Kugryshev: Despite the fact that there is a new hockey league in Russia, I have no intention of staying there. I dreamt of the NHL my entire life. The NHL is the best league in the world with the best players in the world. And no other league can compare to it. I always watched NHL games and saw players do something fantastic on the ice. I am now closer than ever to be next to these great players. In the near time I will try to accomplish the dream of a lifetime.

OFB: Tell us what it means to you to be with an organization with such Russian standouts as Ovechkin, Semin, Fedorov, and Varlamov — many of them young in their pro careers?

Kugryshev: When Washington selected me at the draft I think I jumped to the ceiling at home being so happy. I am extremely happy to be on the same team with such [great] Russian stars. I know all of them personally. And even though they are superstars, it is so easy to communicate with them. I have already received good advice from all of them about the style of play in America.

OFB: There are increasing accounts of Washington’s popularity in Russia due largely to the popularity of their Russian stars. Is this your sense, that there is a special appreciation for the Capitals in many areas of Russia?

Kugryshev: Of course it is a good thing that there are so many Russians in the city [Washington] and on the team. It is always nice to hear [people] speaking your native language abroad. But I will try to get everyone to enjoy my game! And it doesn’t matter whether you are Russian, American, or Canadian.

OFB: You are in North America this summer, training, in Ottawa. Why there, and what are your plans for the 2008-09 season — have the Capitals indicated whether they want you to attend training camp in Washington this September?

Kugryshev: Right now I am in Ottawa getting ready for the season training with great specialists. One of them, Paul Lawson, is a skating coach with the Montreal Canadiens. I like working with him and other coaches very much. Right now I don’t have any plans to return to Russia. There are no conditions for my development there. And in August I will attend the Quebec Remparts’ training camp. I think I will spend the next season with the Remparts. I think it will benefit me. I will be ready physically and mentally to make a mark in Washington next season. But I will also attend the training camp with the first team in Washington in September! I can’t wait for the moment I get on the ice with the team!

OFB: One seldoms hears of Russian hockey players playing outdoors in winter. Did you ever play on frozen ponds? Or is it the case that Russian winters in many parts are so severe that it is simply not practical to try?

Kugryshev: I actually started my career playing outdoors. There are no indoor ice arenas in my home town. Actually, it is a tradition in Russia every winter when it gets cold to skate outdoors. A lot of great Russian players did exactly that to start their careers.

OFB: Do you remember how old you were when you fell in love with hockey, and what about the game made you fall in love with it?

Kugryshev: I started playing hockey very late by American standards. I put on the skates for the first time when I was 7. I didn’t really like it at first. But then I started getting better at it. And within about 2 years I caught up with a lot of my friends. It was then, I think, that I realized that I would dedicate my life to hockey. I can’t even imagine my life now without hockey. I get the greatest satisfaction from playing the game, especially when I score goals.

OFB: Dmitri, a great way for European hockey players to improve their English — at least the naughty parts of it — is to watch the movie ‘Slapshot.’ Have you seen it, and if not, would you consider watching it while training in North America this summer and sharing with us your review of it?

Kugryshev: Unfortunately, I did not see that movie. But I will try to learn English in the near future. I had classes with a tutor in Russia. And here [in North America] I will get a lot of practice communicating with my teammates and friends.

OFB: Dmitri, thank you for taking the time to answer questions from OnFrozenBlog, and best of luck to you in the 2008-09 season.

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Two Young Swedes Compared

By The OFB Team
Sunday, March 23, 2008

Anton & Bengt Gustafsson (photo by Andreas Hillergren)A Hockeysfuture staffer on Saturday offered a comparison between 2008 draft-eligible Anton Gustafsson, son of former Caps’ great Bengt, and 2006 first-rounder Patrik Berglund (no. 25 to St. Louis).

Hockey sense: Equal
Speed: Equal
Technical skills: Berglund
Offensive game: Berglund
Defensive game: Gustafsson
Two-way game: Gustafsson
Shooting: Equal
Playmaking: Equal
Leadership: Equal
Physical game: Gustafsson (by a huge margin)

Most likely to score 80-100 points in the NHL: Berglund

We’re still weeks away from the Central Scouting Service’s final ranking for North American and European prospects, but little over the course of this hockey season appears to have altered forecasts of a year ago for the young Gustafsson: he’ll go somewhere in round one this June. CSS’ mid-season rankings have Gustafsson rated the 6th best European skater.

