10 October, 2008

Category Archives: Shinny

In the State of Hockey, There Is No Offseason

I had objectives to meet on business in Minneapolis-St. Paul this week, but the one I coveted most was meeting a local who could happy hour chat me through a bit of the State of Hockey’s passion for puck. I’d read a lot about it over the years, but I wanted a real live, first-hand testimonial of it, unhurried, over a couple of beers. Minneapolis native Paul Wallerius, in his youth an accomplished local scholastic hockey player, and today a successful businessman and the youth hockey coach to a team that includes his 10-year-old son (”been in skates for seven of his ten years,” he told me), gave me just that this week.

The first important Minnesota hockey history lesson Wallerius imparted to me was an appreciation for the rivalry that Minneapolis has with twin town St. Paul. St. Paul, he told me, has purposely and strategically used hockey to better its prestige in the rivalry. Minneapolis is home to the Twins, Vikings, and Timberwolves. It’s fairly horded the pro sports teams over the years. But the North Stars, Wallerius pointed out, left the Minneapolis suburb of Bloomington, and since 2000, St. Paul has been home to the Wild, where every game they’ve ever played has been sold out at the Xcel Energy Center. St. Paul and Xcel are also home to the state’s famous high school hockey tournament. St. Paul made an aggressive attempt to lure the Twins out of Minneapolis and into a new outdoor baseball stadium slated to open in 2010, but ultimately Minneapolis won the siting.

Minnesota I learned is home to some fifteen thousand lakes. Glaciers which visited the upper Midwest region tens of thousand of years ago are responsible for many of them. It seems fitting that an Ice Age would prove to be the wellspring of the terrain for the State of Hockey.

Wallerius wanted me to make a stop at Tom Reid’s Hockey City Pub, also in St. Paul. Just two blocks from the Xcel Center, it’s a modest museum for Minnesota hockey. On the day I walked over to it from the arena the high temperature in the two cities was 67 degrees, under an indigo blue sky. Very hockey weather for early September. Tom Reid was a defenseman for the North Stars back in the day. He also works radio broadcasts for Wild games. His hockey pub is home to fairly forgettable pub food but worth the visit just to admire the breadth of memorabilia smartly scattered over the pub’s brick walls.

About Xcel Center: it’s a world-class hockey venue, but it’s also home to its own museum celebrating Minnesota hockey. Its most distinctive feature for me was the Jersey Wall: the sweaters of nearly 200 Minnesota high school teams showcased on a club level. They are like individual flags forming a very United Hockey Nation. They are beautiful to behold — the moreso as no Reebok uniform systems are found among them. The arena also showcases exhibits from the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame, and high-profile hockey headlines published decades ago in the St. Paul Pioneer Press are plastered on arena pillars.

A fairly significant moment occurred late last year when Sports Illustrated conferred the title of ‘Hockeytown’ on St. Paul, in response to Detroit’s tepid attendance at games for a great Wings’ team. The Minneapolis Star Tribune, in covering the development, noted that while St. Paul’s claims to the title are impressive, it may only be the second-best Minnesota community for the designation. Warroad, Minnesota, 400 miles to the north, is another well-credentialed claimant. Still, the major magazine’s designation of St. Paul is no trivial matter in the State of Hockey. Hockeytown, State of Hockey, would be a very cool postal address to have. I could retire there.

I pointed out to my new hockey friend that I was greatly anticipating the screening of ‘Pond Hockey,’ the new documentary crafted by Minnesotans Tommy Haines and Andrew Sherbrune. He hadn’t seen it, but he wasn’t surprised by its production by two Hockey Staters.

‘Pond Hockey’ chronicles the formation of the first annual U.S. Pond Hockey Championships, and while set in Minneapolis, it has fast become a state-wide source of enormous pride, Wallerius told me. “It’s only a couple of years old,” he noted, “but it draws teams literally from around the world.”

My new hockey friend asked me what likelihood there was that I could make a return visit to his city for the big party on the big frozen lake.

“Strong,” I replied.

He smiled. He wants to host me for it. I can’t wait for the season’s ice age to return.

