Wednesday 9 April 2014

Connolly Empty Netter Clinches The Double



Bison 5 Manchester Phoenix 3
EPL Playoff Final
6/4/14


Veni, vidi, vici. Or for the non Latin speakers amongst us (I’ll include myself in that category as I failed Latin O-level twice) – I came, I saw, I conquered. Julius Caesar’s famous catchphrase of course. A bit like Brucie's “nice to see you, to see you nice”. The legions of Basingstoke, far mightier than the legions of Rome, marched to Coventry and snatched the victor’s laurels. It wasn’t so much Hail Caesar, but more Hail Doug Sheppard, the man who had masterminded the double. Having cast aside the Guildford Flames, Bison took on the Manchester Phoenix in a do or die gladiatorial contest. There could be only one winner and death (well not really but it sounds good) awaited the defeated.

The contest opened in grand style, but remained goalless after 20 minutes of play. Bison had the better of the P1 with 14 shots against 5, but failed to find a way past Steve Fone in the Phoenix net. Their best chance was when Coach Sheppard was put through, but Fone saved. At the other end Dean Skinns performed similar heroics when a lightning break from Frankie Bakrlik caught Bison with trousers down, but Deano stood up and deflected the puck over the bar.

Early in the 2nd Deano was called on once again to save Bison bacon when he pulled off a double save to prevent a shortie with Bakrlik in the slammer. 4 minutes later it was Long Ciaron Long who was carpeted for boarding and became a boarder in the penalty box. Only 20 seconds into the 5 on 4 Phoenix snatched the lead. Robin Kovar snapped in a rebound close in. Michal Psurny and Tony Hand were adjudged to have had a hand in the goal. 1-0 Phoenix and 28 minutes gone.
 
Having been the better side for half the game and having looked capable of snatching a go-ahead goal, Bison’s concession of a go-behind goal must have caused their supporters to adopt feelings of deep gloom instead of those of deep joy which the Phoenix fellows were experiencing. But all that was about to change only 26 seconds later with an error of gargantuan, cataclysmic and humungous proportions, as I shall relate.
Andy McKinney, facing his own goal, lost control of not only the situation, but also his destiny and, most importantly, the puck. He fell headlong to the ice and, as he did so, he swished his stick at the puck like a man trying to swat a fly. But the swish missed and the fly flew away. Marauding past the prostrate form of McKinney and leaving him to flounder like a beached whale, was Long Ciaron Long, who had had his naturally red beard dyed for the playoffs.....red. Long Ciaron took the puck unopposed to the back door and smashed home through the gap between post and Fone, who had no time to phone a friend about what to do to keep Long Ciaron out. 1-1. McKinney immediately got to his feet (skates more accurately) and how he did grumble and grown, chunner and chunter, babble and burble to the officials. Perhaps they were offering him an assist for the goal and he was saying he didn’t want one. But he deserved one because he had set up the goal.

Shortly after Marvellous Miroslav Vantroba was less than marvellous and ended up being hooked into the slammer for hooking. Now was Phoenix’s chance. Could they capitalise on the man advantage and retake the lead? Well actually no and, worse still, they fell behind. A turnover saw Lumberjack Joe Rand barrelling in on goal with only Fone to beat. The pursuing Phoenix man was Robin Kovar. He had a split second decision to make. “Do I give up the chase and hope that Fone has his number or do I drag him down in a dastardly and cynical fashion? If I let him go, he will have as many bites of the cherry as my netman will allow. If I drag him down, I may get away with a 2 minute minor. At worst it will be a penalty shot, which should favour my goaltender and he will have but one bite of the cherry.” Well what would you do? Of course - he wrapped his stick around Joe’s legs and should really have shouted “TIMBER!” as Joe fell headlong to the ice like a felled Canadian pine. There was a sudden volcanic eruption in the Bison blocks. Their howls of protest did indeed erupted volcanically in violent and vehement vociferation. Some shouted “PENALTY SHOT!”, others “REF-ER-EEEE!”, others still “HOOKING!” Had any members of the aristocracy been present they might have been moved to say, “I say referee, old bean. That was a trifle caddish, don’t y’ know?” But I heard no such utterance. “Penalty shot” said the referee and a penalty shot it was. The puck was placed at centre ice and Joe skated up. Fone moved forwards to make the goal invisible as Joe moved in. Back went Fone. In came Joe. He shaped to shoot and bang! In it went through the hapless netman, who got a piece of it but couldn’t stop it. Over the line it raced. On came the goal light. Polite applause (oh really?) rippled from the Bison blocks. 2-1 Bison.

Into the 3rd we went and very soon it was all square. Bison were called for changing on an icing, an offence so frequently missed by officials, and in the resultant power play Bakrlik, set up by Hand, saw his shot rebound to James Archer (or was it Geoffrey Archer? No it was James), who snapped it in for 2-2.
 
