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The Grand Kamalian
No Clemens-ing In Hockey Please
Posted by: Ben Wright on February 5, 2008 at 4:19PM EST
Just as there is no crying in baseball, there should be no “Roger Clemens-ing” in hockey.  You know what Roger Clemens-ing is:  you’re a proven veteran, a sure-fire hall- of-famer, so you make your own schedule when it comes to playing or not playing, joining or not joining a team.  Time for spring training?  Not according to my biological clock.  I’m thinking I’ll set my own workout schedule and see if I’m ready or even interested in playing again.  If I am, I know someone will sign me, and more than likely it’ll be exactly the team I want.  Clemens has done it in the past because he can, and the same is true for Scott Niedermayer and Teemu Selanne this season, although Niedermayer was actually under contract when he worked out his special calendar arrangements.  Why does that not feel right to me?  Because this is hockey, not baseball.

Hey, don’t get me wrong.  I think Niedermayer is one of the most productive and talented defensemen I’ve ever seen play the game, and certainly Selanne is among the most electrifying forwards ever to grace NHL ice.  That’s not the point; the point is that one of hockey’s greatest strengths lies in its team-first mantra, and this doesn’t fit.  Those two veterans aren’t the only guys who have played the game well enough and long enough to have earned the status and financial well being to set their own reporting schedule.  What’s to stop the Joe Sakic’s and Nick Lidstrom’s of the hockey world to take a page from the Ducks’ veterans and decide that September is awfully early to be doing any heavy lifting or lung busting exercises?  Would the Avalanche or Wings say no, even if it violated contractual obligations? 

And does anyone care about the roster ramifications when a prodigal son does decide to return to the fold?  You can bet Andy MacDonald and Doug Weight cared about it this season, since each was involved in a trade the Ducks had to make for salary-cap reasons when Niedermayer returned.  Now that Selanne is on the Ducks roster, how will the trickle-down effect impact the rest of the team’s wingers, who have done everything asked of them for two-thirds of the season?  Hey good to see you, Teemu, here’s my ice time.

I understand how players can suffer burnout and get caught in that gray area, unable to decide between retirement and returning to the grind of a long, difficult NHL season.  But it’s always been a “we’re all in this together mentality” in hockey.  If this separate calendar for the superstars thing becomes a trend, then the old adage that 50 percent of life is just showing up will have to be tweaked.  It’ll be more like 50 percent of a season is good enough in the NHL, as long as you’re good enough to hold those kind of cards.

And that simply isn’t good enough, for the game.


(9) Comments
Posted by: Nina on February 5, 2008 8:02PM EST
In an era of so many prima donna athletes, this has been a good thing: that even though there are plenty of Superstars in the NHL, for the most part, they don't think they are above the game...
Please. Let's keep Hockey a TEAM sport.

Posted by: HockeyWench on February 6, 2008 9:59AM EST
As good as these "Semi Retired" players are, it is not fair to the rest of the leauge to come back half way through a season and push out players that have put their whole hearted effort into a team just to get moved for the sake of the changing of a mind.

Posted by: Steve on February 6, 2008 10:11AM EST
I would have to agree with the post. In the salary cap era, we not only have to remember that hockey is a team sport on the ice, but also off the ice. People like McDonald are getting the short end of the stick because of these so-called "hero" athletes. The same goes for players who are not willing to stay on a team. Players taking up a large amount of a team's salary cap and then not performing are not helping out the team as a whole. This year, Hossa has been on and off when he's on the ice. He fails to score on the shootout, misses opportunities on the breakaway and is often out of position and fails to shoot on the powerplay. Aside from his hat trick performance in Detroit, where is his presence we had last year on the ice? The team has sacrificed a large portion of the salary cap for him and yet, we are not getting the turnaround we expect, not to mention the fact that he has failed to reach a contract agreement. Whether you remain on the bench for 50 games or you play in a mediocre fashion for the first 50 games, I feel it is the same. Live up to your salary for the sake of the TEAM and the FANS or find a better place to skate.

Posted by: Angry Guy on February 6, 2008 8:21PM EST
I agree with this fully. But as a Red Sox fan, I have no love lost for Clemens, either.

Hockey has always been about dedication and heart, from the first moments a bunch of off duty miners thought up the game.

To modernize it with what almost seems as greed for another piece of the NHL pie (even if understandable) kills off the spirit of the whole thing.

As Alex Kovalev put it in Sunday's broadcast, the veterans' job is to instill these values into the younger players. Then they just leave it alone to pass another generation of players.

If hockey does not continue to capture its own spirit, then it withers and dies as the fulfilling activity it is meant to be, both for the players and the observers.

What does a Stanley Cup mean, if not for the perseverance of our love of a valued sport, and the dedication to apply ourselves to it at any cost?

Once again, you knocked this nail completely through the wood.

Posted by: swegs on February 8, 2008 5:54PM EST
i agree, one of the reasons i love hockey and have always loved hockey is because i think of hockey as one of the last professional sports that still has class.

Posted by: Stock on February 9, 2008 10:01AM EST
Perhaps the NHL should enact a policy stating that if you haven't decided to return to the game by November 1st of the season, you won't be eligible for that season. This of course wouldn't effect players who are injured or free agents who couldn't reach a deal with a team. We're talking about guys who couldn't decide whether or not to retire.

Posted by: Jerry on February 9, 2008 8:22PM EST
Guys, it's not the players fault its the system that lets more than half of the teams into the playoff. Drop to 8 playoff team and see who gets to show up at the halfway mark with a sun tan and their golf clubs. Make getting into the playoffs a challenge and the teams won't have the comfort zone that the vets are manipulating now.

Posted by: Joe on February 21, 2008 11:43PM EST
This team has been inconsistant all year. Especially Kari with the 'soft goals' he has allowed. He has cost the team to this point first place. He needs to stay in the net and stop roaming. Case in point tonight against Carolina, he was amazing in the 1st period and gave it all away in the 2nd period starting with the first goal. Usually when that happens its over and it was again last night. Just like game 5 of this year against NJ, blowing a 5-3 lead in the 3rd and the Thrashers did not get a point. If we go back this year. I am sure we would find the team should have some 7 or 8 more points. Stop making this young kid (age of 24) be the next super star. He is not, he has a lot to learn just like the greats did.

Posted by: Janni on July 10, 2008 1:44AM EST
I believe it is even at this point. But who cares about basketball anymore. The trial is just a gage of what the NBA is all about, mediocrity and back room dealings. I'm done with it whether they stay or not! body jewelryIwedding shoes

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