Wednesday, November 28, 2012

November 28, 2012, ECHL and Trenton Titans feature for the Associated Press


 

Amid lockout, ECHL provides hockey alternative

 



TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- While the NHL and its players remain engaged in a boardroom battle over dollars and cents, professional hockey is still being played across the United States.

Philadelphia, New York, and Washington, of course, are not hockey hotbeds these days. Los Angeles, Detroit and St. Louis aren't, either. But for towns like Toledo, Ohio, and Kalamazoo, Mich., and even here in the capital city of New Jersey, players are still walking through the tunnel and onto the ice to the delight of fans. The East Coast Hockey League may be a much smaller scale than the NHL, and the talent disparity is more than evident.

But say what you will about this lower-level minor league. At least, the games are still being held.

A few hours after the NHL announced the cancellation of games last week through Dec. 14 - including All-Star Weekend - the ECHL opened its doors for another night of ''good family entertainment'' on Friday. Those were the words of Trenton general manager Rich Lisk, as the Titans attempt to cash in on a two-state market raised on - and now starving for - NHL hockey.

But the Flyers, just down the road from the Titans and the parent organization of the team, and the Devils, the defending Eastern Conference champions, are nowhere to be seen these days. A charity game is being played by them here and there, sure. Some of them are renting ice on their own to practice, and others are even overseas on temporary pro contracts. But none of that helps the die-hard NHL fan over the long term.

That's where the ECHL comes in.

''It's very much a developmental league. You'll see young guys here,'' Lisk said prior to Friday night's 3-2 win over Evansville (Ind.). ''But the level of play has really jumped up.''

Once known as a ''goon league,'' the ECHL used to rely heavily on journeyman players, living out their final days on the ice by brawling with each other and pandering for the crowd. It was cheap shots and a cheap date, something that resembled the Federal League in the 1977 cult classic ''Slap Shot.''

But times have changed. While there is still fighting in the ECHL, the league is now much more of a developmental system for the NHL and its primary minor outfit, the American Hockey League. The ECHL is more analogous to Class AA baseball with 23 franchises tucked into mid-size cities throughout the nation.

''First and foremost, the talent level in the league has gone up tremendously,'' Lisk said. ''I would say there are 11-to-13 (former ECHL) guys that are under contract to the NHL, where normally we would have five or six. You see the numbers have jumped up. The level of play has definitely, definitely gone up.''

But how do you market that these days? Even without much competition for the hockey dollar, most of these ECHL cities are not thriving metropolises, and let's face it, the ECHL game is neither as fast nor as crisp as an NHL or even an AHL game. But there is action, there is atmosphere, and with a little cost-conscious creativity, the league is making it work.

''If you compare the first five (home) games of last year to the first five games of this year, we're up 15 percent,'' Lisk said. ''We're up 20 percent in season tickets. We're up to about 800 season tickets. My goal is to get it to a thousand by the end of this year.''

It's a distinct possibility. Without competition from the Flyers, Devils, and New York Rangers, the Titans are experiencing the best of both worlds. There are the true ECHL fans, the loyal bunch that will still be in the building after the lockout. And there are also the NHL fans, who Lisk believes are ''testing the waters.''

To attract the latter, the Titans have a promotion in which fans who own a ticket-package to any NHL team receive discounted tickets to all Trenton games. Also, ticket pricing is designed specifically for families during this time of economic struggle. Single-game tickets are priced between $15 and $30. Full-season ticket packages begin at $396 and top out at $936. The Titans' home rink, the Sun National Bank Center, seats 7,605 for hockey. They drew 3,687 Friday night.

''I'd like to get it back to where it was in 2005 where you had 5,500 fans every night,'' Lisk said, harkening back to another year in which an NHL lockout helped business.

The majority of ECHL games are played on weekends, which is a plus.

''The dates have really helped us out. This year we were able to manipulate the schedule a little bit better in our favor, so 25 of our 36 games are what we (call) Grade-A dates,'' Lisk said. ''When I look at a schedule, I want to go for Fridays and Saturdays.''

Schedules aside, though, Lisk knows the major reason for this year's gate receipts.

''(Our attendance) is up because of (the lockout),'' he said. ''It has helped us.''

Having players with an NHL future also helps, as well. Who wouldn't want to say - as a loyal hockey fan - that you had the chance to see some superstar in the league known as the ''E''?

