Friday, January 18, 2013

What hockey is. What hockey isn`t.

Hockey is watching a kid take his first strides on the ice.
Hockey is being the first one out on a freshly flooded rink.
Hockey is the sound of a slapshot ringing off the post.
Hockey is the wind in your face.

Hockey is catching up with old friends at the rink during the holidays.
Hockey is that first swig of beer after an old-timers game.
Hockey is the retired lady selling 50-50 tickets.
Hockey is the coach helping a kid tie his skates.

Hockey is hotdogs and hot chocolate.
Hockey is slapping the goalie`s pads.
Hockey is the first team jacket.
Hockey is volunteers.

Hockey is an early morning car ride with your Dad.
Hockey is the pride in the cut or the lost tooth, ``It happened playing hockey``.
Hockey is rosy cheeks and snotty noses.
Hockey is looking for a lost puck in the snow.

Hockey is knowing the difference between a jersey and a sweater.
Hockey is about the team.
Hockey is the link between generations.
Hockey is recounting a goal or a save.

Hockey is road trips and tournaments.
Hockey is lessons learned.
Hockey is sore muscles and aching bones.
Hockey is us.

Hockey isn`t billionaires and millionaires.
Hockey isn`t salary caps and mediation.
Hockey isn`t lawyers and accountants.
Hockey isn`t just the NHL.

Hockey isn`t back. Hockey never went away.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Stanley Cup Playoffs 2nd Round Preview.

Well the first round came with its usual share of upsets and unexpected results. For my part, I did about as well as I could hope, picking 50 percent of the series winners, a result with which I can live.

So here we go with the second round choices....

Eastern Conference

New York Rangers vs. Washington Capitals
The Call: Rangers in 6

Don't let the fact that the Rangers were brought to 7 games versus the Ottawa Senators in the 1st round fool you, New York is still one of the strongest teams in the East. The first round was simply a case of a seemingly weaker team matching up very well against a team who finished higher in the standings. The Ottawa Senators had been a thorn in the side of the Rangers all season long, and almost pulled off the upset. Almost.

The Washington Capitals come into this series having knocked off last year's Stanley Cup champions, which of course is no small task. They did it mostly based on the very strong goaltending of relative unknown Braden Holtby, the maturation of Alexander Ovechkin, and the leadership provided by head coach Dale Hunter. "Play hard, whistle to whistle" was the mantra for the Caps against the Bruins in the opening round, which turned out to be a very smart approach as they refused to get into a war against Boston, a war that they inevitably would have lost.

With the Ottawa Senators behind them, the Rangers will be heading into the second round with renewed confidence, a result of beating a team which no doubt had many of them worried from the outset. Holtby's heroic's aside, the Rangers match up favourably against the Capitals in nets. Henrik Lundqvist's 3rd period performance in game 7 will go a long way in boosting his confidence going into the second round.

The goal in New York is to win the Stanley Cup. The goal in Washington, at least from the outside looking in, was don't get embarrassed in the first round. The Rangers have yet to reach their goal, the Caps have.

The only way the Caps win this series is if Braden Holtby turns in a goaltending performance for the ages. 
 
Philadelphia Flyers vs. New Jersey Devils
The Call: Flyers in 5 

 The Philadelphia Flyers started the playoffs with an impressive win over their arch-rival Pittsburgh Penguins in a series that saw them dominate their cross-state nemesis on every level. Laviolette outcoached Bylsma, Bryzgalov outplayed Fleury, Giroux outplayed Crosby, and they won the physical battles. 

On the other hand, the Devils were taken to the absolute limit by the Florida Panthers, winning game 7 in the second overtime period. While their win was laudable, the Flyers are not the Panthers, and this series should mark the end of the road for the Devils' season.

The Flyers have better scoring, more depth, and are riding sky-high confidence into this round. Could be a very short series.



Western Conference

Nashville Predators vs. Phoenix Coyotes
The Call: Predators in 5

 The big question facing the Nashville Predators as they headed into this years playoffs was, "Yes, they have one of the best teams in the NHL, but can they knock off the Detroit Red Wings, their longtime Achilles' Heel?" The Preds answered that question with an impressive 5 game domination of what looked like an aging Detroit squad.

With the first round hurdle cleanly jumped, look for the Predators to continue on their roll against the Phoenix Coyotes, a team against which they match up very well on every level.

