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February 09, 2004

Hockey Newsletter - December 12, 2000

What year is this anyway?
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Way back in 1997, there were 2 NHL superstars and one on his way to becoming "the next big thing." Wayne Gretzky was reunited with his good buddy Mark Messier in New York, Mario Lemieux was hinting at retirement, and Eric Lindros was in the wings. In time, Gretzky faded with the Rangers in the post-Messier days and retired, Lemieux indeed retired then went on to own the Pens, and Lindros fell on his head a couple of times.

So who's in the news at the tail end of the year 2000? Gretzky, brand new owner of the Phoenix Coyotes. Mario, soon-to-be an on-ice Penguin again. Meanwhile, Lindros takes a back seat; though he hasn't landed on his head for a while, he can't seem to land a job anywhere.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - December 12, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - December 5, 2000

Spoiled brats
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Last week, with much hoopla, Eric Lindros told anybody who would listen that he wants to play in Toronto. Where have we heard this before?

"I don't wanna play in Sault Ste. Marie, I wanna play in Oshawa near Mummy and Daddy... I don't wanna play in Quebec, I wanna play in a big U.S. market so I can make even more money..."

Why do teams continue to indulge this guy? Especially now that he is -- literally -- such a head case?

The difference this time may just be Pat Quinn. Eric has put him in an almost impossible situation. Does he really want the big guy on the team? If he says yes, the media are all over him and there's tension in the dressing room -- who gets shipped to Bob "don't call me Bobby" Clarke's house of horrors? If he says no, the media are all over him because he won't take a chance on one of the league's marquee players.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - December 5, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - November 28 2000

Philly update/downdate

This is the fourth CTVSportsnet.com hockey newsletter of the season, and already the Philadelphia Flyers have been in our doghouse and in our hothouse. This week, we'll just poke 'em with a big stick.

A big goalie stick, to be precise. In back-to-back home games this week, Philly faced two of their rejected netminders and the results weren't pretty, unless you're Garth Snow and Sean Burke.

Pittsburgh's Snow made 36 saves and recorded his first shutout of the season, while Burke's 35 saves helped the Coyotes win their first game in Philadelphia since 1997. Never mind that John LeClair was back on the ice. Never mind that another Bob "don't call me Bobby" Clarke ghost, Eric Lindros, has been cleared by doctors to play for some other team sometime soon.

The Flyers are like the Steinbrenner Yankees of another era... loaded with talent, whiny prima donnas and enough wonky management to trip up another playoff run before it gets off the ground. Then again, that's this week. Stay tuned next week to the see the drama unfold in Bob Clark's (or is it Aaron Spelling's?) City of Brotherly Love.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - November 28 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - November 21, 2000

New World Order

One word: Relegation. It works for the biggest sport on the planet (soccer) and it's about blinking time the NHL came around to this method of rewarding/punishing teams.

Right now, the NHL is made up of 5 divisions, based on Money, Management Structure and Whimsy. The first is the We Have Lots Of Money And Our Owner/GM/Coach Is Top Quality division. It includes Toronto, NY Rangers, Washington, St. Louis, Detroit, Colorado and Dallas.

Then there's the We Have No Money Whatsoever But Our Owner/GM/Coach Keeps Us Competitive division. Members are Ottawa, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, New Jersey and Edmonton.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - November 21, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - November 14, 2000

Ouch! Volume 2 (or that old Lindros blockbuster trade)

Here's the injury list for the streaking Colorado Rockies:

Peter Forsberg - Rib
Chris Drury - Knee
Adam Deadmarsh - Concussion

Here's the injury list for the mediocre Philadelphia Flyers:

Keith Jones - Concussion
Jody Hull - Foot
Mark Recchi - Concussion
John LeClair - Back

And here's Eric Lindros - Concussion

Hmmm.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - November 14, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - November 7, 2000

Note to Mr. Gretzky: Don't let the dog out

Sean Burke is the King of the Pipes™. Between the pipes, that is.

While Patrick Roy is making all the headlines with his record-breaking wins and door-breaking sins, the big Coyote has quietly become the best goaltender of the young hockey season. This modern-day Suitcase Smith (he's protected the mesh for New Jersey, Hartford/Carolina, Vancouver, Philly, Florida and Phoenix) has been a perennial disappointment, dropping into each new clubhouse pegged as "the one to get 'em past the first round."

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - November 7, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - June 7, 2000

State of the game

The NHL must have issued a gag-order on publicly dissing hockey in Dallas in June. Everyone keeps telling us the ice is just fine. Larry Robinson said it. Brett Hull said it. And all the announcers on both networks broadcasting the games keep saying it's a non-issue. Hmmm. Then why is it that the puck seems to be smothered in tapioca pudding just 10 minutes into the fray? When we watched a quick snapshot clearing attempt barely get over the red line we thought, "oh it must be late in the period because the ice looks like a banana daiquiri." But the clock said there was still 9 and a half minutes left. Ooops, sorry! The ice is just fine!

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - June 7, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - June 1, 2000

From failing hands...

Maurice "Rocket" Richard:
Icon. Competitor. Humble. Dangerous. Feared. Father. Brother. Habitant. Fierce. Exciting. Fighter. Controversial. Intense. Superstar. Winner. Hero.

Words will never fully describe him. How could the presence of someone most of us never saw in action make such an impact on us? That's the magical, mysterious power of a true hero, a power that spans generations, gender, cultural backgrounds, politics...

Maybe you have the words to explain the unexplainable, to let us all know what The Rocket meant to you. Visit our fan forums and leave your thoughts at:

[retired link]

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - June 1, 2000" »

September 15, 2003

Hockey Newsletter - May 26, 2000

Oh that nutty high tech equipment!

This is how we thought it was supposed to be:

  1. You wear a helmet on your head to protect the little gray cells. It's got a chin strap attached so that the helmet stays attached to your head and the brain stays attached to your brain stem.
  2. You wear elbow pads to protect your funny bone if you fall on the ice or get slammed into the boards. The pads should be small, simple and comfy, so you can still shoot a puck.
  3. You hold a hockey stick in your hand that you must count on for all sorts of important situations during a hockey game. You want it intact when the perfect pass comes to you, and you want it intact so you can lift the other guy's stick as he sets up for the perfect pass.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - May 26, 2000" »

July 30, 2003

Hockey Newsletter - May 18, 2000

Torch song

Seeing the names of hockey legends Maurice Richard and Jean Beliveau in the headlines during the playoffs seems natural. But this week, when The Rocket and Le Gros Bill made the news, it wasn't for their firewagon hockey heroics. Beliveau is undergoing treatment for a cancerous tumor in his neck, and in another Montreal hospital, the doctors fear Richard's abdominal cancer may be back.

It never feels right when we realize that our heroes are human too. We don't want to think that they have weaknesses, that they are susceptible to tragedy and disease like the rest of us.

Two years ago the hockey world was preparing for bad news about the Rocket. The eulogies were written, the NHL ordered a trophy named for him, and we all know what happened: Richard beat it! He's been around to see 2 players win the hold-your-horses-I ain't-dead-yet Rocket Richard scoring trophy.

These guys are winners. One's a fighter and the other's a leader. And they both have that je-ne-sais-quoi Canadiens mystique that has always given Montreal legends an edge. Our money's still on you, Maurice et Jean!

To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - May 18, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - May 11, 2000

If there's a God in heaven...

... please, oh please, don't let it be a New Jersey-Dallas final! Maybe it's because we're still recovering from the sedated state we were placed in during the Toronto-NJ series, but we keep thinking that hockey -- make that NHL hockey -- is still in big trouble. Two years ago, the NHL moved the nets out another foot from the boards to give skaters more room to put pucks in the net. This year during the regular season, Mr. Bettman and the league changed the rules in overtime to make the game more exciting, to get more pucks in the net.

Yet come the post-season, the time when hockey should be at its most thrilling, we're embarrassed to say we're hockey fans. We're starting to think "we gave up a beautifully sunny spring day for another grinding 1-0 game? Are we crazy?" Somehow the NHL never gets around to fixing what is really wrong with the good ol' hockey game. It's become a boring, dull, trap-filled win-by-attrition non-event that awards trophies to teams that put the audience to sleep.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - May 11, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - May 5, 2000

And the award goes to...

