Nous sommes endettés à Kukla pour cette friandise : Les chapeaux' autocar principal Bruce Boudreau `d'invité-centre serveur l'exposition de matin' de 6:00 - 9 : 00 demain matin sur le Fan590.
Et oui, il y a couler de phase au emplacement 590.

Nous sommes endettés à Kukla pour cette friandise : Les chapeaux' autocar principal Bruce Boudreau `d'invité-centre serveur l'exposition de matin' de 6:00 - 9 : 00 demain matin sur le Fan590.
Et oui, il y a couler de phase au emplacement 590.
Nous récemment rappelé au sujet de l'anniversaire de dix ans d'un moment d'or : quand le but de Joe Juneau a propulsé les capitaux de Washington à leur premier aspect de finales de tasse de Stanley.
Aujourd'hui, Steinz regarde en arrière sur le C.C Marais de sports au jour où la course a fini avec des extraits de Poteau' assurance de s il y a 10 ans. C'est un bon Kornheiser lu et, de peur que vous que pensiez c'est une matière baissante, élégant (l'halètement !) mis lui dans la perspective :
Le fait est que les capitaux ont fait la matière d'hockey dans cette ville pour la première fois. Les centaines de projectiles Kolzig ont tourné loin, les buts de finale qui beuglent, Sergei Gonchar, Adam Oates, Todd Krygier, Joe Juneau et Peter Bondra marqué - même le projectile que Tikkanen a manqué - elles tout seront rappelées tendrement, long après que la douleur de perdre quatre directement à Detroit soit oubliée.
Tandis que je me tapis toujours à l'image de dessécher-sur-mon-cervelet du manque du baîller-filet de Tik, je dois être d'accord avec le sentiment global de Kornheiser. 10 ans après de ââ de ‚ de ¬â de de € quand un aspect de finales pour les chapeaux avec des résultats très différents semble non seulement probable, mais imminent de € de ¬â de ‚ de ââ que je pense que nous pouvons sans risque regarder en arrière tendrement sur les chapeaux' loin-loin-encore-ainsi-fermons la brosse avec la tasse, avec la croyance forte de meilleures choses pour venir.
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.
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?
By now, you’ve probably read accounts of hockey enjoying a significant spike in the sport’s television ratings recently. No doubt you also know of (and admire) hockey’s embrace of alternative media. That union has been a fusion of opportunism, technology, and desperation. Generally, it seems to be working.
Still, we’re three years into the Crosby-Ovechkin Era, and even with the promise of hockey benefitting dramatically — perhaps moreso than any other sport — from high definition television, there are durable limitations posing a serious ceiling on Television America’s embrace of our frozen game.
One is geography. Climate, while not metaphysically determinative in the matter, nonetheless plays a lead role in forging many puckheads’ attachments to the game. The other is the physical parameters and pacing at play. Football with its rectangular field, allowing many varying camera angles, and regular stops in the action, doesn’t merely allow television a foothold in its event but actually, in its modern incarnation, is determined by it. Or perhaps you’ve missed the past twenty Super Bowls.
But think about the hockey rink, which necessarily with its dasher boards shields three-and-a-half feet of action from the camera eye and many spectators seated low-in-the-bowl. Its oval, walled- and netted-in configuration just isn’t super fan friendly, relative to the playing fields and surfaces of other sports. It ever has to be so.
This week, freshly considering this reality, aware of a new and fabulous North American fascination with the untelevised World Championships, and aware of film increasingly relying on viral marketing, I wondered: just how much does hockey really need TV?
Can hockey go Cloverfield?
Something fantastically viral transpired with these Worlds. True, North American hockey hearts could welcome them into their lives as not before because of their arrival in Canada, and their being contested in North American time zones. But in Washington at least, it seemed to me that many, many more followed this tournament than in recent years past.
They were able to because of the arrival of the World Championship Sports Network. You plunked down $5 and you got about 50 world-class hockey games broadcast on your computer. On demand, too. Folks like me on regular business travel could carry our laptops along on trips and catch the Worlds in our world of airport terminals, bars Wi-Fi, or hotel rooms.
We in D.C. didn’t want to surrender high-level hockey when we were forced to last month, and when in prelude exhibition play for the Worlds word filtered out (virally) that Russia’s top line was comprised entirely of Washington Capitals, a fair number of folks in this region found a storyline they wanted to follow a bit.
In years past, I don’t recall hockey fans clogging my in-box with reactions to the Worlds they were unable to view. They couldn’t. Also in years past, if I wanted some reaction forum on the tournament I was pretty much confined to the tournament message board at hockeysfuture. This spring there was vibrant commentary on the Worlds on the Caps’ official message boards; in comments left here and on other Washington hockey blogs; and perhaps most tellingly, on the media blogs of the Caps’ beat reporters in town.
Now consider, too, the behemoth ESPN’s role in hockey’s rather robust return from its labor stoppage of a few years back. Which is: nothing. People still snicker at the agreement the NHL has with Versus, but the league’s revenues keep on growing. Somehow word is getting out about great hockey being played these days.
