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

Monday, January 7, 2013

The NHL Lockout: What Can Be Done For The Fans?

The fans always get the short end of the stick in these labor stoppages.  The owners and players fight it out, trying to divide revenue that fans provide, take games off the schedule that fans want to see, and bring such a black mark on the game that fans really question why they support such idiocy.

There is no promise of continuous operation going forward, no cap on ticket costs, nothing besides a stenciled “Thank You Fans” that will undoubtedly adorn every ice surface for the next few weeks.  But, here are a few things that may bring some fans on the fence back from their threats to leave the game for good:

1.       Hold all ticket costs stable through 2014-15
Give jaded fans a reason to come back.  Show that while it was all about the money, the owners are not completely heartless.  Show there was a good reason to wait and give up 17 home dates.  After all, the fans should share in some of the cost certainty the owners have been preaching since 2004. 

2.       Give more perks league-wide to season ticket holders
Most season ticket holders could not get their money out if they could.  It was what amounted to a no-interest loan for some subscribers.  Make it worth their while.  Make it easier for them to re-up for next season with one-of-a-kind perks.  Let every season ticket holder get an autographed jersey.  Give season subscribers a meet-and-greet this year where the player actually has more than a five-second conversation with the fan.  Let the average fan see what it is like to take in a game from a luxury box.

3.       Give GameCenter Live away for free for the rest of this season and subsidize Center Ice for the rest of this season
Steve Lepore had a great point about Center Ice.  The NHL does not own the content all by itself.  The NHL should, however, subsidize subscribers after they fork over the dough to their cable or satellite company.  The NHL is getting a full-season of their TV money and 50% of their sponsor money this season.  It is safe to say they made it through the Lockout okay.  How about broadcasting your wonderful sport to anyone who wants to watch?

4.       Continue to grow the game at all levels and in all communities
Let’s face it: hockey players are the most down-to-earth, relatable athletes there are.  Hockey is grass-roots, it is homespun.  Hearing how a hockey player made the NHL is more heart-warming than any other rags-to-riches story, in my book.  So, let’s step up our efforts to allow these athletes to be ambassadors of the game. 

Brooks Orpik said the wrong thing a couple of weeks ago.  He put the responsibility squarely on the owners to grow the game.  Nope.  This sport’s stewardship is in the hands of everyone, especially the owners and the players, in partnership.  I know it is a hard word to understand, but these parties need to be partners.

5.       Commit to a return to a World Cup of Hockey every other September
Leave the Olympics to the amateurs, although basketball players, swimmers, and skiers, among others, are paid professionals now.  The beauty of the amateur hockey competition we just saw in the IIHF Under-20 World Junior Championship shows hockey in its best form.  Also, the 1996 World Cup of Hockey was a fantastic tournament that was very popular.  Instead of fitting professional involvement in national tournament hockey into the Olympics, why not create your own national tournament?  The owners and players should be partners (there’s that word again) on this.  Besides soccer, there is no sport that is more conducive to a tournament of professional players than hockey.  I would rather see a professional tournament every two or years for hockey than basketball, baseball, or any other sport combined.

6.       Commit to meaningful talks one full year before any expiration of the current CBA
The most annoying thing about this Lockout was that the deal that was agreed upon this weekend probably could have been agreed upon two months ago with a little bit of compromising.  The Lockout was a negotiating tool by the owners, which the “stick” for the players was dissolution of the union.  Enough with the leverage. 

Let’s enforce a one-year rule.  One year before the manual opt-out, come together to determine whether bargaining needs to re-open.  If we are on the right track and the CBA will go to its full term, open up talks for the next CBA one year before the agreement expires.  And, I do not want a couple of short sessions and a couple of press conferences.  I want meaningful talks.  I want progress 11 months before the CBA expires.  I want proposals and counter-proposals during the season leading up to the expiration of the agreement.  That way, mediation could occur early in the offseason if they are still at loggerheads.  The Lockout should never, ever be used as a negotiating tool.  Neither should the tired charade of dissolving the union and challenging the league’s anti-trust protection.  Let’s make less work for the lawyers and more work to find common ground.

What other things can the NHL and their teams do to bring you back as fans?  Let me know by leaving a comment below.

Catch me on "Sports With The StatMan" on Wednesdays at 11pm ET and Saturdays at 11am ET. We will have a special NHL: Return To Hockey episode this week.  Check the show page at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/The-StatMan for the latest show schedule.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Sports With The StatMan: Show Notes #315 - December 17, 2012

On a special edition of Sports With The StatMan, we welcomed @lilybraden to the show, our Boston sports contributor and now Stanley Cup of Chowder SB Nation blog contributor, Heather Yunger, to talk hockey. An entire show devoted to the NHL lockout, the players, the owners, and most importantly, the fans.

If you missed the show, or want to hear it again, download the audio from the link below.  If you have comments or questions on the episodes, feel free to leave a comment below or on our Facebook show page, Twitter, or our BlogTalkRadio site.  Links are at the bottom of the blog post.

