The Best of Down Goes Brown (18 page)

BOOK: The Best of Down Goes Brown
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Chapter 43
Other Mario Lemieux Grievances

 

One thing you can say about Mario Lemieux: When he gets cranky, he's not too concerned about who knows it.

For example, we all remember the 2011 game between the Islanders and Penguins that turned into a gong show, featuring several line brawls and accusations of goon tactics on the part of New York. Lemieux decided to share some feedback, releasing a statement ripping into the league and its leadership, calling the events “unacceptable and embarrassing” and hinting that he could leave the sport entirely if things didn't improve.

Many applauded his stance, while others were critical or even accused him of hypocrisy. But those critics may want to brace themselves, because sources in Pittsburgh tell me that the Islanders game was just one of a long list of things that are severely ticking Mario off:

 

  • Today's players don't seem to grasp the fundamentals, with many unable to execute even a basic “intentionally lose the puck in the defenseman's skates to distract him long enough to blow by him and score” move.
  • He hasn't played a league game for over five years now, so he's not really sure why Esa Tikkanen is still following him around and yapping in his ear all day.
  • While all the cheap shots and fighting during that Islanders game were hard to take, New York really went over the line with that lengthy pre-game ceremony retiring David Volek's number.
  • While occasional encounters with die-hard Penguins fans are nice, the endless gushing, autograph demands, and girlish squeals of admiration make it sort of tough to get anything done during meetings with Gary Bettman.
  • All these gosh darn Stanley Cup rings make it really tough to raise a hand to give Garth Snow the finger.
  • Hey, you try writing a thoughtful statement about the current state of the game with Matt Cooke elbowing you in the head the entire time.
  • The revelation that Zenon Konopka once had a poster of him in his bedroom really makes Mario question whether everything he accomplished in his career was really worth it.
  • You have one little physical confrontation with referee Kerry Fraser early in your career, and you can never go out in public again without every Leaf fan you see trying to hug you.
  • While he realizes that the NHL Guardian Project superheroes were meant to honor key aspects of a franchise's history, he's still not crazy about the Penguin's superpower being “mulletude.”
  • Whenever all the owners get together for a scrimmage, Ted Leonsis won't stop asking him if he wants some advice on improving his game.
  • Ever since Sidney Crosby moved out, Saturday morning “chocolate-chip pancakes and cartoons in pajamas” time just isn't the same.
  • Those 1987 Canada Cup team reunions just get awkward when everyone has to pretend to know who Doug Crossman is.
  • As a forty-six-year-old with bad hips and a history of back problems, must somehow come to grips with the fact that he could probably only score 120 or 130 points if he was still playing today.
  • Despite all of his frequent and passionate requests, it turns out that if you actually sneak up behind Mike Lange after a goal and scratch his back with a hacksaw he'll scream like a child and call the police.
Chapter 44
Understanding the New Wave of Advanced Statistics

 

While anyone can recite traditional stats like goals, assists, and plus/minus, these days many fans are turning to more advanced statistics that can help shed even more light on player performance. Some of these stats are even starting to turn up in mainstream media reports or broadcasts, and there are rumors that some front offices may be using them to help with roster decisions.

Unfortunately, while advanced stat proponents do an excellent job of using data to analyze the action on the ice, they're often not quite so good at explaining things in layman's terms. It's fairly common to see a reference to an advanced stat with no explanation of what it means or why it's important, which can be frustrating to a casual fan.

So while I can't exactly claim to be an expert, I want to help. I want to help so badly that I was willing to spend a few seconds googling terms in an attempt to figure out what they mean. So if you'd like to get on board the advanced stats bandwagon, here are ten of the most important terms you may encounter:

 

QualComp:
This stat, short for “Quality of Competition,” measures the strength of the opposition a player typically faces. A player with a very high QualComp probably plays against the other team's top lines. A player with a low QualComp score probably plays against below-average competition. A player with an extremely low QualComp score probably plays in the Northwest Division and gets to face Edmonton and Calgary a lot.

 

Corsi:
Corsi is similar to the traditional plus/minus stat, except that it counts all shots directed at the net rather than just goals. This results in a more reliable measure due to larger sample size, because the number of shots taken will always be higher than the number of goals scored. Unless the opposition is starting Steve Mason in net, in which case the numbers will be equal.

 

Relative Corsi:
This stat is a player's Corsi number when he's on the ice with his twin brother.