OFB had a chance earlier this month to interview Anton’s proud father at a Caps’ game. That video interview, in which Bengt discusses his son’s game at length, can be found here.

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Quintin Laing, Human Jersey Wall

By The OFB Team
Friday, January 25, 2008

Thursday night at Verizon Center was our first opportunity to catch up with Quintin Laing after his human sacrifice performance Monday night in Pittsburgh. Recall that in leading the Caps’ kill of a Pens’ 5-on-3 man advantage in sudden death OT then, en route to the Caps’ shootout victory, Laing threw his body seemingly at each and every point blast the Pens tried. Like you, we saw a euphoric Alexander Ovechkin recognize Laing’s efforts on the bench at the end of overtime Monday night, and we wanted to know what the GR8 had said to him.

We also wanted to know how in a role that doesn’t necessarily lend itself to statistical analysis Laing evaluated his contributions to the team. On this question we received a most telling response: He evaluates his effectiveness on whether or not the Caps win each night — he takes it most personally if the opposition scores a goal when he’s on the ice. And that conspicuous courage component of his? Here’s his creed: “If I had a broken bone I’d go out there — it’s the NHL, nothing’s gonna keep me out.”

Lastly, we wanted to know how his family reacted to the courageous and indeed at times dangerous style of play he’s adopted in D.C. It pains us at times to see the abuse he regularly absorbs. Imagine the concern his family must have!    

 

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Watching Hockey with Peter the Great

By pucksandbooks
Thursday, January 10, 2008

Morning Cup-A-JoeIt was a thrill for me to run into Peter Bondra in the Verizon Center press box Wednesday night, not only because this represented the first time I’d seen him since he’d retired from hockey but because I was so curious about his new role as General Manager for the Slovakian national team, which will compete in the World Championships this spring in Canada, in Halifax and Quebec City. He was gracious enough to answer every question I put to him during the first intermission, and answer my questions with considerable thought and reflection.

But before I could ask my first question, an elated fan partitioned off from the press box but recognizing Peter shouted out to him and secured his attention, with which he appealed to the Caps’ great to come out to the Gardens Ice House in Laurel, Maryland, for some six a.m. pickup hockey during winter weekdays. Here is what you might appreciate knowing about Peter’s passion for playing hockey, today: he scribbled down the times for the ice slots. Peter and his family continue to live in suburban Maryland.

Bondra acknowledged that he was attending last night’s game to take a close look at three Slovakian players: Marek Svatos, Peter Budaj, and Milan Jurcina. Budaj of course didn’t play, but Bondra had plans to talk to him after the game. In his reflections on Jurcina, it was clear that Bondra had watched him play plenty this season.

“Jurcina started playing early in the season for Glen Hanlon 22, 24 minutes, but unfortunately his game came a little bit down because of confidence, but now he’s showing again, playing well, getting ice time, so I think it’s a good time for him.”

Bondra is leading the Slovakian effort in international hockey at a particularly opportune time. When I asked him to identify Slovaks who’d caught his attention with their play in the NHL this season, he smiled widely and ran off a long list of high achievers: “I can name a lot of them . . . Marian Hossa, [Marian] Gaborik, Pavol Demitra, Big Z — Zdeno Chara — . . . we have a good team. There’s a lot of good players but they’re young and they’re [also] experienced, so it’s a good mix.”

I asked him if having this year’s World Championships contested in North America, on NHL-sized sheets, would influence his selection of players.

“You always try to take your best players,” he told me. “But I also think it’s very good to have the championships in North America, it’s great for hockey and it’s good for Canada.

“We are making preparations [for the change]. We adjust, we change our system a little bit, because we are going to play on the small ice. We will try to practice on it and maybe have a few exhibition games.”

His next observation about Slovakia’s approach to these Worlds really caught my attention: “We will try to play American style.” Likely, he meant “North American” style, but perhaps not.

Slovakia will host the Worlds in 2011, and the Slovakian hockey leadership, Bondra told me, was today carefully attempting to identify young Slovakian talent with an eye toward assembling a distinctly strong roster for those games. Bondra’s contract as General Manager is for one year, after which he’ll be reviewed, but he made clear how much he is enjoying the job.

“My number one priority is my family, but after that, if everybody is happy, if both sides are happy, I will be more than happy to continue.”