On 47 minutes Bison had a goal washed off (a rather strange term I always think – after all if you scrub the scorecard with soap and water it will go all mushy). I can’t describe in detail what happened, as it was a humungous blue paint scramble, but I can confirm that the puck crossed the line and the goal light came on. Much to the horror of the Bison backers, the referee was seen to throw wide his arms. Was he saying, “last time I went fishing I caught one this big”? If only, but alas for the Bison backers, the referee was not a fly fishing disciple of J.R. Hartley and his gesture signified a big fat negative no-no not to be. No goal. Why not? Who can tell? Not I.

It didn’t matter because only seconds later it really was 3-2 and the scorer was trying to write on the sodden scorecard. Set up by Rand and Connolly, Rabbit’s Foot Joe Baird found himself with a crowd of players in front of him, but a shooting chance nevertheless. “A wrist shot or pass to someone else,” pondered Joe. “No. Maybe a clapper.” And a clapper it was. Joe fired in his slap shot through a crowd of players, the shot deflecting off a Phoenix player, across the front of Fone and in off the post. Perhaps all of Joe’s superstitions (I haven’t got enough paper to go into all that) had paid off. It was a lucky goal, but well deserved. 3-2 Bison.

2 minutes later, Tomas “Grandmaster” Karpov sent the Bison backers into paroxysms of pleasure and the Phoenix fans into the depths of doom with goal number 4 and what a goal it was. Coach Sheppard surged forward in a lightning break from his own defensive zone. His pass forward found the Grandmaster in the neutral zone with sight of goal. We were expecting a trademark skate forward and take a chance in a one on one with the goaltender. However, Tomas must have been at the end of his shift. Leaden legs he may have had, but Titanic was the strength in his arms. Now he was just inside the blue line and he raised his stick high to the rafters of the Skydome. Fone must have heard 4 distinctive sounds, all within a split second of each other – the rifle crack as the Karpov stick hit the ice then puck in one sweeping movement, the swish of displaced air as the puck flew past his mask above his catcher, the rustle of rubber against sisal as the puck hit the net and, for him the most depressing sound of all, the explosion of celebration which erupted from the Bison blocks. If the deafening goal celebration had to be likened to the human form, it would not be described as skinny, undernourished or anorexic. Fie no. It would be more corpulent, rotund, full of figure, suggesting the ingestion of too many Pukka Pies, Big Macs and Mr. Kipling’s exceedingly good cakes. More Robbie Coltrane than Robbie Williams you might say. Never mind all that it was 4-2 Bison.
 
With the clock ticking down to just over 4 minutes remaining, Coach Hand called a time out. Phoenix had to pull a rabbit out of the hat and they did. With just over 3 minutes remaining they brought it back to a one goal game. Under pressure Bison couldn’t clear their lines and a centring pass from wide of the crease by McKinney was snapped home by Kovar. Now this was an assist McKinney did want. The other went to Robert Schnabel.

From the Bison perspective to concede a goal now was as undesirable as the scrapings from a fish gutter’s chopping block. The mood in the Bison blocks became as tense as tense could be. It couldn’t have been tenser or even more tense. The hair of the Crinkly Haired Lady began to uncrinkle. The Bespectacled Youth aged prematurely. The hands of the Man in the Charlestown Chiefs shirt began to shake (yes they really did). Climbing Girl began to climb the walls. The Headbanger banged .......... his head. The Man of Steel began to lose his Sampson-esc strength, as if he’s had a Kurt Reynolds haircut. The Gooner gurned. The Rabble Rouser’s moustache began to droop. And both the Howling Man and Duracell Man became quiet. Surely not! Like a cricketer approaching a century it was the nervous nineties for the Bison backers. The glittering prize of the double dangled agonisingly before them, but was it to be snatched away and were Phoenix about to rise from the Flames (the metaphorical flames that is, not the Guildford Flames – they’d already gone back to the Library - remember?). Bodies were put on the line, pucks were keenly contested in the corners, attacks were snuffed out. The clock ticked down. Phoenix were becoming as frustrated as an ASBO toting chav armed with a hammer but with nothing to smash. But for them now was not the time to throw in the towel or even throw up. They had to throw caution to the wind and, with a last desperate throw of the dice, throw themselves a lifeline. It was time to throw the goaltender off the ice and throw on an extra skater. This they did and there were one or two scares for Bison, but valuable time was eaten up by trapping the puck in the corners. Eventually Bison got their chance. A Phoenix move broke down and Aaron “Billy” Connolly took possession. He couldn’t get a clear site of goal as he moved forward, especially when a Phoenix player threw himself prostrate to the ice and risked damaging his prostate if the puck hit it. But the durability of his prostate was not tested as Billy delayed and delayed, shifting the puck wider and wider until at last he had a clear site of the Phoenix net emptied of its telephonically named custodian. Now was his chance. He slid the puck across the line with only 2 seconds remaining. 5-3 Bison and game over. Sorted!

