Sunday, October 7, 2007

Super Saturday #1

Nobody likes being sick, but when you're like me and come down with a fever and can't go out on the NHL's 1st Super Saturday of the season - it's not a bad thing at all.

14 games, 28 of 30 teams in action. I <3 the Center Ice package.

I flipped around between mainly the following:

7:00 - Hockey Night In Canada - Habs/Leafs
Great way to start the evening. Toronto-Montreal Hockey Night in Canada should be the season kick-off game every year, American ratings be damned.

Great game, great action, great rivalry. People think Toronto is a playoff team and Montreal isn't, but huge games like this often balance the teams out.

I plum forgot that Vesa Toskala was a Leaf now. Andrew Raycroft can't keep a #1 job to save his life. But, to be honest, I didn't think goaltending was the Leafs problem last year. Leafs fans might have a different view, as his Wikipedia page is currently being protected from vandalism.

Note to DIRECTV: when a hockey game is tied after the 3rd period, and the broadcast goes to commercial, THE GAME IS NOT OVER! Do not cut the feed off! I could almost see if they did it at the end of Overtime and forgot there was a Shootout, but COME ON! This is the 2nd major Center Ice flub I've seen this year - with the 1st being when the wrong Fox Sports Net feed was routed to the Center Ice channel, preventing me from taking in the pre-game and 1st period of game #1 between the Kings-Ducks in London.
I would have really liked to see the conclusion of this one, with Tomas Kaberle netting the 4-3 OT winner. I guess they put it back on at some point, but I had given up flipping back by that point and stuck to other games.

7:30 - Ducks/Penguins
Not a surprising turn of events given the Ducks awful schedule combined with the Pens lackluster start in Carolina. The Pens had a weak 1st and then turned it on in the 2nd and the tired Ducks just couldn't keep up.

Marc-Andre Fleury needs to pick things up. He's been a capable goalie for a few years now, but it's time to show he's the real deal. I know he's 22, but the Penguins are ready to go deep and if Fleury doesn't play great he could play himself out of a Stanley Cup. His contract extension also expires after this year, so there should be no lack of incentive for "The Flower" to step up.

I missed the flurry of goals that started the 2nd, but Petr Sykora's 2+2=4 performance in under 14 mintues of ice-time made GM Ray Shero look like a smart man.
I had always thought Sykora would be a great fit in Pittsburgh ever since he had the production drop and subsequent falling out with management in Anaheim. When he was bouncing around from the Ducks, to the Rangers, and finally the Oilers, I couldn't understand why Pittsburgh never came up in discussions of Sykora's next destination. There was such a void of European scoring talent on the Pens left by the departures of Jagr, Kovalev, Straka, and even to some extent - Morozov, that Sykora seemed like a perfect candidate to fill. At only 30 years old, and surrounded by a wealth of young talent, look for Petr Sykora to return to his former production this season.
Quick note: Ryan Malone really picked that corner on the last Pens goal. He had a lot of time and space 1-on-1 with the goalie, but that goal was crucial and Malone could use to bury a few more of those.

8:00 - Flyers/Oilers
Daniel Briere has 3 goals in 2 games as a Flyer and two of them have been absolute beauties. Even the third (first in sequential order) was pretty nice and showed a lot of skill down low. I know it's early, but he certainly looks like he's earning that huge contract so many were quick to criticize. However, Danny couldn't save the Flyers on his birthday.
A few bad bounces did them in vs. the Oilers Saturday night. They looked poised to take over the game, but allowed Edmonton to tie it back up with :04 left in the 2nd period. It hurt their momentum, which was lost for good when Martin Biron made a save and let the rebound pop out to the slot where it bounced off the snowplowing Mike Knuble and back past Biron.
Knuble's skate = Edmonton's GWG.

I was surprised by Edmonton's performance. It will be interesting to see where they'll end up in the West, because it's a bit of a mystery at this point.

Other action:
Hurricanes/Capitals
First of all, thank God that Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic (Caps regional network) finally upgraded their video/broadcast equipment. They had such horrible quality video for the last few years that I actually couldn't bring myself to watch much of Alexander Ovechkin because of it. It was really that bad. They went from fuzzy home camcorder last year to HD this year. Plus, those new Capitals sweaters' look sweet.

