It’s swell that we’re all in love with this rockin’ garage band called hockey, but the band still has to be paid, and if Hooters-Lite (not Hustler) wants to underwrite the Friday night jam session, I think the beer will still taste cold. Count me as one who wants a hockey team’s practices, scrimmages, and camps to remain free and open to the public, year round.

Anyone remember the millions the NHL spent on its post-lockout relaunch television advertisements — you remember the ones, the “My NHL” spots featuring the hockey locker room beefcake, rather shirtless, massage-motivated by a Fox News anchor in the pre-game? I remember thinking the first time I watched it, ‘My, how shirtless this hockey player is, and my, how little I now want lunch.’ Now that was profane, and brought to you by Bettman & Co. I’m confident that Ted doesn’t have quite that in mind.

I’m not sure what revenue the Washington Redskins’ cheerleaders bring in to the team, but whenever they make community appearances you seldom hear of Puritanical protests accompanying them or of anyone having a real lousy time at them. In fact, once in a while, the tight end marries the babe. Maybe the SpiritBabe will marry the bachelor blogger.

The Capitals, and hockey in Washington, need increased exposure (if you’ll pardon my word choice). If the Caps’ SpiritBabes are going to be out and about town during and after seasons hence, perhaps toting along a few congenial players with them, it’s bound to improve the team’s visibility, as well as that of the sport.

And in our recessionary times, where is the acknowledgment of the idea’s job creation ???

There’s been all manner of hyperbole associated with this past weekend’s high-pitched hue and cry reaction. For instance, some have alleged that the aisle ladies in their shimmer and shake will distract from the play on the ice. On nights when the Caps lay an egg, I agree — and let’s hope so. On those nights especially I’ll be glad for Verizon Center’s new state-of-the-art, high-rise, high definition, center ice scoreboard. But really, if the Alexanders are barreling down the ice on a two-on-one scoring chance, how many men’s and women’s eyes will be fixated on tight fannies in the stands?

And what of the selectivity of outrage in this instance? When it’s Mites on Ice, all are quiet, despite the fact that with that exhibition the laughter is generated at the expense of really, really short people. But raise the specter of pretty girls prettying up the District’s rink, and all hell breaks loose.

The only genuine harm that can come from this scheme is if, to quote the wit of one of the few in this town with a sense of humor, who imparted it in the maelstrom of message board madness yesterday, “they come down to the Johnny Walker Club after the game and are attracted to out-of-shape middle-aged men.”

When Messrs. Vogel, Parker, Rucki and I were taking in the World Championships in Moscow in the spring of 2007, we had no shortage of aisle-jiggling accompanying our blogging endeavors (see photo above). I think I can speak for the four of us in saying that we got our work done just dandy. In point of fact, the real distraction in terms of Moscow hotties diverting our gaze came with the middle-of-the-night trollop parade through our hotel’s lobby (where we were blog drafting), aided and abetted by bellhops on the cash take.

Baltic beauties in boas and hip-high black boots. Naughty, naughty Nikitas! Sorry, that was the indulgence of reverie.

Anyway, over in Moscow, we learned that NHL scouts were in favor of off-ice girls.

!

Perhaps since Alexander Ovechkin has to spend the next 13 seasons skating here we should let him be the arbiter in the matter.

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Ain’t No Party Like a ‘Vechkin Party

By OrderedChaos (Mike Rucki)
Sunday, June 15, 2008

Ovechkin practices his mind-reading (Photo: Mike Rucki)
WASHINGTON, D.C.â€â€Alexander Ovechkin is a machine. On the ice and off he constantly gives his all, to the delight of Capitals fans and lovers of hockey everywhere.

Yet even Ovechkin looked a bit tired on Friday night at the party in his honor at chic D.C. restaurant Teatro Goldoni. Given his recent schedule, that’s no surprise. When asked what his favorite part of Thursday night was, he replied, “Finally going to sleep,” and seemed at least half-serious. Still, Ovechkin gamely posed for photos and gave a bevy of interviews  he even dedicated 5 minutes to an impromptu blogger roundtable consisting of me, Greg “Puck Daddy” Wyshynski, and Jon “JP” Press.

