Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Rebuild, Retool or Repeat? Your 2009 Detroit Red Wings.




Rebuild, Retool, Repeat? All through the offseason I have been tossing this alliterative query around in my head. Ok, ok not all summer- just since we lost the 4 Horsemen to the Apocalypse.


Since Hoss, Huds, Sammy and Conks all flew the Red Bird One Coop, I have been beseeched with concern, trepidation, worry even. Realizing that for the first time in a long while, this year’s Red Wing team will not look virtually identical to the previous season’s incarnation of greatness.


And with the loss of a great back up Goaltender and  4 goal scorers worth 80 points and a bag of used mouth guards-


What???? I am bitter about Sammy and Huds, leave me alone.


With the loss of 4 goal scorers worth 80 points and a bag of used mouth guards, plus the eternal questions in Net, well this 2009-2010 Season is likely to give any good Red Wings fan nervous fits and the occasional facial tick whenever the phrases “Geno Malkin” and “bloody balls” are uttered.


I look stupid with facial ticks, so I am doing the only thing I can:  Analysis of where our Wings stand after last year’s heartbreaking season's end. Time to dive in and ask the hard questions.


What will these Red Wings accomplish this 2009-2010 season: rebuilding, retooling or repeating?




Are the Wings in a Rebuilding Year? 


There are plenty of “experts out there (cough, cou-THN-gh, cough) who think the Wings are on the decline and in the process of rebuilding. With rookies Helm, Howard, McCollum, Ericsson, Leino, Abdelkader (just learn to spell it now, people. Its much easier if you don’t resist.) and Meech all selling their lake effect property in GR and trading in their Lions wings for Red ones, the Wings have more rookie ass warming the bench and top 3 lines than any Wings team in recent history.


Yes, I am using the term “rookie” loosely. Let it go.


In fact for the first time in about 5 years, the naysayers are out of luck using their standard fare of Red Wing jokes and criticisms. Wings have 13 Twenty somethings in the lineup and 9 Thirty somethings.


And not one player over the age of 39. No one carrying an AARP Card or riding a Rascal to the Rink.  Anymore.


 Only Lidstrom is over 36 years of age. Save the “Cane” jokes for Chicago and let Chelios go. We did.


(AAWWWWW, low blow Juice- not cool.  Why you gotta hate on Cheli? I couldn’t help it, the joke wrote itself.  I have nothing but love for Cheli, and mad props for his amazing contributions to the Red Wing Organization, the sport and American hockey. You can tell I mean this sincerely because I did not add “and Chili” to the end of that last sentence.)


Of our 13 youngins cracking Babcock’s line up, 7 of them are seeing their first season starting in the NHL. Anyone would look at those numbers and think “holy crap- Rebuild in Detroit, ask for an autograph.”


But I disagree. Sure we have tons of rookies breaking the line up this year, but these are no average rookies. These are “kids” who can compete and win at the highest levels in the league. Anyone of these players could have cracked the line up of at least half the league last year or the year before. Our rookies do not signify “rebuild”.


Each of these rooks has seen some incredible NHL ice time, most impressively in last year’s playoff run to the Stanley Cup Finals. I want to be the first to point out that although we did not repeat as Champs last year, the fact that the Wings pulled 4 or more AHL players up after they completed their season and relied heavily on them in the SCF, getting all the way to Game 7, speaks volumes about the talent of these players.


Guys like Helm, Ericsson, Abs, Leino were integral in stepping the fawk up and keeping us in it to try to win it. Playing like seasoned pros when they had barely ever seen the inside of the Joe before. These boys played with the grace, heart, class and talent that Red Wing fans like you and I expect, beyond their years or experience.


Its going to be hella exciting to watch them in their first NHL year, and they are all gonna be good, maybe even great.


"Bertuzzi" Does Not (Necessarily) Mean “Tool”.




