Jumat, 30 November 2012

Friday Caps Clips: Baby Got Bäckis

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • The latest labor-related news, non-news and assorted whatnot:
    • M is for "Meh.": The mediators met with with the League and the union and got them to agree to continue disagreeing. [WaPo, WashTimes, Puck Daddy, Backhand Shelf]
    • Tick tock. The owners are running out the doomsday clock. [Sporting News, Kukla, Peerless]
    • They are also setting the table for more CBA strife down the road. [Detroit News]
    • It's a trap! But also a chance the players have to take. [Yahoo! Sports]
    • Bully me this, Jeremy Jacobs. [Puck Daddy]
    • Why franchise value matters. [SI]
    • Did Roman Hamrlik draw a target on his own back? [The Province]
    • You can hear Hamr's side of the story in this HNIC radio interview. [CBC.ca (audio)]
  • Mathieu Perreault has arrived in Helsinki, and the team could not be more pleased. [HIFK]
  • Boom goes the Backstromite. [RMNB]
  • Aftershock. [RMNB]
  • "Fear not, citizens of Riga. I come in peace." [Alex Ovetjkin]
  • Joey Crabb leads his team in scoring? Joey Crabb leads his team in scoring. And with two other NHLers on the roster, the Aces lead their division and conference. [Alaska Aces]
  • Put him in as coach ... Oatsie's ready to draw up plays, today. [CSNW]
  • The USHL Muskegon Jacks announce that Caps prospect d-man Patrick Koudys has committed to play for the Penn State Nittany Lions beginning in 2013. [Jacks, Thank You Terry]
  • Hockey Day in Virginia this weekend looks to be a fine day's entertainment ... for a good cause. [Hockey Shopped]
  • Blog note: SB Nation United has made some changes in the mobile interfaces - go check 'em out and provide your feedback. They are listening. [Blog Huddle]
  • Finally, there's some honest-to-goodness live hockey on your teevee tonight and tomorrow night. NBC Sports Network is airing both games of the home-and-away series for the Boston University Terriers vs. Caps prospect d-man Patrick Wey and the Boston College Eagles. Our SB Nation colleagues at BC Interruption have graciously invited us over to their place to tailgate in their Game Day Thread. We'll have the link for you around 5:30 or so, and make sure your avatar is properly tied down. [BC Interruption]


Kamis, 29 November 2012

Thursday Caps Clips: Lock Steady

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • The latest labor-related news, non-news and assorted whatnot:
    • The NHLPA delivered a terse statement through gritted teeth to the media: "A small group of NHLPA staff and players met today with three two experienced FMCS mediators. We expect that these discussions will resume on Thursday." [Kukla]
    • What to expect when you're expecting mediation. [SB Nation DC]
    • Mind the gap. [Edmonton Journal]
    • "Brand suicide." Oh, hockey. [SI]
    • Just ask these Caps season ticket holders ... [WaPo]
    • ... and these other fans, and those sponsors ... [WaPo]
    • ... and don't forget the Chinatown business district. [WJLA]
    • Won't somebody think of the anthem singers? [WaPo]
    • Ted Lindsay thinks all the Bettman vitriol is misplaced and unproductive. Yes, that Ted Lindsay. [ESPN]
  • Forbes has published its annual listing of the values of hockey franchises. Parse as you deem best. [Forbes, WashTimes, Puck Daddy, CSNW]
  • In which Ted Leonsis discusses lots of topics ... but not the one we want most to hear about. [ABC News]
  • Operation Hat Trick has raised $500,000 for Sandy relief ... and that's before the jersey auctions have closed. [WashTimes]
  • Mathieu Perreault departed for Finland on Wednesday. We learn he turned down Hamburg in October, and that his new team has arranged for lodging, a car, and the chance to play center. [Le Journal de Montreal]
  • On the occasion of the first anniversary of his separation from the Capitals, Bruce Boudreau was on hand to observe his new farm team play against ... his former farm team. [Dump 'n' Chase]
  • A game the Bears won 5-2, thankyouverymuch. [Patriot-News, Dump 'n Chase, SHoE]
  • Oh, and a win that moved Braden Holtby to within one win of tying the top of Hershey's all-time list. [@TimLeone]
  • Stanislav Galiev scored his first pro goal for Reading with twelve SOG and nabbed third star of the game. Woo!
  • Happy 63rd birthday to Yvon Labre.
  • Finally, congrats are in order for Sylvain Côté, who has been named to Le Temple de la Renommée de la LHJMQ. The ceremony will be held April 3rd in Montreal. [QMJHL]


Wojtek Wolski Takes Polish Hockey Old-School

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BS Ciarko Bank KH Sanok arrived in Krakow on Tuesday for their fourth meeting of the season with Comarch Cracovia. The visitors had taken all three of their previous matchups, and the Comarch fans were in no mood to stand witness to a fourth loss to the defending league champions. They were, however, willing to attend in their (two-plus) thousands in order to see Wojtek Wolski, Poland's only NHL player.

