10 October, 2008

Category Archives: Stanley Cup

The Cup Cake

Earlier today, Gustafsson wrote about Michelle (CapsCrazy) and Dave (Flipper) and their epic wedding cake. CapsCrazy was kind enough to share some of the reception photos with me. It looked like quite a party- Goat, the Horn Guy (complete with horn), and frequent commenter Grooven were in attendance, among others. Even Wes Johnson, the voice of the Capitals, was there.

Guests wore their hockey sweaters to the reception, so there was a colorful display of jerseys from all over. The Caps were well-represented, of course, but there were also Boston and Florida jerseys in the crowd. There was even a wee Leafs fan.

The Capitals’ film crew interviewed the happy couple during the reception, so don’t be surprised to see some of the footage at a game this season.

Congrats, CapsCrazy and Flipper!

Looks almost like the real thing

Looks almost like the real thing


The aftermath

The aftermath


Flipper and CapsCrazy with Wes Johnson

Flipper and CapsCrazy with Wes Johnson

On the Stanley Cup Road, It’s No HoJo Lodging for the Wings

One reason the Red Wings may not be terribly disappointed to play Game 6: a potential return to the Nemacolin Woodlands Resort, “one of only 21 hotels and resorts in the world to host AAA Five-Diamond lodging and dining.” The team took up residence there last week, for Games 3 and 4 in Pittsburgh. And thanks in part to Gary Bettman’s postseason scheduling, the Wings enjoyed an unhurried stay.

If it was the Wings’ mission to get away from the distractions of downtown Pittsburgh (such as they exist), they’d have a tough time bettering themselves than in Nemacolin’s isolated pampering. The resort, located about 45 minutes from Pittsburgh, is situated on 3,000 acres, features its own private airfield, a Pete Dye-designed golf course, and black bear and buffalo roaming about the property. Rooms at Nemacolin can fetch $700 a night. At that rate, Mike Babcock’s crew, you’d think, was highly unlikely to encounter the typical Penguins ruffian-fan, and in point of fact the resort enforces a strict prohibition against extreme mullets.  

In an interesting irony, Nemacolin is the official resort of the Pittsburgh Penguins. Be fun to know if the Wings selected the site as a thumb in the nose of their Finals foes or if the Pens actually had a recommending hand in selecting it for the visitors.

Among the guests late last week at the resort was a contingent of Washington lobbyists, a few of whom read OFB.

“I was checking in and all of a sudden I see a stream of hockey players line up behind me,” one told me. “I knew it was Detroit because each player had ‘Red Wings’ on his bag.”

“What was so funny was for the rest of the time we were there when we’d ask about the Red Wings everyone on staff would reply ‘What hockey players?’ They were in button-lipped mode alright.”

Missing a Mismatch in May

  • Bettman made us wait a week for this mismatch? How is it that so broad a spectrum of press had so difficult a time recognizing the glaring discrepancies between these two teams? “Fooled by youth” is one explanation. In the pressure cooker of a Cup Finals, the Penguins look their age. Meaning, it’s one thing to take down the Rags and Flyers in high-stakes series, but quite another when the brightest lights are shining on the biggest stage.
  • Too little press attention was directed at the benches. Mike Babcock has the look of becoming a great coach, if he already isn’t one. And how astoundingly fortunate is it for the Wings to have a great coach follow fast on the heels of a departed legend? Meanwhile, Michel Terrien has the look of a decent coach managing young world-class talent. He has no answers for what Babcock has concocted.
  • Meet Mr. Invisible, Evgeni Malkin. Zero shots on goal in game 2. Zero.
  • How does that Marian Hossa deal look now in Pittsburgh? Gone is Eric Christensen, Colby Armstrong, and no. 1 pick Angelo Esposito. Hossa almost certainly isn’t returning to the Pens — and neither are some other free agents, including, perhaps, Ryan Malone. Pens’ beat reporter Dave Molinari was a guest of Mike Vogel’s on last week’s CapsReport, and when he was asked how difficult it would be for Pens’ management to keep this current roster of high achievers together, he replied, “It won’t be difficult at all. It will be impossible.”
  • The Penguins have 13 unrestricted free agents for next season. Among them Gary Roberts, Malone, Hossa, Georges Laraque, Jarkko Ruutu, Pascal Dupuis, and Ty Conklin. It’s obvious they have a contending core in Crosby, Malkin, Fleury, Staal, Gonchar, and Orpik — they’re virtual playoff fixtures for the next half decade. But for Shero there may well be a significant rebuild required of a surrounding, supporting cast. Landing and signing stars for the long haul isn’t easy, but neither is assembling a cohesive cast without which no team can win a Cup.
  • How often do really big-name, big-salaried hockey stars in their expensive prime get dealt at the dealine and go on to lead their new teams to Lord Stanley’s glory? Far more often, isn’t it the case that contenders address vulnerable voids with battle-tested grit guys, have them join an already strong room, and then remake already strong clubs into something special?
  • It is staggering to consider how perennially strong the Wings are given where they’ve drafted in each round for the better part of the past two decades. Their scouts just get it done.
  • Another mismatch missed by the press, again related more to experience than talent: Chris Osgood vs. Marc-Andre Fleury.
  • The Wings are a great transition team, but not by luck or whim. Notice the prevalence of short passes they use in breakouts. Shorter passes, rather obviously, carry a higher rate of accuracy. In Babcock’s system players are consistently placed in positions to execute them. They reduce the incidence of turnovers, and they perpetuate poise, possession, and flow. What a great system most especially in high-pressure hockey situations. No team in the league makes anywhere near as widespread and effective a use of the short breakout pass.
  • The NHL could have ended its season — to considerable admiration — in May. (It still might, Saturday night). It chose not to. There’s virtue in scheduling integrity. Winning hockey teams don’t benefit from sitting around idle, and neither do their fans. I loved the reporter’s rejoinder to the commish last week: “You need a hobby.”

