Sunday, December 30, 2018

Best of 2018

This year of our Lord 2018 is coming to a close, and although we are approaching only the midway point of the 2018-19 NHL season, there is no reason we can't take a look at the best things that happened in the hockey world during the 2018 calendar year.

Everyone does top ten lists, but I say why limit yourself? Below are what I consider the top dozen things to happen in hockey this year, in chronological order because I don't mean to rank them first-best, second-best, etc. And please note, I'm focusing only on stuff that happened on the ice (no significant-other cyber bullying stories) and only on the good (even if your team lost one of the games I mention).

Surely the Humboldt Broncos tragedy was the biggest and most important hockey story of 2018, but it doesn't feel right putting it on a list that includes other stories, and it certainly doesn't belong on any list about "bests."

Anyway, here goes...

January 26-28:  All-Star Weekend
The NHL All-Star 3-on-3 Tourney Game was staged right here in my fair city, and a grand time was had by all. Although he came as a member of the New Jersey Devils, recent cancer survivor Brian Boyle received the loudest ovation of the weekend because we Tampa Bay fans still love him from when he played for our Lightning.

In the skills competition, Connor McDavid edged out Brayden Point for fastest skater, the rookie Brock Boeser edged out the veteran Boyle for most accurate shooter, and Alex Ovechkin torched the field for hardest shot.

In the tourney game itself, Nikita Kucherov had the most memorable highlight when he scored by faking out Braden Holtby, juking with his stick blade as if he was going to shoot but then doing nothing, just letting the puck slide through Holtby's five hole on its own momentum. Seeing as how he's a Bolt, the Tampa crowd serenaded him by cheering "Kuuuuuuuuch!"

However, the Pacific Division wound up winning the tourney game and Boeser took home MVP honors. Interestingly, the locker to which he was assigned in the locker room was the same one he used when he led North Dakota to the NCAA title at the 2016 Frozen Four.


February 20:  Kuch fools Holtby
Remember that Kucherov-beats-Holtby trickery I just described? Well, 23 days after the All-Star Game Kuch did it to him again, this time in a real game that the Lightning won 4-2.


February 22:   Olympic women's gold medal game
Speaking of my fair city, did I mention that the U.S. women's national team trained for the 2018 Olympics at a rink less than 15 minutes from my house? I dunno if that's why they finally got over the Olympics hump, but they did get over it.

Where the women's game is concerned, the US-Canada rivalry has been interesting. Entering this year, the Americans had won the World Championships four years in a row and seven of the last eight, yet the Canadians had won gold in the last four Olympics. Needless to say, when the two national squads met in the gold medal game at this year's Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, it meant a lot to each.

Team Canada took a 2-1 lead into the third period despite being outshot, and with goaltender Shannon Szabados playing so well, it looked like they might make it five Olympic golds in a row -- until Team USA's Monique Lamoureux scored with six minutes left to force overtime.

Both goalies stood their ground in the extra session, so the game went to a shootout -- in which Monique's twin sister, Jocelyne Lamoureux, cemented her place in history by scoring this beauty to win gold for the stars and stripes.


February 24-25:  Olympic men's gold medal game
Any doubt that I have a hockey problem was removed when I, a native Floridian who has never been to Europe, stayed up past 2:00 in the morning to watch Team Germany battle Team Russia the Olympic Athletes from Russia.

The NHL did not allow its players to participate in these Olympics, but the talent was still high-end as both teams included some former NHL players and current NHL prospects. Although the Russians included former Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Nikita Nesterov and former Lightning "property" Nikita Guzev, my love-the-underdog mindset kicked in and had me cheering for Germany as the night/morning wore on.

The Germans battled hard and came improbably close, rallying from behind and taking a 3-2 lead when Jonas Muller scored with 3:16 remaining in regulation. When Russia the OAR took a high-sticking penalty inside the final two minutes, giving Germany a power play for the duration, it appeared that a gold medal upset for the ages was about to occur.

However, those crafty Russkies with their backs against the wall had other ideas. Coach Oleg Znarok pulled the goalie for an extra skater, thus re-evening things at 5-on-5. And with 45 seconds left and very little net to shoot at, Guzev forced the game to overtime with a precision shot that pinballed off a defender's stick and into the goal over the arm of goaltender Danny aus den Birken.

15 minutes into the extra session Russia the OAR was on a power play when Gusev sent a perfect cross-ice pass to Minnesota Wild prospect Kirill Kaprizov, who one-timed it home for the winner.


March 21:  Crosby's redirect extraordinaire
Late in the second period of a game against Montreal, Sidney Crosby scored on this masterpiece that you have to see -- in slow motion -- to believe. He tapped a flying puck to himself from his forehand, and then backhanded it into the net with a baseball-like swing of the lumber, and did it so fast that you could never tell in real-time what exactly happened. Remember this bit of handiwork if you're feeling tempted to believe that the 31-year-old Crosby is no longer the best player in the game.


Aprill 11:  The White-out returns
Sensing that their team had a chance to do something in the playoffs, not just get there, Winnipeg's faithful dressed all in white and packed Bell MTS Place from floor to rafters. They were loud and raucous, and added an extra layer of juice to what are already the most intense playoffs in all of sports, and they were rewarded with their Jets winning Game One over Minnesota by a score of 3-2. That victory was secured when unheralded Joe Morrow scored on a long-distance blast late in the third, and the game highlights are here.

Plus, the postscript was good: The Jets made a deep run to the Western Conference Final by eliminating Minnesota in five and then knocking off top-seeded Nashville in a seven-game barnburner. It marked the most playoff success by any Winnipeg hockey team since the Jets 1.0 were playing in the WHA and winning Avco Cups back in the 1970's.


May 6:  Bolts oust Bruins
As Stanley Cup contenders go, the Tampa Bay Lightning and Boston Bruins were all-in and legit this spring. Although the two franchises had not met in the post-season since 2011, the Bruins seemed to be the Lightning's white whale because they had dominated the regular season series for several years, and therefore plenty of Tampa Bay observers, including yours truly, doubted whether our team would be able to get past the boys from Beantown. Fortunately for us, however, that's why they play the games.

Game Five faced off with the Lightning holding a 3-1 lead in the series. With less than seven minutes remaining in the second period, the game was tied at one and the Bolts were on a power play. That's when Kucherov and J.T. Miller began to cycle the puck between themselves in a circling, give-and-go sequence between the right face-off dot and the end boards. The sequence ended with Miller taking a feed from Kucherov and burying it into the net behind Tukka Rask for the game- and series-winning goal.

Since it was Boston that got eliminated, surely the rest of America (and maybe Canada too) was almost as happy as those of us in the Bay Area. Right?


May 7:  Caps eliminate Pens
Any talk of the Bruins being the Lightning's nemesis sounds absurd compared to how big a nemesis the Pittsburgh Penguins have been for the Washington Capitals. Or maybe I should say had been, seeing as how the team from DC finally got that Western PA monkey off its back one day after the Lightning jettisoned the Bruins.

Much ink has been spent over the years writing about how big of an issue the Pens have been for the Caps. I'm not going to recount that here, but if you really want to read about it you can go to the fifth section of this post that I published in June. Suffice it to say that on May 7, 2018, the Caps flipped history on its head a little more than five minutes into overtime in Game Six.

Alex Ovechkin collected a turnover, sprung Evgeny Kuznetsov on a breakaway, and Kuznetsov ended the series and discarded the two-time defending champs by scoring cleanly through Matt Murray's five hole. Kuzy then commenced his flapping-bird celebration. The Caps had finally cleared the second-round hurdle that had haunted them for years, and they were halfway to hockey's promised land.


June 7:  The Capitals win the Cup
One month to the day later, the Capitals reached that promised land by winning the first Stanley Cup in franchise history.

Game Five started with the Caps holding a 3-1 series lead over Vegas, but when the third period started they were trailing 3-2 and Vegas had the momentum. Then, midway through the frame, Devante Smith-Pelly tied the game up when he kicked the puck to his stick and fired it home while falling. A few minutes later, the Caps grabbed the lead when Lars Eller slid the puck in after it had trickled past Marc-Andre Fleury in the crease.

