Showing posts with label NHL teams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NHL teams. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2009

Time for NHL to repay old debt to Hamilton

Coyotes could replace long-departed Tigers who pioneered hockey in downtown New York

http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Team logos from the NHL’s defunct Hamilton Tigers: Upper left, 1924-25; upper right, 1921; bottom, 1922-23. It's time for the National Hockey League to repay its debt to Hamilton.

Ironically, it was a "distress sale" from Hamilton more than 80 years ago that paved the way for the NHL to make it big in the United States. How unbecoming that the NHL continues to fixate on demonstrably unviable hockey markets in the Southern U.S. (come on! Atlanta? Columbus? Florida? Nashville? These are hockey markets, but somehow, Quebec, Winnepeg, Saskatchewan and Manitoba aren't??) rather than return to the Canadian city that contributed – and sacrificed – so much for the NHL in the past.

The story of how NHL hockey moved from Hamilton to New York in 1925 proved to be the single most important franchise relocation in league history. It also illustrates why the NHL's future lies in going retro now, and returning to Hamilton.

In the summer of 1925, New York's most prominent Prohibition-era bootlegger, "Big Bill" Dyer, purchased the NHL's top team – the Hamilton Tigers. They played the 1925-26 season in Manhattan, and hockey has been a fixture at Madison Square Garden ever since. The team's success on Broadway convinced other American cities that hockey was for them, too.

No contest – the Hamilton Tigers are the best NHL team to never have won the Stanley Cup. They were the first-place team following the 1924-25 regular season. Twenty per cent of the roster (Billie Burch and Shorty Green) from what were then ten-player squads made it into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Perhaps the best tribute to the Tigers came from manager Tommy Gorman of the rival Ottawa Senators, who described the Hamilton team as "a magnificent hockey machine."

The Hamilton Tigers lost their championship chance in March 1925, when the then league president summarily disqualified the club from the Stanley Cup playoffs. Hamilton seems to have a bad track record with NHL presidents! This is the only time in NHL history that an entire team was disqualified and all its players suspended.

What was their transgression? The team players had gone on strike to protest what they regarded as unfair salary treatment that year. That, too, was connected to southern expansion of the league.

Fearing the start-up of a rival league in the U.S., the NHL began looking to move south in the 1920s. Founded in 1917 as a four-team Canadian league, the NHL had its first expansion in the 1924-25 season. A second team was added in Montreal (the Maroons), and the addition of the Boston Bruins brought the first American city into the league. To accommodate the larger number of teams, the league schedule was increased from 24 to 30 games.

Players, however, were not pleased about playing 25 per cent more games with no additional salary. Nor were they too happy with the league's announcement that players would receive no share of playoff game revenues. At the end of the regular season, all Hamilton players served notice they would not suit up for a playoff game unless paid to play.

The NHL's first president, Frank Calder, set an autocratic tone that seems to have remained a job requirement ever since. The Hamilton team and its players were summarily terminated. Calder also made it plain that the owners' finances came before the players, the fans or even the game itself. Any concession to the striking players, he declared, would jeopardize the owners' "large capital investment in rinks and arenas and this capital must be protected."

Meanwhile, in Manhattan finishing touches were being put on a new 18,000 seat Madison Square Garden. The building needed to maximize bookings; the NHL was looking for prime American locations. In the summer of 1925 the Hamilton franchise – complete with players, equipment and uniforms – was sold to New York buyers.

The Hamilton Tigers opened the 1925-26 NHL season, As the New York Americans. They were a box office hit! Not for the last time, hockey was sold to American fans more for its fierceness than finesse. The Daily News described the sport as a confrontation between "men with clubs in their hands and knives lashed to their feet."

The transplanted Tigers were such a hit on Broadway that the NHL quickly expanded to other U.S. cities. When the NHL started its 1926-27 season, it was a 10-team league, with six clubs in the U.S. This included a second team playing out of Madison Square Garden – the New York Rangers.