Repeat after me:  “In Holland we Trust, Todd Bertuzzi won’t let us down, In Holland We Trust.” Then go sacrifice a Chris Pronger bobble head to the Hockey Gods, and thank your lucky stars Steve Ott wasn’t on the UFA list.



But what about Bertuzzi, Juice? 




If I had a dollar for every time someone asked me that question, I could have bought Kris Draper’s Contract.


 In 1992.


Look. Bertuzzi is a thug. I’m sorry. Its gonna be very difficult for me to warm up to the idea of needing a hired gun on an elite Red Wings team. But you know what’s more difficult? Watching guys like Pronger, Ryan, Ott, Carcillo, Ivanais, Cammalleri, Ruutu and Burrows pummel the Datsyuks and Zetterbergs.


Or watching a second rounder punk in the second city spear Nic Lidstrom in the tomatoes and send him into emergency surgery.


I can’t tell you how many times last year I wished for a Darren McCarty presence on the ice. For no reason other than deterrence. Look. As long as the league refuses to address fighting, then its suicide to not have an enforcer (or two) in your line up and I support the decision to go looking for a little muscle/psychosis.  For deterrence. (I mean it.)


Unable to will D-Mac onto the roster with the force and power of my mind, I would have preferred to steal Scott Hartnell, but he has a damn NTC. What to do what to do? Ken-otye knew what to do. Even if we fans aren’t visionary enough to appreciate it yet.


Let’s face it with Bertuzzi out there you will get a skater with speed and decent hands who can and will also beat the puck out of anyone who messed with his team mates. Or anyone who doesn’t. Anyone really.


By the way did you know that 7 Anaheim Thucks cracked the top 50 players earning the most penalty minutes last year? Not even Philly- who had 4, The Rangers (4) Vancouver (3) or Ottawa (2) had that many top 50 penalty minute earners….Dirty Thucks.


            Bertuzzi is Yiddish for “Retool”






Picking up Todd Bertuzzi is a sign to me that the Wings looked at the number of opponent caused injuries and the woefully beat up state of our Red Wings at the end of 2009 and had no choice but to fill the enforcer role. Then they drained more blood from Lids boy parts and dreamt of the days when Darren McCarty was king.


Then they got the rug pulled out from under them and lost 80 goals.
 




Where the HEDHS are we gonna get 80 goals?? 


Williams, Bertuzzi, Eaves, oh my. This isn’t your father’s HuddedHossSam. But only a fool would look at Wiley Ken-otye’s offseason acquisitions and think he hired these guys as replacements. He didn’t even hire them as “The Replacements.”


Hmm- I wonder if Keanu Reeves was available…."That man is facking an animal!





At :10 seconds and again at :31… But I digress.


Look. Just short of  kidnapping Ovie, dressing him up in a Canadian Mountie uniform and brain washing him into believing his name is Travis Erhardt from Saskatchewan, and that he plays for Detroit, the Wings weren’t going to make up 80 lost goals by scrambling for UFAs.


But why are you sweating it??? Wings will get 30-40 of those goals back if Helmer and Leino have good years.  If Bertuzzi lives up to Ken-otye’s expectations there are another 20-25 goals. AND if Jason Williams actually manages to play to his potential (ie: avoid those pesky season ending splinters from riding the bench), there is another 25.  There are your 65-75 goals.


Its up to the Defense to do the rest- Both Babs and Ken-otye have said as much. “Our defense has got to be better.”  Translation?  Better goal tending and stronger D.


It only makes sense. Anyone worth their Yzerman sweater see that last year’s scoring circus was really an anomaly. Seeing games where Wings had 5-6, 7 goals? Bizarre to me. Traditionally, the Detroit Red Wings have always been more balanced team- hell the Wings invented (for NHL purposes) and perfected (Pavel Datsyuk) the defensive forward and the Wings were instrumental in successfully overcoming a pure trap defense style in the league. Some would say the first.


Wings will be back focusing on defense this year, which raises the only real unknown in my mind:


Can Jimmy Howard Adequately Replace Ty Conklin? 




