Let me re-introduce myself: I am The Pink Puck’s Editor-in-Chief.
Many of you have been avid readers of our site since it’s inception, others of you may find this post as your first visit. However you reached us, I hope you come back regularly.
Beginning in October — we will launch into another season with one another. As the new season approaches, I find myself asking similar questions: what is a hockey site and what can it be in our always changing world. At the end of the day, we strive to bring you creative content, articles, opinions and projects that you won’t find on any other site in addition to news about hockey past, present and future . I will be the first to admit that vision is a difficult one and a daily struggle; but a struggle that reaps rewards in the form of our amazing fanbase and readership.
Technology and social media are ever changing. Some evenings I go to bed and wake up to an entirely new trend — our site and contributors as a whole thrive on learning about these changes and adjusting our strides off the ice, while keeping up-to-date with the ones on it.
One technology that continues to grow is the inclusion of videos in blog posts, aka vlogs. Personally, I have never shied away from videos, photographs, etc. I have spent some time modeling and still do so for small campaigns and companies. Why am I telling you this? Because no matter how comfortable you are in front of a camera, it will not prepare you for how vulnerable you feel when attempting a vlog.
This season, we will begin to include a weekly vlog, varying in subject matter on the site. I will admit to you right now, that my first attempt is choppy in editing (I have never used iMovie before) and awkward. Bear with me, after all this is preseason — that time when we are all getting our legs under us. As the season skates into view, not only myself but other Pink Puck contributors will be lending a glove save or a saucer pass to the vlog adventure.
My Blueberry Crumble vlog may not receive many stick taps, but I promise the content and creativity will be there moving forward.
I look forward to sharing another hockey season with each and every one of you.
Winter
Vlog Attempt Number 1
The Minnesota Wild started the preseason off slow when they lost to the Buffalo Sabres by a margin of 3-2. Since then, they have played four games, and have won three. Most recently, they beat their Central Division foe, the Winnipeg Jets, by a score of 8-1.
The Wild showed up in front of a home crowd Sunday night ready to play. The line-up, which looks a lot like the one fans will be seeing when the regular season starts, had eleven different players record points.
A team that usually has difficulty scoring didn’t hesitate Sunday, as four of the Wild’s eight goals were posted in the first period.
Matt Dumba, one of the Wild’s young players, had a stellar game, as he posted four points. Among the other players who recorded points were Charlie Coyle, Mikko Koivu, Zach Parise, Nino Niederreiter, Jonas Brodin, Thomas Vanek, Jason Pominville, Nate Prosser, Jared Spurgeon and Mikael Granlund. The Jets’ lone scorer was Mathieu Perreault.
Devan Dubnyk, the Wild’s starting goaltender, played solid in net, making saves on 18 of the 19 shots he faced; similar to the performance the Wild would like to see from him this season.
Mike Reilly, a newly signed defenseman from the University of Minnesota, saw ice time during the game, and posted a plus/minus of +2.
The Wild have one game remaining in the preseason, a rematch against the Buffalo Sabres at home. Their regular season opens up on Oct. 8 against the Colorado Avalanche at the Pepsi Center in Denver.
Like to go Wild? Check out Growing up Hockey: Charlie Coyle in our latest player featured interview!
(Photo: Minnesota Wild)
Many hockey players say that hockey is a part of them; that it is in their blood. In Charlie Coyle’s case it is in his DNA. Coyle counts among his family tree, cousins Bobby Sheehan, who played for the Montreal Canadiens, and won a Stanley Cup with them, and Tony Amonte, who is ranked 11th in American players with 900 points throughout his career.
Even as a youngster, Coyle, who was drafted 28th overall during the 2010 NHL Entry Draft by the San Jose Sharks, before being traded in the summer of 2011 to the Minnesota Wild, had hockey on his mind.
“I know everyone used to tell me that I didn’t do a whole lot when I was growing up,” Coyle shared. “I would always have a hockey stick in my hand.”
