Most Popular
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Pentecostal Preacher Sherman Allen Turns Out to Be Reverend Spanky
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Obama and Me (62)
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Pentecostal Preacher Sherman Allen Turns Out to Be Reverend Spanky (21)
The Fort Worth preacher is accused of beating, threatening and assaulting women for more than 20 years
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While Obama has events going on throughout the city, Clinton is nowhere to be found
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The Fort Worth preacher is accused of beating, threatening and assaulting women for more than 20 years
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Harvesting peyote is legal for only three people, and all of them live in Texas
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While Obama has events going on throughout the city, Clinton is nowhere to be found
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The Dallas Stars Are Ready to Win Us Back
The hockey team is fueled by the good ol' days
By Richie Whitt
Published: February 21, 2008
Hear that?
It's audible. But so quiet and muffled, almost tranquil. Is it the refurbished Mercantile Tower clock, silently ticking high above downtown? Two moths texting in a cotton field? Charlie Chaplin espousing the virtues of Roger Clemens?
Nope. Just another winter hot streak by your Dallas Stars.
Admittedly stripped to a die-hard, bare-bones fan base after years of late-season flirtation begetting only playoff headaches, the Stars are at it again. Quietly, efficiently producing successful hockey that begs to be noticed. But for the most part playing to a city that doesn't give a damn.
While most of us were craning our necks to see exactly when and where Barack Obama would appear in town, the Stars—thanks to last Sunday's 1-0 victory over the rival Detroit Red Wings—won nine of 10 games to solidify their standing as the National Hockey League's second-best team.
"We're down to the core," says Stars president Jeff Cogen, charged with regenerating a hockey buzz in our disappointed, disjointed sports town. "It's not 'Woe is me.' It's just that, compared to who we once were we've fallen off quite a bit. We admit that, and we're reacting to it to get those fans back."
Since their Stanley Cup championship in 1999 and finals appearance in 2000, the Stars have slowly sucked into oblivion. They've won a majority of their games, lost a minority of their fans and now basically exist in a vacuum. In terms of attendance, TV ratings, merchandise sales and significance, they have dropped 25 percent since their peak.
Given that we're already emotionally bankrupt after the playoff collapses by the Cowboys and Mavericks, another successful Stars regular season generates merely a shrug of indifference. Honestly, sports fans are more affected by the beef recall than the meat of the hockey schedule.
"The buzz," Cogen admits, "isn't quite there."
It will be. Because we're stubbornly loyal. Because we're resiliently naïve. Because we're downright desperate for a parade. And most of all because—one way (on the ice) or another (in the stands)—the Stars are going to win us back.
It won't be easy. Already preaching to a jaded congregation, the Stars' sermon was stifled last week. The same day the team announced unprecedented ticket-price reductions, Clemens and Brian McNamee faced off on Capitol Hill. The same day the team earned its measuring-stick victory over Detroit, the Mavs resurrected their trade for Jason Kidd.
But at the risk of accelerating down the same tantalizing, dead-end road, it's easy for us to giddily project this Stars team capturing a Cup. Dallas is again winning with impenetrable penalty killing, timely scoring-by-committee and a goalie determined to validate his résumé.
Sound familiar? 2008 meet 1999.
Stumbling to a 7-7 start on the heels of three consecutive first-round playoff exits, the Stars turned appropriately proactive. They replaced President Jim Lites with Cogen and dismissed general manager Doug Armstrong in favor of an unorthodox Brett Hull-Les Jackson duo that almost immediately gave a contract extension to coach Dave Tippett. On the ice, Dallas allowed for—actually relied upon—major production from minor players such as Mike Ribeiro, Niklas Hagman and Antti Miettinen. Three months later, despite having more GMs than All-Stars (Ribeiro), the Stars are the NHL's biggest surprise. Brenden Morrow and Mike Modano are buzzing around the ice, Marty Turco is standing on his head and, despite playing without injured stalwarts Phillipe Boucher and Sergei Zubov, the team recently rattled off one of the quietest franchise-record winning streaks (seven) in the history of organized sports.
"Since the All-Star break we've really hunkered down," Tippett says.
