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    Friday 30 January 2009

    Round the Rinks, Jan 30th

    Hi all.

    We're finally up and running again...a little late but it's the thought that counts...

    Anything over nine seconds without conceding would have done...:...but Coventry went one better against Belfast on Wednesday, drawing one-all and being denied by several superb saves from Stevie Lyle, notably a stack-the-pads last-ditch effort from Sylvain Deschatelets. This leaves the tie delicately poised going into Wednesday's second leg in Dundonald...

    Not quite so tight up north: Meanwhile, in the battle to face Belfast in the KO Cup final, Manchester drew first blood, beating Hull fairly comfortably by four to nothing, in a game you can read about more thoroughly thanks to Mark's report on The Angry Budgie....

    Another one jumps ship in Hampshire: And this time it's arguably Basingstoke's top forward, Danny Stewart....that trapdoor is yawning wider down south...

    There we are-that's a swift-round up done. Now on to this weekend...

    "This is the final call for all destinations
    This is where you're in or out
    No hesitation-this is not the time for doubt"

    The Saturdays: "Up"

    This weekend is a big one as far as the rest of the Elite League season goes. Obviously the biggest stand-out on this week's fixture card is, of course, Coventry v Sheffield on Sunday night. However, with a full slate of games this weekend and teams all over the league needing to get some momentum going, restore lost faith or just start winding it up toward playoff time, this is the time people need to go for it. Let's have a look at each game in turn...

    Double-headers

    Belfast v Newcastle
    The Giants and Vipers meet twice at the Odyssey this weekend in a battle of two teams with a bit of bad blood between them. Both games will of course be live on http://www.giantslive.tv for the measly sum of five pounds, should you wish to watch them, and while they won't be the most enthralling of games it'll be worth watching just to see which team is the tougher and better organised...

    Nottingham v Manchester
    On any other weekend, this game would have a shot at being game of the weekend. It's certainly the game of Saturday night. Two teams who can be dynamite on their day, occasionally have issues defensively and have a nice mix of scoring talent, grit and a bit of drive from the blue-line. And goalies who can stop everything, but frequently seem to give under relentless pressure. It all points to a no-holds-barred shootout on both nights...

    Saturday

    Hull v Coventry
    The last time these two teams met on Humberside, we saw sixteen goals. Sixteen!. There's not likely to be as many this time round, as you can't expect to find a diamond in the same pile of poop twice. However, it's a game the Blaze desperately need to win with Sheffield coming the following day. Hull? They just need to win, period.

    Sheffield v Edinburgh
    Another game that's something of an appetiser before the main event. The Steelers have made great play all week of the fact that this is the only game they've been talking about, reasoning that if they don't win this, Sunday's game in Coventry isn't important. But it smacks somewhat of psychological warfare, this...the Steelers will be determined to get this game over with early so that they can ease off a little in preparation for Sunday's clash. The Capitals? They would like nothing better than to throw a spanner in the works of the Steel Machine...

    Basingstoke v Cardiff
    The Devils, boosted by new signing Matt Elich, will be hoping to heap misery on the hapless Bison, who you get the feeling are now slipping into damage-limitation mode with the signing deadline upon us...and even with Kevin Reiter in net, you can't bet against them. Well, unless you've got money to burn, that is.

    Sunday

    Cardiff v Hull
    The Devils got lucky this weekend, playing two teams below them in the table, both with personnel problems and both teams who, while they can run most of the league close, don't have the extra zing to beat them. A four-pointer is definitely on the cards for the Devils...

    Edinburgh v Basingstoke
    Gone are the days when this ti was a playoff decider-now it's simply a clash between the bottom two with the Capitals heavily favoured to win...especially with their new signings now into their stride...

    Coventry v Sheffield:
    This is the game of the weekend. A packed Skydome, two teams with a bit of needle between them thanks to the odd barbed comment in the press, and depending on the result, a game which can either see Sheffield take a giant leap toward the title or get reeled ever closer to the chasing pack as the Blaze try and claw their way back up the greasy pole to the top spot....this is where the talking stops and we see if the Steelers can hammer another nail into the coffin of the title race, or whether there's life in the league yet.

    There you go-there's your weekend previewed...

    Thursday 29 January 2009

    Technology is wonderful...

    ...unless it's the computers in my house, which decided not to work all day today. Clearly it was "their time of the month" or something,...I do apologise to those of you who were awaiting the promised article today...a consideration of the way forward for British hockey will now appear some time next week (probably Wednesday)...

    Aye well-to make up for it there'll be an extra juicy Round the Rinks tomorrow, with a look at both mid-week games and a brief musing on why Sheffield v Nottingham isn't the best rivalry in the EIHL any more. You may wish to have a gander at Elite Hockey Today for a bit of background reading on this also...

    All that and a preview of the weekend? Why, yes. Because that's just how we do things here...

    Should be up around 3pm tomorrow...promise.

    Wednesday 28 January 2009

    Midweek Musings...

    First of all, I know it's a bit lazy, but rather than write a new One Minute Preview for tonights Challenge Cup match, I shall simply link to the breakdown I did the last time Coventry met Belfast...as that's still mostly correct. However, a few modifications to it...

    Belfast having Stevie Lyle in net makes things far more even in the netminding department this time round-however statistically Perras is still the better goalie despite being roundly criticised this season. With Blake Forsyth performing very well indeed in front of him, the Blaze defence has also improved, and of course we have the psychological effects of a four-point weekend and an epic comeback to consider, putting the Blaze in a far stronger-looking position coming into this game than they were in barely two weeks ago, despite missing Ben O'Connor through injury and possibly Erik Hjalmarsson also.

    But the wild-card (and "wild" is the operative word) is the return of Jason Rushton to these shores. After a scrap with Jeremy Cornish after two seconds at the weekend, you can bet that Rushton will be after the Blaze from the opening faceoff, particularly Carlson, Calder and the other "skill players". A lot will rest on how the Blaze deal with him, although with both Carlyle Lewis and Danny Stewart available, the Blaze aren't short of those who will be willing to step in to protect their skill players. Also, with the second leg not until next Wednesday, this game differes from the KO Cup-the Blaze need to put down a marker for what will be a very tough game in Dundonald, particularly with Sheffield coming at the weekend also.

    Should be an enthralling match-up...and there'll be a report of sorts on here tomorrow for those of you who can't make it...

    Now, on to the rest of the week's news so far...

    If you're injured, you ain't much use: Well, that's not strictly true. Marc Fulton and Derek Campbell have both been officially de-registered by Cardiff due to being out until the end of the season, but the Devils are standing by them through their rehabilitation, which is an excellent thing to see. Both Fulton and Campbell will remain part of the club off-ice, according to various sources. As reported on Monday, though, Matt Elich will take their spot on the roster.

    I'm thinking of the relationship between "rats" and "sinking ship" right now: Another player has left the beleaguered Basingstoke Bison. Ross Bowers has returned to the EPL, joining Slough Jets for the final stretch of the regular season and the playoffs after impressing having made the step up from MK Lightning at the beginning of the season. There are rumours that Shaun Thompson could be following him from Basingstoke, although it's looking more and more likely that the team will be making the move to the EPL lock, stock and barrel at the end of this season...

    That's your round-up done for a Wednesday-tomorrow we'll reflect on tonight's game and also look at rumours of changes in the EIHL set-up for next season.

    Keep keping your eye on the puck...

    Monday 26 January 2009

    Double Overtime, Jan 26th

    Be warned in advance...some of this post may descend into starry-eyed rhetoric. But then, when you've just seen your team score two goals in the last twenty-seven seconds with the goalie pulled and then win in OT, you're allowed that.

    On we go...let's get the rest of it out of the way first...

    Something to prove, lads?: Belfast were pushed all the way by a battling Basingstoke team on Saturday in the Odyssey, needing overtime after throwing away a seemingly comfortable 4-2 lead at home against the Hampshire side. However, on the return leg there were no such worries, as the Giants seemed to be stung into action and scored 6 unanswered goals in a 7-1 victory down at the Silverdome. There's no wound deeper than those that go to pride, it seems...although the fact that Euan King in the Bison net faced 54 shots on Saturday and stopped 49 of them may also have meant he was simply worn out when the barrage resumed...

