Archive: August, 2008

Saturday, August 30, 2008

To those of us who grew up attending hockey games at the Spectrum, we know it’s more than an arena.
Much more.
It’s the place where we were introduced to the sport, the place where we created memories while watching games alongside our dads, the place where we watched an amazing, blue-collar group of players become the first NHL expansion team to ever win the Stanley Cup.
So give Flyers chairman Ed Snider and his staff credit for not allowing the Spectrum to go quietly.
The Flyers, of course, play down the street at the Wachovia Center, but they will play two preseason games at the Spectrum _ which will be demolished in 2009 to make room for a much-needed entertainment complex that will include restaurants, bars and retail stores _ and will give fans a chance to pay homage to the wonderful building.
The Spectrum doesn’t have all the bells and whistles of the Wachovia Center, but it’s more intimate and the seats are all closer to the action. For those of us who went there during our younger years, the place just feels like home.
The Flyers will play Carolina in a preseason game at the Spectrum on Sept. 27; they will face the AHL Phantoms in the building on Oct. 7. There will be all kinds of festivities _ all the teams’ captains and players from the two Stanley Cups champs have been invited back _ and it will feel just like old times. There is even talk of bringing back the orange jerseys the club wore many moons ago.
The Phillies did things right when Veterans Stadium was closed in 2003. In a moving ceremony that was orchestrated by public-relations genius Larry Shenk, numerous players from each Vet season returned, and Tug McGraw, Steve Carlton and Mike Schmidt recreated their trademarks pitches or swings; Paul Owens returned to the field for one final curtain call, and it was one of the best farewells ever given to any ballpark.
It sounds like the Flyers have similar intentions.

Posted by @ 12:50 AM  Permalink | 17 comments
Tuesday, August 26, 2008

When I think of courageous athletes, I think of Adam Taliaferro and Brian Piccolo. I think of Kevin Everett and Lance Armstrong, Jim Abbott and Mario Lemieux. Among others.

 

I also think of Bryan Berard.

 

Berard, as you may recall, was accidentally hit by the stick of Ottawa's Marian Hossa in 2000. It was a gruesome scene, with blood staining the ice and Berard being raced to the hospital.

 

Berard nearly lost his right eye in the accident; he underwent seven eye operations and, to his credit, returned to the NHL _ and gave back his $6.5 million insurance settlement.

 

Think about that.

 

And, now, at 31, he will be trying to earn a spot on the Flyers' young defense in training camp next month.

 

Berard doesn't have the skill he possessed when he was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1995 draft, but no one can question his character.

 

His presence will add some intrigue to what promises to be an interesting Flyers training camp.

 

I wrote about Berard in today's Inquirer.

 

Posted by Sam Carchidi @ 2:44 PM  Permalink | 10 comments
About Sam Carchidi
Sam Carchidi, who has covered primarily South Jersey high school sports and the Phillies for three decades, is in his second year as the Flyers’ beat writer. He has followed the Flyers since their inception in 1967-68, and remembers when only the third periods of their games were broadcast on the radio - just seven years before they became the city's most popular franchise.

Carchidi has written three books _ the nationally acclaimed Miracle in the Making: The Adam Taliaferro Story, which he co-authored with Scott Brown; Bill Campbell: The Voice of Philadelphia Sports; and Standing Tall: The Kevin Everett Story, which was featured on the Oprah Winfrey Show.

A lifelong South Jersey resident, Carchidi lives in Wenonah, N.J., with his wife, JoAnn, and he is a passionate sports fan of the colleges attended by his daughter, Sara (tiny Mount St. Mary’s in Maryland, which qualified for the NCAA men’s basketball tournament last season and is unbeaten in football since 1951) and his son, Sammy (West Virginia, an annual challenger for the nation’s No. 1 ranking in football and men’s basketball).