play. Whether that particular move was the reason or not, Vokoun has been one of the league's finest goalies since then. Boudreau scratched Marcus Johansson on opening night, and in the next game the young center responded with a goal and an assist. (He has recorded four more goals since, three of them game-winners.)2

Last night Boudreau effectively sent two important messages to the Capitals: that he's willing to bench even the team's biggest player, and, perhaps more importantly, that he's got faith in everyone else when he does.

To his credit, Ovi handled it all as well as he could have — he got (rightly) furious, he got back on the ice, he got an assist, and, in a development that ought to soothe worried Caps fans, he seems to have gotten "it," telling reporters on Wednesday that he understood what had happened. "Of course," he said. "[The third line] play[ed] unbelievable last night, they shut down Getzlaf line and score goals. No doubt about it."


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The NBA Lockout: Why the Players Will Cave
A shockingly readable primer on the economics of professional basketball


Vishnu Parasuraman, Grantland.com, NOVEMBER 3, 2011

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Hopefully the NHLPA will be alert to this... although many NHL owners aren't like Paul Allan; lots might actually quit losing money of the NHL locked out / discontinued!
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The NBA lockout has been dragging on for months. Games have been canceled. Fans are wondering why millionaires and billionaires can't come to an agreement on how to divide over $4 billion in revenue. While those concerns are logical, a full understanding of the issues is necessary to understand the complexity of the situation and why accepting a deal is not a strictly financial decision.

What Is Basketball Related Income (BRI)?

Basketball Related Income (BRI) includes most income generated by the NBA outside of expansion-team money, fines, and revenue sharing. (For a full accounting of what is included in BRI, see Larry Coon's CBA FAQs.) Another important element excluded from BRI is operating expenses. As Raja Bell explained in an interview with the Dan LeBatard Show with Stugotz, this includes arena rental. So what do some owners do? They have one company that owns the arena, and then have that company rent the arena to the basketball franchise, essentially paying themselves and deducting that expense from BRI.

After all those calculations are completed, the players receive a percentage of that income. How does the NBA prevent overages and underages (the players getting too much or too little money)? A certain percentage (last year 8 percent) is withheld from every player's paycheck and placed in an escrow account. When the BRI is calculated at the end of the year, if it is determined that the players received less than they were supposed to, money is paid out to the players. If it is determined that the players were paid more than their percentage, the owners keep the escrow money, and if that is still not enough, then additional money is taken out of the players' paychecks for the following year.

This calculation is important because while the players' contracts are guaranteed, if the league makes less money, so do the players. The idea that the economy tanked, lowering revenue, which resulted in the players' salaries being unaffordable, is just not true. What is true, however, is that the owners can't collectively make a profit with a player percentage of BRI set at 57 percent, as is the case with the current Collective Bargaining Agreement.

So the players must take a lower percentage of BRI, but how low is too low? And how much money are the two sides arguing about? As an example, let's use $4 billion in BRI for the upcoming season, with $0.2 billion increases annually (values are in billions). (The current CBA has the players' share at 57 percent; they have since come down to 52 percent, with the owners offering between 47 and 50 percent.)

Year 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 Total
BRI $4.000 $4.200 $4.400 $4.600 $4.800 $5.000 $27.000
57% $2.280 $2.394 $2.508 $2.622 $2.736 $2.850 $15.390
52% $2.080 $2.184 $2.288 $2.392 $2.496 $2.600 $14.040
50% $2.000 $2.100 $2.200 $2.300 $2.400 $2.500 $13.500
47% $1.880 $1.974 $2.068 $2.162 $2.256 $2.350 $12.690

These are not peanuts being argued over — we're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars at stake, as you can see in this chart that shows differences between various percentages:
Year 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 Total
BRI $4.000 $4.200 $4.400 $4.600 $4.800 $5.000 $27.000
57 to 52 $0.200 $0.210 $0.220 $0.230 $0.240 $0.250 $1.350
52 to 50 $0.080 $0.084 $0.088 $0.092 $0.096 $0.100 $0.540
50 to 47 $0.120 $0.126 $0.132 $0.138 $0.144 $0.150 $0.810

It's important to note the concessions the players have already made in order to understand their reluctance to go further. They've given back $200 million for the upcoming season and $1.35 billion over a six-year CBA. And the owners are asking for additional money, up to another $200 million and another $1.35 billion (if the players end up with 47 percent). One more thing to consider is what last year would have looked like with various percentages:
Change from Actual
BRI $3.817
Actual (57) $2.176
52 $1.985 $0.191
50 $1.909 $0.267
47 $1.794 $0.382

With the owners estimating losses of $300 million and players arguing that the losses are significantly less (with accounting differences taken into consideration), it is reasonable to assume that the players, with their proposal of 52 percent, have arrived at a percentage roughly where owners can make a profit.

