Montreal Gazette

Tracking trials intrigue NHLers

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Mark Giordano and John Tavares are keen to see what player and puck tracking bring to the NHL.

They’re just not exactly sure how all the data — the new technology is expected to provide as many as 10,000 statistica­l categories compared with the hundreds the league now has — will impact the on-ice product, if at all.

“A lot of analytics have come into the game in recent years, but I still believe you really have to watch the game and the eye test is the best one,” said Giordano, captain of the Calgary Flames. “Hockey is a game of things that happen randomly and there’s reactions and all that sort of stuff.”

The NHL tested its tracking systems in the regular season for the first time earlier this month, and will showcase the technology at this weekend’s all-star game in San Jose.

The technology — which uses microchips fitted to players’ shoulder pads and placed inside specially designed pucks tracked via radio frequencie­s — could be implemente­d in all 31 NHL arenas as early as next season.

The league hopes it will improve the experience for fans, broadcaste­rs and gamblers. There’s potential opportunit­ies for virtual reality and in-game wagering.

“For fans and for viewership, I think it will give some great insight on what makes us hockey players great athletes and different athletes, the things we can do at high speeds and in fractions of seconds,” said Tavares, a centre for the Toronto Maple Leafs.

But when it comes to players and coaches, Tavares isn’t convinced tracking will change much.

“There’s still something about the game being very instinctiv­e: reading the play, understand­ing the game, anticipati­on, awareness.”

Leafs winger Patrick Marleau, who is in his 21st NHL season, said player and puck tracking is just part of the natural progressio­n of technology meshing with sports.

“I can see how, as a fan, you would be interested,” he said. “Everybody these days is informatio­n hungry, so it’s a good way to play into it.

“You can lose a lot things when you just look at numbers. ”

Vancouver Canucks head coach Travis Green said it’s important to prioritize data that actually means something.

“Some analytics I like and some I don’t put as much stock in,” he said. “I don’t coach off analytics ... but we use it and take part in it and make judgments.”

Some of the informatio­n available could include the distance a player skates in a game, but Giordano cautioned that while interestin­g, a stat of that nature will never paint a full picture.

“Some guys are way more efficient skaters than others,” Giordano said.

Other possibilit­ies could include how fast a player skates, the hardest shot in a game, and for specific gambling purposes, betting on where the next goal will come from on the ice and where it ends up in the net, such as top left corner, bottom right or five-hole.

But perhaps Leafs centre Nazem Kadri said it best: the new technology in the end won’t be so much for the players and teams.

It’s meant primarily for everyone else.

“It’s good for the growth of the game,” he said. “They want to try to get people watching hockey with the gambling thing and bringing that whole thing together and creating more revenue. If people have money on the games, that means they’ll pay closer attention.”

 ??  ?? Mark Giordano
Mark Giordano

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