***** Illegal Curve is no longer posting at this address. Visit us at our new location http://www.illegalcurve.com
*****

Showing posts with label Cold Hard Rants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cold Hard Rants. Show all posts

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Cold Hard Rants

Fresh off my dip in the swimming pool, while enjoying a bright, warm, sunshiny day in Winnipeg, what best to do other than talk about the Stanley Cup Finals? The finals, which begin Saturday, live from HockeyTown, in front of a capacity crowd of people masquerading as row upon row upon row of empty seats in the Joe Louis Arena, the youthful exuberance of the Pittsburgh Penguins will face off against the veteran smarts and ingénue of the Tre Kroner of the Swedish National Team Detroit Red Wings?

Many commentators, in their previews, are speculating that this series will spark a potential renaissance of the NHL; the series that will force the NHL back into the forefront of the consciousness of the American viewer. One of the marquee franchises, pitted against the future of the game in a battle for NHL supremacy. The finals that will re-create the famed SI cover that said the NHL was hot and the NBA was not.

While I think that the NHL lucked out in getting as good of a match up as it could have possible wished for, I also think they are (typically) unlucky in that at the same time as their marquee match up is “dropping puck”, the NBA conference finals and Championship Finals will be hitting their stride. Unfortunately, the NHL will only take to the forefront of American sports consciousness when the viewing public have no better options to occupy their sport-watching time (heavens forbid they exercise). With their being a very good chance that the Los Angeles Lakers will be meeting the Boston Celtics in the NBA championship, the NHL will not get their place in the forefront; they will be lucky to get 5 minutes in the 2 AM SportsCentre on ESPN Desportes.

Despite this, the tall foreheads in New York and Toronto couldn’t be more excited. The network executive/janitor in charge of Versus couldn’t be more excited. NBC couldn’t be more excited (unless the game runs long, in which case it will be pre-empted for the finals of the 2008 senior women’s amateur heads up poker championship). CBC couldn’t be happier that they don’t have to broadcast an abomination of a final involving two teams from cities more likely to get hit by a hurricane than actually have ice form. And I couldn’t really care less, but because, ostensibly, you have come to this site because you like hockey, I will keep my apathy to myself for now. So, let the puck drop. Let the skates glide, let the sticks slash, and let the home team fall behind. Lord knows this year has to end soon, as training camp begins in 2 months.

For Illegal Curve, I am Andrew (Drew) M.

About the author: Writing sporadically since the inception of illegal curve, (An)Drew has been alienating people since that time. He has the unique skill-set to alienate readers hailing from the Westchester area of New York. Those people seem to be especially touchy about people criticizing their newspapers. Who needs them? Just like the Jews and the Blacks. (It’s from a Seinfeld Episode, you Anti-Dentite bastard.)

Ballhype: hype it up!

Monday, January 28, 2008

NHL Morning Papers (Monday Edition)

Here are the national morning papers:

Here are the Eastern Conference morning papers:

Here are the Western Conference morning papers:

For Illegal Curve, I'm Richard Pollock.

Ballhype: hype it up!

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Cold Hard Rants--An All-Star Debacle

Coming to you live, once again, from the “Centre of the Universe”, Toronto Ontario, is another action-packed, exciting and dynamic, edition of Cold Hard Rants. Unfortunately, for the NHL those three words certainly could not be used in an honest manner to describe yesterday’s NHL Skills Competition as part of the NHL All-Star Weekend “extravaganza.”

Fresh off the un-mitigated disaster that was last year’s all-star weekend the NHL, to their credit, realized that the weekend needed a revamping. Unfortunately, as has become commonplace in Gary Bettman’s NHL, the purported cure was as bad as the disease, and the skills competition portion of the revamped weekend fell flatter than the terrain in Saskatchewan. (Note, I will not comment about the fact that the All-Star game was played in Atlanta, as I am not sure if the people at the event were knowledgeable enough about hockey to realize that what they were watching was in-fact a skills competition and not in actuality how all NHL games are played……hockey in the deep south, FEEL THE EXCITEMENT!)

A group of athletes who’s best selling features is their combination of size, and speed, were reduced to embarrassing themselves in ridiculous competitions like who could shoot a puck into a miniature net, and what goalie can shoot pucks the length of the ice into an empty net. The only thing the night was missing was a dog running through an obstacle course (which, by the way, I would have rather watched). As a viewer at home, the whole debacle was cringe worthy. I was half expecting the entire event to be sponsored by “Bad Idea Jeans.” (™ SNL).