    Steeling points is becoming a habit: Yes, the spelling mistake is intentional. Sheffield scored nine goals while only conceding two on their Edinburgh weekend, mainly thanks to the efforts of Jody Lehman, who earned himself a 44-shot shutout on Saturday. With Basingstoke gaining a point on the Capitals, the race to avoid the wooden spoon is hotting up, never mind the last playoff place...

    Honours even in the North East: The points were shared in the other double-header of the weekend, with Newcastle and Hull both winning their home games of the weekend to keep things close down in the lower reaches of the playoff placings...

    To be released once is unlucky...twice, and you start to think that it may just not be working out. Nottingham have announced this morning that defenceman Ed Hill is their new signing, and Corey Leclair (signed from Coventry in early January) and Jurij Golicic have both been released...

    While we're on the signings: Cardiff's new forward is Matt Elich.

    And, after an up-and-down weekend, maybe it's for the best: The Panthers lost 3-1 to Coventry on home ice after digging out a valuable 5-3 win in Cardiff the night before, in a game which saw Brad Voth and Kevin Bergin exchange pleasantries at the opening face off, and Jay Latulippe get himself thrown out at the end for abuse of an official. Sunday's match against Coventry saw the Blaze finally earn themselves brief bragging rights thanks to a three one win.

    On Sunday, the Devils were shut out away to Manchester, as the Phoenix rebounded from the game we shall now look at in somewhat greater detail, with music and all...

    "Whoa, it was never my intention to brag
    To steal it all away from you now.
    But God does it feel so good..."

    Paramore: "Misery Business"

    Remember a week or so ago, when I said that even in defeat, there were signs of hope if you were a Coventry fan? On Saturday, that hope announced itself well and truly, as the Blaze and the Phoenix graced the Skydome with a game that only usually occurs in a fan's wildest dreams or darkest nightmares. A game that passed into legend the moment that Danny Stewart's angled shot hit the top left corner of Stephen Murphy's net in overtime and a roar of pure, undiluted, primal joy rose from fifteen hundred or so throats, climbing into the heavens to let the hockey gods know that something epic had occurred. A game of which words can only paint an inadequate picture...you simply had to be there.

    But I shall try.

    Manchester started this game by far the stronger-there was no hint of the drama to come as the first ten minutes saw two Manchester powerplay strikes from Beauregard and Fulghum, followed by a solitary reply from Carlyle Lewis. The Phoenix were in the ascendancy, and looked fairly untroubled at the first break as the mutterings began among the home crowd.

    They got louder in the second, as Tony Hand pulled a goal out of nowhere, ghosting into a seemingly harmless position covered by two Blaze d-men before somehow threading the puck between them and over Perras' shoulder. Moments later it was 4-1 as Lucas Burnett finished calmly as he kept his head after a rebounding Cloutier shot to jab the puck home, before the see-saw swung the other way thanks to strikes from Deschatelets and Cowley. When Alex Dunn then fired a bullet from the blue that appeared to be tipped beautifully by Nathan Ward, even though the Phoenix d-man was given the credit, the Phoenix visibly relaxed, and even went 6-3 ahead thanks to a second goal from Hand. At the other end Stephen Murphy was his usual excellent self, denying the busy Hjalmarsson with a well timed poke-check just when it looked like the Swede would equalise, but as the game entered the last ninety seconds with the Blaze only having a solitary Calder goal to show for their efforts, the moans were growing from the home crowd, and the stands were emptying as Perras left his net and the Skydome cringed in anticipation of the empty-netter which David Beauregard was streaking down the left wing to calmly put away...

    Then, somewhere in hockey heaven, the gods decided that an already enjoyable game to watch deserved to become legend, and the next two minutes, while seeming to take place on Skydome ice, were in fact on a higher plane (or, if you're a Phoenix fan, lower).

    Beauregard missed the empty net. That sentence is hard to believe in itself. But Jon Weaver slid across the ice to block the low shot, and forced the Phoenix sniper to shoot high. He did. Too high. The puck rebounded round the boards, and reached Erik Hjalmarsson by way of Calder and Weaver. The Swede twisted from side to side in the slot like an eel and found the smallest of gaps between Murphy's pads for six-five. The roar that greeted his strike was loud, but still had an element of defeat in it-the Blaze were making a fight of it at least, but surely it was too-little, too late?

    Phoenix time-out. A few of the early departures were trickling back in, as messages from friends still watching reached the car park. "Don't go yet, something's happening here"...Return they did, chasing the vain hope of seeing something truly special. Perras stayed on the bench.

    23 seconds to either lose with honour, or make a legend. The puck dropped, the clock began to tick, and every pass was greeted with cheers or groans. No-one was sitting anymore as the Blaze crossed the Phoenix blue-line with fifteen seconds left. The puck went round the back of the net, Adam Calder passed out in front under pressure from Josh Garbutt, hoping to find someone, anyone, in a Blaze shirt to get one final shot off.

    He found Sylvain Deschatelets, in an inch or two of space, who shrugged off a Beauregard slash, aimed, and fired. The puck slid almost in slow motion below Murphy's stick, through his legs, and into the net.

    Bedlam. In nearly ten years of hockey-watching I have honestly never heard a Skydome crowd roar with such joy as it did then. Or seen a team go from calm confidence to looking like its heart had been ripped out as quickly as the visitors. The Phoenix looked beaten then. Stunned. They'd worked so hard, dominated the game. Wanted a victory. Deserved a victory. And someone up there had taken it away from them.

    As we prepared for overtime, the departures were streaming back in. "Lose Yourself" thumped over the speakers, and seemed somehow appropriate. Every man, woman and child in the building was lost in the drama. And most of them hoped for a Blaze goal, hard as it would have been on Manchester.

    A minute into overtime, it came. Barrie Moore streaked down the left side, fed Danny Stewart in the slot, and the little Blaze forward waited, waited, and waited before firing high past Murphy to send the Skydome into new heights of ecstacy, and plunge a dagger deep into the hearts of the Phoenix players and fans.

    It may be a cliché, but this is a game that neither side really deserved to lose...and will be talked about long after this season has been consigned to the history books.

    And if you're a Blaze fan, then hope is re-born. Should you be a Sheffield fan, then next Sunday's game suddenly looks a lot more intimidating.

    And that's your weekend reviewed...

    Friday 23 January 2009

    Round the Rinks, January 23rd

    Let's go bombing into another weekend preview, shall we? Apologies it's so late but I have just spent three hours stuck on the M42 on a journey that should have taken 35 minutes. Nice. First of all, though...

    That minute could be worth a whole lot more come April: Sheffield beat Belfast two-one in the Odyssey on Wednesday, with Ryan Finnerty scoring the winner on 59:01 after the game had looked set to go to overtime. Two crucial, crucial points which also prevented Belfast going above Coventry into third place while they were at it...

    I stand corrected: Robb from the Pyre reminds me after my post on Wednesday that Manchester wore Children in Need special jerseys this season...in which case I apologise for saying no team is doing anything jersey-wise...

    And now, on to the weekend...

    Double-headers

    Edinburgh v Sheffield: Two games at Murrayfield which should, realistically, see the Steelers come out with maximum points, although the Caps will be boosted by new signings Jason Cassells and Brad Bonello. These are games the Steelers will be expecting to win to strengthen their grasp on this years title, and anything less than four points for them would be a bonus for the rest of the league...

    Newcastle v Hull: Tyneside on Saturday, and Humberside on Sunday. Two games which won't provide the greatest level of finesse hockey in the world and indeed may be ignored by the greater part of the British hockey community unless a) it all kicks off, b) someone gets a mullering, or c) both. However, even diamonds are sometimes found in piles of...well, nasty stuff, and this game could prove to be well worth watching due to the teams being so evenly matched...

    Belfast v Basingstoke: You have to fear for the Bison with the Giants on a hot run, especially after the Panthers brushed them aside last weekend with almost contemptuous ease. I can't see much more than four points for the Giants and the Bison doing their "battling loser" act yet again to stay firmly rooted to the bottom...The Saturday leg will be live at www.giantslive.tv, too...

