Sidney Crosby

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The Pittsburgh Penguins’ Sidney Crosby, who’s considered by many to be the best hockey player in the world, is still sitting on the sidelines a year after being injured in the NHL’s Outdoor Classic game against the Washington Capitals. Crosby received a concussion in January 2011 and has played just eight games since.

The 24-year-old Crosby attempted to comeback earlier this season, but after the eight games said he was feeling concussion-like symptoms and returned to the sidelines. In late January, a doctor said Crosby had a fractured neck and that could be the cause of his problems. However, another doctor has now stated that he doesn’t have a fractured neck, but has a soft tissue injury.

There are several doctors working with the star center, but none of them know when Crosby may have picked up the injury. It could have happened back in 2011 or sometime this season when he made the short comeback. However, the medical team said the condition is treatable. Crosby last played a game on Dec. 5, 2011. He missed the last half of last season as well as the playoffs and has played just eight times this season.

The problem is, the doctors don’t know if Crosby has both a concussion and a neck injury or if the neck problem is the cause of the concussion-like symptoms. The Penguins and Crosby are obviously hoping the neck injury is the only problem he has to deal with. Crosby said he’s encouraged that the neck injury could be the root of all that ails him and will start to receive treatment on it as soon as possible. The injury isn’t considered to be career threatening, but multiple concussions are.

The league misses Crosby since he’s viewed as a legitimate star. By the time he was 22 years old he had already won the league’s MVP trophy, a scoring championship, an Olympic gold medal, and a Stanley Cup. Crosby said that he’s feeling okay, and has resumed skating, but hasn’t been cleared to practice with his teammates.

Since it’s taken over a year for doctors to properly diagnose Crosby’s injury, there have been reports that he isn’t very happy with the Penguins’ medical staff and other doctors he’s visited over the past dozen or so months. Crosby said he’s just concerned about treating the injury and getting back on the ice as soon as possible.

The original injury took place at Heinz field in Pittsburgh on Jan. 1, 2011 in the NHL’s annual outdoor game. Crosby was hit by Washington’s David Steckel and was then hit again by Victor Hedman of the Tampa Bay Lightning on Jan. 5 and was diagnosed with a concussion. The then complained of fatigue, headaches, motion discomfort, and dizziness over the next few months. He was cleared to practice in late September 2011, but didn’t return to the lineup until Nov. 21 when he scored a pair of goals and assists against the New York Islanders.

However, after scoring 12 points in eight games he was sidelined again with a re-occurrence of the concussion-like symptoms. He tried to practice with the team on Dec. 7, but said he was still suffering from headaches. He’s now skating on his own and will see if treatment for the neck injury solves his headache problem.

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Things have continued to gone worse for Sidney Crosby. After so many concussions and injuries, Sidney Crosby is now into another one.

According to Crosby’s agent, Pat Brisson, he has a neck injury and third-party doctors will be reviewing the MRI’s of his injuries in the next one-to-two days to check out how severe the injury may be. And not to mention, this also adds into the post-concussion symptoms he’s been having as well.

“The good news is he’s safe,” Brisson told ESPN.com. “It’s treatable, which is positive.”

The Penguins released this statement today about Crosby’s condition:

“The diagnosis of Dr. Robert S. Bray, a neurological spine specialist based in Los Angeles, is that Sidney Crosby had suffered a neck injury in addition to a concussion,” the release read. “Dr. Bray reports that the neck injury is fully healed. Those findings will be evaluated by independent specialists over the next few days. The most important goal all along has been Sidney’s return to full health, and we are encouraged that progress continues to be made.”

Crosby returned to Pittsburgh today skating. Penguins’ GM Ray Shero has said Crosby will continue skating and working out like he has been for the past week.

“Hopefully we’ll see next week as to where he is and we’ll get the reports from California and compare notes to what’s been done so far,” Shero said. “We want to continue to look to see how we can get this under control and manageable so he can return to play.”

It’s sad to see an NHL great be like this right now. He’s only 24 and his career could be cut short, which is a big possibility. However, these fellows in the ESPN report of this injury have made a good point about all of this:

Would be sad to see Crosby go, but this could end up happening for the best of him.

