Record Crowd Views Germany Beat U.S.

  • Friday, May 7, 2010 2:54 PM
  • Written By: Josh Marks

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Germany beat the United States in the opener of the World Championship before an international ice hockey record crowd of 77,803 on Friday. Of course, only one member of the American team was on the ice for the Vancouver Olympics in February, but still a big win for Germany.

Here is the Reuters story:

GELSENKIRCHEN, Germany, May 7 (Reuters) - Germany took 21 seconds of overtime to score the winner to beat United States 2-1 in the opening match of the world championship in front of a world record ice hockey crowd of 77,803 on Friday.

Felix Schuetz flicked the puck into the net soon after the start of the five-minute extra session to prompt a huge roar from the home fans at Schalke 04 soccer club's ground to give Germany a surprise victory.

The hosts kept a clean sheet against the Americans in the first period mainly thanks to goaltender Dennis Endras.

The U.S., fielding only one member of the silver-medal winning team from February's Vancouver Olympics, went behind early in the second period when Michael Wolf grabbed Marcel Muller's rebound to beat netminder Scott Clemmensen.

The Americans then upped the pressure and were repeatedly denied by Endras.

Ray Carter finally broke through midway through the third period before Schuetz grabbed the winner.

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Hockey Excitement ... In Germany!

  • Monday, May 3, 2010 3:10 AM
  • Written By: Josh Marks

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Hockey fans in the United States and Canada are rightly focused on the NHL playoffs. But on May 7 the rest of the world will be turning their attention to Gelsenkirchen, Germany, and their television sets to the opening game of the 2010 Ice Hockey World Championship.

And the 90-year old tournament organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation will be groundbreaking regardless of the competing country (48 teams participating) that rises to the top of the tourney.

There are two reasons why this year is special.

Number one, viewers in Germany will be able to watch the opener in 3D as long as they of course have a 3D-compatible TV set and 3D glasses. The first live 3D broadcast of a professional ice hockey game occurred during the current NHL season with a game between the New York Rangers and New York Islanders at MSG. But that was only for Gotham-area Cablevision subscribers. The World Championship opening game is a collaboration between Deutsche Telekom and Constantin Medien and will be available all over Germany via pay TV channel Liga Total!.

The second reason is the size of the venue where the match is taking place. The Veltins-Arena (pictured above) is a soccer stadium that will be reconfigured for hockey with a potential record capacity crowd of 76,000. That would surpass the current world ice hockey attendance record held by Michigan State University at 74.5 thousand. And none of the NHL Winter Classics have reached that level. The highest-attended NHL game ever was the January 2008 game at Buffalo's Ralph Wilson Stadium, when 71,000 people watched the Penguins play the Sabres in the snow.

This will be the first international competition since the Vancouver Winter Olympics (minus NHL players) so it should be exciting to see which country shines this time.

Around The Rink: Leafs Shake Things Up

  • Sunday, January 31, 2010 8:08 PM
  • Written By: Josh Marks

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Leafs-Ducks-Flames in huge deal

Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager Brian Burke had seen enough.

The storied franchise has been mired in mediocrity in recent years and this year has been particularly bad with the Maple Leafs sitting second to bottom in the league with a record of 17-28-11 for 45 points.

Toronto aims to get back on the right track with this blockbuster deal pulled off Sunday -- Toronto gets defenseman Dion Phaneuf from Calgary and Stanley Cup-winning goalie J.S. Giguere from Anaheim.

The rest of the seven-player deal with the Flames includes right wing Fredrik Sjostrom and prospect Keith Aulie to Toronto for forwards Niklas Hagman, Matt Stajan, Jamal Mayers and defenseman Ian White.

My opinion? This is a smart move for Toronto. They needed to shake things up and as the old saying goes -- defense wins Cups and the Leafs just added two stonewalls in back of their blue line. And Phaneuf has the ability to light the lamp often as well, which is always a plus with a defenseman.

Sale of Tampa Bay Lightning could come soon

The financial mess the Lightning face -- the NHL had to bail the ownership out to make payroll -- could soon be resolved, according to a report in the St. Petersburg Times.

The report says that talks are underway about selling the team to Boston hedge fund manager Jeff Vinik. The article says there is speculation that an NHL-brokered deal could happen swiftly.

Many Lightning fans are likely rooting for this deal because the current ownership is not very popular because of their non-hockey background and flashy Hollywood-type decisions such as hiring Barry Melrose as head coach. We all know how that worked out. On the other hand, Vinik is a minority partner in the Boston Red Sox so he knows about how to run a winning franchise. He also managed the Fidelity Magellan Fund in the 1990s so he is wise to the financials and would probably not get himself into a situation where he fails to pay his players.

But the most intriguing part of the story? The speculation from The Hockey News that Vinny Lecavalier may be traded in order for the team to cut costs. Lecavalier would have to waive his no-move clause. He is in his first year of an 11-year, $85 million deal. One potential place Lecavalier could end up is Los Angeles. To be continued ...

Caps aim for franchise record Tuesday

Speaking of the Lightning, the Washington Capitals beat them 3-2 in a matinee affair at the Verizon Center Sunday on a game-winning third period tally from Alex Ovechkin. The win was the Caps' 10th straight, which ties the franchise mark set in 1984.

The red-hot Caps have a chance to set the franchise record for most consecutive regular season wins on Tuesday when they face off against the struggling Boston Bruins at TD Banknorth Garden.

And while Washington's explosive league-leading offense has propelled the team to victory after victory, solid penalty killing and clutch saves from Jose Theodore and Michael Neuvirth have contributed as well.

I've been saying for awhile that the Capitals are one shutdown defenseman away from being a Stanley Cup contender. I still believe General Manager George McPhee will be shopping for a veteran sacrifice-the-body-in-front-of-the-net blueliner to put the final piece of the puzzle in place for a Stanley Cup run.

The goaltending situation I believe to be resolved as this past winning streak has shown. Number one goalie Simeon Varlamov is nearing a return from injury and has been getting some important schooling from Caps goaltending coach Arturs Irbe. Varlamov is sure to match his high skill level with more maturity when he returns. That said, veteran Jose Theodore is playing his best hockey since he became a Cap, and rookie Michael Neuvirth has been playing solid under pressure. Plus there is highly touted prospect Braydon Holtby, who has been tearing it up in Hershey but has yet to play an NHL game. Needless to say, the future between the pipes for the Caps is a bright one.

Jonathan Quick with save of the year?

I expect to be watching a replay of L.A. Kings goalie Jonathan Quick's unbelievable save on the ESPY Awards.

On Sunday in New Jersey, the talented young netminder was sprawled on the ice with bodies in front of him blocking his view when a Devil lifted the puck off the ice into an open net only to see Quick's glove hand rise up and snap the puck out of the air. All this while Quick's eyes were probably staring at the skate blade of one of the players in front of him. It was spectacular and one of the reasons the Kings rallied with two goals late in the third period to win 3-2 and go 5-0 on their road trip.

The Kings are certainly ready for the playoffs and could potentially ride their hot goalie deeper into the postseason than many pundits think they will go.

Here are the game highlights. Quick's spectacular save is at the 4:35 mark: