Posts Tagged ‘Stanley Cup’

Gonna Fly Now: A Recap of the Flyers Historic Run to the Finals

Section 121 for Game 6 of the Finals

Section 121 for Game 6 of the Finals

First things first, I want to congratulate the Philadelphia Flyers on taking me and all Philly sports fans on a fantastic ride that just fell short of the ultimate goal.  As disappointed as I am in losing the Cup on home ice, I am thankful for the way this team played hockey, for how they inspired us all to believe, and how they believed in themselves and overcame tremendous obstacles to get as far as they did.  The grit and toughness that the Flyers played with in the playoffs truly reflects the mentality of the city of Philadelphia, and like the Broad Street Bullies, this team should be embraced by the fans.

Boucher stops Jokinens Shootout Attempt

Boucher stops Jokinens Shootout Attempt

On April 11th I was pacing frantically in a bar in Dublin, Ireland while a random person I had met (who happened to be a Rangers fan) was getting updates on his phone from his wife back at home.  After he told me that we were going to a shootout I was terrified.  The season was coming down to a simple practice drill, and the Flyers simply weren’t that good, unless the picked the right guys.  Turns out, two of the guys they chose, Danny Briere and Claude Giroux, were the two players that were right for the job, and the only ones on the team that I trusted in a shootout.  When Boosh made the final save and the Flyers secured a playoff spot I ran around the bar in a giddy happiness that I hadn’t experienced since the Phillies clinched the Pennant.
At that time who knew what the Flyers had in store for us Philly fans?  They squeaked into the playoffs on the last shot of the regular season.  They got lucky because Montreal lost to Toronto on the last day of the season, catapulting the Flyers into 7th place where they would face the Devils, a team we went 5-1 against in the regular season and matched up with very well, instead of the President’s Trophy winning Capitals.  All season we knew that this team had the talent to make it to the Finals, but through a season riddled with injuries, excessive partying, fighting, discontent, discord in the locker room among young guys and veterans, and a coaching change, the Flyers were an enigma.  Luckily for us, the team finally came together under Peter Laviolette’s magnificent coaching and beat the Devils in 5 games.

On to the Boston series, a seven game battle that I’m sure no hockey fan will ever forget.  Games 1 and 2 could’ve easily been in the Flyers favor.  When we went down 3-0 I was crushed, but after watching the first few games I still had hope because they really weren’t bad losses.  The Flyers knew that if they played Flyers hockey they still had a shot, and boy did they deliver!  Game 4 was as close as any, and Simon Gagne’s game winner in OT gave the Flyers the spark they needed.  In Games 5 and 6 it was apparent that the Flyers weren’t going down without a fight, bringing us to one of the best games in Flyers history, Game 7.  Down 3-0 in the 1st period and at one point down 3-0 in the series, it looked like the Flyers were dead in the water, but a goal by James van Reimsdyk at the end of the period cut the deficit to 3-1 and gave the Flyers faithful a glimmer of hope.

One thing that I hated throughout the playoffs this season was the fact that the media was allowed into the bench during breaks in the action to interview the coaches.  If I was an NHL coach I wouldn’t allow this because, well, I’m trying to coach my team in the playoffs and I don’t need to waste 30 seconds talking to the media, but anyway, my point is this: Peter Laviolette’s coaching style and intensity translated to the way the Flyers played hockey.  This was never more apparent than when he was interviewed at the start of the 2nd period in Game 7 against Boston.  Down 3-1 they asked him what he thought about the deficit and if he thought his team was out of it.  Laviolette’s reply was simple: we aren’t done, it’s only 3-1, and we are going to win this game.  There was no hesitation in his voice, no sense of nervousness.  The coach knew that his team was going to win, and best of all, I believed him, and the Flyers did as well!

Peter Laviolettes energy fires up the Flyers

Peter Laviolette's energy fires up the Flyers

So after accomplishing the near impossible feat of coming back from a 3-0 deficit, the Flyers’ cinderella run met a team that also had it’s fair share of upsets, the Montreal Canadiens.  Somehow the Canadiens managed to stifle the offensive powerhouses of Washington and Pittsburgh in back to back seven game series to meet the Flyers in the first Eastern Conference Finals matchup between the #7 and #8 seeds.