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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the website, Hardcourt Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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Beginning of the End

by Chris Ross on December 14, 2011

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It pains me to write what I am about to write. I wish I didn’t believe it but, right now, it’s hard to think any differently. All the signs, signals, indicators, compass’ and whatever other device you have are leading me in this direction. I have tried to convince myself this can’t be true but what else am I to believe?

Sidney Crosby is finished.

Extreme words, I know. However, Sidney Crosby is out again after what, at the most, can be classified as a soft elbow to the head from David Krejci. Watch for yourself here (skip to 1:11 for slow motion). It’s possible the first time watch the video you won’t even notice the hit. The hit occurs a few seconds into the video but it is rather inconspicuous.

Once again, Sid the Kid is day-to-day with his concussion-like symptoms but not the day-to-day that we normally associate with injuries. His status as day-to-day refers to the media’s coverage of his status, wondering when Crosby will be back on the ice. Sadly, Sidney Crosby is out indefinitely and, although he insists that he is not back at square one, you have to wonder if this last hit has put him on the Eric Lindros road of perpetual concussions.

Crosby took 11 months off. Like a Dad crossing the street with his 3-year-old child, he decided to play it really safe instead of being really sorry. I repeat, he played it really safe. Unlike the first hit from Dave Steckel that should have put him out, Crosby didn’t want to play with fire this time. In the end though, it only took a minor hit from David Krejci to put him on the shelf. This wasn’t your Scott Stevens on Eric Lindros garbage. This was peewee minor hockey stuff.

This isn’t a movie either. What doesn’t kill Sidney Crosby isn’t going to make him stronger. Each subsequent concussion makes Crosby more fragile than the Dallas Cowboys in the 4th quarter. By now it’s common knowledge to sports fans that if you’ve had one concussion, you are much more likely to have another. At the same time, it’s supposed to take more than what Krejci did to Crosby. Sid is only 24 and is already having to deal with more serious concussion issues.

Is Crosby more prone to concussions than others? Is Crosby simply the recipient of some old fashioned bad luck?

Apparently, I’m not a doctor, as one individual was kind enough point out to me in e-mail form following one of my post’s inquiries into the nature of Ryan Kesler’s injury prior to last year’s Stanley Cup Finals. Nevertheless, common sense can tell you a lot of what you need to know sometimes. My common sense this year is telling me that Sidney Crosby is never going to be the same.

This is one of the few instances where I hope I’m not right.

I have no idea what Sidney Crosby’s doctors are telling him but the fact that he is back up in the press box watching games and sitting out of practice is as bad a sign as it gets. What’s even worse is that we are hearing the same thing coming out of Crosby’s and head coach Dan Bylsma’s mouth. According to Sid, “there is no timetable” for his return. According to Bylsma, “Sid knows his body better than anybody else” and “He’ll return to practice and playing when he is feeling 100 percent.”

100 percent took 11 months last time around.

This time around, before you can say post-concussion symptoms, the best thing that has happened to hockey since Mario Lemieux could be out of the game altogether . Unfortunately, this might be the beginning of the end for Sidney Crosby.
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Written by Chris Ross, Columnist (Archive/RSS)

20 yr old UBC Student. Live and breathe sports. My writing is edgy. Not the typical stuff you find. Hit up my blog – Painting the Black – you won’t regret it. Follow @paintstheblack

20 yr old UBC Student. Live and breathe sports. My writing is edgy. Not the typical stuff you find. Hit up my blog – Painting the Black – you won’t regret it.

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If Sidney Crosby hasn’t noticed, he is the beloved son of Pittsburgh, much like the Steelers are acclaimed in the same town. The winter months never felt so pleasant, now that Sid the Kid warms up the hockey season to fuel a furnace inside the Consol Energy Center. He is like an intense flame on frozen water, a star on ice, the face of hockey – turning the venue into a playoff-like atmosphere.

Crosby, who missed nearly a year due to a concussion, returned to the Pittsburgh Penguins Monday for his sensational debut in a 5-0 shutout of the New York Islanders at a venue that doesn’t qualify as the Igloo. His return should, therefore, raise fear and be taken into consideration after his exceptional comeback led the Penguins while all eyes were turned directly toward Crosby.

