Archive for the ‘NHL’ Category

Headlines We Would Love to See

Thursday, August 16th, 2007

By Jeffrey Petts

We’ll stay away from the fantasy football primer for at least one more day. (My league is on Day Nine of our draft and I’m a little footballed-out.) Instead, Canon Fodder brings you fictitious newspaper headlines we could one day see if a copy editor falls asleep at the wheel. (Beware: double entendres ahead.)

Say MLB Commissioner Bud Selig was to discover a certain portly pitcher residing in southern California is linked to the BALCO/steroids scandal and then pointed George Mitchell in his direction. Considering many already feel Selig is the antichrist, the headline might read like this…

Commissioner’s Office Probing Angels’ Colon

Though I’m sure the MLB team in San Diego has nothing to do with the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, this could be an instance of a perfectly innocent meet-the-players event gone wrong:

Young Boys Sleep-Over Camp Embraced by Padres

What if NBA ballers Shaquille O’Neal, Carlos Boozer, Rudy Gay and Vince Carter were to spend a private summer vacation shooting hoops together?

Carter Shaq-ing Up with Gay, Boozer in Remote Paradise

It might not happen often in the NHL, but Pittsburgh does occasionally beat New Jersey. Newspapers, on the other hand, might make it seem like a cold day in… well, you know.

Devils Overwhelmed by Fleury and Penguins

Finally, what if an Atlanta football icon were to dodge pending federal charges, be traded to Detroit Lions and then approached by management with the choice of a massive signing bonus or a diminutive possession receiver? You might end up reading the following over Sunday coffee:

Vick Gives Furrey the Ax; Will Spend Next Years Tossing Salad and Playing with Johnson

Then again, you might read a very similar headline if Vick cops a plea with the Feds.

Still enjoying Canon Fodder? Do you find it pun-ny? (Okay, I’ll stop.) If so, pass us on to friends and acquaintances. Heck, start spamming friends with our link. We don’t care. But I do care about your questions and comments and such. Send them to me at jeff@canon-fodder.com.

Commiserating with the Commishes

Friday, July 27th, 2007

Editor’s Note: The following is a fictional account of events from earlier this week…

…Or is it?

LaGuardia Airport, New York

***NBA commissioner David Stern is seated at an empty shoeshine stand reading a newspaper when NFL commissioner Roger Goodell walks by.***

 

GOODELL: “David? David, is that you?”

 

STERN: “Hey Roger. Are you in-bound or out-bound?”

 

GOODELL: “Just in from Virginia. The dog-thing. How about you?”

 

STERN: “I had that press conference the other day. Been talking to lawyers since.”

 

GOODELL: “I know what you mean. I thought the shooting in Vegas was bad—“

 

STERN: “—At one of my events, no less.”

 

GOODELL: “Well, that was embarrassing for both of us, but this dog situation is an utter disaster. PETA is relentless. Shoot a guy and nobody bats an eye. Wager on some dogs in a pit fight and the soccer moms form a bloodthirsty mob.”

 

STERN: “Uh-oh. Guess who’s here…”

 

SELIG: “Gentlemen.” ***MLB acting-commissioner approaches and takes a seat next to Stern*** “Why the long faces?”

 

GOODELL: “Greetings, Allan. Aren’t you supposed to be in San Francisco for when Mr. Personality breaks your prestigious record?”

 

SELIG: “If the human bobblehead hits #756, my people have instructions to prop up a cardboard cutout of me in the owner’s suite.”

 

STERN: “It’s not as though anyone could tell the difference.”

 

SELIG: “Hey, it ain’t easy cultivating this image as a curmudgeon.”

 

GOODELL: “Regardless, you’re in an especially chipper mood. You finally get that salary cap of which you’ve been dreaming?”

 

SELIG: “Haha, guys. We’ll get that cap someday. We’ll probably go after it when Big George gives up the ghost. In the meantime, your leagues seem to be the hot topics on the airwaves and neither of you are even in-season. Between gunplay and dogs,” ***Goodell winces*** “…and suspect officials,” ***Stern groans*** “…well, you haven’t seen BALCO in the headlines for a few days.”

 

STERN: “That crooked ref could have happened to any of us. Honestly, I was sure Roger would be dealing with this first.”

 

GOODELL: “Pardon me?”

 

SELIG: “He’s right, Roger. We both were sure the NFL would be the first to be fixing games.”

 

GOODELL: “I rule with an iron first and our officials have integrity in spades.”

 

STERN: “I used to believe the same thing. Then…”

 

SELIG: “Don’t feel too bad there Dave. When the Feds get through with that bozo, all of our officials will feel their colons pucker when they get within a mile of sportsbook.”

 

GOODELL: “He’s right, David. When the Federals gets involved, it’s “game over” for those that have drawn their ire. I believe a certain quarterback has played his last game.”