Washington made their newfound 4-3 lead hold up the rest of they way, and the Cup was theirs. They skated with it 'round the ice, celebrated in the locker room, and then carried it out of the arena and directly onto the Vegas Strip. One of the best-earned adventures in the history of intoxication got underway.


November 24:  Patrik Laine's five-goal game
The 20-year-old Finn had scored six goals in the three games heading into the NHL's Thanksgiving break. In the first game after the break, he took five shots on net and every one of 'em went in, leading Winnipeg to an 8-4 victory over St. Louis. Laine's performance marked the first time in seven years that any player had scored five goals in a single NHL game -- and it made Winnipeg fan Christopher Haley very happy, as it means he will now be getting $50,000 per year over the next twenty years thanks to this contest.


December 4:  The 9-6 game
Coaches hate games like this and refer to them as "pond hockey," but there are quite a few fans -- and probably quite a few players -- who love them while also referring to them as "pond hockey." The Columbus Blue Jackets jumped out to a 4-1 lead, and then the Calgary Flames scored five times in the second period to take a 6-4 lead, and when all was said and done Calgary prevailed 9-6. Johnny Gaudreau led the way with a pair of goals and pair of assists, and the goaltenders might still be having nightmares.


November 29 to December 27:  Stammer on a tear
Just in case anyone was thinking Steven Stamkos is no longer one of the world's elite forwards, the Tampa Bay captain went on a tear in which he scored 15 goals in 13 games. Most of those goals were highlight-reel howitzers, and the Bolts' record across the 13 games was 12-0-1. Stamkos has potted 14 goals so far in December, which is a franchise record for goals by a single player in a single month, and there is still one more December game remaining before the calendar flips to 2019.






Monday, December 24, 2018

A Christmas Miracle

I published this post ten years ago and it feels right to do it  again:

My grandfather passed away two months ago.  

I have wanted to write a post about him ever since, and there are a thousand things I want to say in that post, yet it remains unwritten for one very unmovable reason:  I have no idea where or how to start saying those thousand things.  When a man lives 81 years, has 39 direct descendants, and impacts not only his family but countless other people as well, how can you sum up his life in a handful of paragraphs?  You can’t. 

But I do not have that problem when it comes to writing about Granddaddy and Christmas, after the way they converged three years ago. 

Granddaddy’s love of God, family, and country; his zeal when talking about those things to anybody with whom he came into contact; his faith in the perfectibility of man; his irrepressible Scotch-Irish mischief; his unsurpassed diligence in everything to which he set his mind or his hands – those qualities will all be written about in time, but for the purposes of this post, suffice it to say that in the last few years of his life they were cruelly stolen by Alzheimer’s disease. 

His mental sharpness started to dull about five years ago.  In 2005 his memory faded as well, and the fading was fast.  He carried on conversations with Nana without realizing it was her.  Remembering how she looked in their youth but not in the here and now, he said things like “I wonder when Peggy’s going to come home” while looking into her very eyes. 

When he and Nana arrived at our family’s 2005 Christmas Eve party, nobody expected to be recognized by him.  Because I did not want to confuse him by addressing him in a way that would suggest he was speaking to his grandson, and because I knew his recollections of battling the Nazis remained vivid, that night I simply called him “Corporal.” 

He asked if I was in the Army like he had been, and I told him I was not because of my diabetes. I told him that we nonetheless had some similarities, because just like him, my last name was Stanton and my blood carried Scotch-Irish genes.  He nodded and said it was good to meet me.  He said I should come around again sometime. 

Everyone at the party walked a tightrope, balancing holiday cheer on one hand with the sadness of loss on the other.  The man we loved, who had known each of us by name just a year earlier, had for all intents and purposes ceased to exist. 

But as the night started to grow long, something sparked inside Granddaddy’s mind.  When most of us were assembled in and around the kitchen, he “addressed the room” and said it was great that we were there.  He did not specifically acknowledge that we were all family; however, when he looked at my Aunt Sharon, the third of his five children, a glint appeared in his eyes and he spoke the word “daughter.” 

He and Nana stood on the driveway as the party wound down.  I stood there too, as did several others, hoping to give Nana some sense of normalcy.  But it turned out that our presence was not needed, for while Venus shone brightly like the Star of Bethlehem, Granddaddy came back as if by magic.  Looking up at the Milky Way, he spoke to Nana by name and said:  “Peggy, I’m trying to remember the night we got married.”  Some minutes later, when he said goodbye to each of us, his face bore a look of recognition and for that moment it no longer seemed that there was a stranger trapped in his body. 

As his wife of 59 years drove him back to the house they had called home for 53 years, they talked about their life and their family and it was as if the dementia had never been.  After finishing that 45-mile excursion from rural Hernando County to urban Tampa, they sat up late into the night conversing and reminiscing and sharing life’s small but inimitable joys.  They lay down in bed like they had done so many times through the years, and for that one holy night Granddaddy was Granddaddy again:  John Stanton, Jr., child of the Great Depression, survivor of the Battle of the Bulge, husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather, pastor, proud but humble, flawed but good.

When the sun rose, the dementia was back and my grandmother's husband, as she knew him, never returned.  But they had gotten that one last night together on Christmas Eve, and had gotten it after everyone assumed it was not possible.  As Nana said:  “That was my Christmas miracle.”

Sunday, December 23, 2018

A Carol Born

When it comes to carols, I have always found “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day” to be especially poignant (if you're not familiar with it, you can listen to it here.)

It did not begin as a song, but as a poem written on Christmas morning by America’s greatest poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, more than 150 Christmases ago. At that moment in time America was torn apart and battling itself in the Civil War – a war that still stands as the one in which more Americans died than in any other.

When dawn broke that morning, Longfellow was despondent. During the war his son Charles had been horrifically wounded when a bullet passed through part of his spine, leading to a long and excruciating recovery. And as if that wasn’t dark enough, his wife Frances had died as a result of burns sustained when her clothes were set on fire by dripping sealing wax, which she was melting with the intention of using it to preserve some of their daughter’s trimmed curls.

But despite that sorrowful backdrop, as Longfellow sat in his Massachusetts home on Christmas and heard the ringing of local church bells, his faith in divine promise started to stir and he was moved to put pen to paper. The resulting poem was transformed into a hymn nine years later, when John Baptiste Calkin composed the music to which it was set.

The poem’s words absolutely speak for themselves. Since some of them are excluded from the carol we normally hear this time of year, here they are in their entirety:


I heard the bells on Christmas Day
Their old, familiar carols play,
And wild and sweet
The words repeat
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

And thought how, as the day had come,
The belfries of all Christendom
Had rolled along
The unbroken song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

Till ringing, singing on its way,
The world revolved from night to day,
A voice, a chime,
A chant sublime
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

Then from each black, accursed mouth
The cannon thundered in the South,
And with the sound
The carols drowned
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

It was as if an earthquake rent
The hearth-stones of a continent,
And made forlorn
The households born
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

And in despair I bowed my head;
“There is no peace on earth,” I said;
“For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!”

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail,
The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to men.”

Friday, December 21, 2018

Winter Solstice

Here are some thoughts about the year’s coldest season on this, its first day:

I love how it begins with evergreen boughs on mantles, lighted trees in village squares, carols on the radio, and people knowing that life’s greatest joys come from giving rather than receiving.

I love its chilly mornings when fog clings to the surfaces of ponds.

I love sitting outside on those mornings drinking hot black coffee.

I love watching Sarah try to catch snowflakes on her tongue during our winter vacation.

I love driving across California’s High Sierra between snow drifts so deep they soar above cars and turn roadways into tunnels of white.

I love walking through Appalachian forests that are barren of leaves but laden with snow, and therefore have the appearance of black-and-white photos come to life.

And finally, I love that I can spend a whole day outside in Florida without feeling the need to shower every hour.

So for those who curse the cold: Remember that every season brings beauty, so long as we stop to notice it.

Sunday, December 16, 2018

Sounds of the season (both good and bad)

Note: I first published this in 2014, and the only change I am making is noting that it has now been 68 years, not 64, since the recording of the version of "Sleigh Ride" that I link to. However, since I did put "Baby It's Cold Outside" on the "bad" list and this year there is suddenly a movement to ban it from the airwaves, I want to stress that I am not in favor of any ban, and to reiterate that I like the song -- my criticism is that it's not a Christmas song at all and therefore it bugs me that it has been considered one for so many years.

