ansky212 said:Last night's Bruins - Rangers game was televised on...CNBC. And here we have a matchup where both teams are from top 10 TV markets and they broadcast the game on a news channel.
KeithE4 said:ansky212 said:Last night's Bruins - Rangers game was televised on...CNBC. And here we have a matchup where both teams are from top 10 TV markets and they broadcast the game on a news channel.
That's because the Black Hawks-Red Wings game was on NBC Sports Network at the same time. Turns out that both were good games, although I'm surprised the games weren't reversed.
ansky212 said:That's even more proof that the NHL has a very small following. No other sport would put 2 late-round playoff games on at the same time.
More like a lack of a following specifically on the West Coast (see: Chicago and Detroit being a Western Conference semifinal).ansky212 said:KeithE4 said:ansky212 said:Last night's Bruins - Rangers game was televised on...CNBC. And here we have a matchup where both teams are from top 10 TV markets and they broadcast the game on a news channel.
That's because the Black Hawks-Red Wings game was on NBC Sports Network at the same time. Turns out that both were good games, although I'm surprised the games weren't reversed.
That's even more proof that the NHL has a very small following. No other sport would put 2 late-round playoff games on at the same time.
ansky212 said:No other sport would put 2 late-round playoff games on at the same time.
TheBigA said:But yes, hockey has a relatively small following.
landtuna said:Even in my neck of the woods, Sonoran Desert, USA, it is very difficult to get ice time due to the many hockey leagues - from Mites all the way to the Old Timers.
Mark_Giardina said:Golf is the more boring game to watch on TV next to a televised chess match.
Now soccer is exciting, yet for some reasons it is not popular in the USA. Wonder why?
KeithE4 said:The California teams are non-entities.
KeithE4 said:Now if we only had a hockey arena that wasn't 30 miles away (over an hour's drive through rush-hour Phoenix traffic for most games) from where 90% of the sport's local fans live... ;D
The King Bee said:My most memorable experience was running high cover camera at old Chicago Stadium during the 1992 playoffs. The setup position was way up at the top level of the old barn, right beside the pipes of the mighty Wurlitzer organ and the goal horn. The spot was so loud engineering had to give me an extra audio amp on my headphone line to get my director's calls clearly...and the crowd noise did NOT stop until the end of the game.
The fire marshal always winked at Stadium management and listed the attendance at 18,865...but there were always 21,500 jammed into every crevice for a Black Hawks game.
Mark_Giardina said:Now soccer is exciting, yet for some reason it is not popular in the USA. Wonder why?
landtuna said:Mark_Giardina said:Now soccer is exciting, yet for some reason it is not popular in the USA. Wonder why?
Soccer is exciting only at the younger age levels. As players age soccer becomes a defensive contest similar to tennis and the endless back and forth becomes a good time to catch a nap.
ansky212 said:The problem with soccer is the general lack of scoring. The field of play is much too large which is why most of the time is spent with guys just running back and forth (but that's a discussion for another day). The other problem is that they can arbitrarily decide to add time to the end of the games, which makes them so anti-climactic. You're never going to see a buzzer beater or walk off homer which is what makes other sports more exciting.
...and they have maybe an eighth of the population of the United States, if we're generous. The NHL left Atlanta, a top-ten market, for Winnipeg, a market that makes Green Bay look big. All told, the NHL is a bigger deal than MLS or the WNBA, but I don't want to hear that Canada makes them a major league on par with baseball, basketball, or football. That Phoenix is excited about hockey but is cursed by shitty arena placement is interesting, though; with the Quebec scare, has there been any talk about a new one, or moving into wherever the Suns play assuming they don't already?landtuna said:TheBigA said:But yes, hockey has a relatively small following.
People who disparage hockey tend to forget that our neighbor to the north turns out by the millions to watch, and play, and talk endlessly about hockey. Not only the NHL which Americans are singularly aware of, but all levels beginning with the 4-year olds. A national crisis in Canada was narrowly averted when Wayne Gretzky was traded from Edmonton to L.A. several decades ago. Canucks take their hockey very seriously...
That's funny, because I once read a soccer fan's comment that had that exact complaint about MLS' old countdown clock, that an opposing team couldn't get one last push before the clock ran out. I suspect they would say if you were blowing the whistle the instant the clock said you should, if you weren't acting the way you did and waited for the current play to end before blowing the whistle, you were doing it wrong.landtuna said:When I was officiating I always maintained that Americans would not tolerate the referee being the only source of time keeping and I note that now some games do have a public game clock. That should be mandatory. All too often the end of the game comes at a time when the trailing team has an offensive play building and the ref blows the whistle. This tends to enrage fans and we've all witnessed what happens when fans run wild. It was enough of a problem that I used to let the current play end before ending the game regardless of time.