Home Feature All Habs Top 10: Let Damage Control Begin

All Habs Top 10: Let Damage Control Begin

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All Habs Top 10: Let Damage Control Begin

By Joce, Senior Writer, All Habs Hockey Magazine

The news of the NHL making another proposal to the NHLPA and that a counter-proposal is likely coming, knowing how close the two parties are, brought a lot of optimism in the hockey world that this season could be salvaged. I was reading a tweet from Pierre LeBrun from ESPN and TSN, one of the rather rare journalists worthy of the profession, where he was suggesting some recommendations for the NHL to help the league make itself more appealing to fans. While I did agree with some of them, I found others rather irrelevant, even disagreeing with a few. This doesn’t speak in any way of LeBrun’s ability to assess the fan base’s needs as let’s face it, we could all come out with our own list and each one would be just as good as it relates to us as an individuals, based on our own preferences.

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PENTICTON, BC. — When the NHL announced that it was locking out its players once again, many fans including yours truly threw in the towel on a league that simply doesn’t seem to see the damage it’s causing with its continuous work disruptions. Personally, I immediately made the promise not to contribute to their Hockey Related Revenues (HRR) anymore and that, for the next five years. After all, that seemed to be one of the key sticky points in their negotiations. No tickets to games, no NHL Center Ice package, no NHL or Habs’ merchandise, even going as far as telling family and friends not to buy me any… I pay for my Bell ExpressVu satellite already so when the games come back, I’ll watch them. Let’s face it, I do love the game and I have commitments to All Habs Hockey Magazine and Fantômes du Forum, two hockey sites for which I care a whole lot about.

The problem is that as a whole, the NHL doesn’t believe that the fans have the collective spine to walk away from the game, especially not in Canada or in traditional hockey markets. Taking your customers for granted is a huge mistake in my humble opinion and saying it out loud like Gary Bettman did at the beginning of the lockout is borderline suicidal. The league has a lot of work to do in order to get hardcore fans like myself back at 100%, and there is no doubt that the sport has lost many casual fans for a long, long time. To get some of its popularity back, it will take a lot more than simply painting “Thank you fans” at center ice.

Here are a few of my suggestions on how the NHL can regain some of their fans:

10. Relocate a couple of teams
While we all know that the league would rather expand to 32 teams, there is too much uncertainty following the lockout and too many teams were already struggling in markets where they should not be. My preferred choice would be contracting two teams but I really don’t see that happening. The league however needs to re-build on a solid foundation and bringing a team back to Quebec City is a must. I would also be in favour of seeing another team in Ontario or even in Seattle. This would bring a lot of excitement and positive publicity to the NHL.

9. Generating more offense
The goalie equipment is still too big, especially the upper portion of the pads when goalies get into the butterfly, so more work is needed there. The league should also look at bringing back an old rule, which would force a penalized team to serve the full two minutes of a penalty, even if the team on the power play scores.

8. Find a way to encourage trades
Talk to GMs, including Brian Burke, and come up with ideas which would encourage trades between teams. Fans love it, as seen at the trade deadline. Should teams be allowed to trade cap space? Should they be able to trade additional salary? Should a team trading a high priced player be allowed to pay some of his salary if they trade him and keep the cap hit? Many options here and it does add to the excitement and to putting the NHL on the news.

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7. Get rid of the instigator rule
Having a committee for the appeal process of a suspension is a step in the right direction, no doubt, but referees and league officials cannot fully handle the discipline. Let the players police themselves bring back accountability in hockey. Knowing that they are protected by rules, some players are taking liberties knowing too well that no retribution will come their way. If someone takes a shot at someone’s head, let the players teach him a lesson instead of penalizing them for defending a teammate! He’ll think twice before doing it again. Of course though, referees would have to use discretion so that goons don’t go after star players for no reasons, but that’s much less of a problem than the other problems the instigator rule creates. I’d go further by addressing the material used for elbow and shoulder pads, huge contributors to today’s concussions.

6. Realignment & playoffs format
When the NHL brought up realignment last year, social media, hockey forums and phone lines on hockey shows were flooded with comments. Want excitement and be talked about? Bring this back to the table and agree on the topic with the players. Come up with something that will address realignment and have a better way to balance teams’ schedules so cities can see every team at least once throughout the season. For the playoffs, give your regular season more importance by playing the highest ranked teams against the lower ranks within their conference. Have the first place team face the eighth, second vs seventh, etc. While it is a bit more travel, it pays off to finish ahead during the regular season. This should be in place for the 2013-14 season.

