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Sports Central February 19, 2005 Greg Wyshynski |
The Bright Side of Armageddon I was wrong about the National Hockey League lockout. That's a hard pill for me to swallow, because I was convinced that this was all for the best |
Sports Central February 14, 2005 Eric Poole |
NHL 2004-05: R.I.P. Considering the state of hockey, it's fitting that one of this country's largest collections of NHL memorabilia and jerseys is in a funeral home. |
Sports Central February 12, 2005 Greg Wyshynski |
How to Simply Fix the NHL The solution to professional hockey's problems isn't found in salary caps or luxury taxes or franchise players or "cost certainty." |
Sports Central January 25, 2005 Mark Chalifoux |
The NHL Lockout Stinks At the start of the lockout, which has now lasted over 130 days, I was in the camp that the game needed to be fixed and that if it took the whole season to fix it, then so be it. |
Sports Central January 15, 2005 Greg Wyshynski |
Two For Hooking All of this yammering about luxury taxes and salary caps and revenue sharing comes back to one problem: that the NHL simply doesn't make enough money to sustain itself. |
Sports Central January 12, 2005 Mike Chen |
The Four-Month Itch Okay, I admit it. I really, really, ridiculously miss the NHL. |
Sports Central November 19, 2004 Mike Chen |
The Theory of Contraction The Hockey News recently published a magazine with a series of hypothetical debates. While this is primarily something to fill the void as the current lockout continues, the debates to bring up several interesting talking points. |
Sports Central November 9, 2004 Mark Chalifoux |
Bettman's Plan to Save the NHL "Whether or not we miss half a season or three-quarters of a season, or don't have a season at all -- that is not the issue from our standpoint," the national Hockey League commissioner said. "We need a deal that is the right deal to address the problems and let us go forward." |
BusinessWeek November 1, 2004 Mark Hyman |
An Entire Season in the Penalty Box? As incredible as it seems for a league that sells 90% of available tickets and last season generated revenues of $2.1 billion, the National Hockey League may sit this season out. Who blinks first in negotiations between the owners and the union will depend on willpower and finances. |
BusinessWeek November 1, 2004 Jay Greene |
How This Diehard Fan Would Fix Hockey The sad truth of the lockout is that for the vast majority of American sports enthusiasts, it doesn't much matter. The National Hockey League may well lose the entire 2004-05 season, and most sports fans in this country won't even notice. |
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