The Coyotes, for their part, are in the second round based on the performance of the NHL's first round MVP, goaltender Mike Smith, whom Don Cherry recently called "the best goalie on the planet right now."

Smith notwithstanding, the Predators are simply too much for the Coyotes to handle. Better goaltending, better defence, better scoring, and better coaching than the Chicago Blackhawks who took them to 6 games.

A Nashville sweep wouldn't be a shocker.




St-Louis Blues vs. Los Angeles Kings
The Call: Blues in 6 

It seems like ages since these two teams last played. The Blues and Kings each won their first rounds in short order, the Blues sending the San Jose Sharks packing in 5 games, while the Kings knocked off last year's Stanley Cup finalist Vancouver Canucks, also in 5 games.

The Blues have been pretty much the best team in the NHL from the moment that Ken Hitchcock was brought in as their coach in early November. They are playing strong hockey throughout their lineup and their goaltending has been solid. They are not a flashy club, but they play a smart, defensively sound game, a style that is tailor-made for the playoffs.

The Los Angeles Kings are also a team that is collecting the dividends of an in-season coaching change. They were an underachieving group until Duane Sutter was brought in late into the season. The addition of Jeff Carter, whom they acquired from Columbus, has also had a positive effect on the team, most notably on former Flyers' teammate Mike Richards.

Of the four series picks, this is the one in which I have the least confidence, as it may just boil down to who has the hottest goaltender.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

2012 Stanley Cup Playoffs - First Round Preview

"Predictions are for gypsies." - Toe Blake




The 2011-12 NHL regular season is finally over. For Canadian fans, unless you happen to live in Ottawa or Vancouver, it will largely be one to forget as 5 of the 7 teams based in the home of hockey find themselves on the outside looking in this post-season.


Regardless of how you feel about this "Year of the Concussion", here we go with my picks for the first round of this year's race for the Stanley Cup.


Eastern Conference

New York Rangers - Ottawa Senators
The Call: Rangers in 6.

On paper, as they say, this should be a cakewalk for the Rangers. They possess one of the NHL's best defences whereas the Senators have the fourth worst goals against average in the league. But, last we checked hockey isn't played on paper, but on the ice. 

The Senators saw Jason Spezza finally develop into the player that most observers have always believed he could be this season. Milan Michalek had a breakout offensive season, Erik Karlsson was far and away the best offensive defenseman in the league, and rookie head coach Paul McLean was able to get this club to believe in their chances pretty much from day one. But it won't be enough...

In Henrik Lundqvist, the Rangers have Vezina Trophy caliber goaltending. And, contrary to last year, Lundqvist is heading into this post-season well rested, thanks to the solid play of backup goalie Martin Biron. The Rangers' blueline corps is also top-notch with the first pair of Ryan McDonagh and Dan Girardi ably supported by Michael Del Zotto and Marc Staal.

With Brad Richards, Marian Gaborik, and Ryan Callahan leading the way up front, the Rangers should ultimately take this series. But they will have their hands full.



Boston Bruins - Washington Capitals
The Call: Bruins in 5

It has been an up and down (mostly down) season for the Washington Capitals. The Caps, a chronically underachieving bunch, finally got their head coach, Bruce Boudreau fired early into the season. The expected bounce that the arrival of new head coach and former Washington Capitals legend Dale Hunter was expected to provide never really happened, yet they managed to stumble into a playoff position with a late season push.

The Bruins have also had their share of hot and cold moments this season, with many observers attributing their streaky play to a Stanley Cup hangover following last year's inspirational win. The jury is still out on the possibility of the Bruins going deep into the post-season this year, but they should cruise through the Caps on guts alone.


Florida Panthers - New Jersey Devils
The Call: Devils in 6.


Hard to get really excited about this one. 


Long and short of it is that the Devils have been here before, and they have Martin Brodeur. Sure the Panthers are a good-news story this year. Impressive turnaround with GM Dale Tallon and head coach Kevin Dineen at the helm. 


Whatever happens, neither of these teams is what can be considered a front-runner for the Cup.
 



Pittsburgh Penguins - Philadelphia Flyers
The Call: Pittsburgh in 6.
This series has been designated by yours truly as the series to watch in the Eastern Conference. 