The Potential for Reformed Government: Hockey for Everyone

I don’t know about you, but I’m both startled and delighted at the frequency with which we’re seeing hockey included in American’s contemporary political dialogue. Up until the very end of the veep selection process, there was a widespread belief that Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty could get the nod from nominee McCain. Ultimately, he chose a governor from another hockey-mad state, Sarah Palin of Alaska.

Back in 2004, presidential candidate John Kerry carried off a photo-op at a rink, but it didn’t carry the impact that hockey has in this election year. Kerry’s embrace of hockey then, much like that of his wind surfing voyage that campaign season, I think struck voters as something half-hearted and politically opportunistic.

But in 2008, we’ve seen political candidates in full-on and long-standing embraces of Bauers. What if during the vice presidential debates this autumn, when national political newcomer Palin is asked to relate some biography to American television viewers, she identifies ‘Mystery, Alaska’ as her favorite movie?

It’s a shame that Vice Presidents can’t issue Executive Orders, because  Governor Palin might, like Pawlenty, be inclined in office to proclaim some hockey-related initiatives human rights and high priorities in her first 100 days as veep! The right to bear Bauers . . . floor hockey in all public school phys-ed programs . . . cabinet meetings conducted within shinny skated on the Reflecting Pool (with under-performing department heads placed in goal) (Accountability in government!).

Notice the subtitle of her biography: How a Hockey Mom Turned Alaska’s Political Establishment Upside Down.

Pawlenty of course could still serve in a McCain administration (Secretary of the Frozen Interior). According to the New Republic, Pawlenty “plays lots of hockey.” According to Newsweek, the Minnesota governor “has been known to use his reception-room fireplace as a hockey goal.” (Can you see yet why we love him?) On the Minnesota governor’s own web site, visitors are informed that he still finds time to play the occasional game of pickup hockey.

Were it constitutionally permissible, Pawlenty-Gretzky would be the hockey fan’s dream ticket. Or perhaps in 2012, or 2016, we’ll see the first-ever All-Shinny ticket: Palin and Pawlenty.

Who Needs National Security Creds When You’ve Got a Terrific Backhand?

We don’t delve into politics in this forum, but should John McCain select Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty — widely believed to be on the nominee’s “short list” of VP candidates — as his running mate, and should the ticket prevail in November, it’s necessarily the case that the U.S. government would have its highest ranking advocate of pond hockey . . .  perhaps ever. Pawlenty shares his reflections on our great outdoor game in the highly anticipated documentary ‘Pond Hockey,’ to be screened around the country and released on DVD this autumn.

It would also appear that the new Vice President would have difficulty meeting some government appointments in the dead of winter.

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We could use more such governance, no?

I’m no single-issue voter, but the pick of Pawlenty could make me one.

“Outdoor Hockey Is Beautiful”

That’s the sentiment of a couple of Minnesotans behind the making of the documentary ‘Pond Hockey’, now in final editing and awaiting a distributor. The filmmakers believe it’s mere weeks from showing at a theater near you. Eighty minutes of cinema we can’t wait for; sure looks like we have another OFB night at the movies looming. The trailer suggests that the filmmakers have honed in on the heart of the matter:

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As you might expect, Minnesota television stations are on this story like black on fresh lake ice. One treatment can be found here. Still another can be found here.   

But it isn’t just in Minnesota where outdoor puck is being pursued these days. Jeff Jackson’s Notre Dame Fighting Irish got swept by no. 1 Michigan last weekend, so on Monday of last week, with his charges’ spirits slumped, he took them outside for practice, where it was a not so balmy 12 degrees. That story is chronicled here. The Irish, incidentally, rebounded and swept Bowling Green this past weekend.    

Update: We heard this afternoon from Andrew Sherburne, ‘Pond Hockey’s’ Producer. The first closed screening for cast and crew will take place in a matter of weeks, while the actual release isn’t quite that close. We’ll keep you informed.

Let There Be Shinny

It was at precisely this time a year ago that a very helpful reader in Frederick, Md., alerted us to the availability of a fantastic shinny scene tucked away in Frederick’s Pinecliff Park. As luck would have it, we’ve another cold snap forging rinks each night this week in the region’s northern suburbs. Highs in Frederick Thursday and Friday aren’t expect to top freezing, and plummet well below it at night.