    Now on to the single games...

    Saturday

    Coventry v Manchester: With all of the games between Blaze and Phoenix being close up until now, this one is guaranteed to be worth watching, particularly with the offensive talent on show. With Blaze's new boys Blake Forsyth and Erik Hjalmarsson now more settled, they will be looking for a chance to show what they can do, while the Phoenix will be hoping to dig themselves out of something of a New Year hole and pull off a morale-boosting win away from home after coming close on several occasions already...This is game of the night, definitely.

    Cardiff v Nottingham: But closely behind it comes this meeting in South Wales. Panthers' speed v Devils' power and effort is the order of the day here, and with the Devils finally close to the form of the Devils of old, Coventry in particular will be wishing the Panthers a tough game away from the friendly confines of the NIC...

    Sunday

    Manchester v Cardiff: It's change-about as the four teams who met last night in the non-double-header games swap opponents. Phoenix v Devils is a fixture that the Welsh side have had the better of so far this season, but with both teams having tough fixtures the night before the result this time round is anyone's guess....

    Nottingham v Coventry: Finally, it's the resumption of the Team Hollywood Rivalries. With Corey Leclair playing his first game against the team that brought him to the UK at the start of this season and both sides desperate for points to keep them in touch with Sheffield at the top, no quarter will be asked for and even if it were, one doubts it would be given. This is the game of the weekend by a whisker, and will see 60 minutes of war on the NIC ice...

    There you go-it's a little late, but there's your weekend, previewed...

    A swift "heads-up"...

    Morning all...

    Round the Rinks should be up around 3pm today...normally I get it done the night before but was a little busy...

    Check back then for your weekend preview...

    Wednesday 21 January 2009

    Midweek Musings...

    On we go for a lightning skate around the British hockey world this wintry Wednesday...

    Capitals sign another: He may have a surname that sounds like it should be applied to an ice-lolly, but Brad Bonnello is a decent player...he joins Jason Cassells as Edinburgh's second new signing. PR is here, stats are here.

    Oh, and he's a feisty little bugger as well...just what the Caps need, really.

    In the Pink: Finally, a one-off-shirt that isn't either about celbrating an anniversary by milking it for cash (eg Cardiff's anniversary shirts) or just milking cash (Christmas shirts ad infinitum). Romford have produced a Valentine's Day commemorative shirt, and here it is.

    The thing about these are: a) there's no shirt auction so you don't get the same posers with more money than sense enriching their club by pointlessly throwing tons of money at a shirt which will be re-hashed the same time next year-each (game-worn) shirt goes for the same price as a replica, there will only be one set and everyone has the chance to buy one, and b) the money raised goes to the British Heart Foundation. All of it.

    The amusement gained from seeing someone as big and mean as Mark Williams in a pink shirt covered with hearts is a fringe benefit, of course.

    Fair play, Romford. They join MK :ightning in the charitable stakes, after their "pink shirt for breast cancer" a year or two back. Were they not all sold, I'd want one.

    My question is though, as the top league in the country, why are we not seeing more of this sort of thing from the EIHL rather than the parade of one-off moneymakers we're usually subjected to? It's got to help the PR if nothing else...

    One Minute Preview: As promised, we're now going to look at tonight's game between Belfast and Sheffield, which is as usual live on http://www.giantslive.tv should you fancy spending a Wednesday night watching hockey...

    And you should, patricularly if you're a fan of any of the top four. A Belfast win in tonight's game could make the title race infinitely more interesting, as well as increase the number of runners from three to four. By now both sides will know the opponents' dangermen, who to watch and who to niggle at. There are intriguing battles all over the ice, from the stingy Jody Lehman v the free-scoring Paul Deniset to Rod Sarich v the Belfast forecheckers. These are arguably the two most complete sides in the league doing battle, and the game should reflect that in the closeness of the score.

    My verdict? Sheffield to win. Just. But, for the sake of the league as a whole, I'll be hoping the Giants win...

    And that's your Midweek Musings...sorry they're a little later than usual...

    Tuesday 20 January 2009

    Dumpng and Chasing...

    Yes, I know I said tomorrow would contain the next post, previewing Sheffield v Belfast...what I should have said was that that one will be the next post with a coherent topic...

    This one is nothing more than a very brief edit of two things I missed off yesterday's Double Overtime column...

    Five Minute Major now have a forum...It's in its early stages at the moment but is well worth a visit if you're a Phoenix fan...and even more so if you're not...

    Also, The Cat's Whiskers now has a weekly "Race For the Title" feature, where they keep track of, unsuprisingly, the teams chasing the league title. If you want to keep up on the competition, then nip over
    there...I do...

    There you go...short and sweet.

    Monday 19 January 2009

    Double Overtime, January 19th

    On we go with our usual stream of consciousness review of the weekend...but first of all, a few loose ends as the transfer merry-go-round turns again...

    Niec, nothing, nada: Basingstoke have shored up their roster with a new import, from Telford of the EPL. Andre Niec joined late last week, and the forward registered an assist on his debut in the Bison's 7-1 loss to Nottingham on Saturday. As to what effect it'll have on Bison's chances of making the playoffs at the moment, judging by their current form...just see the title.

    Cassells in the Sky: Meanwhile, up in Edinburgh, they welcome Telford's top point-scorer and second-top in the EPL, Jason Cassells. The Canadian has been getting rave reviews from EPL fans this season, so it will be interesting to see if he can make the step up...

    Now, on to the weekend...

    The Rejects' Revenge: Nottingham found out the hard way on Sunday that former players are almost guaranteed to come back to haunt you at some point, as they lost to Hull 3-2 in the NIC. The Stingrays prevailed 3-2, with two goals from Konstantin Kalmikov (Panther in 04/05) and one from James Cooke (Panther in 05/06) The winning goal was a Kalmikov penalty-shot after Michel Robinson had thrown his stick to prevent a scoring chance with less than two minutes on the clock...you get the sense he may have enjoyed that one.

    Bison are rock-bottom. And may be beginning to dig: Another hefty loss for Basingstoke in their only game of the weekend, as the Panthers cruised to a comfortable 7-1 victory on Saturday night, means that even the playoffs are starting to look more and more distant for the Hampshire club...

    "You've had your fun. Now let the big boys play": In something of a running theme this weekend, Manchester too suffered a bit of a mualing at the hands of Sheffield on Friday and Belfast on Sunday-including conceding six goals in twenty-one minutes against the Giants in an 8-2 defeat in Altrincham. The traditionally-strong Giants and Steelers, meanwhile, took maximum points from the weekend (well, all the points they could) being the only teams apart from Cardiff and Coventry to do so. The Phoenix are nearly, nearly up with the best teams in the league, but weekends like this show there's still a way to go...

    Rumours that he circles meetings with the Phoenix on his calendar are gathering pace: Paul Deniset scored his third hat-trick at Altrincham in three visits there this season on Sunday, which, were he a Phoenix player, would put him on pace for a 72 goal season from home games alone. Clearly, he likes the place....

    Keep on keepin' on: Sheffield earn themselves another four points...and despite being second in the league many fans of their close rivals are already handing them the title after Nottingham lost to Hull on Sunday...

    Meanwhile, in the Midlands, the embers are glowing: Remember when I said on Thursday that, even in their KO Cup capitulation to Belfast, there were signs that the "real" Coventry Blaze were on the way back? A confident performance against Newcastle (despite going two-down early on) and a battling comeback in Edinburgh, aided by two very promising debut weekends (Erik Hjamarsson getting an assist on Saturday despite clealry not quite being match fit and Blake Forsyth looking like the d-man Blaze have been missing all year in scoring 1+2 for the weekend) means that, suddenly, the Skydome has the air of hope around it again. Saturday's meeting with Manchester and Sunday's trip to Nottingham should show whether that hope will grow or stall...but the signs are promising.

    Hm. Not exactly a barn-burner, then: Cardiff and Newcastle played out a rare 0-0 draw on Sunday, with the game only being decided in the Welshmen's favour through penalty shots. Given that, according to IH update, there were only 44 shots combined in those 65 minutes, you'd imagine that this game was fore for those who get excited by tight defensive play rather than offense. So, in essence, hardly anybody...it comes to something when all you can really think to comment on is an early-game scrap between Mike Prpich and Derek Campbell...