This may have been the week hockey turned relevant, and when the Penguins reclaimed a slew of normalcy, now sufficiently motivated with the healthy Crosby. Now, especially with him back, the Penguins seem lethal – and perhaps – even mightily physical and more energized. Every once in a while, such as his fantastic comeback in his recovery from a severe blow to the head, he reminds everyone that he’s the greatest on ice and marvels in an eye-popping performance.

When Crosby returned to the ice for the first time in nearly a season, after sitting out for 320 days with concussion-like symptoms, the atmosphere almost felt like a Stanley Cup Finals. The reason for this as Crosby is the biggest star in the sport is because he is the most gifted player ever to take pride on frozen water, at least in Canada, where he is an icon virtually flattered by every hockey fan. And as the rest of us are intrigued by the hype, the comeback that built excitement since the announcement, the time has come for Crosby, 24, returning to form and clearly looked healthy.

So what exactly is the big deal?

If so many people are willingly cheering in favor of an athlete, such as Crosby, who hasn’t played since Jan. 5 when he was injured on a hit by Tampa Bay defenseman Victor Hedman, then it is clearly discerned that the folks glorifies him. With him back, the game’s popularity itself if, indeed, has ballooned instantly. If he’s not around, absent over time during the season, hockey seems unwatchable and pedestrian.

In other words, Crosby saves the game from itself. At a time when he clearly vindicated that he’s fully recovered from a concussion, with two goals and two assists, he shock off the rust. Very seldom do we see an unbelievable debut from a player after missing almost an entire season. Very seldom do we see a hockey star have an impact the first night in his return after battling with a concussion.

It doesn’t matter that Crosby is probably the only most sensational NHL player in the public’s eye right now by rising as a star when he was just a rookie, and getting the nod to be named the Penguins’ captain at such a very young age. What does matter is that he represents the beauty of hockey, a game that almost died but revived by his presence, heroics and perfection.

The public was utterly in love with his ability to blow by Islanders defenseman Andrew MacDonald and score his first goal in 328 days. Faced with pressure and burdens, the reality of this was he had been longing for this moment and was brilliant, watching Brooks Orpik beat Islanders goaltender Anders Nilsson after Crosby, of course, fired a well-executed pass to him.

The thing is, it would be an insult to discount the Penguins, a team that can raise the Stanley Cup on ice at the end of the season with Crosby in the lineup. The Penguins, where Mario Lemieux now is the current team owner, is also where Crosby is a superstar and had the kind of unique showpiece, following the footsteps of the Hall of Famer.

The stakes were high, but he wisely took precautionary actions, knowing the way his body would react to concussions. The best news is that Crosby appears to be robust and rejuvenated after his intermission he needed to return to usual form, and he certainly was his normal self Monday night. It wasn’t like he was ideal shooting the puck all over the ice, but he was close to perfect, scoring on his first shot.


This is what builds upon a legacy, one that consist of greatness in just one performance of a dazzling debut – beginning all on his first shot. It was, in many ways, spectacular and refreshing. It was, however, a game where he sent a statement, informing the world that he’s healthy and conscious. It was a great play, in part because it contributed to the Penguins victory, and the nicest scene came on an extraordinary backhander.

It was likely and, again, one of his utmost performances as a hockey superstar, a lovable resident in Pittsburgh and a solid franchise player. Fans love him. Other players love him, too. Much has happened since he arrived to the NHL, with his impact to incredibly popularize and cultivate the Penguins, a team that lifted away from mediocrity to an elite force. The defining moment of Crosby’s beautiful season debut came quickly. It took no time for him to find his touch and be a factor in the game, setting up two goals and scoring on the last goal with his effective backhander.

“A game like tonight, you run on adrenaline,” Crosby said during an interview on Versus. “The next few games it will start to set in and it will be tougher.”

This was all Crosby, setting the tone for his teammates. This was all Crosby, putting his team in position to win. And at the end of the night, the Penguins prevailed. Over a tense, physical three hours of fun, he was hit multiple times, attempted eight shots and won 14 of 21 faceoffs, a splendid effort at home where flashbulbs exploded and the electric reaction made his presence felt on the ice.