The park is less than an hour’s ride north and west of the District. We could have kept this our little skating secret, but we’re thinking that come Saturday morning it’d be more fun to issue a shinny challenge and take on any comers.

May we ask our readers in Frederick for a conditions update come Friday?

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‘Tis the Season for Unsanctioned Skating

Rink ice is rarely rented during the holiday week. The principal payoff for a year’s worth of surrendered Sundays making ice there is this week: the evening sheets are mine for endless recreating. If Christmas makes children of us all, Christmas week makes me l’enfant de shinny.

My beer league teammates always answer the call. Richard and Andrew, hideously youthful, supremely skilled, and great friends, I ring first. Brian from Buffalo — a slick stickhandler — I dial next. Ted and Tree I sound out, too — even a small game of shinny needs muckers! Our beer league team, with conspicuously little roster upheaval, has been together more than 15 years.

Together we six form a hardcore set of shinny skaters: willing to pack the gear bags and leave behind out-of-town family and friends, on multiple nights, for rink  travel near and not so near, to skate in age- and rules-ignoring splendor. To sweat, smile, and rib one another for hours. To be together playing the game we love. To be boys again.   

Necessarily, we have no goalie; for impromptu games of mere recreation they are harder to come by than shopping mall parking spaces this week. We’ll play for pipes.

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Our dressing room is half its normal game volume of bodies, but it feels full because of the sacrifices made to be here and the spirit of our endeavor: we few, we happy few, we band of unsanctioned shinny brothers.

I am middle-aged, and while keeping up with the room’s rancor I dress with the apprehension of an out-of-shape, quasi retired, let’s-see-if-can-trick-my-body-into-one-more-night-of-magic wish-maker. The odds, I know, are long. The desire, however, during this week, never wavers.  

Near 8:00 and otherwise armored, I announce myself ice-bound, helmetless, “in honor of Rocket.” I never play shinny in a helmet, especially in small games among friends. It’s my individual act of civil disobediance, and I don’t give a damn what anybody thinks of it. Sometimes, after shinny, I’ll ride home late in my Jeep sans seatbelt, blaring loud rock music, too. Somehow I seem to survive this razor’s edge of living.

We position the two cages perpendicular to their normal perches in the creases, and skate across the Olympic-sized sheet’s offensive zones. That’s space enough, and after we chew it up a bit we’ll move down to the pristine end and chew that up too.

We skate furiously for ninety seconds or so, then settle in to more upright, carefully timed bursts of forechecking and attack. The beer-leaguer’s aerobics. Often, puck carriers are afforded conspicuously easy entrace to the scoring zones. But then they confront a minefield of cage-defending checkers. The pace deadens at times, but we fail to break for water and breath for fully twenty-plus minutes. That’s something.

It’s a small game, the scoreboard is dark, the stands are entirely empty, but the competition among us is as fierce as if we were contesting the finals for our league’s Stanley Bucket. When a player alleges a tally from the feintest of nicked posts or crossbar, he’s instantly shouted down, sometimes even by his teammates. Goals in our games are awarded only to the irrefutable cracks and clanks of heavy, well-targeted wristers. 

When we do break I collapse in a corner, crumpled to the ice, my chest pounding, exertion vapor forming a halo about my head. For a few seconds I am melancholy from middle age mediocrity, reflecting on AWOL speed and reaction time, on newly arrived joint stiffness I knew about previously only from my father’s post-skating complaints. But I am in my gear, soaked with sweat, skating (at times hard) with my ‘mates deep into an evening before holiday mornings without an office to report to. This form of fatigue will ensure a motionless sleep under blankets tonight, and in the morning I’ll happily shuffle in ache through the well-earned stiffness to the kitchen coffee maker.    

We made a rule: no goal counts unless it was assisted — at least one pass from a teammate. Once I made a fancy rush up through all three foes, dangling and pivoting, elliciting cries of praise from my linemates, and thundered a rocket smack in the middle of the crossbar. As the puck angle-launched high up over the netting behind the cage I hot-dogged swawn-dived onto my belly and skidded out to center ice, to exclamation point my feat.

“No pass!” the three defenders gaveled in unison.

“But I own your jocks and socks,” I protested.

