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Jeff Polman

Jeff Polman

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For a Rite of Spring, Give Me Hockey

Posted: 05/ 5/11 01:04 PM ET

In today's overly crowded world of TV sports viewing, April and May are my favorite months. The baseball season is dusting off its cleats and swinging to life, while hockey and basketball are filling our plates with non-stop playoff games. It's hard to know what to watch.

Thankfully, one of these winter sports is making this choice easier. When it comes to sheer postseason tension, breathless action to lock you to the couch without bathroom breaks, the Stanley Cup playoffs deliver a clean body check to their hoop roommates every spring. I'm not talking about TV ratings here, just pure entertainment value. Living in a city where the local hockey team getting eliminated in a thrilling overtime game warrants maybe 1/16 of the Times front sports page, you may understand why I'm compelled to write about this.

Now I would never call myself a hockey expert. One of the first NHL games I attended was the Canadiens winning the Cup from the Rangers at the old Montreal Forum in 1979, Guy Lafleur's thinning blonde hair flying behind him, yet I've only been to a handful of Kings/Ducks games since then, and I couldn't tell you the names of three players on any current team. But when the Canucks outlasted a furious three-game Chicago comeback last week and won Game seven with an overtime goal, I was transfixed and then transported.

Playoff hockey overtime is an oxygen-deprived chamber of near misses and miracle saves, and it was the ninth straight day there had been at least one of them. As I tweeted that night, "this is only the first round of the playoffs, and I feel like I've aged five years." Of the 50 first-round games, 26 of them were decided by just one goal and 14 of those went into sudden death. How can you top that?

The late, great George Carlin once did a famous stand-up routine comparing baseball to football, and if he were still with us today, I'd love to hear his winter sequel on hockey vs. basketball. It might include the fact that from the on-the-fly line shifts to the one 30-second timeout allowed per team per game, everything about hockey is designed to keep the action flowing. In the NBA, everything conspires to clog the action to a standstill. Between the ticky-tack foul calls and endless, exhausting time outs, it often takes half an hour to play the final three minutes of a game. Case in point was in the final Spurs/Grizzlies match, when Zach Randolph went nuts, worked the Memphis arena into a frenzy, only to have an exhausting series of fouls and unnecessary time outs obliterate the crowd buzz like a yanked electrical cord.

I pay almost no attention to the NHL and NBA regular seasons. So many teams are allowed in the playoffs, and I'm usually so embroiled in the World Series and most of the football season that I'm willing to forgo interest until the games mean something in April. It's uncanny, though, how many times I put on an NBA game, note some team's 16-point lead and switch immediately to a hockey game.

When the Hornets topped the Lakers and Grizzlies beat San Antonio on the first day of this year's NBA playoffs, announcers made a point about how rare it was for a no. 1 and no. 2 seed to lose their first game. This happens in the NHL a lot. While the closing minutes of a close hockey game often feature dazzling heroics, it is fairly likely that an NBA team will choke miserably in last-minute crunch time, either by throwing up stupid shots, failing to defend a great outside shooter, clanking at the foul line or losing the ball out of bounds. Imagine the 9th inning of a baseball game in which the third baseman, shortstop and second baseman took turns throwing ground balls into the stands. In the NBA, it always seems that the eventual champion is the team that chokes the least.

Instead, what we often hear is that basketball has the "greatest athletes in the world," but let's see them perform their spectacular moves while on skates. Or have Michael Jordan try and hit a baseball again.

And don't get me started on the 3-point shot. This rule has been around since the 1979-80 season, and from what I can see, has done nothing but gradually make basketball offenses more and more stagnant. How many times do you see a team overcome a huge deficit by playing smart, inside ball, only to chuck everything away when they get close by throwing up a series of panicky, 3-point heaves? If I were an NBA commissioner with ultimate power I'd limit the 3-point option to the last two minutes of every game. (I would also reduce team timeouts by 80%, re-start the score from zero at halftime and make a team win both halves to avoid a two-minute, timeout-free overtime, so don't expect to see me made NBA commissioner anytime soon.)

I certainly didn't always feel this way about basketball. Back in the big-hair, high-socks, small-shorts days, I remember watching the Bill Walton 1977 Trail Blazers beat Doctor J.'s 76ers in a great finals round. Watch this clip if you want to see the difference. Less than two minutes left in the game, and there's a stretch of basketball with no timeouts or fouls, just one quick pass after another, searching for the open man. It's like a human pinball game, or better yet... it's like hockey.

Jeff Polman is the author of three fictionalized historical baseball replay blogs, The Bragging Rights League, being his newest endeavor.

 

Follow Jeff Polman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/braggers41

In today's overly crowded world of TV sports viewing, April and May are my favorite months. The baseball season is dusting off its cleats and swinging to life, while hockey and basketball are filling ...
In today's overly crowded world of TV sports viewing, April and May are my favorite months. The baseball season is dusting off its cleats and swinging to life, while hockey and basketball are filling ...
 
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6 hours ago (8:09 AM)
...correct­..and for a natural cure for summer insomnia, give me nighTtime televised baseball!
13 hours ago (12:51 AM)
Now you know why an entire country is in love with the game. We are lucky in Canada because there is almost always a game that "means something" going on around somewhere close. They may not be NHL games but Junior hockey is great and when even your local team's mix of teenagers all the way up to age 40-somethi­ngs can offer some heart stopping hockey. That is the beauty of the game.
17 hours ago (9:30 PM)
The Stanley Cup Playoffs is the most thrilling and grueling tournament in all of sport! Teams knocking themselves out for the greatest of all sports trophies, the Stanley Cup. I'm from Chicago, and I am a life long Hawks fan. When the Cup was here last summer, it was unlike anything I've seen in Chicago that had to do with sports. The buzz went on the entire summer. Hockey is just a great game played, for the most part, by guys who are far more humble and appreciati­ve of their situation than other pro athletes. My Hawks went out in a great first round series, but I have watched Cup hockey almost every night since they went out. It's a tournament that can't be missed!
11:15 PM on 5/07/2011
It's the greatest game in the world...pe­riod. World Championsh­ips going on now, as well, on Versus. And 20 comments by 20 hockey fans...now 21. Funny how hockey fans always find a way to find each other. Leave NBA, MLB and NFL to the masses. I've always prayed hockey doesn't become hugely popular...­.Major network TV would find a way to ruin it. Just think back to FoxSports trying to do that with the glowing, haley's comet puck to make it appealing to....the masses. Ugh!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
Micro bio?
07:34 PM on 5/05/2011
Enjoyed that perspectiv­e immensely.