    There you go-that's you weekend reviewed...

    Just a quickie before I go-many thanks to those of you who've taken the time to tell me how much you like the blog-both via email and (in the case of one very nice gentleman on Saturday-apologiies if I seemed a little distracted) in person at games...it is, as always, much appreciated...

    The next post will likely be on Wednesday morning, when we'll have a preview look at the midweek action between Belfast and Sheffield as well as round up any tidbits of news...

    Keep keeping your eye on the puck...

    Hockeysomniac...

    Morning all.

    As you may have gathered by looking at the posting time, I'm up far too late. The reason for this is, of course, hockey.

    Surely I can't be the only one out there who has spent many a night with only the computer screen, headphones and the voices of someone far away in Edmonton, Dallas, New York or Toronto describing the action of a game in which you have no interest other than the fact you love hockey...I was originally going to come on just before bed, write my Double Overtime column for the morning and go to bed nice and primed for the following morning. Sadly, it played out the same way it always does...

    "I'll just have a quick gander at the NHL scores..."

    "Oh, hey, there's a game on live...might just give that a quick listen"

    "Oh, hell, it's 2am and it's gone into overtime. Aye well, just till the end of this game..."

    "Game over. Phew. Oh, hey, that matchup in porgress in the third looks interesting too..."

    "Damn. Need coffee. And I'll go to bed at the end of this period"

    "Oh, damn...haven't written a word...aye well. Just the end of OT..."

    And so on down the slippery slope, until here we are at ten past four in the morning...

    Please tell me I'm not the only hockey fan who's done this...

    Right-definitely off for some sleep now. Round the Rinks to come later today..check back around 3pm...

    Friday 16 January 2009

    Round the Rinks Extra

    And the merry-go-round keeps turning.

    Fresh from signing Erik Hjalmarsson, the Blaze make a change on defence, replacing the much-travelled Jon Coleman, who by all accounts is off to Europe, with Blake Forsyth.

    Press release is here.

    He, along with Hjalmarsson, will make his debut against Newcastle tomorrow.

    And, quite frankly, should he score/win a fight and there isn't a yell of "didn't he do well?!" from the audio box, then I shall be very disappointed...

    Round The Rinks, January 16th...

    In we go for another lap round the rinks...but first of all...

    Belfast top off a good week...rumours that they had to take twenty pictures before Tyler Howells, Bobby Robins and Dave Phillips were all looking at the camera at the same time are scandalous and unfounded...probably.

    Given that Coventry has this very famous daughter, who we Coventrians are quite proud of, surely there's some sort of promotional angle in there somewhere. If only for the comedy of seeing the entire Blaze team try and lift a scantily-clad woman on a horse...

    Anyway, ramblings over. On we go.

    Friday

    For once, the first hockey gmae of the weekend doesn't take place at the Odyssey. Instead, we head to Yorkshire for a War of the Roses clash between Sheffield and Manchester. Sheffield have had the better of these so far this season, winning four games to their cross-Pennine rivals' two. With the Phoenix in what, for them, is something of a slump, the Hallam is probably the last place they fancy visiting right now. They travel with the hopes of not just their own fans but those of at least three other teams, though, as everyone bar those from South Yorkshire hops for a Phoenix victory to peg the Steelsrs back a bit in the race for the title. With both sides at or close to full strength, this should be a very nice warm-up to a night-out in the North...

    Saturday

    Hull v Sheffield
    And so to the Yorkshire derby, as the Stingrays and Steelers renew hostilities at the Hull Arena. Quite frankly, I can see little other than a Steelers win in this one, although the Humberside fans will be given some hope by the fact they took the Steelers to overtime last time the two sides met. Even so, the current leaders had enough to force their way past on that occasion, and I can see similar happening here as the Stingrays get little joy out of a weekend in which they play the top two one after the other.

    Coventry v Newcastle
    This one could get a little tasty. To Viper eyes the Blaze are there for the taking after crashing out of the KO Cup. With Erik Hjalmarsson hopefully making his debut and looking to impress his home crowd, there is also cause for optimism in the Skydome camp, although rumours that have surfaced linking the Blaze with a goalie change (JF Perras out, Aalborg's Peter Hirsch in) will add an extra notch of intrigue to the game. As if it needed it-meetings between these two are always memorable Skydome occasions, and this one promises to be no exception, particularly as Newcastle have found something of their former selves since signing Ed Courtenay and Jeff Hutchins...

    Basingstoke v Nottingham
    Second v bottom, with the Panthers only missing Johan Molin and Kevin Reiter still injured? Could be an ugly night at the Silverdome...although with Scott Kelman now on the market the Bison may well be looking to add to their squad before the transfer deadline. However, with things in the state they are down south I can see little other than a comfortable Panthers win.

    Sunday

    Cardiff v Newcastle
    This is possibly the toughest game to call of the weekend. Two physical teams who like to wear the opposition down meet in South Wales, with both needing points in the jostle for mid-table position. Much will depend on how hard Newcastle are worked the night before-the fact that Cardiff only have the one game this weekend may be the one thing that decides who stands up better to the pounding that both teams will dish out...

    Nottingham v Hull
    Poor Stingrays. It never rains, but it pours. After playing Sheffield the night before the Stingrays will come into this game either supremely heartened or just wanting to get it out of the way, depending on the result. Meanwhile, the Panthers can afford no slip-ups in front of their home fans, so will be watching the Stingrays with great care in order to a) avoid being caught out and b) make sure of the two points to keep up with Sheffield...


    Manchester v Belfast

    Gsme of the night-two teams who can rip others apart on their day meet up in Altrincham in the battle of the British goalies. The Giants looked cool, calm and confident in disposing of the Blaze during the week, but they will find the Phoenix a much tougher proposition than a half-empty Skydome with the tie effectively already lost, particularly with a hostile home crowd. Much will come down to which GB goalie plays better on the night...and if the Phoenix defence can stop the Giants attack long enough for the Beauregard/Hand combo and/or Bruce Mulherin to work their magic...it'll be worth watching either way

    Edinburgh v Coventry
    Left as something of an afterthought is the meeting in Murrayfield between two teams who need to restore their fanbases' faith in them. Edinburgh have lurched from loss to loss this season, while the Blaze have proved they can win games but have struggled against their title rivals. Given that this is the type of game the Blaze have won with relative ease this season, you have to back the Midlands club...however, those hockey fans in the Scottish capital may have something to say about that-particularly as the Caps chase that elusive playoff place again-we all remember the fruits of their efforts last year...

    And that's your weekend previewed to within an inch of its life...

    Thursday 15 January 2009

    Speak of the Devil...

    That's just weird. At 3pm I post thinking there could be some light on the horizon for the Blaze, and at 3:30pm, this appears...

    Blaze sign Hjalmarsson, release Kelman

    Now, aside from the slight issue I have with calling someone who's about the same size as Barrie Moore (5'10, 190lbs) a "power forward" (I'd classify him more as a "pest"-after all-that's the same size as Sean Avery, and he's been called many things but "power forward" isn't one of them...

    Everyone is getting ridiculously excited thanks to this one clip...but alongside the human sandpaper that is Danny Stewart and Carlyle Lewis too, the Blaze attack certainly appears to have had more teeth added to it...

    Kelman, meanwhile, has already been linked with Hull, Nottingham, Newcastle and even Cardiff, so who knows where he could be by this time next week?

    Seamless link: Pleasantly, this now allows me to direct your attention to an interesting article by Mark over at the Angry Budgie, concerning the wage-cap and the transfer merry-go-round this season. I'm not going to comment on it, just simply leave you to read it with an open mind...

    That's today definitely done. Check back tomorrow morning for your usual dose of Round the Rinks...

    Thursday Thoughts...

    In we go, with arumination on the events of last night to begin, followed by a recounting of a 3am conversation. Stick with me here...

    hope (n): the feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best

    hope against hope (idiom): to continue to hope, although the outlook does not warrant it.