Christmas wouldn't be the same without Christmas music. Religious hymns, secular carols, bouncy kid's songs, fast tunes, slow tunes -- they all fill a role in enhancing our enjoyment of the season.

I know most people don't give a hoot what I think about Christmas music, but I'm going to tell you anyway. Below are my thoughts regarding my favorite versions of three of my favorite religious Christmas songs, and three of my favorite secular Christmas songs -- plus, my thoughts regarding three of my least favorite.

Fyi, I don't like using the word "secular" in this context because many people attach a negative connotation to it where Christmas is concerned. But in my opinion, it's possible to capture the spirit of the season without referencing God or the nativity. Anyway, here I go:


THE RELIGIOUS

"O Holy Night," Nat King Cole
Though this song was not played very much when I was a kid, it has become ubiquitous over the last 20 years as one big-voiced singer after another, from Michael Crawford to Celine Dion to Josh Groban, has recorded it and received major air time on North American radio stations.

But none of their versions holds a candle to the one recorded by Nat King Cole in 1960. His subtly rich, expertly deployed voice gives you goosebumps as he performs the soaring lyrics and makes you feel like you really are a shepherd watching your flock on that night two millennia ago. The background of the song, combined with the fact that Cole was singing it at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, adds an extra layer of significance.

In the 1840's a French priest asked a local wine merchant named Placide Cappeau to pen a Christmas poem. Cappeau delivered with a poem that has been variously titled "Minuit, chretiens" and "Cantique de Noel." A few years later the composer Adolphe Charles Adams set it to music, creating the heart of the hymn we know today, and I think it's worth nothing that Adams was Jewish.

A few years after that, a little-known American writer and abolitionist named John Sullivan Dwight translated the Cappeau/Adams hymn to English and brought it to our shores as "O Holy Night." During the Civil War it became popular in Union states because of a particular verse that is sometimes excluded from modern renditions: "Truly He taught us to love one another / His law is love and His gospel is peace / chains shall He break / for the slave is our brother / and in His name all oppression shall cease."

"Do You Hear What I Hear?," The Carpenters
When it comes to Karen and Richard Carpenter, mock them all you want for the vein-clogging sappiness of their pop songs. They deserve it. But the fact of the matter is that Karen's voice was resonant and she owned the middle octaves, singing them better than anyone else who achieved pop stardom in the 1970's. My heart thumps when I listen to her arching vocals on their 1978 rendition of this song, complemented by Richard's wonderfully executed accompaniment. On a side note, this song is surprisingly recent, having been written during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.

"I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day," The Carpenters
I have written about this one before, and rather than recount the whole story behind it again, I will simply refer you to that post. If you don't want to go to the link, I don't blame you -- so I'll give you the abridged version by saying that the words were penned by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, as a poem during the Civil War, and subsequently set to music by John Baptiste Calkin.

Sounds kind of familiar, doesn't it? So does this: The best singing of "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day" was done by Karen Carpenter in 1978.


THE SECULAR

"Happy Holidays," Andy Williams
It's not Christmas until you hear this on the radio. In fact, in almost every single year, it happens to be the very first Christmas song I hear on the radio... He'll have a big fat pack upon his back / and lots of goodies for you and for me / so leave a peppermint stick for old Saint Nick / hangin' on the Christmas tree... Rat Packer Andy Williams belts it out so good that I don't even known if anyone else has released a single of "Happy Holdiays" -- but I do know there's no point in anyone else doing so!

"Sleigh Ride," Freddy Martin and His Orchestra
It was 68 years ago that Freddy Martin made this recording and 30 years ago that I heard it for the first time -- on a cassette tape purchased from a RadioShack in Sylva, North Carolina. Bouncing with energy and buoyed by the big bandish optimism of postwar America, it makes me smile and snap my fingers and feel a yuletide chill in the air, even if it's a 75-degree day in Florida. In other words, it is ideal.

"The Christmas Song," Nat King Cole
Mel Torme and Bob Wells wrote it in 1945. Everybody knows it, but not everybody knows its title, so it is sometimes referred to as "Merry Christmas to You" and sometimes as "Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire."

From its line about "Jack Frost nipping at your nose" to its one about "kids from one to ninety-two" to its one about "tiny tots with their eyes all aglow," I daresay that no other song has lyrics which do as good a job capturing the manifold feelings of the Christmas season.

And, I dare ask why anyone has even bothered to record "The Christmans Song" after Nat King Cole did so? His rendering 15 years after the song was written remains, in my opinion, hands-down the best Christmas song of all time.


THE BAD

"Baby It's Cold Outside"
Actually, I kind of like this duet. It's catchy and cheeky, and since I'm not a prude, I am not offended by the persistence of the male who is represented in its vocals.

But can somebody please explain why it is considered a Christmas song? It has nothing to do with Christmas. It never mentions the holiday; and other than using the word "cold," it never mentions anything that's even related to the holiday. Calling this a Christmas song is kind of like calling "Summertime Blues" a Fourth of July song because, well, July is in the summer.

Listen to the lyrics. They are solely about a guy trying to get into a girl's pants. No matter how much she insists she doesn't want to stay for the night, he constantly pressures her to do so because it's cold outside. She explicitly says "the answer is no," and he retorts that "you'll freeze out there" and "what's the sense of hurting my pride?" At one point she actually says "what's in this drink?" When she worries about what gossipers will say, his response is that it would cause him "lifelong sorrow if you caught pneumonia and died." She calls him "very pushy" and he replies "I like to think of it as opportunistic."

Again, I'm not a prude, but seriously, what does this song have to do with Christmas? How come we only hear it this time of year, and only on the stations that switch to a 24/7 Christmas format? There is something amiss.

"Happy Xmas (War is Over)"
I have mixed emotions about putting this on my "least favorites" list. John Lennon was a genuine pacifist who meant no harm to anyone. I have no doubt that when he and Yoko crafted this Christmas song using the melody of the old English ballad "Skewball," they did so with golden hearts. It was meant as a Vietnam War protest, and I have no doubt that they believed lying down military arms in that part of the world would be good for mankind.

My problem is this: The blinders they wore when crafting the song were shared by millions in the West, and those blinders caused real life disaster for people in the Third World of Southeast Asia. Without American military might, the impoverished villagers of South Vietnam were left stranded without freedom and at the mercy of Ho Chi Minh's murderous tyranny.

Generations of people on the Indochina Peninsula had their futures destroyed and hopes crushed when America went the route that John, Yoko, and the other Sixties peaceniks preferred. Had the peaceniks trumpeted any concen for the real life fates of those people, the song "Happy Xmas (War is Over)" might make me smile. Instead it makes me sad.

"Santa Baby"
This is far and away the most repulsive, alleged Christmas song of all time... In a season that's about selflessness, giving, and spiritual redemption, this song is all about self-absorption, materialism, and spiritual vacuity... Rather than seeking peace, love, and harmony, the narrator demands "a yacht," "the deed to a platinum mine," and "decorations bought at Tiffany's"... For evidence that she belongs on the nice list, the only things she mentions are "all the fun that I've missed" and "all the fellas that I haven't kissed"... Yes, this is exactly how we should teach our children about the virtues and principles of the season. I know it was written as a novelty song, but I cringe every time I hear it.


In any event, there are only two days between today and Christmas. Be merry all weekend long.

Monday, December 10, 2018

That Christmas Feeling

I published this post eight years ago, when Sarah was a kindergartner and Parker was, like I said, "resting snugly in Erika's womb" ... Today Sarah is a little more than a semester away from being a high schooler, and Parker says he is ready to play competitive hockey ... She now knows the truth about Santa, and her TV tastes have graduated from children's programming to Riverdale (thank God she still goes to her church youth group on Wednesday evenings!) ... Meanwhile, he still believes in Santa and still loves looking for Dylan (our Elf on the Shelf) every morning ... I think I will grin every time I re-read this post, so I'm re-publishing it today as we all go barreling through the holiday season: 


As long as I can remember, I have spent the Thanksgiving-through-New-Year’s season feeling buoyant and hopeful. On December mornings like today’s, when the temperatures are below freezing and the grass is coated with frost, I have always found it easy to catch the Christmas spirit.