And see him they did, as Wolski swiped the puck off an unwary Cracovian and deftly delivered it to Marcin Kolusz for the game's first tally just before the end of the first period. Sanok went on to score two more unanswered goals in the second, Cracovia potted two on the power play in the third, and then ... got creative.

Patrik Valczak took a long shot on Sanok goaltender Przemyslaw Odrobny and motored in as Odrobny came out of the crease to freeze the puck. Valczak half-heartedly put on the brakes but managed to crunch the crouching tender fairly convincingly.

And then Justice arrived:

Wolski swooped in, took Valczak to the ice, bounced up and shook his left glove free. The official slid smoothly between them, and Wolski's right glove hit the ice. There may have been some pleasantries exchanged as well. Cue the fight, right?

Wrong. The PHL frowns on fighting, so the miscreants were herded to the sin bin. Then the stylishly-stripéd zebras held a swift conference, slapped Wolski with a ten-minute misconduct and ordered him to the showers. Wojtek sauntered out of the box, took a nice long slow glide across the rink, and then this happened:


Wolski had some remarks after the game (via GooglePolska):

"I do not care for the rules in Poland about not throwing gloves on the ice. I will always defend our goalkeeper when he is attacked ... The NHL lockout continues and there is nothing I can do. I know one thing - at the holidays I will return home to Toronto. As always, I'm going to spend it with my family. What's next, we'll see. I do not know if I will come back to Poland."

Full game highlights here. Many thanks to reader Beata for the links and videos!


Rabu, 28 November 2012

Jason Chimera Heads Home

Per Steve Whyno:

Jason Chimera was able to find employment during the NHL lockout in the Czech Republic. But this week The Washington Capitals forward decided to return home to the United States after five games with HC Chomutov in the Czech Extraliga.

Chimera had trouble coping with playing while his family was back home in the U.S. TV NOVA Sport in the Czech Republic was first to report Chimera returning. His agent, Allan Walsh, confirmed that.

Chomutov manager Leo Gudas told TV NOVA Sport: "He wasn't able to live here separated from family, especially his children."

Another reminder of the human element associated with this lockout... and something to think about any time a player gets traded mid-season, really.


Wednesday Caps Clips: Chimera Czechs Out

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • The latest labor-related news, non-news and assorted whatnot:
    • Jason Chimera is heading home after a brief stint in the Czech Extraliga which, unfortunately for Chimera, insists on playing all of its games thousands of miles from his family. (Good choice, Chimmer.) [WaPo, WashTimes]
    • Will Roman Hamrlik have a target on his back when play resumes (assuming he's part of it)? [Puck Daddy]
    • And how will things be for him and the rest of the Caps room? (Spoiler alert: they'll be fine.) [CSNW]
    • More on mediation (which takes on another, perhaps more apt meaning, when spoken aloud). [TSN, ESPN (and again ($) and again), WashTimes, NYT]
    • The farce is strong in this lockout. [SI]
    • What we should be talking about: hockey. What we're not talking about: hockey. [Backhand Shelf]
    • Where we're talking about what we're talking about: at the launch for Brad Richards' line of untucked dress shirts? [Sporting News]
    • #TeamOwners [Arctic Ice Hockey]
    • Some pretty impressive careers ended with the last lockout... [Down Goes Brown]
    • ... but no more than would be expected, generally, so let's kill that silly talking point. [Edmonton Journal, Puck Daddy]
  • The Bears are off to Norfolk to face the Ads tonight, the team they'll host - at the Verizon Center - next week. [Capitals Voice, with more Bears notes at The Patriot-News (and again) and The Post]
  • Dmitry Orlov and Alexander Burmistrov are buddies. (Jeff Schultz and Burmistrov, probably not so much.) [RMNB]
  • Riley Barber is shaping up to be an interesting story early on. [USA Today]
  • A look at what's happening in local high school hockey (Go Vikes!). [Capitals]
  • Finally, it was one year ago today that the Caps parted ways with Bruce Boudreau and embarked upon the short-lived Dale Hunter Era. (That morning's pre-firing Clips make for an interesting read.)