Moreover, hockey’s roots in the broadcast medium are with iconic, culture-defining radio personalities (Foster Hewitt) as opposed to John Madden- or Howard Cosell-type mega personalities on TV. I find that charming. And telling.
I’m still fascinated by the X-Files-like thought of Comcast one day rising up and challenging ESPN’s dominance. But if that never happens, if hockey is never accorded a seat at the broadcast dining room table by the usual suspects, is that so bad? It will always have regionalized television coverage. The league’s dedicated channel is a hit with its fans. Its universe of supporters on line grows by the week — and it appears to be broadening internationally, too — and they’re distinctly engaged. And I’m sure the league and its visionary, new media marketers like Leonsis are by no means exhausted of their ideas for broadening further sports’ fans interest in hockey.
Still, what a lovely virus we have at the moment.
It’s a sunny Wednesday indeed. As heard on 3WT and reported by Dan Steinberg, Tony Kornheiser has accepted an early retirement/cost-cutting buyout from the Washington Post.
Kornheiser, a gifted writer when he wanted to be, more or less (more, actually) abandoned his duties as a sports columnist at the Post nearly a decade ago, to pursue an enlarged if superficial media presence with ESPN and Monday Night Football. He nominally remained a WaPost sports columnist. Certainly he succeeded in broadening his name recognition and well providing for his family. But it’s also fair to question how well served Washington’s sports fans were with the move. Certainly the Post’s editors recognized no conflict.
In the hours and days ahead no doubt we’ll be inundated with bloated bandwidth and belabored broadcast reminiscence related to this media personality’s perceived impact on his community. But he abandoned his community; he was as much a Washington writer this decade as a Washington bureau reporter for the Kansas City Star.
At OFB, we won’t be joining in the lovefest for TK the remainder of this week. Kornheiser didn’t merely consistently give hockey the back of his hand while working here, he actively undermined its presence with his sneering disregard for the game, the local team, and its supporters. For him, there was only one storyline on hockey, one now outdated by decades: the ’80s playoff failures by Bryan Murray’s Caps.
For the past three years, while Washington became home to the planet’s greatest hockey talent — and one of the world’s genuinely most gifted athletes — Tony Kornheiser couldn’t have cared less.
Today, we care a great deal about this buyout news. It necessarily means improved hockey coverage here. Addition by subtraction indeed.
The magnanimous Ted Leonsis never gave up trying to persuade Kornheiser about hockey’s merits and virtues. The owner had him in his box for a playoff game just last month. Details as to how that turned out can be found here.
We ridded our region, mercifully, of another oversalaried, underproducing media personality in George Michael last year. This is a healthy trend we’re seeing by local media: unlarding. Here’s hoping the Post next approaches Michael Wilbon about a buyout.
We’ll chip in.
I made a grievous mistake in judgment this week, and it adversely impacted OFB on perhaps this site’s most important day of existence. We worked closely and well with the Capitals’ media staff to try and position ourselves to continue to bring you the feeling of hockey as we feel it from within Verizon Center, but you may have heard: the Capitals this week fielded upwards of 250 requests for press credentials for Friday night. Contrast that with what Tarik yesterday reported being the coverage corps for a Caps’ game around Thanksgiving: about a dozen. In a media environment far less fashionable than Friday night’s, two of us from OFB get credentialed so that we can deliver both words and images/video here, but at week’s start, sensing a very changed hockey culture here, I informed my OFB colleagues that we might be lucky to get just one of us in the Verizon Center press box for Game 1. Turns out, even that forecast was optimistic.
To accommodate so massive a media surge, the Capitals communicated to us their need to create an overflow area for working press — in the media lounge, downstairs, well away from the madness. That may have made for a quieter work environment, but I wanted to work in the madness. Sensing an arrival of a frozen Red Sea perhaps even louder than last week, and wanting to see how red it would be with Philly in town, I wanted to survey and savor it and share my sensory experience with you.
But I also confronted a former daily-journalist-turned-blogger’s dilemma: the men and women who make a living at covering pro sports have an obvious claim to priority access that I don’t. Mr. Leonsis in his new media age vision may not agree, but I made the decision that under such extraordinary access demand burdens, and having been accommodated for two years so uniformly magnificently by the Capitals, I wanted nothing of being headache no. 251 for the club. I could watch the game from home, and blog like others. I rationalized my decision partly on this half-truth of a premise: to the extent that I viewed myself (wrongly) as being shouldered aside by professional old media, that very condition was emblematic of the coverage success I’d sought for the game I cherish in my hometown.
At 6:15 last night, shopping for my playoff game beer and pizza out in the suburbs, believing myself able to transition back to simple, traditional hockey fan with the snap of fingers away from a keyboard, I realized the seriousness of my mistaken judgment. I felt a profound ache at being away from the action, away from working at chronicling it, and it felt awful. Even beer on sale offered no salve.
