Wednesday, January 21, 2009

State of Nassau Coliseum feature for Yahoo! Sports

Islanders need a new home

UNIONDALE, N.Y. – It is New Year’s Eve. In reality, it could be most days.


The arena is slightly yellowed, the way old newspapers look over time. It stands in the background of a mostly empty parking lot that will soon freeze over. Inside, there are old pictures, exhibits and poster-sized press clippings lining the concourse. They honor perhaps the least remembered dynasty in modern sports history.


Walk out of any of the tunnels and you’ll see pockets of empty seats as two teams complete their pregame warm-ups on the ice below.


Welcome to a New York Islanders’ game day at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. Hosting the Florida Panthers on this day, the Islanders would record a 4-2 holiday matinee triumph, only their second win in the month.


The Coliseum is the third-oldest actively used arena in the NHL, behind only Pittsburgh’s Mellon Arena (opened in 1961) and New York’s Madison Square Garden (opened in 1968). The Isles’ lease expires in 2015.


Time has not been kind to what was the nexus of the hockey universe. Modern when first opened in 1972, the Coliseum is a decaying relic; Betamax in a DVR world.


“This team needs a new arena,” NHL commissioner Gary Bettman told reporters during a recent visit. “My hope and expectation is that they’re going to get it. The focus is not about threats or what could happen. It’s not that I’m denying it. I’m not confirming it. All we’re thinking about is ‘How does this team get their new arena as quickly as possible?’ ”


To that end, Islanders owner Charles Wang and Scott Rechler, the CEO of Long Island-based real estate corporation RexCorp, submitted a bid to Nassau County to develop the land surrounding the Coliseum.


The so-called Lighthouse Project envisions a renovated and modernized Coliseum attached to a convention center, a sports and entertainment facility, a minor league baseball park, 2,300 new housing residences, two hotels (a brand new five-star hotel and the existing Long Island Marriott, which recently underwent a $21 million renovation), business offices, shopping and dining, and a landscaped park.


“The Coliseum represents about 10 percent of the overall $4 billion project. The Coliseum will be transformed where it will have a facelift externally and internally. It will be virtually a new Coliseum,” explained Paul Lancey, the senior vice president of marketing and communications for the Lighthouse Project.


“[The project is important] to stay competitive on an experience platform [and] we don’t have the technology in the building for lightshows and sound systems, and that would be part of the complete renovation of the Coliseum; so we can support new technologies and attract concerts and events [such as the] NCAAs,” he added.


Nassau County accepted the Lighthouse plan in January 2007.


“I would say this is the first step to implementing what new suburbia looks like,” chief deputy county executive Marilyn Gottlieb said. “We have the old suburban model from 60 years ago and that was great. But what people want, what the economy has created, we need to look at a change or a refinement of the old suburbia to something we call new suburbia.


“This is going to be a tremendous jump start to the economy in Nassau County,” Gottlieb added. “That’s one of the reasons we are so very supportive of the project and having it move forward; aside from being able to take this parcel, this huge 77-acre parking lot and turn it into productive use.”


Most notable is that the project will be privately financed. Nassau County residents pay on average $7,726 in real estate tax – second highest in the nation – so any plan that would call for an increase in taxes would probably be met with virulent opposition.


“We’re not asking taxpayers to pay for it,” Gottlieb said. “The cost would be borne by the developer. The basic concept we had [was that] the person who is going to make the profit is going to pay for it.”


So there is a privately financed development plan that was accepted by a county government. It would seem as if there is nothing to hold up a groundbreaking and redevelopment.


Therein lies the rub. The Town of Hempstead, the municipality in which Nassau Coliseum is encompassed, received the Lighthouse Project’s rezoning application in November of 2007. Fourteen months later, the Town of Hempstead is still investigating possible multiple zoning and environmental issues tied into the developmental plan.


Perhaps that will cause the Islanders to look for a way off of Long Island.


Cities such as Hamilton, Ont., Hartford, Las Vegas, Portland and Kansas City have all expressed interest in having an NHL franchise.


Gottlieb said that the Lighthouse Project would turn the Coliseum area into a “social and economic hub.” Along with drawing concerts and events, the plan anticipates creating close to 70,000 jobs. In the nation’s current economic state, that may be most significant domino effect of the Lighthouse Project.


“I do believe it’s a very important project and everyone understands that,” Gottlieb said.


During the Jan. 15 Bruins-Islanders game, it was announced that the Islanders would play the Kings in a preseason game at Kansas City’s state-of-the-art Sprint Center. Opened in October 2007, the Sprint Center can seat 17,001 for hockey. Built and run by Los Angeles Kings owner Philip Anschutz’s AEG Worldwide Group, the Sprint Center could host an NHL franchise as soon as the 2009-2010 season according to an arena spokeswoman.


Is the September visit to Kansas City a case of the NHL perhaps checking out new digs? Is it the first home game for a relocated Islanders franchise? Or is it simply a preseason game in a potentially untapped market?


“As we travel from city to city during the season, we come across Islanders fans throughout the county,” Islanders’ general manager Garth Snow said in a statement last week. “I have had conversations with the Los Angeles Kings about and exhibition game and when they extended the invitation to play in Kansas City, I thought it provided a great opportunity to continue to grow our fan base.”



http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news;_ylt=AgV0LyZQobuyunEm6RsP5kN7vLYF?slug=ys-islanders012109&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Friday, January 02, 2009

1/2/09 Florida Panthers off day story for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

Who's No. 1? For Panthers goalies, nobody

By Denis Gorman

Special Correspondent

January 2, 2009

Consider Tomas Vokoun and Craig Anderson officially on alert.