This is the big question. The Superunknown if you will. Detroit Goaltending- always under fire. Sigh. Will Ozzie have his best regular season ever? Is Howard ready for the Show? If not, is it wrong to hope that Chicago will make a huge error and let the injured Huet go, or can we pick up a guy like Boucher, Bryz, Ersberg or Hiller from a West Coast team for less than $1MM?


Truth is the only unknown with any weight in support of a “rebuilding year” argument is the goaltending. But it doesn’t have the strongest legs. Rookie goalies can do great thing- this isn’t your father’s league. Look at Mason, Quick, Ersberg, Rinne and Varlamov. All had great showings last year. And Jimmy believes he is ready. Babs believes he is ready. Case closed, shut your five hole, er pie hole.


Bottom line: Wings will be fine.  We will be more than fine. This is a retooled Red Wing team, with a handful of super talented young guns who have been chomping at the bit to get to the show, and a solid core of vets who are still the fastest, sharpest, most talented mothra fokkers from here to Gardenia.  Retool? Yea a bit, but only so that its even more likely than not that we will:


            Repeat after me: The Detroit Red Wings are Still the Best. 



Yes, I think with this team, retooled and revamped, that the Wings can and will make it back to the Finals. Let’s look at the rest of the confy. Sharks remain basically intact, with a couple of surprising losses and a couple great acquisitions that likely will not be enough.


Let’s face it, if San Jose had half the heart their fans show, they’d have been Stanley Cup champs long before now.
 

Some argue that the pain of repeatedly letting their fans and themselves down will give them an extra edge. But I have been a heartbroken fan at the end of a season cut too short.  If the Sharks didn’t get momentum off that sort of heartbreak in 2008, where will it come from after getting drop kicked in the first round? Claude Lemieux?


Speaking of Anaheim. Did someone step on a Duck? Losing a Neid-a-weiner and Pronger leaves a big hole in their thug-fence. Anaheim appears to have spent the off season trying to gain some finesse, but that is a classic mistake. No way Anaheim can compete with the Wings or Sharks in finesse, puck possession or pure talent. Hell, they can’t compete in those areas with Chicago, even if Hossa’s shoulder never heals. Anaheim has become slightly less concerning- they will be lucky to be ranked 4th or 5th in the Confy, depending on how Vancouver and Dallas handle.


Chicago? I got a Buck twenty says they don’t make it past the second (city) round. The Blackhawks will make another valiant effort. Maybe they’ll even shoot for the Presidents Cup. They seem to be following in the traditional path of mistakes so many top tier teams make trying to get to the cup. Yawn. Who cares.


The biggest threat to the Wings’ goal of repeating a trip to the Stanley Cup Finals remains with the Sharks, followed by a lesser concern of having to battle through the Thucks. Luckily the Wings just got a bit tougher, and the Thucks just got a little less tough. Sharks remain essentially the same, and if the Wings and Sharks ever meet up in a Western Confy Final- it will be some of the most exciting hockey you will ever see.  Luckily my team has more heart and wants it more. More importantly, Wings know how to win.


Bottom Line: Wings can repeat. And what is more- they want to. 80 games until Playoffs....Bring on Sweden Baby- its time to shoot some puck!

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Burning Questions for the 2009-2010 NHL Season

HEDHS people, Hockey is back!


In honor of this week's pre-season kickoff, I put to you the questions burning a hole in my blocker this season. In other words here are my 30 for 30, (plus two for the KHL and Swedish Elite). Got your own? chime in!