We've repeated ad infinitum that "the Flyers just need goaltending" and in the off-season Mr. Snider and the boys decided to throw as much cash as they could at their legendary goaltending woes and went all-in with Ilya Bryzgalov. Those who have followed Bryzgalov since his beginnings in the NHL with the Ducks kind of suspected that the Russian goalie was a little different. One season with the Flyers proved that Bryzgalov is indeed "wired a little different"  as they say down home. He' s a little strange, but when he' s focused on stopping pucks, he' s one of the best in the business.

So, we've established that the Flyers seem to have pretty good goaltending. Which is a good thing for them because it turns out that they are going to really need it.


The Pittsburgh Penguins will be coming at the Philadelphia Flyers with as healthy of a Malkin-Crosby duo the NHL has had in quite a while. Recap...


Malkin just officially wrapped up the NHL scoring title. Gino got himself 109 points and notched up 50 goals in what was a Hart Trophy caliber season. A brilliant season by any standards.


Crosby came back, scored a bunch of points in a short period, went out again, came back again, and has been scoring points by the bucketload and pissing of opponents since. 37 points in 22 games.


Pro-rate that production and you get yourself a 138 point season. Yeah, that' s right 138 point season. It's been 25 years since somebody has scored 138 point in a season. Them's Mario Lemieux numbers.


Which brings us back to this Flyers-Pens series and the reason for the call in favour of Pittsburgh.


Sidney Crosby will focus on playing hockey and avoiding post whistle activity in this round. Like all of the men who come to dominate the game of hockey, Crosby is an intelligent man. He is also a highly emotional man.


Hockey is an emotional and intelligent game, therefore achieving a balance that yin and yang is a skill as essential as being able to skate, shoot, and pass. Sidney Crosby is very well aware that he needs to control himself. It's his Achilles' Heel. But like all great athletes, he knows that he has to work at his weaknesses as well as his strengths.


They said Orr couldn' t be a good defensive defenceman with his run and gun style. He proved them all wrong by not only becoming the best offensive defenceman of all-time, arguably the straight-up best offensive player of all-time, but also no doubt one of the best shut-down defensive players as well.


Wayne Gretzky, they said, was too small, too slow, and didn't have a good enough shot. The only times where his size may have been  a bit of an issue were; once, when he got nailed at the blueline at Maple Leafs Gardens with his head down, and when he got cross-checked face first into the boards by Gary Suter, injuring his back.


As for Gretzky being too slow, all I know is that we've seen an awful lot of guys chasing him over the years. He may not have been the fastest, but he certainly more than fast enough. As for his shot, well, we all saw what he could do coming across the blueline with a full head of steam, and cranking it as hard as he could past more than just one or two goalies.


This to say that the greats, the truly greats, have made strengths of their perceived weaknesses, and I believe that Crosby will ultimately do the same. It doesn't play well into the Pens' hand to start jabbering, and pushing, and shoving after the whistles against the Flyers.


They can still win a chippy, ugly series against the Flyers should they wish, but that would not be a very smart approach. All that does is add games to the series, and more importantly, wear and tear on the players.


The best approach? Just go in against the Flyers like pros. Play hard, keep your mouths shut, win the games, move on to the next round. Remember, Penguins, the goal is to win the Cup.


Western Conference

Vancouver Canucks - Los Angeles Kings
The Call: Canucks in 5 


 Most agree that the only scenario in which the Los Angeles Kings win this series is that if both Roberto Luongo and Cory Schneider forget to show up for the Canucks and that Jamie Quick plays just absolutely lights out hockey.


That might be oversimplifiying it somewhat, but facts are facts. The Vancouver Canucks have put together back-to-back President's Trophy seasons and are coming off a playoff year that saw them come to within one win of the Stanley Cup.


The Kings have some big names and big salaries on their roster, the Canucks have names and achievements on their rosters.


Wouldn' t be shocked to see a sweep...

St-Louis Blues - San Jose Sharks
 The Call: Blues in 5


 Since Ken Hitchcock took over behind the St-Louis Blues bench on November 6th they have been one of the NHL's best teams. And like all winning teams, they did it through defence and home ice dominance.


The Blues allowed a league-low 165 goals and have a remarkable 30-6-5 record at home. The Elliott-Halak tandem has worked very well for them all season. The fact that almost all of the Blues' regulars are "plus" players is also bodes well for them.


The San Jose Sharks had a difficult season. They struggled mightily to remain in the top 8 in the Western Conference and didn't wrap up a playoff spot until the last week.