5. Three on three overtime
In the last eight years in the BCHL, only two percent of all games ended in a tie. That’s because they play five minutes at three on three if the game is still tied after the first five minutes of OT at four on four! Have your shootout after if you must, but give the three on three a chance. You’ll have the most boring game and the overtime will make your fans go home satisfied! You will have less shootouts and the three on three will be extremely entertaining, while still being a team game in a situation that can happen in a hockey game. I wasn’t a fan of it until I experienced it myself in Penticton.

4. NHL Center Ice
It should be free to anyone who wants it for the rest of the regular season this year. You want as many fans as possible watching your product, even new fans and getting them to watch for free will show how serious the NHL is when they claim being sorry. Allow them to watch not only the players in their city, but also to discover and get to know the stars from all 30 teams around the league.

3. Ticket prices
Every ticket should be sold at 20% off for the rest of this year. If owners were willing to lose more than half the season and possibly an entire season, what’s 20% off tickets sales to show their gratitude to their fans? Whether the arena is full or not should make no difference. This is a way to give back to the fans in a gesture that speaks loudly. They’ll still spend money at the concessions, parking and maybe even at the souvenir shops!

2. Fire Gary Bettman
This is not a choice, it’s a must. He’s the face of this lockout, and fans know that since he’s been in place, this is the third time he causes a work stoppage. Yes, he represents the owners (or some of them) but unless you’ve been living under a rock for the last few months, you’ll also know that the frustration is directed at him, whether you agree with it or not. If the owners want, they can let him save face by letting him quit or retire, but he cannot be there when hockey starts again. This would go a long way into getting back some of the fans, including hardcore ones like myself. It would be perceived as a step in the right direction, just like when the Habs fired Pierre Gauthier and hired Marc Bergevin, bringing a new wind of optimism, a feeling that positive changes are coming.

1. Commissioner with Canadian roots
There is no doubt that the owners need someone who is a good negotiator and as astute lawyer to represent them but what Bettman has been lacking is a genuine understanding and love for the game, its history and its tradition. They need to find someone who will do not only what’s good for the owners, but what’s right for the league as a whole. They need either a Canadian individual or at the very least, someone with ties to Canada and NHL hockey. If they can’t get someone with charisma on top of that, they must find a front end man who will be the PR person who will represent the league in any public function. Tradition is good, and so is history and the league is in dire need of a new face, a new image.

Even after doing all of that, there will be enormous work needing to be done and the irony of it all will be to see the NHL relying heavily on the players they were putting down for so many months, asking them to give more of their time to be used, once again, in their marketing plots and at different events. The kiss and make up will be difficult between owners and players, but they must do it in order to regain the trust from the sports’ fan base. The much discussed $3.3 billion in revenue is a thing of the past and it may take a while to get back to that level once again… until the next lockout.

En français: LNH: Réparer les dommages

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J.D. is a Senior writer for All Habs as well as Associate-Editor for the French version Le Magazine All Habs, while one of three Administrators of the fan forum Les Fantômes du Forum. He has created the handle Habsterix as a fictional character for the sole purpose of the internet. It is based on the cartoon Asterix of Gaule and his magic potion is his passion for the Montreal Canadiens. How old is he? His close friends will tell you that he’s so old, his back goes out more than he does! He was born when Béliveau lifted the Cup and remembers the days when seeing the Habs winning was not a wish, it was an expectation. For him, writing is a hobby, not a profession. Having moved to beautiful British Columbia in 1992 from his home town of Sherbrooke, Quebec, he started writing mostly in French to keep up his grammar, until non-bilingual BC friends pushed him into starting his own English Blog. His wife will say that he can be stubborn, but she will be the first to recognise that he has great sense of humour. He is always happy to share with you readers his point of views on different topics, and while it is expected that people won’t always agree, respect of opinions and of others is his mission statement. || J.D. est Rédacteur-Adjoint sur Le Magazine All Habs et il est un Rédacteur Principal sur le site anglophone All Habs, tout en étant un des trois Administrateurs du forum de discussion Les Fantômes du Forum. Il a créé le pseudonyme Habstérix comme caractère fictif pour l’internet. Celui-ci est basé sur Astérix de Gaule et sa potion magique est sa passion pour les Canadiens de Montréal. Lorsqu’il est né, Jean Béliveau soulevait la Coupe Stanley et il se rappelle des jours où gagner n’était pas un espoir, mais une attente. Pour lui, écrire est un passe-temps, pas une profession. Ayant déménagé dans la superbe Colombie-Britannique en 1992 en provenance de sa ville natale de Sherbrooke, Québec, il a commencé à écrire en français pour garder sa grammaire, jusqu’à ce que ses amis anglophones ne réussissent à le convaincre d’avoir son blog en anglais. Son épouse vous dira qu’il est têtu, mais elle sera la première à reconnaître son grand sens de l’humour. Il est toujours fier de partager avec vous, lecteurs et lectrices, ses points de vue sur différents sujets, et quoi que les gens ne s’entendent pas toujours sur ceux-ci, le respect des opinions et des autres est son énoncé de mission.