“No pass,” my linemates, a bit quieter, confirmed.   

Here is how I know I am an old hockey player: when caromed pucks elude and race down the Olympic-sized sheet I look for others to retrieve. Once, not all that long ago, I did the retrieving, and took pride in it. Retrieving that small black disc down at the other end now seems an Olympian task, as if I’m skating on a Great Lake. Now I watch Richard and Andrew make like jack rabbits and galloping stallions after the puck.

Bastards.  

Here is how I know I am a lucky hockey player: our next skate is Thursday.

At Frozen Country Club, for Outdoor Fun

Want ideal weather for an outdoor skate conceived to thrill hundreds of young hockey fans in lower Montgomery County, Maryland? Try Tuesday night’s 32 degrees at 6:00 p.m. in Chevy Chase, Md., where the Caps — many outfitted in ski caps under their helmets — skated for 45 minutes under the lights at the gorgeous Chevy Chase Country Club’s outdoor ice rink.

This was the second straight year that the Caps traveled to Chevy Chase for such a skate, and being there among the club’s spectators, we left it hoping that it becomes an annual tradition. Coach Boudreau told us afterward, “Every [NHL] team should do something like this . . . [the fans] see the human element of guys laughing and having fun.” He’s right. The practice itself was as easy-going as the holiday mood surrounding it (complete with strings of seasonal lights hung about the plexiglass): basic passing drills, some two-on-ones against goalies at boths ends, and finally a bit of non-checking three-on-three shinny. This was an event mostly about the team connecting with its community, in a novel setting, in perfect conditions.

Initially, fans — especially the younger ones — wondered at Alexander Ovechkin’s absence from the practice. He was at the Club all right — but inside, warm, signing who knows how many autographs. Outside, perhaps two hundred spectators followed the Caps’ light workout, the overwhelming majority of them bantam-aged or younger. Chevy Chase’s west side of the rink affords spectators a slightly elevated view of the ice sheet, and from north goal line to far blue line the plexiglass was hard-pressed with wide-eyed kids.

We noticed a couple of things about this outdoor ice sheet Tuesday night. One, the puck traveled fast and firm and flat throughout; also, light snow built up on it quickly. Atmospheric conditions were perfect for the Caps, but so too was Chevy Chase’s surface. We asked Coach Boudreau and Mike Green to compare it to Verizon’s sheet and received some candid responses. Enjoy.
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Sunday a Day of (Kettler) Unrest

Cup'pa JoeWith five days off before Friday’s game with New Jersey, an observer of Sunday morning’s practice at Kettler Capitals might think the Caps were immersed in a mid-season training camp. Chris Clark, Viktor Kozlov, and Alexander Ovechkin were excused from the skate. Boudreau skated the rest of a weary hockey team a little more than an hour, and often hard. A lot of the drills in the session’s opening opening half had the look of fall camp’s.

“What we’ve done the last 10 days has all been verbal and visual rather than actually doing it, because we haven’t had the time on the ice,” Coach Boudreau said afterward. This block of off days, he added, “is a great teaching tool, and that’s why we want to use it to our advantage.”

During Saturday night’s Comcast telecast JoeB and Craig alluded to Alexander Semin not yet being in “game shape.” In drills Sunday morning Semin looked mobile, but his timing with some of his elite moves appeared to be just off. His razzle-dazzle has some rust on it. And how couldn’t it? He’s missed not just a large number of the team’s games this season but scores of practices as well.

Chris Clark, Boudreau said, is “day to day.”

From a Caps’ official: “Pittsburgh only has 24 points . . . that’s a bigger story than our having 20.”

Agreed.

And what has happened to Ottawa?

On Kettler’s second sheet of ice early Sunday the Washington Junior Nationals, coached by ex-Cap Mark Tinordi, were facing the Portland Junior Pirates in an Atlantic Metropolitan Hockey League game. The rink was crammed with spectators, the rock music during play stoppages was loud, and the hockey was superb. I really didn’t know a thing about this league and its level of play, so I did a bit of research on the ‘Net late yesterday. The Jr. Nats are affliated with the Junior Capitals and the Washington Little Caps (Tier I). They play their games at Kettler and at the Gardens Ice House in Laurel, Md.

