Buffalo is NOT hockeytown USA

We got beat out by Minnesota??? WTF???

http://www.wgrz.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=53381

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/writers/michael_farber/12/04/hockeytown1210/index.html

Buffalo Is Not Hockeytown, U.S.A?

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This week’s Sports Illustrated names a new Hockeytown, U.S.A. to replace Detroit. Buffalo, Philadelphia, and St. Paul, Minnesota are the finalists. And the winner is: St. Paul.

Read the full article

St. Paul is the home of the Minnesota Wild, who have sold out every game since their inception in 2000. The article by SI’s Michael Farber cites St. Paul’s long-standing tradition and grass-roots support from its boys and girls youth programs on up. In fact the Wild actually schedule games around the youth leagues.

But why not Buffalo? Consider how quickly the upcoming Winter Classic sold out. The Sabres and Penguins outdoors on New Year’s Day at Ralph Wilson stadium, surely that should have made a big impression on Mr. Farber. Alas, Farber says Buffalo benefits too much from Canadian fans to be dubbed the new Hockeytown, U.S.A.

But remember Buffalo, this is just one guy’s opinion and you have one too. So email us your thoughts, and we’ll make sure Sports Illustrated gets a copy.

BUFFALO
Three doors lead into HSBC Arena, each topped with a frieze. The ones above the left and right doors depict goalies making sprawling glove saves; stampeding buffalo adorn the center. Almost all of the 18,690 people who will see the Sabres thump Montreal 4-1 on this night stream through those doors and mill about the lobby, creating a charged pregame atmosphere. In an era in which almost any game is available on TV or the Internet, the best reason to buy a ticket is the sense of community it offers, a chance to spend three hours with people who have shared values and shared expectations. With the teeming lobby, the Sabres offer a game and a hockey town-hall meeting.
“Last year some of our people thought we should call ourselves America’s Team on Ice,” says Sabres managing partner Larry Quinn two hours before the opening face-off against the Canadiens on Nov. 16. “I mean, if we’re not Hockeytown, who is? But we said, let’s win one or two Cups first before we start with that. I can’t imagine throwing something on the ice to call attention to ourselves. It just doesn’t seem like Buffalo. It seems more like Dallas.”
Still, the Sabres indulged in some self-congratulation in October, when they publicized a Scarborough Research survey that said Buffalo had the NHL’s most loyal fans: 28.9% of males and 21.6% of females responded that they were very or somewhat interested in the team. (In Philadelphia 12.7% of men and 7.5% of women fit that category.)
Four years after owner Tom Golisano rescued the Sabres from bankruptcy – part of the fallout from the fraud conviction of former owner John Rigas, founder of Adelphia Communications – the revival has been stunning. “I had friends with season tickets who couldn’t give them away,” says Brière, an ex-Sabre. But now, helped in part by a cut in prices, the season ticket base is at 14,800, up from 6,200 at its nadir. Even though fewer than 1,000 seats in HSBC Arena are purchased by corporations, Buffalo sold every available ticket last season and will likely do the same in 2007-08.
This is mom-and-pop hockey, supported by people who, in Quinn’s estimation, spend more of their disposable income on hockey than fans in any other city. Says Sabres equipment manager Rip Simonick, who was with the team when it entered the league 37 years ago, “This is a small city, shrinking before our eyes” – according to the 2006 census, there were about 180,000 more people in Buffalo in 1970 than today’s 276,059 – “but people here appreciate that hockey is a hard, physical game. You work for every dollar here. If you give an effort, the fans will always be there for you.”
It is no accident that the NHL chose Buffalo to be the site of the league’s first outdoor game in the U.S. The Sabres will host the Penguins at Ralph Wilson Stadium, 10 miles from downtown, on New Year’s Day. The 41,000 tickets made available to the public sold out in a half hour.
“There’s a trauma here, with so many people’s kids having moved out of town,” Quinn says. "Sports for a Buffalo person is an outlet to fight back against that trauma. It’s almost like a cause. For a lot of people Sabres tickets are what they do instead of taking vacations. I ask people, ‘How can you afford it?’ They say, ‘Well, we go to 40 games instead of going to Florida, and we don’t take a summer vacation.’ "
“In some ways,” G.M. Darcy Regier says, “this is like small-town Canada.”