 

SELIG: “I’m sure he’ll get to scramble around in a pickup game or two around the prison yard.”

 

GOODELL: “Doubtful. He’ll surely be attempting to avoid 300-pound behemoths, but it will be in snug confines of a cell. The place they’ll be sending him won’t be the country club they sent ol’ Martha Stewart. He’s going to one of the dreadful ones nobody talks about.”

 

SELIG: “What about Donkey Kong?”

 

STERN: “You mean ‘Pacman’.”

 

SELIG: “Whatever. Where’s he going?”

 

GOODELL: “Likely nowhere. To paraphrase those awful commercials, what happened in Vegas will probably stay in Vegas. Local prosecutors don’t swing quite the big stick mister ‘Ron Mexico’ is facing. I’ll wager the ‘Pacman’ is back in camp a year from now.”

 

STERN: “Once my mess is settled, I’ll bet we never hear from my little problem again.”

 

SELIG: “You think the mob will take care of him?”

 

STERN: “Naw. He’ll get witness protection. He’ll end up officiating high school games in Podunk nowhere and collecting a government stipend to stay ethereal.”

 

GOODELL: “It could be worse. You could be him.” ***Goodell nods his head toward NHL commissioner Gary Bettman heading their way with a cup of coffee.

 

BETTMAN: ***Handing the coffee to Stern*** “Here you go, David.”

 

SELIG: “I see you’re still fetching java for your former boss. Old habits die hard for you, Gary?”

 

BETTMAN: “Don’t you have a steroids scandal to ignore?”

 

GOODELL: “Don’t you have a fanbase to ignore?”

 

BETTMAN: “Ha. Good one, Roger. Pick on the guy in fourth place.”

 

STERN: “Fourth?”

 

BETTMAN: “Et tu, David?”

 

GOODELL: “Last I checked, you need to have a television contract to be considered a significant sport.”

 

BETTMAN: “We have a contract.” ***Goodell, Stern and Selig chuckle and guffaw***

 

SELIG: “He’s right, guys. They’ve got their ‘Game of the Week’ sandwiched between a fishing show and cycling.”

 

GOODELL: “If I recall, didn’t NBC cut away from one of your playoff games for a horseracing pre-show?”

 

BETTMAN: “They continued coverage in the two cities involved in the game.”

 

STERN: “So the audience dropped from zero to nothing.” ***More giggles from Stern, Selig and Goodell***

 

BETTMAN: ***Pleading*** “David, please.”

 

STERN: “I’m sorry, Gary. I just forgot how much I loved having you around to play the foil. I guess old habits really do die hard.”

 

***The conversation is interrupted when NASCAR CEO Brian France and MLS commissioner Don Garber walk by***

 

GARBER: “Hey, Dave, Bud, Roger, nice to see you guys.”

 

FRANCE: “The last time we saw you three together was at that ESPN soiree. That was one great party.”

 

BETTMAN: “ESPN?”

 

STERN: “The ‘worldwide leader’ had an event for all of the leagues it has contracts with.”

 

SELIG: “The NHL wasn’t on the guest list.”

 

BETTMAN: “Even NASCAR and soccer are on the big network?”

 

SELIG: “That drops your guys down to sixth.”

 

BETTMAN: “Sixth?”

 

FRANCE: “Hey, Dave, do the imitation of that annoying-whiney guy that used to work for you.”

 

BETTMAN: “David!”

 

FRANCE: “That’s it! You know him too?”

 

STERN: ***Changing the subject*** “Brian, Don, we’ll have to catch-up with you another time.”

 

SELIG: ***Looking around*** “Where is the shoeshine boy? I’ve got a plane to catch.”

 

GOODELL: ***Pointing to a scuff on his own shoe*** “Good idea, Allan. My wingtips could use a good shine.”

 

SELIG: ***Noticing Bettman rolling up his sleeves and starting to add polish to a brush before turning his attention to Stern’s shoes*** “Good grief, Gary. You don’t work for Dave anymore. You’re a commissioner of a major leag–, err, well, you’re a commissioner now. You can pay someone to shine your shoes–”

 

STERN: ***Interrupting*** “Bud, you don’t understand…”

 

SELIG: “I understand plenty. Niche sport or not, he doesn’t have to keep sucking up to you.”

 

GOODELL: “He’s right, David. The incessant tending to your every need is quite demeaning.”

 

STERN: “Gentlemen, you don’t understand. This…” ***Indicating the shoeshine stand*** “…Is Gary’s job in the off-season.”

 

GOODELL: “Oh dear.”

 

SELIG: “Ouch.”

 

STERN: “You know, I was feeling pretty down this week but after looking at how things could be,” ***Stern, Selig and Goodell stare at Bettman working diligently at shining his shoes*** “…we really don’t have it that bad.”

 

SELIG: “Steroids or not, baseball’s ratings are up.”