In this series the Flyers brought the Canadiens back to earth.  The strong defense of Pronger, Carle, Timonen, and Coburn brought the red hot Mike Cammalleri to a stop while getting unbelievable goaltending from netminder Michael Leighton, the first Flyers goaltender to have three shutouts in one playoff series.  Even more remarkable was the fact that Leighton had just come back from an injury to replace the injured Brian Boucher during the Boston series and hadn’t played since March 16th.  Leighton outplayed Jaroslav Halak, the Montreal netminder who was the talk of the playoffs thus far, stopping Alexander Ovechkin of the Caps and Sidney Crosby of the Pens.  After disposing of the Canadiens, the Flyers had done the unthinkable and were going to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in 13 years!  The team was brimming with confidence, so much so that Captain Mike Richards even dared to not just touch, but lift the Prince of Wales Trophy, the award for becoming the Eastern Conference Champions.

Heading into the Finals I knew three things.  One, that the Blackhawks were better than us.  They were more talented, younger, and played in a tougher conference.  On the other hand, I knew that the Flyers were on a run unlike anything I had ever seen before.  I knew we had veteran leadership and had the only player in the series who had won a cup in Chris Pronger.  I also knew that Antti Niemi was able to be beaten, and if we played Flyers hockey, then we could pull off the upset.  Finally, I knew that based on their styles of play and the lack of proven goaltending that this series would be high scoring and momentum would play a huge factor.

Game 1, in a nutshell, was a fiasco.  The NHL loved the 6-5 affair because even non-hockey fans understood when the puck went into the net, and if I had no rooting interest it would’ve been a ton of fun to watch, but from the standpoint of a Flyers fan, Game 1 was the series.  If the Flyers could’ve played some form of defense throughout the game it was there for the taking, but instead they let it slip away, allowing Chicago to keep home ice advantage, something that controlled the series.  Game 2 was played how hockey is supposed to be played, with strong defense and goaltending.  Erase 28 seconds of that game and throw in some bounces that go our way, and the Flyers could’ve taken that game too, but hey, that’s hockey.  At this point the Flyers are in a 2-0 hole to the best team in the NHL, but based on how they played they easily could’ve been in that position, or easily tied at 1.  At least we were heading home for games 3 and 4, so I wasn’t too worried yet.

In front of the Wachovia Center faithful clad in orange the Flyers showed how they made it here.  They made the Blackhawks look slow.  They out-hustled them to every puck.  Most of all, they showed us that they weren’t going to let Chicago win in a cakewalk.  This was a series again!  After winning Game 3 in overtime on a goal by Giroux the Flyers had life, and they jumped on the Blackhawks in Game 4 en route to a 5-3 victory, sending the series back to Chicago tied at 2.

Unfortunately for the Flyers, home ice advantage really showed during the series, and the Blackhawks took advantage of every mistake that the Flyers made in Game 5.  They were the quicker team and played fundamentally sound hockey, but even after they trounced the Flyers 7-4 we had hope because we still put 4 pucks in the net, and Game 6 was in our building.

Game 6 was possibly the best game I have ever been to in my life as a Flyers fan.  The atmosphere was electric.  The Phillies game across the street got rained out, so the World Champs themselves decided to watch some hockey action.  Even the Phanatic joined in on the Flyers Fever.  When Lauren Hart and Kate Smith belted out “God Bless America” there was no doubt in my mind that we would lose.  During the game it was apparent that the Blackhawks were the fresher team.  The Flyers looked slower and more tired apart from the line of Briere (who should’ve won the Conn Smythe in my opinion), Hartnell, and Leino.

In the 1st period the Flyers withstood a barrage of shots and opportunities from Chicago, getting some lucky bounces in the process of being outshot 17-3 at one point.  After Chicago scored and kept the momentum going it looked hopeless, but with under a minute left in the period Scott Hartnell did what he does best and parked himself infront of the net and scored, tying the game at one a piece.  In the 2nd period the Flyers showed the spirit we had seen from them during their remarkable run and took the lead 2-1, but shortly after the goal Braydon Coburn committed a high sticking penalty that the crowd didn’t even see or hear, turning the momentum back over to the Blackhawks, who scored during a 4 on 4 opportunity while he was in the box.  After adding a late period goal the Blackhawks went into the locker room up 3-2, and the Flyers knew that they had to win the 3rd period to keep their season alive.  The 3rd period saw many chances for the Flyers, with pucks flying across the ice, but Philly simply couldn’t get the puck through to Niemi.  Finally, with under 4 minutes left in regulation time, Scott Hartnell provided some more magic and tied the game at three.  The Flyers had the momentum back and just missed winning the game before the buzzer went off.  We were going to sudden death overtime.