The little I saw of this game I was keeping an eye on rookie Nicklas Backstrom, whom looked lost out there. I don't know if it's the smaller ice surface, or new teammates, or the speed of the NHL game, but Backstrom was a step behind and a little out of position on the few shifts I saw of his. I was left wanting more, but I'm sure we'll get it soon enough from the kid.

Red Wings/Blackhawks
I actually brought myself to watch the Red Wings play, if you can believe it. I really wanted to see the 'Hawks. I finally saw how the injury to Martin Havlat went down. So unfortunate. It was really so innocent and he was so pissed going off the ice because he knew it was the same injury he just had repaired twice and he knew it was bad. It reminded me of the Milton Bradley incident from a few weeks ago in MLB.

It was good to see the 'Hawks had so many in attendance on a night the Cubs had a playoff game. 18,768 is a damn good crowd and good enough for a sellout in many other cities. Hockey isn't dead in Chicago; William Wirtz just killed it.

Anyway, it was good to see the 'Hawks get 2 points from the Wings in front of that kind of crowd on that kind of night. It was great to see Patrick Kane deke and score on the Dominator for the deciding score - even if it was in the Shootout.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

The Business of Branding and Marketing

The NHL has had so many missed opportunities and failed ventures in the arena of marketing that any endeavor which doesn't make us real fans cringe is seen as an enormous triumph.

We know the NHL has the stars, the drama, the action, the skill, the artistry, the physicality, the passion of any other sport on earth - even eclipsing the other sports in many of these categories. But the problem is that "we" are a small bunch. We had to seek it out, and hold on when it went away, and stick up for it while it was assaulted by every pundit, sports journalist and talk show host imaginable (not that the criticisms were undeserved).

And whether or not you find such matters fascinating, boring, or confusing, it's good to know that the NHL appears to have an excellent candidate, ex-NFL executive John Collins, in position to at least put the league back on America's radar; if not catapult it into the mainstream. (Here's hoping, anyway...)

We are a $2.3 billion business, and a lot of that revenue is through the gates. We have 22 million people at our arenas every year. We have 53 million avid fans in North America. But the big insight we came to after the lockout is that our fans say they love hockey, but they don't behave like they love hockey. They behave like a million fans of the New York Rangers, a million fans of the Chicago Blackhawks. The passion they have is at a local level, but that doesn't translate to passion at a league level. If you are a fan of the NFL's New York Giants, you'll still watch Monday Night Football even if the Giants aren't playing. You'll watch the playoffs and Super Bowl even if the Giants don't make it. But according to the traditional metrics that tell you about the health and vitality of broadcast ratings, we're not able to scale at the national level of the NFL, MLB or Nascar. So we don't feel like a $2.3 billion business; we feel like a $300 million business, like a niche sport like Major League Soccer or AVP [professional volleyball].

I also like the mention of the league ad campaigns that will slow down the game like NFL films does. Excellent move.

"Brandweek" article from 10/1

My favorite player

#3, Calgary Flames, Defence, 22 years old.

He would kill you if he had the chance.



In the season opening loss against the Flyers, Phaneuf logged 31:20 of ice time. That's more TOI (time-on-ice) than some players will see through their first two games combined.
Just incredible. And that's not to even mention the assists on both Calgary goals.

This kid is every bit the star and has every bit of talent that any of the leagues' other heralded youngsters have. But you might not know it since he plays on the blue line in Calgary.

Every time I see him play I can't help but hope that one day he will don a Black and Orange sweater. It would fit perfectly.


Friday, October 5, 2007

First and Last

Couldn't have gone better for the Flyers.

Daniel Briere scores first early, Biron plays solid, Briere gets the winner late (sweet roof job). Thanks, Buffalo!

Gagne and Briere were trying a little too hard to give Daniel the hattie - Briere took a lick, and Calgary got a chance the other way - but you really couldn't blame them for trying to put the cherry on top.

These weren't your '06-'07 Flyers...
 
Add to Technorati Favorites