

Enjoy the game - and best of luck!grazza wrote:I'm going to the 2nd leg of Edinburgh v Belfast on Sunday night
The trend for the southern teams has actually been to go the other way. In recent years we've seen Romford, Chelmsford and Wightlink all drop down from the EPL to the NIHL. A few years before that, Invicta dropped down from the EPL to the NIHL too. The problem is money, pure and simple. Those teams were struggling to afford players at EPL level (with 4 import limit) let alone the 11 that the EIHL has. The situation would be better if there were more British players with EIHL-level talent. At present we have a relatively small number of talented British players. Once these have been snapped up by the teams, the remaining roster spots are filled with EPL and NIHL-level players who aren't really up to scratch. Increasing the number of EIHL teams would exacerbate this, IMO.grazza wrote:It is quite strange the most built up areas in the UK are in south east England in and around London yet they have never really had much success with pro hockey. London Racers didn't have a proper facility and London Knights were at a time when the docklands area of London was much less prominent and I think having 2 teams would really help a nice rivalry to keep people and local media interested. First off don't name a team London, you ask a Londoner where they are from they are more like to say Chelsea or Hackney, stick to that and concentrate marketing in the local area as there is too much going on in London to really get noticed throughout the city it is like Glasgow, no sports teams have never really been that successful running under the name Glasgow and Braehead is seen as more neutral as it isn't really a place but the name of the shopping centre so rather than calling the team Glasgow or Paisley the Braehead brand is seen as more inclusive to those from all around the West of Scotland.
I don't like how this happens. Yeah they are good so should be paid better but, one it stops teams bringing in better imports and 2 this is partly why Team GB is still so bad! Players like Weaver, Longstaff and co where clearly too worried to go abroad (I know these two did but for what half a season?!) We need our players to go abroad to get better, not eatting up all the money at home! They won't develop at home either.archibalduk wrote:Interestingly, the top British players typically earn more than the foreigners. I'm not sure why this is. Perhaps because top UK players are relatively rare - and because once each team has filled their quota of foreigners (11 foreigners per team at the moment), how you fill the remainder of your roster is pretty crucial. Other than the top British players, there is a big gap between the foreigners and the rest of the British players. Hence the stronger teams do well because they take many of the top British players (and therefore have good roster depth) whereas the very weakest teams have to fill their rosters with British players who spend much of their time in the lower leagues.Tasku wrote:I guess where they are lacking is skill level of local players, because foreigners from Canada or other European countries will always want a bigger paycheck than locally raised talent.
yeah heard two goals chalked off, Edinburgh had one not allowed in Belfast last night, the webcast commentator said it was thrown in though I never had a replay to confirm that. Probably conspiracy theories will do the rounds, tonight's ref at Murrayfield made some harsh calls but don't think it effected the overall outcome.archibalduk wrote:I don't know the details, but I understand the Flyers are unhappy with some goal decisions by the referees. Something about them being denied a goal or two...
This isn't quite along the same lines, but there are strong rumours Paisley will be joining the NIHL-1 North next season. Additionally, the teams have recently been expressing a wish to realign the league (in order to cut down on travel costs). The Northern NIHL-1 and NIHL-2 teams would be split into a Northern Division and a Midlands Division like so:grazza wrote:A morthern EPL would probably be an easier stepping stone for local players but if we had that then there would be less pro teams.
First one was disallowed because play had already been stopped before Fife bundled the puck in, and the second one was disallowed because a Fife player was laying across Kowalski in the Panthers goal.grazza wrote:yeah heard two goals chalked off, Edinburgh had one not allowed in Belfast last night, the webcast commentator said it was thrown in though I never had a replay to confirm that. Probably conspiracy theories will do the rounds, tonight's ref at Murrayfield made some harsh calls but don't think it effected the overall outcome.archibalduk wrote:I don't know the details, but I understand the Flyers are unhappy with some goal decisions by the referees. Something about them being denied a goal or two...
