Saturday, May 23, 2009

"Dropping the Gloves" with Andrew Bogusch


photo credit: Harry How, Getty Images


EMBARRASSMENT IN THE DESERT

It’s rare that the sporting public fails to mock the NHL for its latest issue, but the League is getting a pass (for the moment) on one of its worst black eyes in recent memory.


Lawyers met in a Phoenix bankruptcy court Tuesday in the first of many hearings about the Coyotes’ muddled future. And they did so in relative obscurity thanks to the conference finals, the NBA playoffs, the early weeks of the baseball season and the occasional NFL nugget.


Judge Redfield Baum ordered the League and team owner Jerry Moyes into mediation to determine who controls the insolvent franchise. A status hearing has been set for next Thursday. There is also a June 22nd court date, at which time Baum will hear arguments about the validity of Jim Balsillie’s offer to buy the Coyotes and move them to Hamilton, Ontario.


Could this happen to another major professional league?


No, of course not. And while Moyes and Balsillie are certainly the baddest guys in this drama, the NHL is guilty for letting the situation degenerate to this point.


Yes, the League has apparently been in control of the organization since November, but why was Moyes allowed to own the Coyotes in the first place? He was over-leveraged BEFORE putting hundreds of millions of dollars of his own money into the franchise. His early expenditures drew the attention of the Securities and Exchange Committee because he was using borrowed money.


Where were the red flags then, five to six years ago? As the Coyotes continued to bleed money, why not reach out to Jerry Reinsdorf then?


Because the NHL simply cannot admit the majority of expansion into warm-weather cities did not work. The game had to be played in the desert, even if created the possibility of boardroom shenanigans like this.


When the Montreal Expos were on life support, Major League Baseball took firm control of the organization to prevent any real embarrassment. The on-field product struggled mightily, but the team quickly found a new place in Washington, D.C. and now plays in a brand new ballpark. MLB did not allow an outsider to swoop in to steal the franchise. And it didn’t cling to the idea that baseball had to exist in Montreal.


But the worst part of the Coyote predicament is something few are discussing. The NHL does not want a team in Hamilton because it would mean more dollars leaving owners’ pockets.


A club in Copps Coliseum would be exponentially more popular than the Coyotes. That would mean more revenue, which would mean an increase to the salary cap and floor, which would mean a greater expenditure for owners.


Gary Bettman can say Copps Coliseum isn’t ready to house an NHL team, and that may be true today. But it’s a dilemma with an answer -- they have engineers and construction workers in Ontario and Balsillie has the cash to fund renovations.


It is an almost criminal stance to take as hockey’s caretaker.


The commissioner can keep Balsillie out of the owners’ club for now for (once again) messing up the application process, but he should not forever ignore Balsillie’s love for the game and his deep pockets, both of which the game could use.


Make him crawl from Phoenix to league headquarters to apologize. Make him use an iPhone for six months. Then let him put his new team in Hamilton and let the game be played in a hockey town.



Tuesday, May 19, 2009

CHI - DET Game 2 Recap


photo credit: Julian H. Gonzalez, Detroit Free Press



(2) RED WINGS 3 – (4) BLACKHAWKS 2 OT

DET leads series, 2-0

by Andrew Bogusch


Game 2 of the Western Conference Finals was much more competitive than Sunday afternoon’s opener, but the end result was the same – the veteran Red Wings dismissing the young Blackhawks.

Mikael Samuelsson scored 5:14 into overtime on a perfectly executed 3-on-1 rush to give Detroit a two-games-to-none lead as the series shifts to Chicago for Game 3 Friday night. Chris Osgood outdueled Nikolai Khabibulin with 37 saves, including one on Cam Barker seconds before Samuelsson’s game-winner.

This was a game that Red Wings head coach Mike Babcock feels lucky to have won: “I don’t think we had any legs or any pop whatsoever. I thought we had good will and good determination, but no legs.”

This was Detroit’s fourth game in a week. It was Chicago’s best effort of the series, which is why Joel Quenneville called it a brutal loss.

“We want to beat them one game, the next one, and that’s our concern,” he said postgame. “We should be excited about being back in the United Center to recapture some excitement and enthusiasm.”

After Barker’s wristshot and the ensuing scramble in front of Osgood, the puck wound up with Brian Campbell at the right point. Samuelsson put his stick in the way of Campbell’s cross-ice pass and then sent Jiri Hudler and Valtteri Filppula up the ice. Hudler carried the puck across the Chicago blueline and then fed Filppula coming down the right side. He delayed slightly before leaving the puck for Samuelsson to one-time it past a helpless Khabibulin.

Brian Rafalski and Dan Cleary beat Khabibulin in regulation. The goals came between tallies from Chicago captain Jonathan Toews. The Blackhawks led 1-0 for the second straight game after Toews’ passed deflected in off a Red Wing skate at 12:49 of the opening period. Four minutes later, Rafalski scored on the man-advantage to even the score.

Cleary scored for the second straight game on an unassisted breakaway late in the second period, only to see Toews set-up overtime at 12:20 of the final period.

The Red Wings kept Patrick Kane off the score sheet again, but like Toews, Kane was much more effective Tuesday night. Chicago needs more, though, from its young guns to prevent a short series. Yes, Detroit has only retained home court advantage, but Chicago now has almost no margin for error in this two-game hole.

Odds & Ends…The Red Wings have allowed a power play goal in a franchise-record 11 straight games. It is the longest such streak in the NHL since Chicago in 1989…Detroit is 7-1 at Joe Louis Arena in these playoffs, with that only loss coming in triple overtime.