Wyshynski mentioned to Ovechkin that one of the 134 voters did not give him a Hart vote despite each voter picking their top 5 candidates, a revelation that seemed to surprise him as much as it surprised us earlier. After some consideration as to who the ‘hater’ might be, Ovechkin jokingly replied, “Um… maybe Tarik?” Tarik got just as good a laugh out of the joke when we relayed it to him later in the evening.

Washington Capitals owner Ted Leonsis summed up Ovechkin’s attitude perfectly as he addressed the festive crowd early in the evening: “On the way home I asked Alex what he thought about the awards. He said he’d trade them all for one Stanley Cup.”

The best “frozen moment” of the evening was seeing three decades’ worth of great Capitals together. Rod Langway, Peter Bondra, and Alex Ovechkin could arguably be considered the best Caps of the 80s, 90s, and 2000s respectively. Seeing Bondra and Langway celebrating Ovechkin’s quad-fecta of awards warmed my Capitals heart.

Rod Langway, Alex Ovechkin, and Peter Bondra (photo: Mike Rucki)

Phil Pritchard was there as well, the Hockey Hall of Fame Resource Centre Vice President and Curator  better known to hockey fans as the white-gloved caretaker of Lord Stanley’s Cup. Engaging and friendly to all, Pritchard too looked a bit haggard as he watched over the four awards. Yet his passion for hockey’s precious metal was always clear.

These trophies, unlike the Stanley Cup, don’t travel with the winners for the most part. Rather than Ovechkin escorting them to Moscow, for instance, Pritchard had an 8-hour post-party drive to bring the hardware back to the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto. The trophies will return to the D.C. area for opening night of the 2008-09 season and likely for a visit to the Capitals’ training facility at Kettler some time during training camp.

I remembered to bring my Ross replica trophy for a photo op with the real thing — these detailed replicas were sold at Canadian McDonald’s locations in 2003; I picked up the Ross in Halifax. Six of the trophies had replicas that year and, according to Pritchard, the plan to make replicas of the remaining trophies the following season was derailed by the lockout.

I shall call it... Mini-Ross

I also have a Stanley Cup replica ready to pose for a similar photo in DC with the real Cup… hopefully soon.

Continue reading ›

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10/5/07: Embracing Insomnia

By pucksandbooks
Friday, October 5, 2007

Cup'pa JoeI awoke at 4:30 this morning, two hours earlier than my alarm. I’m awake at the same time as Elliot Segal, and like Elliot today, my head is crammed full of thoughts about a new hockey season in Washington.

I’m thinking about the visitors’ locker at Philips Arena just now, how in darkness just like my bedroom’s those snazzy looking new Caps’ threads — admittedly poorly engineered, and likely to be the death of about 70 NHLers this season — were already hanging in place, set out by the dutiful Capitals’ equipment staff. I thought about how different the Washington players might feel as they first entered the room early this evening and seized upon the new uniform systems. I do think it likely they’ll feel more attachment to them tonight than they did while wearing them during the exhibition season (if for no other reason than a fair number of players had the fight ’til Sunday night to win them). In no small way they’re emblematic of a changed hockey culture in Washington this season.

I’m thinking about those 22 points the boys more or less need to make up to vie for the eighth spot in the East this season. It’s a tall peak to surmount, but I think it likely. For one thing, I don’t see those points in terms of 11 additional regulation-time victories. Last season the Caps authored what will stand the passage of time as the worst set of shootout performances in hockey. In hockey history. If they’d altered nothing about their shootout lineup this summer they couldn’t have gone one-for-eleven again. (Could they?) But GMGM brought in two of the league’s best shootout marksmen (Nylander and Kozlov). It isn’t irrational to imagine the team meeting something like .500 in shootouts this season, and if they do, that 22-point challenge has been reduced to about 17. I’m almost looking forward to shootouts this season. Almost.