Phoenix Coyotes - Chicago Blackhawks
The Call: Blackhawks in 6 


 This series could boil down to a battle of respective MVPs.


Mike Smith has been arguably the best defenceman in the league down the homestretch and has to be considered as a serious Vezina Trophy candidate. He finished fourth among goalies in wins, 3rd in shutouts and save percentage and 7th in goals against average. In his last 5 games he allowed just two goals on 192 shots, easily making him the hottest goalie in the NHL at this moment.


For Chicago, the good news is that it appears as though captain Jonathan Toews is ready to go after missing the last 22 games of the season with a concussion. Toews has clearly established himself as one of the game's best leaders with a propensity for playing his best during big games.


The Hawks also enjoy much more depth in their lineup than does Phoenix. The Coyotes have a 1st line of Radim Vrbata, Shane Doan, and Ray Whitney, with little else to support them. Not exactly up to Chicago's roster of Toews, Patrick Kane, Patrick Sharp, Marian Hossa, Patrick Bolland, and Viktor Stalberg.

Nashville Predators - Detroit Red Wings
The Call: Predators in 7 


 In the Western Conference, this should be the "must-watch" series.


On the surface, these teams appear to be evenly matched. Both teams finished with 48 wins. Both teams feature balanced attacks and strong scoring support from their respective bluelines.


In nets, Nashville's Pekka Rinne is coming off his best regular season of his career, whereas Detroit's Jimmy Howard looked as though he might give Martin Brodeur's record of 48 regular season wins a run for its money until injury dashed those hopes.


The one area that plays in favour of Nashville is in home vs. road performance. The Red Wings have been lights out within the friendly confines of Joe Louis Arean putting together a record of 31-7-3 at home. On the road, it has been a different story as they struggled to a 17-21-3 mark, which is the same as the Toronto Maple Leafs, hardly an impressive lot. At 22-16-3, Nashville owns the 2nd best road record in the Western Conference.


Home ice advantage may just end up being the difference in this one.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Goodbye Toronto Maple Leafs


As of the end of this NHL regular season, I will be putting an end to one of the longest relationships I've ever had. That's right, as of the end of play on Saturday, April 7th 2012, I will officially cease being a fan of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Call it irreconcilable differences.




I've been a fan of the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey club pretty much since birth so it will take some getting used to on my part, but, as they say, enough is enough. Any relationship must be comprised of a healthy balance of give-and-take, and for the most part it has been give-give-give on my part, and take-take-take on the part of the Leafs.

As a fan, you hand over your heart and soul to your team. Growing up as I did in Gaspé, Québec in the 60's and 70's I proudly and openly declared myself to be a Leafs fan amidst a sea of Montreal Canadiens red, white, and blue. I wore a Toronto Maple Leafs T-shirt to school. Heck, I even had a “Clear the track for Eddie Shack” lunch box.



My bedroom wall was adorned with a Toronto Maple Leafs calendar on which I would write down the game results. During my first visit to the Hockey Hall of Fame, then situated on the CNE grounds in Toronto, I took my piggy bank money and dropped it all on a Toronto Maple Leafs memorabilia. My blood flowed blue and white.

Like many kids, I grew into becoming a Leafs fan mainly through genetic pre-disposition. My dad was a Leafs fan. His dad was a Leafs fan.

My grandfather traced his Toronto “bloodlines” all the way back to the beginnings of the club. When he talked about the early days, he didn't refer to the man who put together the team and built Maple Leafs Gardens as Conn Smythe, he referred to him as “Mr.” Smythe. And as far as he was concerned, Mr. Smythe was the be-all and end-all in terms of hockey people.

 Photo: Toronto Maple Leafs owner, President, and General Manager, sits directly behind the Stanley Cup, surrounded by the 1932 champions. Seated to Smythe's right is Frank Selke Sr. To his left, Dick Irvin Sr. King Clancy is the third player from the left, front row. Other Hockey Hall of Fame members on this photo include, Ace Bailey, Charlie Conacher, Hap Day, Red Horner, Busher Jackson, and Joe Primeau.

The best hockey player of all-time, bar none, for him, had been King Clancy. “Not very big, could skate like the wind, and one tough son of a gun” was his assessment. With the Kid Line of Busher Jackson, Joe Primeau, and Charlie Conacher, as well as bruising defenceman Red Horner in their lineup, the Toronto Maple Leafs of the late 20's and early 30's captured his imagination.