''My team this year, we have three guys who are 20 years old,'' Lisk said. ''That would have been unheard of years ago. Now, it's much more skilled.''

The developmental plan is working. A number of NHL players spent time in the ECHL, including Colorado right wing P.A. Parenteau; Minnesota center Zenon Konopka; New Jersey goaltender Johan Hedberg; New York Islanders defenseman Mark Streit; New York Rangers defensemen Stu Bickel and Dan Girardi, as well as goaltender Martin Biron; Phoenix forward Paul Bissonette; Washington forward Matt Hendricks and goaltender Braden Holtby; and, of course, Los Angeles goaltender Jonathan Quick, who led the Kings to the Stanley Cup in June.

''That's everyone's goal,'' Titans captain Ray DiLauro said. ''The NHL.''

And because of the lockout, there are now NHL players getting work in the ''E.'' Washington right wing Joey Crabb, Columbus center Brandon Dubinsky, Montreal center Scott Gomez and Tampa Bay forward Nate Thompson all signed with the Alaska Aces, while San Jose left wing Ryan Clowe agreed to terms with the expansion San Francisco Bulls.

But there is a downside to those attractions. While the NHL players stay in game shape by being in the ECHL, there are players who get cut to make room for them. Those players lose ice time, and more importantly, paychecks.

''It's tough. It's hard. I understand (NHL players want to play at home), but guys come here for little money, and they're sitting at home,'' DiLauro said. ''It's a tough spot.''

Either way, the games - like the NHL lockout - roll on in the ''E.'' And it appears like the Titans, and the rest of the league, for that matter, are taking full advantage.


http://sports.yahoo.com/news/amid-lockout-echl-provides-hockey-221131078--nhl.html

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

November 27, 2012, New York Knicks-Brooklyn Nets regular season game story for Metro Newspaper in New York City


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Nets win OT thriller over Knicks in debut of city rivalry

 

 
DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK
 
Published: November 26, 2012 10:17 p.m.
Last modified: November 26, 2012 11:40 p.m.
                  Text size
 
The Nets told anyone who would listen that they were good. They proved it against the team they will be compared with for the remainder of the franchise’s history.

 
The Nets beat the Knicks 96-89 in overtime Monday night at the Barclays Center. The Nets improved to 9-3 while the Knicks are fell to 9-4. The teams are tied atop the Atlantic Division.

 
“We just came out and showed we were the better team,” Nets guard Joe Johnson said.

 
Brook Lopez led the Nets with 22 points and set season-highs with 11 rebounds and five blocks. Deron Williams and Gerald Wallace each scored 16 points. Williams also recorded a season-high in assists with 14. Jerry Stackhouse scored 14 points on 4-of-6 shooting in 22:13.

 
Carmelo Anthony led all scorers with 35 points. Tyson Chandler finished with 28 points and 10 rebounds, but no other Knicks player had more than eight points.

 
In his 50:03 of playing time, Anthony grabbed 13 rebounds and shot 11-for-25 from the field but missed his last five shots, including a potential game-winner with 4.9 seconds left in regulation and two in the extra session.

 
“That’s a look I want,” Anthony said. “They made shots and we [were fatigued].”

 
Last night marked the first Brooklyn-New York in-season contest since the New York Giants beat the Brooklyn Dodgers, 3-2, at the Polo Grounds on Sept. 8, 1957. NBA Commissioner David Stern, Giants Jason Pierre-Paul and Justin Tuck, former Giants star Michael Strahan, musicians and Nets minority owner Jay-Z and Beyonce, actor Richard Gere, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, newscaster Charlie Rose, Islanders forward Nino Niederreiter and Yankees broadcaster Michael Kay were among the star-laden sellout crowd of 17,732 for the first regular season game between the intraborough franchises.

 
What they witnessed was a heavyweight title fight of a regular-season game as neither team led by more than seven. There were 14 lead changes and 13 ties. And a real rivalry may have been sparked by the unassuming Lopez. Midway through the first quarter, Lopez slammed J.R. Smith to the court as the Nets center attempted to block the Knicks sixth man’s dunk attempt.

 
Nets coach Avery Johnson has emphasized to his big men that they must defend the paint, and the hard foul was a realization of that directive.