"Real tired," Panthers coach Pete DeBoer replied when asked if he was tired of pulling his goalies, minutes after Wednesday's 4-2 loss to the host New York Islanders. "But we'll keep doing it until we get one of them to give us 60 minutes."

In three of the past four games, DeBoer has had to replace the starting goaltender, including Wednesday, when he pulled Vokoun for Anderson at the start of the third period. The Panthers are 0-4 in that stretch.

"I thought he was fine," DeBoer said of Anderson's play in the third, when he stopped 12 of 13 shots. "He'll go [Saturday] in Pittsburgh. Right now it seems neither of them can [take the No. 1 job].

"It's not all on them; other players have to help in certain situations, but I don't think it's any secret in this league [that] you need your goalie. It's such a big part of the game. We're a team with a tiny margin of error and we need our goaltending to give us a chance to win."

Vokoun, who is 8-11-1 with a 2.78 goals-against average, said: "It's hard mentally when something like this happens; when you go through a stretch like that. You don't want to give up a goal, don't want to get pulled. That's the worst for a goalie.

"[This] has never happened to me in my career and I'm sure Andy doesn't like it, either. It's not our decision. When you get pulled two out of three games, it's going to shake your confidence."

When asked whether he has talked to DeBoer, Vokoun said, "No. He's the coach; he makes the decisions that are right for the team. I haven't talked to him and I don't think anyone had talked to him about that. It's his decision."

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/hockey/panthers/sfl-flspanthers02sbjan02,0,3283006.story

Copyright © 2009, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Thursday, January 01, 2009

1/1/09 Florida Panthers-New York Islanders notebook for South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Panthers coach DeBoer sends message by sitting Zednik

By Denis Gorman

Special Correspondent

January 1, 2009

UNIONDALE, N.Y.



Coach Pete DeBoer made lineup changes Wednesday and expressed displeasure with the way several veterans have played.

Right wing Richard Zednik was scratched against the Islanders.

"We have guys in the organization [who are] capable of pushing people for jobs," DeBoer said before the 4-2 loss. "I haven't liked the way we've competed in the last three games. Zednik is a casualty tonight, but it could have been any number of guys. So hopefully the message is received that play hard or someone else will come in and do that.

"We need more from Richard Zednik. We need more from a lot of different guys: Nathan Horton, Cory Stillman. It's a small picture here; it's only three games. I know people will say don't panic, but we don't have that luxury. We can't let a three-game losing streak turn into six or seven. We have to fix it right away. I haven't liked what I've seen the past three games, so were going to make some changes."

Shawn Matthias, a recent call-up from AHL Rochester, was in the lineup and was minus-1

Defensemen Noah Welch and Cory Murphy were also scratched.

Toronto return
Wednesday's game was the start of a four-game trip for the Panthers. The Panthers will visit the Penguins on Saturday, the Canadiens on Sunday and end with the Maple Leafs on Tuesday.

The Leafs game will be a return for defenseman Bryan McCabe. McCabe spent seven years in Toronto before being traded along with a fourth-round pick in the 2010 to the Panthers for defenseman Mike Van Ryn.

McCabe was an integral part of the Leafs' playoff teams from 2001-04. However, after signing a five-year deal with Toronto in 2006, McCabe became the face of the Leafs' post-lockout failings.

Glove work
Goalie Craig Anderson robbed Islanders defenseman Mark Streit early in the third. Streit and rookie center Josh Bailey came in on a two-on-none. Bailey flipped a soft pass to Streit, who attempted an in-close wrist shot that Anderson gloved.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/hockey/panthers/sfl-flsppantnotes01sbjan01,0,3867110.story

1/1/09 Florida Panthers-New York Islanders game story for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Panthers drop 4th in a row

Goalie pulled during Panthers' 4th loss in row

By Denis Gorman

Special Correspondent

January 1, 2009

UNIONDALE, N.Y.

The Panthers played well early and late Wednesday afternoon, but couldn't match the Islanders in a game-changing second period.

"They came out and ramped their game up a notch," Panthers coach Pete DeBoer said after his team lost its fourth in a row, 4-2 to New York. "You knew they were going to start to play better and they did in the second, and we didn't answer the bell."

After an impressive first period, which included Brett McLean's goal at 18:24, the Panthers were nonexistent in the second. They allowed the league's worst team to score three goals in a span of 12 minutes.

Mike Comrie crashed the net and redirected a Kyle Okposo pass at 7:50 to tie the game. The goal energized the Islanders, who began to pressure the deflated Panthers. Nearly eight minutes after tying the game, Comrie scored on a power play to give the Islanders a 2-1 lead.

Sean Bergenheim completed the Islanders' second-period barrage by racing down the right wing and beating Vokoun glove side with 24 seconds left.

DeBoer lifted Vokoun for Craig Anderson to start the third period. Vokoun allowed three goals on 22 shots, but as DeBoer noted, it probably should have been four goals, if not for a phantom goaltender interference penalty on Jon Sim in the first.

"It was four goals on 20 shots," DeBoer said. "Even the first one that didn't count looked like it went in to me. That was reason enough."

DeBoer said Anderson would start Saturday in Pittsburgh.

Mark Streit added to the Islanders' lead with a power-play goal with 6:26 remaining.

Streit ripped a slap shot from above the left faceoff circle that Anderson did not see.

Nathan Horton's eighth of the season at 19:32 closed the scoring.