  1. Sean Avery’s first gaff: Will it be goalie or girlfriend related?
  2. Can the Stars survive Crawford, or have they become the new Thucks?
  3. In which game will Ray Emery shank someone?
  4. Pavel Datsyuk. No question, just can’t wait to see him on ice again.
  5. Will the Bruins wake from their hibernation, set the picinic basket aside and pull together a real Finals run?
  6. How magnificent will it be to see Sid have to deal with Pronger all season?
  7. Is Jimmy Howard ready for the show?
  8. Did the Heatley-Cheechoo-Milan trade benefitted Ottawa more than the Sharks?
  9. Did the LA Kings gain any experience and wisdom last season?
  10. Will they allow Niedermeyer and Selanne to use their “Rascals” on the ice this year?
  11. How quickly after a Detroit fan throws $1.20 on the ice at the United Center will Hossa pick it up?
  12. Will Fox or ESPN pick up Phoenix’ “Coyote Ugly: the reality series” for the fall season? No coach, no wins, no money: All the drama, half the fans.
  13. Will Joe Sakic continue to shovel his own drive now that he has all that free time?
  14. Will Montreal make bad fashion statements again, in the name of tradition? Damn Frenchies.
  15. How will Gary Bettman apologize to Nic Lidstrom for the unwarranted All-Star punishment upon learning that Nico had a torn ligament in his elbow at the time? Flowers? Edible arrangements? A Teddy bear with a sling on its arm?
  16. When will Glen Sather make his first colossal mistake of the season?
  17. Will Steve Mason live up to his rookie year?
  18. Is Tukka Rask the coolest name in Hockey right now? Or is it the name most likely to earn the following chant/signage: “Tuuka Rask? Looks more like someone Tukka Dump!”
  19. How fantastic will Darren Helm be at the, uh.... ahem, ahh., Well you can guess.
  20. Will ANYONE care what happens with the Maple Leafs?
  21. Who will be the worst team in Hockey this year: Leafs, Coyotes, Thrashers, Islanders, Avs, Lightning?
  22. Will anyone ever buy me a Scotty Hartnell “Fro” wig?
  23. How soon in the marketing season will it be before the entire NHL Fanbase starts bringing effigies of Crosby to games?
  24. Will Ovie break Gretz’ record for fastest 50, and score more than 50 goals in less than 39 games?
  25. What will the Wild do this year to make a faster offense work with the Trap, and will Backstop still reign as the most underrated goalie in the league?
  26. Will Jiri Hudler forgo sleeping on his requisition “cot” in the Red Army Barracks, and instead sleep on piles of money?
  27. How many assault charges will be levied against Patrick Roy’s kid this year? (I’m guessing 30.)
  28. Can Manny Legace help Atlanta become less mediocre?
  29. Will Luongo prove he’s a playoff goalie or falter?
  30. Will Forsberg play for the Swedes in the Olympics, prompting obsessive, non-stop and rampant speculation that he’s coming back to the NHL?
  31. Will the Canes once more ward off talks that their season is staaled by surprising us all again with a stellar playoff run?
  32. Do we have to listen to another half season of “Will Sundin play or won’t he” speculation, and why does anyone care???

Sunday, September 13, 2009

CONFESSION OF AN EXHAUSTED HOCKEY FAN

Author’s note: If you haven’t followed my past blogs, some of this will not make sense. More than anything, this blog is a cathartic exercise for me. I apologize and I thank you for your indulgence.


Depravity and Deprivation in LA


We didn’t realize it, but at the time of the Detroit Red Wings 2008 Stanley Cup playoff run, my brother and I were feeling an unprecedented level of quiet depravation. Years in LA, the lockout, life had caused us to lose touch with one of the more significant vehicles of entertainment and bonding in our lives: our love and devotion to the Detroit Red Wings. We were oblivious to the fact that we were searching for ways to spend more time to spend together,to re-experience a piece of our past that had meant so much in our family.

Quiet depravation.


Double entendred and purposefully misspelled if you will: A sense of loss and a level of depravity, you can only get immersing yourself as a true Los Angelenos.


And immerse we had. Not much of my mid-western Detroit “self” existed anymore in this spring of 2008. Four years after leaving Day-twa, I fit well into my Los Angeles home. The only thing I missed from my Midwestern roots-besides loved ones- were the Wings.


Maybe its in the blood, maybe part of the lifeblood that strengthens our relationship. Either way, by spring 2008 we were really jonesing for Hockey.