He likes to consider himself dedicated. Given that he forwent his dream of continuing to play with the Boston University Terriers in his sophomore year when he joined the Saint John Sea Dogs of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League to increase his playing experience and more closely simulate the NHL schedule, his assessment is pretty accurate.
“It [leaving Boston University] was the toughest thing I every had to do. As far as making the decision, it was the hardest thing to do. I always dreamed of playing for Boston University and going to school there and playing hockey, so I never really thought I would ever play major junior,” he commented. “That was just never anything I thought of. I always grew up playing around Boston and I’m from that area so I always thought of BC and BU, the Beanpot and all that.”
Though he was 19 when he made this decision, with the advice of his agents and discussing it with his family, it was still difficult to move so far away from his family.
“It’s always a tough thing to leave and all that—leave your family and leave where you’re from, but I think in the end it worked out,” he discussed. “It was something I had to do even though it was a tough decision. It was something, I think, I could do and it got me ready to where I am now.”
Having spent his childhood and teenage years in and around Boston and attending college just 25 minutes from where his family lived—allowing him to go home on the weekends, making the move to travel to Saint John, New Brunswick certainly took him out of his comfort zone. He was thankful that he did not have to make such a decision at a younger age.
“It was different kind of just leaving everyone behind and go up there and go into a place where I wasn’t really sure what to expect and kind of like a spur of the moment thing too,” Coyle reminisced. “I knew, uh, they told me I’d be living with a billet family up there, you know, and I had no clue about them; what they were like.”
Though he didn’t know anything about his billet family, he still counts them as family today—making summer visits there and considering their children his little brothers and sisters. Perhaps it was his maturity that helped him to view the entire experience as nothing but a positive.
“It really worked out. You get to meet new people like that and make new connections and that’s the special part of it,” Coyle described. “I knew I was going to [leave] eventually, going to play for hockey. I’d be moving away, so it was kind of like a stepping stone for that I think.”
Coyle does marvel at those players who have to make that difficult decision to move away from home at a much earlier age. He talked about some of his friends who were moving away at the age of 16 or earlier to progress and ultimately reach their dream of playing in the NHL. It was clear that this was difficult for him to wrap his mind around.
“I was a little more mature; a little older, so it definitely made it easier just knowing that I was kind of one of the older guys. I think that kind of helped,” he said. “Also, we had a great team up there and those guys made me feel welcome and they’re a great group so that kind of helped make me feel comfortable.”
Once again—as with so many other hockey players—the team experience rings out loud and the camaraderie of that group mentality help cement the positives of what could have been a less than rewarding experience.
Asking Coyle about how old he was when he made a conscious decision that his goal was to make it to the NHL results in some starts and stops in his response as he admits that he always struggles with this question. Eventually he pulls together an answer and starts talking with emotion.
“Ever since I played hockey, I think, I loved it. My dad obviously got me involved and a lot of my dad’s relatives—I have a few cousins who played in the NHL—so it’s just kind of in my family, the hockey thing,” he admits. “It’s just the only thing I wanted to do [and] I knew that involved playing in the NHL to try to make the best league in the world and to keep playing as long as I can.”
His mind set of working hard and hoping it would pay off served him well as he was growing up and he relies on that same approach even though he has made it to the NHL.
“People always ask me ‘What was your Plan B?’ or ‘What’s your Plan B?’” he shared. “I literally don’t have a Plan B. I just never thought of it like that. That’s all I ever wanted to do is play hockey. I don’t know what I would do if I wasn’t [playing hockey], so I just put all my efforts into that and luckily it got me to where I am today.”
In short he has always had a passion for the sport and fortunately he has been blessed with a lot of talent. Perhaps more importantly though, he was blessed with parents who helped mold his thinking that in addition to talent, hard work must also be applied.
“My dad was my coach from when I first started hockey up until high school. He was harder on me than anyone else because he knew he could be and I was his son. I think that helped me a lot, but he always kept the game fun,” he said, his voice animated.
Like so many players who have come before him and those who will certainly come after, he relates countless stories about how his parents spent time helping him—the endless trips to the rinks for practice and games. The example they themselves set on what it means to work hard. And while some people unfortunately struggle to find good things to say about one parent, in Coyle’s case, his struggles were in not leaving out his mother or his father as he talked of how they have helped him.
