2008 National Hockey League All-Star Game Explained

Game Name:2008 NHL All-Star Game
Visitor:West
Home:East
Visitor Total:7
Home Total:8
Visitor Per1:1
Visitor Per2:2
Visitor Per3:4
Home Per1:5
Home Per2:0
Home Per3:3
Date:January 27, 2008
Arena:Philips Arena
City:Atlanta
Mvp:Eric Staal (Carolina)
Attendance:18,644
Previous:2007
Next:2009

The 2008 National Hockey League All-Star Game was held on January 27, 2008 at the Philips Arena in Atlanta, home of the Atlanta Thrashers. It was the only time the All-Star Game was held in Atlanta, as the Thrashers moved to Winnipeg in 2011 as the new Winnipeg Jets (the old Winnipeg Jets moved to Arizona to become the Coyotes in 1996).

Atlanta had originally been scheduled to host what would have been the 55th NHL All-Star Game in 2005, however that game was canceled due to the NHL Lockout of 2004–05.

Players in this game, like the 55th National Hockey League All-Star Game, wore Rbk EDGE jerseys. The jersey logos had been redesigned, showing a simple logo that displays East and West on the respective conference jerseys, captain and alternate captain patches on the right side (instead of left), and the player's number below the logo.

Diversity honored

As Atlanta is a place of significance to the Civil Rights Movement (among the hockey-related achievements is John Paris Jr. becoming the first black person to coach a pro hockey team, the Atlanta Knights of the International Hockey League), and 2008 is the 50th anniversary of Willie O'Ree breaking hockey's color barrier with the Boston Bruins, the NHL chose the All-Star weekend to honour the diversity of the league.

Changes in the All-Star program

The previous year's YoungStars game and skills competition, which lead up to the main game, were criticized for the lack of excitement: the YoungStars game saw a lack of effort by the players overall, while the shootout portion of the skills competition was criticized for being too boring - in the previous year, at three different points in the skills competition, each goaltender would take on four opposing players in regular penalty shots - which in itself is not too different from what was seen in regular-season play.

For this year, to raise interest in all-star festivities, no YoungStars goaltenders were named - instead, the YoungStars played in a three-on-three game (of two running six-minute periods) halfway through the skills competition, with the regular all-star goaltenders in net. There was only one faceoff at the start of each half - if the puck goes out of play, another puck was thrown onto the ice. If a goal was scored, the three players retreated to their own side of centre ice before being able to attack again. For either side to win the YoungStars game, the team must score greater goals in both halves. Brandon Dubinsky of the New York Rangers was named the Youngstars MVP for scoring 2 goals and an assist.

Furthermore, the skills competition itself was changed dramatically - the Fastest Skater competition is now a sprint instead of a lap around the arena (a final showdown portion has also been added), while the traditional Puck Control Relay was changed to the Obstacle Course event, where stick handling, saucer passes, one-timers, and goaltenders attempting to score by shooting pucks the length of the ice into an empty net (itself a former All-Star Skills event called Goalie Goals) is featured. Both changes were made to further reflect game conditions. The traditional Shooting Accuracy remains, though a final showdown stage (consisting of having to shoot four targets in nine seconds with only four pucks, and if still tied, one shot in three seconds at one target) is held to determine an individual winner. Hardest Shot is the only event unchanged from previous years.

But by far the greatest change is in the shootout portion: two events are based on the shootout: in the Elimination Shootout, skaters shoot against the all-star goaltenders, with a skater being eliminated if they fail to score. The second shootout-based event, the Breakaway Challenge, incorporates elements from the National Basketball Association's All-Star Slam Dunk Contest: three players from each team (as selected by the all-star team captains) will be judged on their style and creativity by a panel of four judges as they attempt to score on a non-NHL goaltender. The judges may award up to nine points, and a bonus point is added should the skater score. The judging panel this year consists of Dominique Wilkins, a former two-time Slam Dunk Champion with the Atlanta Hawks, former Thrashers captain Scott Mellanby, Canadian actor Taylor Kitsch, and broadcaster Bill Clement. The two skaters (one from each team) with the highest scores face off in a final showdown to determine the winner of the event.