Of course, just when I thought this had reached the pinnacle of debacle, the speed skating competition took the whole thing to a new level. On it’s face there is nothing wrong with a timed event to see who can skate the fastest from goal-line to blue-line, but when the freakin timers don’t work, what’s the point? The NHL couldn’t have asked to borrow a TIMEX from someone in the crowd? As I was watching at home, and saw Brian Campbell come out for the “finals” I was incredulous, as it was apparent to everyone that Campbell had LOST his heat. I don’t need a timer to tell me he lost, I saw it with my own eyes! To say that this was amateur hour is an insult to anyone who has ever been an amateur athlete. There aren’t enough adjectives in the English language for me to use to blast the NHL for how pathetic this was. Instead of it being a platform to highlight the tremendous athletes that play in the NHL, all it did was re-enforce how incompetent the Bettman era has been. Something the NHL has been all too skillful at showing the public time after time after time.

For Illegal Curve, I am Andrew M.

Ballhype: hype it up!

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Cold Hard Rants

I admit it. Lock me up. Throw away the key. Sentence me to hard time. I’m guilty. I enjoy it now, and I will enjoy it when it happens again. Nothing tickles my fancy quite like the sight of the Toronto Maple Leafs in disarray.

Given the amount of newsprint that has been generated on this issue, an alien dropped into the centre of Toronto would not be too far off in assuming a catastrophic, apocalyptic event has occurred (i.e. World War III, natural disaster etc). In reality, all we are witnessing is a historically poor performing franchise, *gasp* still performing poorly. (Note: for all the Leafs die-hards who are typing/scribbling hate mail to me for calling the Leafs a bad franchise, save it. Don’t talk to me about what happened in the NHL of the 1940s. You have sucked since I can remember, and will probably continue to do so by the time I have forgotten how to remember.)

What I do not understand, is why people are surprised that the Leafs suck. All of the trademarks of a franchise in disarray are present and accounted for in Leafs land.

Top heavy, overly bureaucratic organization? Check.

General Manager who was hired for reasons other than being the best available candidate (hello, working for cheap)? Check. (Although it pains me to write that about an old neighbour—Ramsgate Bay in Winnipeg, represent!)

Poor scouting and thus poor entry draft performances? Check. (Can anyone recall the last homegrown Maple Leafs star? Anyone? Anyone? Beuller?)

Overpaying for free agents? Check.

Trades that “address” issues that weren’t a priority (coughVesacough)? Check

I could go on and on, because I am thoroughly enjoying this. However, I do feel a little bit bad for the real Leafs fans who have had to put up with a level of consistent incompetence which makes the presidency of George W. Bush look like a resounding success in comparison. (Note to Republican readers: it hasn’t been, no matter how many of those “Mooslims” he blows up.)

Unfortunately for Leafs fans, in contrast to the Presidency of George W. Bush which is mercifully coming to an end, there is no hope on the horizon, as I, for one, and call me a pessimist if you must, see no signs that the diseases which have plagued the Maple Leafs organization for generations on end, show no signs of abetting. The Leafs would be very wise to look down the hall at the Toronto Raptors for advice on how to resuscitate a floundering franchise. However, as we all know the words Leafs and wise rarely appear together in the same sentence.

For Illegal Curve, I am Andrew M.

Ballhype: hype it up!

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Cold Hard Rants

Fresh from a road trip with the KY Princess to the purported “Centre of the Universe” (Toronto), I am pleased to wish all of the loyal Cold Hard Rant/Illegal Curve readers, a Shana Tovah, (grab your Hebrew-English dictionary) and welcome y’all (Kentucky influence) to another year of Cold Hard Rants. Hopefully the NHL will keep my interest piqued and provide me with much material to write about without my intense apathy regarding the NHL kicking in.

Speaking of apathy, while in Toronto, the KY princess and I were fortunate enough to attend the Toronto Maple Leafs-Tampa Bay Lightning “battle” on New Year’s Day. Face value of each ticket was a mere 182.00 dollars. For that amount of money, an attendee, hockey fan or not, might have expected something closely resembling entertainment, and event, or a game that the participants gave a damn about. Unfortunately, given the current state of the NHL (watered down, far too many games, real fans priced out by corporate stiffs) that was not something available at the game. However, if your definition of a good night out is plodding hockey, poor skating, and clutching and grabbing like two hormonal fifteen year olds playing seven minutes in heaven then this was the game for you. Fortunately, our tickets were graciously given to us and as a result the quality time we spent together made the evening worthwhile. (The story about how we almost came home with a 6 year old is one best told at another day and time.)