 
“Brook was good,” Avery Johnson said. “Brook was good. He had five [blocked] shots.”

 
Tyson Chandler’s tip-in with 7:20 left tied the game at 70-70 and ended an eight-minute stretch in which the Knicks did not make a basket. During the Knicks’ 0-for-13 stretch from the field, the Nets turned a 64-59 deficit into a 70-68 lead.

 
From that point, the game turned into a tense affair, as the teams played playoff-style basketball. The Nets had a five-point lead, 81-76, with four minutes left following a Jerry Stackhouse 3-pointer and a Lopez dunk.

 
Anthony, Raymond Felton and Chandler scored the next five points and the Knicks led 84-81 with 1:38. But the Nets fought back to force overtime and in the extra period the Nets outscored the Knicks 12-5. Stackhouse’s corner three 1:29 into overtime gave the Nets a lead they would not relinquish.

 
“We really turned up our defense in overtime,” Avery Johnson said. 

 
“Fatigue set in,” Knicks head coach Mike Woodson said. “It was a low-scoring game until the overtime period when the Nets got the breakout points that they needed.”

 
Jason Kidd did not travel with the Knicks due to back spasms. He was replaced in the starting lineup by Kurt Thomas. Ronnie Brewer left the game in the fourth quarter with a dislocated ring finger. A Knicks spokesman said X-rays were negative.


Follow Nets beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman.
 


http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1156936--nets-win-ot-thriller-over-knicks-in-debut-of-city-rivalry

November 27, 2012, New York Knicks-Brooklyn Nets notebook for Metro Newspaper in NYC


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Nets Notebook: Shaq calls Brook Lopez 'one or two' best center in NBA

 

 
DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK
 
Published: November 26, 2012 6:45 p.m.
Last modified: November 26, 2012 6:53 p.m.
                  Text size
 
Brook Lopez is among the two best centers in the NBA, so says Shaquille O’Neal, somewhat of an authority on premier post men.

 
“I like the way he’s playing,” O’Neal said Monday morning during an event at the Zales Jewelers on 417 5th Avenue to promote the future Hall of Famer’s new line of jewelry. O’Neal worked with Zales, who was represented at the launch by CEO Theo Killion, to produce jewelry for men that was both “classy” and “affordable.”

 
“You can see he’s been working on his moves,” O’Neal said of Lopez, lauding the Nets center’s improvement on the low block. “He’s doing both like [San Antonio Spurs power forward] Tim Duncan. He’s worked on his craft. He’s had some big games.”

 
Lopez is averaging 19 points, 6.2 rebounds and 2.5 blocks in 30.1 minutes per game.

 
O’Neal retired from the NBA following an 18-year career that saw him play for the Magic, Lakers, Heat, Suns, Cavs and Celtics. He averaged 23.7 points, 10.9 rebounds and 2.7 blocks in 1,207 games. He was a key component on the 2000-2002 three-peat Lakers and the 2006 Heat championship team.

 
He now works for TNT as an analyst, and has had preliminary talks with the league about bringing a franchise back to Newark. The Nets played the last two seasons at the Prudential Center while waiting the completion of the Barclays Center.

 
“[I] haven’t had [formal] discussions. Right now there are a couple teams who are unhappy [with their arena situations]. When the time is right [we’ll talk],” O’Neal said.

 
Borough battle, round 1

 
Monday night’s Knicks-Nets showdown was the first as intracity rivals.

 
As such, it generated an incredible amount of anticipation. For everyone but Knicks head coach Mike Woodson, that is.

 
“[The game] is important for our team because it is the next game on the schedule. This is an important game for us,” Woodson said. “It’s our schedule.”

 
Both teams entered the game with winning records. The Knicks lead the Atlantic Division with a 9-3 mark, while the Nets are one game behind at 8-4. And even with 70 games remaining in the season, Woodson believes the Nets will be a team the Knicks will have to contend with.

 
“They’re going to be there,” Woodson said. “[It’s] going to be a dogfight to the end.”

 
The trip to Brooklyn was the first for Woodson.

 
But there was one area in which he was exceedingly familiar: Nets off-guard Joe Johnson.

 
“[I] coached Joe for five, six years [with the Hawks]. He’s a load. He’s worthy to be an all-star. He does it easy,” Woodson said. “[The Nets backcourt is a] big problem. They cause a lot of problems for a lot of teams.”