I should have shoehorned myself into that rink last night, even if I had to try and blog from underneath Abe Pollin’s desk. Rather than adopt the view that this new love affair the press is having with hockey could be an impediment to my coverage calling, I should have embraced it as a fresh challenge. I made a huge mistake. This morning, I owe our readers an apology. At least the good guys got it done!
Initially I lessened my early evening ache a bit by maintaining contact with some friends in the press box via instant message. But then my diminished ache turned to anger. I learned that Friday night’s Washington Post delegation — understandably enlarged — was pork barreled in the press box’s front row with the names of Kornheiser and Wilbon. If I ever get to own a pro hockey team they won’t be allowed in my rink — Friday night was a red-tie party for HockeyWashington, and the two of them have amply demonstrated over years not only disinterest in attending such soirées but ridiculing those who do.
My anger wasn’t directed at their hopping on the hockey media bandwagon — it was that after securing so sought after a set of seats . . . they failed to show up to work the friggin game! Kornheiser may have been cavorting about a luxury box, but he certainly wasn’t working upstairs. His workspace space preserved. Ditto for his partner in the superficial, syntax-challenged, and loud. This is a family blog, and the words I associate with this act of unfathomable arrogance won’t appear here. Maybe they could title their next ESPN podcast, ‘Pardon the Absence.’
Enough about hockey-hating egomaniacs and back-room media matters.
Friday night delivered not just a pulsating, emotionally draining victory over a gritty and skilled opponent but perhaps just as importantly it obliterated any residual concern about the viability of Washington being hockey friendly when it really mattered. A Hockeytown under construction may have a completion date that may have to be bumped up.
The Comcast broadcast went live at 7:00 last night, and at 7:00:30 it was abundantly apparent that the orange-and-blackouts of the past were lodged right there, in history. I don’t quite understand how the Capitals’ sales department managed to make it so pervasively red last night.
But I have Friday night beer leftover for them.
Some time near 8:30 Friday night, Capitals’ fans, having spent weeks residing in a purgatory of indeterminate postseason fate, received an invitation from an seraphim angel named Radek Dvorak to enter an unearthly realm of ecstasy.
At that moment in Raleigh, North Carolina, at 19:48 of period 2, while his team was playing for nothing but pride, the Florida Panthers’ right winger ripped a low wrist shot past Carolina Hurricanes’ netminder Cam Ward to stake the ‘Cats to an unlikely 4-2 lead. The shorthanded tally sucked the life out of a sold-out HBC Center. It also occasioned a big surge in beer swigging and the hugging of strangers by Caps’ fans following in Washington.
A win Friday night and the ‘Canes would have secured the Southeast division title — their third since 2002. Two hours earlier, failure in that endeavor seemed unfathomable; this was a team that had spent all but about two weeks in first place in the Southeast, was just two seasons removed from a Stanley Cup victory, and now had on its heels a Capitals’ team that had known only last-place finishes the last three seasons.
Hockey hopes spring eternal in spring in many parts, but not these. That’s the legacy within which the Era of Ovechkin dawned. And true to script, during Friday’s third period Panther after Panther made a parade to the penalty box, their two-goal lead eventually halved and netminder Craig Anderson under a near 50-shot seige. A spring of supreme stress here coalesced into a dungeon of the highest duress. Samsanov Agonistes.
“In Washington,” one of the Hurricanes’ broadcasters commented early in period 3, “the clock can’t move fast enough.”
Truer words were never spoken. Eventually the game clock in Carolina arrived at zero, Pinehurst no. 3 beckoning the ‘Canes, and in that instant, Caps’ fans were removed from all past April ills and into a springtime Friday night frenzy the likes of which they hadn’t seen since 1998. A Friday night of free-flowing frothies and free love — with perhaps dozens of little babies named Radek arriving at Sibley and Suburban next winter.
Saturday morning HockeyWashington awoke to a surreal reality: seeing the Caps, with a victory that night, move from ninth in the East to third. Better still, the Capitals’ fate was at long last in their own Misson hockey gloves. Actually, by virtue of Carolina’s Friday night flop the Caps technically were already in third, by virtue of playing fewer games and being tied at 92 points with the ‘Canes, but Saturday night’s game against Florida was the team’s final exam on the season — worth 90 percent of its grade.
If Friday night was a sudden shockwave to the league standings, Tuesday night at Verizon Center was a sonic boom and a one-color kaleidoscope of unity delivered by a region ignited by an amazing sports story. One sensed within a rapidly enlargening hockey supporting community here a collective hunger to get behind a buzz-generating team. The Redskins lost more than they won under Joe Gibbs II. There’s a pedestrian quality to the Wizards — no longer really bad, but never really good, either. The ‘Nats are rebuilding and years away from contending. On Tuesday night in Verizon Center sports Washington was represented in unprecedented volume and unified uniform.
The home crowds for hockey have been growing and large for a couple of months now, but Tuesday’s ranked in another supportive realm. It was so startling to see the Sea of Red precisely because so many enemy sweaters had long filled so many home seats. If there were 18,000 fannies in the seats Tuesday night, 17,500 of them were Caps’ supporters.