Selasa, 27 November 2012

Operation Hat Trick: NHLers Unite for Sandy Relief

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As frustrating as the ongoing NHL lockout has been, the silver lining - and gosh darn it, I'm going to try and find one - is that all this free time has allowed the players to put together various exhibition hockey games to raise money for charity. The latest, dubbed "Operation Hat Trick", took place at Atlantic City's Boardwalk Hall on Saturday night in front of a raucous, largely Philadelphia- and New York-based contingent of fans, with all proceeds going to relief efforts from Superstorm Sandy.

This night of ice hockey at the beach featured plenty of strange bedfellows, with once-rival players lining up on the same side while (relative) peace existed among rival fans in the stands - all uniting behind a great cause. The rosters were packed with current and former Rangers and Flyers, residents of the NY/NJ area (like the Caps' own John Carlson, a Jersey native) and NHLers just looking to help out and have a good time. And while Team Hartnell eventually fell to Team Richards by a lopsided score of 10-6, there were no losers Saturday night.

(Well... on the ice, at least. I can't vouch for how the players did once released onto the casino floor.)

Here are 10 more slightly scattered thoughts on a great night on the boardwalk:

  • Like any game that is essentially an All-Star Game (even one that features Steve Eminger), the goalies are generally just there for show - they're not really expected to put up good numbers. No one informed Henrik Lundqvist of this fact, apparently, as he turned aside all twenty-three shots faced in the opening frame to stonewall Team Hartnell. The shutout would be gone by early in the second and he eventually ceded six goals, but doing so on 63 shots? Not bad. Someone should really give that guy an NHL gig...
  • Of course the flip side of that story was happening at the other end of the ice, with Martin Brodeur staking Team Richards to a four-goal lead early on. Naturally the best part of this was that, as Team Hartnell's goalie, Brodeur was essentially playing for the Flyers... and their fans. One would imagine it was a struggle for them to not join in when their Ranger counterparts started that familiar taunting refrain of "Maaaarty....Maaaaarty".
  • One thing that was evident throughout the game was the fact that, regardless of the score, the players were clearly having a blast - something that usually makes up for the fact that the quality of hockey may not be the best. Whether it was a member of Team Hartnell chirping Lundqvist after yet another great save or linemates from Team Richards breaking out some dance moves in celebration of a goal, this game was a pointed reminder that, at the end of the day, this is a game. It should be fun.
  • Kerry Fraser was charged with officiating duties in this one and overall had a fairly quiet evening, but his best moment came when he prevented Arron Asham and Daniel Carcillo from engaging in a staged fight and then hilariously issued each of them a penalty shot instead. Asham vs. Brodeur and Carcillo vs. Lundqvist? Clash of the titans, for sure, but the goalies managed to turn aside both attempts... to the surprise of absolutely no one.
  • How about the Caps' own John Carlson? It wasn't the easiest of evenings for him, given the unenviable task of shutting down the hefty firepower on Team Richards (...to say nothing of former teammate Jeff Halpern) but he did make some nice plays in his own end and got to skate alongside pretty much everyone from Braydon Coburn to PK Subban. And he's rocking a pretty decent flow these days, which... is something.
  • One of the bigger stories to come out of this game - aside from the game itself - was the response of the fans, both good and bad. From start to finish the stands rang out with everything from "We want hockey" to "Fire Bettman" (and at one point a pretty loud "Crosby Sucks!"... ah, Atlantic Division, never change). And while it certainly plays into the owners' belief that the fans are too passionate to stay away, and while it did kind of take away from the good feelings and charitable aura of the evening, there was also something kind of moving about it, the very organic nature of a crowd united despite wearing different jerseys and different allegiances. Give us our damn hockey back.
  • Could there have been a bigger troll than James Neal? The guy skates out in front of 11,000 fans, most of whom hate him and his entire team, and has the gall to score a hat trick (and add an assist). Gutsy.
  • Knowing as we do that Steven Stamkos is a very talented goalscorer (and seeing the product of that talent firsthand on numerous occasions against the Caps), I'm not ashamed to say I took some small amount of glee in his seeming inability to crack Henrik Lundqvist - despite at least five or six great scoring chances. Schadenfreude is a beautiful thing, kids, and I choose to embrace it.
  • Ending a game with a stick salute to the crowd is always a nice touch, but this one seemed especially poignant and lasted a good five minutes - as it should have. This was all about the fans, as the salute capped off an evening that also saw jerseys and markers sailing over the glass for autographs throughout the game (with Team Hartnell "coach" Rick Tocchet showing off his mad Sharpie-grabbing skills on more than one occasion).
  • You didn't have to search too hard for hockey long after leaving the arena, as throughout the night one could find hockey jerseys (and at times hockey players themselves) scattered around the casino floors, lingering in bars, walking the streets of the city. It was both surreal and wonderful.

