She lay on the floor as firm hands gripped her ankles against his muscular chest. Their sweaty bodies moved in tandem to the steady beat of grunts and moans. Partially clad passers by ignored the writhing pair.

Despite the images Don Cherry’s comments during Coach’s Corner last Saturday may have impregnated in gullible minds, that’s not what goes on in post-game NHL interviews between players and female media, or male media if so inclined.

It’s just a typical session at the gym as my personal trainer and I go all out to create a faster, higher, stronger body for me.

I don’t hate or dislike Don Cherry. I don’t know him personally, have never met him but appreciate his extensive charity work. Cherry has long been a fierce advocate and proponent of female hockey. A real beauty, eh?  While our opinions differ on certain matters, the thought of him being sexist, the thought of him not putting people on equal footing never entered my mind. That’s why his recent comments stung.

Duncan Keith’s comments to Team 1040‘s Karen Thomson didn’t fire me up.  I’ve heard hockey players say similar things to male media; while interning at The Hockey News it was all in a day’s work. That’s why I took Keith’s comments with a lost shaker of salt. Some people considered them an attack on Thomson’s gender and Cherry’s public reaction was to, in essence, blame a woman for doing her job. The old, “if she hadn’t been there it never would have happened” gambit.

But we are there. Female media are here, there, everywhere and all over Hell’s half hectare. So are male media. It’s not about boys being boys; this is about professionals being professionals. If there are players and media who can’t handle that, they need to be dealt with on an individual basis.

Cherry spoke of having to protect women from disgusting and boorish behaviour exhibited by some athletes. His proposed solution isn’t to punish the perpetrators but to condone the antics and punish female media by denying them equal access to players. If you’re accredited media, you are accredited media – full stop.

We’re all at the rinks, media conferences, games, and practices doing the same job. Women in hockey are not a novelty anymore. There’s even one – Helene Elliott of the Los Angeles Times – in the Hockey Hall of Fame and deservedly so. You can’t kick us out.

You can however, give the boot to all media for so called dressing room interviews. But there has to be some clarification. Dressing or locker room to many people implies one room, with a toilet and a shower no one ever actually uses at the local rink.

In the NHL, it’s not really “a dressing room.” They are multi-room complexes. The dressing room in which media conduct post-game interviews is the tip of the ACC iceberg. There are no showers in there and no one runs about nude. This gem from Jody Vance and the late Wade Belak should get the point across. What you see at home after the game is what media see. If it’s appropriate for you to watch at home, it’s appropriate for media, even horror of horrors, female media to see in the room. Take a good look: most players are not even in the media area. They’re off being naked away from the cameras.

As for nudity, you see much more in the family change rooms at the community centre, at the gym, at the beach, in Old Spice commercials, and in college. While I was cutting my chops at the College of Sports Media, sometimes the guys would go play basketball at Moss Park between classes. Sometimes they didn’t have extra shirts so they’d go topless. My poor feminine eyes! There was even one guy who just for the hell of it, would occasionally doff his shirt to throw his interview partners off. I didn’t bat a single mascaraed eyelash.

Regarding women being above men and on a pedestal, spare me. Well, okay maybe just once I liked being up there. I’ll always cherish Jim Van Horne putting me above the guys (and one woman) by awarding me Top Writer honours in our graduating class at The College of Sports Media. I cherish it because it had nothing to do with male vs. female: it was recognition for what I do and that I do it very well. Thanks, Jim.

A lot of stereotypes have been tossed around over this issue, the usual crap about women getting into sports media to bang players and ogle their bodies in the dressing room.

I hate to break it to some of you guys, but “go find sweaty, smelly men to ogle in cramped dressing room” isn’t on a female reporter’s to do list.

If that were the case, it could be done a hell of a lot more easily than spending $40,000 and a few years in school to cut your sports media chops. Now where’s that “Youngblood” DVD?

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The recently agreed upon re-alignment of the NHL spells the end of the much maligned Southeast division.

The division featuring a collection of non-traditional hockey markets had a run of incredible highs, including back to back Stanley Cups, and more than its fair share of forgettable moments. Its inaugural season was 1998-99 when the Florida Panthers, Washington Capitals and Tampa Bay Lightning were tabbed to join from the Atlantic Division, and Carolina moved from the Northeast. The Atlanta Thrashers joined as an expansion team the following season, rounding out the division with five teams.

The inaugural season saw the Carolina Hurricanes grab the division championship guaranteeing them a top three seed in the East. Their point total would have placed them as the eighth seed in the conference. The division’s benefit of a top three seed would became an issue with rival Eastern Conference fans as the winner of the weakest divisions in hockey was guaranteed home ice advantage in the first round of the playoffs. Home ice did not help the Hurricanes though, as they were eliminated by the Bruins in the first round.

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A Sports UpFront Book Review

Sports sections ofnews media are often considered to be the “sand-box” of journalism.

ABC TV reporter Howard Cosell coined the term and, despite covering sports most of his television career, complained sports writers did not delve deeply into the issues in sports. Cosell complained, for example, that there were too many clichés and unexplored assumptions in the sports world that are taken at face value and not examined further. Critics of the sports coverage often complain sports writing is comprised mostly of action/reaction stories and not more in-depth cause-and-effect explanations one might find in other sections of the news.

Into this sandbox come Tobias J. Moskowitz and L. Jon Wertheim, a finance professor from the University of Chicago and a senior writer at Sports Illustrated, respectively. Suddenly, sports coverage shifts from play-time, to thinking time. The stories in Scorecasting are provocative and profound. They are thorough and well-crafted, providing analysis that can be read and re-read, enjoyed as much for their effectiveness as their aesthetics. There is a lot more to think about here than the one-upmanship that frequently takes place over beer and pretzels.