    On the face of it, last night at the Skydome was the last place you'd expect to find hope. Nine seconds in, Bobby Robins takes advantage of a Jon Weaver mistake, beats Perras and scores, effectively making the following 59 minutes and 50 seconds an irrelevance. Cue much wailing and gnashing of teeth on the forums.

    Ordinarily, I'd have been a part of that. However, even in as the KO Cup was drifting away and the Blaze players were staring dispiritedly at each other as Belfast eased to a 4-1 victory through the simple expedient of working harder as a team (a fact acknowledged by at least one Blaze player afterward), if you looked hard enough, you could see that, contrary to the current swell of opinion, there was still a sign or two of the Blaze the Coventry crowd love so much.

    Maybe it came in the snarl of Carlyle Lewis as he decided that he wasn't going to let Belfast leave without a mark on them and pummelled Bobby Robins with a few hammer blows late in the third. Maybe, a little later, in the flying gloves of Ben O'Connor (not a noted fighter) as he tried to do the same (and took a beating), or the tireless skating of Danny Stewart. Or, maybe, if you're the type of fan obsessed by stats, it came in the nice backhand drag-and-roof shot as Barrie Moore scored the Blaze's second when you could have perfectly forgiven them for playing out the clock.

    Or perhaps it came much later, in the shape of a quiet conversation in the corner of a pub lounge. Speaking with several of the Blaze team who had been receiving a fair bit of stick (some of the harshest, I admit, from me) thess phrases stood out in the midst of much discussion of whether blogs, forums etc and the stuff written on it affects the players stood out).

    "You know what? We read some of that stuff, and we laugh."

    "They may think they're being harsh, but far worse is said in the locker room every single week. Why should we care-most of them know nothing about the game anyway"

    "We know what we're doing wrong-why should we get pissed off by people who don't know the game thinking they do too?"

    Doubtless those fans of the "we pay your wages" brigade will now be spitting feathers in disbelief. However, to my eyes, it shows the kind of spirit which everyone thinks has been lacking...maybe these players believe that they are doing the right thing, and eventually it'll come good.

    And if this is a reflection of the attitude of hockey teams everywhere, then maybe, just maybe, there's never as much to worry about as people think. And maybe, contrary to what some are saying, and the evidence of our own eyes last night the title race isn't over yet...

    Keep looking over your shoulders, Sheffield...there's four teams who don't believe you've won the title yet...

    Wednesday 14 January 2009

    Midweek Musings...

    This is another very short one, given that the games midweek were previewed yesterday.

    Let's begin with a definition...

    Abject (adjective): utterly hopeless, miserable, humiliating, or wretched

    That, by all accounts, seems to sum up the game in Dundonald last night, at least from a Coventry persepctive. A 5-1loss doesn't mean Blaze are already out of the competition, but it does mean that there will likely be a half-empty Skydome this evening at best as many decide not to waste their money on a third-tier competition that their team appear to already be on the way out of.

    For the record-goals...

    Belfast:
    Cheverie PPG Assist: Thornton
    Deniset SHG
    Thornton Assist: Burgoyne
    Burgoyne PPG Assist: Awada
    Cheverie

    Blaze:
    Carlson-asssists Weaver and Moore

    I pinpointed special teams as one of the keys to this tie, mentioned the dangers Belfast pose even on the PK, and lo and behold, three of Belfast's five come through such a route. By accounts from Belfast fans at the game, the Giants were better in every respect-you have to wonder whether some on the Blaze bench had already given up on the tie after the fourth Belfast goal, swapping Perras for Fone in nets. We'll be able to tell for sure tonight if Fone starts...

    One thing is for sure-there'll have to be a hell of a comeback tonight if Blaze are to reach the semi-finals....

    Come on, Belfast. Feel the Rush!: After last night's game it was announced that, with Andrew Martin still absent and taking a long time to recover, the Giants have brought in reinforcements, signing Jason Rushton from the LNAH.

    Hello.

    This guy can flat-out play, and is a little screwy in the head as well...combine him with Bobby Robins and, to a lesser extent, Malcolm MacMillan, and suddenly the Giants look a lot more threatening on the physical side of things going into the run-in. If nothing else, he'll be entertaining...

    Aye well-that's me off to prepare for Mission Impossible (Skydome Edition) this evening...keep keeping your eye on the puck...

    Tuesday 13 January 2009

    One Minute Preview: Knockout Cup Edition

    Today is but a short one, and will be mostly taken up previewing the midweek action between Coventry and Belfast as they meet in the first of two cup-competition battles...this one being the KO Cup appetiser for the Challenge Cup semi later this month. Tonight sees the Giants in their home from home at Dundonald for the first leg, with the return at the Skydome tomorrow.

    So, let's break this thing down, MC Hammer style:

    Goalies: Belfast will have Nathan Craze in goal, after a promise they made when signing him that these games at least would see him as guaranteed starter. Meanwhile, Coventry will, naturally, have starter JF Perras in net. In theory, this import-v-youngish-Brit battle is a mismatch. However, Craze has acquitted himself well thus far, earning himself a reasonable 89.8% save percentage in his eight games played. However, you have to give the edge to the Blaze on this one...

    Defence: The simple answer may surprise some. On statistics alone, the Coventry defence is better. Over the season (League and CC Cup games) the much-maligned Blaze unit has conceded ten less goals than that of the Giants. However, that balances itself out slightly when you consider that the Giants have been playing in front of two goalies whose save percentages are both around 89%, compared to Perras' of 91.8. Certainly when it comes to going forward, the Giants are more effective, with Belfast having provided one more goal and two more assists from the blue-line when comparing the current players on each unit. This picture is skewed even more when you consider that, for the Blaze, over half of the goals and assists of the unit as a whole have been provided by one player in Jon Weaver-if the Giants can close him down, then the Blaze d suddenly looks all but toothless going forward. Edge Giants.

    Forwards: This is where it gets really tricky. The Giants have four forwards who have scored over fifteen goals, and three of those are over twenty. Goals are spread evenly throughout the forward lines, The equivalent figures for the Blaze? Three and one. The Giants have also scored five more goals as a team, with players like Mlacolm MacMillan not soring many but setting up a fair few (5+32). It's just about even, this one...and could well be decided by which unit is more productive as a whole. Even.

    Other factors: The powerplay units and their penalty-killing counterparts could be crucial. Belfast, mainly thanks to the efforts of Paul Deniset, lead the league in shorthanded goals, with the Blaze close behind (10 and 9 respectively), and also outscore the Blaze on the powerplay, 46 to 41. The Blaze desperately need to stay out of the box, as the Giants have had thirteen of their players score a powerplay goal this season to Blaze's ten-a true reflection of their scoring threat with a man extra. With one of the most lethal finishers in the league facing them on the penalty-kill also in Paul Deniset, the PP unit can't afford some of the mistakes that the Blaze PP unit has always had a history of making-particularly with its seeming one-dimensional tactic at times of "pass to point (preferably Weaver), shoot into traffic, repeat" of this season.

    Quite frankly, this is a meeting which is impossible to predict. Results between the two sides so far this season suggest that the Giants have the edge, winning two of the three meetings this season including the only one at the Skydome so far. However, that's to be expected with the teams so evenly matched-I foresee two games of nip-and-tuck hockey, with both sides needing to exploit any opportunities they have to the full. I can see both teams winning their home legs...but one thing's for sure-we're in for two tense nights of hockey...

    Monday 12 January 2009

    Double Overtime, Janiuary 12th...

    You know the drill by now, so let's get on with it, shall we? Starting with a nice, juicy rumour...

    His name fits. But whether the Coventry crowd will love him remains to be seen: After all, Dominic D'Amour hasn't even signed yet. Rumours floating around the Skydome on Saturday, however, have him as a target to replace the departing Jon Coleman next week. Certainly, he's a big lad who's played at a high level despite being only 24...but is another steady defensive d-man really an upgrade on what Blaze currently have, or will it be much more of the same? We shall see. After all, one thing this season has proved is that previous stats mean very little. How do I reckon this? Well, this guy is fifth top-scoring d-man in the league, and look at his form at Basingstoke last season and before that. I rest my case.