An unrealized sense of loss, combined with the nostalgic need to reconnect with each other through something that had been a strong glue, solidifying and helping form the relationship we had long ago nurtured all came to a head for my Brother and I.


It was sort of a perfect storm.


We started out with random texts in February and March, “McCarty’s back, did you see?” “HEDHS YES” “Love me some Macs.”


Then getting together for a NBC Saturday Feature: Wings versus Avs. A classic rivalry. And we sat there eating Baja Fresh, watching our Red Wings smother the Avs. We were blown away and unbelieving. Were these Wings this good, or those Avs this bad? (As it turns out: Both.) We were hooked back into something we had not closely followed in years.


It couldn’t be helped, really. The 2008 Wings were brilliant and exciting to watch. This looked like the teams of 1997, 1998 and 2002- only more. Already in mid March they were in playoff form: tight, methodical and sofaking talented. Mesmerizingly so.


Pasha and Hank “Wonder-twins activate: form of the perfect wing duo”. Nico, the brilliant silent leader. Homer and Ozzie. The thrill was back.


The 2008 Red Wings overwhelmed and amazed us. Might be the best Red Wing team ever.” Hushed tones.


We relished every last playoff game and the time we finally found to spend together. Our love for the team and the game was re-ignited. My brother bought some new gear, started picking up extra games at his Burbank rink and joined another league.


For me it took a different turn. Unable to whiff even a wristshot, I could not expend my hockey en-fueled energy with sport. I began writing about that incredible Red Wing playoff run. And then, thanks to the wonderful people who read what I write and their amazing encouragement, I kept writing. A community of amateur Hockey writers- true fans of the game, grew from our interactions and fueled our involvement and interest in the game. We gave each other great energy and friendship.



I immersed myself in this hockey world. I wrote about free agency trades and the draft. I spent the summer covering hockey news as I learned about the league. For the first time in my life, I closely followed the whole league and the sport, not just one team. I made wonderful friends who were hockey fans, I joined a fantasy league. I received praise for my insight and opinions from one of the best in the business. I affirmed the knowledge that my appreciation for the game is firmly rooted in loving the game the Red Wings organization not only perfects and embodies, but which is so successful that it has fundamentally impacted the evolution of the league.


I learned, shared what I learned, and fell in love with the game. I made amazing friends.


A Year of Hockey


I wrote 3-4 times a week. Some weeks I wrote every day. I read copiously, ran a weekly radio show, did surprisingly well in my fantasy league and never missed a Red Wing game. I traveled all over the country to watch the Wings play. To San Jose, Chicago. Almost made it to Montreal. I attended Kings games, watched big games not involving the Wings. I attended WHL playoffs with other fans who lived half across the country (Go Ontario Reign!). I accepted an offer to write for the Examiner about the LA Kings. I organized and spearheaded a charity project involving young hockey writers and the NHL’s Hockey Fights Cancer program, for which I spent hundreds of hours organizing, meeting, and editing a book that now sits, nearly finished, never receiving final approval from the NHL for publication.


My life was completely immersed in all things hockey for nearly 10 months.


By the winter of 2009, this obsession was exhausting me. I was burning out. I no longer wanted to carry the radio show, no longer wanted to lose my Sundays and part of my Saturdays preparing for the show, watching 4-5 games on a Saturday or Thursday. I was disappointed that the NHL had bailed out of the book project. But I didn’t take a break, or give up even when I wanted to. Each week or day even would draw me back with a little spark, some interesting news, or a friend’s perspective. I was tired of Hockey, but too foolish to step back.


In February 2009, personal tragedy hit my family. I quickly turned my attention away from the Wings and my little hockey world.


Just at that time, something unexpected and amazing happened in my personal life. Something that by all counts is bigger and more incredible than any fantasy anyone here in Hollywood could ever dream up. Bigger than the Cup, Bigger than Hockey. (Ironic only because it was Hockey that brought this amazing thing back into my life....) And so I gladly drifted away from writing, the radio show and the hockey world. Sort of.