But even for people like me, the appreciation we feel for this time of year is increased many times over when we become parents. Watching our children’s faces light up with wonder, we remember how we felt at this time of year when we were kids. Surely, even the most jaded adult must have fond recollections of Christmas Past and hope that today’s tykes are enjoying Christmas Present.


When Sarah was two, I am pretty sure she remembered Christmas from when she was one, but I know she remembered it when she was three. That was the year we got a flat tire while driving to the annual Christmas Eve party for my extended family. It was dark and cloudy and we were stranded for some time on a rural road -- a circumstance that would usually lead to bad moods and quick tempers. But when the lights of an airplane tracking through the clouds became visible, I pointed to them and told Sarah it was Santa’s sleigh. Her face immediately lit up. She pointed at the lights and wiggled and shrieked to Erika: “Mommy! Mommy! It’s Santa! It’s Santa!” And a potentially bad experience was transformed into a golden moment that will never be forgotten.

Exactly one year later, when she was four, getting her to go to bed on Christmas Eve proved next to impossible. For what seemed like hours, she kept getting up every few minutes and running into our room, laughing and jumping and swearing that through her window she had just seen Santa’s sleigh in the sky. Then she started saying that she thought she heard reindeer on the roof. And she kept getting up and making these claims over and over and over again…

When she was five, we took her to Disney World on December 23rd, and the Magic Kingdom was decked out in holiday splendor. After night fell, as we made our way down Main Street USA with Sarah on my shoulders, she broke into song and belted out “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and “We Wish You A Merry Christmas.” Then artificial snowflakes started to shower down, blown from the tops of the storefronts, and the day came to a picture-perfect end.


The next night saw more classic, Christmas Eve moments. Sarah claimed she saw Rudolph’s nose in the sky on our way home from the annual party. Before bed she made a trail of cookies in our driveway to lead the reindeer to our door. At the end was a marshmallow snowman cookie, along with a note on which she wrote: “Rudolph only.”

Finally, inside our home on her own small table by the tree, Sarah left milk and cookies, and an unfortunately broken candy cane, out for Santa. We disposed of the food and drink before she awoke, and Erika was sure to leave cookie crumbs on the plate next to the empty glass. Erika also composed a thank you note from Santa to Sarah. We had already turned this into a tradition, and Sarah reveled in it again.

Sarah is now six. For the third December in a row she is rising before the roosters every single morning, opening her Advent Box and finding where the Elf on the Shelf has moved to. She is smart as a whip and I did not expect her to still believe in Santa last year, but now it is a whole year later and she continues to believe.

We have always told her that Christmas is to commemorate the birth of Jesus, and is about giving rather than receiving, and she seems to get it. Two years ago, when we told her that after opening her gifts she had to choose one to give away to the poor, she countered by asking if she could give away ten of her old toys rather than one of her new ones.


When Sarah was born, we actually said that we would not even do the Santa thing, specifically to avoid the dreaded conversation in which we would have to admit (there’s no delicate way to put this) that we have been lying to her all these years. Then Christmas came and we did the Santa thing anyway, and although I have some reservations, I don’t have any regrets when I watch her enjoy herself. Her excitement heightens mine and Erika’s, and I am serene in my confidence that she will look back on these days with happiness. After all, one of my fondest memories of Christmas Past is of the year my parents broke the news to me that Santa is not real. The memory involves a chalkboard, but that is a story I will share another time, perhaps another year.

The bottom line is this: I love Christmas to begin with, but I love it even more because of my little girl. Erika and I can not wait to keep making new memories with her and her little sibling, who right now is resting snugly in Erika's womb.

Friday, December 7, 2018

Never Forget

Pearl Harbor Day is upon us, so let us recall what happened 77 years ago today. The day after the bombing, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt addressed Congress on December 8, 1941, to request a formal declaration of war. His speech was simulcast to the country at large via the radio. In it, he said:

Yesterday, December 7th, 1941 – a date which will live in infamy – the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.

The United States was at peace with that nation, and, at the solicitation of Japan, was still in conversation with its government and its emperor looking toward the maintenance of peace in the Pacific. Indeed, one hour after Japanese air squadrons had commenced bombing in the American island of Oahu, the Japanese ambassador to the United States and his colleague delivered to our secretary of state a formal reply to a recent American message. While this reply stated that it seemed useless to continue the existing diplomatic negotiations, it contained no threat or hint of war or armed attack…

Yesterday the Japanese government also launched an attack against Malaya.

Last night Japanese forces attacked Hong Kong.

Last night Japanese forces attacked Guam.

Last night Japanese forces attacked the Philippine Islands.

Last night Japanese forces attacked Wake Island.

And this morning the Japanese attacked Midway Island…

Japan has, therefore, undertaken a surprise offensive extending throughout the Pacific area. The facts of yesterday and today speak for themselves…

Always will be remembered the character of this onslaught against us.

No matter how long it may take us to overcome this premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory…

With confidence in our armed forces – with the unbounding determination of our people – we will gain the inevitable triumph – so help us God.



Pearl Harbor was attacked because it was where the U.S. Navy’s Pacific fleet was headquartered. The bombing, which killed more than 2,400 people, began shortly before 8:00 on a Sunday morning.

Five of our eight battleships were sunk, the other three were badly damaged, and multiple other naval vessels were destroyed.

The majority of the American war planes based in Hawaii were destroyed as they sat on the ground.

In addition, most of the American air forces based in the Philippines were destroyed during the nighttime attack on that nation, which FDR also mentioned in his speech.

By crippling our Pacific defenses, the December 7th attack left us extremely vulnerable in the face of an aggressive enemy to our West – an enemy that had signaled its intent to rule the entire Pacific basin by subjugating other nations to its will.

This came at a time when we had not responded to the fact that Nazi Germany to our East had already declared war against us, had already brought most of Europe under its thumb, and had signaled its own intention to rule the world by way of an Aryan resurrection of the old Roman Empire.

Such circumstances would have spelled doom for the vast majority of countries throughout the course of history. With their foundations based on the accidents of ethnicity and geography, most countries would have simply surrendered; or, in a distinction without a difference, entered into “peace” negotiations under which they would have to accept the aggressor’s terms and after which the lives of their citizens would most certainly change for the worst.

But the United States is a nation based on ideals. Our foundation springs from the knowledge that there are things greater than us, things which are greater than the transient circumstances which exist on any given day. We have always found strength in the conviction that our nation exists to support and advance those greater things, to the benefit of people all over the world, and this sets the United States apart from all other nations in all other times.

Taking heed from FDR’s appeal to “righteous might,” reflecting what Abraham Lincoln earlier referred to as the “faith that right makes might,” the American people of 1941 summoned the invincible courage to rebuild and fight at the same time they were under fearsome siege. They did this despite the fact they were still suffering through an unprecedented economic depression that had started more than a decade before.

Let us pray that those qualities – that will to power and that unwavering belief in the sanctity of human freedom – have not been lost as new generations of Americans take the baton from the great ones which came before. For as has been said, those who forget the past will be forced to repeat it.

It would be shameful if history were to record that we squandered what was handed down to us by people like Larry Perry, and as a result we failed to transfer freedom’s blessings to our descendants... And since you probably don't know who Larry Perry is, I recommend you look here and find out.

Monday, December 3, 2018

The Real Saint Nick

History provides many examples of actual people who have, over time, become so melded into the popular imagination that we tend to forget they were real. Saint Nicholas is one of them.

Born sometime around 280 A.D. in the town of Patara, in what was then part of Greece but is now part of Turkey, Nicholas was the son of wealthy parents who died when he was young. Having been raised as a devoted Christian, he spent his life using his inheritance to help those in need, and in addition to his charity he became known for harboring great concern for children and sailors.

Down through history, one particular story about his generosity has persisted. In those days, women whose families could not pay a dowry were more likely to die as spinsters than to get married. It is said that when Nicholas learned of a poor man who was worried about his daughters’ fate because he lacked money for their dowries, Nicholas surreptitiously tossed gold into the man’s home through an open window, and the gold landed in stockings that were drying by the fire. Much later, this 1,700-year-old story inspired the modern tradition of hanging stockings by the chimney to receive gifts from Santa on Christmas Eve.