4 COMMENTS

  1. If they would like offence to return, a league-wide crackdown on the obstruction epidemic is what they have to do. Look at the scoring in the first three seasons of post-lockout NHL. Multiple players hitting the century mark and higher goal scoring totals. These days, teams are rewarded for stifling defensive hockey that encourages the hook/hold/obstruction that plagued the game pre-lockout. Call holding again, teams will lose freedom to hold players, or they will be forced to take penalties.

    PPs are trending downwards to an astonishing degree. The Habs 25% PP that enabled their 2007-2008 season wouldn’t net them the same results due to less PP opportunities.

    Also don’t think 3-on-3 is the solution. Teams will still play conservative I think, they need to change the points system so the end-of-game skills competition isn’t worth as much as a regulation or OT win.

    And the instigator rule isn’t a problem. The league failing to enforce their rulebook is an issue. The start of Brendan Shanahan’s regime could have brought the thugs under control. Just look at what happened when Campbell suspended Matt Cooke for 17 games in 2010-11, Cooke finally reformed his act. Shanahan was starting to give out sentences that made players think twice, dipping heavily into their wallets with the lost wages from long suspensions and long breaks from game action. then the league overrode him and told him to behave like Colin Campbell. The result was entirely predictable. Teams will stop carrying these guys if the threat is they’ll be gone for 10, 20 games when they behave like animals.

    Ted Lindsay, Gordie Howe, Eddie Shore, Bobby Clarke, these are among the dirtiest players in the league’s history. All played pre-instigator. They didn’t care, they were liberal with sticks and elbows regardless. They weren’t afraid of a fight, they followed the “Do whatever it takes to win” principle. Clarke didn’t even bother fighting, he just hid behind a brute like Dave Schultz who did the fighting for him. Ken “The Rat” Linesman played pre-instigator, a guy they called “The Rat”, pre-instigator. The Golden Age of enforcers keeping dirty players ‘honest’ is an illusion.

  2. As mentioned in the original article, there could be 100 lists out there and all would be as valid (or debatable) as any for the simple reason that the points brought forward are personal opinions based on our own preferences, on what we like and/or dislike about the game. None are better than the other and certainly, I wouldn’t claim that this list I’ve come up with is the mighty truth. It is however what I personally prefer seeing.

    Also, I don’t think anyone in their right mind would remotely suggest that there were no cheap shots prior to the instigator rule being put in place. One must admit though that those choosing to play that way back then knew that retribution was a strong possibility as opposed to those who, today, are hiding behind a rule that protects their reckless way to play the game. In no way are the referees or the league able to do that with rules and/or suspensions. Let’s bring accountability back for those who want to play that style and allow players to police themselves a bit on the ice, that’s all I’m asking.

    • If the league took away a quarter of a player’s season or greater for the hits that shock and horrify people, than you’ll see that behaviour go down. Teams will stop wanting to have a guy like that around and the players will understand their careers will be in jeopardy when they do it, not to mention losing a quarter of their yearly income.

      Not to mention, it will stop being encouraged in juniors and we won’t have guys like Cormier, Kassian, Della Rovere and such going for the brutal intent to injure plays in juniors and being rewarded with it by being drafted and getting professional contracts. Teams are looking for reckless hitters who will do “What it takes to win” knowing it takes years for them to earn a record and in the meantime, they’ll put opposing teams skilled players down. Besides, these players would never be drafted if it was thought they’d back off their act if they had to fight. It would be considered like a player who is scared of being hit in the corner or taking a shot block off a 100MPH slap shot. They’ll just select players who accept the risk-reward of having to fight after committing a brutal act that will help their team out.

      • I think that we both know that it’s unrealistic, if not impossible for them to be that severe with their suspensions. Of course, it’s easy to take a third or fourth line player and make an example out of them, but as we know, suspensions are based on precedents. The day that a star player commits the same infraction, there is absolutely no way that the league, the owners and/or the teams will be in favour of seeing one of their key draw getting suspended for a quarter of the season, as you suggest. Again, let the players police themselves a bit more. That’s the only reasonable option.

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