Standing near the New York net while the Penguins had the power play, Islanders defenseman Travis Hamonic turned and noticed Crosby by his goaltender and sent him crashing to the ice. This wasn’t just a way to fire him up, but a way to alert him and test his body in his first game. After the fall, he quickly bounced back to his feet without having confrontation. He was, as the Islanders never had an answer for the Penguins, the best player out there – competing at the very best of what defines Crosby, subjecting his body to injury to formulate a body of work in the pursuit of another Stanley Cup.

His teammate, defenseman Zbynek Michalek, was brilliant himself and played as a balanced team for the first time this season. This was the disciplined goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury, eyeing the puck from every angle and shutting down the net and finishing with 29 saves. Crosby was not the only one to have a striking night, though, and had reinforcements from his teammates. Evgeni Malkin scored a goal and had an assist and Steve Sullivan in the second period scored on a goal, finishing on a terrific passing play from James Neal to Malkin to Sullivan for a tap-in.

But more than ever, this was the greatest hockey star who earned the nickname “Sid the Kid.” This is the capability, the psyche and the talent that set Crosby apart from other players, having a sensational night with two goals, two assists and eight shots on net. Last season, he was the NHL scoring-leader with 66 points in 41 games but took severe hits to the head in consecutive games and debilitated, suffering from dizziness and headaches and having a confused state of mind.

He wasn’t uninspired and he wasn’t unprepared even though he missed a total of 68 games – including playoffs, but ready for the toughest task of his comeback, inspiring the crowd to chant that echoed through the venue. For no one more than coach Dan Bylsma, he feels good about the Crosby craze and somehow he is amazed by it, ready for a double dose.

“It’s a feel I hope to get used to for more than just one game,” Bylsma said.

“Crosby! Crosby! Crosby!

This is an unreal hockey story, not close to the Miracle on Ice, but it ranks with it. Yes, the place was crazy. Crosby was back.

An aspiring sports journalist, a sports columnist for FootBasket, Gridiron Grit, Hardcourt Mayhem, and more. Sports Judge is all sports.

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NHL Needs Sid the Kid

by Chris Ross on November 23, 2011

Forget the magic of Tim Tebow. Sidney Crosby returned to the NHL on Monday Night and he was nothing short of magical.

It was another one of those “wouldn’t believe it if it was in a movie” moments in sports. After 11 months off from one of the most talked about injuries in NHL history, Sidney Crosby scored his 1st goal of the season on his first NHL shot in 11 months. Crosby didn’t stop there as he racked up 4 points total on the night, adding another goal and 2 assists. This was not only a special performance but it was incredibly heart-warming for anyone born with a soul.

I guess special is as special does.

Hockey is a Canadian sport though and south of the border it often doesn’t generate much more buzz than a bowling tournament featuring Norm Duke and Walter Ray Williams Jr. Okay, maybe a bit of an exaggeration but the point is Crosby’s long-awaited return from his mysterious concussion has produced more than a bit of a noise in the United States.

While the ‘Welcome Back Sid” hash tag may not have been trending on twitter as it was in Canada, Crosby’s comeback illustrates how important one man can be to the world of star-driven professional sports.

With Alexander Ovechkin in an extended slump, the NHL has been absent of a true superstar for the past half-year. No matter how good the games are, no matter how good the playoffs have been and no matter how many games the Stanley Cup goes, nothing can fill the void left by an injured superstar of Crosby’s magnitude. Unlike football and basketball, the game of hockey lacks household names. Alex Ovechkin and Sidney Crosby, that’s it.

No Sidney Crosby equals big problems.

Sidney Crosby’s identity and life is hockey. There must have been a point in the last 11 months where he thought he might have been without the only thing he has ever known. Sure, Sidney Crosby needs hockey. However, there’s no doubt that the NHL needs Sidney Crosby more than Crosby needs the NHL.

Sid the Kid is the poster boy for the NHL. He can be as exciting as a peanut butter sandwich sometimes but his ultimate good guy reputation more than makes up for that. My grandmother is as likely to have Sidney Crosby as her favourite (non-hometown) player as that greasy guy sitting at the corner of the bar. His stardom reaches all.

Crosby is a ratings booster. Everyone knows Sid.