It wasn't the greatest hockey. There was no hitting, few icings, a couple of penalties that became penalty shots and 16 goals scored between the two teams. But when all was said and done, none of that mattered - what did matter was that nearly 11,000 people filled Boardwalk Hall to watch their heroes play, that said heroes put on quite a show and that some people in need got a little extra help.

And at the end of the night, players and fans saluted one another in the hope that this won't be the last hockey we see this year.

[Check out the gallery below for more grainy, lousy cell phone quality pics of Saturday's event.]


Tuesday Caps Clips: Fed(s) Up

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • The latest from Lockoutland:
    • The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service will provide mediators to try to help move the negotiating process forward... [NHL.com, Puck Daddy, CBC, Globe and Mail, WaPo, CSNW, WashTimes, PHT]
    • ... but it won't be the trio of Feds initially announced because, well, one of them was a little creepy and awful. [Puck Daddy, Sporting News]
    • Alex Ovechkin speaks on the state of affairs - including the comments made by Roman Hamrlik - from afar. [CSNW, TSN, with more Hamrlik-related thoughts at WashTimes (and again), Backhand Shelf, CBS; Michal Neuvirth, for his part, apologized on Twitter]
    • The weekend's big charity game was a resounding success... at the very least in terms of public relations for the players. [SI, Puck Daddy, and be sure to check out Becca's firsthand account of the event]
    • As the lockout drags on, sponsors check out. [SBJ, Puck Daddy]
    • Decertification for Dummies. [NYT, TSN]
    • Karl Alzner did a hit with LaVar and Dukes (sans Dukes) and didn't sound particularly upbeat about anything other than shoveling snow. [106.7 The Fan (MP3)]
  • Nicklas Backstrom - who added a pair of assists last night - was named KHL's "Best Attacker" for his efforts last week... [KHL]
  • ... and here's what the game experience is like for a fan over there. [Hockey Shopped]
  • If the season gets scrapped, here's a look at the League's contingency plan for determining the 2013 Draft order. [Peerless]
  • Go Vikes! [Capitals Overtime]
  • Finally, happy 54th birthday to Al Jensen.


Senin, 26 November 2012

Monday Caps Clips: Manic-Depressive Monday

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • In case you missed it, all the news that's fit to clip from Saturday and Sunday (and seriously, go back and check 'em out - lots of good reading there).
  • More on this weekend's charity game at Atlantic City's Boardwalk Hall, which raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for Hurricane Sandy relief (with more to come from us later, as well). [BSH, Wash Times]
  • And of course where there are players and media, there will be questions to the players from the media about the lockout. [NYT, NYDN]
  • Speaking of the "L" word, Gary Bettman disputes claims by the NHLPA that the two sides are close - saying, unsurprisingly, that the two sides are still far apart. And so we wait some more. [WaPo]
  • Meanwhile the big market teams - aka the guys who stand to lose the most with no hockey - continue to have little voice in the negotiations. [NY Post]
  • And down on the farm, the Bears shake off a 3-1 loss to the Phantoms on Saturday by putting a four-spot up on the Marlies Sunday afternoon... thus marking just the third time they've scored more than three goals this season. Celebrate the little things, folks. [Caps, CBC, Sportsnet]
    • Helping push the team to victory was the return of Patrick McNeill to the lineup, who finished the night with an assist and a plus-two rating in a pivotal performance for the Bears. [Patriot-News]


NHL lockout 2012: For the Love of the (NHL) Game

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As this lockout drags on and fans become increasingly frustrated (or worse, apathetic), everyone has dealt with a lack of NHL action in different ways. Some have sought out other forms of hockey, shifting focus to the AHL or the ECHL or one of the European leagues – it’s almost the fan’s equivalent of an NHLPA member signing with the KHL, a defiant signal to the owners that you, like the players, have other options and aren’t afraid to exercise them. Others choose to avoid the sport altogether, opting instead to ignore it until the very best becomes available once again. Obviously to some extent this is what the owners are hoping for, that the fans are hooked and can be lured back in if and when the lockout gets resolved, no hard feelings.

The fact is, though, that we all want the NHL back. So it begs the question: is a fan who really just wants the NHL back any "worse" than the fans who are trying to convince themselves that they don't need the League to enjoy the sport?

I had someone tell me recently that hockey fans are divided between those who are truly fans of hockey itself and those who are really only ("only") NHL fans; they believe that one’s approach to hockey fandom basically comes down to the type and level of hockey with which you were raised/introduced, that people raised on the NHL are never fully able to grasp the beauty of the sport in its so-called purest form. And to some extent it may be true - if you grew up in a small town with little or no access to an NHL team, your devotion to the nearby ECHL or CHL or college team (and thus your appreciation of that level) is probably greater, at least initially, than those of us who grew up almost exclusively watching/attending NHL games.