44 Reasons to Watch the Stanley Cup Finals

ESPN’s Page 2 presents 44 reasons to watch the Cup finals, including the funny-because-it’s-true (”Not one word about Roger Clemens or Spygate”), the snarky (”Brian Engblom’s hair”), and the dead-on correct (”Unlike in the NBA Finals, the last minute of a Stanley Cup finals game doesn’t take 45 minutes.” and “HD technology has improved the viewing experience of hockey more than in any other sport except perhaps women’s beach volleyball.”).

Check out the list here for a Friday chuckle and a few terrific YouTube links to hockey vids.

Cup Raise

I first saw this video on Puck Daddy. It is too good not to share. Enjoy.

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I’d like to know how long it took to put that 30 second spot took together.

A VO Gig as an Omen?

Those of you who have been curious enough to follow the many links on the sidebar and footer of the blog may know of another venture of mine. In addition to this blog, a mortgage-paying day job, and a family (with two children under 5), I also have a side business as a voiceover talent to fill those remaining few minutes of my life.

Your New Voice from The Old Dominion!One of the talent agencies with which I am affiliated is in Canada, Vox Talent. Through Vox I receive audition notices when a potential client has selected me for an audition that is to be recorded from my home studio. The audition email has the project name in the subject line. I received two such emails yesterday. One of them immediately caught my eye — subject: Fw: MP3 Audition “NHL”.

The details for this audition were to sound 28-45 with high energy but not to cheesy, authentic, exciting, call to action, mature. If you are selected this will be for 2 spots — 2 NHL teams. Then comes the audition script to be recorded. My stomach turned at the first sentence . . . here is the script:

PITTSBURGH FANS, THE PENGUINS ARE THE 2008 STANLEY CUP CHAMPIONS!

CALL NOW OR LOGON TO SHOP.NHL.COM AND GET THE OFFICIAL LOCKER ROOM HAT AND TEE WORN DURING THEIR POST GAME CELEBRATION!…

THESE COLLECTORS ITEMS ARE AVAILABLE TO FIT EVERY SIZE, AND THE DVD CELEBRATES THEIR INCREDIBLE RUN TO THE STANLEY CUP!

TO ORDER THIS CHAMPIONSHIP PACKAGE, CALL 1-800-555-1234 NOW!

AND FOR THE LARGEST COLLECTION OF CHAMPIONSHIP MERCHANDISE EVER OFFERED, LOG ONTO SHOP.NHL.COM

THE PENGUINS ARE CHAMPIONS!
SUPPLIES ARE LIMITED SO ORDER TODAY!

Why couldn’t the audition script have 2 different words — Detroit and “Red Wings” instead of Pittsburgh and Penguins? This spot will obviously run every 10 minutes on the NHL Network; as a hockey fan and blogger who is also a voiceover talent, it would be quite cool.

Here now is my Stanley Cup prediction: If I am selected to record these two spots, the flightless fowl will win the cup — fate tends to have a sick sense of humour in these matters. At least my Capitals’ season ticket renewal will be paid.

I wonder, though . . . will they send the recording of the losing team to needy countries, too?

