17 March, 2010


Ice Can Be Nice in June

Last night’s game 5 was easily the best game of these Stanley Cup Finals, and perhaps the best finals game in years. Near the top of NBC’s broadcast, did you catch¬†play-by-play pro Mike Emerick’s referencing the¬†temperature of Joe Louis Arena’s ice sheet?¬†
A frosty eight degrees.
That’s about 12 degrees colder than is standard for an NHL sheet. It was warm outside in Detroit yestersday, and Joe Louis staff knew they’d be working with a full house. So they over-refrigerated the sheet to ensure quality as long as possible.
The play¬†for much of¬†last night’s game was fast and crisp, with passes remaining rather flat on the ice for nearly all of regulation play. In fact, Detroit’s best period was the third, when the puck seemed afixed to red Wing stick blades in the Pittsburgh zone. As the temperature in the rink over the course of the multi-overtime game rose, the ice¬†sheet’s quality deteriorated, as it should have.¬†But Joe Louis staff and the Red Wings organization offered the entire hockey world a powerful¬†exhibition of what can be done with ice hockey in summer and a rink heated high by packed-in bodies.¬†¬†



2 Comments

  1. pepper wrote:

    I was wondering why the puck wasn’t bouncing around after such length of play, after having so much focus on our horrible ice this season.
    Now what, I wonder, is appropriate attire when the weather is within the white segment of the wheel?

    3 June, 2008 at 11:29 pm | Permalink
  2. The Peerless wrote:

    lalalalalalalala..I can’t hear you…Juneishot…juneishot…Juneishot
    Signed,
    Verizon Center

    4 June, 2008 at 12:02 pm | Permalink

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