If it comes to pass, I think a Canucks/Sh­arks WCF series will be pretty exciting. good goaltendin­g, good D and lots of O. If it comes to pass. The Bruins v Lightening series looks pretty good too.
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kapalabhati
No matter where you go, there you are.
07:29 PM on 5/05/2011
No doubt about it. Go Bolts (from a Pens fan...).
07:19 PM on 5/05/2011
nhl playoffs are so exhilerati­ng and exhausting i can't watch them all. amazing how few blowouts there are. almost every game is a one or two-goal margin (20 have gone sudden death so far). too many nba playoff games are decided by the end of the 1st half or even 1st quarter.
10:25 PM on 5/05/2011
So true. lou. The OT games have been so awesome to watch. Even if the Bruins OT games make me age about 20 years. = )
10:33 PM on 5/05/2011
I don't know if I'll survive to see the Canucks win the cup - raise a glass for me if you don't hear me hollering all the way to where you are.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDMac
Me? Sarcastic?
04:56 PM on 5/05/2011
Agreed! One of my best Mother's Days was spent in the Igloo watching the Pens win a playoff game.

P.S. LOLed at the "big hair, high socks, small shorts." Haven't followed the NBA since Byrd, Johnson and Dr. J ruled the game.
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kapalabhati
No matter where you go, there you are.
07:28 PM on 5/05/2011
It's a Great Day for Hockey!
04:24 PM on 5/05/2011
There really can be no argument as to which playoffs are superior..­. nothing even approaches the NHL.

1. Physicalit­y. Take the contact levels of the NFL and put them on a concrete hard ice surface while players are moving 30 miles an hour on skates. NBA and MLB do not bear mentioning­, obviously.

2. Pace of play. All the constant end to end rush of the NBA but without the constant fouling and interrupti­ons that cause the last 2 minutes of game time to translate to a painful to watch half an hour of real time.

3. Significan­ce of scoring. Goals are actually important. So are touchdowns and to a slightly lesser extent runs in baseball. Any basket in an NBA game? Yawn. It's hard to get extremely excited about something you know is going to happen again in 20 seconds and repeat for the rest of the game dozens and dozens of time practicall­y like clockwork

4. Tension. Those very important goals can always be scored at *any second*.

5. Sudden. Death. Overtime. See two previous points, multiply tension and significan­ce by order of magnitude.

6. League parity. The big market teams don't just buy the championsh­ip every year. I'm looking at you NBA and MLB.

7. The Cup... greatest trophy in all of sports. Period. Nobody had half a dozen of them that were knocked off by Tiffany's sitting in display cases in their team front office.
04:39 PM on 5/05/2011
Faved and already fanned = )
08:24 PM on 5/05/2011
Great response, and thanks for mentioning the best trophy ever. I obviously could have gone on for another 1200 words in my article but had to get back to the Bruins/Fly­ers overtime. (There have been six more sudden deaths since I wrote this late last week!)
10:29 PM on 5/05/2011
You did a nice job with the article. Interestin­g to hear the perspectiv­e of someone who is more a baseball fan than anything. Good job. = )
12:57 PM on 5/06/2011
I actually had someone try to argue that the world cup was the better trophy once.

When someone uses it to baptize their first born I'll hear them out. :D
04:38 PM on 5/07/2011
To your third point - I always wondered when watching the sports highlights of the day why a slam dunk warrants the HIGHLIGHT OF THE NIGHT honours. Is there only one slam dunk per game? One per night? Is it a turning point in the game?

I've watched hockey highlights and seen some truly amazing plays, goals and saves these playoffs, and then SportsCent­re just picks a slam dunk as the HoN winner and I shake my head. Sure, I'm only 5'11" and can't even touch the rim if I tried. I also can't score a goal in the fraction of a second it takes before I'm nailed by a defenseman­, but these guys do that with their stick between their legs while skating backwards.
27 minutes ago (1:41 PM)
I see several dunks a game in most games. I'm bored with them mostly, they're not really a skill play they're kind of the opposite. I mean sure "I can jump high" is kinda a skill but mostly I see dunks as "I'm going to just shove it into the basket to make sure I can't miss". I'm much more impressed by a sweet three point shot.

But neither of the above compare, of course, to this:

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=vzbmI6-YS­nQ

Or this...

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=0x2E1cyTV­BA
03:53 PM on 5/05/2011
Q: You know what is like playoff hockey?
A: There is NOTHING like playoff hockey.
10:36 PM on 5/05/2011
Sudden death Olympic gold medal hockey comes close.
04:29 PM on 5/07/2011
Yeah, but even that pales because it's a one game and done. A best of 7 series is the way to go, but not practical for the Olympics. The only advantage to watching Olympic hockey is you're essentiall­y seeing all star teams playing with heart. That and you can turn on a game before the eliminatio­n round and see some amazing hockey: Finland v Sweden, Czechs v Slovaks, etc.
03:18 PM on 5/05/2011
Jeff,

You got it right.