“That was the best [home] crowd I’ve ever seen,” Mike Vogel told me over the weekend.
Better than the white-out postseason crowds of the powerful late ’80s Caps’ clubs at Capital Center?
“Those crowds weren’t loud like Tuesday’s,” Vogs added.
All we knew when the team returned home from its spectacularly successful six-game road trip was that it would play before large crowds here — likely, sellouts. We had no idea that the stands-shaking Redskins crowds of raucous old RFK would at last get a run for their rancor on F St.
For hockey.
Late on Wednesday afternoon the Caps’ communications staff, struggling perhaps like the fanbase to keep up with the speed of the hockey’s team’s ascent, announced the continuation of home Red Outs. The modest delay may have played a role in Thursday night’s home environment for Tampa: quite good, but not nearly as Red, not nearly as ear-splitting. The Caps’ nerves on ice that night, too, had a hand in quieting the mood a bit.
For some among HockeyWashington, Saturday’s first eighteen hours were a painful crawl toward a determinative destiny, while for others, savoring suddenly arrived at salvation, time couldn’t stand still enough. After all, morning paper reading, home cleaning, and car oil changing were all performed in third place. I imagined a Saturday morning Sea of Caps’ caps at Costco, among Saturday household chore performing the Red Army wearing the Capitals’ relic Old School look of a failure past now transformed in mere hours’ time into something fresh, vibrant, honor-bestowing, and most especially hip.
Chinatown was Red with anticipation at 4:05. I saw it.
Arriving early in Verizon Center’s press lounge, I surveyed beat media to see where Saturday night ranked in their list of most significant sporting events they’d personally covered. For the Washington Times’ Corey Masisak, only two events — the ACC basketball tournament won by underdog Maryland a few years back and his first Army-Navy football game rivaled the hockey he’d chronicled this March and April and most especially this past week.
“Maryland was like the 6 seed and they went down beat the numbers one, two, and three [seeds],” he told me.
WTOP’s Jonathon Warner has been involved in professional sports journalism for more than 30 years. For him, Saturday night had only George Mason’s Cinderella run in the NCAAs two years back as a rival to the Revival in Red.
“This is huge — this run they’re on, it’s actually given me chills of late,” Warner told me.
“You can feel the buzz,” Steve Kolbe told me. “Washington, D.C., as a whole has grown as a hockey town. That puck drops tonight, we’ll all have goosebumps.”
The Times’ Thom Loverro told me that in his 16 years at the paper Saturday night’s game “ranked right up there” among all regular season games he’d followed in Washington.
Next I asked the Washington Post’s Tarik El Bashir.
“I think you heard me down in the press room earlier tonight ask, has there been another comeback this dramatic in Washington pro sports history?”
“This team was left for dead on Thanksgiving day,” he added.
Tarik’s covered the Indy 500, “where you have 350,000 people,” he noted. But when he considered the lead-up to Saturday night, all of the must-wins the Caps had to have, Saturday raced to the top of his biggest games list.
“We awoke a sleeping giant here,” owner Leonsis, clad again in red, observed late Saturday night. That was a most pleasant observation to encounter Sunday morning, confirming that last week really wasn’t just a dream.
The Caps’ post-season begins this Friday night and continues with a Sunday matinée:
Friday, April 11, 2008 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington  Comcast SportsNet, VERSUS, TSN, WJFK
Sunday, April 13, 2008 2 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington  NBC, TSN, WJFK
Tuesday, April 15, 2008 7 p.m. Washington at Philadelphia  Comcast SportsNet, VERSUS, TSN, WJFK
Thursday, April 17, 2008 7 p.m. Washington at Philadelphia  Comcast SportsNet, VERSUS, TSN, WJFK
* Saturday, April 19, 2008 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington  NBC, TSN, WJFK & 3WT
* Monday, April 21, 2008 TBD Washington at Philadelphia  Comcast SportsNet, VERSUS, TSN, WJFK
* Tuesday, April 22, 2008 TBD Philadelphia at Washington  Comcast SportsNet, TSN, WJFK
* If necessary
Click here to see other series’ schedules.
Jonathon Warner’s “Saturday Night Caps” program on 3WT tomorrow will feature the first-ever appearance by our good friend Dmitry Chesnokov of SovetskySport, who’ll appear to discuss the Russian players on the Caps and Russia’s hockey culture more generally. With the early 1:00 start tomorrow afternoon, Warner will conduct an extended post-game on 3WT that will roll straight into “Saturday Night Caps.”
Having spoken with both program host and featured guest this week, I know they’re both eager to learn of specific topics to address late tomorrow afternoon and into the early evening with listeners. We’d be happy to pass along to them specific questions you may have. Send ‘em along in comments here or in email to us.
3WT can be found at 1500 and 820 on your AM dial, 107.7 on FM, and streaming on line here.