    This is getting silly now...: Andrei Rajcak is the latest player to leave Edinburgh, joining an illustrious list this season (Iain Bowie, David Nimmo, Jeff Hutchins, Shawn Germain, Michel Robinson, and John Dolan). The Capitals appear to be seeing if it's possible to end a season having completely replaced at least one whole line, perhaps more than once. However, up until now their stand-out player by some distance, Mark Hurtubise (who has been involved in over half of the Caps goals this season, and is third in the league in points, ahead of far more heralded players like Carlson, Calder, Tessier et al) has stayed loyal. If he leaves or suffers a season-ending injury, then I reckon that to all intents and purposes, the Caps are done...I'd be surprised if he isn't one of the hot properties this coming summer...

    There you go...that's the off-ice news out of the way...

    Aye well, Ryan, at least you can point to the scoreboa...oh, bugger: Sheffield finally faced Cardiff for Steelers v Devils III: Finnerty's Revenge on Saturday...a game that had been building for months after his infamous threats to Jay Latulippe after a bad-tempered meeting in South Wales. This was the first time Cardiff had returned to Sheffield since then, so naturally everyone was waiting for Finnerty to go out there and do his thing as he promised...

    Nothing. Not even a minor penalty. In fact, Finnerty was quiet for a lot of the game.

    OK, you say-clearly he'd been ordered to. It shows on the scoreboard cause the Steelers won, right?

    Final score-Sheffield 3, Cardiff 4, after penalties. And, just to twist the knife, Sheffield's favourite Devil, Brad Voth, put home the winning shot.

    Sorry, Finner...

    In fairness, though, the Steelers always play hard for the full sixty minutes: Trouble was, this weekend both games went into overtime at the Hallam Arena. And, after there overtime win in Coventry last weekend, it was thus something of a surprise to see both Cardiff and Belfast take the hnours in sudden death. Although much welcomed by the rest of the league, given that the Steelers have looked unstoppable in recent weeks.

    Meanwhile, down in the doldrums: Basingstoke can't buy themselves a win at the moment. After going down by the odd goal at home to Edinburgh to leave themselves firmly rooted to the bottom, they were taken out to the woodshed and given an 8-0 beating by a resurgent Cardiff in South Wales, effectively ensuring there will be no return to the KO Cup final for them this season. Some would say that the mere continuing existence of a team in Basingstoke is cause for celebration, but many more weekends like this and the rumours of a drop to the EPL which have been floating around for at least the last two seasons will just get louder and louder.

    And one rung up the ladder: Hull had another weekend to forget. After being summarily disposed of by Coventry at the Skydome (yes, the game was as one-sided as the 7-1 score suggests) they managed to throw away a 3-1 lead in eight minutes at home as Newcastle came back to force overtime, with David Longstaff sealing the win.

    Of course, it would help if they had a (living) coach on the bench: Come on, Stingrays. Admit it. You just stick a mannequin dressed as Rick Strachan on the bench as some sort of joke no-one else understands....ha-ruddy-h...

    What? You mean that unmoving lump in a brown jacket behind your bench is the REAL Rick Strachan? Is there some sort of "Weekend at Bernie's" thing going on here? Cause on Saturday, I didn't see him move a muscle, even when the Stingrays called a timeout...

    Terror comes to Hull...it's "Night of the Living Dead Hockey Coach"!

    A little is fast becoming a lot of trouble....: Manchester lost twice this weekend, by a goal each time...something which seems to be becoming a habit. Of the seventeen games they've now lost this season, ten have been lost by one, or two-thirds. You get the feeling that, had even two or three of those gone the other way, we'd be talking about the Phoenix as legitimate title challengers rather than a team that is perhaps one more piece short of being a genuine powerhouse in this league. That said, a cup or even a playoff victory is still very much a possibility, what with the Phoenix still being in the Challenge Cup (and having arguably the easier semi against Basingstoke) and one of the stingiest defences in the league.

    Job done: That's all you can really say about Nottingham this weekend. They went up to Edinburgh on Sunday and seemingly brushed the Capitals aside with ease, only allowing 16 shots as they won 6-0 in a game which was effectively over after ten minutes as the Panthers went 3-0 up.
    Oh yes, and Michel Robinson would likely have taken immense pleasure in the win after his nightmare experience up in Scotland, too.

    Back in the game!: Belfast, meanwhile, have been quietly making some serious progress in the past week or two, and are now settled in third after pulling out two excellent wins against Sheffield in the past five days, despite still missing Andrew Martin. Given that their next two games are against another resurgent side in Coventry this week, the top two clubs (Nottingham and Sheffield) will doubtless be watching the battle with interest as they attempt to gauge which one is likely to be the bigger threat to their positions at the top of the heap.

    How soon they forget: Coventry win twice, and suddenly all is well at the Skydome again. Now, in fairness, the Hull performance was very calm, very professional, and there wasn't a player that played badly. Sunday in Manchester was the same. However, given the fact that most in Coventry now accept that there are still some "issues" with the Blaze this season, it's surprising that suddenly all appears to be sweetness and light again...

    Meanwhile, in the frozen North: Newcastle Vipers, four more points. There appears to be no sign of the Hutchins/Courtenay effect slacking off. Most interesting tidbit out of Newcastle in the past few days though, has been this from Chris McAllister.

    First off, anyone who plays with a broken bone in his foot is a braver man than most. And McAllister is a big lad, to put it mildly. However, given that this season he's been conspicuously absent whenever the rough-stuff has kicked off in games against the Blaze...which it has a few times, I remain somewhat sceptical of his claim. Maybe he could make it if he was in there when things got a bit testy and everyone avoided his eye, but it must be said I haven't really seen him asserting himself either with hits or rough stuff..and it's not like he hasn't been given the chance.

    Still-I await Saturday with interest now...

    And that's your weekend reviewed...

    Friday 9 January 2009

    Round the Rinks, Jan 9th...

    Straight in today..flying south to north and back again on our weekly lightning trip round the EIHL...


    Saturday

    We start in Hampshire, for Basingstoke v Edinburgh,a game which will never win any prizes in the glamour stakes, but will be close and more intense than a junkyard dog with piles, since when you're scrapping down in the mud at the bottom of the pile, things often get dirty quickly...and, with the possible exception of mud-wrestling at the Playboy mansion, are never pretty. And cuddly bunnies are in short supply in both Hampshire and Scotland this season...

    Coventry v Hull:
    After last week's massive clash, this game is the perfect antidote as the Blaze seek to get back on a winning run-they've been wobbling recently and, although these games don't have the razzmatazz of the "big-boys" for the fans at the Skydome, the team very much need a win after a barren spell-if only to restore confidence and stop the murmurs of disquiet aimed at several players hitherto considered "fan favourites". Personally, I can't see the points of those whinging now (with the exception of the defensive issues) so it'll be interesting to see how the team react. On the Stingray side, undermanned as they are, a point will be the realistic target, but wins have come with less.

    Sheffield v Cardiff,
    : If you think that all the bad feeling has been quelled by the EIHL's desperate attempts to clean up the mess from the time these last two teams met (for which Andrew Sharp is still paying) then think again. You clearly also believe that Paris Hilton has, as she claims, only shared intimate time with "a couple of men" The time has now come for Ryan Finnerty to make good his infamous boasts in the Sheffield Star (this being the game he claimed would see Jay Latulippe beaten up in revenge for his "sucker punch" on the Steelers number ten back in the early season). Apart from that, there's the little matter of maintaining their title charge to consider too. If the Devils have any sense, then soaking up the punishment and taking revenge on the ensuing powerplays could be the key to victory for them...

    Newcastle v Manchester
    : Power v speed. Rapier v club. Gorilla vs a pack of mongooses (yes, that is the correct plural). Pick any image of "big and powerful v smaller and quicker" and it sums up this game to a T. Which will win out up in the North-East? Traditionally, this is an area where hard work and a willingness to get mucky are appreciated over being very quick, very skilled and...well, even a bit showy at times. At the MRA, the Vipers are a tricky proposition, with Manchester only winning by one the last time they went up there. Andrew Verner will be the key for the home side as they batter at the gates of Stephen Murphy's goal, and attempt to keep up with the burning speed and guile of the flying Phoenix...

