To me, it's like they look for something to complain about. They're not happy unless they're complaining.
Examples ...
Jamie Samuelson of the Detroit Free Press isn't happy because he thinks the NHL is using the Wings, and also about the rumored Winter Classic this season being on New Year's Day.
This scheduling still strikes me as awfully weird. It would be like a small fledgling religion trying to place a major holiday on December 25th. I just don't think it would get the attention it would on another date.
New Years Day is college football. It's a Federal holiday on the calendar and a de facto holiday for sports fans. I'll bet if most guys could only pick one day each year to sit on the couch and watch as much football as they could, they would pick New Years Day.
Well to me it's the perfect day. Last year's game was a boon for the NHL. Look at the numbers. In my opinion it wouldn't have been nearly as big if had been the following week. Of course that's my opinion. The above is his, just an opinion. His gets more play becuase his audience is bigger. He's ignoring the numbers though; I'm not.
Another negative ninny is The Hockey News' Mike Brophy.
Apparently it is going to take more than a salary cap to stop the insanity.
The cap, after all, was supposed to be a mechanism that prevented NHL GMs from shooting themselves in the foot. Cost us a whole year of hockey to get the damn thing implemented.
Well, there are a number of GMs limping today from self-inflicted wounds and hockey – off the ice, at least – appears to be in critical condition.
Hmm I didn't read of any NHL general manager going to the hospital. His whole tone is negative. There were many readers who sided with this guy too. There were a couple who said Brophy was off base, but Dave the Rave summed it up best.
As much as I respect Mike Brophy, IMHO he is missing the point regardng the money to talent ratio. Whether these guys are 'worth' the salaries is irrelevant. Players are now a commodity and the price rises according to supply and demand. Teams who feel they have to gamble and have the means to do so, will, simply to get a shot at the extra revenue that these names can bring in terms of attendance and playoff money.
The lockout wasn't for nothing, but Brophy and Jim Kelley with sportsnet.ca would make many think that it was.
Ever since the ink dried on what is now one of the ugliest documents ever agreed to by team owners in any sport, Bettman has been muttering "it’s all good" to just about anything you could throw at him short of Boots Del Biaggio’s checkbook.
He lists a bunch of players and the money for which they signed, and then writes, "This is cost certainty?" I get what Brophy and Kelley are getting at, but they're wrong for the reason Dave the Rave stated and for what, Kenothicles, a Kelley reader wrote.
Nice try Jim - salaries are fixed to revenue now, so the salaries aren't increasing at a pace greater than can be sustained by the aggregate average of all teams.
Or as Thunder points out.
Jim, you say "the customers have no say until the players say the CBA is over or it dies its natural death".
Wrong.
If the customers stop going to the games en masse, if the rinks in every building are filled to less than half their capacity (and that means in Montreal and Toronto too), then you'll see a little more action to correct the ridiculous, out-of-control, spiralling (sic) salaries.
No fans, no salaries, no play
At least hockey-hating Stephen Harris of the Boston Globe understands that. He correctly puts the "blame" on the fans.
General managers and owners took their fiscal irresponsibility to new lows, lavishing ridiculous contracts on average, unproven players, some fading toward the end of their careers.
The big losers of free agency?
That’s easy, too:
The fans, who will see ticket prices continue to rise so players can make more and more millions. The teams keep spending, and the fans keep paying. As W.C. Fields advised, “Never give a sucker an even break,” and there is no group of saps more eager to part with their money than American sports fans.
Even Damien Cox, who wrote a mostly positive story about the Red Wings organization, makes a dig toward the Wings home arena.
That, it seems, is the only way to understand the decision of Marian Hossa yesterday to accept a 25 per cent discount on his services for one year to go and live in Detroit and play out of crumbling, smelly Joe Louis Arena.
So his assumption that players aren't supposed to play there, but fans are supposed to keep showing up at a "less than perfect arena." By the way, in my opinion, the Joe is a great arena. It has the best sight lines of any arena where I've seen an NHL game.
Much was made this past season that the Red Wings couldn't sell out the Joe. Maybe it's because Red Wings fans aren't suckers as Harris proclaims most sports fans are. Maybe Wings fans want their general manager, Kenny Holland, to be fiscally responsible.
Of course Cox, Harris, et. al. probably wrote scads of negative articles about the Red Wings woeful attendance figures.
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