And on Sunday, beginning at 5:00 p.m., the NHL Network will air its first-ever “Ovechkin Ovation” — a symphony of AO’s 5-pt. games this season, one after another, intermission-free. The extravaganza will start with a look back to Ovechkin’s rookie season in the 30-minute program “Top 10 Alexander Ovechkin Goals of 2005-06.â€? Included in that list is his incredible, sprawling-on-the-ice, no-look, backhand goal against the Phoenix Coyotes that is still a favorite moment among fans.
Next up will be Ovie’s outburst in Ottawa on December 29 (4 goals, 1 assist); followed by his January 31 surreal slaughter of the Habs (4 goals, 1 assist); and the evening will conclude with this past Monday’s massacre of the Bs (3 goals, 2 assists).
There are obviously two important matinée hockey games to follow this weekend, but thanks to local radio and the NHL Network, we’re also being afforded a terrific opportunity to supplement our puck addiction and appreciate more a faraway land that has delivered to D.C. some exceptionally special athletes.
No need for NetFlix this weekend.
I’m sticking to my prediction: on game days, it’s antacid through early April for Caps’ fans. Jonathon Warner of 3WT asked me last night to predict the Southeast division’s resolution, so of course I told him I’d get back to him around April 5. Near that evening’s end.
Of a possible six points among this week’s three divisional road games I thought three the baseline for a passing grade. Insomuch as Alexander Ovechkin was magnificently neutralized by both Florida Friday night and Tampa last evening, and the team displayed great gumption in salvaging regulation-time victory from the jaws of an infuriating overtime Saturday (and more Tums and Pepto for Washingtonians), I’m grading the gang out at C+.
I fielded calls and email from out-on-the-ledgers after Friday night’s loss in Florida. That was a game determined by a miscue (a Mike Green whiff) and a bad bounce (on BJ’s left post). But generally speaking, the Caps would rather face Detroit or Ottawa than the Florida Panthers. Since the lockout, the teams have faced each other 22 times. The Caps have won a grand total of six of those games. Six. It doesn’t seem much to matter that Roberto Luongo is no longer in South Florida — it’s a mean moon rising for the Caps in Sunrise.
At least three compelling storylines emerged from this roadtrip. The most obvious, in light of his first-star effort last night, is Olie Kolzig’s revitalization. The Washington Times’ Corey Masisak this morning notes that the 37-year-old netminder “is now 11-3-2 since Christmas. [He] has allowed a total of 10 goals in his past five games.” He’s in a groove for sure, and the consistency and game-stealing he’s displaying gives one ample evidence to believe that the rotation with BJ that Bruce Boudreau has insisted on in 2008 is paying big-time dividends. Yes the Caps would have liked more than three points from this trip, but if they arrive in mid-March with a fit and sharp no. 1 netminder — all things injuries being somewhat equal — you have to like their chances in the race for the division crown.
Sami Lepisto made his NHL debut last night, and his 14 minutes of ice time seemed in their impact more like 24. He displayed the poise and mobility and deft puck distribution that had Hershey Bears’ officials and fans raving about him. It was only one game, but it was a very good one on a must-win night, and Lepisto’s resume in his first season of North American pro hockey is stellar. He skated a +27 with the Bears and put up almost a point per game (32 points in 38 games, good for 4th on the team in scoring) as a rookie rearguard — much of those numbers accumulated while Hershey’s blueline was decimated by injuries.
A third-round selection in the 2004 bumper crop of Caps’ Entry Draft picks, Lepisto represents one of the more intriguing prospects in the entire Caps’ organization. For whatever reason the Caps have seldom selected Finns, in an era when that small, Scandanavian, hockey-mad outpost has delivered scores of smart, sturdy defenders, reliable two-way forwards, and the odd stud goalie to the NHL. Prior to coming over to North America, Lepisto had three full seasons of experience in Finland’s top pro league with Helsinki Jokerit. (The team, incidentally, that beginning next season will be coached by Glen Hanlon.) Contending NHL teams need not only to select well in round one each June but to pick up serviceable players intermittently in later rounds. As a young pro hockey player Sami Lepisto already looks a good deal more than serviceable.
Another non-first-rounder, Tomas Fleischmann, may have announced his comfort zone arrival as a productive top-6 NHL forward on the road trip. The owner of a new two-year contract, Flash had 2 goals and an assist in the three games and looked a lot like his did in the AHL the past two seasons — among the best players on the ice each night. So many hockey fans render etched-in-stone verdicts on players’ value and potential from an opening 50 or 100 NHL games. Alexander Semin, for instance, had 10 goals in his first 50-plus games as a rookie. Fleischmann is from the same draft class, and now has 8 goals in 56 games on the season. Flash is particularly important to the Caps as a skilled winger on the left side should the unthinkable in terms of injury take place. The Caps didn’t give him a new two-year, one-way deal out of a sense of charity.
So the old and new came through on an important road swing through the South. On the radio last night studio host Jonathon Warner a few times used the word “separation” as Caps’ fans hoped it would relate to the team’s fortunes on this road trip. Mike Vogel, calling in from Tampa, was quick to dispel us all from such a silly notion. New data arrived this week further confirming that this will be the springtime of our disquiet.