Nicholas became Bishop of Myra and was imprisoned during the anti-Christian persecutions carried out by the Roman Emperor Diocletian. Based on the stories of his life, Catholic tradition considers him a patron saint of children, orphans, sailors, travelers, the wrongly imprisoned, and many other categories of people. Churches were constructed in his honor as early as the sixth century A.D. Today, his remains are buried in BariItaly.

For generations now, kids and adults alike have used the names Santa Claus, Saint Nicholas, and Saint Nick interchangeably, without giving it a second thought. But there was an actual Saint Nicholas, a decent man who is obscured by commercial renderings of Christmas. We should not allow that fact to be forgotten, regardless of whether or not we are Catholic (and for the record, I am not).

Friday, November 30, 2018

Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes

Well short of the 30-game mark, this NHL season has seen several teams already make major off-ice changes.

And I'm not even counting Steve Yzerman, arguably the best GM in the league, stepping aside from that post with my Tampa Bay Lightning and handing its reigns over to Julien BriseBois. That happened before opening day.

The biggest shoe to fall since opening day was the firing of Joel Quenneville, by Chicago Blackhawks GM Stan Bowman. Quenneville is merely the second-winningest head coach in NHL history, and all he did for the Blackhawks this decade was deliver three Stanley Cups for a franchise that hadn't experienced one since 1961 (and before that hadn't experienced one since FDR's second term).

Hockey teams' game day rosters consist of 20 players. It was not Joel Quenneville's fault that Stan Bowman threw a wet blanket on Chicago's roster by devoting 30 percent of the salary cap to a grand total of two players, one of whom had, in seven years of service, turned in only two 30-goal seasons, neither of which was in the three seasons immediately before. Nor is it Quenneville's fault that Bowman has a track record of failing to understand what Brandon Saad does (actually, does not) bring to the table. Nor is it his fault that Chicago's prospect pipeline has long been thin because the team's scouts are just average and its minor league affiliates do a poor job getting draftees ready for the big show.

But when the inevitable downturn in the Blackhawks' fortunes arrived, there was no way Stan Bowman was going to fire himself. And it would also be exceedingly difficult for him to fire a whole slew of specialists and replace them all. So instead he canned the greatest coach the organization has ever had.

A similar situation played out in Edmonton, where Peter Chiarelli handed a pink slip to Todd McLellan. To be sure, McLellan is nowhere near as good a coach as Joel Quenneville, but then again, the man who fired him is the worst GM in the league one of the most inept executives in the league. It was Chiarelli, not McLellan, who got rid of Taylor Hall and signed a slow, aging Cro Magnon Milan Lucic to a long-term deal because he thought Lucic's plodding skill set would somehow fit with the supersonic one of Connor McDavid. And it is Chiarelli, not McLellan, who talks like he would do that boondoggle all over again.

Meanwhile, John Stevens got the axe in LA and Mike Yeo got it in St. Louis. At least neither of those firings reeked of general managers desperately trying to save their own jobs by making someone else pay for their sins, although it is debatable whether there is much Stevens could have been expected to accomplish with the Kings' current lineup.

By far the most interesting in-season change, however, is the one that went down in the City of Brotherly Love, where Ron Hextall -- a major figure in Philadelphia Flyers history -- was dismissed of his GM duties by team president Paul Holmgren.

If you were to say that Hextall comes from what can be called royal blood in the world of hockey, you would not be off base. His grandfather Bryan was a Hall of Fame winger for the New York Rangers who scored their Stanley Cup-winning goal in 1940. Later, his father Bryan Jr. and uncle Dennis had successful NHL careers of 10 and 14 years, respectively, with the former playing center and the latter left wing.

Hextall has said that when he was a kid he "hated the Flyers" because he saw the Broad Street Bullies dole out some of their patented cheap shots monster hits on his father and uncle. But as everyone knows, he wound up being a Flyer when he reached the NHL, and not only that: He became one of the most famous and popular Flyers ever.

Unlike his forebears, Ron Hextall chose to be a goalie, and his manner of goaltending was revolutionary because he thrived on coming out of the crease and skating with the puck like a forward or blueliner would. Operating on the theory that the other team can't shoot the puck if you are the one controlling it, Hextall used his superior skating and deft stick work to carry the play away from opponents and feed teammates with outlet passes, triggering offensive rushes or, at the very least, clearing things out of the Flyers' defensive zone. He was the first goalie to score a goal during a regular season game on a rink-length shot -- and also the first to do it during a playoff game.

In his rookie season of 1986-87, Hextall won the Vezina Trophy and led the Flyers all the way to the Stanley Cup Finals before they fell in seven games to the Edmonton Oilers, who were then at the height of their dynasty. His play was so clutch and indispensable during their playoff run that he accomplished the rare feat of being named the league's playoff MVP despite not being on the team that won it all. His Game Six performance, in which he forced the series to a seventh game by fending off an onslaught by Edmonton's snipers, was so good that Wayne Gretzky told reporters "Hextall is probably the best goaltender I've ever seen in the National Hockey League, that I've ever played against."

What endeared him to Philly fans as much as the results, however, was how he wore his heart on his sleeve with his tempestuous play. The kind of player who would break his stick over the crossbar, or swing it at a foe to keep him in check, or engage in fistfights with opponents if he thought it would give his team an edge, Hextall had more than 100 penalty minutes in each of his first three seasons in the league. No other goalie in history has had more than 70, and only three have had more than 60.

'Tis ironic that the child who despised the Broad Street Bullies became a man who would have fit right in on that club. Which helps makes his tenure as Philly's general manager and recent dismissal from that post even more interesting, to use the word I used above.

When he became GM in May 2014, Hextall replaced none other than Paul Holmgren, the same man who fired him this week. His first order of business was to clean up an albatross of a mess that Holmgren had created with regard to the salary cap, and clean it up he did, despite not having much leverage in trade negotiations.

Hextall moved out good but overpaid veterans to liberate the team from their contracts; and he did this not in exchange for other veterans of comparable ability, but for prospects and draft picks whose purpose was to bear fruit in the future.

This change in approach came with owner Ed Snider's blessing, as the organization had for years been rash in swinging immediately for the fences rather than methodical in building the kind of team that could be a true and consistent contender for la Coupe Stanley.

The change was not necessarily bad, for how can building for the future be bad? Especially when your starting point of salary cap hell means you have to step backward before you can step forward?

The problem is that beyond those players who got salary-dumped, the Flyers' core still had (and has) major talent. Which means the course correction had the effect of squandering, or at least threatening to squander, the prime playing years of Claude Giroux, Jake Voracek, and Wayne Simmonds. Flyer fans know how good those players are, and as they watched one year after another of Hextall's rebuild go by without any discernible change in the on-ice results, they grew restless -- as did those who sit above Hextall on the org chart.

Three things about Hextall's tenure occupied the negative spectrum that runs between the adjectives "troubling" and "mystifying": The coaching situation, goaltending situation, and something dissonant about his personality.

In May 2015 he hired Dave Hakstol away from the University of North Dakota to become the 19th head coach in Flyers history. While there is no denying the success Hakstol had in his 11 years at the helm of UND, bringing a skipper from the NCAA directly to the NHL was a gamble that hadn't been tried in 33 years, and some people believe Hextall's objectivity was compromised by the fact that his son played for Hakstol in college.

Hakstol's teams in Philly have been simultaneously mediocre and inconsistent. They have been marked by an identity crisis and have not moved in any noticeable direction as each season has unfolded. Now in his fourth year, it is not like he hasn't been given ample time to move the needle, and it is not like he hasn't had talent to work with, yet the needle remains stuck.

Fans have been calling for Hakstol's head, and it seems that at least some people in ownership and upper management have as well. But all the way through his own firing, Hextall stubbornly stood by the coach and counseled everyone to be patient and give him more time.

And the situation between the pipes has possibly been even more aggravating for Flyer partisans than the situation on the bench. From Bernie Parent to Pelle Lindbergh to Ron Hextall himself, Philadelphia once had a proud goaltending tradition. But that tradition has vanished over the last 20 years, and it has been the Flyers' weakness in net that, more than anything else, has kept them from becoming a real contender.