What bothers me about this theory as a whole, however, is the implication that being an NHL fan is somehow lesser than, that someone who didn’t get exposed to minor league and/or college hockey doesn’t really get the game itself and that it’s impossible to start out watching NHL hockey and still appreciate the next level (or two or three) down. It’s the implication that you are somehow superior because while you may enjoy the NHL, you are able to experience the game without the trappings that go with a multimillion dollar roster, a fancy arena and 18-20,000 fans a night.

In short, hockey fans can be NHL fans, but it’s rarely the other way around.

Frankly, while I was raised in an NHL town with an NHL-focused upbringing, I have always considered myself a hockey fan above all else. I love so much about this game - and most of it transcends how much the players are getting paid or even if they’re getting paid at all. It’s how I’m able to turn on any hockey game at any given time and be at least moderately invested, something that’s nearly impossible to do with other sports. I love the sights and the sounds, the personalities of the game both sparkling and dull; I even love hating certain players and teams and fans. I’ve studied the history and the origins of the sport because I find it fun to see where the game has been and how far it’s come.

And yet I haven’t really sought out other leagues to ease the withdrawal pangs of this torturous lockout. I simply can’t get motivated to care about what is going on in the AHL or what the latest college scores are. I don’t even really want to know what some NHLers are doing in their assorted European leagues, so long as they stay healthy (looking at you, Mr. Laich…). The reality is that being a hockey fan can take a great deal of energy, emotion, time, and yes, money – and as all of these tend to be in short supply, I prefer to focus most of it on the best and little else. Someone saying that this doesn’t make me a "true" fan seems akin to telling a music lover that they’re only a "true" lover of music if they spend their evenings watching middle school band concerts and open mic nights at the local bar.

That’s not meant to put down these other hockey havens, mind you - the AHL is a perfectly good development league and a totally valid option to fill up the NHL-less days, as are any of the other leagues and levels in North America and abroad. Some find solace in these other forms of hockey; I’m simply not one of them. I prefer hockey played by the best players in the world at the top level in the world, and anything less just doesn’t appeal to me.

Here’s a newsflash: people choose to be fans in different ways, none better or worse than the other. Someone who replaces the NHL with the AHL or the CHL or college hockey is no better or worse than someone who simply abstains from hockey altogether, just as someone who started watching a year ago isn’t less of a fan than someone who has watched since birth. The common bond between all of us? We love the game. And that’s all that should matter.


Minggu, 25 November 2012

Sunday Caps Clips: Boardwalk Benefit

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • #OperationHatTrick was a rousing success, a little island of NHL hockey bliss in a churning lockout sea. [Puck Daddy, Press of Atlantic City, CBC, Sportsnet, ESPN, Courier-Post (video)]
    • The game-worn jerseys of all the players are available at auction ... [Steiner]
    • ... and you can bid on John Carlson's sweater here. Bid early and often! [Steiner]
    • Say, that fellow there over in the shadows. Yes, that one. Looks a lot like Donald Fehr, nu? [Philly.com]
  • The charity game was nice, but the real issues continue:
    • "...[I]f you believe in free speech and you don't believe in censorship, and you believe everybody's entitled to their opinion, they speak it. ... We don't believe in censoring anybody." Donald Fehr responds to the firestorm sparked by Roman Hamrlik's comments. [WashTimes]

    • Folks are starting to pay attention to the squabbling. [SenShot, WashTimes]
    • Time for the moderate owners to start moderating. Rise up! [NYPost]
  • News from around the Caps organization:
    • The Hershey Bears continue to struggle, posting a 3-1 loss to the Adirondack Phantoms. [Patriot-News, LDN, SHoE]
    • Old friend Keith Aucoin will be visiting the Giant Center in a Toronto Marlies sweater today. [Patriot-News]
    • The Reading Royals also lost 4-2 to the Evansville IceMen, ending an 11-game win streak.[Gamesheet]
  • And here's a quick scan of the news from overseas:
  • Sverige:
    • Marcus Johansson had an assist, a sweet sharp-angle goal and an only slightly awkward face plant as Karlsoga BIK took the league lead away from Filip Forsberg's Leksand. [HockeySverige (video, MJ90's goal is at the end)]
    • Speaking of Forsberg, he continues rehabbing a (what seems to be) hip flexor injury. He reports he is riding the bike a lot and skating a bit, and hopes it won't become a chronic thing. Oppan Rehab Style, Filip. [dt.se]
    • Brynas has had terrible bad luck with injuries to their defensemen, which is how young Christian Djoos got so many minutes, so fast. But you know what? He's earning those minutes now, and his coach has high praise for him. [Arbetarbladet]
  • '''''': Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom continue to be awesome and their next game is Monday against woeful Atlant.
  • Suissa: Previous media reports had Brooks Laich returning to Kloten for this weekend's games, but now the indicators are that he remains in the US for further treatment. [Blick.ch, Eishockey-24]
  • Polska: Ciarko PBS Bank Sanok is participating in the IIHF Continental Cup in Stavanger, Norway. Sanok is unfortunately last in their group with two losses, but Wojtek Wolski was named "man of the match" with two goals in their loss to Metallug Zloban. [Eurosport]
  • Finally, here's a don't-miss interview with Wolski as he discusses the differences in training and philosophy between the PHL and the NHL, why he's always catching his new teammates checking YouTube, and just how long it will take for him to get on a plane bound for Washington. [FanPost]