My state of mind, probably like many Flyers fans, was one of euphoria mixed with total fear and terror.  Either the Flyers score and we go to Game 7, or the Blackhawks will be hoisting the Stanley Cup on our ice.  In the first couple of minutes of the overtime it looked like the Flyers would be taking the game.  They had control of the puck and just missed putting the puck past Niemi, but, like in Game 2, it just wasn’t happening.  Then, with 15:54 left in the first overtime, it was all over.  As a fan in the Wachovia Center that night I can tell you one thing, none of the 20,327 fans knew what happened.  The light didn’t go on.  The refs didn’t signal for a goal.  All we saw was Patrick Kane throw the puck towards the net, and then a few seconds of confusion before sticks, helmets, and gloves went flying.  It didn’t take long for them to review the play and it was obviously a good goal.

Watching them parade the Cup around the Wachovia center was like a punch to the gut for me, especially when you think back to the 2007 draft when the Flyers were poised to pick Patrick Kane, but lost the draft lottery to the Blackhawks.  Kane, who, if not for a coin flip, could have been wearing Orange and Black that night, instead put the puck past Michael Leighton and sent a dagger of pain into all of our hearts.  The Flyers gave it their all, fought as hard as they could, and the team that put an entire city on it’s back from April 11th until June 9th knew that they had done something that NOBODY expected them to do, except maybe themselves.  They went from a team that was one shot away from making the playoffs to losing the Stanley Cup Finals on one of the strangest goals I have ever seen in overtime of Game 6.  It was a remarkable run, and we should all be thankful to have witnessed it.  History was made this season, and this team will be back.  History will be made.

The Beard: A Sports Phenomenon

Canadians teach the Art of the Beard

Canadians teach the Art of the Beard

What is a beard?  Some might say it’s just facial hair.  Some argue that it symbolizes laziness or lack or direction.  Others just argue that it is annoying and “gets in the way”.  These people, my friends, don’t understand the true meaning of the beard.  Since the dawn of time, men have been growing beards.  From Moses, to Jesus, it seems that the most prolific people to ever walk the earth sported graceful, majestic, scruffy, beards.

In sports, the beard has taken on a meaning unto itself.  Back in the early days of baseball nearly every player wore facial hair.  The earliest proponent of facial hair that sticks out in my mind is Cap Anson, who compiled over 3000 hits in his major league baseball career, all while wearing a very dignified mustache.  On the mound, Rollie Fingers groomed one of the most perfect mustaches ever known to man, and many believe it was one of the main reasons for his success.

Facial hair was prominent throughout the sports world, but the New York Islanders of the early 1980s started a trend that has gone on now for almost 30 years: the Playoff Beard.  The Playoff Beard trend has recently come into popular culture, but most lifelong hockey fans have sworn by it for years now.  The theory goes like this: if your team makes the playoffs, you must not shave until your team wins it all or is bounced from contention.  This past year, the NHL promoted a league-wide Beard-a-Thon, where fans could grow playoff beards for their teams and raise money for charity.

To analyze the playoff beard theory more closely I want to discuss the Stanley Cup Finals.  On one side you had the Detroit Red Wings who sported unbelievable beards.  Unfortunately, they were all topped by Maxim Talbot, Craig Adams, the ageless Bill Guerin, who grew beards majestic that it carried the Penguins to the Cup.  Many people would say Crosby and Malkin were the main catalysts for success, but I beg to differ.  The beards were the difference.