He of course, passed his passion along to my father, for whom Syl Apps, and later Ted Kennedy, became heroes. “Nobody worked harder at the game of hockey than Teeder Kennedy” he would repeat ad nauseam. And of course, the best “money goalie” of all-time was without a doubt Turk Broda. Like I would do years later, he collected hockey cards and pictures, his prized possession being a complete Bee-Hive series of his beloved Maple Leafs.

Photo: Left to right, Hockey Hall of Famers, Syl Apps and Ted "Teeder" Kennedy. Apps won 3 Stanley Cups. Kennedy won 5 Stanley Cups and the Leafs never once missed the playoffs during his career.

When I came along, I did what many kids do and slipped into the family business. The first players I followed were Keon and Ullman. Then Darryl Sittler arrived and soon was the captain. My grandfather had Clancy, my father had Kennedy, and I had Darryl Sittler.

For a while there was hope. Things for which to cheer. There was the 6 goal and 10 point night against the Bruins. There were the 5 goals in one playoff game against the Philadelphia Flyers. And there was of course The Goal, the 1976 Canada Cup winner (in overtime, thank you very much).



Video: Darryl Sittler,  captain of the Toronto Maple Leafs scores the 1976 Canada Cup winning goal in overtime. Goal as it the 2:38 mark of this clip.
 
But then it fizzled... Badly. The Leafs were no longer being run by Mr. Smythe like they had been in the early years. No. My Leafs were under the control of a lunatic. Harold E. Ballard. The fat, loud, obnoxious, classless, lying windbag who became quite possibly the most hated owner in the Canadian sports history.

He had managed to wrestle ownership of the Maple Leafs by being buddy-buddy with Conn Smythe's hapless son, Stafford. Through a series of machinations, Pal Hal, ended up as the head honcho at Maple Leafs Gardens. Actually ringleader is a better term than owner, because under Ballard the Leafs were a circus act that would have made Barnum and Bailey green with envy.

He was brash, and he was crass, and it seemed as though he was doing everything possible to destroy the Toronto Maple Leafs. He let Dave Keon get away to the WHA because he didn't want to pay him. He humiliated his coaches, first Red Kelly and then Roger Neilson.

Under his watch the Leafs traded away fan favourite Lanny McDonald. He fought constantly with Darryl Sittler. Soon, he was gone too.

Video: Lanny McDonald interviewed by HNIC's Dave Hodge. McDonald's first game at Maple Leaf Gardens after being traded to Colorado.

Things got so bad in Toronto a one point that a high draft prospect's parents wrote Ballard urging, pleading, that the Leafs not draft their son. Ponder that for a moment. A kid, an Ontario kid, not wanting to go to Toronto because it was a terrible organization. “Not under Mr. Smythe's watch” I can almost hear my grandfather saying...

Yet Ballard kept kicking the Leafs further and further down the path of disrepute. A once proud franchise, it had become a shattered shell of its former self. Even as he faced death he held true to his classless form. There were the public fights with his son, Bill Ballard. And there was Yolanda. Yes Yolanda. No Vaudeville farce would be complete without a Yolanda. An equally unbalanced younger, second (or was it third?) wife.


Photo: Harold Ballard barks at reporters as his wife, Yolanda, looks on.

Eventually, Ballard died. While it may seem harsh, it's safe to say that not many Leafs fan cried when it happened. In fact, there was reason for hope. Things could only improve right? Well... yes, and no. While there were some notable improvements, the end result was the same. The Stanley Cup remained some distant dream. An illusion, a mirage...

Sure there were some good years following the Ballard era. Some good teams and players. Doug Gilmour, Joe Nieuwendyk, Curtis Joseph, Eddie Belfour, Mats Sundin, Wendel Clark. But still they came up short. Not a single Stanley Cup finals appearance since 1967.

Photo: Toronto's Doug Gilmour slips puck past Los Angeles goalie Kelly Hrudey in the 1993 Stanley Cup playoffs.

Fast forward through the Cliff Fletcher, Pat Quinn, and John Ferguson Jr. eras to November 2008 the arrival of the brash and tough talking Brian Burke.
Burke certainly came to the Leafs with a second-to-none resume. Harvard Law School graduate. Director of hockey operations in Vancouver. GM of the Hartford Whalers. Executive Vice-President and Director of Hockey Operations NHL. GM of the Vancouver Canucks. GM of the Anaheim Ducks.