The System

But this is much more complex than economics. The BRI/percentage determines how much in total players will be paid. The system, on the other hand, determines who can pay a player and how that money is distributed. The owners prefer a hard cap, punitive luxury tax, and a restricted Mid-Level Exception (an exception that allows a team over the cap to sign a player to a contract of a calculated value of around $5 million a year).

The players prefer a less restrictive system. Why does it matter? Because the union wants to create as many well-paying jobs as possible. A more restrictive system filters money upward to the superstars. The union exists to protect the middle-of-the-road player. This isn't about the overall payout, but the median payout. Let's take the following example with fictitious numbers to illustrate the point, where there are two players, the total BRI is 20, and the player percentage is 50 percent:
Contract Superstar Player Mid-level Player Total
Restrictive 10 2 12
Non-restrictive 10 5 15

Actual Payout Superstar Player Mid-level Player Total
Restrictive 8.33 1.67 10
Non-restrictive 6.67 3.33 10

As you can see, the overall salaries, when actually paid, are identical at 10. This is because the BRI and percentage determine that payout. But, in the less restrictive scenario, the mid-level player gets a larger piece of the pie, which the union prefers. The idea is that the superstar gets a lot of money anyway and also reaps the benefits of endorsements, so the union needs to protect the player who doesn't get any of that. If they wanted to support the superstar player, they would simply disband the union, which would make any salary cap restrictions illegal (as an antitrust violation) and allow the owners to get into a bidding war over elite players, with everyone else left to fend for themselves.

An Impasse

The owners have already been given enough concessions to address their concerns, and are largely independently wealthy anyway, so why are they continuing to draw a line in the sand? Because economics is a sideshow to them. Some owners are willing to cave. Micky Arison, the Heat owner, was fined $500,000 for intimating that he was willing to make a deal and that other owners were holding up the process. Mark Cuban used his brother to get the message out there that the owners would move to 51 percent. Yet other owners, most notably Dan Gilbert and Paul Allen, won't budge.

The owners aren't holding out for parity. They are holding out because of indifference and vindictiveness.

Does anyone really believe that Paul Allen, worth $13.2 billion, is holding up this deal for a few million dollars out of his pocket? (As a comparison, for Paul Allen, $5 million is the equivalent of $10 to someone worth $30,000. Would you hold up an entire sports league for $10? In fact, for Paul Allen, the entire stated losses of the league, $300 million, would be the equivalent of around $630 to someone worth $30,000.) Of course not. The reality is that there is not, nor will there ever be, parity in the NBA. You need an elite superstar to win a championship, and there are maybe 10 of those in the NBA. Parity is simply being used to hide their true intent.

The owners aren't holding out for parity. They are holding out because of indifference and vindictiveness. Financially, they have so much money and so many alternate sources of revenue that it doesn't matter if their teams play or not. And since most owners' teams aren't going to win anyway, the motivation just isn't there to cave. For certain owners, like Dan Gilbert, this is taken to an extreme. The man who penned the Comic Sans diatribe against LeBron James would love nothing more than to slice a year off James' championship window in Miami.

So, the players must cave, right? They need paychecks and the owners appear indifferent. The short answer is yes. Economically speaking, they should cave immediately. They are going to lose more money from missing games than they will lose from taking a worse deal. And the players will eventually cave. There will be basketball again. But it's the system that causes reluctance. Sure enough, it's being reported that the owners are not offering 50 percent with a system the players covet, but are instead offering a choice: (1) a 50 percent split with a restrictive system, OR (2) a 47 percent split with a non-restrictive system. So, the players are in a situation where they have already lost, already given so much, and already covered the owners' losses (some of which are unrelated to players' salaries), and they now must choose between keeping more raw money or protecting that middle class of players. Not nearly as simple as dividing a $4 billion pie.


