By - Joe DeLessio
By our unscientific tally, we're pretty sure more people have now written about the poor (but improving)
ratings for the Stanley Cup Final over the past week than have actually
tuned into any of the games. There are plenty of reasons for this that
have been covered elsewhere — the teams involved, competition from the
NBA, and so on — but this was also a series that until just a few days
ago looked like it might be over quickly: The Kings won the first three
games — the third of them in a rout — and had a chance to wrap things up
at home last Wednesday. They didn't, and then on Saturday night, they
lost again, dropping their first road game of the entire postseason.
Category - Business Plan
Source - http://nymag.com/daily/sports/2012/06/stanley-cup-final-has-gotten-interesting.html
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The teams will meet in Game 6 in Los Angeles tonight, and once
again, the Stanley Cup will be in the house. Once again, longtime Kings
TV announcer Bob Miller will call the potential clincher, even though it won't be broadcast live.
Once again, the Kings have a chance to win their first championship in
franchise history. But less than a week ago, this appeared to be a Kings
coronation. Now, it's a series.
Of course, the Kings still have a 3-2 series lead, and their
goaltender has been the best player in this postseason. Indeed, Jonathan
Quick is capable of stealing Game 6, even if his team doesn't dominate
the way they did in Game 3. But Quick has been human in the past couple
of games — the turnover that led to Zach Parise's goal was a killer —
and 40-year-old Martin Brodeur has been turning back the clock. There are all sorts of reasons the momentum has shifted towards the Devils — even luck (or lack thereof, depending on your perspective) has played a part — and the x's and o's of it all
are plenty fascinating. But not even a week ago, after Quick had given
up a total of two goals in three games, the Devils had virtually no
margin for error. Now, they have reason to believe that good things can
happen for them offensively, even against the mighty Quick, if they're
able to effectively play their preferred forechecking style.
The Kings can talk all they want
about how they were tested plenty in the first three rounds of the
playoffs, even though none of those series lasted more than five games.
But this is a new kind of adversity. The Devils have already made things
interesting by forcing a Game 6, and New Jersey's been resilient
throughout these playoffs. Just one more Devils win now means one final
cross-country flight, and one final game to determine a champion. The
puck drops a little after 8 p.m. Eastern tonight.
Source - http://nymag.com/daily/sports/2012/06/stanley-cup-final-has-gotten-interesting.html

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