Contrast this evening with the one we had on Sunday afternoon, watching the Toronto Raptors do battle with King James and his Cleveland Cavaliers. Same arena, but completely different experience. A crowd that had a buzz going through it, and was (somewhat) bristling with energy. Players who seemingly gave a damn (although LeBron only started to care after being trash talked by Chris Bosh’s girlfriend.) Overall, from top to bottom, an experience and event, two words that were woefully missing from the Leafs game I attended. There is no reason why I, a white Canadian (race does matter when comparing basketball and hockey, the two most racially polarizing of the big 4 sports) who grew up playing and watching hockey, should have enjoyed the Raps game more than the Leafs game, yet there I was on Sunday, screaming, and cheering, and generally enjoying myself.

Looking back at both events, while they are still fresh in my mind, it is obvious the Leafs and the NHL should mimic some of the tactics employed by the Raptors. For some reason, the NHL has been slow to recognize that the game is only part of the reason for going to a sporting event. Many people go for the pomp, the entertainment, and the hoopla surrounding the event. The game is secondary. If people are entertained, then the quality of the game will be of less importance to the attendees. Given the lousy quality of the product the NHL puts on the ice, they should be focusing on off-ice, in arena entertainment. However, and not especially surprising when you think of the NHL and Leafs brain-trust, the fact they have neglected this aspect should not come as much of a surprise.


For Illegal Curve, I am Andrew M.

Ballhype: hype it up!

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Cold Hard Rants presents Back and Forth with Zac and Andrew

***For you, our valued reader, we have a special edition of Cold Hard Rants this week. Legendary fan of illegalcurve Zac Smith, has agreed to engage in a back and forth discussion with myself about the NHL, it's numerous problems, and the future of the NHL in the United States. We hope you enjoy this very special episode of Cold Hard Rants. ***

Part 1
I am a little confused, my name is Zac Smith here to rant back and forth with Andrew, but I am told this is for a hockey blog. Am I to believe that the lockout has ended? Really!?!? As a citizen of the United States, I had thought that the NHL had gone the way of Vince McMahon's XFL. And to some extent my suspicions would be valid.

I can't find many traces of the NHL in the mainstream of our media. In terms of relevant professional sports leagues in the United States, the NHL now ranks somewhere behind Nascar and the PGA and just barely above Mixed Martial Arts. Listen, I am not here to disrespect hockey. Hockey probably requires the greatest combination of athleticism and skill of any professional sport. Instead, I am here to examine why it is that I and my countrymen don't care much for hockey. There are a few obvious reasons we can examine.

The first is television coverage. One would argue that even if I wanted to watch the NHL I couldn't. No major network in the US carries regular season hockey games. Any regional sports network will choose to play the closest NBA team over the local hockey squad. However, even if I were able to watch hockey, would I? History would suggest that neither I nor the average Joe Blow American would. Rather, every attempt made by US networks to market hockey has failed and hockey was dropped from the lineup. Even when the NHL was on the major networks with the most resources to promote it, the ratings sagged. The problem may not be so much the product as how it is packaged. We lack a functioning knowledge of hockey that makes it difficult to follow on television. But how do the networks educate the new viewer without dumbing it down to a level that turns off the hockey fans that make up a majority of the viewers?

We identify hockey with Barry Melrose’s slicked back mullet rather than Ryan Smyth’s blue-collar work ethic. We like to feel like we know our sports inside and out. 90% of football fans think they know how to beat a Cover 2 because they can beat the Patriots on pro difficulty on Madden. Or they think they could be the general manager of their favourite team because they have been in the money the last three years in fantasy baseball. I have no idea how I would begin to gamble on hockey (assuming it were legal here). The NHL just doesn’t have that driving force to capture the imagination of the American public.

Part 2
ZBS,

Did I just read you correctly? Are you busting on the XFL? How dare you! The league that gave rise to the re-birth of Tommy Maddox’s NFL career, which for gambling purposes was lucrative pour moi. You best be stepping back from your XFL bashing sir, lest I have to get He Hate Me out to make you respect!