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The Beginning of the End for the NCAA
Compensating players was just the start — the entire system is about to collapse


Charles P. Pierce, Grantland.com, NOVEMBER 1, 2011

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Interesting to see what happens in the hockey world if this occurs... NCAA (amateur) vs Major Junior Hockey (professional). Now, the lines will be removed. Both leagues will be considered professional. Kids could move from one league to the other (unless the leagues put in rules restricting it)...wow!
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In June of 1970, Bill Veeck, a renegade baseball owner, took the stand for the plaintiff in the case of Flood v. Kuhn, in which St. Louis Cardinal outfielder Curt Flood essentially sued major league baseball to break the power of the "reserve system," a pernicious practice that bound a player to one team for as long as that one team wanted to keep him. It was this system of, at best, involuntary servitude on which the business of baseball had remained a rigged game in favor of management for over a century.

Veeck thought the system doomed. Sooner or later, he believed, a judge, or somebody else in authority that didn't give a damn about sitting in the owner's box for Opening Day, was going to get a good look at the system. That person probably then would spend four or five minutes laughing so hard that they nearly fainted, and then that person would throw out the whole system for the fraud that it was. Better to eliminate the reserve system gradually, Veeck testified. (He recommended a system of seven-year contracts, much like the system that had prevailed at one time in Hollywood.) That way, he thought, the owners could control the transition between the reserve system and whatever came next. Veeck also pointed out that the reserve system, as it was practiced at the time, ran counter to some cherished American beliefs about the country's values.

"I think it would certainly help the players and the game itself to no longer be one of the few places in which there is human bondage," Veeck testified, according to the account in Brad Snyder's A Well-Paid Slave, an exemplary book on the Flood case. "I think it would be to the benefit of the reputation of the game of baseball … At least, it would be fair."

The owners didn't listen. Veeck was not one of them. He had a predilection for putting midgets on the field. And black people. And, as far as the authoritarian exercise of whiteness went, baseball management made the Politburo look like the O'Jays. They ignored Veeck. They even beat the Flood case in the Supreme Court. Then, in 1975, an arbitrator named Peter Seitz threw out the reserve clause and free agency fell onto baseball all at once and everywhere. The system utterly collapsed and, just as Veeck had predicted, it was not a soft landing.

Something like that has happened over the last 20 or 30 years in regard to college athletics. Every few years, some angry, stick-waving prophet would come wandering into the cozy system of unpaid (or barely paid) labor and start bellowing about how the essential corruption in the system wasn't that some players got money under the table, but that none of them were allowed to get any over it. Sooner or later, these people said, the system would collapse from its own internal contradictions — yes, some of these people summoned up enough Marx through the bong resin in their brains from their college days to make a point — and the people running college sports had best figure out how to control the chaos before it overwhelmed them. Nobody listened. Very little changed, except that college sports became bigger and more lucrative, an enterprise of sports spectacle balanced precariously on the fragile principle that everybody should get to make money except the people doing the actual work.

Now, though, the indications are that the reckoning is finally here. In its role as the protector of the lucrative status quo, the NCAA is under assault from a number of different directions, and the organization seems to be cracking from the pressure. Just in the past two years, we have seen the lawsuit brought by former UCLA star Ed O'Bannon in which O'Bannon and several other former NCAA athletes challenged the NCAA's right to profit from their "likenesses" in perpetuity. Earlier this month, legendary center Bill Russell joined that suit. In the October issue of the Atlantic, historian Taylor Branch took a mighty whack at the entire system and made a case for paying college athletes on the grounds of simple fairness. Branch's credentials as a chronicler of the civil rights movement gave his critique a profound resonance in places where nobody much cares if Alabama beats LSU this weekend. Yesterday, Congressman Bobby Rush of Illinois, a former Black Panther who once escaped being murdered by the Chicago Police Department through the expedient of not being at home to get shot, and still the only man to defeat Barack Obama head-to-head in an election, likened the NCAA to Al Capone, which is not a compliment, not even in Chicago. And, perhaps most significant of all, a petition is being circulated by current football and basketball players requesting (politely) a cut of the vast ancillary revenues that the colleges and the NCAA are raking in.