Show #315 - December 17, 2012 - Special Edition: NHL Lockout (AUDIO)
  • Open: 42% of the season has been canceled and pessimistic on whether we will have a season at all
  • 2:00: Heather joins the program
  • 4:00: The sides do not seem that far apart. Is it worth losing a season over that difference?
  • 5:20: Both sides are to blame and taking their time
  • 6:50: What separates the NHL are the quality of their fans and the live feel of going to games
  • 8:50: The sport of hockey is evolving and the product on the ice is more exciting
  • 9:45: Difference of TV coverage of game in U.S. and Canada - capturing the live event
  • 13:35: Does a shortened season cheapen the road to the Stanley Cup and how would it change the season?
  • 17:10: Would a shorter regular season make more sense in the NHL?
  • 17:55: Stanley Cup Playoffs and NBC/ESPN
  • 21:10: Did the NHL come all the way back from the last lockout and will it be a national sport when they come back?
  • 23:15: Season ticket holder view of NHL Lockout and the possible drain on attendance
  • 27:45: Fans feel they have gotten short end of the stick. What can we do about it?
  • 31:05: On criticism of Boston fans for having the most active owner pushing the lockout, Jeremy Jacobs
  • 32:20: NHL/NHLPA and employer/employee comparisons
  • 33:50: Union decertification and "disclaimer of interest", is the union using their decertification bargaining chip too late?
  • 36:35: The 2012-13 end game and comparing NHL to other major sports
  • 38:00: Where I stand on the NHL Lockout
  • 40:15: Don Fehr gives Heather the heebie-jeebies, but owners use threat of lockout as a cudgel
  • 41:00: Closing statement: This is Heather's last lockout
  • 43:10: Upcoming episodes/How to Find the Show/Close

Show #316 - December 19, 2012 - Pro Talk - NFL Week 15/16, Hot Stove Baseball (SHOW PREVIEW)

Show #317 – December 21, 2012 - This Week in Fantasy Sports - NFL Week 16 (SHOW PREVIEW)
SHOW INFORMATION

NEXT SHOWS
Here is what is going on next week on Sports With The StatMan:
Upcoming episodes:
  • Sports With The StatMan #316: Wednesday night, December 19th, 2012 at 11pm ET
    • NFL Week 15 Recap, Playoff Picture, Week 16 Preview
    • Giants in danger, clash of the titans in Foxboro, Jets season officially over, Vick and McCoy to return for the Eagles?
    • MLB Hot Stove: Dickey trade, who's left?
  • Sports With The StatMan #317: Friday afternoon, December 21st, 2012 at 1pm ET
    • Special date and time
    • Week 15 Weekly Best/Local Leaders, Injuries
    • Week 16 Hot Pick-Ups, Game Picks
All of that and more on Sports With The StatMan next week.  For the latest show schedules, log on to the show page at www.blogtalkradio.com/The-StatMan.  Also, your corner sports bar is always open to talk sports.  Just go to our Facebook page and start the conversation.  Like us on Facebook and follow the show on Twitter (twitter.com/gstatman).

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

A Petition to Save the Hockey Season

In this age of social media and going viral in an instant, the latest lockout news was not made by Commissioner Gary Bettman, NHLPA chief Donald Fehr, or any of the other movers and shakers who could bring us hockey.  Or was it?  Janne Makkonen, a 21-year-old freelance video editor from Finland, may help make the fan's vote heard.  He took to YouTube to provide some inspiration in a video titled "Together We Can" and created a petition for all of us to try to do the same.

See the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EWQs3O_IDas
Sign the petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/gary-bettman-the-nhl-save-the-hockey-season-nolockout

I'll tell you this, it's inspiring.  I signed the petition and this is my reason for why this potential lockout is important to me:

***

Hockey, like any sport, marks the time.  The time was marked by greed between Fall 2004 and Summer 2005.  As much as people swore off the sport, people came back because the product was better.  Some people never returned.  With each work stoppage, more and more people will turn off hockey forever.  More will never attend another game.  More will move on to other things and spend their hard-earned money on something else.  Hockey, as in all sports, is a diversion from real life.  When real life greed permeates the great game of hockey, people get disillusioned.  How much more will we take before everyone just finds something else to do?

I get that everyone has to make a living, that this is a business, and one of the primary goals is to make money.  But, it is not the only goal.  The Stanley Cup stands for more than just money.  It is a legacy.  It is tradition.  It is pride.  Sadly, the hockey establishment has failed in all three areas.  Commissioner Bettman's legacy will be that of untold profits for the owners and sky-high ticket prices, while work stoppages have dotted the landscape.  The tradition of awarding a Stanley Cup every year since the Spanish Flu epidemic of 1919 was halted in 2005.  So much for tradition.  The pride of the owners, and the players, have brought us to the precipice of another work stoppage and a possibility of missing most or all of yet another season.

Hockey does mark the time and I am hoping the next few months will be marked with the puck on the ice instead of lawyers in board rooms.

The Latest from MLB Trade Rumors

Total Pageviews