In press conference after press conference there was a promise of no five year plans. Winning now, was the credo. Burke used words such as truculence and rambunctiousness when describing what the Leafs would be like under his control.  In the time since his hiring the Leafs have missed the playoffs in 2009, 2010, 2011, and now, 2012.

This of course while the Toronto Maple Leafs reside in what is quite possibly the most fertile ground for the development of hockey players anywhere on the planet. A point that Don Cherry made quite famously on a recent edition of HNIC's Coach's Corner.


Video: Don Cherry criticizes Brian Burke for lack of Ontario players on Toronto Maple Leafs roster.

 And through it all Brian Burke remains defiant, acting as though he's actually building a winner in Toronto. Trying to convince fans, or perhaps himself, that everything is under control. Lambasting any and all who dare question his decisions.

Well, I for one am not buying it and am moving on as a fan. After this season, yet another miserable season that ended in failure, I will be a free agent. Free to cheer for an organization of my choice. It would be hard for me to do worse.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

The Senator returns.

There are people in sports who have the ability to command respect well beyond traditional team rivalries. Baseball has men like Joe Torre. Basketball has Magic Johnson. In hockey, Serge Savard is such a man.

Many people grow to become leaders over time, or through the demands thrust upon them by circumstance. Some people were just born with a natural ability to lead and inspire, in much the same way that some hockey players were born with the ability to score goals. Hockey Hall of Famer Serge Savard is one of those rare individuals whose very presence seems get everyone around him to try a little harder, play with a little more confidence, and ultimately, win.

It's no secret to those who know me that I've never been a dyed in the red, white, and blue Montreal Canadiens fan. Au contraire, I've been fairly vocal about the fact that I'm not a disciple of Les Glorieux. But Serge Savard, is a different story. Rewind 40 years...

In the fall of 1972, Team Canada played an epic hockey series that pitted them against the hated USSR. For years the Russians had dominated hockey at the Olympic and World Championships level. The reason for this dominance was the absence of our top professional players at these competitions that were deemed "for amateurs only".

This series was supposed to be a cake walk. Eight straight wins, eight straight easy wins, was the prevailing opinion. History tells us that what ended up happening was quite different altogether.


It started with a 7-3 loss in Montreal that left the fans stunned. Surely it was just a bad dream. Surely Team Canada would bounce back and take all of the remaining games. Well not exactly. Things got so bad that at the end of the Game 4 loss in Vancouver, fans were actually booing Team Canada. Think about that... Team Canada booed off its own rink.

It was as if everything we had grown up to believe up to that point was one giant lie. My world, all of our worlds, seemed to be crumbling around us.

Well we all know the story now. Team Canada dropped the first game back in Moscow, but roared back to win the last 3 games to take the series 4-3-1.

We remember the exploits of Henderson, Cournoyer, and Esposito, to be sure. But it is also very telling that Team Canada never lost a game in that series when Serge Savard was in the lineup. A fact that was not lost on his teammates who were unanimous in stating that when Savard was in the lineup they all felt just that little extra confidence, that belief that, in the end, everything was going to be alright.

So that would be the first reason why I respect Serge Savard. Anyone who pulls on the Team Canada sweater and performs like he did, is bound to be good in my books, no matter what NHL team he plays for.

The second reason I respect Serge Savard is that he has been very, very good for the development of hockey in Quebec. Which by extension is good for Canadian hockey, and hockey in general.

It's no secret that the game of hockey is going through some very difficult times in Quebec at the minor level. Less and less kids are playing the game. Only 100,000 or so are registered in leagues this season. A quick check of NHL rosters last December revealed that there are more NHLers who hail from the state of Minnesota that do from Quebec.The number of QMJHL players drafted by NHL clubs is also in constant decline.

A few years ago, Quebec boys dreamed of becoming the next Richard, Beliveau, or Lafleur. Today they dream of becoming Alex Harvey, Mikael Kingsbury, or Alexandre Despaties. Fine athletes to be sure, but not hockey players.

Don't believe in the effect that having a homegrown hockey hero has on the long term development of players? Think Patrick Roy. During the time that he was arguably the best goalie in the game, he inspired many of Quebec's best young athletes to become goalies, the result being that a generation of top notch NHL goaltenders have hailed from La Belle Province.


