Game 7 is over, and the San Jose Sharks have just finished off the Calgary Flames.
The camera is on the hand-shake lineup, and the focus keeps switching back to Owen Nolan's face. He's disappointed, obviously, having joined a Calgary team that seemed to have a shot at going deep in the playoffs even though they drew the hottest team in the NHL going down the stretch.
Owen Nolan. Who was a superstar in San Jose for years. Who still keeps a home here. Who famously called his shot in an All-Star game played on home ice in 1997. When he was a Shark.
He's in San Jose tonight, looking tired. A nasty red mark graces his left cheek. He was in San Jose in 1996 when I moved here for the first time, and he was new himself, having been traded from the soon-to-be Stanley Cup Champion Avalanche. I watched his Sharks play in the Shark Tank, and I cheered for him. I could care less about the Sharks.
I cheered because every time he touched the ice I was transported back to my childhood, when I could watch Owen Nolan play for the OHL team in my small, smelly town. He was the star of the Cornwall Royals before being drafted first overall. He was the rookie of the year in the OHL in 1989. And just as he would someday be an All-Star in the NHL, one night he was the star of the 1990 All-Star game between the OHL and the QMJHL, played that year in my smelly little town.
After that game the goalie coach conspired to deliver a stick to me: the OHL goaltender's stick, signed by the winning goalie, Fife. That was nice. It was a game-used stick. It was signed just for me.
After the game my mother took me to Cornwall BBQ for a very late dinner. I carried my stick in with me and sat it down at the table. And just as we started eating a family walked in to the restaurant; jovial, starving, and beaming. And the big kid, all of 18 years old, who walked in with them was Owen Nolan.
I saw him, and stammered "That's Owen Nolan." My mother, because she is my mother, said "You should go talk to him."
"What? I can't talk to him. He's with his family, and they're just here to eat."
And because when my mother looked at him she saw an 18-year old kid and a family flushed with pride instead of a hockey god on earth, as I did, she pushed it: "I think his family would be really happy for him to see you come up to him here. Just tell him you are a big fan."
Reluctantly, but excitedly, I gave in. I picked up my bulky goalie stick, and walked into the other dining room, where Owen Nolan, my hockey hero, was sitting with his family.
"Hi, um, Owen?"
"Yes. Hello there."
"Um, I uh, just wanted to tell you that you played a great game."
"Thanks very much."
"And, uh, I was um hoping that you might sign this stick. It'sthegoaliestickPaulDesjardinsgaveitto
"Sure. I'd love to."
"Thanks Owen. I'll see you around." And then, elated, I returned to my table with my now sacred trophy in tow.
For 18 years I've carried that memory around with me, close; closer than the stick with his autograph, which was lost in a frantic move about a year later. He's probably had hundreds of encounters like that; I've only had the one. I think I've mentioned it so many times to my wife that it grates on her nerves a little. Whenever his name is mentioned on television she says "Hey look! It's your buddy."
She teases.
But. For that night he was my buddy.
And tonight he's disappointed that his team won't be going on to the next round of the Playoffs.
But tonight I'd like to say, as I did 18 years ago: "You played a great game."
The movie was made in 1977, and hockey in the 70's was dominated by two different types of teams: the high flying Montreal Canadiens backstopped by the brilliant Ken Dryden, and the Broad Street Bullies (a.k.a. The Philadelphia Flyers) who between them won 8 Cups in the 70's. "Slapshot" can both be a nostalgiac look back at the Broadstreet Bullies days and an indictment of it.
In part because of "Slapshot" and in part because it's just true, hockey is a beer-sport. The fans drink beer; the players drink beer; the movie versions of players drink beer; the sponsors are beer companies. On its own this association is benign: lots of sports are associated with alcohol. But every once in a while that beer-y culture manages to taint the sport.
In 1998, at the first Winter Olympics to involve NHL players the U.S. Men's team (comprised of 23 NHL players and captained by Brett Hull) trashed their rooms in the Olympic Village after being eliminated from the tournament. Some of the players were seen out at local bars during the week, and on the night of the destruction, but despite this Hull claimed that what the players needed was more time out drinking: "That more than anything was a downfall for us; it was almost stifling," he said. "Maybe if we did something to relax a little more, we would have done better."
