Category: NHL (Page 44 of 44)

Bad Ass Mofos

Michael Jordan and Jack Tatum were Bad Ass Mofos, guys with big mouths who backed it up. Guys you hated when they were playing your team, but you would’ve killed to have on your team. Bullz-Eye.com is running their list of sports history’s Top 10 Bad Ass Mofos. Who’s #1? Where does Lawrence Taylor fall on the list? What about Mike Tyson?

Check out the feature and then post your thoughts, gripes and suggestions here.

The new and improved NHL…if anyone cares

Writing as one of hockey’s six remaining fans, I am excited about this season. Most team’s rosters currently retain only about half of the players they employed before the locked-out season. How about that new Markus Naslund you’ve had your eye on? A Scott Niedermayer would look pretty good at your blue line. How about a 2005 Khabibulin between the pipes? They could be yours, for cheap too. Everyone is a buyer with a Collective Bargaining Agreement that requires every team to have a minimum salary requirement. In the new CBA, no one player can account for more than 20% of a team’s salary. Thus, if a team signs a Peter Forsberg for the max $7.8 million, that team has to spend the maximum team salary so his contract does not account for more than 20% of the total. This should restrict teams from stockpiling all-stars, and trying to buy a Stanley Cup. Sorry, Rangers fans. GMs will have to be creative like NFL GMs were forced to do, and marquee players may have to *gasp* not go to a team solely for the money. I know, pure lunacy. Unlike NFL teams, though, they will not be able to cut a player and get the cap money back. GMs will have to sleep in the beds they made, whether it’s at a Red Roof Inn or a Ritz-Carlton. Maybe they can even instill some type of team loyalty back in professional sports and market their premier players to the public as more than just a stopgap until someone less expensive comes along and they trade or waive that player.

Fans become die-hard fans of a team because of the players, usually a player. How many Bulls fans are there because of Michael Jordan? And he’s been retired for seven years (note: Washington never happened). Notice I didn’t use a hockey player in that example. I think they are taking some of the best features from the NBA (max money contracts) and the NFL to come up with a deal that may lead to long-term stability for a league that desperately needs it. Now, if they realized they may have to reduce some of the most expensive ticket prices in professional sports to less than a mortgage payment for a family of four to go to a game, the casual fan may actually head down to the arena rather than change the channel on their way to more reality TV. More on the G-Spot’s take of the new NHL to come.

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