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Leigh Steinberg

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Will Hockey Ever Be Popular in California?

Posted: 06/08/2012 6:59 pm

The Los Angeles Kings are performing at a transcendent level in the playoffs. Originally picked as a No. 8 seed and not thought of as contenders, they are on the way to win the championship of the sport. They have talented young players who are exciting. Their players are fan and media friendly and seem the nicest personalities (off the ice) of any team sport. They are up 3-1 in the Stanley Cup series with New Jersey and playing spectacularly. Why aren't they riveting SoCal fans and winning the heart of the region? What's different about hockey?

When the Dodgers were in their first World Series in 1959, there was Dodger-mania. The games were played in the afternoon then and they wheeled televisions into our elementary school classrooms so we could watch. When the Lakers were in their championship years, car after car had Lakers flags flying and downtown shut down for a parade. When USC football is successful, Southern California is festooned with banners and memorabilia. When the Anaheim Ducks won the title several years ago my friend Warren Moon called me from Seattle and said "It must be wild and rocking down there." I responded that I had just driven down Pacific Coast highway and it was sleepy and calm.

It doesn't escape anyone's notice that it does not snow in SoCal. There is not ice adorning every body of water in the winter time. Southern Californians go on snow trips as kids up into the mountains. I would always try to bring the snow home to share that amazing substance with my parents. But when the bus hit the flats, the snow returned to its essential element. Ice skating is enjoyed by some, but is more a sport we watch during the Winter Olympics. There are fanatic hockey leagues here at the youth level, but participation is infinitesimal compared to AYSO soccer, Little League baseball, youth basketball leagues and skateboarding. And these sports are played by young people whose parents demanded they turn off the computer, video games and the text phone. There are more junior lifeguards in our towns than hockey players in all of Southern California. It is not a high school sport and is rarely played at the universities here. So generally, unless your parents are from the East, Midwest or Canada, we don't grow up with ice hockey. And neither did our heavy population of folks born in Mexico.

Americans tend to like sports which have finite acts of success or failure. There are numerous commercial breaks to hit the bathroom and discuss the action. Failing that, we like a lot of scoring. Hockey, like soccer, has continuous play and little scoring -- which does not fit our taste as well. While sports like the NFL grew along with television and are perfectly fitted to a screen format, hockey does not televise as well. The puck is small and except for aficionados, it can be hard to follow. Seeing a game in person is an entirely different experience. I went with Kings owner Phil Anschutz and his wife to my first game some years ago and we sat next to the ice. A player came flying towards Mrs. Anschutz and the barrier actually bent towards her and it looked like she might be crushed! Hockey can be incredibly exciting in person, with a crowd to share it with.

Hockey has not been televised on a major network with real promotion capacity for some years. When we watch Fox or CBS the promos for the NFL are endless. The NHL realized its Midwest-Eastern regional appeal some years back and began aggressive expansion into sun belt markets. It had momentum and garnered cachet as a "hot" event to attend. It looked as if the NHL would join the NBA, NFL, MLB and golf as a television and gate equal. And then it did the most self-destructive act possible. The sport engaged in a long, game cancelling strike. They sabotaged their own explosive growth. Instead of appealing games and athletes, the public was treated to acrimonious headlines and the specter of billionaires battling with millionaires over unfathomable sums. The public said "a pox on both their houses" and the sport has never recovered. In roughly the same time period Major League Baseball quadrupled their gross receipts as the steroid fueled home run races brought the sport back from its own strike.

Hockey should recognize the lack of familiarity with the sport in sun belt states and do a better job of educating the public as to the rules and finer points of play. The NFL is constantly producing seminars and content that does exactly that with football. One of the promotional problems is that the bodies of the players are covered from head to toe. The players need star building based on interacting with the public out of uniform. The Kings have young stars that the area could relate to. The Ducks are locally owned and managed and they do some amazing promotional activities.

None of this is a denigration of hockey. I have many friends whose kids love participating in the game. One of our attorneys, Chris Koras, is from Canada and played professional hockey. I like going to Ducks games. I am attempting to explore why the NHL has not transfixed Southern California even with the most exciting young team in the sport. It will be interesting to see the impact on local fans if the Kings are able to win the Stanley Cup. It may jumpstart hockey popularity. But don't be disappointed if Southern Californians don't take to the streets en masse to celebrate.

 
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The Los Angeles Kings are performing at a transcendent level in the playoffs. Originally picked as a No. 8 seed and not thought of as contenders, they are on the way to win the championship of the spo...
The Los Angeles Kings are performing at a transcendent level in the playoffs. Originally picked as a No. 8 seed and not thought of as contenders, they are on the way to win the championship of the spo...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JustinP213
I dislike all political parties.
11:41 AM on 06/11/2012
The article should be titled: "Will Hockey Ever Be Popular in America?"

I am a hockey fan (and a fan of many other sports). Alas, just look at the historical ratings for hockey games. Compared to the other three most popular sports, the numbers are much lower. Simply, the average American just DOES NOT like to watch hockey. I don't think anything can be done to change that.
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bullwinkle88
01:02 AM on 06/10/2012
It's funny from one area of the US to another. I live in Buffalo and here there are more youth hockey teams than baseball, football, and basketball combined! Hockey rules here.

I am always interested in furthering the sport - which I consider to be the greatest in the world. I am hopeful that LA will discover the Kings after all these years of anonymity behind the basketball, football, and baseball teams.

It's a slow process that may or may not happen. I don't think it did in Raleigh, even though they won The Cup a few years back. I hope LA is different.
09:36 PM on 06/09/2012
Wasn't having Gretzky play in Southern California supposed to increase interest in the sport too? If a vast majority of Californians don't relate to hockey, winning a championship may make hockey there more of a blip on the radar screen for a couple years, but after that, it should subside back to being completely meaningless to culture in So Cal.
08:53 PM on 06/08/2012
I think you will be surprised by the amount of fans that will come out to celebrate when the Cup comes back to California as was evident when 4,000 plus fans meet the team at LAX when they returned home after winning their first round series against the Vancouver Canucks. Championships and Contenders who go deep into the playoffs with the possibility of "winning it all" year after year will generate the kind of attention that is needed by the NHL to bring the LA fan base and market into alignment with the dominate markets back East and in Canada. There is a very large diehard Kings fan base that has waited a long time through decades of valleys with very few peaks and I for one, can't wait for the Cup to come to it's new home at Staples Center, the City of Los Angeles and to all the Kings fans who have been waiting 45 years to see it happen.
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Frank Smith
08:00 PM on 06/08/2012
"Hockey has not been televised on a major network with real promotion capacity for some years. When we watch Fox or CBS the promos for the NFL are endless."

The team that scores the most goals wins. After that you need to understand icing and offsides. The penalties? Don't worry about that, not even the refs and players knows what they are anyways.