Mike Commodores Beard led the Hurricanes to the Cup in 2006

Mike Commodore's Beard led the Hurricanes to the Cup in 2006

Another Stanley Cup Finals that will forever go down in history is the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Calgary Flames.  I remember the series because I was trying to forget May 22, 2004, when the Lightning ousted the Flyers from the playoffs in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals, the last game the Flyers would play until after the NHL Lockout.  Anyway, the Flames came in to the series prepared, with possibly the best set of beards ever assembled.  The Flames had many redheads on the team, from Mike Commodore (who’s beard appeared when he was a Hurricane during the 2006 Stanley Cup Finals) to Martin Gelinas, to Mikka Kiprusoff, who has the best beard of any goalie, all time.  In Game 6 of the series with the Flames up 3 games to 2, Martin Gelinas scored what seemed to be the Cup winning goal for the Flames.  The officials reviewed and said that the puck never crossed the goal line.  In my opinion, the puck clearly crossed the line and the Flames should have been 2004 Stanley Cup Champions, thanks in large part to their beards of greatness, but the referees screwed them.

So, what does a beard symbolize?  Beards are a symbol of dedication, toughness, and strength, plus they are downright intimidating if worn by the correct person.  For some reason most professions frown upon the untidy mess of hair that is a beard and instead insist on a clean shave.  This makes no sense.  Some of the best performances of all time have come when people believe in their beards.  The Playoff Beard theory clearly states that if you are on a hot streak you must not do anything to interrupt that streak.  Just look at Eric Gagne during his 84 consecutive saves streak (although HGH may have had something to do with that as well).  Apollo Anton Ohno, the Olympic Gold Medalist in Speed Skating, believed so highly in his soul patch that he wouldn’t dare shave it.  What has it earned him?  5 Olympic medals and 1st place on Dancing with the Stars.  Even Kimbo Slice, a bum who fought on the street, used the beard to his advantage.  Do you think he would’ve made millions of dollars if he looked normal?  That beard of his was so intimidating it forced ESPN to let it grace the cover of their magazine.  The man went from nobody to superstar overnight, and has his beard to thank.  Look at Zach Galifinakas.  Imagine what his image would be like if he shaved his beard.  I bet he doesn’t shave it until he hits a string of 3 or more terrible career moves.

Johnny Damon attends to his beard

Johnny Damon attends to his beard

Take Johnny Damon’s epic 2004 playoff run.  His mane of hair has been enshrined in Cooperstown (as well as the movie Fever Pitch), and most of Red Sox Nation believes that if he had shaved that beard, or if Big Papi changed his facial hair, then the Red Sox would never have broken the Curse of the Bambino.  In 2007, the Red Sox went the opposite route, shaving their heads in the playoffs, and what was the result there?  Another World Series title.  The Tampa Bay Rays, a perennial 100 loss team, sported RayHawks, a form of mohawk, during the 2008 campaign.  It powered them all the way to the World Series, where they eventually lost to my Philadelphia Phillies.

The phenomenon of the beard can apply to other things besides sports.  If you are a salesman and are on a hot streak, don’t shave until you miss a sale.  If your employer tells you to shave, decline.  Tell him or her that you are growing the beard as a commitment to reaching your goals, as well as the goals of the business.  As a fan, I firmly believe in the power of the beard.  Believe me, beards are hard to keep going and take endless commitment.  They are itchy, they get in the way, and they are unpredictable.  I grew my playoff beard for the Phillies last season, and refused to shave it for over a month.  I didn’t even shave until a week after we won the World Series.  During the playoffs I discussed not shaving until after the BCS National Championship because my Penn State Nittany Lions were undefeated at the time.  I decided to shave the playoff beard in the first week of November.  In the second week of November Penn State lost to Iowa, ending the perfect season and a chance to go to the National Championship.  I still feel that I am to blame because I shaved off the beard too soon.

You might be asking, what prompted me to write such a long expose about the art of the beard?  I actually came up the idea while watching Chan Ho Park pitch 3 perfect innings a few nights ago.  His beard is like nothing I have ever seen.  Based on the sheer size of the beard, I estimate that it has been growing since early June.  On June 2nd, Chan Ho Park had a 7.32 ERA with a 1-1 record.  Since then, Chan Ho has been unstoppable.  He is 2-1 in that span with 7 successful holds.  In his last 17 outings, Park has pitched 26.1 innings while allowing only 5 earned runs and racking up 29 strikeouts against 4 walks.  With the bullpen in shambles, it looks like Chan Ho has become the rock that is keeping them steady.

7/31/2009:  To update, after writing this article Chan Ho Park trimmed his beard.  What happened in his next outing?  Well he let up a run of course.  It didn’t cost the Phillies, but it just goes to show how powerful the beard really is.