Doesn't sound all that bad. The messages I was reading from the Fife players on Twitter suggested they were a lot more controversial than that. But I guess that's to be expected!rmt_1982 wrote:First one was disallowed because play had already been stopped before Fife bundled the puck in, and the second one was disallowed because a Fife player was laying across Kowalski in the Panthers goal.grazza wrote:yeah heard two goals chalked off, Edinburgh had one not allowed in Belfast last night, the webcast commentator said it was thrown in though I never had a replay to confirm that. Probably conspiracy theories will do the rounds, tonight's ref at Murrayfield made some harsh calls but don't think it effected the overall outcome.archibalduk wrote:I don't know the details, but I understand the Flyers are unhappy with some goal decisions by the referees. Something about them being denied a goal or two...
Yeah, it sounds like the larger budget was the main factor attracting him.MWE wrote:Steelers have signed Doug Christiansen as head coach
Thought the final was a fantastic advert for Ice Hockey in the UK, as the pace didn't let up all game, and I think a few independent observers were pleasantly surprised with what was on offer. Still, the Panthers were made to fight for the win, and for Jordan Fox to score the winner is fitting, as he made the decision mid season to drop back to the blueline instead of being up top, and cost himself a lot of possible points in the process. However, he did score probably the goal of the season for us, and still weighed in with some very important points.archibalduk wrote:Yeah, it sounds like the larger budget was the main factor attracting him.MWE wrote:Steelers have signed Doug Christiansen as head coach
In other news, I was sorry to hear that the Leeb brothers are retiring. I really enjoyed seeing them play this season and they were two of my favourite players along with Guthrie who is also leaving (yes, I'm a secret Blaze fan!).
The Playoff weekend was a lot of fun as always. I love the atmosphere and of course a weekend of nothing but hockey. The semis were both the typical conservative/cagey affairs until one team pulls away. The 3rd/4th game was, as expected, a dull exhibition game. The final was brilliant - such a shame the Giants couldn't get the winner (but they came oh so close several times). The Giants took a lot of penalties towards the end of the game and this really harmed their chances. After the game, David Ling did his water skiing impression with the trophy!![]()
I was very impressed with Rupert Quiney of the Devils. I've seen him play a number of times for the NIHL Devils this season and he has always impressed. However, he didn't look out of depth in any way against the Panthers in the semi and the Blaze on the Sunday, and he rightly had a lot of ice time in both games. He's very versatile too - he seemed comfortable both at LD and LW. He's one to watch next season. Luke Ferrara (Devils) and James Griffin (Blaze) had good weekends too - Ferrara was able to keep up with the faster pace of the EIHL and Griffin was one of the Blaze's best players this weekend.
And Manchester won the playoffs!!What a result for a team with only 3 forward lines against an extremely strong Flames team who also benefit from good depth.
And finally, Invicta came back from a 6-4 loss to the NIHL Devils in game #1 to win 13-10 on aggregate. Unfortunately I'm going to miss the first leg of the semi-final, but I can't see them making it past the Chieftains. It's not impossible, but Chelmsford are so strong that it's going to take something special.
Brilliant news!!Mighty Knight wrote:The London Racers have reformed, and plan to play in the ENIHL2 next season! Don't have an official website yet, but for those of you on Twitter; https://twitter.com/racers_london
Paul Thompson made a couple of interesting Tweets on this topic shortly after the finals. The first one stated that a friend of his who is a coach in the DEL remarked that the level of play in the final was as good as the DEL in terms of quality. Another Tweet mentions Gunnar Svensson's (former Elitserien coach for 36 years) view that the EIHL is Europe's best kept secret (i.e. that it is overlooked more because of salary rather than quality/skill).rmt_1982 wrote:Thought the final was a fantastic advert for Ice Hockey in the UK, as the pace didn't let up all game, and I think a few independent observers were pleasantly surprised with what was on offer.