The Love Guru

 There’s good news for Leafs fans. The Maple Leafs will be playing in June … in a new Mike Myers movie called The Love Guru.

From a National Hockey League press release:

In the comedy “The Love Guru,” Pitka (Mike Myers in his first original character since Austin Powers) is an American who was left at the gates of an ashram in India as a child and raised by gurus. He moves back to the U.S. to seek fame and fortune in the world of self-help and spirituality. His unorthodox methods are put to the test when he must settle a rift between Toronto Maple Leafs star hockey player Darren Roanoke (Romany Malco) and his estranged wife. After the split, Roanoke’s wife starts dating L.A. Kings star Jacques Grande (Justin Timberlake) out of revenge, sending her husband into a major professional skid — to the horror of the teams’ owner Jane Bullard (Jessica Alba) and Coach Cherkov (Verne Troyer). Pitka must return the couple to marital nirvana and get Roanoke back on his game so the team can break the 40-year-old “Bullard Curse” and win the Stanley Cup.

Myers co-wrote the script featuring his beloved hometown Maple Leafs and shot the film in that city. For the production, the NHL provided Myers and Paramount Pictures unprecedented access and rights, including the use of NHL marks and NHL game action footage, permission and facilitation to film inside NHL arenas, and guest appearances by NHL players and the Stanley Cup, the most revered trophy in all professional sports, marking its first starring turn in a feature film.

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For more exclusive video, visit The Love Guru on YouTube.

Cup in Afghanistan as a Hero Comes Home

The Stanley Cup made its second trip to Afghanistan today, escorted by hockey players including former Washington Capital Mike Gartner and bruiser Bob Probert. The soldiers in Kandahar played ball-hockey against the former NHLers, got some autographs, and of course has spirited debates about which team would have its name etched on the Cup in 2008. Defence Minister Peter MacKay said, “To have a nice little repose, a little opportunity to engage in some friendly competition, to play with these NHL stars . . . It’s a piece of home in Kandahar.” Read more about the visit here.

At almost the same time that the Cup made its way east, Sgt. Jason Boyes–the 81st Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan–made the trip the other way. His casket came off a plane at Canadian Forces Base Trenton, about 100 miles east of Toronto, late this afternoon. Our condolences to his family, and to all those who’ve lost loved ones these nearly seven years in Afghanistan and five years in Iraq.

Just Hand Us the Cup

Cup'pa JoeHockey luminaries Gary Bettman and 2007-08 Jack Adams Award winner Glen Hanlon loom large these days. Knowing the commissioner as I do, it’s virtually certain he’ll insist on senseless redundancy, and not cancel the remainder of the NHL season and instead mandate that the Caps complete the remaining 79 games on their schedule. Insanity is famously defined as the repetition of the same act while expecting a different outcome. At least in the absence of competitive drama this hockey season the Caps can showcase their impressive new threads in arenas across the continent.

How am I supposed to work up any hatred of the Caps’ opposition when they can’t even score?

Here’s one directive I do expect out of the league office, perhaps as early as today: the Caps will be required to wear thermal versions of Reebok’s uniform systems, ones made of Northern Ireland sheep wool, for they are unable to work up a sweat in their current garb. Especially the goalies. I am an admirer of the team’s first television ad of the new season, one featuring a sultry brunette being tattooed with the new logo. But I’d modify the ad’s slogan to: “Perimeter kicksaves by yawning netminders, in True Colors.”

Hanlon, few would have guessed a month ago, is today on the short list for Sports Illustrated’s Sportsman of the Year Award — at least if it’s bestowed for exemplary acts of good sportsmanship. Knowing he had all the weakspots from recent years filled on his roster coming into this season, he’s chosen to sit Alexander Semin in two of the season’s opening three games, affording the appearance of competitiveness in the games. I know Semin’s ankle is sore, but I also know that he’d be playing were we in April instead of October. Or if there was any doubt as to the outcomes.

Approximately two-thirds of the Caps’ top line is in synch, the power play isn’t, and a stud is missing from the lineup, and so far no one in the East can compete. Speaking of tattoos, long ago I made a promise to my hockey chums that when Lord Stanley is hoisted here by my guys I’d permanently etch the occasion on my hind quarters. Herewith, I’m accepting estimates from the region’s parlors, with quivering buttocks.

Imagine the disquiet that must be settling in on the team’s general manager and scouts, knowing that soon, by virtue of a hostile NHL Board of Governors decree, they will be restricted to drafting hockey players only from Maryland and Virginia. You don’t really think the league is going to give Ross Mahoney et al a crack at another Mathieu Perreault — (he’s not allowed to play as many games as other forwards in the QMJHL, to keep the scoring race competitive) — do you?