There is no I in team” is one of the issues they explore. And yet, when the game is on the line, it takes a superstar such as Michael Jordan to come through for the win. Moskowitz and Wertheim examine how Jordan did step up as needed, but when criticized by the coaches or the media, Jordan’s response was that there may be no I in team, but there was an “I” in win.

As you might expect, the book does not shy away from statistical analysis. A first team all-star on a team, the authors explain, gives a 16 per cent chance of the team going deep into the playoffs, and adds a 7 per cent chance of winning a championship. Having two first team all-stars on a team increases those odds to a 37 per cent chance of making the finals and a 25 per cent chance of winning it all. Increase the number of all-stars on a team to three, and the numbers jump again to 70 per cent chance of making the finals and 48 per cent chance of winning the championship. No wonder, then, there was such a hullabaloo when Lebron James joined Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade on the roster of the Miami Heat.

Is there such a thing as home field advantage? It seems that there is. Moskowitz and Wertheim prove it, with statistics from major league baseball, NHL, professional and college football, basketball and international soccer. With stats that range from just over 50 per cent in baseball to just under 70 per cent in international soccer matches, Moskowitz and Wertheim explain that it is not just the home team hoopla such as cheerleaders, announcers, enthusiastic fans, a good night’s sleep, etc. that makes this so, but there is the bottom line to consider:

There is considerable economic incentive for home teams to win as often as possible,” they write. “When the home team wins, the consumer – that is, the ticket buying fans – leave happy. The better the home team plays, the more likely fans are to buy tickets and hats and T-shirts, renew their luxury suite leases…The better the home team plays, the more likely businesses and corporations are to buy sponsorships and the more likely local television networks are to bid for rights fees. A lot of sports marketing, after all, is driven by the desire to associate with a winner.”

Moskowitz and Wertheim give us a fresh approach to understanding sports events. Their statistical analysis makes for interesting reading, helping us to predict the likelihood of a winning team, the accuracy of the strike count or the success and value of a first round draft pick.

In their epilogue, they say they want to write more, and invite readers to send their suggestions. And indeed, that is one of the weaknesses of this book. There are only so many ways one can mathematically examine sports. It is, after all, human performance, no matter how it may be shaped by the media coverage and the leather-lunged fans in the stands. There is still lots of room in the sandbox of sports journalism, but Scorecasting will provide some thinking time for our play time.

Scorecasting: the hidden influences behind how sports are played and games are won


By Tobias J. Moskowitz and L. Jon Wertheim
Crown, $26 (US) $30 (CDN), 278 pages

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Scott Walker barely remembers the biggest moment of his career, and not because of his struggle with concussions.

Walker hasn’t played in the NHL since 2010, but he still ties the laces on his skates regularly. He’s the head coach, and part-owner, of the Guelph Storm in the Ontario Hockey League. He was skating with the team at the end of his final NHL season, as a way to stay in shape, and stay in the NHL. Then the Storm made a coaching move.

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Since July of 1997, there have been 170 coaching changes in the NHL, that’s 5.6 per team. Take a moment to let that sink in.

While many accomplished and respected hockey men have had to clean out their office over that time, Lindy Ruff was never among them—until this past week.

At risk of missing the playoffs for the fourth time in six seasons, thanks to a miserable 6-10-1 start to 2012-13, the Buffalo Sabres fired their coach of 15 seasons. Replacing him as interim coach is Ron Rolston, promoted from the Rochester Americans of the AHL.

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The Papal Address Feb 18 2013

This week on The Papal Address Chris Pope calls out people who believe Pittsburgh Penguins forward Matt Cooke intentionally injured Ottawa Senators defenceman Erik Karlsson.

The Papal Address is a 2-minute address to someone in the sports world. The voice behind The Papal Address is Sports UpFront co-founder Chris Pope. Music on The Papal Address provided by Edward T Music Productions. 

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In the wake of another lockout that further damaged the reputation of the NHL, the hockey culture’s hang-ups may have reared their head again early in this abbreviated season.

Trying to pulverize an opponent with fists can be called a display of honour, but celebrating exuberantly is often considered something quite opposite that has no place in what is frequently called the ultimate team game. Flamboyance on the ice is rooted out of the vast majority of Canadian kids by the time they hit Major Junior. Excessive celebrations are met with such sensitivity that when we witness one, it dominates sports highlights the following day.

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Nick Spaling sets down his PS3 controller, not to head to Bridgestone Arena, but because he’s letting his captain’s dog, Dug, out for a washroom break.

Waiting to find out if he’d play a third season for the Nashville Predators in the NHL this year, the forward wasn’t ready to commit to buying or renting a house in Music City USA. So newly re-signed Predators captain Shea Weber took him in.

“Obviously we weren’t playing or getting paid and I figured it would be easier for him to move into my place than to rent a place and pay for something when he didn’t need to,” says Weber.

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The Papal Address Feb 4 2013

This week on The Papal Address Chris Pope calls out NHL fans who thought they could boycott the NHL season in response to the NHL Lockout.

The Papal Address is a 2-minute address to someone in the sports world. The voice behind The Papal Address is Sports UpFront co-founder Chris Pope. Music on The Papal Address provided by Edward T Music Productions. 

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Lockout.

The dictionary describes it as, “the withholding of employment by an employer and the whole or partial closing of the business establishment in order to gain concessions from or resist demands of employees.”

NHL fans are beginning to call them something else, something much harsher, and vulgar.

The full 2004-05 season was cancelled and the current 48-game campaign was only salvaged after an ugly 113 day lockout.

Labour disruptions in sports overseas don’t happen. Owners wouldn’t be so callous or daring to lockout their players twice in nine seasons. Players wouldn’t have the intestinal fortitude to go ahead with a strike. They know that to do so, would be a death penalty in the court of public opinion.

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