Serge Savard made no secret of the fact that part of the role of the Montreal Canadiens was to nurture, encourage, and develop home grown talent. His teams not only counted on star players from Quebec such as Roy, but he also filled his roster with players such as Sergio Momesso, Gaston Gingras, Serge Boisvert, Stephan Lebeau, and Gilbert Dionne. He brought Quebec born coaches such as Jean Perron, and Pat Burns and the Montreal Canadiens hockey operations department was filled with Quebecers.

The Savard effect was felt all the way down the hockey ranks. During his years at the helm of the Montreal Canadiens, hockey flourished in this province. The QMJHL expanded at a prodigious pace. Young players were drafted into the NHL in record numbers.

By bringing in Serge Savard as an advisor to the Montreal Canadiens today, Geoff Molson showed that, yes, he understands the special responsibility that he has as head honcho of the hockey club. He also understands, that very soon, just a couple of hundred kilometers down Highway 20, there will soon be an NHL club (Quebec will return to the NHL, you can count on it) that not only is backed by one of this country's most impressive media empires, but a club that will surely go to great lengths to show that they, not the Montreal Canadiens, are Quebec's true team.

Today, Geoff Molson fired the first salvo in the Montreal-Quebec City hockey war. The big winners will ultimately be the fans, Quebec-born players, and the game.


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Hockey Evening in Old Quebec.

   We call ourselves "Les Vieux", or, "The Old Guys", and we meet every Tuesday evening on the outdoor rink just inside the walled portion of Old Quebec, near the St-Louis Gate, to play a little hockey.

   I'm not certain what the world record is for the most outdoor hockey rinks, but Quebec City has 127 of them. Within a 20 minute walk from my house there are three. I divide them into the very busy rink, the not-so busy rink, and the skate-with-the-sweetheart-or-the-family rink.

  Tuesdays, we head to the busy rink where "Les Vieux" divide themselves into two groups. Darks versus Whites.

   As Tuesday night is my Toronto Maple Leafs vintage Bill Barilko sweater night, I'm with the Darks, where my job is to play defense, dish off the puck to the more energetic guys, and maybe, just maybe, embark on one or two rushes.

  Rushes that may or may not become end-to-end jobs. That, and of course, have myself some fun.

   So tonight we started throwing the puck around in our usual lazy manner, as guys came on to the ice, one by one, or two at a time, and eventually a game started. A game just like any another game.

   That is, until a coach bus parked itself on D'Auteuil Street, 50 feet or so from the rink.

   As the door opened, a ruckus could be heard. The type of ruckus that any of us who has ever been anywhere near a hockey rink has heard many times.

   They piled out of the bus, half-running, half-stumbling, and headed towards us. Or more accurately, headed towards the ice. "Hey, hey, guys. Wait up, wait up!", a parent or coach yelled from the back.

   The first thing I noticed was their equipment. Everything matched. The gloves, the pants, the helmets. All new and all top of the line.

   I couldn't help but think back and my own faraway years as a young minor hockey player, and think that we would have been quite impressed to see an opposing team so nattily attired.

   Our team, had the old early 1970's Vancouver Canucks hockey stick and rink logo, and certainly had no names on the back. They were passed down from year to year, and you were fortunate if the socks actually matched the sweater.

   As I was the player who is the most comfortable with English, and the player whose style is well adapted to chatting while skating, the man who appeared to be in charge of this group asked me, "Is it okay if the boys go out on the ice? They've never skated outdoors before.". 

  "Sure, we'll divide the rink up. You guys take half, we'll take half." As our numbers were lower on this evening due to the fact that it's Valentine's Day and some guys have their priorities wrong, there would be room for everyone, we all agreed.

   Enough room, until we realized that there was not one, but in fact, two teams, presumably here to take part in the 53rd annual Quebec City Pee-Wee Tournament, hockey's equivalent to the Little League World Series of baseball.

   As sharp looking as the first group of kids looked in their coordinated outfit, the second group was a more ragtag looking bunch. In fact they didn't have full hockey gear. Just skates, gloves and helmets. Except their goalies, who were in full gear, complete with yellow sweaters which had clearly seen better days.

   In the space of about 15 minutes, we went from being 10 older guys shinnying our way through a nice winter evening, to a mishmash of "Les Vieux", a couple of Pee-Wee teams, and about a dozen adults armed with cameras, scrambling to get snapshots of their offspring taking their first strides on natural ice.