Sabtu, 24 November 2012

Saturday Caps Clips: Saving Room for Decert

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • The League has cancelled all games through December 14 as well as January's All-Star Game. [Capitals, Puck Daddy, WaPo, WashTimes, DCEx, Backhand Shelf, PHT]
  • More from the labor front:
    • Depending on who you want to believe, decertification is either "the likeliest way to see NHL [hockey] this year" or it would "likely lead to the end of the season." But just what the hell is "decertification," anyway? Learn up, kiddos. [CBC, Puck Daddy, mc79hockey, SportsNet, SportsNet, Backhand Shelf (and again), PHT, Freakonomics]
    • So close and yet so far away? [USA Today, CSNW, WashTimes]
    • Closer to home, Troy Brouwer's role as Union rep perhaps trumped his role as teammate as he took the opportunity to chastise a couple of fellow Caps for speaking out of turn. [Japers' Rink, WaPo, WashTimes, Backhand Shelf, CBS]
    • Karl Alzner took a much more diplomatic approach (because he's Karl Alzner), in a pair of interviews. [StarPhoenix, WashTimes]
    • Despite the frustrations expressed by some PA members, don't think that their resolve has lessened (even though it probably has). [NY Post, Puck Daddy]
    • Outspoken player agent Allan Walsh: "[W]hether we make a deal this year or not, is that Bettman will be gone because the players will refuse to deal with him going forward." [SportsPro Media]
    • To that end, Gary and Don - hockey or GTFO. [Globe and Mail, and if you missed Tom Boswell's piece on Fehr from the other day, unmiss it now]
    • And while it might seem that this is owners vs. players, it may in fact be owners vs.... owners? [Backhand Shelf]
    • Could anyone other than Don Cherry dictate write, "First, you unfeelin’ jerks.... [N]obody likes to be called a cancer or an idiot." [Star]
    • "[H]ockey players who think they should be paid like baseball and basketball players, despite the disparity in the NHL's U.S. TV money, need a reality check." [SportsNet]
    • How to hate on Da Commish. [Puck Daddy]
  • The latest Cap to head to Europe is Mathieu Perreault, off to Finland to suit up for HIFK Helsinki. [WaPo, WashTimes, Hockey Shopped]
  • Nicklas Backstrom is too good for the KHL. Lather, rinse, repeat. [RMNB (and again, with deets on the b-day boy's big day)]
  • On the Adam Oates Error Era in Hershey. [LDN]
  • And speaking of guys who have coached the Bears and then (presumably) the Caps, here's a good read on how Bruce Boudreau transformed the franchise when he took over for Glen Hanlon five years ago yesterday. [SB Nation DC]
  • Reading's win streak? It goes to eleven. [Capitals Voice]
  • Finally, what to get for the fan who has everything... except hockey, that is. [Deadspin]


Jumat, 23 November 2012

Brouwer, Alzner Respond to Teammates

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First it was Roman Hamrlik expressing his displeasure with the way the NHLPA - and more specifically Don Fehr - have handled the lockout thus far.

Then it was Michal Neuvirth backing up Hamrlik's comments (and adding a little spice of his own).

Now things get really interesting, as the Caps' NHLPA representative Troy Brouwer has spoken out against his two Czech teammates:

"Those are two guys that have never been on a conference call, never been to a meeting, never paid attention. People are going to have their own opinions but when you’re fighting for something with 700 other guys, all you’re doing is just making it harder to make a deal and making it harder to accomplish the things we’re fighting for."

"For me, I think those guys selling us out, being selfish like that and making those comments... me being on their team, how am I going to trust them as a teammate from now on? Because you know they’re not going to support players in the big scheme of things when you go and you play on the team with them; it’s going to be tough to want to back those guys from now on."