On October 27, undoubtedly in response to all of this, and in an obvious attempt to keep order within the help, the NCAA voted to allow its member conferences to decide whether to pay their athletes an annual stipend of $2,000 to cover the "incidental costs" of a college education. NCAA president Mark Emmert was firm in his denial that this constituted "pay for play."

Nonsense.

Of course, it is.

And that's the ballgame right there. As soon as you pay someone $2,000, you cannot make the argument that it is unethical to pay that person $5,000, or $10,000, or a million bucks a year, for all that. Amateurism is one of those rigid things that cannot bend, only shatter. Amateurism is an unsustainable concept. It could not last in golf. It could not last in tennis. It couldn't even last in the Olympics, where it was supposed to have been ordained by Zeus or someone. It is the rancid legacy of a stultified British class system in which athletes were supposed to be "gentlemen" and not "tradesmen." Which is to say that sports are supposed to be for Us and not Them, old sport.

It was particularly badly suited for transplantation to this country, where we — theoretically, anyway, and against a preponderance of available evidence today — believe that we are a classless society based on upward mobility and the essential fairness of our system.

(Yeah, yeah, I know, but play along for the moment, OK?)

Sports have always played an important role in the construction of that part of our national self-image. Sports as a "way out of poverty" is one of our more cherished national myths, and it always ran headlong into the British concept of amateurism, which was based on a class system that didn't believe in ways out of poverty for the lower orders, or the Irish. But I repeat myself. Basically, amateurism offends against this country's image of itself and, therefore, its support here always has been tenuous.

Give Americans a chance to be greedy and noble at the same time, and the cultural momentum becomes unstoppable.

Which is part of the reason why every major "scandal" in college sports begins with the crash of a cymbal and ends with a stifled yawn. What we have in college sports at the moment is a perfect example of a functioning underground economy. People tolerate that economy because, fundamentally, we believe that, if you work a 40-hour-a-week job that requires travel all over the country, you ought to get paid for it. We also love the games. Hence, out of both selfishness and a kind of innate sense of fairness, most people are more satisfied with the sausage than they are horrified at how it's made. Give Americans a chance to be greedy and noble at the same time, and the cultural momentum becomes unstoppable.

The counterargument, of course, is that athletes are "compensated" by the scholarships they are granted to the universities they attend. In a time in which the middle class is being squeezed, and a college education is pricing itself out of the reach of thousands of families, this argument gains a certain amount of power. However, let's accept it on its face for the moment. You can say that the university is entitled to the gate receipts from its games based on the value of the scholarships it grants to its players, and I might even grant you that, at which point I will lie down until this feeling passes.

But the ancillary income — television revenues, the sale of jerseys and other gear, the use of a player's "likeness" in video games, and on and on — completely overwhelms the equation and makes the relationship inequitable. The Southeastern Conference made over a billion dollars last year. The Big 10 made $905 million. These people may have a moral right to their ticket sales based on the scholarships they provide, but they don't have a moral right to every last nickel they can squeeze out of their labor force. That's absurd. It's un-American. And it cannot last.

The NCAA is floundering now, proposing a cheap pay-for-play scheme while denying it is doing so, and hoping to buy a little more time against the looming inevitable. Eventually, one night, they'll throw up the ball at an NCAA tournament game and none of the players will jump. Or, a judge will rule on one or another of the lawsuits. Let's look at the history of one of the plaintiffs.

In 1963, Bill Russell went to Jackson, Mississippi, and, in the face of the worst America had to offer, conducted integrated basketball clinics. In his way he helped redeem the distance between this country's promise and this country's reality. Bill Russell's been threatened by experts, boys, and now he's suing you. If I were you, I wouldn't screw with Bill Russell.


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Before I made it: Johnny Oduya

Kevin Kennedy, The Hockey News, 2011-11-05


I was seven years old when I started playing hockey back in Sweden. I remember most of our games were at outdoor rinks. Some of them had a cover on top, but they weren’t fully enclosed. My brother also played hockey so I was always hanging around the rink and I actually don’t remember using any new equipment probably until I made it to junior. My gear was mostly hand-me-downs from my brother for sure. My mother was a single mom and having two boys playing hockey wasn’t the cheapest way to get some exercise. We’d buy some used stuff, I’d use some of my brother’s gear and we’d make it work.