Given that Hextall was a goalie and everyone knows you can't contend for championships without excellent goaltending, most people assumed he would orchestrate a major upgrade in that area. So, the fact that goaltending remains the team's most glaring weakness 4+ years after he took over has caused considerable consternation for everybody who wants the team to succeed.

Whether it is fair to blame Hextall for that is up for debate. Upper crust goalies don't grow on trees. Teams that have them almost always sign them to lucrative extensions before they reach free agency, and are loath to trade them for anything other than a king's ransom that would gut the team on the other side of the deal.

On top of that, it is notoriously difficult to forecast how well a young netminder will do when he faces NHL offenses, which helps explain why you almost never see a goalie taken with a high draft pick.

It's not like Hextall has done nothing to address the goaltending. He did draft then-17-year-old Carter Hart in 2016, and there are more than a few hockey insiders who expect Hart to be the real deal... but there is a lot of time between when a kid is a 17-year-old playing in juniors and when he is a man playing in the NHL, and Hextall has failed to successfully bridge that gap where the Flyers are concerned.

Philly's goalies to start this season were Brian Elliott and Michal Neuvirth, who are respectively 33 and 30 years old and have both had numerous injury problems over the years. Elliott has a reputation for underachieving in the playoffs, based on his years in St. Louis; Neuvirth has not seen the second round of the playoffs since 2011, his first full season with the Washington Capitals, when they got swept by Tampa Bay despite being the top seed. Meanwhile, Carter Hart is currently playing his first season in the AHL and having a rough go of it as he struggles to get his save percentage above .900.

In short, Ron Hextall failed to fix the Flyers' most obvious and pressing personnel need. That definitely hurt his cause. And although it sounds strange to say this about a man who once played with a violent temper befitting the Tasmanian Devil, his calm and even-keeled personality also hurt his cause.

Of course there is nothing wrong with being calm and even-keeled in the midst of competition, as evidenced by the fact that Tony Dungy has won just as many Super Bowls as Mike Ditka. Certainly Ron Hextall wants to win badly, and certainly the lack of on-ice advancement made him stew inside. But never showing that he was stewing, and continuing to preach patience while the results stayed the same, made it look like he had no sense of urgency. And in this city, for this franchise, with these fans, that will never cut it.

So he has been shown the door, even though a strong case can be made that the man below him and the man above him should have both been shown the door first. I am skeptical whether this particular change will make a difference, for it seems to me that the Flyers franchise as a whole has been sailing without a rudder ever since Ed Snider, its founder and owner, died of cancer. It seems to me that wholesale institutional changes, not just the replacement of one executive, are needed to right the ship.

Not that I care. It's fine with me if the Flyers continue to list this way and that without ever moving forward, for I am a Lightning fan. Like everybody who is good and decent, and who is also not from Eastern PA or Southern Jersey or than little state known as Delaware, I feel as though it is my patriotic duty to root against any team from Philadelphia.

But I also know it's not as fun to root against a bully when his biceps have shriveled and he's no longer a bully. The NHL lost some of its punch and edge when the Flyers changed from daunting to whimpering, and it might be good for the NHL if they find a way to change back.


  

Sunday, November 25, 2018

Quarter-mark goods and bads

The 2018-19 NHL season officially passed the point of being 25 percent done going into Thanksgiving weekend -- or "American Thanksgiving," as our Canadian friends more accurately call it -- and one of the wags at Yahoo Sports chose to mark the moment by writing about one thing that each team should be thankful for.

But those 31 things, one per team, are just his opinion, and who says his opinion is better than mine?

Ever eager to steal improve upon an idea, I decided to publish my own list and make it include one positive thing and one negative thing concerning each team's season up to now. There's no way a season can be all sunshine and daisies and puppy dogs, right? Here goes...

Anaheim Ducks
The Good:  John Gibson. The Ducks have been depleted by injuries, and are getting outshot at a clip of 36 to 27 per game and getting badly outchanced as well. Yet thanks to the 25-year-old Pittsburgh native who guards their net, they would be in the playoffs if the playoffs started today. Gibson is covering up their warts with his .927 save percentage, and stealing wins for them in games they deserve to lose. Count him in as the Vezina frontrunner.

The Bad:  I'll just copy and paste one of the sentences from above: The Ducks have been depleted by injuries, and are getting outshot at a clip of 36 to 27 per game and getting badly outchanced as well. If that doesn't change, it will sink them over the course of an 82-game season no matter how well John Gibson plays. It just has to.


Arizona Coyotes
The Good:  The penalty kill. Entering Friday, Coyote opponents had been on the power play 62 times, during which the Coyotes had scored a whopping 10 goals while yielding only 5. To put that in perspective, consider that only two teams had more than 10 short-handed goals for all of last season.

The Bad:  Same old results. Despite that excellent penalty kill and despite what appears to be an upgraded roster with a promising amount of talent, the 'Yotes yet again sit near the bottom of the standings. Right now they are in seventh place in the Pacific Division and tied for the third-worst record in the league.


Boston Bruins
The Good:  David Pastrnak. With 17 goals and 26 total points in 23 games, he continues to prove that he is one of the league's most potent offensive forces.

The Bad:  Depth. Or more specifically, lack thereof. Boston's top line of Pastrnak, Patrice Bergeron, and Brad Marchand might be the best on the planet, but the team's scoring dries up when they're not on the ice -- which isn't good when you are trying to win the Stanley Cup and to do so you will need to get through the likes of Toronto, Tampa Bay, etc. in your own conference and then will need to face the likes of Nashville, Winnipeg, etc. from the other conference.


Buffalo Sabres
The Good:  The turning of the worm. The Sabres have been stockpiling a considerable amount of young talent for a few years now, and that talent is finally starting to produce the kind of results everyone has been waiting on. The sun rose today with the Sabres having the best record in the entire NHL, a mark they have earned without smoke and mirrors.

The Bad:  Goaltending. Actually the Sabres' goaltending has been quite good, but Carter Hutton is about to turn 33 and has never been considered among the NHL's best, so I can't help but wonder whether a downturn is around the corner (and if one is, I wonder whether Linus Ullmark, now in his fourth season but with only 32 appearances under his belt, has what it takes to backstop a team to the post-season).


Calgary Flames
The Good:  David Rittich. Right as 36-year-old goalie Mike Smith has started to flounder in net (.876 save percentage), in has ridden the 26-year-old Rittich to save the day and give Calgary fans reason to believe they might be able to make some post-season noise. Rittich's sample size might be considered small (12 games this season) but his .930 save percentage and 2.04 goals-against average are very good.

The Bad:  James Neal. When the Flames signed him to a five-year contract with an annual cap hit of $5.75 million, they thought they were getting one of the NHL's more dependable scoring threats. But Neal has just four points in the first 23 games, is minus-5, and has often found himself relegated to the bottom-six.


Carolina Hurricanes
The Good:  Sebastian Aho. The 21-year-old Finn is having a breakout campaign thus far, his 25 points in 23 games bringing some long-needed offensive excitement to Raleigh and a long-needed "face of the franchise" as well.

The Bad:  Same old results. Granted, the Canes do look a little better this year, but, playing in a weakened Metropolitan Division, they would still be two points out of the final wild card spot if the playoffs started today.


Chicago Blackhawks
The Good:  Corey Crawford's return to the lineup.

The Bad:  Everything else, literally. It's hard to believe the Hawks' recently mighty empire has crumbled to dust, but it's true.


Colorado Avalanche
The Good:  That top line. There are other lines in competition for the title of "best in the NHL," but Colorado's salvo of Nathan MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen, and Gabriel Landeskog clearly is the best, at least in my book. Rantanen and MacKinnon are 1-2 in the league in total points while Landeskog's 14 goals are tied for fifth.

The Bad:  Depth. Or more specifically, lack thereof. The drop-off when you get past Colorado's top line might not be the worst in the NHL, but it's drastic enough to limit this team's potential.


Columbus Blue Jackets
The Good:  The standings. Despite some notable injuries and surprisingly subpar goaltending by Sergei Bobrovsky, the Jackets are just one point out of first place in the Metropolitan. If "Bob" gets back to his regular self, which he probably will, watch out.