The explosion of celebration in the crowd had to be seen to be believed. Grown men fell weeping with joy to the floor. Drunken Telford fans just fell to the floor. Old ladies cheered so loudly that their dentures shot from their mouths with the velocity of a Marcel Petran slap shot. Mothers hurled their babies into the air and forgot to catch them. Can you believe that? OK I’ll admit only the bit about the Telford fans is actually true, but who cares? Bison had done it. No trophies since Nicky Chinn had played hockey in the age of the Druids and now, like busses, two at once. And well deserved. What a season. The ice became littered with discarded equipment as the Bison bench cleared and Dean Skinns disappeared under a mob, not of angry villagers but of his euphoric team mates. The only helmet glove or stick not thrown onto the ice was Chinny’s helmet, which remained firmly on his head – not sure why. Is a Rabbit’s Foot Joe Baird style superstition? Muzzy Wales, for whom I am sure the team had won it, was brought onto the ice, sat on a chair and given one of Grandmaster Karpov’s MoM beers and it was nice to see Phoenix’s Frankie Bakrlik, skate up into the midst of the Bison boys and give his personal congratulation to Muzzy, his old team mate at Slough, who had been so unlucky to sustain his nasty injury and miss the playoffs. The medals were distributed and every time a player put his beer down to collect his medal, that naughty chappie “Billy” Connolly took a swig from it. Finally, the EPL Playoff cup (little bigger than an eggcup but who cares?) was planted into the hands of Bison skipper Nicky Chinn and he lifted it high to the rafters of the Skydome to the acclamation of all present (well almost all but not the Phoenix fans or indeed the small contingent of allied Flames fans who had not yet gone back to the Library) as the champagne sprayed forth to celebrate a champagne victory. Each player raised the cup in front of a joyous Bison crowd and it was great to see the “child line” of Cameron “Popeye” Wynn, Stuart “The Cat” Mogg and Danny “Iceberg” Ingoldsby all coming forward together to raise the cup. It was just a shame there weren’t 3 handles on it. Slovak blueline hero Marvellous Miroslav Vantroba and Czech twinkled toes Tomas “Grandmaster” Karpov came forward together holding one handle each, which was great to see – these two were compatriots when Czechoslovakia existed. The celebrations went on and on, but I won’t, dear reader, as I am sure you have other things to do, except to say that all there remained to do was for the Telford fans to find their fallen comrades, old ladies their false teeth and mothers their discarded babies.

Tuesday 8 April 2014

Popeye Wynn’s Spinach Fuelled Performance Helps Bison Put Out The Flames



Bison 5 Guildford Flames 2
EPL Playoff semi-final
5/4/14

Bison seem to have Guildford’s number this season. 5 victories to 1 in the league, a knock out from the EPL cup, including a humiliating 8 goal blast at Planet Ice, and now elimination from the playoffs. No wonder those from the Library chose to align themselves with Manchester Phoenix in the final – a strange alliance if ever there was one. There were fine and determined performances from the entire Bison bench, but my hero of the night (well it was more afternoon straddling early evening but that doesn’t sound so good) was Cameron “Popeye” Wynn, who set up two of the Bison goals, as I shall relate in this humble account.

P1 opened in robust style with the Flames taking a penalty as early as the 18th second. Nothing came of the power play, but Bison did manage to capitalise on their second power play on 11 minutes. Martin Opatovsky got cross, cross checked and had to check into the penalty box as a result. Only 12 seconds later Bison surged into the lead on the power play. Andy “Machine Gun” Melachrino fed Tomas “Grandmaster” Karpov behind the net. He emerged at the back door and in a big sweeping arc fired the puck across the face of goaltender Gregg Rockman and in between the hapless goaltender and far post. There may have been some softly spoken, sedate and shy shrinking violets amongst the Bison crowd.  Any reservations they would normally display were well and truly given the old heave-ho, as they underwent a curious yet instantaneous metamorphosis from meek and mild introverts into a bunch of raving extroverts. 1-0 Bison.

Alas for those former shrinking violets the lead lasted only 3 minutes. Back came the Flames. A long range but powerful shot by Jez Lundin was blocked by Deans Skinns, but the rebound fell perfectly for Marcus Kristoffersson, who snapped it in for 1-1. The period expired with no further scoring nor any more extrovert behaviour from the shrinking violets.