 

Fenwick:
Essentially the same as Corsi, except it excludes blocked shots from the calculation. If you are caught wearing Corsi colors in a Fenwick neighborhood, you will be stabbed.

 

Zone Starts:
You can learn a lot about players based on which zone they typically start in. For example, a player who starts most of his game in the Eastern time zone plays for a team that is important and will be on television a lot, while a player who starts most of his games in a Western time zone can safely be ignored.

 

TOI/60:
This is an abbreviation for “time on ice per 60 minutes,” and measures how much ice time a player receives over the course of an average game. You can learn a lot about a team from checking this stat. For example, if a team has five players who all have a 60.0 in this category, it means the team has forgotten to go into the game settings menu and turn line changes on.

 

ESSV%:
This stands for “even strength save percentage” and measures a goalie's ability to stop the puck when teams are playing five-on-five, with .920 being average and anything over .930 being excellent. It is not to be confused with ENSV% or “empty net save percentage,” which measures a goalie's ability to stop the puck when his team has pulled him for an extra attacker, with .000 being average and anything over .000 being excellent and, come to think of it, we probably don't really need this stat.

 

Regression to the mean:
This mathematical concept means that anything going well in your life will inevitably start getting worse again and make you sad. Statisticians are incredibly depressing to hang out with.

 

PDO:
This stat adds up a team's shooting percentage and save percentage while a specific player is on the ice. Since this tends to regress to 1000 over a large enough sample size, it can be used to measure whether or not a player is benefitting from unsustainably good luck. Used in a sentence: “On the day he was introduced to Carrie Underwood, Mike Fisher's PDO was off the charts.”

 

Wins:
This stat measures the number of times a goaltender has been credited with a win. It's extremely useful for determining if the person you are talking to is a fan of advanced statistical analysis, since casually mentioning goaltender wins during the course of a conversation will immediately cause a blood vessel in their forehead to explode.
Chapter 45
A Brief History of Teemu Selanne

 

One of the best moments of the 2011–12 season came in mid-December when Anaheim's Teemu Selanne made his long-awaited return to Winnipeg. It had been over fifteen years since Selanne had played a game in the city, but fans there hadn't forgotten the magic moments he created as a Jet in the early nineties. Once the NHL announced the return of a franchise to Winnipeg, fans circled that night's game on their calendars.

The emotional ovation was just the latest in a long list of highlights for one of the game's classiest and most popular superstars. Let's take a look back at Selanne's memorable career:

 

June 11, 1988:
Selanne is drafted with the tenth overall pick by Winnipeg Jets general manager John Ferguson Sr., who must then explain to his confused son why he's not immediately trading him for a terrible backup goalie.

 

October 8, 1992:
Veteran Jets defenseman Randy Carlyle refuses Selanne's request for his jersey number—#8—then wonders why the rookie is walking away mumbling something about “payback” and “revenge” and “Bruce Boudreau in twenty years.”

 

March 2, 1993:
Selanne breaks Mike Bossy's rookie goal-scoring record and then famously mimes shooting his glove out of the air, while a young Artem Anisimov watches at home imagining how everyone would probably think it was really cool if he did something like that someday.

 

June 17, 1993:
After finishing the season with 76 goals and 132 points, Selanne wins the Calder Trophy for top rookie in a close vote over the two other finalists, “Ha ha ha” and “No seriously, Teemu Selanne had 76 goals and 132 points this year, why are we even voting on this?”

 

April 4, 1995:
My wife finally realizes that the flashy kid on the Jets who scores all those goals is not in fact named “T. Mussolini” in a moment that I wish I was making up.

 

February 7, 1996:
Selanne is traded to the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, which devastated Winnipeg Jets fans assume will be the worst thing to happen to them all year.

 

January 18, 1998:
Selanne scores a hat trick and is named MVP of the All-Star Game, putting to rest the old stereotype that Europeans just don't want to win badly enough when it comes to intolerably dull corporate shill-fests.

 

March 5, 2001:
The Mighty Ducks trade Selanne to San Jose Sharks, but hold open the possibility that he could always return to the franchise in four or five years as a consultant or an assistant scout or a dominant first-line winger.

 

July 3, 2003:
Selanne signs a heavily discounted free agent deal to join the Colorado Avalanche for one season that nobody remembers because it
never happened.

 

September 15, 2004:
A slumping and aging Selanne returns to his native Finland to undergo knee surgery during the NHL lockout, since having all your internal organs replaced with titanium cyborg parts is apparently called “knee surgery” in Finland.

