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Showing posts with label ranting about the nhl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ranting about the nhl. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

A Continuation Of My Fair Weather Facebook Rant

Not many readers of the blog would actually know that I posted a rant on Facebook.  Nor would many of you even care.  But I was just plain sick of hearing the whining coming out of Chicago and Northwest Indiana sports stations, newspapers, radio personalities, and yes, so-called fans about what was wrong with their beloved Blackhawks.  Since most of my readers (if there are any of you left) on here will most likely "get it", I figured why not share.

I can't believe I am coming to the defense of a Chicago team but I am.  Here is the original post from Facebook yesterday, followed by some commentary.

I'm a Pittsburgh Penguin fan stuck in the middle of Blackhawk country. I wasn't always outnumbered. Only in the last 8-10 years did it get this way after the majority dormant fan base woke up from hibernation realizing a) Chicago has a pro hockey team and b) they're pretty good. A couple Cups later and now, everyone's a Hawks fan. But if you aren't, that's ok. You can basically go [expletive deleted] yourself which is a common phrase I have heard for at least the past 3 years if not longer.

But i don't care. I'm also a hockey fan, period. I like good hockey. I love great hockey. I really love playoff hockey. And the Kings/Hawks series was just that.. Great playoff hockey. Period.

So to all the Hawks fans that have been asking questions and wondering what happened to their beloved team? The answer is...NOTHING! They played their best games against a tough as nails team that will most likely annihilate the Rangers in the Final.

There is nothing wrong with your scoring ability, your players heart, your line pairings and combos, your goalie, your coaching staff, or your organization. The only thing wrong is YOU. The fans that question anything about this team.

The Hawks are one of the best teams in the NHL and will be for years to come. When it came down to it, the Kings just got the pucks in the right spots, they got the caroms, they got the rebounds. That's it. Period. That's a big part of playoff hockey.

So from a Pens fan to the ever expanding kingdom of the so-called Hawk loyal, go back into hibernation. I know the true hockey fans want no part of you and I'm sure the real Hawks faithful don't either.

Let me clarify some things.  Yes, I posted that.  I am just tired of bandwagon fans who claim to be die-hard....regardless of what team you claim to like.  There is no such thing.  You can't wake up one day and decide you will bleed for your time, kill for your team, or die for your team (okay maybe a slight exaggeration but real fans are rabid).  It doesn't work like that.  Now the first paragraph where I talk about the "expletive deleted" thing, that happened.  It happens a lot.  Mostly by drunk or well on their way to be guys at bars that think no one else, especially those living in this area, should be allowed to cheer for another team.

But it also happens with these people that call themselves fans that were no where to be found in the 80s, 90s, or pre-Toews/Kane.  If you are in the Chicagoland area, go to any sports bar and take a poll of everyone wearing a Hawks jersey with a current player name on the back.  Ask them who Dirk Graham is.  Ask them who Steve Larmer is.  Ask them who Tony Amonte is.  Ask who Tony Esposito is and you'll get "the guy from the Binny's Beverage Depot commercial."  Then ask who Jeremy Roenick is and see how many say "That guy on NBC with the greasy hair".  There are going to be exceptions, of course, but the norm is not what you would think.  The rabid fan-base that the sports analysts talk about is largely an artificial one generated by recent success.

I enjoy hockey and as a fan of hockey, I love when people find the sport for the first time and realize there is something they have been missing.  But what I don't like are the pretenders.  Don't be one of these fans that is here when you win and criticizes, mocks, and eventually disappears when you lose. There is no reason to crucify your team because they don't win the championship, regardless of the sport.  If you can make it one step from the top, you made it one step from the top.  No one else can say that except the one person/team in front of you.  You are still among the best, you are still elite.  Cherish that, because in today's sports, salary caps, free agency, and league parity have made it anyone's game.

For the Hawks, they will be back next year with a chip on their shoulder.  Come playoff time, they will be sitting right there with the rest of the elite.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Read At Your Own Risk: NHL Editorial Commentary

Since my efforts to post my Steeler cards for yesterday were thwarted by Blogger's "random technical difficulties", I thought I would try again today.  However, something else has been bothering me lately and I don't know why but I need to vent for a moment.

Game 6 of the Stanley Cup finals is tomorrow night with the Hawks taking their one game advantage back to Philly.  They could easily win this and put an end to what has been an exciting, yet sloppily played finals.  If not, game 7 is right around the corner and would most certainly become an instant classic.  Each and every day after one of these playoff games, there have been reports flying around the interwebs about the TV ratings.  Ever since the Olympic "explosion" of popularity, it seems hockey has moved from the back burner to almost front and center.  But is this a good thing for the fans or only the business side of the sport?

I am not stupid enough to ignore that fact that a sports popularity is largely due to its marketability.  With most NHL games over the last five years appearing on lesser known (or carried) cable stations and local market affiliates, it has hardly had the national following that it somewhat had pre-lockout.  Last year alone, there were a half dozen market affiliates that even considered dropping NHL games from their lineups, technically creating local blackouts.  While this would have most certainly destroyed or at the least, damaged some viewing opportunities, the fan would either pony up for tickets, go to a bar that would spare a tv in the corner, or find the radio broadcast, even if it meant driving around town for 2 1/2 hours to listen.  Now let me take a step back and say that I am largely speaking of the United States market because, as we all know, hockey is THE sport in Canada and always will be (one more reason to move to Canada, as if I needed more). 