I’ll join Jonathon Warner and my pal Eric McErlain of Off Wing Opinion on “Saturday Night Caps” this evening at 6:00 on Talk Radio 3WT. For the second time this hockey season Jonathon is opening up his studio microphones to a couple of commentators from the blogosphere. We’d hoped to have Jon Press join us but he had a conflict.
This will be our first appearance with Jonathon since Bruce Boudreau took over behind the Caps’ bench, so we’ll have a lot of good vibes to sort through and discuss.
3WT can be found at 1500 and 820 on your AM dial, 107.7 on FM and streaming online at www.3wtradio.com.
The coverage theme for this blogger tonight is being in the building of a first-place club on a Friday night in February. Rarefied air, that’s called. And we have a columnist in the house to cover it: Thom Loverro of the Washington Times. Thom has covered the Caps as well as any columnist in this city the past 10 years, so I’m not surprised he’s here. Gonna try and chat him a up a bit during an intermission.
The mission tonight is plain: a little bit of separation.
From 275 feet above the ice it’s still quite easy to see that all classification of birds likely has nests in Mike Commodore’s ‘fro. There’s a new Will Ferrell flick coming out, “Semi-Pro,” featuring the hero as an owner-player-coach of an ABA team in an era of heavy, airplane-ensnaring hairdos, and Commodore could double for Farrell in the film’s poster art.
Jonathon Warner of 3WT was mentioning to me how the Caps were 13 points back of Carolina on November 23, the Caps of course last in the Southeast that day and Carolina in first, and how since then the Caps have accumulated 44 points to the Canes’ 29. Then Mike Vogel pointed out how the Caps had lost a week into the Boudreau tenure in Carolina, meaning that that ground actually started to be made up in earnest around December 1.
The Caps are 13-4-4 in one-goal games under Gabby.
Another mightily healthy home crowd on hand.
Seven seconds in, Scott Walker and Matt Bradley seemed to behave in a manner of some longstanding animosity between these clubs.
Just before the four-minute mark, Eric Cole goes shootout showoff on Brent Johnson, one-handing a dazzling deke by BJ to put the ‘Canes up 1-0. A stunner, and while Milan Jurcina may have looked radiation burned on the play, that outside speed by Cole is replicated by few in this league.
Not yet midway through the first, it’s abundantly clear that these ‘Canes brought their hard-hats for some heavy duty hitting. They are plastering the Caps’ puck possessors at almost every turn.
The Caps are about to go on almost consecutive power plays, but otherwise, it’s been Carolina’s period through the opening 12 minutes. This is the ‘Canes club I think many of us thought we’d see all winter — and haven’t.
Another strong effort at getting the puck to the Caps’ net results in it’s getting behind BJ again. Shots are 8-3 Caps, but where it counts, 2-0 ‘Canes. Carolina looks fresh and determined, and it’s perhaps worth nothing, they last played on Tuesday night, while for the Caps this is their third game in four nights.
Near the end of the first period, the Phone Booth is, save for the usual spottiness of the Club level, good and crammed full of hockey fans. If the team keeps winning, there will be nights I think when walkups are stunned to learn of there being no tickets available at the gate.
It’s ugly after one: 2-0 visitors.
More anon. Continue reading ›
Today’s Washington Post Sports section front is a revolutionary feast of outreach to the region’s hockey fans. Start with the sumptuous photo journalism of a celebratory Alexander Semin. The Post is hardly alone in old media in diminishing impact photo journalism in recent years, but its return is always welcome. We have as well Tarik’s usually stellar game file. And columnist Mike Wise got a story — a compelling one, too — from a visit he made to Kettler.
During last night’s evening drive WTEM’s Steve Czabin called the Post’s Sports section one of the worst in the country. Among other grievances, he cited the absence of notes files accompanying team coverage. But there’s this as well in today’s Post, from Tarik.
We’ve given the Post props for this kind of work before. We just wish it weren’t so cicada-like in its intervals.
Something momentous and stupendous happened to hockey on Tuesday. By late Wednesday afternoon I was aware of an unusual mainstream media preoccupation forming a phenomenon: they were, rather uniformly, rather nationally, saying nice things about our sport. Really nice things.
Then came Wednesday’s 5:00 hour on ESPN.
I was New-Years-resolution fitnessing at a big health club then, flat screen TVs hanging overhead, the pearls of wisdom from the talking heads captioned for the sweating. At the top of hour there there’s some hip and chic and therefore unendurable split-screen of sports columnists blathering for 30 minutes. A guy named Woody from Denver, Jay from Chicago, somebody else I didn’t know, and some smarmy host red-meating the proceedings. I figured they’d quick-hit hockey ’cause of Tuesday’s novelty and move on to the important stuff, like what Tony Romo and Jessica Simpson will do together during the Cowboys’ bye week.