In this day and age of ever decreasing scoring and ever increasing trap hockey, Sidney Crosby is one of the few reasons to tune into a hockey game. The only people happier right now than the Pittsburgh Penguins are the executives at NBC and Versus. If Sidney Crosby can return to the NHL as good or, dare I say, better than ever, it will be almost impossible to keep him out from being mentioned in the elite company of players like Orr, Lemieux and Gretzky. Once in a generation talents don’t come around every day.

It took quite a lengthy period of time but Crosby looks to have come back at the right time. Sheriff Shanny has finally implemented the absolutely necessary harsher punishments for head shots that was lacking from Colin Campbell’s reign. The brutal head shots and concussions to go along with them seem to have significantly lowered in number this year. Amazingly, Dave Steckel, the man who essentially sidelined Sidney, wasn’t even suspended for his actions last season.

That won’t happen anymore.

The overabundance of bad press the NHL received over its handling of the head shots situation is gone and its most important entities are now much better protected.

11 months of NHL hockey without Sidney Crosby was tough. 11 more years of NHL hockey with Sidney Crosby sounds more like it.

20 yr old UBC Student. Live and breathe sports. My writing is edgy. Not the typical stuff you find. Hit up my blog – Painting the Black – you won’t regret it.

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Sidney Crosby’s return to the ice still remains an open question. But despite the Penguins formally placing him on injured reserve on Monday, the former MVP could return at any time, a team source told ESPN.com’s Pierre LeBrun.

Under league rules, if a player is placed on the injured list, he must wait seven days to return to action. But because Crosby was still on the injured list from last season, the seven-day waiting period would not apply, the source said.

Crosby is continuing to recover from concussion-like symptoms sustained last January. He has been skating with the Penguins since training camp opened but has not yet been cleared for contact.

The Penguins open the season on Thursday at Vancouver.

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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Of all the sporting events taking place in the Winter Games, none are greater and more exhilarating than Team Canada.

In an atmosphere where hockey hails and is predominately recognized within a culture that created an interesting sport on ice, there’s nothing more content than witnessing Team Canada potentially win a gold medal on its home soil. The true Canadians originated a game that has extended to higher level, played globally and admired from all parts of the world.

Such as Team USA, a cohesive team believing they could stun Canada on its home surface, on a platform truly pulling for the Canadians to sustain incremental triumph. In a nation where fans appear as hungry as the athletes, a savior and a true Canadian generates regards akin to a probable mission of Team USA. Their world-class athlete happens to be Sidney Crosby, the famous NHL star. Those following the National Hockey League are familiar with his inexplicable athleticism, contributing to the Pittsburgh Penguins’ Stanley Cup title last year.

But on this occasion, he has a chance to guide his home country to an Olympic gold medal, standing as the premier Olympian in the country where Wayne Gretzky created a stellar legacy, where the Maple-leaf flags are waved proudly, and where the national anthem is famous around the world. What is considered the most enthralling Olympic event in decades, the masses turned it into the most-watched sporting activity, thrilled to witness proud reverence.

If Canada advances to the gold-medal rounds, millions living in the British Columbia or any parts of the country will hope they could attain the superior prize at home.

Over the years, Canada managed merely a lone gold medal in 58 years and are now seeking to improve and toss a hapless drought behind them. The country is pulling for the admirable Crosby, the 22-year-old hockey sensation, and depends on him to produce at the highest level. There’s an understanding that his grace and poise in representing his native country is an advantage. He’s a wonderful specimen, a difficult breed to find in a complex sport that requires mastery.

At such a young age, he has met an agenda by winning a title and received awards. It seems he’s more than Sid the Kid, a keen superstar with optimism and finesse. He’s the exalted icon the populace has waited to witness and hopefully invoke a glorious moment.

Mens Hockey - Vancouver 2010
The magnitude of Canada hockey signifies much about a culture that treasures all angles of the sport, in which inheriting a medal only symbolizes humor and personality. Crosby is ranked in the column of Gretzky and Mario Lemieux by replicating similar styles. Where he has ensured a career in the states, his presence is acute for rejuvenating a defaced sport.