I remember my mom would always stand in the corner of the rink to watch the game, never with the crowd of parents. Like any mom watching her son, she would get stressed out during games, but she never put much pressure on me.

I was never a star player growing up and never played with older guys or was moved up a level. I really took my time. When I was 12 years old, we actually came over to Canada for a tournament in Barrie, Ont., and that was definitely my most memorable moment from playing hockey when I was a kid. It was amazing to come over from Sweden and play against a bunch of Canadian teams.

I didn’t really play any other sports as a kid. Usually kids in Sweden play soccer, but I didn’t do any of that in an organized way. I think everybody I grew up with played soccer, but for me it was only hockey.

When I was going to school I worked in a cemetery during the summers. Not digging graves, but doing some landscaping type of stuff, for about three years. When I was 18, I came over to Canada to play junior and since then it’s only been hockey.

Being a seventh round pick, my path to the NHL was different from a lot of guys. In my draft year, I was playing junior in Quebec and at the end of the season I went back home to Sweden for the summer and got the word there that I had been drafted. At that point I was just happy somebody knew I existed. Unfortunately, it never really never worked out with Washington and it took another five years before I played my first NHL game.

When I got back, I was much more ready to play at the NHL level and I have no regrets. I’m not going to say the younger players get rushed in to the NHL these days, but there’s definitely more pressure to perform at a much younger age and I never really felt that pressure when I was just starting my hockey career. There’s a different path for everybody.

Throughout that time I never thought about a career outside of hockey. I mean, I obviously wanted to make it to the NHL, but there are other places you can make a career playing hockey so I don’t remember ever being really worried about it.

After training camp in 2006, I went down to the minors in Lowell and was there for only one day before getting the call to go back to New Jersey. I remember somebody from the office drove the four hours to get me to the rink and honestly I had no idea whether I was going to play.

When I stepped on the ice I remember thinking I was really doing it. This is real. The first game I remember not playing too much, which was kind of nice to get into it slowly. I remember my first shift I was partnered with Brian Rafalski, but the rest of the game was a blur.


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Getting To Know: Joe Mullen

Mark Malinowski, The Hockey News, 2011-11-06


Status: NHL right winger from 1980-1997 with St. Louis, Calgary, Pittsburgh and Boston. Currently serves as an assistant coach for the Philadelphia Flyers. Joe Mullen scored 502 goals in his NHL career.

Ht: 5-foot-9 Wt: 180 pounds

DOB: Feb. 26, 1957 In: New York

First Hockey Memory: "Roller hockey, playing with my brothers in the schoolyard across the street from where we lived in New York - 49th Street between Ninth and Tenth."

Hockey Inspirations: "Well, New York Rangers. Watching them all those years, living up the street from Madison Square Garden. My dad worked there. My dad and my brothers playing roller hockey were inspirations."

Last Book Read: "I just read one Mr. Snider gave me. About a guy from Hell's Kitchen - a friend of his who started out in the mafia, became a producer and a pilot. Pretty cool book, it was called Mafia Summer.”

Nicknames: "Oh, you don't want to know that (laughs). I don't want to put them out there either."

First Car: "Oldsmobile Omega (blue)."

First Job: "Sweeping the streets in New York City."

Current Car: "I got a Toyota Venza (charcoal)."

Greatest Sports Moment: "Winning the Stanley Cup with Calgary. And two with Pittsburgh."

Most Painful Moment: "Probably the first time I tore up my knee. Not so much it hurt, but I knew I was done for the season. And that was painful to take. (How did it happen?) It was freaky. Just skating on, actually it was Bernie Nicholls, I was backchecking on him and I was going to go rub him out. And I just kind of fell. When I went to get up I could tell the knee was done. (Where?) It was in St. Louis."

Favorite Uniforms: "Probably the Calgary Flames."

Favorite Arena: "Edmonton's ice surface was always my favorite ice surface. Was it my favorite rink, probably not (laughs). But that was the best ice surface. I always enjoyed Minnesota. (Why?) I guess because I did pretty well there."

Closest Hockey Friends: "Probably my brother Brian."

