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Why I'll Still Watch NHL Hockey (and You'd Be Stupid Not To)

Posted: 01/07/2013 12:18 pm

Not surprisingly, fans are upset with the NHL. A bloated, unnecessary and ugly lockout, "a fight between millionaires and billionaires," kept fans from the game they love. "They don't care about us, the fans who buy tickets and overpriced beer," and other obvious, stupid messages were common. The 2004-05 lockout kind of felt to me like my high school darling breaking my heart, but then she got back together with me only to do it all again. Callous harpy! Am I a sucker for giving in to her twice?

No, because this isn't at all a good parallel. There is no personal connection between me and the NHL, just a throbbing love for the game they play. The league itself I view with cool detachment. I understand and accept that owners are just people making money off the game. They don't have to care about me or hockey, and they don't, and I'm fine with that. I don't care about them. Anyway, I was nearly totally indifferent to this lockout. It really surprised me. One or two Saturdays I felt a muted pang, wondered what it was, recognized it, and drank hockeyless beers with a smile nonetheless.

Now that I am older than the league's best players, I view them differently too. They aren't simply older Timbits players there for of their purity of heart. They are the best skaters, stick-handlers, shooters, and hockey visionaries in the world, and this won't change because of the lockout. I admire their abilities, not them. Those who put a celestial trust into the hearts and minds of strangers are incredibly naive, and ought to be disabused of the notion that players, nevermind owners, care about them. Do grown ups really feel this way?

We are not entitled to hockey. Hockey doesn't enter this world the way forest, mountains and rivers do. A lot of boring, legal framework stuff that I am completely and wilfully ignorant about needs to be there, and when there is a disagreement at this level, which seems to happen twice a decade, I do something else.

But the NHL is back now. Is it that the owners and players finally sympathize with the hearts of fans? Is it that they could no longer go without hockey, the game they love? No, maniac, of course not. I'm sure the players actually do love hockey, or did anyway. But the players have a profession and the owners have a lucrative hobby (some of them, not all).

I have grown out of regarding hockey players in supernatural terms, something especially easy to do when you're a Leaf fan. The lockout was undoubtedly stupid, but the fact remains that the most skilled players on Earth will get to play again, their skills not a bit diminished (maybe rusty) for the ugly lockout. If you loved hockey before, there's no reason why you won't love watching the same sport again. If you've gotten used to life without hockey, fair enough, but taking the lockout personally is the result of viewing your relationship to the game in unhealthy terms. Those who claim to take revenge on beloved hockey by ignoring it are in effect prolonging the lockout out of spite, and I suspect this crowd will tune in soon, their misplaced pride notwithstanding.

Hockey players are just strangers doing great (or horrible) stuff with a puck, and there is no gun to our head demanding we view. Love of NHL hockey, hockey played at its best, must not be contaminated by money, even if the latter is required for the former's existence. Now that it's over, I can finally get back to feeling heartbroken whenever our questionable goaltending and porous defence does its work. Lupul and Kessel are exciting. I hope Kulemin rises again (he is deserving), JVR is useful, and all Phaneuf's hard work improving the accuracy of his slapshot, hours of aiming carefully at the side of a barn, pays off. These are question marks that, however they turn out, I will watch get resolved.

So you all can remember the good times, here are Datsyuk highlights.

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Not surprisingly, fans are upset with the NHL. A bloated, unnecessary and ugly lockout, "a fight between millionaires and billionaires," kept fans from the game they love. "They don't care about us, t...
Not surprisingly, fans are upset with the NHL. A bloated, unnecessary and ugly lockout, "a fight between millionaires and billionaires," kept fans from the game they love. "They don't care about us, t...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Torontosaurous
05:08 AM on 01/08/2013
I'd be stupid to not watch grown men chasing a puck around ! The social relevance is staggering !
I can finally feel like I belong to something bigger then myself,something that really matters.yes,I'd be stupid not to put down my book and watch t.v.After all ,sport stars are true heros and deserve our admiration and money,and t.v. In general is responsible for bringing about the new renaissance !
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
JD Halperin
10:04 AM on 01/08/2013
Sorry, I'm taking about people who love hockey but are disillusioned after the strike, people for whom the economic reality has tainted their love of the game, even though this reality has been there all along.

If you don't like hockey, that's different! Continue reading!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Torontosaurous
08:40 PM on 01/08/2013
I guess I was responding to your headline.I sometimes forget that the authors of the articles read the comments.Sorry for the unnessary sarcasm.
03:21 PM on 01/07/2013
I can't wait for the first game this year, I will put on my jersey and grab a beer and I might even move the couch a little closer to the big screen.
02:14 PM on 01/07/2013
The league has a PR issue to resolve and there is a quick, simple, and neat solution.

Fire Gary Bettman immediately after the agreement is finalized. Do it quick and publicly throw him under the bus as being responsible for the unnecessary lockout. I'm not saying he is, just that it would be an easy scapegoat and that it would warm the hearts of all hockey fans.

Fire Gary Bettman and turn the page on this whole debacle.

Fire Gary Bettman and all is forgiven.
02:01 PM on 01/07/2013
I might not be back the first game, but I'll be back soon enough. It'd be silly not to take advantage of the discounts and free perks that will no doubt get doled to entice fans back.

I don't believe my actual team ownership was one of the ones prolonging the lockout and the GM definitely made no off-season contract signings so long and expensive only for the team to complain about in negotiations.

So I see no reason to penalize my team or the businesses in the community that rely on them. Sure I wanted the season to start in October. But here we are, and it's not October.