Search Helium

Home > Sports & Recreation > Hockey

Is the Winter Classic good for the NHL?

Results so far:

Yes
85% 152 votes Total: 178 votes
No
15% 26 votes

by Jimmy Flatbush

Created on: October 19, 2010

Professional hockey became irrelevant after the National Hockey League (NHL) lockout occurred during the 200402005 season. Not only did the lockout wipe out most of the regular season schedule, it also eliminated the venerable Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time in league history. The NHL relies on a small, yet undying, fan base for most of its support. The elimination of the Stanley Cup Playoffs alienated hard-core fans, which further diminished the popularity of a sport that was already on its death bed.

The NHL was losing fan support before the lockout. The sport became mired in a sluggish trap oriented game, one where open ice was at a premium, and players were prevented from exhibiting their skating and puck handling prowess. Fans considered the trap style of play to be boring, and consequently they refused to give their hard-earned money to a sport once predicated on end-to-end action. Moreover, rule changes restricted fighting in the NHL, which was another slap in the face to hard-core NHL fans.

During the lockout, the player’s association and league owners dealt with the lackluster NHL format by creating rule changes in addition to working out a new collective bargaining agreement. The result was a more wide open game that rewarded skill players over those who clutched and grabbed their opponents. Two line passes created more scoring chances, and the trap became a distant memory. Overtime shootouts upped the ante of regular season games. Fighting made a slow, but perceptible return to the sport. Hockey purists were jubilant, while returning to arenas in American and Canada in numbers that rivaled the sports’ popularity during the late nineties and the early part of the new millennium.

One piece of the puzzle remained to be solved for the NHL: a prominent game played in an environment that would captivate not only hockey purists, but also a completely new breed of hockey fan. Introduced the Heritage Classic in 2003, outdoor hockey came back to the sport on January 1, 2008 in the form of the Winter Classic.

New Year’s Day is replete with college football bowl games, so deciding to play the Winter Classic on the first day of the New Year was a bold move by the NHL’s top brass. The gamble handsomely paid off, as the first New Year’s Day game garnered an incredible 6.4 television rating. The game did not produce a marquee match up between the Penguins and Sabres, but it did provide fans a glimpse of what hockey looked like

126621

Featured Partner

OMB Watch

OMB Watch exists to increase government transparency and accountability; to ensure sound, equitable regulatory and budgetary processes and policies; and to protect and promote active citizen participation in our democracy. OMB Watch...more


CONNECT WITH US

Read
our blog
Helum for writers

Write and get published
Share with other writers
Polish your freelancing skills

Join our active writing community
Helium Content Source for Publishers

Quality articles from proven freelancers
Exclusive rights, fast turnaround
Brand engagement, business blogging -- our writers do it all

Get custom content today!

INFORMATION


Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA