Saturday, November 3, 2007

Saturday Night Hockey

With all three local teams in action, you get a taste of how things have become. First, you have the Islanders. The once proud franchise of the early 80's tried to turn back the clock and give their legendary head coach Al Arbour a chance to coach his 1,500th game. They were successful in granting this kind gesture to Arbour, but in doing so, they also managed to make a side show of the sport.

Since the end of their dynasty, they have invented new ways to try to demise the game and sport. Remember when con man John Spanos tried to buy the team? Then Charles Wang takes over and hands the reigns to Mike Milbury who trades away a wealth of talent capable of creating another dynasty. And who can forget when Wang tinkered with the idea of putting a sumo wrestler in goal for the team? I can't leave out the time when they decided to make their backup goalie the new GM and he inturn decides to give goalie Rick DiPietro a 15 year contract. Granted, he is the face of the franchise and a darn good goalie, but 15 years for crying out loud? I'm not even going to get into the Chris Simon slashing incident.

Then you have the Devils. Lou Lamoriello has made them the prototype franchise in hockey. Up until this season, the last 12 years have been very good to the folks out of the Garden State. Not only have they outplayed the rest of the league, they out-managed the league, out-scouted the league and even out coached the league. Perhaps the one issue they have had in Lou's run is the fact that he keeps firing good coaches at odd times, like a few days before the playoffs. Memo to Lou: If you want to coach too, then do it. But make your mind once and for all.

In the middle of the Devils success has been Martin Brodeur. When all is said and done, he will probably go down as the greatest goalie of all time, and rightfully so. But the one thing I can't seem to get over is the fact that he has become Cameron Diaz on hockey skates. Think about the similarities: They are both great to watch, they both have a flare for the dramatic and they both can look awfully silly at times. As great as he is, I can't respect a guy who flails his arms and throws himself all over the ice if an opponent comes near his crease. Marty, hockey's a rough sport. Take the hit like a man and focus on stopping the puck.

Then comes my beloved Rangers. Since i'm really just getting warmed up to this whole blogging thing, i'm not going to get crazy about them too soon. But after the 1994 season where they hoisted the cup and the sport to new heights, they saw a period of competitive teams in the mid-90's. Then came the dark ages, the period that lasted from the 1997-98 season through the lock out where they failed to make the playoffs in any season. But they emerged from the lockout a new team and Sather, who probably should have been fired after he traded Brian Leetch, has finally been able to live up to his billing. In case you forgot, Sather is the guy who as GM of the Oilers was quoted as saying that if he had the Rangers payroll he would win the cup every season. So far, he hasn't lived up to that promise yet but some of us are still hopeful.

Now, with Henrik Lundqvist in goal, they are ready for anyone. For the first tome in a long time, the Rangers are poised at making a run. The season has started slow, but the defense, which everyone thought would be the weak link for this team, has really held it together. Once the offense is able to click like we all expect it will, look out.

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