As we know in the States, hockey is uninteresting and unpopular to those inclined to football and basketball or even an impaired game called baseball. It’s entirely a beloved game in Canada, and starting off with a 8-0 shutout win over Norway on Tuesday is a sign of hope, inching closer to the gold-medal rounds.

Unlike most young stars, he’s willing to accept a challenge, a task testing wills and the state of mind. He’s definitely a team leader and an inspirational leader, looking to bring back long-awaited delight. In front of a delirious Canadian crowd, Crosby generated cheers as one of the noble icons. From all parts of the world, he’s idolized for the spectacular performances forcing spectators to drop their jaws and shut their eyes in disbelief.

Ice Hockey - Day 5 - Canada v Norway
It seems he’s one gifted star, appreciated by many after returning home pursuing prestige and to win Olympic gold. It seems fans and coaching staff vowed without even hesitating that he’s the “face of Canadian hockey.” During his prime and years served in the NHL, Steve Yzerman, the executive director, knows a great and prosperous star when he stares at one, referring to him as the face of Team Canada.

I couldn’t agree with Yzerman more. No one is awry describing Crosby as the greatest hockey player to compete on the Canadian team, or even wrong when acknowledging him as the face of the Vancouver Games. Ever since he was drafted at No. 1 by the Penguins, he ignited a large fan base at the Igloo in downtown Pittsburgh and drove the team to a championship win. There’s a potential dynasty abounding in the NHL, but in the Winter Games, a possible moment is looming for Team Canada.

After watching an unflappable and tough-driven Crosby dominate in his Olympic debut, he routinely stuck with his regular style, setting up goals to pulverize Norway. With his vision to locate his surroundings and teammates, Crosby saw Jarmone Iginla in the slot and fired it directly to him as he slapped it into the net for a goal. Following his assist, he amassed another one when he and Rick Nash designed a perfect shot as Iginla scored. No wonder why he excelled in his early years, mastering a Stanley Cup, an MVP trophy, and an NHL scoring title.

It’s good to know the Canadians are favorites to conquer greatness at the Winter Games. Thrilled to have top-notch goalies with much respect is every team’s wish. But as it seems, Team Canada commands top regards in the goalie department, having Martin Brodeur and Roberto Luongo, two NHL stars who are really popular in their native country.

The fans waved Canada flags, embracing what is a wondrous moment in sports. Among competition, Canada, Sweden, and Russia are the deepest teams built to cause destruction, but the Canadians are fortunate to have Crosby. After all, he’s the best hockey star on the planet. And there are no second thoughts, realizing he might be a savior if Canada pulls off the unthinkable.

It’s the biggest tournament in years and decades, along with a Canadian team in which some calls the finest in a long time, coached by the master of coaching Mike Babcock, who’s deeply honored. For now, the Miracle on Ice theme is irrelevant. Thirty years ago, Team USA shocked the Winter Games and people across the world, but even if America is boundless, they are overshadowed by Crosby and Canada.

Think of it as a Canadian sport.

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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Four months ago, the Steelers clinched a record-setting six Super Bowl victories. The passionate sporting town was known as Steel City, and still prefers that name as the town will always embrace football. But the calendar says May, which means football is out of season until September, which is four months looming. But now, the non-stop talk in town isn’t Ben Roethlisberger’s captivating throw to Santonio Holmes for a classical game-winning catch.

People are buzzing about Sid the Kid and the Pittsburgh Penguins, NHL’s most captivating hockey team to witness arguably the greatest player of our time since Wayne Gretzky. Not only the greatest superstar to bring life to an ailing sport, but the greatest rivalry to magnetize and embracing two eminence superstars that introduces stardom as much as the Steelers have done. Having populace admire players such as Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin chances the complexion of a sport in which they have certainly done, felicitating sports followers. In this case it isn’t about hockey, but about embracing high-action packed drama, thrilling templates in today’s sports culture.

In Game 7, the 21-year old made a scene on the national stage, noticeably as much as Big Ben, a Super Bowl icon who shares some of that spotlight with Crosby, a Canadian bred on quest for his first Stanley Cup, in a town that has converted from steel into frozen ice to witness the Igloo present new life of NHL’s main attraction and menacingly the league’s Michael Jordan. He’s not nearly a comparison to Gretzky, and in fact he’s the greatest player to emerge in the history of the league on such a quick notice, accomplishing landmarks that not even Gretzky was able to reach at such a young age. Remember, this is only Crosby’s third year and in that span he has already been named team captain, becoming the youngest to lead among peers, known as Pittsburgh’s charismatic leader.


