PUCK YEAH!

A Kiwi Visits The Pond

Hi! I am John – I used to live and play hockey in Auckland. Chances are you have either played with or against me at some point over the years, but now I live in Nelson and there isn’t any ice here.  So I play inline.  To help with the ice-withdrawl I decided to take a shot at writing for AnaheimCalling.com. Long story short – they liked my stuff for some reason and now I am a senior writer there.

Through spontaneous coincidence I was in Canada attending my host sister’s wedding mid-September, so I made sure to fly via California on the way back and take in some of the Anaheim Ducks training camp. Alas the wedding was the same weekend as the open scrimmages so I was unable to get to those.

I stayed with a friend and together we attended two pre-season games: Ducks v Kings on the 22nd and then Ducks v Golden Knights on the 24th.  I also got to eat at Selanne’s Steak House Tavern which was beyond amazing.  We hadn’t intended on getting the menu food – hearing that you could just order burgers at the bar; but they sat us at a table and before we knew it we were enjoying the most decadent meal ever imagined.  All whilst enjoying the view of Teemu’s trophy cabinet of Stanley Cup and Olympic medals, not to mention trying not to stare too much at Francois Beauchimen seated at the table next to it.  Oh yeah and Teemu’s eldest son actually gave me my food.  How. Cool. Is. That.

Anywho – the actual games; yeah those were fun. With the addition of these two games I have now been to a total of five Ducks games – one in Vancouver and two previous at The Pond but these were my first taste of pre-season action.

Friday September 22nd – Ducks v Kings

You might recall that this was the Ducks first pre-season win – but it didn’t look like that was going to be the case after the first period. The Ducks by rights should have found this game all too easy – the Kings had left half their team (and the better half at that) in China. Leaving essentially the Ontario Reign guest starring Brandon Prust to contend with a Ducks squad made up of a half and half of Ducks and San Diego Gulls regulars.

The Kings controlled play in the first whilst the Ducks looked completely out of sorts. The only real highlights were two fights, the first featuring Scott Sabourin and Brandon Prust, the second between Boko Imama and Mike Liambas. Sabourin didnt seem entirely prepared or ready for his fight – I know he had done much better in fights with the Gulls. Liambas led the AHL in PIMs last year so he fared a little better.

The seats I had were lower bowl – second row from the glass near the goal line for the Kings in the first, Ducks in the second and Kings again in the third. That said – I watched in horror as the Kings took the early lead on the lone goal of the first period. But later celebrated with much aplomb as the Ducks proceeded to provide the reverse #2ndPeriodExperience and pot two goals in the 2nd. The first a beauty of a tic-tac-toe passing play finished off by Rakell on the powerplay and the later a point shot that somehow made its way though traffic by my home-boy Jaycob Megna.

The Hults goal in the 3rd looked like a filthy pass by Wagner on the jumbotron but yeah – it was down the other end of the ice for me. An aside on that – lowerbowl/near the glass seats seem like kind of a waste of time if you have to watch the other ice action on the jumbotron. Oh yea – Megna got the 2nd assist on that one too. Mah boy!

Matt (not so) Luff (ly) made things interesting after some sustained Kings Reign pressure in the 3rd but Silfverberg got the insurance marker on a goal mouth scramble that again was hard to see from the other end of the ice but apparently resulted in an automatic goal since the net was knocked off.

Post Game Notes – from someone who doesnt get to the Pond that often (again because of that whole 12 hour flight thing):

Sunday 24th – Ducks v Golden Knights game

This was to be a slightly mortifying embarrassment to watch but one that did not leave me massively disappointed because hey – at least I still got to watch my boys play live in person.

The pond was super quiet despite it being a Sunday – I blame the lack of discounted pricing for pre-season action. Seriously, Ducks brass – what gives?

I was rocking my Chiefs (of Slapshot fame) jersey which was also the jersey of my last ice team in Auckland before I moved to Nelson. I got a few comments and even got to have a selfie with ‘Ned’ the super-fan recently seen in all the promo material and hype vids. Super cool dude.

The Ducks iced a line-up consisting of Getzlaf and Perry with Giovanni Fiore in place of a mysteriously dinged up Patrick Eaves. The kid-line of Max Jones, Sam Steel and protector Scotty Sabourin. Ritchie, Kase and Kossila on another line and finally a sort of hodge-podge energy/shutdown line of Rasmussen, Tropp and Kopacka. On D – Fowler was paired with Welinksi, Montour with Cooper and Larsson with Holzer. I just remembered all of those lines off the top of my head almost week later and full of jetlag so I am kind of stoked with that.

Without beating around the bush the Ducks had plenty of chances in the early going (largely thanks to the ‘Kid line’) but it was Vegas that was able to capitalize. All three Vegas goals were as a result of point shots through traffic. This is an expansion team that realises they need to keep it simple and keep it simple they did. Infuriatingly so. By the third goal I was silently fuming that nobody seemed to have figured out their grand plan of getting it back to the point whilst wreaking havoc in front.

What small glimmer of brilliance that shone amidst a frustratingly close-but-far game of chances for the Ducks was the strong play of Scotty Sabourin. He played well with the kids and when head coach Randy Carlyle recognised this and slapped Rasmussen on with Sab and Jones – he made a nifty soft-hands play to backhand a rebound in. A lot of the post-game comments on Twitter were based on his play in that game alone – he had earned a spot over fellow face-puncher Jared Boll. But apparently that was not meant to be.

The Ducks didn’t do much else and Fiore made it only a tad less humiliating with a last minute score from an impossible angle for a final score of 4-2. The Vegas “Vets” came to play and the Ducks elder statesmen did not.

Post Game Notes:

If you have never made it over to see your favorite team play – you absolutely must at some point in your life.  The in-game experience is something television cannot replicate.