
http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news;_ylc=X ... &type=lgns
I agree that the interence and stick infractions need to be enforced more but if you look at the game critically, fighting (which has been the 2nd most popular event in the game) has been reduced drastically at the expense of allowing the stick infractions to increase in frequency. In the the "old days" if someone was sticked, they or a team-mate would drop the gloves with the offender (especially if it wasn't called by the refs). Now with the extra 2 minutes and possible game for instigating, the idea of players acting as their own enforcers has gone out the window in large part, as you hurt the team by taking the extra penalty. I will clarify: I love a good scrap but not games where it turns into one fight after another (all things in moderation).If this were actually enforced, I guarantee you there would less fighting.
What is funny is that if you eat Little Ceasars pizza, you actually helped pay for the Red Wings to win those Cups. (Not that the money goes directly to the Red Wings but I did go to help Ilitch buy the Wings) Also, the Tigers, but baseball sucks. I don't know, just found it ironic that you used pizza delivery and Red wings in a the general statement.Wulfran wrote:Honorable mention goes to the Detroit Red Wings but they actually managed to win some Cups to go with their spending spree. Most of these tards shouldn't be delivering pizza, never mind running multimillion dollar businesses and they created the situation that the league is in today.
You gotta be kidding me.hockey just isn't a great TV sport (unless they make some modifications like the NFL has for first down graphics on the field etc...hockey really needs the glowing puck etc to make the casual fan understand wtf is going on.
In Canada and the in the North and NE US, hockey is immensely popular, rivaling baseball and the NBA in some markets. The big problem was the NHL expanding too fast into the southern states. The NHL not being super-popular in your market is not an accurate assessment of its popularity in all markets across North America.hockey is at rock bottom and wasn't doing well before this strike
-hockey doesn't make anywhere near what the other big sports make
I love watching Hockey in high definition on my 10 foot screen but on a small TV it's a bit more difficult to watch.miir wrote:You gotta be kidding me.hockey just isn't a great TV sport (unless they make some modifications like the NFL has for first down graphics on the field etc...hockey really needs the glowing puck etc to make the casual fan understand wtf is going on.
Black puck on white ice.
I don't really agree.In Canada and the in the North and NE US, hockey is immensely popular, rivaling baseball and the NBA in some markets. The big problem was the NHL expanding too fast into the southern states. The NHL not being super-popular in your market is not an accurate assessment of its popularity in all markets across North America.
No kidding. Their tv contract was pushed down to espn2. Fox and abc dropped them. Hell, Niagra vs Fairfield in college b-ball would get better national ratings on espn2 than a Detriot vs Stars game.Sueven wrote: But the NHL has staked it's financial success on a model that necessitates appealing to Americans. The sport has abjectly failed to do so.
Our Bluejackets might not be the best team evar, but that arena was almost always sold out every game.Wulfran wrote:
As much as some of us longer term (and yes Canadian) fans scoffed at the expansions, places like Columbus and Minnesota are solid and sell out to 100% capacity.