Regularly during our chat many folks in the press box who recognized Peter came by and interrupted our chat, which was fine by me. George McPhee was talking with Blackhawks’ assistant GM Rick Dudley when the two arrived near us. McPhee, pointing to Bondra, said to the former Tampa GM of the late ’90s, “Remember this guy?”

Bondra deserves a hero’s welcome in Washington’s hockey rink. I concluded my inquires by asking him if being in hockey management helped lessen his missing of playing.

“Exactly, you hit the button. It’s hard playing hockey for so many years and suddenly being away from hockey. This is helping me, coming here, to get something I’m missing. It would be nice to [still] be playing, but . . . my injuries, my body, it was the right choice. Now I enjoy being around my family, I enjoy taking my son to his hockey game.”

“Do you get out on the ice with your children to help with their practices?” I asked as followup.

“Yes — I do I do I do I do!” he exclaimed with beaming smile.

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Mathieu Perreault: Lightning in a (8-oz.) Bottle

By pucksandbooks
Saturday, July 14, 2007

Perreault and Backstrom - photo by sk84fun_dcThirty minutes prior to Friday night’s Rookie Camp scrimmage Drummondville, Quebec native Matheiu Perreault could be seen standing behind the players’ benches, not yet in gear, twirling his hockey stick with a puck seemingly taped to his blade. I say seemingly because over the course of four or five minutes the puck never ever moved from the center of the blade curve. He’d whirl his stick with rapid wrist action, rapid eye movement motion almost, and never lose control of his prized possession. For a few brief seconds it appeared as if the puck defied gravity with the blade curved toward the floor. It was a magical spectacle.

Out on the ice this week there has been a similar attachment of puck to Perreault’s stick. An emerging storyline this week, he has freshly impressed Capitals’ officials with his playmaking ability, his elite hockey sense, and particularly his knack for being in the right place at the right time in tight quarters. A player of modest stature (5 ‘8, 160-ish), Perreault shows no reluctance to go where the big bodies bang.

A year ago at this time most in hockey would have thought Perreault lucky even to be invited to the Caps’ Rookie camp this summer. His rookie year in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League with the Acadie Bathurst Titan was nice but unspectacular (18 goals, 34 assists in 62 games). His offensive production did jump a bit that postseason, but come June and the NHL Entry Draft, his size kept him on the board late. The Caps grabbed him in round six, 177th overall.

But as the final leaves were falling from trees this past autumn a strange thing was taking place back up in Acadie Bathurst: Perreault was a dominating offensive force night in and night out. He was named Q League Player of the Month for November. By Thanksgiving (ours), he’d passed his rookie year points total. Along with draft classmate Francois Bouchard he was invited to the Canadian World Junior Final Evaluation Camp in December. In midseason Caps’ General Manager George McPhee went on the CapsReport and told Mike Vogel that Perreault had received “the highest possible score” on a player’s hockey sense. He finished the 2006-07 season with 41 goals and 78 assists in 67 games, and he capped it off by winning the league’s MVP award.

He arrived in Washington for the first time this week (”It’s hot here” he complained to me), and from the opening moments of Wednesday’s opening scrimmage he displayed an elite game of deft playmaking, unrivaled puck control, and superb instincts. He scored two goals that night, and he sent flat accurate passes to teammates in every scoring sector.

Along the boards, where you might think him most vulnerable and overmatched, he actually excels, drawing defenders to him to create open space for his linemates. He wins most of his draws, many quite cleanly. He is in constant motion in the offensive zone.

But outlandish offensive numbers and hardware almost as tall as he is bear no relationship to Perreault’s shy and soft-spoken demeanor off the ice. He was frank in acknowledging how even he had no idea he was in store for an MVP quality CHL season.

He told me that last season was so spectacular that he is at pains to identify specific goals to better this season. Instead, he will focus on “improving my strength, [gaining] more speed . . . more speed.”

From McPhee’s midseason assessment to this week’s dynamic display I made a point of trying to press the GM for a bold forecast for Perreault. I didn’t want to know if McPhee thought Perreault simply NHL-destined but rather if once there he’d be an impact player.

“He’s a good player,” McPhee told me after Friday’s scrimmage. But what about an impact NHLer? “I wouldn’t be surprised at all,” he added.