As the 2009 Playoffs approached, my Wings were chugging along, the Red machine, doing everything perfectly. My Brother and I once more geared up, focused and ready for an epic playoff run. Expecting and sure of eventual success.


Expectations Only Mean You Think You Know

What’s Coming Next, And You Don’t.


Throughout the entire 2008-2009 season I had unwavering belief and certain knowledge that my Red Wings would make it back to the Cup and would get it again. I never had a doubt. In fact, given my new found intimate knowledge of the rest of the league, I felt beyond confident.


My certainty wavered at only two points. First, after the Sharks failed to snuff the Ducks in Round 1, and we headed into Game 7 against Anaheim. As much as I loathe the Anaheim team and their hideous untalented thug style of play, I knew this would be the true test. In my opinion, it was the real 2009 Stanley Cup final series. After Game 3 I had no idea who would ultimately prevail. It was the second most painful playoff series I ever lived through.


This year of Hockey had brought me back to that level of emotional investment I felt in the mid 1990s. I was surprised to realize I had truly forgotten the pain we felt in 1995, 1996 when arch nemeses crushed our Stanley Cup dreams. That Ducks series brought it all back.


Driving home from Anaheim after Game 6 seeing Hossa robbed, I was proud of my team, but worried about them and the beating they were taking, exhausted and scared. So much emotional investment in this year had culminated in the Confy Finals. So much time and energy. But I was in, committing to the cause as any good fan is.


And my Wings didn’t let me down.


We moved on, and eventually snuffed the one team I knew it would cost to beat.


I realized I wasn’t writing much anymore and I cancelled radio show after radio show when my usual co-hosts began to drop out of the broadcast- not surprisingly in conjunction with their teams falling in the Playoffs.


I tried to write, but found myself observing the same things about my Red Wings I had the year before, and using the same adjectives, descriptors and observations. Mere paragraphs in, I trashed blog after blog, feeling like I ought to just post a one liner: “See my analysis of Game 3 – Dallas Series, 2008.” I felt tapped.


If I was tapped, I marveled at how the Wings were able to maintain the physical and emotional strength that it takes survive 3 of 4 consecutive seasons that last from September to June. It made me love my team that much more.


On to the Stanley Cup Finals. Pens again. Most of my hockey loving friends had quietly dropped off my facebook grid. No one even bothered to check in with me. Some had switched their allegiance to the Pens. The same people who had bashed Sid the Kid all year I found were quietly supporting his Cup run. To me it looked less like support for the Pens and more like dislike for the Wings. I took it personally. I wanted to feel hurt, but initially, had little energy to devote to the matter. Instead, I stopped looking for interaction with non-Wings fans and stuck with my own kind.


Re-committed all my energy into supporting my team. (Insert “ die-hard athletic supporter” joke here.)


Plus, after beating the Ducks, I was even more confident in my team’s talent and strength. I even believed that beating the Ducks was the sacrifice the Hockey Gods need to bestow upon you the Cup.


I believed there was no team the Wings could not take down. To this day I still believe as a fan, and analyze as an amateur sports writer that the 2009 Pens were less formidable a team than the 2009 Ducks.


But you can’t make it through Anaheim unscathed. You can’t survive it without being beaten senseless, emotionally and physically drained. There is no modern team more brutal, evil and dirty than the 2007-2009 Anaheim Ducks.


Now with Pronger on the Flyers, I expect Sid and his sheep to suffer what Pasha, Homer, Hank and Nico, along with the entire San Jose Sharks team have suffered. Let’s see a second run materialize with the Mighty Bruins still hungry and the Flyers beefing up to take back the “Thuggiest Team in The League” Title, (but with more young talent than the Ducks have had in a long time). Trust me, if the Flyers could just land a playoff goaltender, they would see a cup. Can you imagine a guy like Nic Backstrom or Henrik Lundquist on the Flyers? 22, there is your dream team. Thank goodness they have no talent to ever pick a decent goalie in Philly. But I digress. Where were we? AH yes, on to the Stanley Cup Finals 2009.