The nominees for all the NHL awards came out this week, right smack dab in the middle of round two. This happens every season, and it usually ruffles a few feathers in the fan world. You see, the votes go in before the playoffs start, so sometimes a Hart Trophy candidate or two have long been out of Cup contention, and because we're so excited about the playoffs, we forget the great seasons they had.

There's no question that Jaromir Jagr belongs on the list on any given day. Chris Pronger led the unlikely Blues to the very top of the standings. And Pavel Bure, well, he got the Panthers back into the playoffs for those hockey-rabid fans in southern Florida. Uh-huh.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - May 5, 2000" »

July 28, 2003

Hockey Newsletter - Apr. 28, 2000

That's the way the puck bounces...

Talk about your Ice Follies! The first round of the 2000 playoffs saw pucks thrown in the net, pucks deflecting off bums -- literally, not figuratively -- into the net, and pucks ripping through the mesh at the side of the net. And when goals like that happen in the playoffs, you know there are going to be upsets. The darlings of the CTVSportsnet.com newsletters both lost in the first round when things just didn't bounce their way. Jaromir Jagr's cross-ice pass from the left wing hit Calle Johansson just below the left butt-cheek and ended up behind Olie the Goalie ending the season for the Washington Capitals, the early Eastern Conference favourites. And in the West... well good golly! St. Louis Blues defenceman Marc Bergevin threw the puck into his own net in one game, and bobbled another one in his mitts in the final game that led to a 2-on-0 for the Sharks and the winning goal. Those incidents coupled with a handful of nutty deflections sent the Blues to the greens Tuesday in a surprising first-round upset.

And don't ever bring up the John LeClair goal to a Sabres fan if you know what's good for you. After an off-season of whining about last year's missed call in the final game of the Stanley Cup playoffs, the poor Buffaloes will spend another summer crying foul about the puck that exploded off LeClair's stick and ripped through the mesh beside Hasek. We can smell a lot of therapy for Lindy Ruff during his long golf season.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Apr. 28, 2000" »

July 08, 2003

Hockey Newsletter - Apr. 12, 2000

Nostalgia ain't what it used to be

When the NHL first expanded from six teams to 12 (was that really 32 years ago? Egads!), the league brass did a very strange thing. The original six were put in one conference and the newbies were put in another. So come the Stanley Cup Finals, some poor expansion team would have to face the best of the 6 and be humiliated night after night coast to coast to coast.

In 1968, 1969 and 1970, that poor team was the St. Louis Blues. Led by Red Berenson, the Plager brothers, Glenn Hall, Jacques Plante and coach Scotty Bowman, the Blues went down 4-straight each time -- twice to Montreal, and once to Boston (remember the Bobby Orr flying goal?) Mercifully, the league decided to change the current divisions and save St. Louis from further embarrassment.

Fast forward to the year 2000. St. Louis has come out on top of their conference for the first time since those early days. But this time, they're IN the strongest conference. And while that's a good thing, it could also lead to heartbreak again. True, they beat out the best in the entire NHL to win the President's Trophy, but they will have to face any or almost all of Detroit, Dallas and Colorado just to get into the finals.

Yikes!

Now we're not here to make predictions or anything, and we're not supposed to out-and-out cheer for any one team, but for old-times sake, we're going to cross our little CTVSportsnet.com fingers and hope that Chris Pronger and his mates won't be singing the blues in June.


Meanwhile, in the East...

What were the Flyers thinking? Couldn't they have thrown a couple of games at the end of the season so that they wouldn't have to face Buffalo in the first round? Don't they remember 1998 when the Sabres trashed their sorry asses even with Lindros in the lineup? Dominik Hasek is on another tear, winning Player of the Week honours for the last week of the season. Why would anyone want to face that momentum in the first round? We're sure the New Jersey Devils were more than happy to finish in 4th place rather than 1st on that last day of the regular season. In playoff history, Bure isn't quite as overwhelming as the Dominator.

CTVSportsnet.com's Steve Milton certainly has something to say about the first round matchups:

"The primary ingredients of an upset pie include a goaltender who can't or won't be beaten; coming into the first round on a roll; success on the road; strong penalty killing; an attractive power play and a favourable season's record against your opponent.