“My mom is the best person I know and I think those characteristics that she has taught me go a long way in the hockey community with meeting new people, creating long friendships through hockey and just being a personable person.” Coyle shared with pride and affection for his mother.
Many parents are convinced that their children are oblivious to the efforts they put forth in not only raising their children but in ensuring they have food, lodging and lack for no essentials. And while Coyle may not have acknowledged it when he was younger, it really did not go unnoticed.
“They go out everyday and they go to work to provide for our family growing up, as they still do. Whether it was driving me to hockey or going to work and coming home late at night from work, we grew up watching that every day,” he said. “You don’t really think of it at the time, but now you look back and they did all that for us, for our family and so that hard work and all those qualities and sacrifice and dedication, we just see it first hand through my mom and dad all the time.”
Like all young boys playing hockey, Coyle idolized some of those who were playing in the NHL at the time of his childhood. Of course, in his case, he could idolize and pretend to be family.
“I think I always envisioned myself in my cousin Tony Amonte’s footsteps. When I was growing up he was playing in the NHL and I always looked up to him,” Coyle recounted. “I remember playing street hockey, you know, outside in front of my house, and pretending I was him—scoring goals, doing this, playing in the NHL. Just keeping it in the family, I guess.”
But it was his father who has perhaps left the biggest impact on Coyle and how he approaches not only every game, but also how he prepares for them.
“My dad would always say ‘Practice is much more important than a game. You know that’s how you prepare for the game; that’s what get’s you ready. So how you work in practice is how you are going to work in the game,’” Coyle related. “So he always used to tell me that so I always used to tell myself ‘Well, if that’s true then I have to be the hardest worker out in practice. I have to outwork all my teammates to do that.’”
Even though Coyle has been with the Minnesota Wild since he signed his entry-level contract in 2012, he still hears his father’s sage advice and applies it in his professional life. And it must be paying off, because the Wild signed Coyle in 2014 to a five-year contract extension.
As far as Coyle is concerned that approach doesn’t just apply to the game of hockey.
“Just when I was very young, I think I understood those qualities and hard work and how it pays off. My mom and dad used to put that in my head everyday with everything, not just hockey—schoolwork, all that,” he said. “He used to always tell me to keep a positive mind and that would obviously help me as well to not get discouraged. It’s like both [my parents] tell me the same things, but in a different way and they have an understanding of how things go and what to tell me and they tell me in their own way.”
Undoubtedly his parents must be proud of him as a hockey player but more importantly as a son. Though he admits to being a quiet guy as a kid, he has a great sense of humor, and shares stories at ease. The easiest word he found to describe himself as a boy though was dedicated. He recognizes there are times to see the humor in things, but for him that is definitely not when he is on the ice.
For Charlie Coyle hockey is a passion—a passion that gives him joy. He realizes though that it is the hard work and positive attitude that help him to continue to grow. It is a refreshing attitude to experience in this era of entitlement. While his parents probably are already aware; they have raised an amazing person whose approach to hockey is also his approach to life and will see him go far. Hockey in the DNA may help explain some of his talent, but his true skill comes from perseverance and his willingness to be the hardest worker at all times.
(Photo: Alan Sullivan)
On Sunday the Boston Bruins announced transactions concerning those at camp. Not very surprising, given their age and stage of development, Jakub Zboril (Saint John Sea Dog, QMJHL), Brandon Carlo (Tri-City Americans, WHL) and Jake DeBrusk (Swift Current Broncos, WHL) were all returned to their Junior teams. However, these players left impressions on head coach Claude Julien and it is clear he is looking forward to seeing more of them.
For those who were expecting Malcolm Subban to serve as the backup goaltender for Tuukka Rask, they will have to wait a little longer. Both Subban and Zane McIntyre were assigned to the Providence Bruins along with Noel Acciari, Chris Breen, Anthony Camara, Brandon DeFazio, Justin Hickman, and Ben Sexton. The final person cut in this round was Ben Youds who has been released to join the Providence Bruins Training Camp.