The Junior Nats and the Junior Caps form the Washington Junior Nationals College Development Program (WJNCDP). From the team’s web site: “It is the mission of the WJNCDP to help players develop as young men and as hockey players, but also to help guide these young men toward some form of college hockey.” Coach Tinordi has two sons skating for him — Jarred and Matt. The Nats are 14-11-0-2 and will travel to Hudson, New Hampshire this weekend  for a two-game series against the Northern Cyclones. This is good hockey to watch — you now have two good reasons to make winter visits to Kettler Capitals.

The Caps are off Monday and then travel to Chevy Chase Country Club Tuesday evening at 6:00 p.m. for a return engagement of last season’s highly appealing outdoor practice there, weather permitting. The forecast for Tuesday evening looks pretty good. I’m particularly interested to see what someone like Nicklas Backstrom thinks of this noval and perhaps annual outing.     

The Hockey Rink of Madison County (Va.)

It’s exciting for us to receive messages of hockey appreciation from readership up in Hockey’s Home, in Canada, but perhaps more so when we receive it from an unlikely outpost of puck passion. Yesterday we received this outreach from reader Robert in Etlan, Va., a relatively small community in the Shenandoah Valley:

“We live in Madison County which is about 1.5 hrs. SW of the Beltway. We have a population of only about 14k. About 12 years ago a couple of brothers who grew up playing ice hockey in Canada decided to turn an unused public tennis court into a roller hockey rink. They and others built the sideboards from plywood and 2×4’s. It started small but now we have 3 divisions with almost 100 players.I was never a hockey fan, let alone a player; after all it was too warm here and roller blades hadn’t been invented yet. But now my kids are big fans and are counting the days until the season opens although my daughter’s broken arm (from soccer) may prevent her from being goalie until January.The operation is now being partially supported by the Parks and Rec Dept., and while our surface is in pretty rough shape, I think we can get by. Maybe next year, we can raise enough funds to get a really good resurfacing job.As far as I know, we are the only street hockey league in our area. And I think people who participate in such leagues either playing or watching are far more likely to want to become Caps fans and go to the games, buy paraphernalia, listen to the games or order NHL Center Ice from the satellite company, as we did last week. By the way, my 11-year old son has memorized the spelling of all the Russian players in the NHL.

Anyway, I called the Caps the other day and asked a Caps rep if there was anything the Caps could do to develop some sort of relationship between the team and our league. He did say they offered to sell tickets for the mezzanine area for $19 if we could get 50 people who wanted to pay that. That’s nice but I’m not sure we could get 50 people. In previous years a large group of us has attended a Richmond hockey game which costs about half as much. We don’t have Fairfax-type incomes here. (Our web site, incidentally, is http://www.madisonhockey.com/)

In sum, I’m not real sure what I’d like the Caps to do, but I think they have a vested interest in seeing leagues such as ours that have developed such enthusiastic supporters of hockey out of thin air, do well and prosper. I’d also like to see our parents and players develop an identity with the team.

Any ideas?”

Robert:

Firstly, thank you for sharing with us your community’s new-found love affair with hockey. We never tire of hearing such tales. One of the beauties of hockey is that it has many enticing off-ice iterations: floor hockey, commonly played in school gymnasiums across the country; roller; and one of the most underrated of all recreational pastimes, street hockey.

Up north, in the States and Canada, fenced-in tennis courts are commonly flooded in winter and skated upon. This winter, the four of us are gonna keep our fingers crossed for a cold stretch of weather to settle in on Etlan one weekend so that perhaps some of its 100 hockey players can lace up some skates — that rink of yours should be used all year ’round! We also think it’s fantastic that Etlan’s Parks and Recreation Dept. is actively maintaining it in support of hockey.

The Caps are heavily involved in growing hockey in the surrounding community — we receive word of each and every one of their visits to schools and hospitals and civic gatherings, and hardly a week passes without such a visit. We’re not sure if they’ve undertaken a trip out west in your neck of the woods, but based on your description of the game there and the people supporting it, they should.