It’s very quiet in suburban Maryland at 4:50 in the morning, but it won’t be inside Verizon Center during hockey games this season, thanks to a $25 million investment hanging high at center ice and encircling the lower rings of the seating tier. We’ll be exposed to an atmosphere, I wager, the likes of which we in D.C. never have before, and how fitting that it debuts alongside a buzz-generating hockey team. You’ll agree with me, I think, that Ivan Majesky in enlarged hi-def is still Ivan the Terrible. This morning in my dark quiet I’m thinking about a winter Friday or Saturday night with a marquee visitor in town, the Caps on a three- or four-game win-streak, the house full or close to it, the Alexes scoring on binges, and all that noise.

Still before 7:00 and still dark, I learn I’m not alone in my puck thoughts: I receive an instant message from the Caps’ Spike Parker. He’s working already and I’m blogging: it’s just like we’re back in Moscow together again, except the women in my neighborhood don’t look quite as fit and alluring. We wish each other a Happy Opening Day.

I’m thinking about the novelty all of the media on the Caps I’ve consumed this week. We may look back on this week as perhaps the most significant for media for this team in its history, when a perfect storm of blogging, new and renewed print and broadcast zeal, and some re-engineering by old media combined to deliver a feast for hockey fans in this region. Somebody tell Tony and Mike.

I’m thinking about the bloggers’ season kickoff soirée scheduled for this evening downtown at the Grand Hyatt, and how eager I am to reconnect with so many friends I made last season and didn’t get to see over the summer. (Vogs, I’ll have one for you.)

Hockey’s here again, in my hometown. Even in the dark, I can look out and see the correct alignment of the planets.

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SkyBlog: A Few Words About a Thousand Pictures

By pucksandbooks
Monday, May 14, 2007

Somewhere over Europe, at 30,000 feet â€â€Ã‚ As a traveler, I’m not much of a picture-taker. Instead, the images I form of a foreign culture and its distinguishing traits I collect from hours of interactions with its people. I seek out the animate as opposed to their monuments. Now that I think about it, a nation’s people are its monuments. Ideally, these encounters spawn new and exciting and altogether unexpected friendships. Such was my great fortune in Moscow and Mytischi this spring.

Ironically for me, though, a fair portion of our Worlds coverage has come to be characterized by the quality and volume of images we captured. And as late as day two or three of our excursion we had no notin that this would happen. When we devised a workplan for Caps’ management last month we imagined the trip’s two powers of generous prose, Vogel and yours truly, making laptop keyboards hum while Parker and Rucki tended to things techy. This we did, but in a pocket-sized Sony digital camera with video capability Rucks had an impression-collecting tool whose utility and quality I don’t think even he appreciated back on May 3.

Instantly, we had roving camera eyes collecting and distributing impressions of this year’s World Championships, with Rucki pointing his jewel tool at the ice sheets even from Khodinka’s upper deck. This bit of technology was something we hadn’t exploited before even at OnFrozenBlog. Meanwhile, Vogel and Parker had their remarkable Capitals’ web content schematics down to a perfectly practiced art form. But Rucki’s vantage exponentially expanded our coverage team’s focus. Daily we generated photo galleries, publishing at least one every day. With these stills and small video snapshots we were able to bring the life of Moscow cafes, its personalities, and of course the action on the ice alive, for a travelblog and, eventually, a stand-alone e-exhibit. Sometimes we found delight in the sculpted cream-top creations of our middle-of-the-night cappuccinos and published our mirth moments later.

By tournament’s end Rucki was practiced enough in this rewarding artwork to orchestrate a post- bronze medal game picture of combatants-turned-teammates Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom. It was a portrait that was picked up literally globally, by print and electronic media from Stockholm to Silver Spring. Continue reading ›

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OFB on The Capitals Report

By Gustafsson
Friday, May 11, 2007

The Capitals Report was broadcast live from Moscow today (11 May, 2007). Mike Vogel and Spike Parker were joined by OrderedChaos and pucksandbooks as they all continued their coverage of the World Championship. If you missed the broadcast, you can find the podcast version here.

