Monthly Archives: February 2009

Is Gary Bettman Delusional?

Our Question of the Week: Is the Commissioner of the National Hockey League Delusional?

 

In an interview with Fox Sports Arizona on Wednesday night, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said that the Phoenix Coyotes financial problems will be resolved and, indeed, new investors will be coming on board.

 

It was, essentially, the same line he handed to a group of Canadian business leaders earlier in the week. If those business leaders actually believe Mr. Bettman, then we all know why we’ve had a financial meltdown throughout the business community.

 

Although Bettman claimed all be well in Phoenix and that there are all sorts of people just dying to flush their money down a giant toilet known as jobbing.com Arena, he did not explain how new fans would come rushing toward the turnstiles. He did not explain how the team’s lousy arena lease deal would be re-written. He has obviously convinced a rich guy to blow his finances on a failing NHL franchise, but he hasn’t explained to that guy how suddenly fans are going to start showing up in a building that’s barely half full most nights.

 

I mean, come on, Gary, the Coyotes already have a $21.30 All-You-Can-Eat ticket package. You can’t make it much cheaper to attend. And yet, they still aren’t attending in a community where the average wage is $34,000 a year. That’s among the lowest in the United States.

 

How are the Coyotes EVER going to be successful?

 

While the rest of the world struggles with bankruptcies, massive unemployment, economic meltdown and government bail-outs, Gary Bettman believes the NHL is on an economic island unto itself. And he believes this, even though he sees the drop numbers on the announced attendances. I was in Tampa last Tuesday when the announced attendance was 15,912. Sorry, but the St. Pete Times Forum wasn’t half-full. There might have been 15,912 tickets distributed, but barely 8,000 were actually in the building (oh, yeah, and most were wearing Canadiens jerseys). Other than the product on the ice and the attendances in Canada, nothing about the NHL appears real.

 

The man who said, earlier this week, that the NHL’s financials were strong and the future was bright, lives in a world uninhabited by the rest of us.

 

Please Gary, let us into NHL World, where the streets are paved with gold and every team is the Toronto Maple Leafs. 

The Super Bowl: Post-Game.

The big game in the cold light of dawn…

ORLANDO — Live from the Ben Roethlisberger/Santonio Holmes Parade at the Magic Kingdom on Monday afternoon…

 

1) No doubt the Pittsburgh Steelers should be proud of their 27-23 victory in Sunday’s Super Bowl XLIII and while the game was certainly exciting and we’re told the TV coverage was wonderful, it was a game tainted with horrible plays, bad decisions and down right rotten officiating.

 

Terry McAulay’s officiating crew called 18 penalties, 11 against Arizona for 106 yards. There were holding calls missed (or ignored), but there were many called — right in the midst of big plays. There were some calls made and many more good calls missed.

 

It was THE big game and, yet, the officials weren’t ready for it. And as bad as Kurt Warner and Ken Whisenhunt called the offence in the third quarter, the officials were the true goats in this one.

 

And by the way, I still haven;’t seen a replay that clearly shows Santonio Holmes had both feet down in the end zone when he caught the game-winning pass. Just sayin’.

 

2) This year’s Super Bowl MVP was Pittsburgh Steelers’ wideout Santonio Holmes and quite frankly, it was an inspired selection by a group of people that more often than not picks the winning quarterback just because it’s the easy way out.

 

But Sunday night’s Super Bowl XLIII was Holmes’ game. He had nine catches for 131 yards and the game-winning touchdown and he even set up the game-winning score on a terrific pass-and-run play. The kid from Ohio State was the best player on the winning team and that indeed makes him the MVP.

 

That’s why it’s amazing to me that people are still questioning the Holmes selection today.

 

3) It’s Pro Bowl Week in Honolulu and it just might be the last. That’s not to say it’s the last for the Pro Bowl, but the last for Honolulu.

 

It’s very likely that next year’s Pro Bowl will be held the week before the Super Bowl in South Florida as part of the Super Bowl festivities and if it’s successful, which it will likely be, the Pro Bowl will never return to Hawaii.

 

The move makes sense. Now, perhaps it’s time to think about dumping the all-star game for good. 

Super Bowl XLIII: Steelers Defence Trumps Arizona Offence

TAMPA — It’s game time. Here is our pick for Super Bowl XLIII… and why.

SUNDAY EVENING

Pittsburgh Steelers, AFC Champions (14-4) at Arizona Cardinals (12-7) at Raymond James Stadium, Tampa.

 

What makes Super Bowl XLIII so simple in its scope is the fact this is a game about Pittsburgh’s defence and Arizona’s offence. They’re calling it Steel Curtain II here in Tampa, and there is little doubt that the reason the Steelers are seven-point favourites is the fact they possess the No. 1 defence in the NFL.  Since defence always trumps offence, we’ll go with the Steelers. But one thing could change it all: Kurt Warner-to-Larry Fitzgerald. If those two hook up early and put some points on the board, Arizona could run away and hide. Meanwhile, if strong safety Adrian Wilson does his job and helps stop the Pittsburgh running game, then Arizona could win it by half-time. Trouble is, I just like that Pittsburgh defence far too much — Troy Polamalu, LaMarr Woodley, James Harrison. Wow. By 9:30 tonight, the Steelers should be holding their sixth Vice Lombardi Trophy.

Take: Pittsburgh

 

Final score: PITTSBURGH STEELERS 20, Arizona Cardinals 10 

 

Championship Week: 2-0

 

Season: 159-106-1