Instead, everyone took turns praising not just the Winter Classic but the fundamental appeals of hockey, which, they claimed, were showcased in Buffalo on Tuesday. And they couldn’t stop talking about it. They interrupted one another with accolades. They debated when and where the next outdoor game should take place. Soldier Field was mentioned, where the “revitalized Chicago Blackhawks” would skate perhaps against another Original Six club. One fella admitted that he couldn’t stick with a single college bowl game Tuesday afternoon (imagine shunning all those three- and four-loss dynamos!) because he kept getting drawn back to the Lakeside fun in a winter wonderland.
Understand that in the wallets of these Worldwide Leader in Sports personalties are laminated cards that read, “If I even know that hockey exists, I seriously hate it.”
In the middle of the hour Kornheiser and Wilbon followed, on PTI. These two of course last did coverage favors for our sport pre-expansion. But they, too, joined in the broadcast swooning over our sport. It was no gag, either. Gym exercisers to my right and left seemed to be following the dialogue like I was, but only I kept falling off equipment pedals.
At times the MoJo that moves the media in a hungry pack around a new food source is vague and intangible. It formed and fomented around hockey late Tuesday and throughout Wednesday. I don’t think as recently as 12:45 p.m. Tuesday anyone even in the NHL’s Communications or Marketing offices could have imagined the media’s love-at-first-sight sweet nothings for our game soon to ensue.
Early Thursday I Googled “Winter Classic” as a subject search, and from little more than one full page of listings spotted these headlines:
Winter Classic is a step in the right direction
Winter Classic: Outdoor Game Scores
The Perfect Snowstorm: The Winter Classic Scores
NBC Shoots, Scores with NHL Winter Classic Ratings
Winter Classic a Huge Success
NHL Winter Classic proves league can get it right (” . . . nothing short of an overwhelming success . . . “)
In truth, hockey got lucky Tuesday, on at least two fronts. The first was a slate of yawner college pigskin bowl games, the byproduct of BCS madness rendering New Years Day — once the sport’s Christmas morning — now needless, the nutritional equivalent of television Twinkies. The second front, obviously, was the weather one: raucus and Rockwellian. The Ralph on Tuesday had everything but the Budweiser Clydesdales.
Best of all, few among the millions who watched likely thought, “Ah-hah, the spoiled millionaires are discomforted for a few hours.” No, millions saw highly skilled, smiling skaters persevering through rhythm-robbing interruptions and a rapidly deteriorating playing surface, and 71,000 supporters screaming through sideways snow and sleet and gashing Great Lake winds.
I became aware that hockey had created a crush, that in this week it was being asked out on a date by the four-sport letterman who never noticed us in class; a date perhaps only for this Saturday night, but a date nonetheless.
Here’s a loser-has-to-get-a-Mike-Green-haircut wager I direct at those who think Tuesday was a lone flicker of lucky lust directed at the league: there’s a new Yankee Stadium today under construction, and it won’t be open 5 years before the Rangers skate a regular season game in it.
Why would the Yankees and BigMedia care about us again?
Because in our natural state we’re very pretty.
Holiday partying during Saturday’s you’re-a-dolt-if-you-missed-that-one in Ottawa, I managed to catch Jonathon Warner’s post-game ebullience on 3WT making my way home, and thereby felt as if I hadn’t missed a thing. Confession: I’ve done a terribly poor job of touting Jonathon’s talents, both with his “Saturday Night Caps” program and his superb post-game roundup. This is all the more unforgivable in light of the fact that Jonathon was gracious enough to invite Eric McErlain and me on his Saturday show earlier in the season.
At one point during the post-game show last night Jonathon had Nicklas Backstrom on the phone from the Scotiabank visitor’s room, and at the end of the exchange Jonathon told his listeners, “You could just hear Backstrom’s smile [on the call].” Great radio personalities showcase an empathy with their guests and listeners, and this Jonathon regularly does, most particularly with his callers. ÂÂ
A game like last night’s makes fans want to reach out and connect with the rest of the supporting community, in something more personal than message boards, and a program like Jonathon’s allows precisely that. Perhaps a figure like Jonathon suffers from commerical radio’s larger decline the past decade-plus, but if the Caps make a notable push in the standings in the season’s second half, Caps’ fans are going to want to hitch a ride on this radio program. Bruce Springsteen has a catchy little diddy out these days titled, ‘Radio Nowhere,’ but last night, listening to Jonathon’s program, I felt like I was lodged in Radio Somewhere Warm, Informative, and Fun.
I was Blackberried during the Saturday night family holiday gathering, and the required 36 or 38 third-period updates I could have done without. But once home, I was able to have every goal, and some other notable plays, replayed for me by visiting the Caps’ home page and streaming the video highlights found in the game recap box. I hadn’t been in a position this season to need that before, but now I appreciate it.
Donald Brashear’s now legendary maiming of Chris Neil, however, was not included in the package. I’m going to have to ask the Caps’ communications folks about either the oversight or some more sinister reason for excluding it. I mean, it’s Christmas time.