In the goalie department that brings the backup netminder competition to Jeremy Smith and Jonas Gustavsson. Gustavsson was away from camp for a few days, and had been expected to play in Thursday’s game against the Rangers. However, his wife was just about to give birth to a daughter. The little girl made her appearance in Detroit on Friday afternoon, arriving before the Bruins did for their preseason game. Gustavsson is set to be backup Monday night as Rask is given the start and expected to play the entire home game against the Red Wings.
During practice Monday morning, it was clear that the remaining group of players—which still includes some youngsters—will see a couple of them get another chance in evening’s game. Austin Czarnik will center a line with Matt Beleskey and David Pastrnak. While not an 18-year-old, Czarnik finished college this past spring and as such is entering into his first full season of professional hockey.
“Honestly? Just that. Communication,” Beleskey said after practice. “You know we talked about some tendencies [Czarnik] likes to do and just be simple, play your game. I’ll let him do his thing and I’ll do mine.”
However, the younger players are often a little intimidated when it comes to vocalizing on ice to a veteran player.
“Yeah, I think it’s make them feel comfortable and make them realize that we’re all part of it,” Patrice Bergeron said this weekend. “Their input is as important as ours and that’s’ the only way you can succeed is by everyone feeling comfortable and everyone, you know, uh, giving their thoughts also their ideas about how they think a shift should be going.”
Some of the younger players have been watching these veterans and idolizing them, so it is understandable how such vocalization to someone they see as a superior can be difficult. The Bruins organization though strives to ensure that all of its prospects understand that they are important and that they are there to be evaluated as professionals.
While practice cannot fully simulate a game experience, what it can help with is this communication. Knowing that the guy to your right or left is the guy on your line for that evening’s game and discussing how each handles certain situations is paramount to seeing a productive team in general. And if the youngsters get used to doing this early on, by the time they do make the team, they will already be comfortable with such associations.
What is clear, watching the rushes, the drills and the games as they have progressed is that the team is coming together. There is more communication. There is a confidence that is building among those who continue to be on the roster with this most recent of cuts.
After Monday’s game against the Red Wings, the team will play two additional preseason games, both on the road. The first will take place on Wednesday, September 30 against the New York Rangers. The second will be on Friday, October 2, when they meet the Washington Capitals.
Not to be glib, but Daniel “Carbomb” Carcillo is the last of a dying breed. Better people than I have written about what it means to be an enforcer type player and what that does to a person. Carcillo himself came from the mold of a Danny Briere (who also retired this off-season) or a Marty St. Louis (ditto) in size, however for the most part you would be hard press to ever confuse them for Carcillo.
Danny Briere had 4 hat tricks in his career, 2 all-star game appearances and some pretty big playoff games (mainly with Buffalo in ’06) as well as finished with 307 goals, 389 assists and 696 points …. and 744 penalty minutes in 973 games played. Whereas in only 429 games, Carcillo had 1,233 penalty minutes. Marty St Louis finished with 391 goals, 642 assists and 310 penalty minutes in 1,134 games played as well as winning the Lady Byng Memorial Award three times in his career. Carcillo and the award for sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct for in this case, his on-ice activities? The man who was either suspended or fined 12 times in his first 9 seasons? Yeah right.
This is not an attack piece on Carcillo. No. This is to remind everyone that people can change and/or people can be very different than what your preconceived notions of them are. Everyone expects Carcillo to be a jerk or at least to be the living hockey embodiment of the protagonist of 2000’s Hot Topic teenager anthem Wheatus’ Teenage Dirtbag. But, besides doing quiet charity work like many a hockey player (including the ‘Champs for Charity’ where he ended up ‘fighting’ former pitcher Ryan Dempster as well as during the latest lockout, he was a part of Operation Hat Trick to donate money to Hurricane Sandy and I’m pretty sure he’s also donated to Scott Hartnell’s #HartnellDown Foundation), he’s starting a new charity called Chapter 5, dedicated to helping NHLers transition into retirement.