Soul Searching and Sour Grapes


And so it went. My Wings had flashes of brilliance in the 2009 Stanley Cup Finals, but they were held together by stick tape and mouthguards. They often played on nothing but adrenaline and sheer will. Their minds and hearts pressed valiantly forward, but the Ducks run had cost us.


By the end of Game 5 of the SCF, I was tired. I didn’t know how the Players were able to push on. I honestly didn’t know. But they did.


And still my Wings didn’t let me down. Sure, sure. I sat on the floor sobbing my eyes out as Game 7 wound down to its inevitable heartbreaking conclusion.


I cried for the loss. I cried for their disappointment, wanting this team that had given me so much this year to win the prize I felt they had earned.


I cried because of the year of Hockey, of a life immersed ended feeling my team had been robbed. I cried in disappointment, because I never once during that Finals series doubted these Wings would pull it out. I cried because my heart ached for the effort these amazing Red Wings gave and for the heartbreak they surely must have felt.


I never once stopped being proud of this team, or loving them. But I was exhausted. I could not take one more moment of Hockey. We turned the television off as the buzzer sounded, I could not even bear the idea of watching Sid hoist the Cup at the Joe. It still makes me sick to my stomach. I was done.


And then I felt guilty relief. It was over.


I didn’t watch, read, write about or listen to a thing involving Hockey for months. I stopped talking to most hockey friends. I quit the radio show.


I had seen it coming before the Finals series, but I did not know if losing the Cup had been the final straw. I did not want to be a sore loser, so I forced myself to attempt to write, promised one more radio show. Sent notes of congratulations to hockey friends who were Pittsburgh fans. Wrote one last heartfelt blog, but otherwise my heart wasn’t in any of it. Never did the final radio show.


I felt guilty. I felt like a fair-weather fan. (Of the GAME, not my Wings- JUST TO BE ABSOLUTELY CLEAR).


I let myself feel the hurt and took offense that “friends” completely abandoned me at the beginning of the Wings Finals run, and felt affronted that they had no words of support after my team lost (especially hurtful since I had supported them and their team’s runs and sent notes of condolence when they were feeling this same disappointment). I was resentful that I had given so much of my time, life, year to support and be there for people who ultimately not only abandoned me, but revealed their true feelings about my team.


I felt like the poster child for sour grapes and I was embarrassed. I did not expect my character would ever allow such meltdown. I felt guilty, but I could not over come it. I kept hoping it wasn’t so much sour grapes, as burn out.


But honestly, I didn’t know.


And so in that first week of June 2009 I left Hockey.


When UFA Day came along and I could not bring myself to check TSN, I wondered if I was done with Hockey. (Again, Not done with my Wings, just to be clear.)


June and July passed, without feeling the spark or need to tune in.


Then came August 16th. The HHOF. On a lovely weekend trip to Toronto, I dragged my wonderful, patient, incredibly understanding (non-hockey fan) boyfriend to the HHOF.


Yet even as I walked through the HHOF, something was wrong. I felt excitement, but nothing deep in my heart. Nothing like the feeling of standing there on the edge of Wrigley Field watching the Wings warm up. Nothing like that overwhelming sense of gratefulness and awe sitting in the nosebleeds at the Honda Center during Game 6 of the Conference Finals. Nothing like road tripping across the state to watch a game with some of the greatest hockey fans I have ever met.


Hockey felt like a responsibility, an obligation. Nothing at the HHOF stirred in my heart, even when I knew it should. Bobby Orr’s bronzed skates? Nothing. A Belfour mask? Meh.


The only emotions I felt were incredible love and gratitude toward my boyfriend who was wonderful enough to waste his time with me, enthusiastically I might add, wandering through a place I should have been joyfully exploring.


I stood looking at the California Seals sweater when he uttered, “Oh geez. Let me get a picture before you start to cry.”