None of the lower-half teams in this year's playoffs have all of the above, but Buffalo has the first four of the six, and Philly -- sans Lindros and avec a rookie goalie -- must be a little worried. Make that a lot worried."

Read more at:
(retired link)

Hockey Newsletter - Apr. 5, 2000

And the award goes to...

Looks like the St. Louis Blues are going win the President's Trophy this year for the best record in the NHL. And while we're talking hardware, let's hand the Norris Trophy over to Chris Pronger, the Blues' charming gap-toothed defenceman. Wait, don't pull the trophy train away just yet. Roman Turek, Ed Belfour's bridesmaid last year, is waiting in line for the Vezina. And the Jennings.

Okay, since the flatbed of NHL silverware is still hanging about, we may as well unload the Adams Trophy on coach Joel Quenneville for leading this solid team to the top. There's no award for NHL brass, but St. Louis GM Larry Pleau got the next best thing this week when he landed a contract extension through the 2003-04 season.

Is this as good as it gets? Not quite. The pundits haven't quite given the Blues the shoe-in vote for the ultimate trophy yet. The Cup (TM) must be earned during the second season. And you can be sure none of these winners will give a hoot about any of these trophies if they don't win The Cup (TM.)

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Apr. 5, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 29, 2000

Money can't buy me love

With a $61-million payroll, you'd think a team would at least get into post season play. Well, those fat cats in New York, New York will be on the golf greens instead of the frozen confines of Madison Square Garden come April. And with four games remaining in this miserable season, the Rangers fired president/GM Neil Smith and head coach John Muckler. Are these guys to blame? Partly. Is there anything they could have done differently? Nope. This is the "New NHL" where decisions to spend big cash come from above.

A struggling team like New York succumbs to the NY media's whining by bringing in Fleury, Kamensky, Lefebvre etc. to ensure a drive to the Cup. Then they wind up with a mishmash of stars who need a season to get used to Leetch, Richter, Nedved and the rest of the Blue Shirts. Sorry guys, money can't buy you Cups.

Assistant coach John Tortorella will coach the team through the final four games while MSG president Dave Checketts said a new GM will be hired and will be responsible for picking the next coach. Good luck to him, poor guy.

(The Atlantic Division also saw another coach get his walking papers this past week. Robbie Ftorek has done a dismal job at keeping the Eastern Division-leading Devils motivated. And when a team stops playing for a coach, what do you do? Bring in Larry Robinson. Didn't Ftorek coach the Kings before Robinson took over? Hmmm???)

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 29, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 22, 2000

How do you plead?

Instead of a weekly injury tally maybe the CTVSportsnet.com newsletter crew should compile a police blotter, fingerprints and all. New Jersey's Scott Niedermayer joined Marty McSorely in the NHL 2000 ugly pages this week. He looked like Mark McGwire aiming for the fence with his two-handed swing at Peter Worrell's noggin. No accident this. Cost the Devil defenceman 10 games. And what the heck is the league going to do about Bryan Marchment... that is, repeat offender Bryan Marchment? No, he didn't end someone's career with a cheap knee shot this time, he just attempted a disembowelment on Paul Kariya. It is getting harder and harder to watch the most exciting game in the world. Hockey today is like Culloden on ice... without the bagpipes. And off the ice we have to hear about Eddie the (spread) Eagle's attempted bribes after being arrested for assault. Eddie, they had to use Mace on you... you were kicking the officers in the chest... you think they're going to cut you a break? Never before has the NHL brass faced such a black time. And no matter what penalties and suspensions are being handed out, it doesn't seem to be deterring the players from being downright dangerous.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 22, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 16, 2000

NHL's eyes wide shut?

The most surprising thing is that it doesn't happen more often. Bryan Berard's tragic eye injury reminds us that the game of hockey is a delicate balance of speed, skill and luck. Or lack of it. And that in a blink of an eye, a career can end. The play that brought Berard down in a pool of blood wasn't extraordinary. In fact, it was a routine play where a player takes a swipe at the puck while in enemy territory. Marian Hossa did not pull a McSorley.

Already the debate has started again about mandatory visors, and not the half-shields either. The NHL forced helmets into the league 20 years ago, though when players don't tighten their chin straps, what good are they? Will the NHL and the NHLPA rethink the visor situation? We hope so. As Berard's eye specialist, Dr. Rob Devenyi, said, there has never been one case of an eye injury when a full visor is used.