Funniest Players Encountered: "Oh, Marc Bergevin. (A lot of people say him.) Did you catch his act? (No.) OK. Well, he'd bring a bag of props with him. When he got traded, he had two bags - his equipment bag and his bag of props. And just...he had wigs, he had everything. He's a character. And he'd come in and blast the music, he'd dance for the guys when we won. He was just a funny guy. Not because of that, but he's funny all the time. Pulling pranks. We had Krzysztof Oliwa and he pulled pranks on the guy like every 10 minutes. I mean, he was an easy target. Marc just wanted to prank the guy all the time."

Toughest Competitors Encountered: "Messier's gotta be in there for sure. I thought Ray Bourque was a pretty fierce competitor. Those two stick out in my mind."

Most Memorable Goal: "That's probably the first time I got 50 in Calgary against Winnipeg (1989). (Goalie?) I'm not exactly sure."

Strangest Game: "We had a snowstorm in New Jersey one year. Maybe 500 people in the building. And we had to play the game that night. The Devils team was late for the game. Of course, they were driving. And we had the bus and were there early. So we beat it and got there early. They just got stuck. It turned out to be really late. To play with 500 people in the stands is like practice. Plus, our goaltender (Doug Dadswell) - he was a rookie. It was his first game in the National Hockey League. And he had to play that game."

Last Vacation: "We probably went to Disney World. That was a few years back. With the kids."

Favorite Players To Watch: "Well, growing up, guys like Brad Park and Rod Gilbert and Vic Hadfield, that were obviously New York Rangers. Growing up right next to Madison Square Garden, I was definitely a Rangers fan. Then when I was playing, Rick Middleton was always one of my favorites. Mike Bossy. Current guys, right now, Sidney Crosby I really like to watch. Mostly the team I'm coaching. I really enjoy coaching, so, to watch our team every night and seeing improvement and seeing the guys do what you tell them is pretty cool."

Favorite Sport Outside Hockey: "I like playing golf, that's what I do during the summer."

Personality Qualities Most Admired: "Just happy-go-lucky people. Just love life, don't really have a bad thing to say about other people."

Career Accomplishment: Winner of three Stanley Cups, played in three All-Star Games (1989, 1990, 1994); Led NHL in playoff goals in 1986 (12) and 1989 (16); In 1,062 regular season NHL games, scored 502 goals, totaled 561 assists for 1,063 total points; In 143 NHL playoff games, scored 60 goals, 46 assists for 106 points; Signed as a free agent in 1979 by St. Louis out of Boston College.


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What's Carey Price worth to the Montreal Canadiens?

Mike Boone, The Gazette, November 4, 2011


Psst! Wanna buy a top-tier National Hockey League goaltender?

It’s going to cost you. Let’s put on our math hats and figure out how much.

To celebrate his 29th birthday on Thursday, Pekka Rinne signed a seven-year, $49-million contract extension with the Nashville Predators. And with the ink barely dry, Rinne made 35 saves to shut out the Phoenix Coyotes.

That singular performance will have faded from memory when Gerry Johannson sits down with Pierre Gauthier, likely some time in the spring of 2012. But just as sure as there are dobros, pedal steels and pickup trucks in Nashville, the Rinne contract will come up in the course of conversations between Carey Price’s agent and the general manager of the Canadiens.

Whoever coined the expression “comparisons are odious” wasn’t a player agent. Let’s look at some comparables:

Drafted in the eighth round (258th overall) in 2004, Rinne got a late start, breaking into the NHL in 2008 when he was 26. His regular-season record is 101-58-20 with a goals-against average of 2.33 and a save percentage of .921. In playoff action, Rinne is 8-10 with a 2.60 GAA and a .908 save percentage.

Rinne’s salary in his rookie season was $725,000. He then signed a two-year deal worth $6.8 million, of which he’ll be paid $4 million this season.

Price – a/k/a The Franchise, The Franchise Saviour and Jesus Price – was a first-round draft choice (fifth overall) in 2005. Price played 41 games for the Canadiens in the 2007 season when he was 20 years old. Heading into his Friday night start in Ottawa, Price was 102-80-26 in the regular season with a GAA of 2.60 and a .915 save percentage. He is 8-15 in the postseason with a GAA of 2.84 and save percentage of .907.