As usual, I digress.

(For the record, I would much rather be writing on an all XFL blog, but seeing as how that is unlikely to be possible, I suppose any forum for me to rant on will suffice.)

Anyways, after my second digression in the span of 3 paragraphs (impressive, I know) I say to you, my American counterpart, that the NHL is a dead proposition in the majority of U.S markets. Why is that, you query? Because in order to love hockey, you have to know hockey. And in order to know hockey it helps to have a knowledge of ice and snow and cold, because, they sort of are pre-requisites to be a hockey market. What the NHL has failed to realize, and why they have is beyond my comprehension, is that while you can make ice indoors, very few NHL players begin their hockey careers anywhere but outside on frozen ponds, and in climates that are able to say they experience a real winter. I don’t have the stats in front of me, nor do I care to have the stats in front of me lest they prove me wrong, but I am willing to bet all of my money versus all of your money that the majority of NHL players grow up in a place that actually knows about snow and wind chills. Why the NHL would abandon or ignore these markets (i.e. Winnipeg, Hartford, Quebec City, South-western Ontario) in the hopes of striking it rich in unfamiliar hockey markets like Nashville, Tampa, Carolina, and Miami, shows how strikingly incompetent NHL executives are. It is the catering to non-traditional NHL markets at the expense of actual markets that have the potential to succeed as hockey hotbeds, which account for the NHL’s primary failure in the U.S.

What are your thoughts on that, my American brother from a different mother?

Part 3
First off, as a Denver Broncos fan, it is my duty to resent anything that is Tommy Maddox related. I mean seriously. How dare Dan Reeves draft him! It’s the equivalent of the Colts taking Brian Brohm in the 08 draft. If McNabb was ticked off by the Kolb pick, imagine how Elway must have felt. And he was not nearly as injury prone as McNabb. I can’t even utter Tommy Maddox’s name without having to spit to get the taste out of my mouth. The only positive to come from the XFL is that it distracted Jesse Ventura from his mismanagement of the state of Minnesota. As long as we are on the subject though, professional wrestling is also more relevant than hockey here, but

You actually stole my next point. I had planned on pointing out how the NHL has insisted on placing teams in places where more people have played Jai Alai than have been on skates. Every time it snows in Dallas it causes a fifty-car pileup, yet they deserve the Northstars? It’s completely nonsensical. While I, like you, lack any statistical evidence, I would argue that Duluth, Minnesota would likely provide a more avid fan base than Tampa. Wait. I wanna retract that and say Carolina. I could never say anything bad about the franchise that launched the career of my on and off again girlfriend Erin Andrews (It’s complicated, she wants to be exclusive, I’m not sure if I am ready yet). My torrid romance with Ms. Andrews-Smith aside, I agree that the placement of NHL teams doesn’t make sense. In addition, as you pointed out, American kids just don’t play hockey.

Last time I recruited a class on NCAA football, it told me that the best athletes in our country come from Florida and California. I’m pretty sure there is not a sheet to be found in the average neighbourhood in either of those states. It’s hard to get behind a sport that lacks homegrown talent. The few NHL players I do follow played for the University of North Dakota, but are in fact natives of Winnipeg. Most NHL players have more consonants in their last name than a season’s worth of Sesame Street sponsors.

Why aren’t we developing more hockey players? The easiest answer is that hockey is not accessible as any of our other favourite sports. If a kid wants to play football all he needs is one friend with the pigskin. If he wants to play hockey, he needs skates, a stick, a puck, and some ice time. It’s also preferable that he brings his helmet, gloves, shoulder pads, and breezers. It’s too expensive a sport to play. Even when the dollar was worth way more than a loonie, it was still too expensive.

Part 4
ZBS,

Dan Reeves making a bad coaching decision? Heaven forbid! As history has shown his “legendary” coaching career featured more mis-steps than Mark Cuban’s performance on Dancing with the Stars. Granted, he didn’t force Eugene Robinson to go trolling for hookers on the eve of the Superbowl, but I do think it says something about his lack of coaching acumen that his players weren’t all but chained up to their hotel rooms on that night. And don’t even get me started on Ray Buchanan’s dog collar at Media Day of that Super Bowl. National Felon’s League indeed.

Guess what everybody? I digress!

