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Erin Brown

Changing Lines

Name: Erin Brown | Gender: F | Member Since August 10, 2006
Current Level: Superstar | Email: Private
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Posted on: March 7, 2008 9:20 pm
 

The ROAR returns to Chicago

Occasionally, I will join my friends Smitty and Adam on some sort of sports-related road trip. This year's journey is to Chicago for a Blackhawks game and a side venture to Milwaukee for a Bruce Springsteen concert.

Unfortunately, I got too swamped with work to work out the details. I'm incredibly disappointed I won't be joining them.

I would have liked to experience a Blackhawks game at the United Center. The resurgence of the team, not necessarily in the standings, but as an important part of the city's fabric once again, has been a thrill to follow. Every time a Blackhawks press release lands in my inbox at work, more often than not, it contains something that makes me smile.

Home games on television. Bringing legends Stan Mikita and Bobby Hull back into the fold. A sold-out fan convention -- the first of its kind -- scheduled for the summer.

Prior to Friday's Sharks-Hawks game, Chicago honored Mikita and Hull before a number of former players and a stuffed-to-the-gills United Center crowd. Watching the legends come onto the ice and the ovations from the crowd were enough to give me chills. And, remember, I'm not a Blackhawks fan. I can only imagine what a great feeling it must be to those who are.

Even the introduction of owner Rocky Wirtz, who took over the team when his father, William, passed before the season, drew cheers. One fan in the stands, clad in his team's colors, offered a "We're not worthy!" bow as Wirtz spoke.

One of the best moments of the evening, however, had to be the ceremonial faceoff, with Hull and Mikita dropping pucks before former Hawk Jeremy Roenick and rookie star Jonathan Toews. It was an image perfectly symbolic of how this franchise has turned around, with Roenick and Toews serving as the bookends to an era many would like to forget.

Given the reaction and roar from the hometown fans, it is fair to say they already have.

Posted on: February 29, 2008 11:14 pm
Edited on: March 1, 2008 9:34 pm
 

Despair, Inc.

SUNRISE, Fla. -- A couple new additions appeared in the Florida Panthers locker room this week, and they weren't necessarily the three players acquired at the trade deadline.

Adorning the once blank walls of the team's weight room are five large signs in Panthers colors with a motivational saying on each: Details. Team Unity. Accountability. Perseverance. Sacrifice.

The effort rings hollow, though, especially with 15 games left in the season. Florida has now lost eight of its last 11 and is on the verge of missing the playoffs for the eighth straight season. The Panthers are seven points behind eighth place Philadelphia, and seven points behind division leader Carolina.

"We're in a bad position," Tomas Vokoun said. "There's no question about it."

Tonight may have been the first time in ages the Panthers actually found some energy to fight back. Down 3-1 to the Minnesota Wild in the third, Nathan Horton netted a power play goal six minutes into the period. A few moments later, his open-ice hit on Stephane Veilleux woke the Cats from their slumber and sparked a more intense style of play.

Florida finished with 16 shots in the third, but were unable to chip in a comeback tally like so many teams have done to them this season.

But like the new posters hanging in the Panthers locker room, Friday's effort is too little, too late.

Even Jacques Martin, who has presented a positive front during some of the rough stretches this season, appears to be tiring from his team's constant struggles. He plodded into the postgame press conference pressing his hand against his brow, like he was trying to rid himself of a splitting headache. Maybe he is.

The last coach I saw do the same thing down here was Terry Murray, who, after a 5-2 loss to Philadelphia on Dec. 27, 2000, appeared nothing short of bewildered and offered no answer to why the Panthers had won just six games at that point. Florida fired him the next day.

Granted, Martin didn't appear clueless as to why Florida continues to lose. He's well aware injuries have gutted the team. And that they are fragile when they have a lead. And that the Panthers are either taking too many penalties, breaking down too many times on defense, not playing physically enough or just giving up a cheap, lucky goal at the worst possible moment.

The whole situation lends itself to something one might see on a poster by Despair, Inc.:

Defeat: For every winner, there are dozens of losers. Odds are you're one of them.
Category: NHL