29 Juli, 2008

De Archieven van de categorie: De centrale Liga van het Hockey

De moordenaar komt voor de Hoge Oorzaak van Wilson door

coach-pressconf.jpgVroeger held-GLB Kevin Kaminski, nu de HoofdBus van De Honden van het Staal van Youngstown van Centraal Hockey is de Liga, uit op de weg deze week met zijn team. Zij zullen in Colorado Vrijdag nacht dan slingeren door Texas voor twee data alvorens aan Ohio in middenofà ‚  volgende week terug te keren spelen. à ‚  zullen zij sommige huisdata het volgende weekend, met inbegrip van de Nacht van $1 Bier op Vrijdag, 29 hebben Februari - wanneer ik bij geheel in beslag word genomen Clyde met mijn bloggermates, collegabloggers, à ‚  en sommige grootmoedige bloglezers; anders, ik beà ‚  nippend waardezeepsop uit in Heartland met wat oud tijdhockey.

Ik ben niet zeker waar in Americaà ‚ de Moordenaar  doorboorde upà ‚  Woensdag nacht was, maar via e-mail peppering hij me voor updates op het kap-Eilanden spel. Ik verplichtte gelukkig. Hij was opgewekt, ook, om van zijn oude teammates Peter Bondra, Joe Reekie, en Chris Simonà ‚  te leren die in de persdoos van het Centrum Verizon wordt verzameld. Hij had me zelfs tot Bonzai overgaan hello in de vorm van „vertelt hem ik nog zal beschermen van hem [achterste].“

De Honden van Kaminski zijn 28-17-4 dit seizoen, goed voor tweede plaats in de Noordoostelijke van CHL afdeling. à ‚  Vorig seizoen, Moordenaar leidde Youngstown aan een verslag 36-24-10 en een postseason ligplaats. à ‚  

Zoals met veel andere professionele hockeyteams op dit ogenblik van jaar, zijn à ‚  Youngstown en zijn bus geconcentreerde onà ‚  een lei ofà ‚   toughà spelen ‚  met de postseason tekening dichtbij. Maar de Moordenaar wordt niet zo geconcentreerd en uit Washington verwijderd om aan een pleidooi voor één of andere hulp voor een terrific oorzaak terug niet te antwoorden in de stad waar hij zodat vele vrienden en verdiende zo wijdverspreid en het verdragen van het volgende maakte. à ‚  A week of zo geleden liet vallen ik hem een lijn verklaren wat de helft dozijnen hockey blogsà ‚  hier probeerde om te doen outà ‚  helpen het Hoge het hockeyteam van Wilson. Laat vroeg hij me vorge nacht of het' D te laat is voor hem om ons sommige punten voor onze veiling in Clyde aanstaande woensdag te verschepen, de eerste dag de Honden terug van de weg zijn.

Wij kunnen niet zijn schenking op tijd voor die Vrijdag nacht, butà ‚  ontvangen ik vrij zeker ben die niet veel kwestie. Ben pret die ik heb gedacht om een weinig een auctionà ‚  te houden online, voor onze vrienden die uit stad andà ‚  kunnen niet in D.C. zijn zijn. op 29thà ‚  maar wie, in geen klein volume, ons gecontacteerd en van hun belangstelling voor het helpen blijk gegeven. à ‚  à ‚  à ‚  

Hockey Rinks from South Dakota to South Africa

Ever wonder what professional ice hockey teams play in New Zealand? How about Dubai? Where can you catch a pro game next time you’re in Bahrain, or Spain, or mainly on the plain?

Well a dedicated French hockey fan named Sam has completed quite a project: a Google map of every professional hockey team’s ice rink in the worldâ€â€over a thousand of themâ€â€including each team’s logo and a link to its home page.

From the SIJHL to the OHA; from the Mini-Big-Egg in Taiwan (home of the Sharks) to Boondall Iceworld (where the Brisbane Blue Tongues play); every arena that hosts a professional team is shown on this wonderful map.

Click here to see for yourself; it takes a couple minutes to load, but once it’s done you can zoom in and see just where the Heerenveen Flyers or the Neumarkt-Egna Wild Goose call home.

[Tap of the stick to Odessa Steps and the New York Times.]

Blaming the Messenger

cupajoe.jpegLikely we agree that the NHL has a pretty compelling product to pitch . . . particularly when relative to say, celebrity poker or the Professional Bowler’s Association or Pro Bass Fishing. It boasts world-class athletes who virtually to a man are an unrivaled blend of brawn, bravado, and sublime skill. Additionally, they commonly comport themselves as upstanding members of their communities; which is to say, their All Star Games, for instance, are seldom associated with spawning terrorism in large cities. In action, NHLers are showcased in perhaps sports’ most novel setting, walled and glassed in with no out of bounds escape. To quote the illustrious Ron Weber, “Welcome to the world’s fastest team sport!”

And yet, with so much greatness indigenous to its game, the NHL can be counted upon to come up Marty Turco short when it comes to Madison Avenue marketing.

It could fairly be said that the NHL does a terrible job of illustrating and mainstreaming its core product to the American public, if such a charge weren’t so serious a slander to “terrible.”

But why is the league so amateur and so ham-fisted in its marketing endeavors across the board? The answer may be in analogy: in the quest for a healthy share of the mighty purse offered by the American sports revenue landscape, the NHL ever steps into the ring with a twentysomething Mike Tyson physique and his stonebreaking fists and proceeds to try and sway the judges with intermittent scoring jabs. Season to season, it never seems to know if it’s a puncher or a jabber. And decades of split decisions ultimately land you on Versus.