 

GOODELL: “We’re more popular than ever. Some even talk of the NFL as the ‘national pastime’.” ***Selig glares at Goodell***

 

BETTMAN: “I hate you guys.”

 

**************

 

Admittedly, something a little different. Real life has been kind of busy lately and when that happens, Canon Fodder feels the pain. Be sure to keep checking in and I’ll do my best to give you a good reason to do so. While you’re at it, continue to spread the word about Canon Fodder. Slowly but surely, this little website is gaining in popularity. If you’ve got a question, comment or suggestion, send them to jeff@canon-fodder.com.

Sit Back and Enjoy the Ride

Friday, June 8th, 2007

The journey is the reward.
– Chinese proverb

A reader recently shot a rather lengthy e-mail my way begging the question of which is worse – to be a fan of a team that consistently falls just short of a championship or to follow a franchise that’s rarely if ever in contention? The obvious response (to me, at least) is to say the former is much more preferable to the latter. Competitive teams are much more entertaining than consistently awful teams. (Unless you’re a masochist.)

Whether he intended it to or not, the reader’s query got me thinking about what we should expect from our favorite sports franchises. Should any fanbase be disappointed when their team falls just short of a championship? Does too much regular season success followed by post-season mediocrity breed contempt?

Living in Detroit, I’ve been blessed to watch the Red Wings (NHL), Pistons (NBA), University of Michigan Wolverines (football), Michigan State Spartans (basketball) and most recently, the Tigers (MLB) all enjoy a great deal of success in recent years. Some of these teams have been dominant for more than a decade and as a result, the expectations of their loyal throng have risen to unrealistic levels. Any season the Wolverines don’t win the Big Ten, the radio waves carry a cacophony from talking heads calling for the dismissal of the team’s head coach. And heaven forbid the Red Wings win the President’s Cup (for the best regular season record) and fail to bring home Lord Stanley’s Cup to sit alongside of it. Pistons fans are beginning to sound eerily similar too. The mentality seems to be win or don’t bother. The gulf between champion and runner-up seems to be greater than that between second place and worst in the league. Sooner or later, we’ll stop calling it “second place” and start labeling it “first loser”.

Don’t believe me? Look at the Atlanta Braves. Here’s a team that has enjoyed an unprecedented run of success going back to the early 1990s. Near the tail end of their incredible string of fourteen consecutive division titles, the team had troubles selling out their new stadium for playoff games. It’s with stunning regularity you’ll hear someone speak of their success only to downgrade it by mentioning the fact the Braves only managed to win a single World Series during that time. An organization that went to five championships in nine years is considered to be a failure by some critics because they lost four of the five times. During this same stretch of time, the Florida Marlins managed a pair of World Series championships in their only two trips to the post-season and are often thought of as a more successful organization. Two post-season berths compared to fourteen? Fans have become so jaded in Atlanta (and across the nation) as to expect the Braves to flounder in the post-season.

Compare this with the fate of the Kansas City Royals year after year. Since their World Series victory in 1985, the Royals haven’t been to the post-season even once. In the twenty-one seasons since then, Royals fans have seen their favorite team peak three times in second place in their division. Considering Kansas City is the absolute antithesis of Atlanta, I’m sure any blue-blooded Royal fan would opt to punch a Braves fan in the face rather than be subjected to talk of why it’s a shame the Braves can’t be more successful. There’s little sympathy to be found in Kansas City (and in a dozen other baseball towns) because Atlanta fans don’t know how good they have it.

The same goes for Red Wings fans. If a diehard Blackhawk fan were to haul off and slug a Red Wing fan bemoaning their lack of post-season prowess, well, I wouldn’t blame the Chicago fan.

And Arizona Cardinals fans have a chip on their collective shoulder big enough to have a right to attack any sports fan so be careful around them too.

In the end, my advice to fans of any team is to sit back and enjoy the ride. If your team has been riding high, take in a few games and bask in the warmth of winning. It won’t last forever. (Even Yankee fans are coming to this realization.) Is your team rebuilding? Embrace the up-and-coming talent. Watch them develop into elite professionals. Say you knew-them-when. And if your team is a veritable dog, adopt a second team. Though sports polygamy is a dicey subject with some diehards, can anyone really blame fans of the Detroit Lions, Arizona Cardinals, Kansas City Royals, Pittsburgh Pirates, LA Clippers, Golden State Warriors, Chicago Blackhawks, Boston Bruins or anyone from Cleveland or Philadelphia if they started following another team just to feel what it’s like to cheer again? It’s grown men playing children’s games. Get an icy beer, a hot dog, a comfy seat and enjoy the show. It’s supposed to be fun. Relax.

Don’t forget to keep passing Canon Fodder to friends, family, acquaintances, coworkers, or anyone else with an e-mail address. While you’re at it, drop me an e-mail with any questions or comments you may have. I can be reached at jeff@canon-fodder.com.