ON THE afternoon
of Game 5 of the Stanley Cup finals, during a teleconference beamed to sylvan
Oakland Hills Country Club in suburban Detroit, Tiger Woods was asked whom he
liked that night, the Red Wings or the Pittsburgh Penguins. This was the kind
of warmup question that Woods could have knocked 300 yards off the 1st tee with
some generous platitude, but instead he grinned and said, "I don't really
care.... I don't think anybody really watches hockey anymore." � His reply
was more rip it than grip it. � Eleven hours after Tiger had implied that
hockey was deader than a persimmon driver, Pittsburgh pulled out a stupefying
4--3, triple-overtime win to extend the series, the last bump in the Red Wings'
ultimately glorious road to their 11th Stanley Cup. (That's more than any
franchise has won except Montreal and Toronto.) The high-paced drama of Game 5
left an impression not only on NHL history—it was the fifth-longest game in a
Stanley Cup finals—but also on Penguins left wing Ryan Malone.
As Malone sat in
the dressing room, his lopsided kisser resembled an orange that had been run
through a juicer. His nose had been broken for the second time in the series
when it was struck by teammate Hal Gill's slap shot in the second period.
( Malone returned for the third period, cotton jammed in his nostrils.) A few
feet from Malone, defenseman Sergei Gonchar, whose back had been in spasms
since he crashed headfirst into the boards late in the second period, was
recounting his return in the third overtime and his role in setting up the
winning power-play goal. The Penguins had earned that fateful man-advantage
when Detroit's Jiri Hudler cut defenseman Rob Scuderi with a high stick, a
mandatory four-minute penalty because Hudler had drawn blood. Across the room
from Malone and Gonchar, Scuderi, a zipper of stitches across his
russet-colored mustache, was saying, "You're skating up the ice hoping
you're bleeding.... I was just praying for blood."
(That is not the
kind of prayer, incidentally, that players will be voicing this weekend at the
U.S. Open, starring Woods and his arthroscopically repaired left knee, an event
at which a commentator, in reverential tones, will describe someone's
aggressive shot as courageous. Guaranteed.)
Regarding Woods's
assertion that no one "really watches hockey," he should know that a
match that lasted nearly 110 minutes of game time averaged a 3.8 rating and a
seven share in the U.S.—roughly 6.25 million viewers—and attracted another 3.4
million in Canada. Two nights later, after Detroit goalie Chris Osgood
preserved a 3--2 series-ending victory by foiling Sidney Crosby's shot and
sprawling as Marian Hossa's last-second rebound attempt slid through the
crease, 6.8 million Americans saw the Red Wings skate with their fourth Cup in
11 years, the most-watched Game 6 in at least 13 years. In the Detroit area,
where Woods will play at Oakland Hills in the PGA Championships this August,
45% of all TV viewers that night watched the Cup clincher on NBC.
Buttressing the
NHL's appeal with numbers, whether TV ratings or the stitch count in the
Penguins' dressing room, is like drawing a portrait of this rich, textured
finals with stick figures. But the response to the often captivating Red
Wings--Penguins series hints that hockey may be coming in from the cold,
Tiger's opinion notwithstanding.
DURING A drill at
the Red Wings' skate on the morning of Game 6, 24-year-old Swedish defenseman
Jonathan Ericsson, who didn't crack Detroit's lineup all playoffs, began
skating at the right circle, crossed over like Fred Astaire, took a pass and
whipped a shot on goal from the left circle. It was a snippet of the kind of
skill that has characterized Detroit teams for more than a decade.
These will be
remembered as the Red Wings of Nicklas Lidstrom, Henrik Zetterberg and Pavel
Datsyuk—has the value of the Euro ever been higher?—but no one seemed more
emblematic of this extraordinary franchise than Ericsson, who, like a handful
of other minor league prospects, had been afforded a two-month Stanley Cup
tutorial by accompanying the team for its playoffs campaign. The 6'5",
206-pound Ericsson is a tall glass of aquavit—strong and smooth with a
finishing kick. He was the NHL version of Mr. Irrelevant, chosen with the
291st, and final, selection of the 2002 draft. While some NHL teams had traded
their last-round picks for future considerations in order to bolt for the
airport that weekend in Toronto, Detroit heeded its European scouting director
Hakan Andersson and selected a player who, at Andersson's urging, had switched
from center to defense in his final year of junior hockey in Sweden.
In typical Red
Wings fashion Ericsson has been tested and prodded and seasoned, much like the
flashy Zetterberg was at his first training camp in 2002, when future teammate
Darren McCarty made him his personal chew toy. "[ McCarty] ran me over a few
times," Zetterberg, this year's Conn Smythe winner, recalls, "but right
after camp he apologized and said that [general manager] Ken Holland had told
him to do it." Ericsson appeared in just eight of Detroit's games this
season, yet with his industrial-strength shot, which was clocked at 100.1 mph
last January in an AHL skills competition, Detroit consultant Scotty Bowman
believes that Ericsson will be a top-four NHL defenseman—perhaps as soon as
next season. No organization handles the business of succession more adroitly
than the Red Wings.
Consider:
21-year-old Darren Helm, a modest playoff contributor, is heir apparent to
veteran superchecker Kris Draper—except with better hands; 24-year-old center
Valtteri Filppula is as good as the 27-year-old Zetterberg was at the same age;
27-year-old Niklas Kronwall is developing into a premier defenseman, to follow
Lidstrom. Says assistant G.M. Jim Nill, "This group has three more years
[as an elite team], then we've got a lot of guys who are 27, 28 or 29, so they
have five years left. And our kids should be getting better. There's a definite
chain of command here."
When a salary cap
was introduced after the 2004--05 lockout, Detroit could no longer outspend
other teams. (The Wings and the New York Rangers typically had the league's
highest payrolls.) There were, however, no constraints against continuing to
outthink them. The Red Wings used to be the New York Yankees. Now they are
Moneyball.