Price’s entry-level contract included bonuses and paid him $2.2 million a year for three years. His current two-year deal is worth $5.5 million, and Price will be a restricted free agent if the Canadiens don’t re-sign him by July 1.

A few more comparables: Cam Ward’s six-year Carolina contract pays him $6.3 million per through the 2015-16 season. Pittsburgh’s Marc-André Fleury is signed through the 2014-15 season at $5.5 million per, and Jaroslav Halak’s four-year contract in St. Louis averages $3.75 million.

OK, have you entered all those dizzying numbers into your spreadsheet? Let’s play You Be the General Manager.

How much should the Canadiens offer Price? $30 million over five years?

Or perhaps you’d prefer to play You Be the Agent. The pay is probably better, and an agent doesn’t deal with the media. (Neither does Gauthier, but I digress.)

Should Johannson advise his client to go long-term on another contract with the Canadiens? Or should Price sign for two years, which would set him up to make stupendous coin as an unrestricted free agent (at least under the current collective bargaining agreement, which expires after this season)?

Tough decisions, but that’s why GMs and agents get the big bucks – which, unlike player salaries, are not public knowledge.

How did the gargoyles take over the cathedral at Hockey Night in Canada? Within the living memory of many Canadians, HNIC was a great national institution. Along with Radio-Canada’s Soirée du Hockey, the CBC Saturday broadcast was an occasion for fans across the country to gather around the electronic hearth for what we in Quebec call a truc rassembleur, a cultural phenomenon that bind this diverse country together.

Danny Gallivan, Rene Lecavalier, Foster and Bill Hewitt, Bob Cole ... their rich, radio-trained voices still echo down the years. And between periods we had Frank Selke Jr., Brian McFarlane, the brilliant Dave Hodge.

Hockey Night in Canada was square, but it mirrored white-bread blandness in nine of the 10 provinces watching hockey. And the telecast did have Howie Meeker as its in-house eccentric.

If Meeker was the crazy uncle, sprung from the attic on Saturday nights, HNIC’s current star is the frothing grandfather released from the basement, like the Gimp in Pulp Fiction.

What’s left to be said about Don Cherry? Many hockey fans like him, some don’t. At least he’s provocative – and never dull.

What irks me most about HNIC is Cherry’s supporting cast. With the exception of Elliotte Friedman, Canada’s premier sports broadcast features a collection of on-air mediocrities that add nothing to a viewer’s enjoyment of the game.

Contrast Hockey Night in Canada with any National Football League telecast. The studio shows feature witty hosts (Chris Berman is the ne plus ultra), Super Bowl winning coaches (Tony Dungy, Bill Cowher, Mike Ditka, Jimmy Johnson) and former All-Pro players: Terry Bradshaw, Dan Marino, Shannon Sharpe, Tom Jackson, Howie Long, Boomer Esiason, Keyshawn Johnson, Rodney Harrison ... the list goes on and on.

On HNIC we get Cherry, a coach who never won a Cup; Mike Milbury, arguably the most inept general manager in the history of the NHL; journeyman goaltenders Kelly Hrudey and Glen Healy, and the man I fear the diabolical MacLean is grooming to skate into the Corner when the Coach is clinically non compos mentis: P.J. Stock, who was a fourth-line scrapper for four NHL teams, amassing more than 500 minutes in penalties while scoring five goals in 243 games.

How many sleeps till TSN snatches the rights away?


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BLUES RELIEVE PAYNE AS HEAD COACH, HIRE HITCHCOCK

THE CANADIAN PRESS, 11/6/2011


ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis Blues have changed coaches after a disappointing 6-7 start, firing Davis Payne and hiring Ken Hitchcock to a contract through next season.

The 40-year-old Payne was the second-youngest coach in the NHL but got only one full season with St. Louis after being hired in January 2010.

The 59-year-old Hitchcock is 534-350-88-70, winning a Stanley Cup with Dallas in 1999-2000 and also coaching at Philadelphia and Columbus. Hitchcock was also an assistant coach for Canada's men's hockey team when it won gold in the 2002 and 2010 Winter Olympics.

He had been under contract with the Blue Jackets through the end of this season for US$1.3 million

The team called a news conference for Monday with Hitchcock and general manager Doug Armstrong, and said there would be no comment until then. Hitchcock will be on the bench for practice that afternoon.