Follow Nets beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman.
 


http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1156926--nets-notebook-shaq-calls-brook-lopez-one-or-two-best-center-in-nba

Sunday, November 25, 2012

November 25, 2012, Operation Hat Trick news story for the Associated Press


NHL players help Sandy victims



ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -- Locked-out NHL players hit the ice Saturday night to raise money for Superstorm Sandy victims.

New York Rangers star Henrik Lundqvist made 57 saves in the Operation Hat Trick charity game at Boardwalk Hall to help Team New York beat Team New Jersey 10-6.

''(You'd) think he'd have a little rust on him (after not) playing for five or six months,'' said Philadelphia Flyers left wing Scott Hartnell, who captained Team New Jersey.

Pittsburgh Penguins left wing James Neal scored four goals for Team New York.

Hartnell and New York Rangers center Brad Richards organized the game. Tickets ranged from $20 to $100, and the players' equipment will be autographed and auctioned off. The proceeds are earmarked for the American Red Cross, Empire State Relief Fund and the New Jersey Hurricane Relief Fund. The NHLPA also donated $20,000 to the charities.

''A lot of people were affected by Sandy. It's great to do stuff like this,'' Rangers defenseman Dan Girardi said. ''A lot of people here lost their homes are fans. We had some people who lost everything.''

The sellout crowd of 10,792 hockey-starved fans chanted ''We want hockey! We want hockey!'' and also called for NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman's firing.

''We hear that,'' Girardi said. ''(The New York), New Jersey and Philadelphia fans are very passionate. It's hilarious, but we don't feel that way.''

A group of 25 players met with NHLPA executive director Don Fehr earlier in the day for an update on the negotiations.

''When you make a move towards them, if you're (going to) have an agreement, somebody has to say yes and now I can do this. Instead they said more or less, 'Yes and what else can you do for me?''' Fehr said. ''Everybody understands that negotiation is a process. So far, we seem to be doing all the negotiating.''


http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nhl-players-help-sandy-victims-023440134--nhl.html

Saturday, November 17, 2012

November 17, 2012, New York Rangers Hurricane Sandy fundraiser and CBA news story for AP

 

Richards, Rangers raise funds on Staten Island

 


NEW YORK (AP) -- Center Brad Richards and several of his New York Rangers teammates participated in a benefit skate Friday to help in the relief efforts on Staten Island after Superstorm Sandy.

Richards, who signed with the Rangers last offseason, and led them to the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference last postseason, partnered with a high school team to organize ''Skating for Sandy.''

Defensemen Steve Eminger, Dan Girardi, Anton Stralman and Marc Staal as well as forwards Carl Hagelin, Brian Boyle, Ryan Callahan, Jeff Halpern, Taylor Pyatt and Marian Gaborik joined Richards at the Staten Island Skating Pavilion for two afternoon sessions with area children.

''Being part of the community makes you a part of everyday life,'' Richards said.

The idea was broached by Steve Rose, a community affairs officer in Brooklyn and a friend of Richards. Rose estimated the event raised between $10,000-$12,000.

''Obviously you know what's gone on with New York,'' Richards said. ''It's scary to see what the damage is.''

Richards will also play in a Sandy-related charity game next Saturday in Atlantic City, N.J.. He will be joined by Eminger, Halpern and Rangers goaltender Henrik Lundqvist. Also in that game will be several members of the Philadelphia Flyers.

''We're excited about that,'' Richards said. ''We've got a lot of good people on board.''

For a day, at least, Richards and his teammates were able to take their focus off the NHL lockout, which began on Sept. 15. Talks have netted little progress of late, and as the days wind down, so do the chances of a season. Friday, in fact, was the 62nd day of the impasse, and the NHL and NHLPA haven't even talked this week.

On Thursday, the league requested a two-week moratorium.

''I don't see the point behind that,'' Callahan said. ''It doesn't make sense to me. Two weeks is a waste of time.''

One of the main issues at play in fighting for a new collective bargaining agreement is determining which side will pay for the lockout, as well as expanded revenue sharing and contract lengths. One aspect of the owners' proposal stipulates a maximum length of contracts, yet owners gave some players multiyear deals just before the lockout began two months ago.

