L K said:
cw said:
I'm from a different era I guess. I just can't imagine someone like Jean B?liveau or Gordie Howe allowing something like this to enter their minds. They were a little before my time - or towards the end of their careers but I looked up to them. I cannot rationalize this. It just won't compute. It's values, ethics, honour - things like that.
What he's doing is just repugnant to me. It hurts his fellow players, his team, his fans, the sport - I just don't see much good from doing it - beyond it's the easy way out for him personally.
If a player did this in the original six era, he might get banished to the minors for life or get the crap beat out of him. Players on different teams couldn't socialize with each other. The regular season games were serious rivalries - and that was a part of why people watched - something was genuinely on the line. Players didn't like to lose. You couldn't wimp out - you had to show up.
Yesterday, I was feeling grateful my kids grew up Sundin fans and not Kessel fans. Kessel's example is not one I'd ever want my kids to follow.
Someone's paying you to do a job. It doesn't really matter how much. Don't be a dishonest weasel: do the job with an honest effort. What else the team does is beyond a players control. The players duty and responsibility is to compete to the best of their ability. When they don't, they're messing with the integrity of the sport. Have a little class. Try to be a sports figure kids can look up to - that is a part of it.
I don't care to come off as a prude on this (though I realize i'm probably failing at that). I understand it's an 82 game season and no one can give 110% for all 82 games. Some games, they're going to be banged up, road weary, not at their best, etc. A number of times Quinn's teams (Quinn being a coach who was pretty good at inspiring his club) didn't "show up" - one can't ride an emotional high all 82 games either. But over the season, they made a pretty fair effort - never one as blatantly bad as Kessel's this season.
I've seen this sort of thing: a breakdown of values, creeping into all the other major sports. And so maybe I'm not exactly shocked. Maybe it's inevitable. It was a significant factor in turning me off them. If someone thinks I'm going to watch another 7 years of Phil Kessel doggin' it in a Leafs jersey, they're nuts. I won't ever be a fan of a player like that. I hope they run him out of town.
I don't know. Years ago the Bruins used to hold training camp in London. Part of their pre-skating warmup was they had to jog to the arena. My Dad would sometimes be running on the same route and they didn't seem to mind that a kid was around them (the language didn't change) and he got to speak to a few of the players. A handful of them couldn't speak on the jog down to the arena because they were so out of shape. I mean now if a player came in that far out of shape they would be sent home.
So to be honest I'm not sure how much I'd buy comparing different eras because the goals and expectations for before during and after the season were so different.
They didn't know nearly as much about fitness back then as you might think. And they often worked two jobs because hockey didn't pay enough. Kessel makes more in 20 minutes of ice time than many of those guys made in their entire hockey career. In about 24 seconds of ice time, Phil Kessel earns what the minor leaguers like Howe got paid for a season when Howe broke in. Howe made as much money playing semi-pro baseball at the time. And Howe managed to double his hockey pay (=50 seconds of Kessel ice time - a NHL shift) when he made it to the NHL. Kessel today would earn average pay of the 60s in about 2-3 shifts. Financially, times have changed. Hockey back then was closer to a bonus job to supplement your income than a career for many of the players.
Training camp was really just that - literally. They showed up with their summer beer bellies from being car salesman or summer school teachers and started "training" to get in shape. Read up on the '72 Summit Series. The Russians showed up fit and in game shape while the Canadians were doing their usual shedding a few pounds from their off summer - which is the key reason why the Russians got the jump in that series and why Canada was able to come back (they got in better game shape as the series went along).
One of the first guys in hockey I recall who changed attitudes on fitness was a Leaf - Norm Ullman. He'd spent much of his career playing in Detroit. Came to Toronto in a trade and they figured due to his age that he should be effectively washed up. But at age 35 or so, a few years after expansion from the original six:
http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/leagues/seasons/teams/0000381971.html
he led the Leafs and Dave Keon in scoring and folks said "what the heck is going on? How is Ullman doing this?" What the media found out he was doing was working out all summer running and improving/maintaining his fitness. Prior to that some hockey players worked physical jobs to help them stay in shape (construction, farming) but that was kind of the extent of it. Aerobics was not in our common vocabulary at that time.
Showing up to training camp as they did was kind of the norm. Nobody thought too horribly about it if the guy arrived out of shape because maybe he was behind a desk working all summer.
I've said it before: I don't think there's a member of the last Cup winning Leafs team who could crack the roster of this lousy team based upon how they'd show up in training camp and how much bigger, stronger, faster, better conditioned, better coached, etc players are today. Keon and Kozun, Ian White and Tim Horton were about the same size. We've learned a lot and come a long way.
Long story short: in '72-73, I sat in Maple Leafs Gardens with Jim Ryan, world record holder in the mile chatting one on one for an hour or two, about what he did for training, diet and the psychology of running, He was awesome and answered everything in a forthright way: an American kindly helping a curious Canadian kid. I could probably write the essence of what was known about diet and training at that time by the fastest miler in the world in a page or two: "Run 100-200 miles per week" and "take some glucose tablets or eat a Mars bar a few minutes before you run" - pretty shallow stuff and nobody seemed to know the answers.
The first warnings about cigarettes started to come out in the 60s but it took quite a while for folks to heed them.
http://www.si.com/nhl/2012/02/29/players-smokingcigarettesnhlhockey
Bossy, Lafleur, Mario Lemieux, etc - all pretty heavy smokers for example.
We had stuff like Jack LaLanne on TV or Charles Atlas - there was some weight training but I don't recall a lot of folks buying into that in hockey at the time or making it a major deal.
So to pass judgement on their fitness strikes me as considerably off base. Folks really hadn't widely figured it all out to the extent it was widely expected like it is today.
It was a small league - only 6 teams. Competition for roster spots was very intense. Because they played each other a lot, hatred of each other grew. If you showed up to play like Kessel has, they'd either beat the crap out of you or bury you in the minors. It was post WWII and these teams were kind of going to war with each other. They had little tolerance for chickens and guys who wouldn't stand up for their teammates - via effort or fighting. Values seemed more important. It was a different era.