Rosters

Eastern Conference Western Conference
Coach: John Paddock
(Ottawa Senators)
Mike Babcock
(Detroit Red Wings)
Assistant Coach: Don Waddell
(Atlanta Thrashers)
Ron Wilson
(San Jose Sharks)
Starters: 39 – G Rick DiPietro (New York Islanders)
33 – D Zdeno Chara (Boston Bruins)
79 – D Andrei Markov (Montreal Canadiens)
4 – F Vincent Lecavalier (Tampa Bay Lightning) - (C)
11 – F Daniel Alfredsson (Ottawa Senators)
17 – F Ilya Kovalchuk (Atlanta Thrashers)
30 – G Chris Osgood (Detroit Red Wings)
3 – D Dion Phaneuf (Calgary Flames)
5 – D Nicklas Lidstrom (Detroit Red Wings)
12 – F Jarome Iginla (Calgary Flames) - (C)
13 – F Pavel Datsyuk (Detroit Red Wings)
61 – F Rick Nash (Columbus Blue Jackets)
Reserves: 29 – G Tomas Vokoun (Florida Panthers)
30 – G Tim Thomas (Boston Bruins)
15 – D Tomas Kaberle (Toronto Maple Leafs)
44 – D Kimmo Timonen (Philadelphia Flyers)
51 – D Brian Campbell (Buffalo Sabres)
55 – D Sergei Gonchar (Pittsburgh Penguins)
8 – F Alexander Ovechkin (Washington Capitals)
9 – F Jason Spezza (Ottawa Senators)
10 – F Mike Richards (Philadelphia Flyers)
12 – F Eric Staal (Carolina Hurricanes)
18 – F Marian Hossa (Atlanta Thrashers)
19 – F Scott Gomez (New York Rangers)
26 – F Martin St. Louis (Tampa Bay Lightning)
71 – F Evgeni Malkin (Pittsburgh Penguins)
91 – F Marc Savard (Boston Bruins)
20 – G Evgeni Nabokov (San Jose Sharks)
34 – G Manny Legace (St. Louis Blues)
2 – D Duncan Keith (Chicago Blackhawks)
25 – D Chris Pronger (Anaheim Ducks)
27 – D Scott Niedermayer (Anaheim Ducks)
55 – D Ed Jovanovski (Phoenix Coyotes)
9 – F Marian Gaborik (Minnesota Wild)
10 – F Shawn Horcoff (Edmonton Oilers)
11 – F Anze Kopitar (Los Angeles Kings)
15 – F Ryan Getzlaf (Anaheim Ducks)
18 – F Corey Perry (Anaheim Ducks)
19 – F Jason Arnott (Nashville Predators)
33 – F Henrik Sedin (Vancouver Canucks)
63 – F Mike Ribeiro (Dallas Stars)
97 – F Joe Thornton (San Jose Sharks)
Notes

Summary

align=right width="230"WEST 7 - 8
(1-5, 2-0, 4-3)
EASTstyle=font-size:90%Philips Arena (18,644)
Atlanta, Georgia
First period
Nash 0:12 Referees
1:20 Staal (Campbell, Malkin) Rob Martell
9:43 Markov (Richards, Hossa) Brad Watson
13:35 Ovechkin (Spezza, St. Louis)
15:10 Campbell (Malkin, Lecavalier) Linesmen
17:49 Ovechkin (2) (St. Louis, Spezza) Lyle Seitz
Second periodPat Dapuzzo
Nash (2) (Datsyuk) 9:34
Niedermayer (Thornton, Sedin) 15:08 MVP
Third periodEric Staal (Carolina)
Getzlaf (Jovanovski) 0:41
Nash (3) (Iginla) 1:56
4:08 Hossa (Gomez, Chara)
Phaneuf (Getzlaf, Arnott) 5:07
Gaborik (Sedin) 10:57
12:35 Staal (2) (Kovalchuk, Savard)
19:39 Savard (GWG) (Campbell, Staal)

W - Tim ThomasL - Manny LegaceTV: Versus, CBC, RDS

References

NHL.com - NHL tabs All-Star starters

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Canucks' Luongo to skip All-Star Game . January 9, 2008 . 2008-01-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080131214839/http://www.tsn.ca/ctvnews/sportsstory.asp?story_id=226854 . 2008-01-31 . live .
  2. Book: Podnieks, Andrew . The NHL all-star game : 50 years of the great tradition . 2000 . 0-00-200058-X . Harper Collins . Toronto . 169.