We're firmly in between Canadian and American Thanksgiving and I didn't want to wait 3 weeks to post this.
I've lately been annoyed at the Rangers and my other sports team are the New York Giants, no comment on them. So I want to focus on positivity.
1) I'm thankful that league scoring is back to where it was in the first half of the 90s, just about. We now get scoring but it's not so absurdly high with goalies that don't seem to know how to play the position as it was in the 80s.
2) I'm thankful that we're in a league where skill is no longer considered a dirty word. There was a line that the Rangers used to have that was pretty good in the early 2000s and would be probably one of the better second lines in the game in today's NHL. It was Hlvac-Nedved-Dvorak, the Czech mates. I remember how much anger and resentment Rangers fans had and the most dirty possible word that they used for that team was the "f word"...finesse. Legit it was used as a slur.
3) I'm thankful that you don't need to be 6'4 220 LBs anymore to succeed. I'm glad there's more variety in the sport and little skilled guys can still succeed. And while you don't have to be 6'4 220 LBs to succeed you can STILL succeed. You just have to be actually good. You can't ONLY be 6'4 220 LBs and expect that to allow you to succeed in the league.
4) I'm thankful that even though skill is not looked down upon teams CAN still win with toughness. There was a 2 year gap between the Colorado Avalenche winning and the Florida Panthers. To be fair the Red Wings and Avs of the 90s were uber skilled too.
5) I'm thankful that attitudes towards toughness are changing. This is related to #3. It's not longer enough to just be tough and people are looking intellectually at the game nowadays. A guy being stuck in his own zone blocking a lot of shots and hitting is probably not a good defenseman if that's all he does.
6) I'm thankful for analytics and hockey nerds like @Machinehead, sometimes it can be upsetting when you thought you played well but analytically you didn't. But all in all it gave us a much better understanding of the game than just using the eye test.
7) I'm thankful that staged fighting is almost non-existent and the only time you usually see fights with a few exceptions is when players have a legit reason to fight (defend their teammates). And I'm thankfully teams value depth enough that most teams won't waste a roster spot on a goon. For example, Matt Rempe got a few games but has been mostly out of the lineup for the Rangers, because we have better players that play hockey better in that spot.
What are some of your reasons to be thankful about the NHL?
I've lately been annoyed at the Rangers and my other sports team are the New York Giants, no comment on them. So I want to focus on positivity.
1) I'm thankful that league scoring is back to where it was in the first half of the 90s, just about. We now get scoring but it's not so absurdly high with goalies that don't seem to know how to play the position as it was in the 80s.
2) I'm thankful that we're in a league where skill is no longer considered a dirty word. There was a line that the Rangers used to have that was pretty good in the early 2000s and would be probably one of the better second lines in the game in today's NHL. It was Hlvac-Nedved-Dvorak, the Czech mates. I remember how much anger and resentment Rangers fans had and the most dirty possible word that they used for that team was the "f word"...finesse. Legit it was used as a slur.
3) I'm thankful that you don't need to be 6'4 220 LBs anymore to succeed. I'm glad there's more variety in the sport and little skilled guys can still succeed. And while you don't have to be 6'4 220 LBs to succeed you can STILL succeed. You just have to be actually good. You can't ONLY be 6'4 220 LBs and expect that to allow you to succeed in the league.
4) I'm thankful that even though skill is not looked down upon teams CAN still win with toughness. There was a 2 year gap between the Colorado Avalenche winning and the Florida Panthers. To be fair the Red Wings and Avs of the 90s were uber skilled too.
5) I'm thankful that attitudes towards toughness are changing. This is related to #3. It's not longer enough to just be tough and people are looking intellectually at the game nowadays. A guy being stuck in his own zone blocking a lot of shots and hitting is probably not a good defenseman if that's all he does.
6) I'm thankful for analytics and hockey nerds like @Machinehead, sometimes it can be upsetting when you thought you played well but analytically you didn't. But all in all it gave us a much better understanding of the game than just using the eye test.
7) I'm thankful that staged fighting is almost non-existent and the only time you usually see fights with a few exceptions is when players have a legit reason to fight (defend their teammates). And I'm thankfully teams value depth enough that most teams won't waste a roster spot on a goon. For example, Matt Rempe got a few games but has been mostly out of the lineup for the Rangers, because we have better players that play hockey better in that spot.
What are some of your reasons to be thankful about the NHL?