Last week two members of the Montreal Canadiens were at a bar in Tampa after closing when they were arrested for purse snatching and non-violent resting arrest. Purse snatching? For the hell of it?
And on Valentine's Day members of the Jamestown Vikings went on a drunken rampage after their season was cancelled halfway through the year.
I'm not a hockey fan because of the beer. But I do love "Slapshot". Maybe I like the idea of hockey and beer more than the reality of hockey and beer.
Tonight Richard Zednik of the Florida Panthers took a skate in the neck from one of his teammates (who was flying through the air after a weird check). Zednik is fine and conscious as of right now, and he left the ice under his own power; but still. Fuck. Skate to the neck??
Here's the video, you perverted bastards:
This past fall when the season was about to kick off and I was about to become a Stay-At-Home-Dad I decided I was going to spend my $140 on something else. I don't even remember what that money was spent on, but it definitely wasn't spent on the NHL Center Ice package.
I figured I could get by with the Sharks local coverage up here in the Bay area, and some games on Versus, and the occasional NBC afternoon game. It was going to be tough (wah!) because I really do love hockey, and I love watching the Wings, and I was kind of looking forward to brainwashing Erin into being a Wings fan for the first 6 years of her life (at which point she'd develop a hockey mind of her own and start cheering for the Avalanche).
Then, during free preview weekend of the NHL Center Ice package I came across a press release from the NHL Network announcing a partnership with Comcast cable for broadcasts in some markets. The Bay Area, it turned out, was one of these areas. So I looked for it, and lo and behold, there on the guide next to '419' was NHLTV. Woohoo! 24/7 hockey hockey hockey hockey hockey. NHL on the Fly is one of the greatest shows ever, and it's almost always on. Add this to the free preview of NHL Center Ice and I was in a little bit of hockey heaven.
But I knew it couldn't last. The weekend was almost over, and on Monday they were going to take my Wings away from me and I'd have to settle for highlights on 419, or online streaming radio broadcasts, or NHL.com updates. But in total despair, as Monday came along and my Wings were getting ready to play, I tuned into NHL Center Ice anyway, in the way that someone might worry a loose tooth. I wanted to feel the pain, just to feel something.
And my Wings were on the tv. What the hell?
They stayed on all game long. I got an extra day of free NHL Center Ice. What a lucky little boy I was.
The Wings have played 55 games so far. I have seen almost every one of them. They never ever ended my free preview of NHL Center Ice. Maybe I'm the only subscriber in my town, and they just never flipped the switch off when the season ended last year. Whatever the reason, I have to remind myself every game that it might be the last one, that I should savour every check, shot, pass, save, and scrap.
I'm not sure if I should feel grateful to Comcast for their (incompetence/charity) or feel revenged on the Big Corporation. But I have learned an important life lesson we should all learn:
Live life as though it is an unexpectedly extended free preview weekend of NHL Center Ice.
Sorry. That was too much. I just made myself ill.
Chalk it up to just about anything: good goaltending (from Hasek); great defense (led by Lidstrom); and production from varied lines (Zetterberg, Datsyuk, Lang, Hudler, Samuelson, Holmstrom, Cleary....). This team is well rounded in ways that the talking heads couldn't see at the beginning of the season. And I think the real difference-maker is Lidstrom. Lidstrom has led the Wings this year the way Yzerman led them in the past, by example. He's the best defensman in the league, and while the Wings are this year scoring one fewer goal per game, they are also giving up one fewer goal per game. What the Wings lost in offensive focus with the departures of Yzerman and Shannahan, they have gained on the back end. While Crosby or Brodeur will likely win the Hart Trophy as MVP, Lidstrom deserves it, if for nothing else than making the prognosticators eat their words and their hearts out.
Of course anything can happen in the next 12 games, and the Wings have a very tough playoff forecast, and have been dismal since 2002 in the post-season. But for the moment I am just savoring the fantasy of John Buccigross looking at the standings and saying: "The Wings? Who let the Wings play this year??"
