Showing posts with label NHL Network. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NHL Network. Show all posts

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Sunday Thoughts

The Capitals have won three straight and find themselves only three points back of the division leading Hurricanes. And with that important note, here are my "Sunday Thoughts":

  • What an important and opportunistic week this will be for the Caps. They go into Monday night's matchup in Pittsburgh having lost six straight games to the Penguins. However, this isn't the same Washington team and they won't be facing the same Pittsburgh team. Sidney Crosby is out indefinitely (a month, perhaps even more) with the dreaded high ankle sprain. Following that, the Caps begin a home-and-home series with the lowly Toronto Maple Leafs. Six more points adding up to a six game winning streak is not out of the question. My prediction: Washington will be the division leader by the end of the week.
  • Viktor Kozlov broke out of his season long goal scoring slump by tallying twice in last night's victory. The success of Washington's second half of the season can be helped dramatically by the improved scoring output of the big russian winger. My prediction: Kozlov will resemble the player he was with the Islanders last season and finish the year with 20 goals.
  • Michael Nylander's injury could be the best thing that has happened in Nicklas Backstrom's short career. Backstrom had a career high four points (all assists) in last night's victory, and is proving to everybody that he is already playing like a number one center in this league. With Nylander out for the season, Backstrom will receive more ice-time and will play the rest of the season with Ovechkin. My prediction: Backstrom goes on a tear during the second half of the season, finishes the year with 20 goals, 50 assists and the Calder Trophy.
  • The Capitals number two and three centers, Boyd Gordon and Dave Steckel, combined to win 70% (28-40) of their faceoffs last night. Gordon has provided the team with a defensive-minded second line option to complement the flashy Fleischmann and Semin, while Steckel makes up the team's shut down line with Matt Bradley and Quintin Laing. My prediction: these two lines make up the backbone of the Caps run to the playoffs which will see the team win the Southeast Division and host a 1st round matchup against the (Flyers?). How exciting would that be?
  • The Stingrays shut out the Augusta Lynx last night 2-0 in front of a record crowd of 10,565 in the North Charleston Coliseum. It was the team's 4th straight win. Capitals prospect Travis Morin added an assist on the team's 1st goal giving him 43 points in just 36 games in the ECHL. He'll be the team's lone representative in the All-Star game this Wednesday in Stockton, CA which can be seen live on the NHL Network.

Friday, February 9, 2007

NHL Network: Coming to America?


The time is now for the NHL Network to make it's debut in the US. With the coverage on NBC spotty at best, and the availability of Versus a problem for some there is a definite need. A Canadian version of the network has been on the air since 2001.

The one place where the NHL Network would greatly help is with a nightly highlights show. The NHL has been without one since midway through the '03-'04 season when ESPN pulled the plug on it's NHL2Nite show. They are lucky to get five minutes of coverage now on the ESPN's Sportscenter.

The league currently has a deal in place with Comcast, one of the largest cable companies in the US, to launch the network no later than the summer of 2007. If they fail to do so they would have to pay the NHL a $15 million dollar penalty. According to Andy Strickland, who covers the St. Louis Blues on ESPN Radio 1380, the NHL is currently negotiating with US cable and satellite providers as they try to make a strong push to get the network on the air for the playoff run.

If the NHL network makes it's debut in the United States it would become the third major sports league to broadcast their own cable network following the NBA with it's NBA TV, which debuted in 1999, and the NFL with it's NFL Network, which debuted in 2003. Major league Baseball has also had preliminary dialogue concerning the development of their own cable channel.

The NHL network currently has a deal to broadcast 34 live NHL games during the '06/'07 season. The contract has an interesting clause that says the network cannot broadcast an NHL game while any of the six Canadian teams are playing. As a result they have been forced to show a number of Sunday night games that usually feature the Anaheim Ducks, who seem to have a number of games in that time slot this season. That clause would most likely not carry over to the US version of the network and the result would allow the cable channel to broadcast more games.

The network also has television deals with the American Hockey League and East Coast Hockey League, who have become strong partners in the development of NHL players. They will broadcast 12 live AHL games and 22 live ECHL during the 2007 season that will also include the ECHL's Kelly Cup playoff coverage. They also provide live coverage of NCAA hockey which can be hard to find on US television.

You can make a difference, contact your local cable or satellite provider and tell them you want the NHL Network.

Adelphia
Brighthouse Networks
Cox Cable
Directv
Dish Network
Insight
RCN
Time Warner Cable
Verizon Fios

Click here to visit the NHL Network's homepage.