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OFB / Washington Caps Photo Gallery

By The OFB Team
Monday, May 7, 2007

The boys have started a photo gallery during their time in Russia.

IIHF Foriegn Correspondants
Spike Parker (l), pucksandbooks, Mike Vogel, OrderedChaos (r)
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Diary of a Dream Roadtrip: OFB as Foreign Correspondents (Part II)

By pucksandbooks
Friday, May 4, 2007

(continued from Thursday, 3 May, 2007)

Travel Journal

April 7: At the Blogger’s End of Season Soiree at Clyde’s all four of us meet James Mirtle of the Toronto Globe and Mail. Before we can finish shaking hands with him he asks us about “this Moscow gig . . . is this really happening?” We’re stunned, as collectively we’ve mentioned it only to family and close friends. Then James goes on to explain his meeting with Mr. Leonsis at the Sabres’ game that afternoon. We put two and two together. And we promise to keep James apprised of the developments. Mirtle, who has his own exemplary blog, sure seems interested in writing about our trip.

April 10: This fantasy trip carries one principal administrative headache for me: I’m without a passport, and I have less than 30 days ’til travel. My real job involves a good bit of interaction with Capitol Hill staffers, and recognizing the novelty of my circumstances, and vaguely aware of “pull” that can come from people in privileged places, I share my challenge with a lawyer chum in a United States Senate office. We’ll call her Lucky Charm.

Expedited passports, she informs me, are back to being processed in about two weeks, so she wants me to initiate my request through the normal procedures. A couple of days later, I’ll present myself at a Maryland passport office and cough up a lot of dough to expedite. I’m told there that I can follow the progress of my application on line at the State Department’s web site. Still, I’m terribly nervous about placing my faith in the federal government within this constricted timeframe. Lucky Charm is excited for me, and I like having her in the know in case things with State get bogged down. She asks me to keep her informed of the progress.

April 12: The OFB comrades get out of our respective offices early and travel to the Caps’ Ballston offices for a 4:00 meeting with Kurt Kehl, Mike Vogel, and Spike Parker. The first formal Moscow Meeting. The meeting agenda is basic and general  storyboard the coverage in Moscow, and present to Mr. Leonsis a workplan, which Vogel will construct, for the owner to approve. After all, he’s making an enormous investment with this gig, so he has a right to understand and approve the products we’ll be delivering.

The meeting in Kurt’s office is informal and cordial and chock full of nerves-calming cheerful banter. OrderedChaos and Spike are the room’s twin techies, conversing much of the time in computer geek-speak about the World Championship Tournament page the Caps will devise. Vogel, seated next to me, directs a few “They’re speaking Russian to me” raised-eyebrow glances my way. The geeks lose me after the words “World Championship.”

We discuss travel and lodging, and Kurt reminds us that one of the team’s Russian scouts, “Gleb,” will be with us virtually all along, guiding us through the foreign currency and culture. Vogel chimes in about specific pieces we’ll be constructing, first and foremost a tournament preview. I offer the view that any workplan for Mr. Leonsis should acknowledge that perhaps as much as a quarter of our ultimate product will arrive from unplanned and unforeseeable comings and goings and encounters in Moscow. It’s good to have a guiding script of course, but we do ourselves  and especially our readers  a disservice, I suggest, if we fail to embrace the novelty of this gig and “allow stories to write themselves.”

The meeting, which lasted nearly two hours (altogether pleasant and too fast), adjourns, and before OrderedChaos and I can convene our own strategy session at Bailey’s across the street (the “meeting” being euphemism for “this is really happening and we’re drinking tall drafts to celebrate it”), I ask Vogel to lead my bloggermate on a tour of the new offices as he did for me the previous Friday. Continue reading ›

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Diary of a Dream Roadtrip: OFB as Foreign Correspondents (Part I)

By pucksandbooks
Thursday, May 3, 2007

Travel JournalThe seldom-designated OFB Code 5 is defined by a call to cease all work and routine, immediately, and respond to unfathomable news of an exhilarating nature by embarking upon a beer-damaging of our respective livers. I say seldom, because prior to April 5 we’d yet to sound its siren.