    Sunday


    Edinburgh v Nottingham
    : This game is a banana-skin waiting to happen for the Panthers-the Capitals are far, far more comfortable in Murrayfield than away from it, and at times the Panthers have looked, for their part, unsure of themselves at times while away from the NIC. With injuries and new players to settle, the Midlanders need to put in a professional and calm performance if they're not to be shocked by the Scots.

    Hull v Newcastle
    : It's an "ugly duckling" match, this. No-one likes to watch it that much, it will never be pretty at first glance, and compared to some of its companions, its shabbiness and lack of obvious attraction makes it stand out horribly. But, like Hans Christian Andersen's feathered hero, there is the chance that, one day, it'll surprise us all with just how good to look at it is.

    And that's why people keep turning up. This game becoming a classic is far less certain than a cygnet becoming a swan, but there's always the chance.

    Manchester v Coventry
    : A game that, but for the termination of my employment this week, would have seen me travelling north almost forthing at the mouth in anticipation, this game could be bigger for both teams than it looks. Manchester win, and the wind of change currently blowing at the top of the EIHL may start to gust a little more strongly. Coventry win, as they have done in all the meetings up until now, and maybe belief will begin to flood back into the Skydome side. Either way, if any of the preceding meetings between these two are owt to go by, this game will simply not disappoibt if you like close, quick and end-to-end tussles. It could even qualify for "highlight of the weekend"....

    Sheffield v Belfast
    ...unless this meeting finally delivers the feast of attacking hockey the rosters promise. With a large Hallam crowd and Todd Kelman attempting to stoke up the atmosphere with his hope that "every Steeler wakes up bruised from head to toe on Sunday morning" (after playing Cardiff the night before), the passion is there. The skill is there. Question is, will the excitement finally go all the way to eleven?

    Cardiff v Basingstoke
    : And so the "friendly" rivalry resumes for another on-ice skirmish, this time on Welsh territory. Bison v Devils has, this season, been a very blood-and-thunder type of encounter, with gloves seemingly dropping often and more handbags found here than in than a Louis Vuitton factory shop. And Sunday night should be no exception.

    There you go-that's the weekend previewed...only three hours late, too.

    Friday Quickie...

    Morning all,

    I should have Round the Rinks up for mid-afternoon or early evening today, so by the time you all come home from work, college or wherever, a nice juicy weekend preview should await...

    Thursday 8 January 2009

    Thursday Thoughts

    Morning all,

    Apologies for the lack of updates so far this week-the credit crunch has hit home at Breakaway HQ, as I've just been made redundant, so have been engaged in sorting myself out a new job as soon as possible. However, I have been keeping an eye on British hockey happenings and so here's a quick reflection, including something of a rant about face-cages....

    More new blood? Talk about ringing the changes for the New Year: With Johan Molin concussed, Nottingham have move quickly to cover his absence, bringing in Slovenian international utility player Jurij Golicic from Jesenice, who weirdly, play in the Austrian league. Notable for his fairly impressive stats thus far, as well as being possibly one of the highest-scoring Elite League player names in Scrabble terms ever) he joins ex-Blaze d-man Corey Leclair on the revamped Panthers blueline. Both players made their debut tonight in Nottingham's 7-3 win against Basingstoke, with Leclair scoring and both getting cautiously optimistic reviews on the Cage Forum. Speculation is now rie on who will be cut to make way once Molin is fit, with Rumun Ndur and Brendan Cook the consensus picks...

    Speaking of being in the firing line: There are rumours floating around in Coventry that JF Perras is being eased out of the door at the Skydome due to "not being as good as hoped"-he's coming in for some stick from the home crowd despite having one of the best save-percentages in the league. This is one I just can't work out...Perras has been one of the better imports in Coventry this season, but is automatically getting blamed by many for letting in "soft" goals. Have they forgotten defence is a team effort?

    It's just one seamless link after another today...: And, speaking of that Blaze defence, it will shortly have a new member, according to an announcement on BBC CWR's Face-Off show tonight. Jon Coleman has taken up a contract offer in Europe and will be off in mid-January...no clues as yet to his replacement, although a nasty rumour says it could be Rumun Ndur. Thanks, but...no, just, no. Great guy and all, but...no. This game will of course be available for your viewing pleasure at www.giantslive.tv should you wish-click on the link for all the details...


    A philosophical question for a Thursday: "Players with cages are untouchable. Discuss"
    A debate has been raging recently on THF about whether youngsters playing in cages should be treated with kid gloves in the EIHL, following an incident in Basingstoke at the weekend in which Ben Davies was hit hard but cleanly by Kurt Reynolds, sparking a melee. It seems to be the case often that face-cage players are protected far more diligently by their team-mates when it comes to being hit, with retribution often being sought for what, were it on an "older" player would just be shrugged off.

    This is wrong. I accept that there is always the danger of some 16-year-old being drilled and injured by the opposition's monster import forward, but, on the other hand, if they can't take the hits in the first place, or will expect to be treated differently or hit less hard than their team-mates due to age, should they really be on the ice with the big-boys in the first place? Your thoughts, please...

    Thirty Second Preview: Belfast v Cardiff:


    his game will of course be available for your viewing pleasure at www.giantslive.tv should you wish-click on the link for all the details...

    And an intriguing watch it will be. With the Devils now almost back to full strength and the Giants needing to build some momentum for a late charge, both teams will want the points badly. After the Giants winning by the odd goal in Cardiff on Sunday, there is clearly very little between the two sides at the moment...this, more than most, is a game in which the top players will need support from their less-spectacular team-mates in order to take away the win. I reckon the Giants will just about have enough to beat their Welsh rivals, but it will be nerve-shreddingly close...

    And that's your Thursday Thoughts...

    Monday 5 January 2009

    Double Overtime, Jan 5th...

    First one of 2009, and naturally, we begin with a little music for our first item...

    "It's the little sparks that fly and then land like dynamite, It's just, it's just the little things, pure incidentals..."

    Alisha's Attic "The Incidentals"


    Let's get Coventry v Sheffield out of the way early. This was, as predicted in Round the Rinks, an absolute barn-burning, siren-wailing stormer of a game, with two moments of real controversy, a goal-judge with an itchy trigger finger and won in dramatic fashion by a sublime piece of finishing from Jeff Legue.


    It was also a game of little things. Inches, sometimes less. Like, for example, the inch-or-so thickness of tape on the end of Jody Lehman's stick handle which meant that Jon Coleman's absolute howitzer of an overtime shot, after he was given space from the sublime passing from the Blaze powerplay unit, steepened its rise by a fraction and went high over the bar and not into the roof of the net, where it had been heading. Or, thirty seconds later, the margin by which a desperate dive from Jon Weaver to keep the puck in the zone deflected its path out, perfectly onto the stick of an onrushing Legue, who duly did his thing thanks to the ice-water flowing in his veins.


    There's more. The difference in distance the puck had travelled which meant that Scott Kelman's deflection of a centering pass went zinging into the inside of the post and out rather than into the side of the net, despite the goal-judge telling all and sundry that it was in (however, given that in the third he put his light on when the puck had barely entered Lehman's crease, never mind the net, his judgement this night was, at best, questionable)
    The margin by which Lehman overslid across his goal to knock the net off as Adam Calder gleefully banged what he thought was the equalizer into the empty net, causing it to be washed out. The margins by which Lehman somehow deflected shot after shot wide late in the third as Blaze made the league-leading defence look completely lost, playing with verve and passion which had been sadly lacking in Nottingham the night before.

    The distance under the bar into which Scott Basiuk placed his bullet slapshot to put the Steelers 2-0 up after only four minutes.

    And, ultimately, the distance between the bottom of JF Perras' pads and the puck as it was slid under him beautifully for the Steelers' overtime winner. A small gap, but it could have huge ramifications on the title ambitions of three clubs.