I am 100 percent in agreement with your assessment as to the lack of a hockey culture in the U.S. We get indoctrinated into certain sports at our youth, and if hockey is ever to seriously take off in the U.S. the place that needs the most growth and development is in the minor hockey ranks. I am not talking about the United States Junior Hockey League (or whatever it is called), I am talking about hockey at the community club/house league level. That’s where kids get their first taste of hockey, and that’s where their seeds of love for hockey get sown. Unfortunately, as I previously mentioned, the pre-requisites for most affordable hockey is outdoor ice, certainly something that is not possible in most U.S. markets. Furthermore, the NHL and Hockey USA, if they are serious in their efforts to increase the popularity of the game at the grassroots level, must do something about the cost of hockey equipment. It’s prohibitively expensive to a large number of people, both in Canada and the U.S. I don’t think that it is a coincidence that soccer is the most popular game in the world, and also the most inexpensive to play.

Although, to be honest, I am not sure the NHL superiors are aware there game isn’t the most popular sport. Shows how delusional they are.

Part 5
Before we go any further, I just want to point out that you somehow turned my own Microsoft Word against me. Now every time I want to type favourite, colour, or neighbourhood it tries to insert an unnecessary “u” into each. Say what you want about Canadians, but they are crafty with their subtle psychological warfare. The first time I saw my computer auto-correct to “favourite” I had the urge to call ham “bacon” and considered watching the Oilers and Avalanche tonight over the Nuggets and Celtics. Touché my friend. Dammit! You even have me speaking French now. Let’s wrap this up.

First I think you overlooked the main reason soccer is the world’s most popular sport: people love theatre. I mean short of Baron Davis’s flop (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTdERYOtqsg ) the other night you have to go to a Jessica Alba movie to see the quality of acting a soccer game provides. Soccer hasn’t taken off here because we aren’t “cultured” enough to appreciate the performance art aspect of soccer. We prefer our athletes to be genuine. We want athletes who will be the first to praise God while simultaneously carrying on extramarital affairs. But since our asides could fill another Cold Hard Rant I will close with my thoughts on hockey.

The only solution I can think is to return some of the US franchises to Canada. Right now the country whose national sport is hockey has six franchises while the country where hockey ranks as the sixth or seventh relevant sport has 24. Our market is diluted with hockey teams in areas that don’t know the first thing about the sport. Leave us the Wild, Avalanche, Rangers, Bruins, Penguins, Red Wings, Flyers, Blackhawks, Sabres, and Devils and divide the rest amongst yourselves. That gives us ten franchises in locations that have generally experienced a real winter. It would also unite the hockey faithful in the areas where teams are contracted. Look at football fans in Baltimore and Cleveland. Nothing unites a fan base like taking away their team (unless they are LA fans). As a bonus, it would also allow some relocation to hockey hungry cities like Winnipeg. I think we solved it. Someone tear Gary Bettman away from his coloring books and get him on the phone.

Part 6
ZBS,

If you could keep that juicy piece of info about our psychological warfare to yourself, the entire country of Canada would appreciate it. So far only you, and my girlfriend (here on out known as The Kentucky Princess for her love of Tayshawn Prince), have stumbled upon our secret plan of world domination via Microsoft Word.

As for your closing point about relocation of NHL teams I wholeheartedly agree. I would leave the U.S. with 16 teams in total though. In addition to the cities you listed I would also give you teams in St. Louis, Columbus, Long Island, Dallas, Washington, Los Angeles (you HAVE to be in the 2nd largest U.S. market unless you are big enough to overcome not being there like the NFL is), Dallas, and I am a strong advocate for the return of the Whalers to Hartford. Any city that holds a parade for its team simply for taking Les Canadiens to 7 games is a hockey city in my books. Oh, and bye bye New Jersey for the only thing worse than the complete and total absence of publicity the NHL gets in the U.S. will the publicity they do get when the first fan is killed outside the Devil’s new arena in Newark. The only logic I see for putting an arena in Newark is that Kandahar and Kirkuk, Iraq already have arenas. Those 16 U.S. cities, coupled with new teams in Winnipeg and the Golden Horseshoe of south-western Ontario will result in a solid league of 24 markets, and as a result the quality of play will increase to 1980s levels, in which even the most embittered anti-hockey individual would admit was entertaining hockey. I for one look forward to the day when Crosby, Malkin, and Ovechkin can fly around the ice, and show off their talents in a manner to which Gretzky, Lemieux, Hawerchuk, and LaFleur were able to in what I call the golden era of the modern NHL. Of course, considering the dearth of intelligence in the NHL offices, I won’t be holding my breath for this to happen.

