Parece-me que o caráter verdadeiro de uma equipe do hockey está revelado o mais frequentemente nestas sessões do showdown, e que o mais frequentemente a equipe merecendo prevalece. As the college hockey regular season concluded more and more observers pointed out Minnesota’s seeming lack of cohesion and chemistry — a trait that is becoming a bit of a staple in that superstar-laden program. And sure enough, last night it was North Dakota that carried the play in OT. And whereas the Gophers are perhaps a program increasingly of one- and two-year high profile pitstops en route to the pros, note that Sioux senior Chris Porter won UND’s entry to the Frozen Four last night.

I think if I were building a hockey team designed to prosper in sudden death, I’d seek leadership and experience. Is it any wonder that at the NHL’s trade deadline every year we see GMs across the league pony up high value assets for grizzled greybeards?

Special hockey teams seem to rise to the remarkable challenge of sudden death. The 1998 Capitals went 5-1 in overtime in the East’s playoffs en route to their only appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals. Last season’s Hurricanes went 4-1 in extra time in their postseason run. We may never again see the likes of the 1993 Montreal Canadians, who won ten straight postseason overtime games. Doubtless there are dozens more testionials to champion fortitude forged in this frenzy, and it seems doubtful that a team involved in at least a handful of OT games has won a Cup while amassing a losing record in them.

Let’s invent a word for our yearning for this marvelous mayhem.

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Posted at 10:51 am. Filed under Carolina Hurricanes, College Hockey, Montreal Canadiens, Morning cup-a-joe, National Hockey League, Overtime, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Washington Capitals.
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One Comment

  1. Folks can talk about Cinderella all they want in the hoops tournament, but it seems worth noting that none of the top seeds in any of the regions are in the NCAA Frozen Four.

    “go green! . . . go white!”

    Monday, March 26, 2007 at 10:58 am | Permalink

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