- Location:office
The past few days have been a blur of NHL 2007, Red Wings games, Star Wars: Empire At War, and Chicken Soup for the Father's Soul.
I've also managed to squeeze in 4 chapters of Paul Churchland's "A Neurocomputational Perspective". I was lucky enough to finish my B.A. at UCSD, where Paul resides; he also wrote a letter for me for grad school and I probably owe my current position at Stanford to him (to his letter, and the repuatation behind it). So I vowed that I would re-read his 1989 book over the break, as well as write down further philosophical project ideas so I don't forget them. What follows is a short list, and includes some (disputably) non-philosophical projects:
1. Developing a working and critical knowledge of the Medieval discussion of comparitive, unequal infinities; use this as a springboard for examing Descartes, Locke, Leibniz, Newton, and Hume on infinity.
2. Link up the Medieval 'quo-est, quod-est' distinction with Descartes' discussion of material/formal falsity in the Meditations.
3. Examine Aquinas on Universal, integral, and potential wholes.
4. Research the issues at stake when Lee Hester (a Native philosopher) is given Churchland's neuroscientific philosophy of mind and epistemology.
5. Research the problem of humanity, specifically in the context of 'finding humanity' in neuronal activation patterns (Ramachandran, Churchland)
6. Prepare a Book of Job story, taking Humanity in the place of God, and akrasia in the place of the Adversary; can this story be made MORE relevant?
7. Begin the Big Book of Things I Believe: for instance, that Nietzsche was right about the big swirling mass of wills; but that this can be incorporated into a purely materialistic, neuroscientific, philosophy of mind and action.
8. Wonder aloud about Buddhism, vegetarianism, and the decision to not eat anything that feels pain
a. wonder if there is anything that is non-arbitrary about these decisions
b. wonder if there is anything that is non-hedonistic about the committed omnivore in the 21st century
9. Begin the book on the three generations of Scully men.
I wish I had 10. But I think 9 is enough for now. Plus, I keep forgetting them. For instance, the 3-panel cartoon I came up with: a neuroscientist, God, and a madman....hijinks ensue.....
- Location:home
- Music:Heartbeat--Jose Gonzalez
Superman? Sandra Day O'Connor? Martin Luther King Jr.? John Lennon?
Mine is Steve Yzerman. His legacy is one of brilliance, class, and perseverance.
Although Gretzky and Messier have more points, goals, and Cups, Yzerman did it all with one team, sacrificing his own ice time and production for the sake of turning the Red Wings into the most dominant team of the last decade. He came to play every day, including the Stanley Cup run in 2002 when he was on one knee throughout.
You can learn more about Yzerman here. You can watch a cool little video here.
Dream on.
- Location:Home
- Mood:
nostalgic - Music:Dream On--Aerosmith
I finished grading papers tonight. Not forever, just for this week. Yay me. And my students are learning. Yay them.
I am a stupid stupid man because I wrote a metaphysics paper for my philosophy of language course. You might think that this is a very geeky thing to say, but let me correct you: a geek is an enthusiastic, amateur expert; I get paid for what I do. So I'm not a geek. Er. I'm not a philosophy geek.
Damn. Gremlins and Zoolander are on at the same time. Wait. What the hell am I still doing up? It's 3:30am.
Going to sleep now.
- Location:home
- Mood:
tired - Music:Relax--Frankie Goes To Hollywood (It's in Zoolander)
The talking heads are split on who will take the West: Anaheim vs. San Jose. No one places Detroit higher than 5th. After the last two games (they lost 4-1 in Anaheim last night, giving up three power play goals), I'd be goddamned ECSTATIC if they finished as high as 5th.
Ecstatic.
On the upside, I have tomorrow off, so I can continue in my beer-ish haze for a little while longer and then sleep in.
- Location:home
- Mood:
disappointed - Music:Seinfeld theme
Click here and read down to Bucci's link after '10:47' and 'SHOOTOUT'.
Unfortunately I can't link directly to the video or I would have done.
This is just awesome, in the appropriate sense of the word.
- Location:office
- Mood:flabbergasted
- Music:Cocaine Blues -- Johnny Cash
