Sunday, January 21, 2007

The "Fourth" Sport

The NHL can't get anything to go their way, can they? The league loses its entire 2004-05 season to a strike. Despite rules changes that make the game far more entertaining, they basically lose the entire 2005-06 season because most of America couldn't watch the games (owing to the league's truly STUPID decision to put themselves on the Outdoor Life Network, which promptly changed its name to Versus after last season). Now, in 2006-07, even more controversy reigns.

Slate.com's Daniel Engber penned a fascinating story the other day which highlights the ne'er-do-well atmosphere that seems to permeate the NHL's landscape. According to the article, the NHL's All-Star voting for this year's game turned into a complete debacle, when a grass-roots write-in campaign for little known Vancouver defenseman Rory Fitzpatrick turned into a war between self-proclaimed computer geeks trying to rig the system and the NHL offices, who risked the embarrassment of a nondescript player gaining a spot in one of the league's showcase events.

Meanwhile, the league's most marketable young star, forward Sidney Crosby, is stuck on a financially decrepit team that can't get an arena deal done and is in constant danger of moving to parts unknown --- whether it's Hamilton, Kansas City, or Sheboygan. While franchise instability is hardly limited to the NHL, no other league seems to be as distracted by the financial health of its franchises. Heck, the Colts were in real danger of moving to Los Angeles for the first part of this decade, yet the story was effectively kept on the back burner until Indianapolis announced a new stadium deal.

And, as ESPN.com's Damien Cox pointed out recently, the Penguins aren't the only team in sport purgatory. Cox's living autopsy on the Florida Panthers contained this sad (yet accurate) portrayal of the team:

This is, arguably, the NHL's weakest link, a team that was once very popular playing out of the bandbox Miami Arena when a hail of plastic rats meant the home team had scored but now lives in virtual seclusion somewhere near, but not too near, Fort Lauderdale.


Despite all the bad press, the biggest tragedy for the NHL in all of this is that very few people seem to care. That, more than franchise instability or All-Star voting problems, is the largest hurdle the NHL has to overcome.

1 comment:

John Wustrow said...

As one of the few people who will admit to being a fan of the NHL I say the league should scrap every change it has made in the Gary Bettman era. First thing go back to the old way of referring to conferences and divisions. Wales and Campbell Conference has a much better ring to it than Eastern and Western Conference.
Next, move teams back north. You don’t think a team would do better in Winnipeg than it would in Phoenix? People in Connecticut are just begging for the return of their Whalers. Hockey is a sport that just can’t survive in the south where winter does not exist. Many fans of the game became fans because they grew up playing hockey on the frozen lake or pond by their house.
Finally revert all the rule changes that have gone down. Stop breaking up fights so fast. It’s what makes hockey unique. Growing up a Red Wings fan, I always looked forward to the next game so I could see who Bob Probert would beat to a pulp. Take back all the rules that open up scoring. Hockey is a defensive game, and should stay that way. A 1-0 overtime game is much more exciting than a 6-5 shootout. Finally take out that damn shootout. Let the players go 5 on 5 for 20 more minutes and after that it’s a tie. Teams should not get credited for losses in overtime. A loss is a loss.
As soon as Bettman realizes he’s screwed up the NHL for the last 15 years, things have to get better.