My zany idea during the lockout (and it IS pretty zany) was to eliminate all the clubs in non-hockey markets like Florida and Nashville and California leaving only the Canadian clubs and those in strong American markets like Philadelphia, Boston, Detroit, New York and Minnesota. The teams that were 'dissolved' would be moved to hockey markets in Europe like Finland, Sweden and Russia. There would be a North American league and a European league and the two would function like the leagues in baseball do--teams in each league would only play each other except for twice a year there would be interleague play. The champions of each league would compete for the Cup like the AL pennant winner and the NL pennant winner. Obviously there are big problems...European players would command a grossly inflated salary because they'd probably prefer to stay closer to home unless the paycheck is large enough to pull them away. Same with North American players I suspect. Travel wouldn't be a big deal if scheduling was done well, until the championship series when you'd have teams going from, say, Montreal to Turku.
Of course this idea is totally impractical but hockey would only be in markets where it's already thriving, which I think is the main appeal of it. So I guess this thread is to ask what people would do if they were the commissioner of the NHL to make the game more accessible, more popular and more appealing. I think one of the biggest problems facing hockey is that people have a hard time watching on TV so any ideas about that? If you say "blue dot on the puck and red line when it's shot" I'll have to ask one of the administrators to ban you from the site







 If you want to be popular, you have to be on TV... If you want to be on TV, you have to be popular...
 If you want to be popular, you have to be on TV... If you want to be on TV, you have to be popular... Or you have to pay 30€/month a private channel to see 1 or 2 games per month... In France, for example, there is absolutely NO hockey on the public channels, exept half of the Olympic Games... that's to say around 10 games... every 4 years! So don't complain too much about the situation in the US
 Or you have to pay 30€/month a private channel to see 1 or 2 games per month... In France, for example, there is absolutely NO hockey on the public channels, exept half of the Olympic Games... that's to say around 10 games... every 4 years! So don't complain too much about the situation in the US 


 ) and our games are not only not on free tv (you'd need cable to see them) but also we only get televised coverage of away games because our fool owner hold the tv rights for homegames and refuses to allow them to be shown. Combine this with the team's pathetic performances since the 80's and you'll find the scores of the high school girls basketball teams before you get to the hockey coverage in our local papers. They don't even mention the scores on the sports section of the new some nights. So this is what we get with one of the league's 30 teams in or backyard; you can imagine the amount of coverage it gets in other areas...
  ) and our games are not only not on free tv (you'd need cable to see them) but also we only get televised coverage of away games because our fool owner hold the tv rights for homegames and refuses to allow them to be shown. Combine this with the team's pathetic performances since the 80's and you'll find the scores of the high school girls basketball teams before you get to the hockey coverage in our local papers. They don't even mention the scores on the sports section of the new some nights. So this is what we get with one of the league's 30 teams in or backyard; you can imagine the amount of coverage it gets in other areas...


 The Nordiques had a good fanbase... And i'm also for the return of the Winnipeg Jets. Those two teams were in the NHL when i discovered hockey, and i'd really enjoy to see them back in the big league.
 The Nordiques had a good fanbase... And i'm also for the return of the Winnipeg Jets. Those two teams were in the NHL when i discovered hockey, and i'd really enjoy to see them back in the big league.