 

June 6, 2007:
Even during his most triumphant moment, the classy Selanne insists on sharing the credit with those who made it all possible, which makes it kind of awkward when he goes to hand the Stanley Cup to Chris Phillips.

 

January 28, 2008:
Selanne announces that he will return to the Ducks for one final season, on the condition that everyone agrees to act surprised when he makes the exact same announcement every off-season for the rest of his life.

 

February 20, 2010:
An assist in Finland's win over Germany makes Selanne the all-time scoring leader in Olympic hockey, although the record is broken a few days later by every single Canadian player who gets a shift against Evgeni Nabokov.

 

March 28, 2011:
Selanne becomes the oldest player in NHL history to score on a penalty shot, then regales his younger teammates with stories of days long ago when penalty shots were still considered exciting, back before Gary Bettman brought in the shoot-out and ruined them.

 

December 17, 2011:
As the heartfelt pre-game ovation from Winnipeg fans grows louder by the moment, with no signs of letting up, Teemu Selanne begins to get the feeling that he may have been in this city before and should possibly remember who any of these people are.
Chapter 46
Other Ways NHL Teams Use Home Ice Advantage for an Unfair Edge

 

When the talk of the entire hockey world is a mid-season game between the Kings and Blue Jackets, you have to assume that something has gone horribly wrong. And midway through the 2011 season, you'd have been right.

A game in Los Angeles between the two teams was decided on a late Drew Doughty goal that seemed to cross the goal line with a fraction of a second left on the clock. But replays showed something mysterious: The game clock appeared to pause for over one full second right before the goal. That slight delay was enough to turn a goal that shouldn't have counted into the game winner.

Predictably, conspiracy theories were floated immediately. The league promised a thorough investigation, while making clear that the game's results would stand. Everyone was outraged.

Should they have been? No. Because even if the glitch was intentional, it wouldn't be unique. After all, the Kings wouldn't be the first hockey team to get a little boost from their home arena. In fact, it's common practice. Here are just a few of the ways that teams around the league are using their rinks to gain unfair advantage:

 

New York Islanders:
Attempt to unnerve opposing players by ensuring that the visiting team's dressing room is infested with vicious disease-carrying rats that are slightly larger than the rats infesting the home team's room.

 

Toronto Maple Leafs:
Thanks to the typical midweek crowds at the ACC, are often able to get out to a quick start against confused opponents, who can take up to two full periods to realize that the pre-game moment of silence has ended.

 

Tampa Bay Lightning:
Blatantly attempt to damage the retinas of opposing players by placing a bright red light directly behind their own goaltender and turning it on three or four times every period.

 

Vancouver Canucks:
An intricate installation of mirrors and holographic lasers has actually succeeded in convincing foolish opponents that the Canucks' best player has a linemate who looks exactly like him.

 

Minnesota Wild:
While visiting teams have made clear that they realize every arena has imperfections and they don't want to seem like they're whining, they'd still prefer an indoor dressing room.

 

Montreal Canadiens:
Have been known to attempt to confuse opponents by having their fans loudly engage in chants from the wrong sport.

 

Detroit Red Wings:
Players visiting Joe Louis Arena often report feeling confused and disoriented by the experience of playing in an arena that doesn't have some faceless corporation's name slapped all over it.

 

Winnipeg Jets:
After years of playing fair in Atlanta, have achieved an unfair advantage recently by filling their building with fans who actually care about hockey.

 

New Jersey Devils:
While they concede that it doesn't actually create a competitive advantage, visiting teams report that it's still kind of weird how all the benches and penalty boxes in the arena suddenly have little tip jars.

 

Pittsburgh Penguins:
Oh sure,
you
try to concentrate knowing Jean-Claude Van Damme might be battling terrorists on the catwalk overhead.

 

Edmonton Oilers:
At one point last year, instructed the official scorekeeper to start randomly assigning a point to Sam Gagner on every single goal scored, just to see if anyone noticed.

 

Boston Bruins:
Opponents report that due to an apparent architectural error, the path to the Bruins net is constantly blocked by some sort of huge granite pillar wearing a #33 jersey.

 

Ottawa Senators:
After an afternoon of leisurely pre-game preparation, it's always fun for the Senator players to see their opponents sprinting off their team bus three minutes before puck drop while breathlessly screaming, “Seriously, that's the closest spot to downtown you could find to build your arena?”

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