The Blues begin a five-game homestand Tuesday night against Chicago.

Hitchcock and team president John Davidson didn't return telephone messages from The Associated Press.

The Blues were 67-55-15 under Payne. He was interim coach the remainder of the 2010-11 season after replacing Andy Murray and the interim tag was removed after the Blues finished 23-15-4.

Payne coached two seasons for the Blues' affiliate in the AHL before getting promoted.

The Blues were optimistic about making the playoffs for only the second time in seven seasons after adding veterans Jason Arnott, Jamie Langenbrunner and Scott Nichol to a base of young talent.

Goalie Jaroslav Halak in particular has struggled with a 1-6 record, while backup Brian Elliott is 5-1. Forward Chris Stewart is off to a slow start with three points.

St. Louis lost four of its first six, then seemed to right itself with a three-game winning streak that included victories at Vancouver and Philadelphia but has dropped three of the last four.

Hitchcock's teams have won six division titles and topped 100 points eight times. He inherits a team expected to contend for a playoff spot after missing the post-season five of the previous six seasons.

Since being fired by the Blue Jackets in February 2010, Hitchcock coached Canada at the IIHF World Hockey Championship earlier this year. Hitchcock has worked with seven national teams for Canada, including the 2008 world championship squad that won the silver medal in Quebec City.

Hitchcock and Armstrong also have plenty of history together. Armstrong was GM with Dallas when Hitchcock coached there, was an assistant GM with Canada at the 2010 Olympics and also worked with Hitchcock at the 2008 world championship.


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Hockey: A young man’s game

DAVID SHOALTS, Globe and Mail, Nov. 06 2011


Scoring is down slightly in the NHL – an average of 5.22 goals a game were scored entering the NHL’s schedule Sunday compared to 5.46 for all of last season – but the surprising thing is who is doing the scoring.

The youngsters are taking over the offence this season, as three of the top five and six of the top 15 scorers were 25 or younger. At the top of the list is Toronto Maple Leafs winger Phil Kessel, 24, followed by Claude Giroux, 23, whose rapid development made the Philadelphia Flyers feel comfortable trading star centres Mike Richards and Jeff Carter last summer.

A look at the scoring statistics for individual NHL teams is even more startling. The leading point-producer on 13 of the league’s 30 teams is 25 or younger. Teenagers such as Jeff Skinner (Carolina Hurricanes), Tyler Seguin (Boston Bruins) and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (Edmonton Oilers) dot the lists.

Hockey experts say this is a trend, not one or two bumper crops of great prospects moving through the system. The youngsters at the top of today’s scoring parade are not likely to fade.

“You’re getting 20-, 21-year-olds stepping up now and doing more things,” Winnipeg Jets head coach Claude Noel said. “They are more confident in their abilities.

“When you look at players now, when they’re 21 years old some of them have two, three years of [NHL] experience and they’re good players in the league. Before, the maturity [age] used to be 27. Now it’s 21, 22.”

Both Noel and Tim Bernhardt, whose playing and scouting career in the NHL goes back 30 years, say the improvement of coaching and training techniques in minor and junior hockey is driving the youth movement. So is the dedication of hockey parents and coaches, who send their children to hockey schools, put them in summer leagues and hire nutritionists and personal trainers.

“Before, when you were 20, you had so much to learn about becoming a pro, the training and conditioning it took,” Bernhardt said. “Now, the process has been sped up. Junior hockey is now like a miniature NHL and midget hockey is crazy. These kids have personal trainers and they’re hitting full stride at 21, 22.”

“You go into any minor-league rink, like the American Hockey League, see the facilities and they’re better than any NHL rink was 20 years ago. It’s the same in junior.”

Several of these precocious young men go head-to-head this week and the details are in the Five Games To Watch list.

Despite the payoff for the NHL, Bernhardt is ambivalent about the single-minded preparation for the big leagues among minor hockey players. The vast majority of parents and players spending thousands of dollars in the hope of making the NHL will see their dreams go unfulfilled.

“I was talking about this to someone a while ago and we both said we had a lot more fun when we were younger,” Bernhardt said. “You see these kids now, they’re 18 years old, they can’t eat hamburgers, can’t go have a beer. Most of them aren’t going to make it and they miss out on a lot of stuff.”


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