By virtue, the presence of Crosby emerged more than leadership. It has immersed amused fans, willing to relish an ailing sport and create a positive bias on an unimportant foreign creation. Witnessing a dramatic superstar or two for that matter is amply gratifying of rejuvenating the inferior NHL, which endears masses, caring more for alluring spectacles and breathtaking moments, other than boredom. At least until now, in the postseason, nothing has being boring, if anything it’s being an addiction for more extravaganza liveliness that Crosby proffered since making his debut, alongside Washington’s antagonist Ovechkin, a showdown never experience when Gretzky or Mario Lemieux worshiped stardom, two studs that posed as idols in their prime.

Now, its Crosby’s and Ovechkin’s turn to translate a bitter rivalry, a scene of epic classics and electrifying city consciousness to rename Pittsburgh when the calendar says mid May to Igloo City, at least the nickname of the Mellon Center suggests it is a proper name. Not only Steelers Country, but Crosby’s Country, where he has lifted spirit to a new level as the Penguins continuously storm to new heights, looming ever closer to a Stanley Cup trophy as Crosby and young-rising 19-year old Jordan Staal could become the youngest in history to participate in the Finals, since the scoring-threat Lemieux led Pittsburgh to back-to-back titles in the early ‘90’s. Since NHL’s crestfallen player’s lockout, they are the hottest team in the postseason, with an overwhelming and convincing 23-15 record, championship caliber prosperity that prolonged when the Penguins clinched the uttermost engaging series and indicated much optimism in the sport with an insecure status.

Well, not as long as there’s an eventful rivalry that interest us, such as Crosby vs. Ovechkin to earn immeasurable plaudits as one of the greatest sporting duels in the history of sports. But sooner than later, it had to come to an end in which only one was allowed to prevail as a legitimate winner. Still, it was a rivalry we craved, wishing for more amusing epic clashes on ice, wishing for more interesting ice wars, particularly at a time when sports faces discomfiture.

Of late, Major League Baseball topples with tattered steroid revelations and the NBA falters from officiating debacles, plenty of ignominy to make you turn your disgusted heads away from the troubling times to an impassioned modern era event, and maybe keep the sport cure from wilting. Good thing Crosby and the Penguins lasted a merciless ice war, both teams forcing seven games in the nature of intense and ambitious challenges. It was Crosby, who advanced on the Capitals’ ice, ousting Ovechkin with an early controllable 4-0 lead en route to a thrashing 6-2 rout, to clinch a trip to the Eastern Conference Finals. And if they continue to dominate as they have, without a doubt, they will represent the East and will be a good-natured first option team to hoist the cup only a few weeks away. The Penguins quick start opened up a 2-0 lead in the first period with 16 shots to the Capitals, in which sizzling offensive intensity was the summary of the game early on, furtherance when the five games were decided by one goal, three of those confirmed in overtime.

After witnessing an interesting series, you saw the right team advance, which embodies the kid everyone embraces. Not only in Crosby’s sport, but as a distinguished sports star who exemplifies sports in positive mode to renew the sport as we again revisit since Gretzky and Lemiuex. Players like Sid the Kid represents values of sports and restores essence as the Penguins are appealing, particularly if they add a third championship banner in franchise history.

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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And let them face off in what should be a dramatic series, when the ice is thicker and the nets are larger for an intense series that will observe a scene for the next few weeks. This fanfare event is buzzing louder from Pittsburgh to Washington D.C., where the spectators will add to a modernistic rivalry between two foes that made an emergence as hockey’s main attraction. Even better, they eased their way into sports main attraction. They’re Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin, and clearly without them there’s no drama worth watching when there’s only players skating on ice and exchanging dukes twice as vigorous as boxers Manny Pacquiao and Ricky Hatton.

Well maybe.

