Curious Hair wrote:
sjboyd0137 wrote:
Hank: I love the idea of moving a team to Quebec City. Hartford was a bad idea for an NHL team, and it still is. Too close to Boston, and too much of a Bruins fan base to truly allow another NHL team to thrive. Even in reading on the history of the team, that fact is full acknowledged.
Yes, Hartford was sandwiched between the Bruins and the Rangers/Islanders/Devils, but if you could have marketed the NHL properly, there's no reason why they couldn't have had their slice of New England. Look at Raleigh, where they ended up. There are three major college basketball programs in one small city. I think New England could have managed two hockey teams.
Where it went wrong for the Whalers was just how poorly run the team was. To wit: they hired Pierre McGuire to coach the team and he has since gone down in history as one of the worst coaches in the history of the league. They drafted Chris Pronger only to trade him for Brendan Shahahan, who himself was promptly traded for spare parts. Even when they were a decent club in the '80s with Ron Francis, Kevin Dineen, Joel Quenneville, etc., the divisional playoffs just meant they routinely got crushed by vastly superior Boston/Montreal teams. While the Whalers suffered from benign incompetence under the original ownership, they were actively sabotaged by Karmanos and Rutherford, who had no intention to keep the team in Hartford and intended to move to Auburn Hills, Raleigh, or an abandoned aircraft hangar in Columbus until such time that a real arena was built.
Also, the Hartford Civic Center was a dump and still is a dump. It's one of those buildings where there's not a good seat in the house.
I guess what it comes down to for me is that while Hartford wasn't a perfect market, it's still vastly preferable to Raleigh.
I completely buy that. The whole thing down to Raleigh sucking as a hockey hotbed.
I feel like the problem for them came with the merge into the NHL. They were a great WHA franchise. Very successful. I get the idea that a lot of fans had no interest in trying to root for multiple NHL teams at the time, and while they had a fan base in the WHA, a lot of those fans were also Bruins fans, and folks tend to stick to their first love.
It would be similar to a situation where the old IHL was competing against the NHL for players, and when it was folding, it merged with the NHL. Could you really sustain 2 hockey franchises in Chicago? Or if you want to look at actual distance, could the Milwaukee market survive with a built in fan base 100 miles away in Chicago? You can point to other sports where that does work, but, unfortunately, hockey doesn't have the mass appeal that baseball does. I wish it did. It's a great sport to watch.
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Darkside wrote:
Our hotel smelled like dead hooker vagina (before you ask I had gotten a detailed description from beardown)