Lindsay Czarniak sure didn’t pick the right hockey season to go to the dark (Burgundy) side, did she?

We have a Roll Call of the Rocks-in-Their-Heads to conduct. First up, ESPN’s John Buccigross, who pegged the Caps for 14th in the Eastern Conference this season. That was with Alexander Semin in the lineup he prognosticated so. Another last-place-in-the-Southeast forecast came from Sports Illustrated’s Sarah Kwak. “Their offseason moves failed to address the defensive shortcomings that led to their surrendering 3.35 goals a game,” she opined. The Caps have defensive “shortcomings” only if the barometer was holding all 82 opponents scoreless for the entire season. Let’s see if we can get Eric Staal and Erik Cole and Ryan Whitney to get the shot counter above 5 midway through a game against the Caps before we wring our hands over “defensive shortcomings.”

Here’s what Kwak should have written: “Ditched in D.C. this summer: Kris Beech. Standings value? Five slots, minimum.”

This dynasty-audition by the Caps is breeding in me rational but nonetheless exuberant sentiments. Check out the exchange I had tonight with the shepherd of both lonely and swelling hearts on radio each evening, Delilah, on FM WASH:

Delilah: “On the love line, pucksandbooks . . . that’s a distinctive name. So you want to dedicate Paul McCartney’s ‘Silly Love Songs.’ Tell me Pucks, who’s stolen your heart this Monday night?”

Me: “Don Koharski.”

Lord Stanley in a Combat Zone

The Stanley Cup in Afghanistan - photo from the CBCFor better or for worse, there are, commonly, comparisons between sports and war. The players “going to battle.” The game was “a war.”

But in a far more positive development, for what is believed the first time in its 115 year history, Lord Stanley’s Cup traveled to the combat zone of Kandahar, Afghanistan, this week. Along with the ever present Hockey Hall of Fame personnel, chaperoning the Cup is Canada’s Chief of Defense General Rick Hiller and 19 former NHL players, including Bob Probert, Tiger Williams, and Ron Tugnutt.

The group will also tour the region and play a couple of ball hockey games with some of the Canadian soldiers stationed at the military base, which number more than 2,000.

“We’re here to meet the troops and hopefully boost some morale up here,” said Probert.

Vegas Odds

Mrs. Gustafsson just returned from Las Vegas and brought me the Bellagio’s Odds to Win the 2007 Stanley Cup. I’ve combined that sheet with the one I picked up in November.

Odds to Win the 2007 Stanley Cup
Team Line as of
27 Feb 07
Line on
7 Nov 07
Opening Line
19 Jun 06
Anaheim Ducks 4/1 7/1 15/1
Buffalo Sabres 4/1 7/1 12/1
Nashville Predators 5/1 18/1 18/1
Ottawa Senators 7/1 8/1 5/1
Detroit Red Wings 8/1 8/1 6/1
San Jose Sharks 8/1 4/1 10/1
New Jersey Devils 9/1 10/1 8/1
Calgary Flames 10/1 18/1 12/1
Pittsburgh Penguins 10/1 12/1 75/1
Dallas Stars 12/1 6/1 10/1
Tampa Bay Lightning 15/1 30/1 20/1
Vancouver Canucks 15/1 20/1 20/1
Carolina Hurricanes 18/1 10/1 8/1
Atlanta Thrashers 20/1 18/1 30/1
New York Rangers 22/1 20/1 15/1
Toronto Maple Leafs 22/1 22/1 25/1
Minnesota Wild 25/1 8/1 50/1
Montreal Canadiens 28/1 15/1 20/1
Colorado Avalanche 35/1 22/1 18/1
Edmonton Oilers 40/1 18/1 15/1
New York Islanders 50/1 50/1 50/1
Boston Bruins 100/1 50/1 50/1
Phoenix Coyotes 100/1 80/1 40/1
Florida Panthers 125/1 50/1 40/1
St. Louis Blues 125/1 75/1 100/1
Chicago Blackhawks 150/1 75/1 75/1
Washington Capitals 150/1 75/1 75/1
Columbus Blue Jackets 200/1 75/1 50/1
Los Angeles Kings 500/1 50/1 25/1
Philadelphia Flyers 500/1 50/1 12/1

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One Small Step Toward Reforming Political Stupidity

bush1.jpgSomewhere on the path to the Rose Garden perhaps 10 or 15 years ago the unending parade of championship-winning sports teams visiting the White House became rote and cliched. The visits have lost all of their novelty and pizzaz — they’re as inevitable as the setting sun and recorded greetings at federal agency phone numbers. The athletes themselves, I’m sure, still get a kick out of the gig, but for the rest of us, they’ve become the twelfth season of ‘Cheers’ or ‘Friends’ . . . and worse, yet another government entitlement. It’s time to mercy kill them out of existence.