Today the NHL is a 30-team league with only six Canadian clubs. The Phoenix Coyotes' filing for bankruptcy proves the NHL's geography is no longer sustainable.

At least half a dozen teams, most scattered across the American south, are in financial distress. Research In Motion CEO Jim Balsillie is looking to relocate the Phoenix team to Hamilton. Turning Coyotes back into Tigers is not only overdue recognition of what Hamilton gave the NHL in the past, but also recognition of what Hamilton (and other Canadian cities) can do for the NHL in the future.

The time has come for the NHL to pay its dues....

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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

MY ALL TIME NHL team


While sitting around, Thinking about hockey (of course) I started to think "Who would I have on my ALL - TIME roster?

Here was the group of talent that I came up with, feel free to disagree with me (I'm sure you will) and tell me who you'd have on yours instead!

Line 1: Frank Mahovlich / Wayne Gretzky / Gordie Howe

Line 2: Alexander Ovechkin / Mario Lemieux / Maurice Richard

Line 3: Luc Robitaille / Darryl Sittler / Mike Bossy


Defence pairings

Bobby Orr / Ray Bourque


Scott Stevens / Paul Coffey

Brian Leetch / Denis Potvin


Goalies
Patrick Roy
Martin Brodeur
Jacques Plante

Bench
Ted Linday
Dave Keon
Brett Hull
Sidney Crosby
Mark Messier

What do you think? Who made your roster?

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

What the??


It can't be!!! it's not fair!! last time I checked my calender, it wasn't even November yet, and we've already had snow, and the last few days have been COLD... WHY??
We got ripped off with the summer (or lack there of) this year..I can't remember any part of this year where I actually felt like it was a great hot day out.. and now this!!!


Now that I got that off my chest.. I'm back :oD Thanks for visiting my blog again and putting up with my ranting... much appreciated ;-)

The last time I was here I mentioned our upcoming election at the time... Well it passed, with pretty much the same results as before the election, a minority goverment was re-elected... so basically all they did was wasted time, and about 130-230 (depending on who's numbers you look at) million dollars of the tax payers money tossed down the drain for no real change.... THANK YOU VERY MUCH GUYS!!!

Someone should explain to me how the whole economic thing works, I really do want to know, how is it that when the American dollar goes down, our (the Canadian) dollar nosedives too? shouldn't the weaker American dollar translate to into a slightly better dollar, and good prices on this side of the border? Does anyone want to leave a message and tell me how it all works? (will be my "learned thing of the day" when you do)

I can't wait for the new Fable 2 game to come out (yes i'm 29 and play video games..so?) I LOVED the first one, (and I MEAN loved) and from what i've been reading about this one.. WOOOHOOOOO doesn't look like its going to disappoint!

In case you're wondering, I'm writing this during a downtime at work, haven't had a customer all day today.. CRIPES!!! Yesterday was good, and a couple days last week were great, but most of the time, its so dead in here, that it gets borderline lonely lol

Whats with this stupid idea of another NHL club in Toronto, or expanding to Europe... Who's smoking what when these ideas are tossed out???

The NHL needs to put teams back in Quebec (bring back the Nordiques!!!),Winnipeg Minnesota, and maybe even back in Hartford.
I really don't think Hamilton would work out as an NHL club, nor do I think the NHL can actually work long term in KC, Houston or Las Vegas (well, they got the minor league team The Thunder, so there are SOME fans..but still...). The suits in the meeting need to stop thinking about the European expansion NOW, it wouldn't work!!! can you think of the jetlag from a weird road trip that see's you in Montreal, then in Luxembourg, then to New York? BRUTAL on the players bodies.....

Should be a few topics here to think about, for my next few posts, i'm going to get a little topic specific (just for a little while, doubt it'll last) and talk about a few different things, I welcome your comments to my rantings and blabbering.

Back soon...Real soon!