Take the moment to utter OH UH! It is fine to suggest, and grasp hints that it’s an ice match with non-stop red-blooded conflict. Two marquee stars finally collides on the same ice layer, ready to expose their forceful essence and puissant nature among hockey as each have done well. Crosby, the 21-year old, who in his three year campaign, wears a smile, immaculate away from his ice age. But when he’s on ice it’s an entirely different attitude, hijacking the game with cockiness. Already, he’s been labeled as a self-centered individual and takes more physical poundings and beatings than anyone of his teammates. Swirling around of late is that Crosby might not even stand out as the best Penguin skating, as some argue that Evgeni Malkin is the prime superstar.

As much criticism as Crosby takes, it does not make sense whatsoever as we must not forget this is a guy responsible for rejuvenating the sport, which was pretty much dead. The resurgence of hockey has made its way back from Crosby’s dominance and fierce mindset, and ripping him is only sending thanks to the icon. Often he’s known for his sensitive outcries, contesting and whining for bad calls. He’s even the league’s test dummy, used as a defensive toy as he’s pounded into the class more often than anyone else. In an entire season, Crosby has being bullied as opponents have turned into villains with their powerful and physical contact. Let’s just say that’s the kind of bombshells he’ll see in this next round against Ovechkin. Not at all is he Mr. Nice Guy, in a feud and one-on-one duel worth having eyes set on. It’s the newborn rivalry of Crosby vs. Ovechkin, similar to the Lakers-Celtics when it was Magic Johnson vs. Larry Bird, who joined the league in the late 70’s.

And this era there’s Tiger vs. Phil and Roger Federer vs. Rafael Nadal, nemesis that have made the game interesting from back-and-forth epic classics, endless rivalries that makes sports grand. To praise the inaugural rivalry of two hockey studs, deciphers the rapid change and outlook on how anything could muster heyday suddenly. Crosby and Ovechkin have indeed propelled an intriguing rivalry because of its boisterous that reaches a crescendo of some bad-blood and prestigious hierarchy. There haven’t been players this exciting since Wayne Gretzky, now it’s back and fully updated with rivalry written all over the resentful faces of Crosby and Ovechkin. One is more physical as the other prefers giving out assist and shots. Of course, it’s Ovechkin, who’s the physical one and thinks Crosby is an emotional whiner, and if so, he might want to duck, hold and cover or continue to take the hard blows.

It’s being emphasized by Ovechkin, the Russian, who has beaten up on Crosby entirely. For obvious reasons, the Russians targeted him in the regular-season, knowing how much his presence and representation means to the league. But at the same time, Ovechkin and other players’ intents are to hinder Crosby as much as possible, and putting a body on him is the lucrative practice for preventing the dynamic superstar of producing unforeseen shots or having possession of the puck to convert on prodigious shots. Giving Ovechkin the slight edge defensively is a good call. The Canada vs. Russia tension has reemerged, and with that said Crosby is the virtuous leader as Ovechkin presents an agitating approach, creativity and hard contact, which irritates Crosby and makes it harder for him to organize a solid shot or create a play for teammates. We waited anxiously to see a newborn rivalry, gradually turning into a one-one-one duel between two of the superb players in the game, none better than Crosby or Ovechkin.

Meanwhile, Ovechkin and Crosby can’t stand each others guts, which indications it will be a physical series and it will be some words exchange. And when you think about it, those are the typical things that generates rivalries. Trash talking and altercations are part of the game, and it’s the distinguishing nature of hockey, entertaining spectator’s and causal fans. Without the fierce boxing on the ice, there’s no fun in the sport in which I’m very sure we’ll see some brawls even though it’s a cruel ordeal to advocate. Its two franchises that don’t care for each other, which makes it more interesting to see with team is more emotional to start the series.

Allow me to say the Penguins, since Crosby is already irritable how the games played out the last time these two teams met. In the past two decides, the edge has gone to the Penguins, but the Capitals are already favorites and either team has yet to face off at center ice. Maybe because they held the advantage this regular-season, but still they must convert their season dominance to the playoffs where winning matters. It’s a supreme battle that might require stitches and might even knock out a few teeth, well, let’s just hope it don’t get that brutal. But crazier than ever, it is the match up and series that could turn into a Game 7 showdown to present NHL’s greatest classic.

For now, it’s an ice war among two of the league’s best. It’s on.

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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