...

"It’s frustrating as players having other players come out and say this but we still as a core are very strong. We still believe the same things. We stand by the proposal that we made [Wednesday] and nothing’s going to change."

Meanwhile out in Calgary, fellow teammate Karl Alzner also weighed in on the recent comments - albeit in a slightly more diplomatic fashion:

"The first thought that came into my head is knowing Roman and knowing what he's like. I just had to laugh. Roman's the kind of guy that just takes it as it comes. He says what's on his mind. Whether he thinks it through all the time is another story. He just says it. If he doesn't like practice, he lets you know. If he doesn't like what you did in the game, he lets you know. I think it's just frustration setting in."

Whatever happens with the lockout itself, one thing's for sure - the Caps' locker room is going to be one fun place if and when hockey comes back this year.


Neuvirth: Lockout "Is About Several Superstars With Big Contracts"

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A day after Roman Hamrlik expressed his frustration with both the state of affairs on the labor front and his union's leadership, Michal Neuvirth came to his Caps teammate and fellow countryman's defense. Per TSN:

"I agree 100 percent with Hammer," Neuvirth told TVA Nova Sport in the Czech Republic. "This lockout is not about majority of players, I think. It is about several superstars with big contracts."

So... is Neuvirth/Ovechkin now more or less awkward than Neuvirth/Holtby?

For his part, Hamrlik clarified his comments a bit in an interview with TSN:

"I've been in the league for 20 years and faced three lockouts," Hamrlik told TSN's That's Hockey on Wednesday. "There's only 14 other players in the league that are facing their third career lockout. I believe I've earned the right to say what I think."

"Someone thinks I'm selfish - I might be," Hamrlik told TSN. "But it's selfish to play hockey. I still want to play with the Capitals or at least have the chance to win and go as far as I can. I think time is against us and we need to find a solution. I think that it's a fight between two groups that have too much pride. We need to find an agreement - I still support Fehr, but we as players we need to push him a little bit more and get the best deal possible."

...

"I'm just disappointed - I know it's a really tough business, it's not just me losing money. Everybody's losing money - the sooner we figure it out, the better for everybody."

For those of you keeping score at home, that leaves the Caps with allegedly one of the most hard-line owners, a superstar threatening not to return when this mess is over, and a pair of players who have now publicly expressed frustration with their union (a rarity, to date). Washington remains, if nothing else, a city comprised of diverse viewpoints...


Friday Caps Clips: Reality Czech

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Czech, please:
    • Roman Hamrlik added some clarification to his previous remarks but still stands behind them ... [Globe and Mail, TSN, THW, TSN (video)]
    • ... and he has the support (and then some) of fellow countryman and Caps teammate Michal Neuvirth ... [Rink, PHT, TSN, Hockey Shopped]
    • ... who may have been feelin' pretty good after recording his first shutout for Sparta Praha ... [iDNES]
    • ... and yes, the hockey gods have a strange sense of humor. The Spartans are on the road today, playing at… Jason Chimera’s Pirati Chomutov. [Chomutov]
  • Do these exchanges mean the unity armor worn by the union and the owners is starting to show some cracks? Maybe. And maybe that's a good thing. [PHT]
  • Happy Nicklas Backstrom Day! He's turning 25.
    • Dynamo Moscow is playing at home against Severstal. Perhaps Mean Lars will score the OT gamewinner.
    • Heja Sverige! Bäckis has confirmed he will play for Tre Kronor in the Channel One Cup portion of the Euro Tour hockey tournament, to be held in Moscow December 13-16. That is, if he doesn't have other, more pressing business at the Verizon Center. [dn.se]
    • CBS Sports is counting down the top 50 players "in" the NHL. Himself is #99 #69 #19 #14. [Eye on Hockey]
    • Appreciatin'. [What's Up, Ya Sieve]
  • A hazard of playing lockout hockey in Poland - dodging airborne chocolate bars. Wojtek Wolski reflects on what it means to play in and for his native land. [IIHF, Canoe.ca]
  • Filip Forsberg says his hip is improving, he's back to light training for Leksand, and he will definitely be ready to play for Sweden at the WJCs. [Hockey Sverige]
  • Finally, doin' good in the 'hood. [Hockey Shopped]


Kamis, 22 November 2012

Hamrlik: "We Have to Push Fehr to the Wall to Get the Deal"

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Veteran Caps blueliner Roman Hamrlik is 38-years-old and was set to earn $3.5 million in this the second year of a two-year deal, so it's easy to see where his interests may not necessarily align with those of the majority of the Players Association (or its most-influential members) as they collectively bargain for the best possible mid-range future they can get. Still, Hamrlik, like most players, has kept his other-than-helpful-to-the-Union thoughts on the matter to himself.

