Throughout my 22 years, I've known of one thing, and that is hockey. I know the in's and out's to the sport and can recite players names, numbers, positions, best players on teams, goalies, trophy winners, etc... As I've said (and argued with you before) that hockey is the ultimate team game. Baseball, Basketball, and in some instances Football are too individualistic sports, they can't be the ultimate team game. For baseball in particular, its all individuals. There is little to no camaraderie in baseball because everything is measured in individual stats. Pitchers = Wins, Losses, Saves, ERA; Batters = BA, HR, 2B, 3B, etc... (only team stat would be RBI's I suppose) and the same thing happens to fielders = errors, put outs, etc...
Basketball is very similar in that individuals dominate the sport. As the Cavaliers have proved, Lebron can get them into the playoffs, now you have to have a good team to get in the finals, but I think there are a lot of teams with owners who are happy with one decent player, and a bunch of nobody's on the court giving their fans no hope...I"M TALKING TO YOU CLIPPERS!
College is the same way too, because I think all of these "star" players are ready to jump ship after one year. It's a joke. They don't care about the logo on the front, but the name on the back. John Wall doesn't care about the state of Kentucky basketball right now, he cares about his stats and his draft stock and the dollar bills that are coming his way. If you are good, the dollar bills will be there after your time at Kentucky is up.
Football is certainly more of a team game than the other two, but still, football has a lot of ego. Very few players in the league are willing to do anything for their team, and a lot of them, especially wide receivers, are considered divas. They all want the ball all the time, even when it isn't practical to throw.
So now I come full circle back to hockey. Hockey is certainly measured in statistics, but it goes deeper than that. There are very few players that one would call "a puck hog" and you'll see a lot of players willing to give the puck up to a teammate. Even the greats like Sidney Crosby realize that you have to be able to set your teammates up, because you can't do it all yourself. That similar situation happened to the best player, Alex Ovechkin, this year in the playoffs. He thought he had to do everything, shooting any chance he got, and look where the Capitals are now! They are golfing after the first round, after losing to a #8 seed.
The Penguins, the last cup winner, have a good team. They had a tremendous offense, a great defense, and a decent but inconsistent goaltender. One of the reasons that makes hockey the ultimate team game is this...personal sacrifice. Do you know who Rob Scuderi is? If I were to tell you Scuderi single handedly kept the Penguins alive in that series would you believe me? It wasn't Crosby, wasn't Malkin, wasn't Fleury, but Scuderi. It's true. Scuderi will never get the credit he deserves, but he layed his body on the line, blocking countless number of shots and saving game 6 to force 7 for the Penguins. Only Scott and myself give this man the credit he deserves.
So is that okay with Scuderi? Absolutely. He gets no credit and gets the oldest trophy in sports; every young hockey players dream is to hoist the cup, and he achieved his goal.
So personal sacrifice is important, but roles are the most important reason why hockey is the ultimate team game.
There are so many roles in hockey: grinders, power forwards, playmakers, snipers, danglers, offensive defenseman, stay at home defenseman, fighter, star, butterfly goalie, stand up goalie, hybrid goalie, back up goalie, agitator, etc...
To be successful you have to have many of these roles on your team. The Cup winning Pens did! Fleury was playing out of his mind in net, and played the butterfly style. Their top line of Crosby, Guerin, and Kunitz was really balanced. Crosby was the star playmaker, Guerin was the power forward sniper, and Kunitz was your grinder on the line, and that line was extremely successful last year. Then a defensive line with Scuderi, our stay at home defenseman, and Sergei Gonchar, our offensive defenseman, was as balanced as they come.
Fighters are equally important because fighting isn't just for entertainment of fans, its about sticking up for teammates and creating momentum. The most important unwritten rule in hockey is don't go after our star player. Here is a perfect example. Drury, our star player gets a cheap shot check from a punk. That sets our head coach Lindy Ruff on a mission, he has to send a message. In hockey, the home team (in this case the Sabres) have the last change, so the Senators put their guys out, and the Sabres can then change lines to match up one last time...take a look and I'll talk more about this.
So, pretty exciting huh! So to recap, Lindy puts his first line out there...not fighters, which Bryan Murray (coach of the Sens) matches with his top line full of stars. Lindy than pulls his line off and puts his fourth line, full of fighters and agitators on the ice, essentially tricking Murray into putting his star players in harms way. Look at #22 Adam Mair in the blue, goes immediately after their star Jason Spezza. Look how many white jerseys surround him after he starts wailing on Spezza. Look at the goalies, Biron and Emery get involved. Emery is a fighter and a tough customer, but Biron was fighting way out of his league (as you can tell). Look at how every man has to grab another guy. They may not be fighting, but they don't want their teammate to get ganged up on. Then look at the coaches, fighting on the bench. (Ironically, the guy that is in the middle with the mic, is the Sabres all time leader in fighting majors and penalty minutes) I can't make everything out, but Lindy is quoted as saying "Don't go after our f*****g Captain." That entire elaborate 3 minute spur of the moment plot was for one reason, to send a message that their goons taking cheap shots will not be tolerated by the Buffalo Sabres any longer. The Senators haven't messed with the Sabres like this sense that incident. Thats what a real, ultimate team does, they win, and they stick up for each other.
Some parents think hockey is to violent a sport and that they aren't good role models, but I'll tell you something, fighters ARE ultimate role models, and the ultimate team players. Those guys are A. usually the nicest guys on the team off the ice B. always help the community C. they do an important job for the team! They know their role, and they know their job, and it's an honour to do that for the betterment of the team.
Hockey is the ultimate team game. Every players goal is not to score the most goals, but to hoist that beautiful silver cup on the last game of the year.