During the early evening commuting hours of April 2 I was a pedestrian isolated in the headphones of an MP3-player, with plans no more exotic than taking in that evening’s Versus NHL broadcast with a bottled beer or two. In my sonic solitude I missed a call to my cell phone from bloggermate OrderedChaos. This was at about 5:45.

Near 6:00, I learned that OFB colleague Gustafsson had rung me as well. I remember thinking: Do I really need multiple reminders of the Versus broadcast from these knuckleheads? Nearing my home 10 or so minutes later, this time I caught the flashing signal of my cell’s incoming call indicator.

It was Gus again, but I picked up too late to connect with him. Next I learned that both earlier OFB calls left voicemail messages marked “Urgent.” And just now I’d had a third call from the blog. Something was seriously up, but with the trade deadline come and long gone, was a Hershey Bears’ reassignment really an occasion for a Monday evening assault on a cell phone?

Then I retrieved my voicemail. Here’s how “up” the something was:

Gus: “Umm, you need to halt whatever the *#*@ it is you’re doing and call me back, pronto. Umm . . . we have a Code 12 on our hands.”

OFB doesn’t have a Code 6, let alone a 12.

6:25 p.m., April 2: OrderedChaos, I learned from Gus, was satiating himself at a Seder. But he was doing so with serious indigestion. Around 5:30 this evening he received email from Ted Leonsis, in which the Capitals’ owner inquired, in his characteristically cryptically terse e-fashion, if OFB had any interest in taking a couple of weeks of vacation from work, rather soon, and . . . flying to Russia . . . to cover the IIHF World Championships as correspondents for the Caps’ web site and OFB.

As in, bloggers unleashed on a mighty big stage.

As I understood the overture at this early, head-spinning, it-must-be-a-dream hour, we were being asked to take a two-week hockey vacation to go cover the Caps competing in the Worlds, with the owner footing the bill. Presumably, we’d be fully credentialed by the IIHF. There’d be Russian women. Next thought: I’ve got to call my father.

Code 12 indeed.

April 3, 7:25 a.m.: My retired father is always up early to retrieve two newspapers from his Maryland Eastern Shore grocery. But late last week he left for Colorado and some late-season skiing at Steamboat. I failed to reach him last night, and this is my second try; I’m anxious to share with him the Monday evening earthquake. After more prolonged ringing, I again receive only an unpersonalized voicemail beep. Weird.

I don’t leave a message. I need to relate this magical mayhem to him when we’re connected.

5:15 p.m.: In the press lounge of Verizon Center before the Panthers’ game, I pass along some bottled Maine microbrew to Mike Vogel culled from my March roadtrip with the Hershey Bears. “Mike!” I call out to him, trying to be discrete, then grabbing him by the arm, quieting to a whisper, “Ted really blindsided us with this Russia trip idea.”

He looks nonplused.

“I just learned about it yesterday,” he tells me.

“So let’s go to Russia,” he adds, nonchalantly. Continue reading ›

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Washington Capitals Press Release: OFB to Russia

By The OFB Team
Thursday, May 3, 2007

Washington Capitals Plan Unprecedented Coverage of IIHF World Championship
Four reporters in Moscow to provide content for WashingtonCaps.com and other outlets

ARLINGTON, Va. – The Washington Capitals will send four reporters to Moscow to offer hockey fans unprecedented coverage of the International Ice Hockey Federation World Championship. The Capitals have partnered with Clearspring Technologies to deliver audio, video and written content to WashingtonCaps.com, Caps fans and local, national and international media outlets.