For Illegal Curve, along with my guest ranter Zac Smith, I am Andrew M.

About the writer: Formerly a speech writer for a Canadian Federal Politician, Andrew will be bringing his unique take on the hockey world to the illegal curve blog once a week, or more often if the rage needs to be released in a manner other than clobbering a referee over the head with a whiskey bottle. Mainly because he doesn’t have enough empty whiskey bottles at his disposal.

Ballhype: hype it up!

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Cold Hard Rants

Sitting here in my shirtsleeves on October 25th with the sun shining through the windows, a cold thirst quenching slurpee in my hand, a bike ride on my mind, and a day by my pool in my dreams, my thoughts naturally turned to hockey and the NHL. As is my wont, those thoughts were along the lines of how dumb the NHL and its schedule makers are.

This week, I read with bemusement about how the Detroit Red Wings’ proposal to extend the season to 84 games had been rejected by the fellow NHL governors. Only in the NHL would owners be delusional enough to think that more games are the solution to one of the myriad of problems currently plaguing the NHL. Currently the NHL season stretches from September to June. That’s ten months for our readers who are mathematically challenged. Arguably, the coldest city that has an NHL team is Edmonton, Alberta. When the coldest city to house an NHL team only has cold weather for probably 6 months a year, does it not make sense to shorten the season rather than lengthen it? In my humble opinion, a game that is played on a cold surface (i.e. ice) works best when it is cold outside! Fans are in the mood for hockey on a cold winter’s night. No one has ever said, “it’s 95 degrees outside, I don’t want to play golf, or go swimming, or go sit on a patio with a cerveza, I want to watch people skate!”

Now while I am a strong advocate for a shorter NHL season, I am also not naive enough to think that there is a snowball’s chance in hell of this ever happening (pardon the pun). The reason why, comes down to the usual issue when discussing problems with the NHL, namely, dollars and cents. Currently and for the foreseeable future, and despite the Tiny Perfect Commissioner’s best spin efforts, the NHL is referred to as a gate driven league. In short, and taking away all the b.s. around that euphemism, it means that an NHL team receives the majority of their revenue by getting people to pay their way into the arena to see a game. The TV contract with NBC pays each team a percentage of the zero dollars NBC pays the NHL to televise their games. Believe it or not, any percentage of zero dollars equals zero dollars per team. (Again, the help is for our mathematically deficient readers—although if someone would copy and paste that fact to NHL head offices in either Toronto or New York, it might aid in their understanding of the mathematical equation.) To contrast, the NFL pays all of their players’ salaries via the revenue from their TV contract long before they have had one person pay for a ticket to see a game. So, when the Detroit Red Wings want to extend the season by two games, it is a blatant attempt at a cash grab, to help offset the loss of revenue they have experienced by no longer being able to refer to themselves as Hockeytown, a title that was stripped from them when they were unable to sell out playoff games, and this year’s home opener.

Now, as I know from my political days, it is easy to be a critic, but I can hear my readers yelling, what is your solution, Andrew M? The answer is easy (at least to me it is.) Fewer games played in a season would result in those games being viewed as more valuable. More valuable to the team’s season and potential playoff future, and as an intended consequence, the fans would put more value on each individual game. Thus, the team would be able to charge a higher amount for tickets to the games. It’s simple supply and demand, yet this basic economic concept seems lost on the NHL and the owners. When there is only 35 home games per year, they are played during an environmental season that actually befits hockey, and the Tuesday night in February against Atlanta seems a lot more important to the paying public than the Sunday afternoon in April versus Nashville does. Although why there are NHL teams in Atlanta and Nashville in the first place is another issue for another time and day.

For Illegal Curve, I am Andrew M.

About the writer: Formerly a speech writer for a Canadian Federal Politician, Andrew will be bringing his unique take on the hockey world to the illegal curve blog once a week, or more often if the rage needs to be released in a manner other than clobbering a referee over the head with a whiskey bottle. Mainly because he doesn’t have enough empty whiskey bottles at his disposal.

Ballhype: hype it up!