NHL hockey will always have places for the undersized and overskilled and determined. Martin St. Louis or Steve Sullivan or Daniel Briere would score goals in any era. It’s too early yet to tell if Perreault’s on that kind of development arc, but he possesses in abundance hockey’s most coveted quality — game-dictating instincts and skills.

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10 Questions for a Full-Time NHL Scout, Part II

By pucksandbooks
Friday, March 30, 2007

[The following continues a conversation with NHL Scout started Thursday, March 29, 2007]

In Part II of my dialogue with NHLScout, I examine the contemporary American hockey development landscape, particularly with respect to college hockey, as this is his primary scouting territory. I sought to get a portrait of the college game’s increasing infusion of talent from very non-traditional outposts, like California and the lower Midwest. I also wanted his thoughts on Ann Arbor’s USNDTP, now in its 10th year of existence.

pucksandbooks: What is the “offseason” like for you? Late spring or summer, what are your principal tasks for your NHL club?

NHLScout: The “offseason” really depends on where you are. The draft is in late June, and every team has meetings in early June. Come summer, there are tournaments in different parts of the world — Europe, Boston, Michigan, different areas of Canada. It just depends on your role on your team, and where the good players are. If you are a trusted, veteran scout, and a top kid is playing in the Slovakian tournament in July, you’re on that plane. For the most part, summer is pretty low key. From Mid-May (or so) to late August (or so) you have meetings, the draft, and maybe two or three tournaments. A lot of guys will work hockey schools to bring in some extra cash.

pucksandbooks: The 10th birthday of the United States National Development Team Program (USNDTP) is occasioning its share of overview from the American hockey journalism community. What is your sense of where it is today?

NHLScout: I think the successes of the U.S. Development Program are clear — top draft picks, numerous college players. On the one hand, it’s too bad that leagues such as the Minnesota High School league or the New England Prep Schools are losing their top players. On the other, the U.S. is finally producing elite level players such as Jack Johnson, Eric Johnson, Phil Kessell, etc. on a consistent basis thanks to better coaching, better preparation, and better competition. It’s helped the college game by giving them more ready-made prospects. And it’s given players such as those previously mentioned the chance to play against good competition.

Is it a perfect system? No. Is it worthwhile, and better than not having the team? Definitely.

pucksandbooks: I’m a strong believer that scholarships in college hockey ought to be given to as many American hockey players as possible. There are far more Americans there today than there were 15 or 20 years ago. Looking ahead, will the college game, do you think, be able to maintain its basically North American identity, or will more international players comprise those rosters much as they have in recent years with Canadian Juniors (which is capped, of course)? Or, is it simply too difficult in terms of resources for college coaching staffs to scout European players?

NHLScout: I have no real preference where college hockey gives the scholarships. To me, I want the best players in college hockey. I would hope that U.S. youth hockey will continue producing enough top players that the majority of the players will be American, just as Canadian Junior Hockey should remain predominantly Canadian. However, if it means raising the quality of play, I will happily embrace Europeans and Canadians in the college game. In fact, with pro teams now strip-mining the college game (thanks to a CBA change, college players now cost less to sign, so teams are taking more and more players who are not quite ready because there’s less cash at risk), college hockey is going to need to find new sources of talent to even maintain the current level of play.

pucksandbooks: InsideCollegeHockey.com earlier this year published what I thought was an under- appreciated report titled “States of the Game,” about where college hockey players come from, by state and province. The thing that stood out to me was California’s emergence. More than 30 Californians were on D-I college rosters this season. What the heck is going on out there, and with places like Texas and Missouri, too?

NHLScout: What’s going on in the warm weather states is very simple — NHL expansion worked. In 1991, the San Jose Sharks arrived in California, expanding the NHL’s presence beyond LA. It’s now 16 years later. Those college kids from California were roughly 3-5 when the NHL got there. Now they’re hockey players. That’s not an accident.

Others will look at the Gretzky trade — 1988, hockey hits the big time in LA. That was 19 years ago. Guess how old these college kids are? 1992, Tampa Bay. 1993, Florida, Anaheim, Dallas. The kids who picked up hockey because they were finally being exposed to it are just now hitting the age where they are hitting the national scene.