Exactly. And Buffalo is a little too much small-town Canada to qualify as Hockeytown U.S.A. Only 8% of the Sabres’ season-ticket base is Canadian, but on any given night a fifth of the Buffalo crowd has braved Peace Bridge customs’ checks and come from eh-droppin’ southern Ontario. Filling the building with imports is like setting a wind-aided world record.

my sister went to college a short drive north of there, and lived there for a few years after.

they seriously shut down their television broadcasts to play high school games during playoff season

thats fucking bad ass

yahoo held a poll on their hockey page like 3 weeks ago. detroit still trumped the other 3. The poll ended at something like Detroit 41, St Paul 21, Buffalo/Philly 19.

No argument there, but with time, Buffalo I’m sure will make it’s mark.

Just look at the league. Most of the American players are coming out of Minnesota

http://www.lovefilm.com/lovefilm/images/products/1/1781-large.jpg I think these guys give minnesota the deciding edge.

We’re a huge hockey town, just not as much as them. I think they deserved it more.

I agree 100% with the article.

[quote=“JayS,post:8,topic:39758"”]

We’re a huge hockey town, these paste few seasons. I think they deserved it more.

[/quote]

Correction

My thoughts are that detroit will always be hockey town but who needs a title for that? I cant wait to see all that government funding because we live in hockey town.

“excuse me sir, where are you from?”

“I’m from hockey town, why do you ask?”

“WOW!! HOLY FUCKING SHIT!!! TAKE MY DAUGHTER HAVE SEX WITH HER SHE JUST TURNED 18 AND LOVES IT BACK DOOR!!!”

“thank you”

^ If you’re going to change what I typed when you quote me, at least check for fucking typoes.

[quote=“RobHimself,post:10,topic:39758"”]

Correction

My thoughts are that detroit will always be hockey town but who needs a title for that? I cant wait to see all that government funding because we live in hockey town.

“excuse me sir, where are you from?”

“I’m from hockey town, why do you ask?”

“WOW!! HOLY FUCKING SHIT!!! TAKE MY DAUGHTER HAVE SEX WITH HER SHE JUST TURNED 18 AND LOVES IT BACK DOOR!!!”

“thank you”

[/quote]

back door is exactly why we need the title

Damnit! Sorry… :frowning:

[quote=“Zer0DazE,post:12,topic:39758"”]

back door is exactly why we need the title

[/quote]

Amen

Having grown up in the suburbs of Minneapolis and St. Paul I can attest that Minnesota is down right serious about their hockey. Within 5 miles of my house in any direction I had access to 10 different outdoor rinks; all with warming houses, boards, nets, lights, and the city mainatining the ice all winter long. No cost to use these things. Everyday after school we’d head up to these rinks and played till we couldn’t stand anymore

From youth to pro, Minnesota has it covered! Youth hockey is everywhere. Televised High School playoffs that bring more attention to the cities than the Final Four…that’s pretty impressive. University of Minnesota hockey…another biggie. Not just for the guys, but girls hockey has been big for the past 10 years. And like the article said the Wild sell out all the time.

Being in Buffalo the past 3 years I’ve seen plenty of dedicated fans…but as a whole Buffalo can’t touch Minnesota with the title of Hockeytown.

Minnesota has always been HUGE with hockey, its pretty much an extension of canada :slight_smile: haha

[quote=“JaysGreenLX,post:6,topic:39758"”]

Just look at the league. Most of the American players are coming out of Minnesota

[/quote]

couldnt of been said any better:tup:

every time I go to a Red Wings game I laugh at the Hockeytown into, make fun of Hasek and then watch the Wings dismantle another team.
I wonder what the hockeytown cafe would be called if they take the title away from Detroit?