I turned to look at him, curious as to why I would cry and saw that he had located the Igor Larionov induction display. It would only stand for another 2 months before the 2009 Inductees replaced him. It was something that I was incredibly lucky to be able to see.


Anyone who knows me or had read my stuff knows that the mere unexpected sight of Igor Larionov on ice accepting an award at the Staples Center is enough to reduce me to a sniveling crybaby.


But the tears never came. I still can’t tell you what I felt. Well that is not true. I felt ashamed that the emotions were absent. Tom snapped pictures and I felt rotten.


If a trip to the HHOF with an understanding boyfriend who doesn’t even follow Hockey and seeing Igor’s original CCCP sweater couldn’t pull me back in, what would?


I wasn’t sure. August ended with a recommendation from Cassie to apply for the SB Nation LA Kings writer position that was open. I never pursued it. I didn’t have the energy to commit.


I didn’t know what would happen this year. I knew I wasn’t going to do the radio show again, I hadn’t written about hockey in months. I had heard they revamped the NHL Connect sight and didn’t care. I wasn’t following the trades. Hudler’s defection to Russia barely upset me.


Birthday Hockey


I perused the Wings Schedule, looking to pick up Wings-Kings October tickets for my Brother and I- his annual birthday gift, and when I realized the Wings have no “Cali Hat Trip” until January, I felt something.


Akshully, I was totally distraught.


For 4 years my brother and I had an October Birthday Date. Dress in Red Wing gear, and head to the Staples Center for his birthday. And they had taken that away from us. I was so upset. No Wings in October? I was almost reduced to tears.


But it triggered something in me. As I planned a trip to Detroit for Thanksgiving, I saw that the Wings would be home and playing Calgary. A game at the Joe. I hadn’t been in the Joe since 2002, 2003 maybe? HEDHS, I could not recall. I called in a long standing favor and got two tickets. Not quite Section 109, Row 18, but who am I to complain? Seats in Section 110 will do just fine.


Slowly, the excitement is growing again. Anticipation for a new season. I found myself watching FSN when they ran a Classic about a week ago: Game 4 of the 2000-2001 Wings-Kings Series.


Excitement over the prospect of this year’s Wings. Realizing that we have some unknowns, and questions, and excited for it. Anticipation over what a year without such immense pressure will do for us. Hoping to see the boys play with joy in their eyes, and hoping they take a little the pressure off themselves. Knowing that we can make it back to the Cup again.


Growing excitement in building a championship fantasy team, even taking on a commish role this year, and inviting some of the smartest hockey fans I have known to be in the league. (Cripe this league is gonna be so tough. I have no chance of winning it, but I am stoked to be battling it out with each and every one of you!)


A Sunday morning watching Dallas beat my Wings on NHL Network in Game 5 of the 2008 Confy finals (especially poignant since I have a million other things to do). Watching Pasha manhandle an entire Stars team, catching his own rebounds 3,4,5 times…Sigh.


Beginning to wonder how Scott Hartnell and Jeff Carter will do with Chris Pronger on the team. Wondering if the Sleeping Bear of Boston is gonna come out and correct their mistakes and make a real Stanley Cup Run. Wondering if the Sharks haven’t traded away two core –key players, and are prematurely dismantling their very talented team.


A need to write about my hockey experience again.


Slowly, it’s all coming back. Not just my love for the Wings, but for the game. Creeping in ever so cautiously again.


I woke this morning with an answer to the question that had burdened me all summer. The worst questions a sports fan will ever have to ask of themselves:



Had I merely burnt myself out last year, or have I proven to be a shallow “fan”, a homer stuffed with a mouthful of sour grapes? Was my character so lacking?


I turned on the television, choosing The NHL Network’s “Ten Best Rookies of the 1990s” over E! Entertainment’s “True Hollywood Story: Christina Aguilera” and A&E’s “Sell this House”, and as I sat down to write this, I knew the answer.