Providing coverage from Moscow from May 4-13 will be the Capitals’ Mike Vogel and Sean Parker, along with John Keeley and Mike Rucki of On Frozen Blog (onfrozenblog.com). Vogel and Parker produce the majority of the editorial content on WashingtonCaps.com, named the NHL’s best team website last year by Forbes.com, while Vogel also writes the blog Dump ’n Chase (dumpnchase.blogspot.com). Keeley and Rucki are part of a four-person group that launched On Frozen Blog in October 2006 as “a haven for the hockey malnourished.�

Washington Capitals IIHF World Championship Press Release
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Honey, I Can Leave the Office, But I Don’t Want To

By pucksandbooks
Thursday, April 12, 2007

cupajoe.jpegIn many American office settings the comings and goings and feats and follies of the contemporary sports world serve as common cafeteria and water cooler banter. So I was curious, while in the Capitals’ offices at Ballston Wednesday with my colleague OrderedChaos during normal business hours, would there be some manner of inverse office discourse among staff? Which is to say, would Caps’ staffers perhaps idly chit-chat about, say, legendary real estate agents or stock brokers? Turns out, these staffers are united by a passion for their product, and on this the first day of the NHL postseason, in a corner of the corporate suite filled by communications staffers, the chat was all about round one matchups. Hockey talk by hockey pros interrupted by hockey chores. How Heavenly.

It just now dawns on me that I left Ballston yesterday without inquiring about summer internships for non-intern-aged hockey bloggers.

OrderedChaos and I were guests for a late afternoon tour of the new digs. Mike Vogel and Sean Parker had hoped to get us over early in the afternoon in time for us to make a guest appearance on the CapsReport, a fantastically flattering offer. But in our breathless excitement seconds after their e-vite none of the four of us could carry off the required shifting of our regular work tasks to make it happen. Another time, hopefully. I think at some point this summer our quartet is going to have to host a backyard barbeque for our bosses and respectfully guide them to a reorienting of their priorities for us. Security clearance labor within our nation’s defense infrastructure is undeniably important, but on the 8th floor of Ballston, Change Is Coming this summer, and it needs to be faithfully chronicled.

Is it guilty pleasure to pass Capitals’ staffer work cubicles and management offices and delight in seeing desks adorned with photos of staffer children playing hockey? I say guilty because I have a somewhat unorthodox view about what is appropriate recreating for children. I should first acknowledge that I take seriously the volume of data increasingly confirming increasing obesity rates and computer game addictions among the nation’s youth. And if they so happen to choose soccer or basketball in pursuit of good health, instead of our sport, really we ought to suppress the urge to raise discussions of orphanages and foster care. Initially. Usually I find the onset of unrecoverable withering in my committed relationships attendant to talk of children, and specifically my insistence that at 12 they be dispatched to billet families in Manitoba, and that loving aunts and uncles take up charge of raising the soccer-preferring of my progeny. Can I be blamed if my progressive thinking is a moderately difficult match? Some men dream at night of hot tubbing with triplets; I fantasize about the children of Washington Post editors clamoring for expensive hockey gear from their parents every autumn, and signing up for travel hockey. I call it Leonsis’ Revenge.

But to get back to this landmark work complex. It’s two levels, with ice level housing the team’s plush and posh penthouse-feeling locker room; a cavernous therapy area, adjacent to which are sets of state-of-the art aquatic and steam immersion chambers; a Redskins’-sized weight and training room; coaches’ and training staff offices; and a mini-theater seating perhaps 30, within which the players will obviously view opponent film. I joked with Sean and Mike that one Friday night we might be able to sneak in for a digitized screening of ‘Slapshot’ with popcorn.

My favorite part of this level is a glass partition separating an entrance hall from the team lounge, and within this wall the team has managed to arrange facsimiles of Caps’ playing cards from seemingly every season, replicas so true to the originals in appearance that even the closest scrutiny will fool veteran collectors, I wager. The original cards were donated to the team by a long-time season ticket holder. In one room I was staggered to encounter a brand new, never before used skate sharpening machine, which featured a marble table. A really top-of-the-line sharpening unit can fetch over $15 k, but I’d never seen one with a marble top. Near the tour’s end I asked Vogel if there was any rival to this architecture anywhere in the league. “Just LA,” he told me.