Remember earlier in the season after Trent McLeary almost died when a puck hit his neck? At that time the league said "we can't have the players out there in armour." Well, maybe we should.

CTVSportsnet.com's Steve Milton thinks the NHL and the NHLPA should make some changes to protect the players in this faster, bigger hockey league:

"From the beginning, players understand they are accepting a certain amount of risk when they contract to play for money. The game is too fast, the money too great, the pressure too intense, the travel too debilitating, the players too big, the puck too hard, for injuries not be an everyday fact of life. But no one has ever agreed, inherently or otherwise, to the loss of an eye. To a lifetime of searing headaches. To being bushwhacked from behind."

Read more at:
(retired link)

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 16, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 1, 2000

Back up goalies

Martin Biron, Fred Brathwaite, Marc Denis, Brian Boucher, Jean-Sebastien Aubin, Jose Theodore. At the beginning of the season, these names didn't roll off the hockey fan's tongue very easily. Things are different now.

These young second-string goalies have taken advantage of injuries or sloppy play by icons like Hasek, Fuhr, Roy, Vanbiesbrouck, Barrasso, Hackett: big-money goalies. While fans and pundits alike are questioning the quality of play in today's NHL, goaltending never comes up. And it's really quite strange when you look at history... it used to be that when the league would expand, the number of goals scored would increase. No more. The goaltending pool is strong, and looks to be getting stronger every year. Recent back-up goalies who have done well include Olaf Kolzig, the one-time second-banana to Jim Carey. Byron Dafoe was also in the Washington system at the time. Then, of course there's this year's darling between the pipes, Roman Turek. Last year we hardly ever saw him play, as Ed Belfour was leading the Stars to the top. But this year, shooters wish they didn't have to see Turek when they face the stingy fella in the St. Louis net. So, even though we fans are feeling a little tender lately about the state of hockey, we can still feel the excitement of the game played by those kids behind the masks.

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Mar. 1, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Feb. 16, 2000

Good golly, are the Flyers ever huge!

Let's just call them the Even Broader Street Bullies. Bob (don't call me Bobby) Clarke doesn't seem to notice that teams with fast little snipers, skilled players and no-name players are the ones making moves up the standings in the NHL these days. So why does he pick up 6-foot-3, 277-pound left-winger Gino Odjick from the fledgling Islanders? Because "if you're going to go to war, you have to have the weapons." Uh-huh. And if you're going to win the Cup, you have to have a goalie, Mr. Clarke. Or maybe you'll just have the Big E, John LeClair, Keith Primeau and Gino stand in front of the net for 60 minutes. Nothing could get past that beast of a wall!

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Feb. 16, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Feb. 11, 2000

Post All-Star Blues

"The world is too much with us..."

...and North America didn't win a thing. But is it really surprising? The players who represent "the World" at the All-Star game come from hockey programs that encourage skating, puck-handling, passing, finesse. The North American hockey training method is to have kids play as many games and tournaments as they possibly can to give them real game experience. So it's no wonder that the World won the skills competition -- in spite of some beautiful skating by Phil Housely and stellar puck control by Ray Bourque -- and won the Game itself. The All-Star game isn't a "real game experience." So when we saw Lindros, LeClair and Roenick all wind up to make big hits, they lost a step and an edge by pulling back. This wasn't their game, and the final score reflects that.

The competition brought the league's new rules to the front again, and there is speculation that the NHL may move to a 4-on-4 scenario in the future. Watching skilled players have more room to roam may be Bettman's way of getting hockey into the mainstream US psyche. It's wide open. It's exciting. And CTVSportsnet.com's Steve Milton has something to say about that:

"Jaromir Jagr and Pavel Bure both supported the 4-on-4 notion during All-Star week, but in the NHLPA each of them has exactly the same number of votes as a fourth-line winger: one. The union -- my, they're silent these days, aren't they? -- would figure that 4-on-4 would reduce the number of jobs, but we don't know that for sure. It might, conversely, require more intense skating, and therefore more substitutions and the same-size roster as today's. If it didn't, it wouldn't be worth it, would it?