The Bad:  Contract uncertainty surrounding their Russian stars. Bobrovsky is the franchise's backbone, Artemi Panarin is far and away its top offensive gun, they both become unrestricted free agents after this season -- and neither of them sounds eager to remain in Ohio long-term. Gulp


Dallas Stars
The Good:  Alexander Radulov's return from injury. Since coming back 14 games ago, the spunky Russkie from Nizhny Tagil has banged in 8 goals and dished out 12 assists for an average of 1.43 points per contest.

The Bad:  Ben Bishop's injury bug. He was recently named one of the top 100 goalies of all time, and deservedly so, but Bishop has been dogged by injuries his entire career and this past week he wound up on IR again. The Stars need him on the ice and at his peak if they are going to have any chance of making a playoff run.


Detroit Red Wings
The Good:  The 180. Not long after losing their first seven games, the Wings flipped the script by winning six in a row and they have now won 11 of their last 15.

The Bad:  The 180. You never want to see athletes do poorly and have a bad season. But this team is not a contender, and in order for it to resume being one, it really needs to finish low in the standings to increase its chances of getting a high draft pick for the first time since dinosaurs roamed the earth. If this recent spate of winning doesn't stop, the necessary rebuild will be sabotaged delayed (and yes, I absolutely hate this way of thinking, but there's some truth to it nonetheless).


Edmonton Oilers
The Good:  Connor McDavid is on the roster.

The Bad:  Peter Chiarelli is in charge of constructing the rest of the roster around McDavid.


Florida Panthers
The Good:  Aleksander Barkov's consistently strong two-way play. He does not get the media attention he deserves, but he is one of the best players on the planet.

The Bad:  Vincent Trocheck's injury .


Los Angeles Kings
The Good:  Drew Doughty is still committed to the team.

The Bad:  The team is floundering and regressing and has a barren prospect pool, and its average player age is approximately 372 years, 239 days.


Minnesota Wild
The Good:  The resurgence of Zach Parise, Mikko Koivu, and Ryan Suter.

The Bad:  Having to play in the same division as Nashville and Winnipeg.


Montreal Canadiens
The Good:  The nobody-saw-that-coming emergence of Max Domi as a high-end scoring threat.

The Bad:  Carey Price. Two years ago he was widely considered the greatest goalie in the world. Then, last season he had by far his worst campaign ever, and now this season is even worse. Price is sporting a subterranean save percentage of .895, which ranks 37th best in the 31-team NHL, and did I mention he is already 31 yet this is the first year of his eight-year contract under which he counts $10.5 million per season against the salary cap?


Nashville Predators
The Good:  That Blue Line. Roman Josi, PK Subban, Ryan Ellis, and Mattias Ekholm all on one roster? That's just not fair to the rest of the league.

The Bad:  Having to play in the same division as Winnipeg. That's just not fair to the Preds, because no matter how awesome a regular season they churn out, they will go unrewarded for it come playoff time as they'll be forced to face the Jets prior to the conference finals.


New Jersey Devils
The Good:  They have three players shooting greater than 18 percent for the season (including two who are over 20 percent) and not a one of 'em is named Taylor Hall. For the record, those players are Travis Zajac at 25.9 percent, Brian Boyle at 21.2, and Kyle Palmieri at 18.2.

The Bad: One year after surprising everyone by making the playoffs, the Devils have regressed to a last-place tie in the Metropolitan.


New York Islanders
The Good:  Barzal & Co. With five different forwards averaging two-thirds or more points per game, the Isles' offense is performing well enough that it doesn't feel like there's been much of a drop in the wake of John Tavares splitting town.

The Bad:  Trying to keep from thinking of how much better this offense would be right now if Tavares hadn't split town.


New York Rangers
The Good:  20-year-old Brett Howden and 19-year-old Filip Chytil have 12 and 8 points, respectively, and Alexandar Georgiev, the Rangers' young backup goalie from Bulgaria, is 4-2 with a .911 save percentage in the games he has started.

The Bad:  The Rangers, like the Red Wings, are playing too good to give themselves their best chance of landing a high draft pick that might boost their rebuild. They are in playoff position right now, whereas their long-term future would be better served if they were dead last (and yes, I hated typing this concept just as much now as I did when I typed it about the Red Wings).


Ottawa Senators
The Good:  The semblance of a quality core. Ottawa's overall roster may be wanting, but Matt Duchene, Mark Stone, and Thomas Chabot are all averaging more than a point per game, and 19-year-old Brady Tkachuk looks like the real deal with his moxie and his 11 points in 12 outings. These are the kind of pieces around which a good team can certainly be built.

The Bad:  Eugene Melnyk, famed maestro of incompetence and miserliness, still owns the team. Therefore it is almost impossible not to believe that he will cause them to lose pending free agents Duchene and Stone, and that before long he will trade away Tkachuk for pennies on the dollar. It is especially easy to feel such fear after seeing this holiday weekend's example of Melnyk's latest incompetence.


Philadelphia Flyers
The Good:  Wayne Simmonds is playing like a man possessed.

The Bad:  Ron Hextall is the best goaltender currently employed by the organization... but he is the GM and has not played a single game this century.


Pittsburgh Penguins
The Good:  The Big Three. The players who comprise Pittsburgh's triumvirate of superstars -- Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, and Phil Kessel -- continue to pile up points and perform splendidly in all three zones.

The Bad:  The rest of the team. Its secondary scoring has dried up, its defense corps is a sieve, and its goaltending is wobbly with starter Matt Murray surrendering more than four goals per game before being sidelined by injury. Because of these issues, the Penguins, though only 17 months removed from winning their second straight Stanley Cup, are seven points out of the final wild card spot. Yikes.


St. Louis Blues
The Good:  Ryan O'Reilly. Though known mostly for his defensive prowess and "hockey IQ," this 27-year-old is flaunting considerable offensive touch in his first year with the team. O'Reilly leads the Blues in all three offensive categories (by a wide margin) and is on pace to pulverize his career bests.

The Bad:  When you are expected to contend for a playoff spot, yet fire your head coach a quarter of the way into the season and find yourself sitting in last place at the end of that same week, that has to be a sign that things aren't going well, right?


San Jose Sharks
The Good:  That Blue Line. Erik Karlsson, Brent Burns, and Marc-Edouard Vlasic all on the same roster? That means the Sharks, if they wanted, could spread them out instead of grouping them and as a result would have a Norris Trophy caliber defenseman playing on every single one of their defense pairings. Holy guacamole.

The Bad:  You might need to take out a second mortgage to afford to go to a game at SAP Center (but then again, that's really your problem, not the team's).


Tampa Bay Lightning
The Good:  Brayden Point. Let's see, this young centerman has 28 points in 23 games, recently rang up a natural hat trick in 91 seconds, and plays Selke-level defense to boot. He belongs in the Hart Trophy conversation, pure and simple.

The Bad:  It seems like they get outshot every night. Fortunately they are so good that they still have the second-best record in the East, but when your goal is to win it all instead of just make the playoffs, getting outshot on a regular basis is the kind of thing that can, and eventually probably will, sink you.


Toronto Maple Leafs
The Good:  Frederik Andersen. With a .931 save percentage and 2.24 GAA, the red-headed goalie from Denmark is covering up the Leafs' defensive thinness and is looking like a Vezina winner in the process.

The Bad:  The constant cascade of no-information articles about the William Nylander contract impasse. Enough already!


Vancouver Canucks
The Good:  Elias Pettersson. Nuff said. Give him the Calder already.

The Bad:  Coming back to Earth. After a promising start that had them in playoff position a couple weeks back, the Canucks have regressed and slid down the standings and are now four spots behind the final wild card.


Vegas Golden Knights
The Good:  Their underlying numbers are still good.

The Bad:  Their record (12-12-1) is unimpressive and that's largely because Marc-Andre Fleury's goaltending has not been up to his usual standards.


Washington Capitals
The Good:  Tom Wilson. Of course everybody else who plays in or follows the NHL was unhappy when Wilson's suspension got reduced, but Washington's players and fans are thrilled that he is back. In the seven games since he returned to the fold, the Caps are 6-1 and he has racked up nine points on four goals and five assists.

The Bad:  Wondering what the goaltending will be like if Braden Holtby gets injured... since, prior to this season, new backup Phoenix Copley had posted a career save percentage of only .829 at the NHL level.