From my chum Marleen this morning I received not only a faithful blow-by-blow summary of the slow dance — “Brash uncorked 18 straight haymakers on Neil’s head . . . the announcers claimed just 15, but I counted, rewound the Tivo and slow-motion counted, and it was 18 glorious noggin-knockers” — but a powerful sense of my needing to make the YouTube retrieval of this medieval deathmatch my Sunday obligation. It took a bit of digging, but oh was it ever worth the effort, and now it’s recorded, as it should be, forever for posterity at OFB.
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JoeB, previously noted appropriately for his astute call of Alex the Gr8’s greatest-ever goal in Phoenix his rookie year, rises again to the occasion in Scotiabank Saturday night.
“Oh my goodness . . . gracious . . . Chris [Neil] go down already.
“Chris Neil ate about 15 [Donald Brashear] lefts.”
We can forgive JoeB, during all that excitement, for not fact-checking the fist-throw count with Marleen in real time. ÂÂ
Tarik’s lead this morning, I thought, was letter-perfect:
“If Alex Ovechkin was less than 100 percent because of stitches in his thigh, it wasn’t evident Saturday night against the Ottawa Senators.”
One might have attributed last month’s 4-1 triumph in Ottawa to the Sens taking the then victory-starved Caps lightly, but what now? Tuesday’s third matchup of the season between the teams will tell us a lot, I think, about the sort of mettle Bruce Boudreau’s players will take into the season’s second half, for they’ll host one ornery Sens’ squad in a late matinee then. But win or lose Tuesday, the Caps have already delivered an interesting potential storyline between these clubs. If — if — the Caps could somehow scratch and claw their way into the East’s eighth spot at season’s end, they’d very likely face the Sens in the postseason’s first round. And regular season MoJo between clubs often influences playoff karma. An interesting, thought, no?   ÂÂ
I could get used to these kind of winter-time Sunday mornings.
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We were lucky to have had former Washington Capital Yvon Labre and former radio play-by-play voice Ron Weber not only attend OFB’s viewing of “The Rocket”, but they graciously took the microphone in hand at the front of the theatre to answer questions and provide a little insight as well.
Here is a short video with part of their observations.
OFB is pleased to announce the participation of legendary local radio voice Ron Weber and former Caps’ great Yvon Labre this Tuesday night for our screening of ‘The Rocket’ at the Avalon Theater. These Caps’ legends will offer us their insights into the movie and the career of Rocket Richard during a post-film Q & A.
Eric McErlain of OffWingOpinion published a terrific review of ‘The Rocket’ this past week for The Sporting News. Eric writes:
” . . . the movie gets down cold . . . the ability to transport you back in time to the Montreal of the 1940s and 1950s, both on the streets of the city and inside the legendary Forum that closed for good back in 1996.
“One of the greatest challenges for any sports movie is figuring out a way to depict live action in a believable manner, and The Rocket acquits itself well in that sense. By the time the movie ended I was sincerely hoping that there was a men’s league somewhere in North America that would let folks play hockey donning vintage uniforms and equipment. Can there possibly be a league anywhere that will let you play without a helmet anymore?”
Seats are still available for Tuesday — join us for a memorable night at the movies in the company of Washington hockey royalty.
Capitals netminder Olaf Kolzig was a guest on yesterday’s John Thompson Show on SportsTalk980. Topics discussed were:
Changes made by Coach Boudreau.You can listen to the the interview here.
Interim Caps Coach Bruce Boudreau was a guest on yesterday’s John Thompson Show on SportsTalk980. Topics discussed were:
Coaching in the NHL.You can listen to the the interview here.
The second caller into Jonathan Warner’s post-game radio show asked a concise and insightful question. Paraphrasing in my own words, here it is:
The Capitals are in last place. If the Capitals don’t have the personnel to make the playoffs after the extensive Rebuild, then the fault lies with GM George McPhee. If the team does have the personnel but the players aren’t executing, then it’s the fault of the coach. It’s one or the other. Which is it?
Understandably, Warner and guest Ken Sabourin waffled on the answer, since clearly they are not in positions to indict either McPhee or Hanlon. But it is, in my estimation, a valid question. Now the answer may be “both,” of course, but at the least it’s one or the otherâ€â€and since another fire sale would potentially kill the team’s fans (I know it would shorten my life expectancy), a coaching or general manager change seems to be in the cards.
Glen Hanlon did an admirable job in his first few years. Cleaning up after the roster-gutting and the Butch Cassidy disaster, he forged a hard-working if under-talented team into a tough group. George McPhee has had his share of blunders (e.g., questionable draft picks; Trevor Linden; Robert Lang) and his share of coups (e.g., Oates to Philly for way more than he was worth; Milan Jurcina).
So who, OFB readers, is the source of the team’s current woes: the Coach, the GM, or both?
Today, NHL Commish Gary Bettman graced XM Home Ice with his presence in order to announce the start of his new radio show, “NHL Hour,” which will also feature various league executives. It will debut on Tuesday, November 27 from 4 to 5 p.m. EST on XM Home Ice and NHL.com, so get those questions and complaints ready! I fully expect to hear fan comments about white jerseys at home and a more inclusive schedule.
To read the full press release and get more information on the show schedule, click here.