Anyway, it's not necessarily the number of jobs that would change, but the KIND of jobs: 'faster, more skilled, more creative,' the job descriptions would read."

Read more of Steve Milton's article at:
(retired link)

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Feb. 11, 2000" »

July 04, 2003

Hockey Newsletter - Feb. 2, 2000

Rod Bryden holds another news conference

Is this getting tired or what? I do believe the man has had more press conferences than the Sens have had games this season! And what was it all about this time? Well, a ticket price hike, of course. Since the people have spoken and you're not entitled to milk the government, throw it back at those mean old fans and make 'em pay!

"We are giving our fans and corporate sponsors the final say on if we stay or go... we now have to look to our revenues to see if this team is viable." If you can bear to watch this guy again, check out the news conference at:
(expired link)


Mr. Smith goes to Washington

Over the 24-year history of the Washington Capitals, one distinctive trait has clung to their jockstraps like an albatross. Injuries. It always seemed that at any time during the season, the Caps' training room was packed to the max, while a b-team of unknowns struggled on the ice. And by playoff time, they were pretty much dead. Not this year. No sirree, they're as healthy as a horse... errr... as a team of healthy horses. So what makes this year different from the others? Well, the crack CTVSportsnet.com research team took a look inside that training room and found a new face... Mr. Greg Smith. He became the Caps' head trainer this year and he must be working wonders. Not only is Washington's injury slate clean as a whistle day in day out, but individual players are also starting to dominate the NHL award sheets:

Goalie Olaf Kolzig was named NHL Player of the Month for January, posting a 11-1-2 record, 1.68 goals-against average, two shutouts and a .936 save percentage and leading the Capitals to the NHL's longest undefeated streak this season (10 wins, one tie.)

Defenceman Sergei Gonchar was named Player of the Week as he led the NHL in scoring through this period -- 3 goals 4 assists for 7 points in four games -- and posted a plus/minus rating of +5. Looks like Mr. Smith can work wonders in the Capital City. It is an election year, isn't it?

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Feb. 2, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Jan. 26, 2000

John Manley out indefinitely with whiplash injury

It's already old news, but we may as well mention it for the record. The people spoke and John Manley's Liberal government listened. After promising Canadian hockey teams (well, Rod Bryden) some tax and money subsidies, it looks like they finally realized that constituents care more about housing and healthcare. Will some of the teams have to head south? Probably. Will that make us any less a hockey-loving nation? No. Most of us can't afford to go see a game, or don't have a team in the neighbourhood so we watch it on television anyway... so who cares if they're playing in Kanata or Boise, Idaho?

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Jan. 26, 2000" »

Hockey Newsletter - Jan. 19, 2000

The Government has tossed a bone to the Canadian teams. A cabinet-issued federal aid package will be negotiated on a team-by-team basis but is contingent upon further aid from the league, the municipality and the province in which the team plays.

So is everybody happy? Well, chief... er... spokesowner for the cause, Rod Bryden, says he's "put the for sale sign back in his garage." Lucky us. The kudos and criticisms are being heard loud and clear in the CTVSportsnet.com fan forums:

Camilo:

It's a difficult question. Sure, Canadian teams deserve tax breaks if other "Canadian cultural organizations" such as Nortel, Bombardier, Irving Oil, and Hollywood movie studios receive them.
However, why should the government give taxpayers' money to greedy owners such as Rod Bryden just so that he can move the team in a few more years. Why should the government pay money to multi-millionaires/billionaires when thousands of people are living on the street?
Let the NHL teams go. If Canadians truly love hockey, we can create our own league where players play for the love of the game instead of the allure of the American buck.

William McEachern:

How many jobs does pro hockey make in Canada? Everyone talks about rich hockey players and owners and how they already have tons of money, but they forget the 1,200 people who work for the Ottawa team alone. They don't make much money, and they will be out of work if the team leaves.

Brad Lippitt :

The responsibility for this mess must be shared by all parties concerned. I haven't seen the NHLPA accept any responsibility at all when they are a major part of the problem. The only long term solution is a salary cap and unless the fans demand that the NHLPA accept that, nothing is going to change. How much money does an NHL player deserve? Enough is enough! FANS UNITE, SALARY CAP IN 2004!

Continue reading "Hockey Newsletter - Jan. 19, 2000" »