California, Texas, and Florida are widely considered (among) the best states for athletes in football and baseball. To make my math easy, let’s say that in 1993 there were 5 million 5-year-old boys in those three states. 2.5 million played football, 2.5 played baseball. Now, let’s say 500,000 of those kids picked up hockey. All of a sudden, you’re talking about some of the best young athletes in America lacing up the skates instead of playing other sports. An extra half million athletes for leagues to pick through to find talent. While the vast majority of those athletes will fail (as is the case with all athletes), the USHL, NAHL, New England Prep Schools, NCAA, and, eventually, the NHL now have a deeper talent pool to utilize.

I forget where I heard this, but I’m sure one of your readers can find it: look back at the recent U.S. Bantam/Midget National Champions. I’m fairly certain many of them have been from California. The number of rinks in these states has exploded, meaning that ice time becomes cheaper and parents don’t have to drive three hours to get their kids on the ice. The kids who used to be centerfielders are now centres, and that’s vitally important for the future of the NHL. While intelligent people can disagree on the merits of expansion and how it immediately affected the NHL talent pool, we’re just now beginning to reap the benefits of exposing young athletes to the game.

pucksandbooks: My last question for you: who will get — and who should get — the Hobey Baker this year?

NHLScout: If I had a vote for the Hobey Baker, I would vote for David Brown from Notre Dame. Frankly, no player had a better season than Brown. He was the most outstanding player in college hockey. The other nominees all had great seasons — Bagnall was an amazing defenseman, Curry carried BU at times, Hensick and Duncan are two of the best offensive threats in college hockey, etc. — but I have questions about the merits of all of them.

For example, Brown had better numbers than Curry, and on a worse team. Duncan plays on a line with Oshie and Toews, making him the third best player on his own line. Hensick, like Curry, is surrounded by an impressive supporting cast. Frankly, for their talent level, ND was barely a Top 25 team. It was only because of coaching and David Brown that they were ranked #1. That said, I expect Hensick and Brown to split the Midwest/Western vote and Curry to carry the entire East Coast, so he’ll bring it home. For me, it would have gone (1) Brown, (2) Hensick, (3) Curry, (4) Bagnall, (5) Duncan.

By the way, I’ve had a couple of days to check out your site, and count me as a future regular reader. You guys have done a terrific job.

I’d like to first thank you for this opportunity, and the readers of this blog for their support of the greatest sport in the world. And if you see a scout at a game, buy him a coffee. He works his ass off to put the product you see out there on the ice, and he’ll appreciate it.

pucksandbooks: The Frozen Four is coming to Washington in 2009, and I expect to see you there. You won’t be paying for your coffee or your beer that week. Thanks for giving my readers and me so much of your time and such thought-provoking insight.

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10 Questions for a Full-Time NHL Scout

By pucksandbooks
Thursday, March 29, 2007

If you were to compile a list of the most intriguing and alluring professions (outside of being a highly paid pro athlete), what might be called “dream jobs,” you might include a ski instructor at Vail, a photographer for Hugh Heffner, perhaps a road test driver for Porsche. My list would include being paid to travel around the world to watch hockey, with rinks as my office, as a scout. On conference calls I’d be asked to discuss slick-skating Slovaks and mischief-makers from Moose Jaw.

In this role I could envision myself shamelessly dropping the names of athletes and locales, annoying my fellow air travelers in their comparatively mundane business comings and goings with “Once I land in Stockholm I’ll race over to national team headquarters to obtain a progress report on Jergen . . . for I understand he’s tearing up the Elite League.” This likely explains why I am not a hockey scout; at times I lack subtlety.

Of course, our perceptions of these professions are premised on myth and an outsider’s necessarily flawed vantage. When you actually get a chance to talk to someone in them, markedly different realities are detailed for you. This was my experience recently in an entirely unplanned and altogether fortuitous exchange I had with a full-time NHL scout. From the moment I confirmed his identity I knew I wanted to pick his hockey head clean of its “a season in the life of” experiences and analyses, for his is a line of work long shrouded behind the scenes, in mystery even, by design.

In this scout I had not only a fertile and fruitful information source but an emblem of hockey’s most impassioned: you don’t go into hockey scouting because the loading gig at Home Depot didn’t come through, you scout — necessarily making unfathomable sacrifices on your personal life — because you possess in inexhaustable fire for life on ice, he told me. He didn’t merely answer my questions in rich detail but created compositions with my readers’ perceived curiosity foremost in mind. He asked of me only that I preserve his anonymity and that of his NHL employer. I happily obliged.