Obviously, it’d be a big investment in time and resources to get a segment of your community to Washington for a Caps’ game. Still, we hope one weekend it happens. Remember, too, that there’s a terrific experience in taking in say a Saturday morning skate by the team at Kettler Capitals, which is free and open to the public all season long. A bit further up the road, in Hershey, Pa., the pro hockey experience is family budget friendly and among the best in all of hockey. Lastly, the Caps at the end of each season hold a sale of their equipment, and that allows recreational hockey players (and souvenir collectors) access to great gear often at great prices.

We’d like to hear how the season progresses in Etlan, so please stay in touch. And if you do flood that outdoor rink, we know of at least one OFBer who’ll point his Jeep west toward the Shenandoah Valley on a Saturday morning and join in the fun.

Seeking a Frozen Fountain of Youth

Icy HotLight a candle tonight for the welfare and recovery of an aged hockey player. I’ve had five days to prepare for my arrival on summer ice among and against a band of contemporary collegiate hockey players, as a beer leaguer who’s literally double their ages. The goal is simple: survive.

There is quality professional summer hockey taking place at Kettler Capitals this week, and across the Potomac, at the Cabin John Ice Rink in Montgomery County, there is quality amateur hockey also taking place, sullied a bit by my presence (a blogger double the age of the collegians). This misadventure is one part morbid curiosity (can I hang at all?) and one part fleeting vanity (do I possess still any moves that might elicit from my youthful ice mates age-dismissing praise?). I also thought it might be fun to chronicle.

Every summer at virtually every rink there are summer camps for hockey youths. This week at Cabin John, the Sport International Hockey Academy is guiding Montgomery youths through their puck paces. “40 hours of non-stop hockey” for ages 6-17 is how the camp advertises its week. The camp’s counselors are comprised of D-II and D-III flatbellies from Northeast colleges; I’ll be attempting to last a mere two hours in their company tonight.

Spending their mornings and afternoons with ankle-biters and many skating novices, the counselors are understandably starved for some serious ice time come evening. They also want to stay in shape. That’s where I come in. I take a Sunday shift at CJ on the Zamboni, and I am empowered with keys to the facility. Weekday evenings there in the summer are pretty much dead by 8:00. See where this is going?

Have I mentioned the advantage of youth these collegians will have on me?

Until this week I hadn’t been on the ice all summer. Worse, my off-ice summer training regimen has consisted largely of lifting draft Vogels. I’ve gone Tkachuk. Last weekend I made two trips to the gym to jumpstart my aerobic qualifications for tonight. But that’s like changing the oil on a ‘78 Chrysler Town&Country for a cross-country cruise to Cali.

Cup'pa Joe

On Monday night, I shared Cabin John’s minature studio rink with a beer league teammate, where we tossed the biscuit around a bit and got our feet used to being in skates again. A bit “winded” we were, early on, on that small surface.

Hit the gym again last night. There’s no small victory in these bursts of renewed fitness activity that haven’t already produced injury. I’ve also thrown down a bit of a nutritional gauntlet this week: no Dairy Queen, and wheat tortillas with my burritos. Last Friday night I tried Rolling Rock Light with my home movie viewing. The horror in the bottle was more terrifying than ShowtimeBeyond. (Under the category perhaps of wedding re-gifting, I still have five bottles to donate to any OFB reader.)

The odds are overwhelming, I think, that about 20 minutes into tonight’s skate I’ll be UpTkachuking.

But there’s no turning back. I’m treating tonight as a seminal moment in my hockey career. This autumn delivers one of those calamitous, ending-in-zero birthdays for me, a widely acknowledged crossroads between sun-setting athletic viability and out-to-pasture, well-past-prime leisure pursuits that quietly are lamented by the young in rinks. Tonight I will learn where Coach Life is slotting me on my shifts in 2007-’08: grinding on the fourth line with other grey-hair-eds or still hopping the boards for second power play unit potency.

Cooling Thoughts Amid Mercury Madness: The Heritage Classic, a Reminiscence

Heritage Classic - Jose Theodore - photo by Getty ImagesOFB reader Chris Meza helpfully reminded me this morning of cooler times, and specifically of November 22, 2003 — date of the Heritage Classic outdoor hockey game between Montreal and Edmonton. Chris is a good person to talk to about that event, seeing as he traveled from Washington all the way to Alberta that weekend to take in the game in the upper deck of Edmonton’s Commonwealth Stadium. I vividly remember him ringing me on his cell phone from those frozen environs. I asked Chris to share with me his recollections of that remarkable Saturday night.