I am also not stupid enough to not realize the fact that running an NHL team is the same as running a regular business.  Ratings mean revenue.  Revenue means sustainability.  I get that.  I get all of that.  If a business fails, all beneficiaries of it's service will suffer as well.  In this case, low ratings mean lower marketability.  Lower marketability means less exposure.  Eventually the Networks will win out and hockey will once again be relegated to some hunting and fly fishing channel on extended cable, never to be heard from again (maybe that's a slight exaggeration).  The only people left watching will be the diehards with the fortunate position of being able to afford the "Center Ice" packages or live in a cable market that has said network.  Ultimately, though, the business agenda of the league, ownerships, and networks is not the same as the fan's agenda.  The fan, in their primitive form, doesn't care about those things.  They will find a way.

Marketing focuses on some basic economic principles.  You are trying to gain the biggest return of/on investment of a concept/product for the least amount of effort and shortest amount of time.  There is no doubt that the Olympics this year was the catalyst for the focus on the current popularity of the NHL.  With more emphasis on the Winter Classic each year, and now the Heritage Classic in Canada, prime-time television exposure is successfully targeting a demographic that has forgone hockey for more accessible sports like baseball, football, and dare I say, basketball.  But the Olympics is every four years and the Winter Classic only happens once a year.  The other annual tournaments have already proven to provide less a motivation for the casual observer.  The fan, on the other hand, will actively seek out the coverage whether it be on obscure networks, premium sports packages, or the internet outlets that cover the games.

ESPN exposure helped the NHL in the past with ratings but like anything that isn't fashionable or "hip", was moved to the backburner and eventually off the network completely.  If not for Barry Freakin' Melrose, there would be no mention of hockey whatsoever on any of the ESPN networks.  VS. is not available in all markets and is subject to local blackout in most.  They also have arguably one of the worst coverage teams in the NHL, led by Bill Patrick in studio.  Fox had hockey at one time but "jumped the shark" when it introduced the Glow Puck "technology" when they felt their viewer base was too stupid to follow the game without it.  The current NBC coverage is most definitely biased toward US based teams and makes no effort to hide that fact.  Despite having games for the last two years, they are still tinkering with their announcing matchups and analysts but just haven't found that right combination; they are close but not there yet.  Who knows what will happen if NBC and Comcast actually are able to merge.  Shudder to think.

Which brings me to the fans.  If there is one thing that has driven me nuts (other than the Pens suffocation under their own ineptitudes) during this playoff season, it has to be all the "fair-weather fans" that have suddenly sprung up like dandelions in my front yard.  The extra media attention has brought out everyone from little kids who didn't know what hockey was to grandma's that think Toews and Kane are "nice young boys".  I hope, for my sanity's sake, that these are true "new" fans that will stick around after the hype, after the hoopla, and after the playoff intensity dies down and not cockroaches that scurry under the fridge when you flip the light on.  If that occurs, hockey in the US could see a resurgence as big as it had when the NHL was marketed as "The Coolest Game on Earth" and every promotion told you so. 

Unfortunatly for those FWF's, I think their days are probably numbered and within the next month, they will have forgotten how fun it was to watch a game.  They will forget the fast pace, the hard hitting, and the intense competition.  The hockey talk at the water cooler, the front page headlines, the lazy sports writers that never cover hockey except when it's fashionable, the coverage by the Entertainment News outlets like Huffington, TMZ, print newspapers, etc. will all go away.  We will be back to where we were right before and right after the lockout.  The true fan will be left standing. 

The best thing, in my opinion, about all of it comes from a more selfish side of me.  Because the FWF's will all go back to watching baseball and preparing for thier fantasy football drafts, I will have nothing to discuss with these people.

-I won't have to explain what icing is almost on a daily basis. 
-I won't have to explain why helmets don't have full face masks. 
-I won't have to try and defend the merits of pulling your goaltender with 2 minutes to go in the playoffs to someone that sees no benefit to extra offense and can't understand there is no difference in losing 4-3 or 5-3...it's still a loss. 
-I won't be critized for making critical comments about the lack of goaltending prowess and breakdowns in defense every single night while 8-10 combined goals are scored. 
-I won't have to explain the physics of putting a 1" x 3" round piece of frozen rubber into a 6'x4' box being blocked by a 6'+ tall man in full goalie pads while skating 15-20 mph to anyone that thinks it is "their job" and should be easy. 

The questions will stop and I won't have to defend the sport that I love any longer to people whose rallying cry is "Hooray, local sports team(s) and or athlete(s)".  I will be content once again...

Maybe.?.


(The views in this long-winded and probably mostly incoherent rant are the fragmented views of the author and do not necessarily represent those of any parties involved, mentioned, or thought about in the process of forming this post.  Those parties include but are not limited to: the NHL, the Pittsburgh Penguins, the executives of ESPN, NBC, VS, FOX or any other lackluster sports broadcasting organization, Gary "the Devil" Bettman, most of the morons I have crossed paths with over the last six months, Barry Melrose, Bill Patrick, the inventor of the Glow Puck (may you burn in hell), or any other person that may find what I said offensive or off putting.  Thank you.
----The Management )