My favorite bumper stickers are irreverent and clever, such as “My kid can beat up your honor roll student.” The NHL needs to be the revving Mustang with the non-working muffler grinding its gears down quiet Main Street bearing that bumper sticker. Not because it’s cool or hip or trendy to do so but because that’s its authentic ride. Once upon an Original Six time, the league was like this. Sadly, today, chauffeur Bettman and seemingly all his colleagues in the New York and Toronto offices prefer a Taurus.

To be fair, the NHL is confronted by a cultural quandary in North America that no other professional sport  including even NASCAR now  does: Canadians get it while 80-percent-plus of Americans do not. And yet, ironically enough, some of the most durable relationships between hockey and the American community occur south of the Mason Dixon, at the minor pro level. Texas, for instance, once had a minor pro league all of its own and today fields seven of the CHL’s 17 teams.

Understand, too, that the aim here isn’t to dislodge the NCAA hoops tournament from its Swiss Bank account perch; rather, contemporary professional hockey that features the young virtuosos that it does ought to be able to better the cooking channel numbers on Monday and Tuesday evenings. Even if the chefs are playing poker while the lasagna bakes.

[Timing in life is everything, and this morning The Onion has a riotously humorous mockery of the NHL's television plight up on its site, featuring the Commissioner announcing a new broadcast agreement with the Food Network.]

Last year Reebok promoted its new wonderkid, Sidney Crosby, with a 30-second television advertisement striking in its sparse production values but so compelling in its cumulative subtleties that it fairly ran on a loop on Versus and regional networks the entire season. I saw the spot perhaps 425 times last season, enjoying it as much in April as I did in October. It’s worth, I think, a reminding look:

Maybe the spot moves you like it did me, maybe it doesn’t. But is there any denying that Reebok unearthed an ageless essence of our grand game in a way the NHL seldom ever has? A few years ago, Mastercard gave us a similar “reverence of spirit” treatment in an ad that featured a boy and his father stomping through prairie snow toward a frozen playground, their sticks and skates hauled over their shoulders. These “postcard” impressions of hockey’s roots, searing in their splendor, have few rivals in sports; they ought to be fixtures in marketing campaigns.

Why is it that corporate America can at times magnificently honor hockey while the NHL most often profanes it? Remember the NHL ’s multi-million “Re-launch” ads of last season, proudly debuted by the Commissioner at some swanky New York restaurant for the press last autumn? Bare-chested, scar-free, shiny-and-authentic-toothed actors (as opposed to authentic hockey players), introduced by indecipherable Asian poetry and billed as warriors of some sort, were pre-game massaged to loud music by pinup tramps in unintentionally satirical excess. Good breeding and taste prevent me from YouTubing a sample for you here, but Bettman should have been impeached for authorizing those.

Shakespeare told us “To Thine Own Self Be True.” Hockey’s return to the sporting mainstream has its own salvation within, if only its leaders would recognize it.

10 Questions for “Killer!”  Kevin Kaminski

Kevin Kaminski - currentIf you’re attempting to identify Capitals’ players, past and present, who rank as all-time fan favorites, you have to include Churchbridge, Saskatchewan’s, Kevin Kaminski, a.k.a. Killer! A Cap from 1993 to 1997, his Wikipedia biography includes this career summary:

During his four seasons with the Capitals, his hard-nosed, gritty style of play would make him a fan favorite, as he would not hesitate fighting players who were much bigger than him… on January 26, 1997, Kaminski, then playing for Washington, goaded Edmonton Oiler enforcer Louis Debrusk into taking 27 penalty minutes just three minutes into the game, and goaded another Edmonton player into taking a roughing penalty before leaving the game with about 5 minutes to go in the first period with a concussion.”

Be still my Old Time Hockey heart.

Between 1993 and 1998 Kaminski played in 113 games with the Portland Pirates, then the Caps’ American Hockey League affiliate, and played a key role in their 1994 Calder Cup title, amassing 9 points and a league-high 91 penalty minutes in 16 playoff games. In 2000 he was inducted into the Portland Pirates Hall of Fame. Kaminski retired from pro hockey in 1999 and began his transition to coaching in 2000, when he served as an assistant coach for the AHL’s Cincinnati Mighty Ducks under then Head Coach Mike Babcock.

Today Killer is in his first season as Head Coach and Director of Hockey Operations for the Youngstown Steelhounds of the Central Hockey League. OFB caught up with him under some remarkable circumstances: in the middle of a 21-day roadtrip across virtually the entirety of the American Southwest, the Steelhounds raced home for 48 hours to reconnect with family before embarking on yet another 20-hour bus ride to a faraway rink. It was a road-weary respite with which the coach was home trimming the Kaminski Christmas tree, a helping daughter in his arms. But far from feeling imposed upon by the interview request, the Coach was eager to talk hockey and especially hear about his hockey friends in D.C.

There are those forging lifetime careers in hockey as players, coaches, and perhaps one day executives predicated on an inexhaustible passion for the game, guys who wake up every day and can’t wait to get to the rink. Kevin Kaminski is one of these puck-breathers. He remembers “the honor of playing in Washington,” and I assured him that he was very well remembered by Washington’s hockey community nearly 10 years since he last played here.

I conducted this interview from my office in Northwest Washington, and as I listened to Killer relate his expectations of his Steelhounds  “When things get rough out there, I tell my guys, ‘We gotta win, but we gotta take a number . . . we gotta pay that guy a visit‘; or, when discussing what life for him would be like were he playing in today’s NHL: “I have visions of crushing guys”  I swear he had me so fired up I wanted to race outside onto K Street in my navy blue blazer and khakis and lay a savage and unsuspecting shoulder blow on the first person I laid eyes on.

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