The league of course selected the late November date seeking optimally chilly and dry conditions for the game. It got chilly all right. That Saturday afternoon, temps were in the single digits. Before the evening was done, the Habs and Oilers were skating in air that reached -28 Fahrenheit.

“The night before, it snowed in Edmonton,” Chris recalled. “It snowed enough and it was cold enough that one of the Zambonis needed for the game froze up.”

There were two games for the early winter hearty to take in that day, an Old Timers one featuring ’70s and ’80s Oilers and Canadians greats and then a standing’s counting one between the contemporary teams afterward. Players for both games were able to skate out onto the makeshift ice surface from their locker rooms.

I asked Chris how he outfitted himself for his perch a hundred feet high in the frosty Alberta night. “I was in winter socks, longjohns, Levis, two shirts, a heavy duty ski coat, gloves, a scarf, and a wool cap,” he said. “The thing I remember most about the fashion that night were the locals, men and women, and even their children, armored in winter coveralls that you commonly see construction workers in when they’re working outdoors in extreme winter.”

He had another vivid recollection from his frozen stadium experience. “I didn’t purchase refreshments from the concessions, because trips to restrooms required . . . well, in all those layers all of us were in, it just took too long,” he laughed.

Heritage Classic - Edmonton, Alberta

It wasn’t just spectators lavishly layered — Montreal netminder Jose Theodore famously added a touque to the top of his goalie mask to try and ward off the tundra chill, and many of the skaters appeared to pull turtlenecks up to their ears.

The league set up two large viewing screens at both ends of Commonwealth for spectators. Chris said that the screens were important for those like him seated up high to follow the play. “So much of the stadium seemed to follow the play on those screens,” Chris said. “Their enthusiasm, with every rush, seemed identical to the passion you associate with a Canadian crowd in a typical arena.”

I asked Chris to identify a lasting image of that November’s frozen feast. “Even in the upper deck where I was, you could see the joy on the faces of the Old-Timer All Stars, their delight in taking shovels and pushing snow off of the playing surface. It just reminded you of hockey’s roots and that the game’s biggest names seemed to relish a return to them.”

Dispatch from the American Hockey League Road

Spring is encroaching on Washington, but not New England. Not yet. Friday afternoon I passed an ice fisherman in southern Massachusetts and a lone pond hockey player in Nashua, New Hampshire. Knowing such conditions were likely, I packed an Easton hockey stick and my gloves and skates. It was torture passing the snow-crusted banks of the Nashua pond without Winter Roadpulling over — that lone skater needed a passing buddy — but it was already 5:15 Friday evening and I’d driven straight from Maryland without a meal, stopping only for fuel. Faceoff at the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester was at 7:30, and I needed a hot meal and a few early Friday evening beers after more than eight hours in the Jeep. I resolved to scout out a skating pond in Maine Saturday afternoon.

Three puckhead chums journeyed up to New England to join me this weekend, but they beat me here by a full day. Marleen rang my cell Friday while I was on the New Jersey Turnpike to alert me to some shinny she thought she observed while driving through Massachusetts. Turned out to be a guy ice fishing. “If you’re mistaking an ice fisherman for a pond hockey player,” I told her, “must have been Joe Reekie out there.” Hah.

Major League Baseball is already in its second week of exhibition games, but I’m hardly ready for spring, and so this long weekend journey north is spa-therapeutic for my hockey soul. One can almost chart winter’s staying power and depth with each 100 miles migrated north. In New York state, I regularly see massive crests of ice that have bled through rugged rockwall framing the highway.

This is my fifth or sixth weekend tour of the American Hockey League, and this one will include a Sunday Q’ League matinée in Lewiston, Maine. Fifteen minutes into my visit to Manchester, New Hampshire’s, Verizon Wireless Arena Friday night, I’m overcome by a conviction that this league has just about everything right while its big, far more expensive brother would do well to emulate approximately 75 of the A League’s features.

