Attention American Hockey Fans

Kukla’s Korner has the heads-up on the NHL Networks’s schedule this year, and it’s pretty big, especially if you are a hockey fan that doesn’t live in Canada (or right across the border).  The NHL Network will be carrying 75 HD regular season hockey games this year, including the full measure of CBC’s Hockey Night in Canada.  That means the pre-game stuff and After Hours.  It will be preceded by a Public Service announcement warning Amercian viewers about Don Cherry’s suits.

Click here for more of Cherry’s wardrobe, if you dare.

Dirty Deeds Done Cheap

You may have heard that CBC was having an issue trying to secure the rights to the ‘Hockey Theme Song’.  The rights have been secured, but now CTV (TSN/RDS) owns them, so if you are the sort of person who flinches when you hear the Monday Night Football song on ESPN, this is for you.  It will also appear during the Olympics in Vancouver, and anywhere else they can shoehorn it probably.

SCF: Penguins VS Wings

The 2008 Stanley Cup Finals begin this Saturday, pitting the Original Six Detroit Red Wings against the risen from the ashes Pittsburgh Penguins. The young Penguins, led by Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, will look to run roughshod over the older, ‘more experienced’ Wings.  Still, you have to respect Zetterberg, Datsyuk and Holmstrom (Zetterberg in particular saved my fantasy team on more than one occasion).  In goal, both Chris Osgood and Marc-Andre Fleury have been doing excellent work, Osgood especially as he had to step in after Hasek tried to give their opening round series away.

My excitement for Game 1 (8:00pm start time) has waxed and waned, thanks in no small part to the NHL having the teams sit on their hands for days and days so they can start the series on a weekend.  I know they are trying to take care of their core market (namely, the millions of people who watch on HNIC) but it’s really hard to stay interested for that long when the Sabre-guys aren’t involved!  I’m picking the Penguins in 6, and I hope America tunes in to watch this clash of two US teams whose cities actually know what hockey is when their teams aren’t in the finals.

America, Meet Don Cherry

Canada’s most outspoken - and most oulandishly dressed - hockey talking head will have a regular gig on Sportscenter throughout the rest of the playoffs.  I enjoy Cherry’s hard to follow tirades, so getting more airtime for the former coach is OK by me.  Ron MacLean will be along too (most likely to keep him on the rails, not that it works on HNIC).  I might watch Sportscenter again, haven’t bothered for quite a while.

Random NHL Thoughts

I watched a fair bit of the games last night, except for the part of the Calgary/San Jose game where I fell asleep (stupid late games).  The Rangers/Devils game helped me come to a decision on which team I want to win…the Devils, as I don’t ever want Sean Avery to win another game in his life.  His little stick waving dance in front of Brodeur was very bush league.  I was watching on CBC, and Ron MacLean and Kelly Hrudey pointed out a rule about inciting a penalty where the ref (who did warn Avery) could’ve given him a 10 minute misconduct.  You also saw Chris Drury skate over to Avery and say something to him after the warning, maybe to tell him to cut that out?  I’d love to know.

Calgary/San Jose was CRAZY.  San Jose gets a PP 30 seconds in, and within minutes it’s 3-0 and Kipper is storming off the ice.  Curtis Joseph came off the bench and slammed the door…and the momentum shifted back to Calgary after Cory Sarich slammed Patrick Marleau to the ice on a monster hit along the boards.  Marleau had already been bloodied once by Dion Phaneuf so he was having a rough night.  Brian Campbell was instrumental in the Calgary win, as he didn’t take anybody on the winning goal, just kinda standing between Owen Nolan and Nabokov, being a great screen for the Calgary vet.

Montreal and Boston had quite a goaltending duel, as Carey Price was great, Tim Thomas outdid him though.  Martin Biron got his first playoff win to get Philly back into things there, and he is going to be a dad again today, congratulations Marty!

CBC Hot Stove - Switch Ends for More Offense?

Scott Mellanby was on CBC’s Hot Stove segment between periods of their Leafs/Sabres coverage, and had an interesting theory on how to increase scoring without an equipment change - switch the ends of the ice you defend around, so you have the longer skate to the bench in two periods instead of one.  There are some stats that back it up:

Entering play Saturday, 2,058 goals had been scored this season in the second period, compared to 1,683 in the first period and 1,844 goals (excluding 185 empty-net markers) in the third frame.

Defensemen would have a harder time getting off the ice with the longer skate to the bench, especially if the puck doesn’t go all the way down the ice on the clear.  That would mean more would stay late on their shifts, giving forwards an added advantage.  GMs may not like it - their best defenders would be getting more of a rough ride.  From a purely business standpoint, arena/ticketing changes would have to happen as many season ticket holders pay to sit at the ’shoot twice’ end of the arena.  Otherwise, they’d have to switch up the locker rooms (another expense, although a one-time one).  It’s better than the stale ‘BIGGER NETS!  SMALLER GOALIE EQUIPMENT’ idea that always gets floated around.

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