He retired on Thursday September 17th via The Players’ Tribune in an article called A Bittersweet Day. One of the reasons his new charity is going to be dedicated to helping former NHL players after they retire is because his very close friend, Steve “The Matador” Montador died in February of this year. Carcillo finished his career with another Stanley Cup with the Blackhawks in June. On the night that they won the Cup, Carcillo’s friend Missy wore Montador’s jersey on the ice while celebrating with him. The ‘A Bittersweet Day’ goes into detail about Carcillo’s day with the Cup and how he took it to a golf course that he and Montador loved playing/goofing around in. Carcillo also wrote another article in April on The Players’ Tribune called, Gone, which also had a very emotional video where he talks about how we (fans, players, trainers, the sport, the game, the world) can’t lose another Steve Montador.
Normally when a player retires, you wish them good luck and hope that they spend their newly found vacation time drinking out of a coconut on some exotic beach. In this case, I hope Carcillo continues the momentum he started with the Chapter 5 Foundation as quickly as he can because it’s such an important cause for all of us who are fans of the game of hockey.
One final thought in regards to everything that has happened during the 2015 hockey offseason:
Ian McLaren
@iancmclaren
Didn’t expect Dan Carcillo to be the shining beacon of the Chicago Blackhawks organization at the end of the hockey day, but here we are.
3:55 PM – 17 Sep 2015
Hockey is life. It has saved me from myself more than once and it will continue to be my savior. Watching the game is one thing, but playing, being on the ice is quite another. I cannot tell you how many times I have taken a deep breath upon getting on the ice and thinking “I am home.” It is the mix of cold and refrigeration equipment that fills my nostrils and lifts my stress and worry from the day.
There was a moment in the not so distant past where I thought my playing might be done for. I tore my ACL in a late night beer league game and the road to recovery seemed almost too much to bear. I felt isolated from my hockey family as I pushed through the surgery and then rehab. The game saved me, this time by watching and writing about it, interviewing players and reading the latest trades. I caught a deeper perspective into the sport I love and it soothed the mental struggle I was challenged with as my knee put up a fight against recovery.
Two years after surgery, I am almost in a place where I don’t think about my reconstructed knee in a game. I have been able to push my body to places I never thought I could achieve and in a way, my injury was the best thing that could have happened to me. It forced me to appreciate the little successes and push through my fears. I diversified my activities, adding CrossFit as another avenue of fitness beyond hockey. My body has never been in the shape it is in now. It has become a well-oiled machine. I am mindful of what I put into it and the performance that I get out. I have embraced a background level of soreness but am reaping the rewards, as my skating is faster, my shot harder.
I can truly understand how difficult it must be for a pro player to step away from the game when they come to the point of hanging up the skates, whether from the reality of retirement or the realization that they will never be “good enough.” Even after multiple injuries, many guys put up with the pain and the struggle to stay in the game. Hockey is a difficult game to put away. It is much more than a sport. Hockey is Life.
(Photo: Alan Sullivan)
What a difference a couple of days of practice can make in the preseason. Tuesday’s game was a bit chaotic as players struggled to understand where each other was. Watching that game from above was like watching random fast skaters. However, Thursday’s game had the speed that the Boston Bruins want to bring this season, but the passes were more solid and there seemed to be much more control among the line mates that were out at any given moment. For some of the Bruins, this was a second game, and in the case of the line consisting of Ryan Spooner, Brett Connolly and Jimmy Hayes, this was their second game as a line.
Unfortunately for the team, they saw captain Zdeno Chara go down and he would not return to the game. On Friday, during his media availability, head coach Claude Julien informed those assembled that Chara had been evaluated and was listed as day-to-day. This was much better news than the timelines for both Dnneis Seidenberg whose offseason injury requires surgery and Seth Griffith who is sidelined for an expected four weeks with a sprained MCL from an on-ice incident that took place when the Bruins played the New Jersey Devils on the 18th.
