My fantasy cover for EA NHL14, be sure to vote for Hall to be on the cover, and to enter the Oilers NHL14 cover contest on edmontonoilers.com !
I am awful at predictions. I predicted Carolina to finish 2nd this year...aaaaand they're not in the playoffs. Anyways here are my picks, my pre-season cup winner pick was the Rangers, so I'll stick with them...reluctantly. I'd love to see a Chicago/Pittsburgh final, however.
Please comment below and tell us your picks! Update: The NHL has an awesome bracket challenge this year. I have set up a league called "Oiler fans on twitter" if you want to join in! In response to the Minnesota Wild's Brodin infographic, I have put together a response to elect Nail Yakupov for this year's Calder Trophy.
UPDATE: The NHL Season has concluded so the infographic has been updated for a final time@ For a hi-res version click here. At times, the NHL is infuriating, and at times the NHL is absolutely brilliant. During the frustrating lockout, word spread about the NHL conducting focus groups to figure out how to win fans back to the most exciting game in the world. Fans were furious to hear that the NHL figured it could simply win us over with a heart warming message, or some magical phrase designed to turn us into dumb, drooling sheep again. Fans were mad at themselves during the lockout, too. Mad that we even followed the NHL at all, that we ever spent money on a league that would take advantage of us every time a CBA expired, and assumed we'd come crawling back for more. Well, we did. We filled NHL arenas and TV ratings were reported to be high. And what about that heart warming message or magical phrase? Something about a "shared sacrifice"? It never came. There was no ceremony, no suits, no podium. Instead, the lockout ended in the middle of the night with Bettman and Fehr announcing the deal in their casual street clothes. There was an apology from Bettman later on, but the message was simply what the fans wanted to hear: Drop the puck. Get on with it. Game on. Mad MenRecently, in time for playoff hype, the NHL unleashed it's first-of-five playoff commercials.... and IT. IS. BRILLIANT. Don Draper brilliant. This is what the commercial ISN'T: It isn't heartwarming. It isn't a plea, it isn't an apology, it isn't trickery. It isn't even a sell on hockey or the players. It is a challenge. The NHL is challenging the fans. Brilliant. The NHL is challenging our creativity and inviting us to get weird. They are giving the fans free reign to dress up, build costumes, start new memes, dance, yell, hoot and holler. It's a brilliant way of acknowledging our pent up energy/rage/anger and giving us the freedom to not only express it, but to help amp up the energy again. The NHL needs fans to be excited. That is their hidden message here. TraditionsI hope the NHL is trying to build a fan culture. Each stadium has it's own traditions and unique cheers, but the NHL as a whole doesn't really have a fan culture outside of "GO ____ GO!" and the mexican wave. They aren't trying to shove anything down our throats, they aren't trying to force us to act a certain way, or sing a certain song, or feel a certain emotion. They aren't trying to force new traditions. They are going to let the fans dictate this new culture. And I hope they are simply looking for more great footage.
I hope that this ad campaign is a true effort to build upon what fans already do: the green men, weird costumes, giant heads, random horse masks, you name it. Be weird. Be more weird than last year. What you are doing now is not weird enough. It's a challenge. It's brilliant. I love it. I am the white sheep. |
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