''There's people on the (ownership) committee who signed (players to) contracts two hours before the lockout,'' Richards said. ''(It's) tough to trust people when that's going on.''

The Capitals signed defenseman John Carlson (six years, $23.8 million) and forward Troy Brouwer (three years, $11 million), while the Bruins agreed to terms with forwards Milan Lucic (three years, $18 million), Tyler Seguin (six years, $34.5 million) and Brad Marchand (four years, $18 million) in the days leading up to Sept. 15. Capitals owner Ted Leonsis and Bruins owner Jeremy Jacobs are on the league's negotiating committee.

''(I'm) not going to single out certain guys,'' Richards said. ''Some of them I don't know personally.''

The lockout has already forced the cancellation of 327 games, including the Winter Classic between the Maple Leafs and Red Wings at Michigan Stadium. The league's other big midseason event - the Jan. 27 all-star game at Nationwide Arena in Columbus - is also expected to be formally cancelled in the near future.



http://sports.yahoo.com/news/richards-rangers-raise-funds-staten-002356438--nhl.html

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

November 14, 2012, Cleveland Cavaliers-Brooklyn Nets notebook for Metro Newspaper in NYC


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Nets Notebook: Avery Johnson pushing improvements

 

 
DENIS GORMAN
NEW YORK
 
Published: November 13, 2012 8:44 p.m.
Last modified: November 13, 2012 8:54 p.m.
                  Text size
 
The Nets’ season is five games old, but that doesn’t matter much to Avery Johnson, who believes the Nets have room for improvement.

 
“Are we embracing some of our concepts? Are we doing a better job of knowing the individual strengths of our opponents? A little bit. But after five games — especially playing the same team twice — in a 48-hour period, we’re not there yet. We still have some work to do,” Johnson said in his pregame press conference Tuesday night at the Barclays Center.

 
Johnson stressed lead management as the primary concern.

 
“We’ve had two 20-point leads at home [but] we haven’t managed them well,” Johnson said. “We have to figure out a way to hold leads. Sometimes just having a lead early in the game and going away from the reason why you had those leads — whether it is tough defense, ball movement [or] setting good screens. We just have to do that more consistently.”

 
Not taking Cavs for granted

 
Prior to the season, the expectations for the Cavaliers were to be one of the NBA’s weaker teams. And entering last night’s game, the Cavs had a 2-5 record and were the league’s third-worst defensive team having allowed on average 103.4 points per game.

 
So did the Nets expect an easy night? Not quite.

 
“We’re not on a level where we can take anything or anybody for granted,” Johnson said. “We have to play as close to a full game as possible to win any of these games. For us, there’s a responsibility that goes along with it. It’s a greater level of responsibility. It’s what we all said where we wanted to be. Now we have to have the appropriate response. That is getting off to good starts, paying very close attention to detail and the game plan, and moving the ball on offense.”

 
The Cavs’ best player is second-year point guard Kyrie Irving, but Johnson pointed to the quartet of rookie guard Dion Waiters, reserve guard Daniel Gibson and big men Tristan Thompson and Anderson Varejao as players the Nets must neutralize.

 
“It’s not just Kyrie. Waiters is a good-looking young player; he can score. He can shoot the ball. He’s a good passer. Gibson is kind of in the same mold as what we saw in the last two games with [Orlando Magic guard J.J.] Redick. He runs all over the place; he can make threes,” Johnson said. “Their big guys inside, they gave us some problems last year with their physicality. If we’re not ready to put on our hard hats against Thompson and Varejao, then we’re going to be in trouble. We have to be physical with those guys. The worst thing we can do with this team is give them second shots.”

 
Notes

 
The Nets will serve Thanksgiving dinner today at St. John’s Bread and Life in Bedford-Stuyvesant. … The Nets starting five was named to the NBA’s All-Star ballot, the league announced earlier in the day. … Small forward Gerald Wallace and sixth man MarShon Brooks were inactive for the game. Both have been recuperating from left ankle sprains. Wallace hasn’t played since the season opener on Nov. 3 and Brooks has missed the last three games.


Follow Nets beat writer Denis Gorman on Twitter @DenisGorman.
 
More about Nets , Cavaliers , Avery Johnson


http://www.metro.us/newyork/sports/article/1156189--nets-notebook-avery-johnson-pushing-improvements