   The chaotic scene was too much for a few of our group, who simply chose to leave the ice to the oncoming mob. A couple of us older guys remained, throwing the puck around while looking on as the kids soaked in the experience of skating outdoors under the lights, in a remarkably beautiful setting, just steps away from where, unbeknownst to them, 100 years earlier a group of Quebec City boys, who called themselves the Bulldogs, a team led by hockey legend Joe Malone, won the first of its two Stanley Cups.

   I learned that the first of the two teams, the one with the matching uniforms, was from the U.S. and they figured that it would be good to take the boys out on natural ice while they were in town, and they invited a team from the Ukraine to join them in the experience. "Even if they both played yesterday, they still have lots of energy left over", said one of the coaches.

   "Why don't you guys take the whole rink and have the kids play a game?'', I asked.

   "Only our kids have full gear, plus the kids are not all at the same level", answered the coach.

   "Just throw the sticks in the middle, and split them up. I think the people would like to see that.", I said pointing to the 20 to 30 passersby who had stopped to watch the two Pee-Wee teams buzzing around the outdoor rink, laughing, talking, and having the time of their lives.

   Within two minutes I found myself standing over a pile of sticks.

   One fancy stick thrown to the left, one fancy stick thrown to the right. One not-so fancy stick thrown to the left, one not-so fancy stick thrown to the right. "All right boys, whichever side your stick is on, that's your team", yelled out the coach.

   For the next 20 minutes or so, two Pee-Wee teams from two totally different cultures skated, passed, stickhandled and shot the puck all over the ice.

  As I skated off the ice, my unofficial refereeing duties fulfilled, one of the horse carriage drivers who had walked over to watch the action said to me in French, "Ça c'est la meilleure game de hockey que j'ai vu depuis longtemps''. (That's the best hockey game I've seen in a long time.)

  Hard not to agree with him.

 

The time has come for the Bobby Orr and Wayne Gretzky trophies.

   You might say that the last thing the National Hockey League needs right now are another trophy or two added to their already well stocked hardware shelf, but a case could be made for the point of view that the time to create a Bobby Orr trophy and a Wayne Gretzky award has now come.

   Right now we have the Art Ross, the Hart, the Norris, the Rocket Richard, the Calder, the Vezina, and the Lady Byng as what one might consider the as the first tier regular season individual trophies. Add to that the Conn Smythe trophy, and we pretty much have it covered.

   Some fans and observers have mentioned that perhaps renaming certain trophies, like, for instance making the Norris trophy the Bobby Orr trophy, or have the Hart trophy become the Wayne Gretzky trophy could be a solution.

  Personally, I'm not a fan of the renaming route. The original names help in passing down hockey history through the generations.  These trophies help tie players like Red Kelly to players like Zdeno Chara. Or guys like Howie Morenz to Sidney Crosby.

  No, rather than change what we now have, adding the Bobby Orr trophy and the Wayne Gretzky trophy would probably do the trick.

   Award the Bobby Orr trophy to the NHL's top scoring defenceman, and the Wayne Gretzky trophy to the Stanley Cup playoffs leading scorer. Those are both accomplishments which legitimately deserve to be honoured. And for those who figure that the Orr will almost always come to the winner of the Norris, or that the Conn Smythe trophy winner will more often that not also add the Gretzky, consider this...

   Since the NHL lockout, the winners of the Norris trophy have been:

Lidstrom
Keith
Chara
Lidstrom
Lidstrom
Lidstrom

   The winners of the Bobby Orr trophy, had it existed of course, would have been:

Visnovsky
Green
Green
Lidstrom
Niedermayer
Lidstrom

Only one two occasions would there have been a simultaneous Norris and Orr trophies winner, and that would have been Nicklas Lidstrom.

   As for the Smythe-Gretzky comparsion we had the following Conn Smythe trophy winners

Thomas
Toews
Malkin
Zetterberg
Niedermayer
Ward

Over that same period, Gretzky trophy winners would have been

Krejci
Briere
Malkin
Zetterberg
Alfredsson
Stall

   Again, we see only two instances where there would have been a simultaneous Smythe-Gretzky winner. In this case, Malkin and Zetterberg.

   So how long before the NHL adds some more trophies? Who knows, but the time has come for the Orr and Gretzky awards.