Into P2 we went and it took only 3 minutes for Bison to establish another lead, a lead they were never to lose (sorry I’ve given the end away). The scorer was Bison skipper Nicky Chinn, who treated the crowd to a piece of vintage Chinny. Set up by Karpov from a pass by Reynolds out of defense the Welshman, who is rumoured to have been playing at the time of the Druids in his native Wales, wizzarded his way through a static Flames D which appeared as stationary as Stone Henge itself. Chinny shouldered responsibility for the team and, eying up the opportunity which had been handed to him, muscled his way headlong through. He certainly couldn’t be described as bone idle or lacking in guts as nosed his way towards goal at breakneck speed and with all the heart and soul he could muster. He deked and slotted home off his backhand to rock Rockman. Keen relish, hearty enjoyment, unadulterated pleasure – take your pick as to the expression which best described the reaction of the Bison backers most accurately. 2-1 Bison.

On 28 minutes it was 3-1 with a goal from Marvellous Miroslav Vantroba very similar in execution to Chinny’s goal and it was Chinny who sent him on his way through the Flames D. As he carried the puck forward he looked for a set up pass, but none was on. “Oh well,” thought the follically challenged Slovak blueliner, “I’ll have to do it all by myself. Chinny did so why can’t I?” And he could and did. Marvellous Miro miraculously marauded his way through the Flames D, whose members looked as ineffectual as Barbie dolls trying to stop a Saturn V transporter (the largest wheeled vehicle ever built in case you didn’t know). The Barbies failed. The Saturn V transporter succeeded. Marvellous Miro got through the lot of them, foxed Rockman with his deke and slotted home.

The clocked ticked on to 30 minutes played and what happened next propelled the Bespectacled Youth into paroxysms of praise and admiration as he acclaimed the lead up to Bison’s 4th goal as a textbook example of how to make a dump in pay off. The object of the Youth’s approbation was Cameron “Popeye” Wynn, one third of the Wynn-Mogg-Ingoldsby “child line”. Giving his line mates the opportunity of a line change but maintaining the momentum of the attack, he dumped in the puck, chased it down, scrapped for it on the boards, ground it out and fed a pass to the slot where Lumberjack Joe Rand, who had just come over the wall, made the Flames fans go up the wall and invoke a wall of sound from the Bison backers as he forced it over the line for 4-1 Bison. What commitment. What grinding. What passing. Popeye was awarded a thoroughly deserved assist. He should have got a can of spinach, but none was available. Behind me the holders of membership card numbers 001, 002 and 003 of the Cameron Wynn Appreciation Society politely applauded. Really? Well OK no. They erupted like a trio of raving lunatics, for whom strait jackets should have been ordered. Unsure exactly how the goal had been scored (prior to hearing the Bespectacled Youth’s account) I asked one of them how it had gone in. All he said was “It was a mess” and our conversation terminated with me being none the wiser.

Soon after Bison snuffed out a 5 on 3 with Baird and Vantroba sharing a cell for boarding and holding respectively and there was no more scoring in the period. And so into the 3rd we passed as intoxicated Telford Tigers fans next to the Bison block began to pass out. Sitting comfortably at 4-1 to the good, Bison had to keep it tight, knowing full well that the Flames were quite capable of staging a comeback. To let their opponents back in with an early second goal would have been as undesirable as the Bearded Rabble Rouser of Block A coming home to find his eccentric butler doing a doggie sweep in the garden using the top hat from his Royal Ascot apparel as a collecting vessel. They held firm until the 53rd minute when the Flames grabbed a power play goal through Branislav Kvetan. The referee didn’t think highly of Nicky Chinn’s high stick and stuck him in the box. Only 4 seconds into the 5 on 4 Marcus Kristoffersson squared to Kvetan in front of goal and he wristed in a top shelfer. 4-2 with enough time for a grand recovery, but Bison had other ideas, as I shall relate.

Re-enter Popeye Wynn, who was surely having the game of his life, particularly bearing in mind the importance of the game. Not content with his marvellous set up for goal no. 4 he proceeded to set up goal no. 5. Breaking forward from the left wing, he received a pass from Long Ciaron Long and fired in a wrist shot from the point. The Herculean force of the shot belied the slight frame of the body building shake imbibing Bison forward. So hot was the liquid spinach enhanced shot that Rockman could only spill it into the slot where lurked Cuddly Joe Greener, carrying 56 lbs more bodily tissue than Popeye. Joe put his full weight behind his snap shot and it was 5-2. Cam had earned his second can of spinach.

For the Bison backers it was turning into a joyous jape, jolly and jaunty. Conversely for the Flames faithful the concession of the goal was a morose moment, melancholy and mournful. They must have realised, now back to 3 goals to the bad with less than 3 minutes to play, it was all over but the shouting, most of which was being done by Duracell Man. A unkind song arose from the Bison blocks....♫...Go back to the Library...Go back to the Library..♫ And when the final buzzer sounded to confirm it would be a Bison v Phoenix final, they did.