Until now, that is.

Via Roman Jedlicka, an NHL play-by-play announcer for TV NOVA Sport in the Czech Republic, comes the following translation from an iSport interview with Hamrlik in which the rearguard lambastes the PA's leadership, specifically targeting Donald Fehr:

"I am disgusted. We have to push Fehr to the wall to get the deal. Time is against us. We lost 1/4 season, it is $425 million. Who will give it back to us? Mr. Fehr?

"There should be voting between players. Four questions - YES or NO - then count it. If half of players say let's play, then they should sign new CBA. If there is no season he should leave and we will find someone new. Time is our enemy."

Hamrlik may be getting cranky as his career winds down (Caps fans will recall him voicing his displeasure with being healthy-scratched by Dale Hunter back in February), but perhaps he's earned the right to speak his mind - after all he's one of fourteen should-be NHLers who has sat through all three of Gary Bettman's lockouts.

Regardless, you can bet that Hamrlik isn't the only one who's ready to take the best deal he can get and play... because no player ever knows how many games he might have left.

(H/t Puck Daddy)


Thursday Caps Clips: A Locked-Out Thanksgiving

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Some late-breaking news from last night: Adam Oates and his coaching staff are returning to DC.
    • Oates: "I got to meet some of the young guys in the organization, and I got to get some head coaching experience." [Dump 'n' Chase]
    • Mark French: "I think everybody learned a lot in the time we were together. I thought all four individuals made it work as well as it possibly could." [Patriot-News]
    • Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 4 (30 shots on goal), Hershey Bears 0 (15 shots on goal). [SHoE, @WashCaps]
  • Yay, lockout:
    • In which Roman Hamrlik takes a well-placed swing at the ant hill ... [Rink, Puck Daddy]
    • ... and his former Habs teammate Erik Cole rushes in for damage control ... [TSN]
    • ... and BizNasty pretty much agrees with the Hamrman. [Puck Daddy]
    • #theplayers made a proposal to the League. [Globe & Mail]
    • Conjunction junction. [USA Today, CBC, Edmonton Journal, Puck Daddy]
    • The latest in post-proposal he said/she said. [Puck Daddy (and again), ESPN, SI, Sportsnet]
    • D is for ... decertification? [Globe and Mail]
  • Finally, five years ago today a Hershey Bears head coach bid his team farewell, checked the directions to DC, and peeled out of the Giant Center parking lot. Uncanny. [Japers' Rink]
  • Congrats are in order for the ECHL Reading Royals, who used the occasion of a visit by the South Carolina Stingrays to post their tenth straight win. [@RRoyals]
  • We at the Rink wish everyone a healthy, happy, and still-hopeful Thanksgiving.


Rabu, 21 November 2012

Wednesday Caps Clips: Make or Break?

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • It would seem that an NHL season is about the only way that Nicklas Backstrom is going to be able to find challenging hockey at this point. [KHL, RMNB, Alex Ovetjkin]
  • A real NHL season, that is, since digital Nicky is apparently unstoppable as well. [ESPN]
  • The latest on the lockout:
    • We've heard it before, but today's seems to be an important day in the negotiations (or lack thereof). [CBC, ESPN, SI]
    • Believe it or not, the sides agree on a lot of relatively meaningless things. [Toronto Star, Puck Daddy]
    • They'd probably also agree that their bickering isn't endearing either side to its fans. [ESPN (epic rant from Buccigross), Globe and Mail, Backhand Shelf, Buffalo News]]
    • Of course, there's plenty on which they don't appear to be anywhere close to agreement. [Puck Daddy]
    • And while Gary Bettman has many strengths, diplomacy isn't exactly one of them. [Backhand Shelf]
    • But if you want him fired... be careful what you wish for... [The Spin]
    • ... the next "idiot" may not make you quite so wealthy... [CBS]
    • Perhaps a bit of perspective might help the players... [Dallas Stars Blog (h/t Wysh), All Things Avs, CSN]
    • ... and the owners... [Dallas Stars Blog]
    • ... because "by this point the whole situation has begun to resemble the plane housing the going-down-in-flames Rihanna 777 Tour." [Grantland]
  • Congrats to ECHL Goalie of the Week Philipp Grubauer. [ECHL, Capitals]
  • Some thoughts from Chocolatetown. [Patriot-News, RtR]
  • Finally, "Gary Bettman ordering a pizza" is your moment of zen. [Down Goes Brown]