    Home is where the heart is: If you doubt the importance of playing on home ice to teams in the EIHL, then this weekend should, once and for all, have settled it. Particularly if you were in Nottingham on Saturday to see the same Blaze team which did themselves and the game proud on Sunday (aided massively, it has to be said, by a superb Steelers road performance) then the Panthers playing with as much drive and pomp as their Midlands rivals have become known for, roared on by the NIC crowd, would have done it.
    Failing that, how about the Steelers so nearly throwing it away against Hull before dragging out an overtime win in a dress rehearsal of their game at the Skydome the following night, or Belfast outlasting a determined effort from Manchester? Both teams winning their home legs of the KO Cup semi before Newcastle edged out Edinburgh on penalties?

    Being a cynical sort of fan, I often doubt the whole "fans can be the sixth man" rhetoric trotted out before every big game. Just occasionally, though, you wonder whether the cliché merchants might not have a point.

    Wince of the Week: You know that "inches" theme earlier? Well, it seemed Danny Stewart was inches from doing himself a serious mischief at one point on his comeback weekend. Some players would ease themselves back into the game, possibly not go in quite as hard on a check or two...not the Blaze's "little ball of hate" (if you object to me calling him little, then look up the reference by Youtubing Pat Verbeek). Trouble was, it nearly cost him dearly when he sought to make Rod Sarich better acquainted with the Skydome plexi and lost an edge as Sarich moved...cue a sickenng thump as he flew, horizontal in mid air and face-first, into the boards where the Steeler had been a second before. As fans nearby leant over expecting to see a crumpled heap on the ice, he was already up and heading back toward the play...
    Ease your way back in? That's for cowards...:)

    And by the way...Manchester 4, Nottingham 2. Up to fifth, three points behind the top four and on something of a run. Just saying...

    Obligatory Stingrays mention: Three point weekend, including a point in Sheffield? Maybe the New Year has rung in a new run on Humberside...

    Now, if only the "Chaventry" and "Squeelers" stuff worked as well: Has anyone else noticed that since the whole Team Hollywood affair, the Panthers appear to be back to the team everyone thought they'd be at the start of the season? Can someone arrange for an opposition coach to mention "Chaventry" in a press-release, please?

    Petty name-calling. Motivation at its best....

    Much more, and they'll be calling them the Shawshank Panthers: Corey Neilson has clearly been encouraged by the public redemption going on in his team's goal at the moment, as he signs Corey Leclair to be his next reclamation project after the American was released by Coventry. Given that Panthers fans were giving the same negative feedback about Jon Coleman when he went the other way, and given that that particular American d-man has now become something of a fan favourite at his new club, Neilson will be hoping lightning strikes a third time in this season's EIHL...

    Newsflash: Anglo-Welsh relations "tense" after weekend: Basingstoke and Cardiff don't like each other that much, it seems. Another incident-packed game at the Silverdome, including a six-man brawl late in the game, meant that they managed to break a combined total of 200 penalty minutes...can't they just be friends?
    On second thoughts-it's more fun this way.

    And there you go-that's your weekend reviewed...

    Monday Quickie

    In what is fast becoming a Monday tradition...just letting you all know that Double Overtime is in the process of being written and should be up for seven or so...

    Friday 2 January 2009

    Round the Rinks, January 3rd

    I swear these Fridays seem to come around quicker and quicker as the season passes...we'll get into our weekly trip up and down the country in a moment, but first of all...

    He may be a big, ugly sod on the ice, but off it...: it appears Doug MacIver is a little different. Here's a nice story from the Western Mail about the Cardiff enforcer and his fiancée giving up part of their Christmas Day to visit the wards of Cardiff Children's Hospital after he asked if he could do so...

    Opposition fans will still likely hate him with a passion, but quite frankly, there's nothing you can say to him but "fair play" for this...well done, ya big lug...

    There we are then...with that out of the way, let's look forward to a bumper weekend in the Elite League which sees all ten teams in action twice...something of a rarity so far this season...

    Double-headers
    The only double-header thie weekend sees the league's two northernmost teams face off home and away, in Newcastle on Saturday and Edinburgh on Sunday. After their comeback win against Hull on the Great Capital Skate on Tuesday, Edinburgh will need to carry that momentum into two tricky games against a Vipers side who, finally, are showing some signs of consistency. However, after losing to Nottingham on Tuesday the Tynesiders will no doubt be looking at these two games as a way to get back onto the winning trail in the least difficult way possible (going purely by league position). Both teams need the points desperately, so there will be no quarter given or asked in either game...

    Saturday
    Going from South to North this time round....

    We start in Hampshire for Basingstoke v Cardiff, a game that will see the return to the ice of Mike Prpich for the Devils, as well as Brad Voth recovered from an injury he's been carrying recently. Both players are huge returnees for the Devils, with Prpich being one of their major offensive threats and Voth being...well, Brad Voth. The Bison, on the other hand, aren't missing any of the players they've managed to retain on their roster up to now...however, there is a doubt over Kevin Reiter. This means that you have to back the Devils in this one...

    Travelling north we see the resumption of one of the nastiest little rivalries in the league (at least this season)-Nottingham v Sheffield may get all the press but Nottingham v Coventry has had more than its fair share of flashpoints recently with the ongoing Team Hollywood fiasco and a game that was somewhat tasty to say the least just before Christmas. Panthers won that game 4-0, and will fancy their chances of repeating this time round, given the problems seemingly existing in the Blaze dressing at the moment. It could be a stormer...

    Travelling further north still, we arrive in Sheffield, as the Steelers take on The Stingrays in the Yorkshire derby, as Sheffield face Hull. This is a game the Steelers will need to win going intyo Sunday's clash with Coventry (of which more shortly) and with the Stingrays still suffering from injury problems, their fans will expect them to do so quite comfortably. Whether they will, though, is another matter.

    And finally, we turn sharp left and travel across the Irish Sea for arguably the highlight game of the night-Belfast v Manchester (which of course you can see courtesy of www.giantslive.tv if you wish). Two of the pretenders to the EIHL throne clash in a meeting which has seen the Phoenix win at the Odyssey already this season, but with the Giants now returning to full strength both sides will fancy their chances of the two points, and both are equally capable of getting them, too. I can see this one only being decided in overtime...

    Sunday

    Going back from North to South, now, and having already dealt with the second of the Edinburgh/Newcastle double-headers, we start on Humberside as Hull face Basingstoke in a meeting of two of the league's basement clubs. It's fair to say that this game is definitely not the main attraction of the weekend, but both sides desperately need the points in the chase for the last playoff place and the mad scramble for position down there, so if you are up on Humberside, you should be served fayre that isn't the most polished but not lacking in flavour for all that...

    Travelling south, we come to Altrincham for Manchester v Nottingham-a game which as recently as last season may not have merited more than a quick look to see if the Panthers could arrest their traditional January slump. How times have changed. This season, this is a clash between two of the league's top sides as they battle for position behind the top spot. Both sides will be fully aware of the threat posed by the other at this stage in the season, and with both teams more comfortable when they try and take the game to the opposition, the goalies could be in for a busy night at both ends,

    Onward and downward to the Skydome for a crucial game in deciding, if not the ultimate destiny of the league title, at least who's in the driving seat. Coventry take on Sheffield in first v third. This is a weekend in which the Blaze simply have to perform or risk slipping back into the mire of mid-table, as they face both of the teams above them, with Sheffield being arguably the slightly trickier opponent thanks to being a more rounded team than Nottingham, who they face the night before. The Steelers, meanwhile, will be hoping for two points to drive an early nail into the coffin of the Blaze's title hopes and at the same time maintain the gap between themselves and Nottingham. It should be a storming game.

    Finally, we hed West for Cardiff v Belfast. This is another game crucial for both teams if they want to haul themselves out of the mid-table quicksand and get themselves back in touch with the top four-and quite frankly could go either way on Cardiff's small, confined rink, so different to the wide-open spaces of the Odyssey.

    There you go-that's your weekend preview-keep keeping your eye on the puck...

    Technical Hitch

    Morning all...

    Just a quick one to let you know I hope to have this week's Round the Rinks up around lunchtime...my computer is continuing to play up and the connection is a little patchy...it shall be up in plenty of time for the weekend though...hopefully around 1pm...