(First published April 16th, 2011)
Habs fans can be forgiven for daring to feel good after last night's
team-effort to secure themselves a place in the 2010-2011 Stanley Cup
playoffs. They might even feel compelled to express such good feelings
with Subban-esque exuberance. After all, this season's conclusion is
certainly a far cry from the bumbling, stumbling manner in which they
entered last year's post-season (a single point secured in an overtime
loss to the Leafs).
The truth is, last night's game was one of the Canadien's most
impressive team efforts this season, taking nothing away from the
Chicago Blackhawks, who also put on a remarkable display of skill and
effort. It was the net-minders who stole the show, with Montreal native
Corey Crawford bringing everything he had to the game, and Carey Price
somehow bringing that much more.
There was a lot at stake for the Stanley Cup Champion Blackhawks,
struggling to make the playoffs, and the Canadiens trying to prove that
last year's post-season run was not an enigma.
This is just part of the back story in what turned out to be a very
entertaining hockey game. Yet thus far I have written more in this blog
than anything that appeared on TSN's NHL webpage last night. In fact, I
already surpassed their coverage by the time I had written "Habs fans
can be forgiven..."
Despite what some people down the 401 might think, Canadiens fans
generally don't mope around with a chip on their shoulder. They are much
harsher toward their own team than with their rivals. Nonetheless,
there's always been a sense that respect for the Habs in Toronto-based
media is grudging at best.
What truly exposed the negative bias was something that should have
united fans and the league, the now infamous hit on Max Pacioretty by
Zdeno Chara. It should be noted that to a man, all of TSN's Hockey
Insiders, and many other analysts and players believed that Chara should
have been suspended; if anything for not taking everything he should
have learned in his 13 years in the NHL to back off a dangerous play.
The league not only did nothing, it went as far as to chide the
Canadiens organization for what it perceived as an exaggeration of fact.
This left Don Cherry, who's intelligence and charm have decades
exceeded their expiration date, to blame the Habs organization and the
stanshion for being at fault and Chara's negligence consigned to the
annals of great 'hockey plays.'
League officials, it seems, can barely hide their contempt for the team,
as evidenced by Colin Campbell's eye rolling treatment of La Presse
reporter Richard Labbé. When Labbé questioned the league's inaction on
Chara, Campbell all but concluded Pacioretty deserved a face full of
stanshion because of his questionable hit on the New York Islanders'
Mark Eaton earlier in the year. So much for impartial.
Recently, Team 990 radio host Mitch Melnick noted an interesting
omission in one of the NHL's latest 'History Will Be Made' television
ads. The commercial, titled simply 'Mess,' is a collection of film
footage from decades of Stanley Cup celebrations, replete with flying
sticks, gloves, ticker tape parades and spilling champagne. Several
teams are represented in the video, most of them American, and none of
them include the Habs. The Canadiens have enjoyed the majority of those
celebrations (24 of the 94 times it has been awarded).
Even the encyclopedic mind of Pierre McGuire is not immune to reserving
his harshest criticisms for the Canadiens organization. As an astute
analyst of the game of hockey, Pierre is generally fair and honest when
talking about the Habs on local radio. Put him under the studio lights
at TSN headquarters and another side emerges, highly critical of the Habs front office
while regularly giving the Leaf's Brian Burke a hall pass.
Further to the head-scratching treatment of the National Hockey League's
most successful franchise (a fact, not fan interpretation) was
last night's inexplicable praise for the Toronto Maple Leafs. In case
you haven't heard this one before, the team began the year with great
promise before coming apart as the season progressed. They
went on to make a desperate end-of-season run for the last playoff spot,
and (stop me if you've heard this before) fell short. The NHL's version
of the Dallas Cowboys had praise heaped upon them from Sportsnet's
Hockey Central analysts last night for their 'courageous' season-ending
desperation, topped off with a delightfully rosy prognosis for next
season.
Really? Why exactly should anyone in Leaf nation be celebrating? A
season that began with such promise was squandered by poor play, and
let's be honest, bad coaching. If I were a fan I'd be thinking that this
is worse than deja-vu, it's a nightmare. How could you not wonder aloud
why the largest market in professional hockey, and perhaps the largest
fan base, can't do anything better than falling a few point short of a
playoff birth for the sixth consecutive time?
Yet somehow it makes perfect sense to give the Leafs top coverage.
Am I exaggerating? I invite you to check out both TSN and Sportsnet's NHL pages today, and tell me who dominates the headlines.
I have no time for conspiracy theories. Usually they are
based on little fact and appeal to an audience ready and willing to
cling on to what little information fits their world view.
For Habs fans it shouldn't matter. The team's track record speaks
for itself. Regardless of how far the team goes
this year, the Habs made the post-season. If my numbers serve
me correctly that would be a league-leading 78 playoff appearances.
Still, you have to wonder what a team has to do to get some respect from the league and the media.
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