He is based in the U.S. He covers a major region of the country — its colleges and prominent high school programs. He is responsible for all of the teams and players in one of college hockey’s power conferences. And at times he is also tasked with scouting junior hockey and the occasional professional game.

Scouting Technology - photo from International Scouting Services Inc.

pucksandbooks: Most hockey fans have an impression that the life of an NHL scout has to be pretty much the closest thing to Heaven on Earth as far as careers go. I mean, what could be better than getting paid to watch terrific hockey! Jet planes, morning skates, and hotels with embroidered bathrobes. Firstly, how accurate are our general impressions of this career, and would you identify for OFB readers both your favorite and least favorite aspects of it?

NHLScout: I love when people talk about the glamour of this job. Let me make it clear from the start that I love my job. There is literally nothing I would rather be doing in the world. As you said, I get paid to watch hockey — what could be better? I’m sure people will skip this disclaimer and read what follows as me complaining, but that’s not my intention. I just want to strip the “glamour” idea from the job. Scouting is a grind. The glamour is for athletes, GMs, and some coaches. The scouts are the faceless drones who do the grunt work without the public recognition.

I’m one of the younger scouts, and single. On a “home” week for me, I’ll spend Tuesday through Sunday driving to games, watching games, and sitting at home filing game reports. I frequently drive 5 hours to see a game, then drive 5 back (through snow, rain, ice, whatever else) when the game ends. That means I’ll leave my house around noon on Friday, and get home around 3 a.m. Saturday. I haven’t had a Friday or Saturday night off since the last weekend in August. When I’m on the road, it’s long drives, small towns, and hotel rooms. Ever been to Medicine Hat, Alberta? Or Sioux City, Iowa? Or some random town I can’t spell in Latvia? NHL scouts have.

And this isn’t NHL hockey we get to watch every night. I’ve seen high school games where one player is a borderline 7th round pick, and the rest of the kids can’t even skate. It’s painful to watch and hard to focus — you end up trying to find attractive women in the crowd, or staring at the clock as the minutes count down. Scouting is a time consuming, exhausting job, especially for wives and children. I’m incredibly lucky to not be married at this point — I don’t know how the wives are able to do it. Their husbands are gone for weeks at a time, work strange hours, and have very little time off. Honestly, the toughest people in hockey are the wives and children. It’s amazing what they have to deal with.

My favorite part of the job is hard to choose. I love the community. Scouts are a tight-knit group of men who do their best to look out for each other. Older scouts helping rookies with things like hotels, directions, back doors to rinks, etc. Rookies driving the older guys while they catch up on some rest. Going and talking to the athletes and coaches and finding out information. Hearing the stories of guys who have scouted for 50 years (”I remember seeing Bobby Orr back in juniors. One game . . . “) never ceases to entertain me. I love the first moment of every day when I walk into a rink, and feel the cold, and smell the sweat, and just feel at home. I love those infrequent games where you see something special — a player you just know will be a star, or a goal you’ve never seen before, or a great fight. I love that my job changes every day.

My least favorite part of the job is just the travel and lack of free time, which gets old pretty fast. For every trip to a great city like New York or Boston or Madison, Wis., there’s the trip to Sioux Falls, South Dakota, or some small town in Western Canada, or a place in Russia where no one else speaks English. I don’t really have time for a social life because I’m working every night. I also wouldn’t mind if women were more impressed by the job title. When I get a rare night off and go out to a bar, I usually end up surrounded by male hockey fans who are asking me questions, while the girls of the group walk off to find a doctor or a cop. Continue reading ›

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10 Questions for Ross Bernstein, Hockey Author and Fighting Expert

By pucksandbooks
Tuesday, February 20, 2007

The Code - by Ross BernsteinHere’s hockey plasma for you: as a freshman at the University of Minnesota in the late 1980s, Ross Bernstein attempted to walk on to the Golden Gopher hockey team, and failing, channeled his puck passion into serving as the team mascot, Goldy the Gopher. The experience formed the basis of his 1992 book Gopher Hockey by the Hockey Gopher. Later he would author a keepsake not just for Minnesota hockey fans but really for all American hockey lovers: the exhaustive and richly illustrated Frozen Memories: Celebrating a Century of Minnesota Hockey. If you possess a scintilla of curiosity about how Minnesota became the State of Hockey, it belongs on your coffee table. The scope of research conducted in Frozen Memories is astounding, and that’s become a staple of Bernstein’s sportswriting career.