The World Champion Miami Heat were in town this week to White House glad-hand with the Prez. Inexplicably, Washington Post reporters covered it. Maybe I’m irritated over this because as we’re a nation at war I feel strongly that a President — any President — has better things to do than pretend he gives a rodent’s rear end about Shaquille O’Neal’s prowess in the low post. And make no mistake: the Heat will be just one of at least 3,000 victorious sports teams to visit 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue this year.

This silly style over substance plot started out as a homage to professional sports champions almost three decades ago, but it’s evolved to include, these days, even the field hockey legends from Prairie View. The Little League World Series victors? No f’in doubt. Thus far, we’ve avoided including only regional church bingo champions on the conveyor belt congrats from the leader of the free world.

I may also be irritable in this matter because the phoniness of this event is underscored most dramatically when Stanley Cup champions visit the President hailing from Texas . . . or Arkansas . . . or wherever. Let’s say, hypothetically, that the Buffalo Sabres win Lord Stanley in three months’ time. Lasting Middle East peace would be achieved before this or any non-Minnesotan President could tell his domestic advisor “Let’s keep this visit brief . . . Briere speared our guy in the balls.”

Ronald Reagan started this scheme, but back in 1981 or ‘82, I’d argue that it was defensible, and actually, a clever bit of political psychology. Reagan inherited a nation battered by gas lines, high interest rates, the Iranian hostage crisis . . . but also the Miracle on Ice. You’d have an easier time dislodging Dustin Penner from in front of the crease than convincing me that Herbie’s Heroes didn’t instill in Ronnie a sense that welcoming the nation’s sporting heroes to the people’s house was a wise bit of spirits boosting for a beleaguered nation. This was the dawn, too, of the Magic-Bird era on the hardwood, so more fantastic feats could be chronicled by White House photographers.

But times have changed — the Department of Homeland Security likely has 40 percent of today’s pro athletes on a watch list — and so should outdated, ridiculously scripted, and altogether phony rituals.

Instead, I’d advocate the adoption of a rigid criteria for athletes’ earning a White House visit. Here’s my five-point plan for reform: Continue reading ›

The OFB All-Time Five: Final Tally

Bobby Hull
Bobby Hull
Wayne Gretzky
Wayne Gretzky
Gordie Howe
Gordie Howe
Bobby Orr
Bobby Orr
Ray Bourque
Ray Bourque
Patrick Roy
Patrick Roy

What are the odds?

I recently returned from business travel to Las Vegas. While exploring the MGM Grand, I picked up a sheet titled Odds to Win the 2007 Stanley Cup. I’m not sure how frequently they update the odds, but this sheet from last week has the current line dated 7 November 2006.

Odds to Win the 2007 Stanley Cup
Team Current Line
7 Nov 06
Opening Line
19 Jun 06
San Jose Sharks 4/1 10/1
Dallas Stars 6/1 10/1
Anaheim Mighty Ducks 7/1 15/1
Buffalo Sabres 7/1 12/1
Detroit Red Wings 8/1 6/1
Minnesota Wild 8/1 50/1
Ottawa Senators 8/1 5/1
Carolina Hurricanes 10/1 8/1
New Jersey Devils 10/1 8/1
Pittsburgh Penguins 12/1 75/1
Montreal Canadiens 15/1 20/1
Atlanta Thrashers 18/1 30/1
Calgary Flames 18/1 12/1
Edmonton Oilers 18/1 15/1
Nashville Predators 18/1 18/1
New York Rangers 20/1 15/1
Vancouver Canucks 20/1 20/1
Colorado Avalanche 22/1 18/1
Toronto Maple Leafs 22/1 25/1
Tampa Bay Lightning 30/1 20/1
Boston Bruins 50/1 50/1
Florida Panthers 50/1 40/1
Los Angeles Kings 50/1 25/1
New York Islanders 50/1 50/1
Philadelphia Flyers 50/1 12/1
Chicago Blackhawks 75/1 75/1
Columbus Blue Jackets 75/1 50/1
St. Louis Blues 75/1 100/1
Washington Capitals 75/1 75/1
Phoenix Coyotes 80/1 40/1

Oh… and doubling down on 11 doesn’t always work.