Perhaps the best event to come out of Thursday’s game against the New York Rangers was rookie and 18-year-old Brandon Carlo’s first NHL goal. Even though it is preseason, he was still quite happy about it and was excited to be playing in the game. But then why wouldn’t he be considering he was paired with Chara.
The lanky 6’5” defenseman shows a maturity belying his youth, which could be the result of his determination to excel. His eyes and ears are open and he is taking in everything he can from coaches and veterans alike.
“[Chara] helps with everything. Every single thing when I am on the ice with him. He just teaches me little things here and there,” Carlo spoke in admiration. “There’s so much knowledge within that guy that he’s shared with me, but mainly just having a good stick, using our bodies, so he’s been very helpful.”
And obviously Carlo took it all to heart because on Friday afternoon the Bruins announced that they had signed the Colorado Springs native to an entry-level contract. Could he be this year’s David Pastrnak for the Boston Bruins? Hard to say with camp still underway and Carlo having had only two preseason games under his belt. Traditionally defensemen take longer to develop than forwards, but Carlo is off to a good start and perhaps his international play the past two seasons coupled with serving as Alternate Captain for the Tri-City Americans this last year has given him a better understanding of what it means to step up.
Coach Julien commented to media on Saturday, before the team headed to Detroit, as to the potential that Carlo has. And Carlo was among those who traveled to to play the Red Wings, marking his third preseason game.
It was also clear in talking with Spooner after Thursday’s game that communication both on and off the ice continues to improve and was in part responsible for his goal that tied the game and ultimately forced it to go to overtime and then a shootout.
“I think there was a rebound and it went to [Patrice Bergeron] and we actually talked about that if he got the puck in the middle he was just going to throw the puck over there and it was a great pass,” Spooner described his goal postgame. “I was going to one-timer, but I looked up [and] there was a bunch of bodies in front of the net so I was just trying to get the puck on net. I actually tried to shoot for a rebound and it went in the net so I’m not going to complain.”
And while the goal may have been a fluke, his being in the right place at the right time to receive the pass from Bergeron was not. It is this communication and understanding where players will be that becomes essential when the regular season gets underway.
The Providence Bruins training camp begins Sunday, September 27, so it would not be surprising to see some cuts made to the Bruins still large training camp roster, likely sometime during the evening as the team returns from another overtime win in Detroit. However, the injuries to Chara, Seidenberg and Griffith are likely to dictate a more judicious pruning of the roster than might have originally been anticipated.
If you are anything like me, you are always stressing about how to look chic, but appropriate in every situation. I believe that there is a time and place for everything–and as much as it pains me to say–going to a hockey game in a pair of stilettos is not appropriate. Dressing for sporting events is a time that you need to be a little more casual, but casual never means that you aren’t cute!
Erin Andrews recently had a great article in Cosmopolitan about “leaving the club shoes at home” when attending a sporting event. She’s totally right. Her shoe of choice is a Vans slip-on. If you had asked me last year if I had agreed, I would have 100% said no. My style has done a complete 180 degree flip, though, and I wear Vans whenever it is appropriate (or inappropriate). Pairing a slip on sneaker with a sundress and leather jacket or some boyfriend jeans is the perfect attire. I like to mix some stylish pieces with something so opposite because you look put together, but like you didn’t even try. This is one example of dressing chic and still fitting the dress code.
Rocking a tee shirt with your fave team’s logo on it is sometimes thought of as something that you can’t look stylish in. Stop thinking that immediately. First of all, most teams have neutral color shirts, no matter the team’s colors. If you are like me, you don’t wear a lot of color, so this is perfect. My trick is to always make sure I have a ‘third piece’; whether it’s a scarf or a jacket, you will always look more put together. My go-to for hockey is a leather jacket for so many different reasons, and if you followed along with me and my Press Level Fashion looks last year, you would see how it was my #1 choice. I’ve put together a cute look below to show you how to dress up a simple tee shirt.
Shirt | Shoes | Jeans | Jacket | Bag
Just remember: you can still show off your team spirit and look stylish. Don’t try too hard, that’s key.
For more on fashion follow along this season for my Press Level Fashion posts on The Pink Puck and online at Girl Next Score.