His latest effort is the culmination of two years of interviews with more than 100 NHL enforcers, active and retired, coaches, and managers, on and off the record, titled The Code: The Unwritten Rules of Fighting and Retaliation in the NHL. It’s an unprecedented insider’s chronicle of the history of fighting in hockey, with Bernstein gaining access to insights into the super-shrouded, most often unspoken world of hockey’s honor and intimidation system.

When we chatted last week Bernstein informed me that he was working on an update of Frozen Memories, to be completed perhaps by year’s end, as so much has happened in Minnesota hockey since its publication. I mentioned my interest in the U.S. Pond Hockey Championships and the novelty of schoolboy games being contested outdoors on ponds and lakes in the land of 10,000 lakes, and Bernstein confirmed that those events were among the targets of his updated book. But after that, we got to talking about brawling — big time, bare-knuckled brawling — and an hour went by before I’d asked him half of the questions I wanted to. Passionate puckheads are a warm meal on a winter’s night delight to talk to; passionate puckhead authors, I learned, are tiramisu.

pucksandbooks: Hockey’s rules, styles and strategems, even its source cultures have evolved so dramatically over the past 25 years. How do you explain fighting’s enduring role at both the minor and big-league levels of the sport?

Ross Bernstein: In doing the book, I tracked the history — 150 years — of violence in hockey. Violence has been a part of hockey since day one; it’s always just been part of the culture. Actually, it was way worse once upon a time. You had stick fighting. Toe Blake. In the last 25 years it’s evolved a lot, and I point to the Broad Street Bullies as the turning point. 1987 was the last year we had a bench-clearing brawl in the NHL — the penalty became too steep. My book chronicles this evolution. Fighting’s down 37 percent post-lockout. You notice Tie Domi retiring as quietly as he did. The goons are gone. Guys today gotta be able to skate, to take a shift. Having said that, hockey remains a game of fear and intimidation. You have to carry your head on a swivel. It’s not like football where guys are wearing a mask — it’s a totally different game. Fighting has always been a part of it.

Expansion also played a key part in perpetuating fighting’s legacy. Fighting was made more prevalent to sell the game. I’m talking about regions where the kids don’t play the game; fighting became a selling point there. What if NASCAR said, ‘We’re eliminating crashing?’ But the way I’d put it is, fighting isn’t as gratuitous in the new NHL.

pucksandbooks: My father and I have had a 25-year disagreement about fighting in hockey. He hates it, thinks it’s a nuissance that harms the sport’s overall appeal. He’d outlaw it yesterday if he were made commissioner tomorrow. I on the other hand see it as altogether organic or indigenous — an extension of the sport’s rugged checking, and a byproduct of the novelty that is racing a round a playing surface at upwards of 30 mph while wielding a weapon. Which one of us is right? Continue reading ›

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10 Questions for “Killer!” — Kevin Kaminski

By pucksandbooks
Friday, December 15, 2006

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

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

Be still my Old Time Hockey heart.

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

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

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

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

Continue reading ›

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10 Questions for the Dean of D.C. Hockey, Ron Weber

By pucksandbooks
Thursday, November 9, 2006

Part of what we want to do at OFB is remind people that there is a rich legacy to the Capitals’ organization and a sizable spirit for hockey in this region, and if you want to chronicle this you have to reach out to the people who laid the groundwork for it and ask them to share their stories. And today we begin our chronicle by sitting down with the Dean of D.C. Hockey, Ron Weber, a Washington Hall of Fame broadcast talent who for many veteran Caps’ fans was no less than their access point to pro hockey in D.C.

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OFB was granted a great privilege this past Monday evening when, an hour before the Caps-Senators’ game at Verizon Center, we were invited to sit down with Mr. Weber and address any and all questions about his remarkable radio career and his general thoughts on pucks in D.C.

Today Mr. Weber and his wife, Mary Jane, reside in Montgomery County, Maryland, and attend every Caps’ home game. In the course of this memorable visit it became clear to us that while Mr. Weber is removed from a career in hockey by nearly 10 years, his love affair with both the Caps and hockey is as vibrant as ever. It’s virtually certain that we won’t again see the likes of his run behind a microphone at any rink or home field for a Washington professional sports team. Continue reading ›

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