I love Chicago. I lived there almost eight years and enjoyed just about every moment of it. I graduated from college, met the love of my life and discovered sandwiches made with fried plantains instead of bread in Chicago. So any time I have an excuse to visit Chicago, I will. This week, my excuse is the annual conference of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies, really just a bunch of cool dudes givin' some cool talks and just bein' cool in general. It also didn't hurt that my man Brian, sole proprietor of the spectacularly named, regrettably fallow P.V. Glob's Bog Blog, was able to get tickets to the Blackhawks-Avalanche game. You all can imagine my excitement that this trip was now going to be in service of my day job (as film nerd) and my moonlighty gig (as a professional Hockey Blogger).
I was rewarded for my decision with an exciting game that ended with a last-minute goal to stretch the Blackhawks' unbeaten-in-regulation streak to the halfway point of their season. Pretty incredible. Some notes from a Pens fan in a strange land:
- Easily the coolest part of a Blackhawks game is their tradition of cheering like crazy throughout the singing of the national anthem. Apparently, this practice is somewhat controversial, because I guess nothing is more disrespectful than cheering. I mean, Jesus, let's lighten up a little. I understand that the national anthem is meant to bring about silent reflection about 'Merica and sacrifice and whatnot, but hearing twenty thousand people go crazy as Jim Cornelison belts out the anthem is exciting and inspiring and pretty damn patriotical if you think about it. And anyway, Hawks fans can scream all they want, they're still not going to drown out this dude (clip's a fake, but still: pipes):
- The United Center's Jumbotron game is pretty tight as well: before the game, an intro video shows the Blackhawk logo being woven behind images of great players from the team's history. And it's not just Mikita and Hull and Toews, either; there was a healthy serving of Steve Larmer, and even Eric Daze popped up at one point. I'd like to see the Pens do more of this - we should be seeing Kehoe and Mario and Jags, but also Bryan Smolinski and Shawn McEachern and Stu Barnes. The more obscure the better.
- On the other hand, they also showed another, less good video where current players look at the camera and say, "I stand for Chicago," "I stand for the fans at the Madhouse on Madison," and etc. All well and good until one player announces, "I stand for the Indian head." Come on, dude. Native American head. It's not hard.
- One thing that was noticeably absent from the Jumbotron was the endless pump-up videos and Loud-o-Meters that the Consol staff shoves down our throats each game. Somehow, the fans just knew when to cheer. They must be some kinda geniuses.
- On to the actual team: they're good. I mean, they're really good. I wouldn't say they looked unbeatable; they started Daniel Carcillo on Toews' wing fer chrissakes (and yes, I know Carcillo scored the game winning goal, but that doesn't change the fact that he is Daniel Carcillo). But the Hawks, and the fans, never really seemed in doubt that the team would pull out the win, even with the Avalanche leading by a goal and Semyon Varlamov playing out of his mind.
- It's pretty impressive that the Hawks could beat an Avalanche team that was going all-out to end the streak, especially with Marian Hossa a late scratch, and Patrick Kane uncoincidentally looking invisible for most of the night. That was the biggest disappointment of the night: missing out on watching Hossa play. In fact, I was all ready to write this entire post on Hossa, and the joy of watching him play. While Toews is the team's unquestioned leader, and Kane their most terrifying player, I still get the feeling that Hossa is the most important guy on the team (he also has the best goal celebrations - his fist pumps register on the Richter Scale). He seems to score every big goal for them, he plays great on both ends of the ice, and he never takes a game off. I admit that I spent a couple of seasons hating him for leaving Pittsburgh because he thought he had a better chance of winning with Detroit, and I took a great amount of pleasure in the poetic justice of the Penguins' vanquishing the Red Wings in the subsequent Finals showdown. But I've grown up, readers, and now I can let go of these petty feelings and just appreciate Hossa for the player he is. He was humbled by his loss in Detroit, redeemed himself by winning the Cup in Chicago the next year (yeah, three Cup finals in three years with three different teams is pretty good when you take a step back), and now he's a crucial piece to a team that is gunning to win it all again this year. At this point, not only do I not resent Hossa for leaving Pittsburgh, I actually encourage him to change teams every year, until every fan base in the league has had the pleasure of cheering him on.
- I'm not sure if this is a function of Hossa being out, but I was fascinated by the Blackhawks' power play lineups: Coach Quenneville basically kept his stars separate, flanking Toews with Andrew Shaw and Brandon Saad, and playing Kane with Patrick Sharp and some other dude on the other (can't really call it the second) unit. If this were Bylsma, there's no doubt he'd be rolling with Keith-Seabrook-Kane-Toews-Sharp (substitute Hossa for Seabrook when he's back) for 1:30 of the power play. Toews' unit looked great and created a goal on their first PP opportunity, while the Kane unit sputtered in the other two chances. It would be interesting to see how different the Pens' power play would be if they kept Malkin's and Crosby's lines intact for the power play and gave them both half of the penalty to do work, with some overlap to get 71 and 87 out there together. Having watched our second power play unit at "work," I think a more even talent dispersal might be a good thing.
- Toews is an impressive guy. When the Blackhwaks needed a goal, he gave them one, an incredible shorthanded power drive that I can only imagine had Pierre McGuire creaming his little suit pants. That's the mark of a superstar, though: Toews rose to the occasion, and everyone in the crowd could feel it coming. Watch the goal, and listen to how the crowd's roar builds as soon as Toews touches the puck, coming with speed down the right side boards. It's impossible not to get excited when you watch a player kick it up a notch like Toews does here:
- This was a thrilling game and a great experience to share with a great bunch of fans, but what I noticed most was how damn fast the whole thing went. It's not that the game was played at a frantic pace, because it wasn't. It was, I assume, due to the fact that I'm used to watching Penguins games, where I live and die with each shift, I'm constantly aware of who is on the ice, opposing power plays seem to drag on and on, etc. Watching a game in which I only had the most casual of rooting interests, everything seemed less weighty, and penalties expired after what seemed like a few seconds. I hardly glanced at the game clock, and was surprised when a period would end before I was half way through my $8 Budweiser. It was a fun way to enjoy an amazing game.
- Oh, but their post-goal song is still extremely dumb. Dur dur dur durrr dur dur durr...
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