Immediately above this athletic oasis resides the organization’s sales, communications, and management staff offices. These folks are distinctly young and bright-eyed and busy. Many of them can be found working very late. I’m sure that’s because of their commitment and their passion, and of course the significant challenges the team today faces. But I also think that for more than a few their labor environs invite an association not unlike that of the visiting outsider’s: a home, of the heart, away from home.

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A Visit to the Capitals’ Time Machine

By pucksandbooks
Saturday, April 7, 2007

NewspapersI traveled back in time Friday night at Kettler Capitals Iceplex, but not because of the alumni nostalgia displayed on the ice. What was mature on the ice sheet contrasted sharply with the new-car smell of the Caps’ new offices I toured, and into which staff has transitioned in just the past three weeks. I got a look at all that was trendy modern and sleek and stylish and state of the art snazzy within, but it was at the very end of my impromptu tour, when I was led into a nondescript storage space preserving the team’s newsprint history, that I found Kettler Capitals’ most impressive asset: the dramatic records of an era when the team and this community’s media were bonded in mutual respect.

Remember those heavy-papered scrapbooks into which many of us sports’ fans cut and pasted newspaper accounts of our team’s most cherished victories? The Caps have tall stacks and long shelves of them too, but these are the giant historical editions, of a length to accommodate easily a full newspaper page plus, and their contents  dating back to the team’s very first personnel manuevers prelude to their inaugural season  are a treasure trove for a Ph.D in Puck. Mike Vogel and Sean Parker led me through a sampling of them Friday night. I wanted to remain buried in them until Monday morning.

Perusing these print files from the 1970s and well into the ’80s, I first noticed the space allotted for photojournalism. Game stories back then ran not only sizable pics of Caps in action but multiple ones before the jump. Hockey photos  yes, hockey ones  routinely ran right next to one another on the sports page fronts . . . because, I presume, sports editors then saw hockey action as compelling imagery. Today we don’t have photojournalism so much as accompanying text imagery  sports art as afterthought. It’s a profound distinction, and you see it dramatically rendered in these grand scrapbooks.

The absence of helmets in almost all of these early Caps’ print pics played a significant role in their general appeal, I told Vogel, and he agreed. Hair was worn rather long and rather thick in Travolta’s time, and flaired out in a teammate’s goal-scoring embrace or while in full stride up the ice, the effect is unlike anything we can see today. (Except I guess in the X Games.) It is marvelous.

I next noticed the breadth of print outlets publishing Caps’ coverage in these pages. Certainly I would have expected Washington Star star treament of the early Caps, but dailies back then served in some instances merely tens of thousands in northern Virginia and Montgomery County, and all of them had hockey beat reporters! Sean and Mike identified Gazettes and Ledgers for me I’d never knew existed, and I’m a native Washingtonian. Of course there was far less sporting option for the press and fans to follow 30 years ago, but I’m not quite sure that explains the consistency of hockey coverage from paper to paper in olden-days D.C. My hunch is that for editors then sports was less global, less cosmopolitan, and that there existed an understood if unspoken agreement between publisher and reader that Washington had its sports teams and that we were behind all of them. It sure seemed laid out that way.

Vogel and I share a writer’s regard for the grand career of the late great Bob Fachet of the Washington Post, and so necessarily our stroll down Memory Lane Friday night reunited us with Bob’s amazing passion and professionalism. The salad days of hockey media in D.C. were mornings with Fachet prose and evenings with Ron Weber’s radio calls. This is just an idle thought: perhaps Vogel should lead the selection of an individual peice of hockey writing from among new and old media every year and honor it with an award named for Fachet.

Anyway, at one point in our page turning Friday night I seized upon a Fachet story of moderate size that ran on the Post’s sports front and included the box score at its conclusion. The account was of a September Caps’ exhibition game.

Walking out of the team’s offices late last night, I had immediately before me contemporary evidence of the team’s terrific bonding with Northern Virginia skating families inside Kettler Capitals as well as a renewed appreciation, from the team’s archives, of a close embrace of hockey by our community in the not-too-distant past. I thought next about the significant bond daily championed and nurtured by Mr. Leonsis with the team’s bloggers.

It’s an almost perfect picture.

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