The most obvious: one can plop down $20 at the box office and two minutes later press one’s face against the glass. We can quibble about what are admission rates that are good for both owners and hockey families in the NHL, but 20 bucks sure seems right for a prime perch for minor pro hockey. And make no mistake — the ‘A’ is damn good pro hockey. Continue reading ›

Good Fences (and Rinks?) Make Good Neighbors

There is an old adage that says “Good fences make good neighbors.” Does this also apply to backyard ice rinks?

Backyard Ice Rink

Be sure to visit James Mirtle’s blog for the rest of the pictures, including the “John Deere Ice Resurfacing Machine.”

Sunday Skate in Pinecliff Park, Frederick, Maryland

pond2.jpegI was in the misery portion of Saturday night’s game with the Rags on my television when I logged on for diversion and found a fortuitous comment to my “Freezing February, My Friend” file of earlier in the week. It informed me of a skating pond in Frederick, Maryland, frozen solid, altogether welcoming of shinny skaters. Imagine that! There were hockey players young and more experienced gathering there Sunday afternoon, the email informed me. In an instant, sad Saturday became Let’s -Get-to-Bed-Early-for-Skating-Sunday.

To OFB reader and Frederick resident Mike, I am puck soda indebted to you.

My beer league buddy Richard and I Jeeped up to the pond this afternoon and captured these images. Enjoy.

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Morning Cup-a-Joe (2/6/07)

cupajoe.jpegInland water seeking its ocean, rivers, streams, and occasionally even troughs are in constant motion, and so when in our region nature, with a hard freeze, halts their movements, I’ve ever regarded it as a call to halt life’s regular motion — of work, chores, and regular leisure — and replace it with life’s greatest: legs churning, bladed bursts and glidings, arms rising in salute of shinny scores. Our present blessed freeze is in its infancy, but its vista transforming effects are already postcard-worthy. On Monday I halted my routine to share an extended weekend with my father, whose post-retirement home rests on a gentle slope overlooking a tributary of the Miles River on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Yesterday morning we sipped coffee together while perusing newspapers, regularly distracted by the novel beauty outside his patio windows of a perfectly formed frozen waterway meandering for miles down by the dock.

I cannot tell you where or when he first took me pond skating as a youth — my memories of our hockey-related journeys are too cluttered in their volume — but as father and son in 1970s and ’80s Washington we were among the first to the freshly frozen Canal, Reflecting Pool, or Blue Ridge Mountain pond on frosty winter weekends.

After coffee yesterday we ran errands made marvelous on a Monday morning by the slow routine of shore life, and whether chatting or riding silently along commuter-free roads our heads would turn, instinctively, to inventory the progress of the freeze on all manner of moderate-sized water. My father, his body war- and hockey battered, needs knee replacement surgery, which necessarily will end his playing days with the GerriHatTricks. (He’s therefore resisted it.) He hasn’t played, actually, in a couple of years, and instead volunteers to run the time clock at seniors tournaments his teammates enter. This allows him to be in the room “with the boys.”

A relatively new resident “over the Bridge,” Dad hasn’t known this sort of wintery weather there, which made this visit so special. We stopped at Blockbuster early last evening and briefly considered renting ‘Mystery, Alaska,’ but we’d seen it already upwards of a hundred times between us. We took the chocolate lab with us on all of our errands, and included in my Jeep unloading to accommodate her was my Easton street hockey stick. I ride around town with a street hockey stick, it would seem, because you just never know when you’ll spot a game and need to pull over and join. I took the Easton aluminum with its plastic blade out of my Jeep and leaned it against Dad’s garage yesterday. Riding home across the Bridge this morning I realized that I’d left it behind, then immediately smiled realizing that this was that rarest of Washington winter weeks, when street hockey sticks won’t be needed by the weekend.

I want from life this week not four or six standings points for my team but one more walk alongside my father toward our favorite form of recreation, this time a walk we’ve never made: down his property’s slope, skates slung over our shoulders, layered in turtlenecks and bulky sweaters and bluejeans, with a one-year-old lab hell-bent on completing our line. With his arthritic hands and aching back it’s literally the case we’d spend more time gearing Dad up than we would out on the ice tossing passes to one another. Neither of us, I don’t imagine, would complain much about that.