Winnipeg Jets
The Good:  Kyle Connor (20 points in 20 games, +6) is not having a sophomore slump.

The Bad:  Having to play in the same division as Nashville. That's just not fair to the Jets, because no matter how awesome a regular season they churn out, they will go unrewarded for it come playoff time as they'll be forced to face the Preds prior to the conference finals.

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Snubs


Clearly the 18 members of the Hall's selection committee read my post and realized the error of their ways, because three of those players have since been enshrined.

But one of them is still on the outside looking in, plus there are other deserving players in the same situation, so I obviously have a little more work to do.

With this year's class of inductees having been formally enshrined last Monday, there is no better time than the present to explain why certain players need to be in the Hall. So here I go, and I am not going to  include anyone who has only been eligible for a few years, for that is usually a very reasonable time to "wait" considering there are only so many slots to be filled each year. No, I am here to kvetch for people who have been snubbed for a considerable and unreasonable period of time, and of course I am going to start with the one man from my previous post who is still awaiting the call.

Alexander Mogilny
This electrifying winger was the first Soviet player to play in the NHL, and first person from outside of North America to captain an NHL team. As stated in my previous post: "After being drafted by Buffalo with the 89th overall selection in the entry draft, he defected to the United States in 1989, chose uniform number 89 (of course), and played 65 games for the Sabres during his rookie season of 1989-90... in his fourth year playing over here, he exploded for 76 goals in the 1992-93 season. In the 22 years since then, no player has managed to reach the 70-goal mark and only four (Mario Lemieux, Jaromir Jagr, Alex Ovechkin, and Steven Stamkos) have managed to reach 60."

Well, in the three seasons since I typed those words, only one player (Ovechkin) has had a 50-goal campaign and nobody has gotten to 51. And it's not as if Alexander Mogilny's 76-goal campaign was some kind of flash in the pan that makes an otherwise normal career look better than it really was: He averaged better than a point per game across 16 NHL seasons, exceeding the 1,000-point plateau while playing in fewer than 1,000 games -- despite playing in the so-called dead puck era of stifling clutch-and-grab D. In all of NHL history, only 25 other people (out of 6,000 or so who have played in the league) have maintained that high a scoring clip across as many seasons as Mogilny.

He won the Stanley Cup with New Jersey in 2000 and took home the Lady Byng in 2003, and before that he won an Olympic gold in 1988 and World Championship gold in 1989. The man from Khabarovsk has been retired for 12 years and it is past time to give him his plaque.


Doug Wilson
And what about this now 61-year-old Ottawa native who was an elite blueliner in three different decades? Doug Wilson was an eight-time All Star who won the Norris Trophy at a time when Denis Potvin, Ray Bourque, and Paul Coffey were all performing at their peaks. And he had four other Norris nominations plus a pair of Hart Trophy nominations. His 827 points (237, 590) are the 15th most by a defenseman in league history.

After 14 stellar campaigns with the Blackhawks from 1978 to 1991, he moved west to join the expansion San Jose Sharks and became the first captain in that team's history, tallying 48 points for them in 86 games across the final two seasons of his career. Wilson is currently the Sharks' general manager, having held that role since 2003 and having used it to turn the team into one you always see in the playoffs.

His playing career was HOF-worthy in its own right, but when you add his managerial career on top of it, he should be a shoo-in. Regrettably, he has yet to be invited after all these years.


Butch Goring
The members of the New York Islanders' old Trio Grande line have more name recognition than Butch Goring these days. But Goring was the missing piece who, once acquired, elevated the Islanders above contender status and helped transform them into one of the greatest dynasties in hockey history -- and he was already an NHL star well before they acquired him.

When the sun rose on March 10, 1980, Goring was in his ninth season with the LA Kings and ranked as that franchise's all-time leader in both goals and assists. He was an institution in LA and the notion of playing for another team was the furthest thing from his mind. But when the sun set that day, he had become a New York Islander by virtue of a blockbuster trade that is still considered, all these years later, to be the gold standard of trade deadline deals.

At the time of the trade, the Islanders -- who had been considered Cup contenders for a few years but had never made it to the finals -- were in position for a playoff spot but had been playing inconsistent all season. Taking over the center ice position on their second line, Goring made an immediate impact and they went undefeated in the 12 games between the trade and the end of the regular season. Then came the post-season, when he racked up 19 points in 21 games to help lead them to the first of what would become four consecutive Stanley Cups.

The following spring, Goring brought home the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP after tallying 20 points in the 18 post-season games that it took for the Isles to win their second title. He was a member of their dynasty for all four of their titles, and also for their fifth straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final in 1984, which they lost to Edmonton. Across that span he averaged more than two-thirds of a point per playoff game while also accounting for 188 regular season points.

Hailing from Saint Boniface, Manitoba, he was strong, speedy, and scrappy. In addition to being a leader and champion, he ranks third in Islanders history for shooting percentage, second in Kings history for short-handed goals, and third in Kings history for hat tricks. Butch Goring has now been Hall of Fame eligible for thirty freakin' years. Put him in!



Theo Fleury
At 5'6" and 180 pounds, Theoren Wallace Fleury was a generation or two ahead of his time, a precursor to the small and shifty players who now seem to own the league. He was dripping with so much talent, and played with so much unpredictability and passion, that he always seemed to appear on highlight reels -- most famously for this overtime goal and celebration which capped Game Six of Calgary's 1991 playoff series against Edmonton.

Fleury won the Stanley Cup with the Flames in 1989 (that franchise's first and still only championship) and won Olympic gold with Team Canada in 2002 (breaking an almost unfathomable 50-year drought for hockey's home country). He was such a fan favorite in Calgary that once, when his jersey was covered with blood and the officials sent him to the locker room to change into a clean one, a fan removed his own jersey and tossed it to Fleury from the stands so that he wouldn't have to miss a shift. When the Flames traded him in 1999 because they feared they could not afford to pay him when he hit free agency at season's end, he was the organization's all-time leading scorer and tearfully remarked that "a piece of my heart left today, but the biggest part is here in Calgary and always will be."

So why isn't this native of Oxbow, Saskatchewan already in the Hall of Fame? It's hard not to believe that his de facto exclusion is all because of the messy way his NHL career concluded.

In the summer of 2000 he entered the league's substance abuse program to confront addictions to alcohol and cocaine. Then his 2000-01 season ended early because he re-entered the program with 20 games remaining... Fleury did not miss any games during the 2001-02 season, but he admitted that he was still struggling with addiction, and his behavior became erratic; he got into a fistfight with the San Jose Sharks mascot, and on one occasion when he was called for a penalty he left the arena instead of just going to the penalty box... Two days prior to the start of the 2002-03 season the NHL suspended him for two months for violating the terms of the substance abuse program, and in January 2003, after having served the suspension, he got into a fight with bouncers at a bar in Columbus... Three months later the NHL suspended him for violating the substance abuse program yet again, and that suspension marked the end of his NHL career.

However, we would later learn that there is more to Fleury than that checklist of derogatory marks. It turns out he was sexually abused as a youth by his juniors coach, Graham James, who of course did the same to other boys including eventual NHL player Sheldon Kennedy. James wound up going to prison for his crimes, and it was those crimes that fueled much of Fleury's angst and addictive behavior.

Today Fleury is clean, participates in multiple charities, and cites September 18, 2005 -- when "I just basically said, please, God, take away the obsession to drink and do drugs" -- as his day of sobriety.

Hockey-wise, at the NHL level he averaged more than a point per regular season game and more than a point per playoff game in a career that spanned 16 seasons and more than 1,100 contests. He did that despite battling the demons mentioned above, and despite playing with Crohn's disease as well.

Plus, after being banished by the NHL, he proved his love for the game by heading to Northern Island and playing for the Belfast Giants of the UK's Elite Ice Hockey League, and by playing for free for the Horse Lake Thunder of the senior amateur North Peace Hockey League.

From where I'm sitting, Theo Fleury's battle with and eventual victory over his personal demons makes him more deserving of an induction to the Hall. Not less. I can think of no reason not to include him -- or Alexander Mogilny, Doug Wilson, or Butch Goring -- in next year's class.