The familiarly pungent stench in "the room" and the wins piling up in the standings announce that it's officially hockey season in Dallas. Before only the 10th sellout crowd of the year at American Airlines Center, the Stars shut out the Red Wings in a crucial game, mid-February notwithstanding. Turco improved to 2-9-5 in his career against Detroit, and the Stars beat the league-leading Red Wings for only the fourth time in 15 games spanning four seasons.
After Hagman's rebound goal allowed Dallas to melt away the final seconds of the nationally televised showdown, the crowd chanted "mar-DEE!...mar-DEE!" Not quite the collective throat that serenaded goalie Eddie Belfour a decade ago, but you could almost hear the echoes awakening.
"Our level of hockey is high," Turco says. "We're at the top of our division, but that's not what is going to satisfy this team."
Or management. Not unlike The Beverly Hillbillies inviting "Y'all come back now, ya hear?," Cogen has a second strategical component aimed at tricking us into investing in his team this spring and beyond.
"We've got to rekindle our lost fan base," says Cogen, who helped bring the team to Texas in '93 and returned last November after a stint with the Rangers. "Take them back to a happier time."
In conjunction with the 10th anniversary of the franchise's only title, fans buying full-season tickets for 2008-09 will be afforded 1999 prices. Wow. Tickets which this year cost $53 per game will next year cost $33; the $33 ticket down to $21. Other bargains will permit existing season-ticket holders to move down 10 rows for the same price.
"It's a bold strategy," Cogen says. "We're basically cutting-and-pasting ticket prices right from Reunion Arena 10 years ago."
Something needs to be done, and kudos to the Stars for doing it.
The fans still shout "Stars!" during the National Anthem and pump their fists to Pantera's hard-rockin' theme song. Modano's shirttail still trails in the breeze on breakaways. The team's game-day production crew still nails it with video bits like "Finnish or Gibberish" and music from Flight of the Conchords. And just ask the players: It's still "aboot" winning.
But it's all not quite right. The allure has diminished. Craziness has been replaced by complacency.










The STARS don't look like the STARS. I stopped going to the STARS' games and watching them on TV because their jerseys were gone. The STARS had one of the best-looking jerseys in the league, and for no apparent reason, their jerseys were replaced with nondescript jerseys. They were left with no character.
So, bring back the STARS' jerseys and you will have me back. I don't care if they win or lose, as long as they play hard and LOOK like the STARS!
BRING BACK THE STARS!
Comment by Carol Blackmon — February 20, 2008 @ 03:32PM
The Dallas Stars generate the most thrilling action in town!!!! No other local sport generates the heart-pounding suspense each time Robi, Brendan or Jere charges down the ice, slicing past the opposing goalie to vibrate the net in a goal for Dallas!
Dallas is a town that is limited to few in loyalty for any sport; we expect to win everything. If you believe that fans contribute to that success, then we need to be in the stands cheering. We need fans at the AAC before the 2nd period, and remainding in the stands until the last shot is blasted! 1999 prices???!!!! With Jerry Jones pricing us out of his new stadium, how can we resist such a bargain? GO STARS!!!!!!!
Comment by Sharon Ziegler — February 21, 2008 @ 01:04PM
I was stunned to hear about the price rollback. But, winning solves everything. Make it past the first round and stop breaking our hearts. I think it goes back all the way to 2000 with Eddie, cold meds and "One Billion Dollars!, the passing of Hitchy, Gainey and a host of others. Who remains? Only Zubie and Mike? This is not the same team. It is not the same game. If baseball shot itself in the foot and alienated potential fans in their strike then hockey could ill afford to do the same. It will take time to rebuild.
I remember Norm saying one day that if he talked hockey then only 5% of his audience would remain to listen. I have come to accept that hockey is a niche sport of a very dedicated base and a flexible number of band wagoners. Yeah, DFW likes winners, Texas likes winners, losing in the first round of a playoff series does not inspire passion.
All that said, I was so glad to see they pulled the trigger on a trade. I like the two headed monster GM.
Me like hockey.
Comment by cactusflinthead — February 27, 2008 @ 12:38AM