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January 23, 2006

Hockey Stick Check

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Posted by Nick

Hockey stick check:

Hart has tried composite sticks in the past and has actually used a few teammates' composites this season because he's had trouble getting his usual wooden Montreals. Most of his teammates have two-piece sticks, with wooden blades provided by the team.

"I don't really like them," Hart said of composites. "I feel like I'm going to break them."

The stiffness and extra weight of wooden sticks that makes them so attractive to Hart have another benefit: Feel. Since the sticks are a little heavier and solid, it is easier to feel the puck on your stick then with lighter, hollow composite sticks.

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August 19, 2005

Hockasting

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Posted by Nick

My colleague Matt May has a good idea for a way technology can help the NHL:

The NHL is going to need a full-court press to get and keep the fans' attention and interest. OLN will also need to increase its exposure, as it treats its NHL content as a draw for its other programming. And Comcast, which owns OLN, is heavily invested in digital cable and broadband Internet. Comcast will be pushing NHL content on its on-demand cable services as well as online.

So, we're most of the way there: a sports league and a television network both with a vested interest in reaching people more people than they currently have access to. This is a great situation for podcasting, and even better for video in RSS enclosures. I don't think we're quite ready for full-game feeds, and we may never need them, given the real-time nature of sporting events. But OLN will be creating hockey-related content around their coverage, and that's no good to them if nobody is watching it at 11pm. They will already be offering it on demand. Why not serve an MPEG for download on their own broadband network?

Hockey is not my favorite sport, but big time hockey is far and away the most thrilling major sport -- much more so than baseketball or footbal, which have their charms but do not have the primal intensity that hockey can generate, especially in the playoffs. The key is to figure out ways to translate this intensity to podcasts. I think it's possible.

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March 17, 2004

Sports as Reflections of the Larger Society

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Posted by Nick

Colby Cosh is one of the most interesting writers around today. Here's a lengthy post that looks at some of the sociological, psychological and biological aspects of sports. (He cites Steve Sailer, a writer with whom I differ on some key issues like immigration. That said, there's no doubt that Sailer's use of data and numbers is admirable, that he takes science seriously and that people, including me, have a lot to learn from his writing.)

I particularly enjoyed Colby's discussion of fighting in hockey:

... I would also ask you to consider that the self-regulating ethos of Canadian-style hockey, the idea that not all disputes are appropriately settled by reference to the authorities, will protect the place of individualistic Americans and Canadians within the game, and especially the former. When two guys fight on the ice they're saying "We're not going to take our problems to the sheriff--we're going to settle them according to a shared, non-legislated code of fair play." (Sometimes, as with the famous Lights Out brawl at the World Juniors, the message of a fight is "the sheriff is an a-hole; we're taking matters into our own hands.") Why is there so little fighting in the European game? Maybe it's presumptuous to say this, but have you noticed that the Europeans are a little weaker in their grasp of the whole "personal responsibility" thing? That their societies (with exceptions) are organized to minimize the importance and the permissibility of self-defence? That when a European player feels molested on the ice (warning: Don Cherry-style generalization), his instinctive response is to take a dive, appealing to the magistrate with elaborate theatrics?

Brilliant stuff.

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February 10, 2004

What's Wrong with Hockey? Bigger Ain't Better

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Posted by Nick

ESPN solicited feedback from readers on How to Fix Hockey. Does any other sport find itself with fans wanting as many fundmental changes to the game? Widen the ice, dump the two-line pass rule, reduce the number of refs, change the point system, make penalties last the full two minutes and not just until a goal is scored, etc.

This suggestion was most intriguing:

Has anyone noticed the increase in the size of goalie equipment? I know the NHL put limits on equipment size last summer, but goalie pads need to be smaller. You hear goalies complaining about shots so hard they hurt. This isn't baseball, it's hockey, it's supposed to hurt.

Maybe bigger ain't better.

UPDATE: NHL GMs are meeting in Nevada to discuss changes to the game:

One issue was whether the width of [goalie] pads should be further reduced -- maybe even back to the 10-inch standard that was raised to 12 in the 1989-90 season.

The maximum length was cut to 38 inches before this season.

"We talked about the goaltender's equipment again, it always seems to come back to that in this day and age, and things as far reaching as making the nets bigger," Campbell said.

Advances in equipment technology make equipment stronger, sturdier, larger and lighter at the same time, meaning they can take up more space in the crease while not compromising a goalie's mobility and agility. Hockey GMs are smart to consider this.

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