Du retour d'une amante
Here's the funny thing: I used to hate the Boston Bruins. As a kid growing up just outside of Hartford, Connecticut, my dad used to take me to Hartford Whalers games. If you've any sort of NHL knowledge, you know that the Whalers were one of the truly terrible league expansion teams, a minor league club in a market that was much too small, with terrible management and an inability to push past the first round of the playoffs. Still, they were the lifeblood of Connecticut sports, the blue and green littered my youth. I still vividly remember trying to convince my folks that I could play youth hockey for real, despite my size; and I will never forget the day they traded Ron Francis to the Pittsburgh Penguins for a bag of pucks and a roll of tape. It was the only time outside of 9/11 that there was a moment of silence in the classroom. Peter Karmanos (may he burn in hell) held the carrot in front of the fans' collective mouths, promising to keep the team in Hartford if only he could bleed a few more full-season ticket plans out of them. I remember being in awe of the kid at my new middle school whose father was part of the coalition attempting to buy the Whalers and keep them local. But it didn't work out, as we all know, and the blue and green forever left the Civic Center, taking with it the true meaning of "Brass Bonanza" and the hearts of too many hockey fans.
The NHL did everything in its power to alienate me after that. With the Whalers now the Carolina Hurricanes, I had nobody to root for, and it was just as well. The league became, essentially, irrelevant with the infusion of expansion teams in born and bred hockey cities like Tampa Bay, Anaheim, Nashville and Phoenix. The strike two years ago was just proof positive that it was a screwed up sport on the decline, and that there was no reason to go back.
Until last week.
I hated the Bruins growing up a Whalers fan, but there was no way in hell I could allow myself to root for the Rangers or Islanders, so with the distancing of my Whaler allegiance, I adopted the Black and Gold as my own. Loosely, mind you, very loosely. Occasional games are fun to watch, but the Bruins under Jeremy Jacobs seemed destined to repeat the mistakes of their former rivals to the south. Joe Thornton, a lightning rod young center was sent packing to San José for the same bag of pucks and Marco Sturm, who would end up being the only part of the trade that would work out for the B's.
When Patrice Bergeron went down this October with a concussion, I figured that the season would be more or less the same as the rest, but something about Claude Julien's salt-of-the-earth Canadian face and X's and O's system kept the young Bruins pressing onward into the playoffs to face, of all teams, the Montreal Canadiens.
After a miserable opening period in Game 1, the Bruins put on quite the show, going toe-to-toe with the best offense in the east, and losing some hard-fought and unlucky games, eventually ending up down 3-1 at the Bell Centre. There they staged a massive third period rally to rattle rookie goalminder Casey Price and send the series back to the Hub with a 5-1 win. At the new Garden, the old denizens of NHL seasons past came out from their hazy, dust-covered shelters and filled as many seats as they could around the contingent from Canada, just in time to witness a stunning 5-4 victory to force a Game 7 back on the road...
...where, tonight, the Bruins were shut out, 5-0. I am by no means a diehard hockey fan, but for the last week I was unable to rip my eyes from the ice as I came to love Milan Lucic, Phil Kessel, and Zdano Chara. I was comforted by the paternal image of Claude Julien so cool behind the bench. I was able to deactivate my automatic translation of PK to "penalty kick" and activate the automatic response of "penalty kill". I dug up the definition of icing and remembered all the hand signals for the various penalties. I let myself be at ease, surrounded by French Canadian names so similar to my own, like Bégin, Bouillon, Julien, and Carbonneau, while waiting for the return of a savior named Bergeron. I found myself kneeling on the floor screaming at the television as the B's created a lot of traffic in the Habs' zone but couldn't find the net. I finally figured out why they were called The Habs.
It is truly unfortunate that the Bruins were unable to finish off Les Glorieux in a remarkable first round comeback, but somehow, it's OK. My love of hockey was never able to mature. I never learned the subtleties or the nuances of the game, grew to cling faster to my first love, baseball. But this week has brought me back to hockey in a way that so few other things could, so much so that I will be waiting for next season; and while my heart will forever hold tight to blue and green, it now finds itself wearing a sweater of black and gold.
The NHL did everything in its power to alienate me after that. With the Whalers now the Carolina Hurricanes, I had nobody to root for, and it was just as well. The league became, essentially, irrelevant with the infusion of expansion teams in born and bred hockey cities like Tampa Bay, Anaheim, Nashville and Phoenix. The strike two years ago was just proof positive that it was a screwed up sport on the decline, and that there was no reason to go back.
Until last week.
I hated the Bruins growing up a Whalers fan, but there was no way in hell I could allow myself to root for the Rangers or Islanders, so with the distancing of my Whaler allegiance, I adopted the Black and Gold as my own. Loosely, mind you, very loosely. Occasional games are fun to watch, but the Bruins under Jeremy Jacobs seemed destined to repeat the mistakes of their former rivals to the south. Joe Thornton, a lightning rod young center was sent packing to San José for the same bag of pucks and Marco Sturm, who would end up being the only part of the trade that would work out for the B's.
When Patrice Bergeron went down this October with a concussion, I figured that the season would be more or less the same as the rest, but something about Claude Julien's salt-of-the-earth Canadian face and X's and O's system kept the young Bruins pressing onward into the playoffs to face, of all teams, the Montreal Canadiens.
After a miserable opening period in Game 1, the Bruins put on quite the show, going toe-to-toe with the best offense in the east, and losing some hard-fought and unlucky games, eventually ending up down 3-1 at the Bell Centre. There they staged a massive third period rally to rattle rookie goalminder Casey Price and send the series back to the Hub with a 5-1 win. At the new Garden, the old denizens of NHL seasons past came out from their hazy, dust-covered shelters and filled as many seats as they could around the contingent from Canada, just in time to witness a stunning 5-4 victory to force a Game 7 back on the road...
...where, tonight, the Bruins were shut out, 5-0. I am by no means a diehard hockey fan, but for the last week I was unable to rip my eyes from the ice as I came to love Milan Lucic, Phil Kessel, and Zdano Chara. I was comforted by the paternal image of Claude Julien so cool behind the bench. I was able to deactivate my automatic translation of PK to "penalty kick" and activate the automatic response of "penalty kill". I dug up the definition of icing and remembered all the hand signals for the various penalties. I let myself be at ease, surrounded by French Canadian names so similar to my own, like Bégin, Bouillon, Julien, and Carbonneau, while waiting for the return of a savior named Bergeron. I found myself kneeling on the floor screaming at the television as the B's created a lot of traffic in the Habs' zone but couldn't find the net. I finally figured out why they were called The Habs.
It is truly unfortunate that the Bruins were unable to finish off Les Glorieux in a remarkable first round comeback, but somehow, it's OK. My love of hockey was never able to mature. I never learned the subtleties or the nuances of the game, grew to cling faster to my first love, baseball. But this week has brought me back to hockey in a way that so few other things could, so much so that I will be waiting for next season; and while my heart will forever hold tight to blue and green, it now finds itself wearing a sweater of black and gold.
Labels: Commentary





