10/31/18

Maine @ UConn recap

After a bout of rain overnight Friday into Saturday, I headed off to Hartford, Connecticut that morning/afternoon to catch Maine @ UConn in a "matinĂ©e" college hockey matchup, and, in doing so, I found out just as much about the history of hockey in that city as I did about the "new generation" there!


The first period saw a scoreless, and rather uneventful, series of events, although UConn managed to kill off a 5-against-3 manpower disadvantage against it about halfway through, much to the delight of the crowd watching the game, but still missing on both of those opportunities of its own, one of which lasted about 15 seconds into the middle frame, again, making the first 20 minutes of the game entirely scoreless...

What that period lacked, though, the rest of the game more than made up for, as an ugly boarding incident injuring one of the UConn skaters along one of the ends of the rink led to a major penalty against Maine, along with the player making that hit getting ejected from the rest of the game; another pair of penalties each way suddenly led to a 4-against-3 advantage for UConn, during which time the opening goal of the game arrived, as UConn slowly, but surely, worked the puck closer and closer to the net to the point where a "point-blank" shot through a bit of traffic in front of the net was all that was necessary to convert and open up the scoring; UConn took advantage of another Maine penalty with just over 20 seconds remaining, passing the puck in a sort of "umbrella" formation between everybody, indeed, eventually, getting one of the five skaters wide open enough to be able fire home another goal to give UConn a 2-0 lead headed into the final 20 minutes!

The last period, however, was when things suddenly got even uglier between the teams, as it seemed like every stoppage early in the period featured some pushing and shoving between players, including a crazy sequence early on: two roughing penalties, one against each team; a high stick by one of UConn's players; a Maine player elbowing somebody on UConn; finally, four penalties all at once: a cross-check call against UConn, and roughing/slashing/tripping penalties against two separate Maine players, all of which resulted in another power play for UConn, which, ironically, seemed to give Maine more momentum to get on the scoreboard, and, indeed, that ended up happening just after the expirations of all but the major penalty against UConn, making it a 2-1 game, which stood until there was barely a minute remaining in the game, by which point Maine had pulled its goaltender for the extra skater; after everything that had happened within those 20 minutes, Maine had clawed its way back from being down 2-0, to being tied, 2-2, and headed to the overtime period with a chance to win, but despite the insanity of the third period, it seemed as if Maine was content to escape with the tie, while UConn was too "ticked" deep down inside at blowing said lead to be able to generate many chances within the extra five minutes of action to make the final score a 2-2 tie!


As for the game presentation, I'm not sure about the past few years, but UConn's intros to the games this weekend seemed to set up a "theme" of sorts for the rest of the season, as they involved a short performance by the UConn band, followed by highlights, then the visiting team starting lineup intros, then more highlights, followed, lastly, by UConn's starters being introduced; unfortunately, at least to my ears, the whole thing seemed quite loud, and that never seemed to change once the game started, but, thankfully, despite the loud music volume during the game from both the band and the "pre-recorded" sound system itselfthis tune remains in the same position with UConn hockey as it did when the NHL's Hartford Whalers still existed:


...in fact, from the very beginning of UConn's days inside the former Hartford Civic Center/current XL Center, as of the 2014-15 
season:

...but DYK there's even more history to the tune than just the Whalers?

Meanwhile, the PA announcer definitely must "moonlight" as a comedian and/or movie trailer announcer when he's not announcing UConn hockey home games, as he definitely has the "deep" type of voice you might typically hear in movie trailers, and he cracked jokes during the game about ("A") fans in Halloween costumes, ("B") various moments in UConn sports history, ("C") the fans' knowledge of a few events that all occurred within a certain year, one of which involved one of UConn's on-campus venues, and ("D", immediately following "C") the Mensa society...

On a (pair of) more personal note(s), our old (basement) freezer started "de-frosting" on us earlier this month, forcing that thing to the "scrap heap" after about a decade, although that had replaced another unit that had run for at least 20 years before then, and requiring the installation of a new one in its place; lo and behold, we ended up getting a Whirlpool freezer from one of the Lowe's locations around here; also, my "stools" went from normal for the vast majority of this year, to spending this month showing up as being very dark, to suddenly being tiny, and then bloody once again later this past week, just like about a year and a half ago; in all honesty, I've never treated my body the best, with things such as occasional migraines and various pains lasting basically my whole life so far, so, maybe, just maybe, that's a sign that I should, probably, start making possibly "wholesale" lifestyle changes sooner rather than later, before those problems end up getting more frequent and/or severe later on in my life!

Well, that's it from me for now; again, "stay tuned", as always, for the next one of these recaps, most likely following Cornell v. Harvard @ MSG the weekend after Thanksgiving, along with a possible visit to the "new" FAO Schwarz toy store; before then, though, if you do nothing else in the immediate future, make sure to go out and vote wherever you happen to be registered to do so, since who knows whether or not something(s) might end up happening in the foreseeable future stopping us from doing so...?

10/16/18

In *more* "mixed" retail news this week... (also, some sports updates)

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/topstocks/sears-is-now-a-penny-stock/ar-BBNFJJe?li=BBnbfcL

Sears Holdings, Incorporated (SHLD) recently dropped below $1 for the first time ever in the retail company's storied history (officially since 2005, when Kmart and Sears merged but unofficially since 1906, when the original 1886 company was publicly listed for stock trading); the news following headlines revealing CEO Eddie Lampert's declarations that (A) he was willing to "buy back" the Kenmore appliance line, reportedly valued, by itself, at $400M+, while the entire company has reportedly dropped to only about $100M, and (B) the company just missed one debt deadline, and faces another debt deadlines very soon, one of which requires the company's "reserves" to be above a certain amount, and another demonstrating that it would have been able to pay $134M in debt by mid-October, neither of which seems to portray the company as one capable of surviving beyond, say, sometime next year, and has certainly accelerated the company's continued decline from about 3,500+ locations at the time of the 2005 merger between Kmart and Sears to only about 800 now (a decline of 77+%) - surely, one would think that a pair of retailers that have been in and out of bankruptcy/rumors thereof ever since the end of Bradlees/Caldor/Jamesway/Montgomery Ward/Woolworth/etc. would just "pull the plug" already, and shut everything down once and for all, allowing its remaining employees to move on, its investors to "cut their losses" as much as possible, and its retirees to collect whatever they might be entitled to, while allowing the rest of us to figure out what the executives were up to!

Also, in a follow-up to that news from a few days ago, it looks like even more locations will get closed very soon, and some articles of clothing sold there caught fire:




Specifically, Toys "R" Us appears to be returning suddenly, just a few months after shutting down all of its locations in the U.S. after 70 years; the initial plan appears to be launching a supplier of toys to retailers such as Kohl's/Target/Walmart/etc. under the name "Geoffrey's Toy Box" in time for this year's "holiday season", before slowly bringing back the Babies "R" Us and Toys "R" Us names in the foreseeable future - incidentally, a few employees/executives seemed to have still reported to the company's final HQ in Wayne, N.J. these past few months, giving the appearance of "continuity" there the whole time, while the rest of us thought the company had folded after shutting down the last of its 700+ locations; a few of them reportedly traveled to the North Dallas Toy Show just a few days ago to make their "pitch" to the retail/toy industries...

Unfortunately, the CEO of MGA Entertainment, Isaac Larian, who tried to buy the (original) company out of its liquidation process back in the spring, says this revival effort is "dead to (him)"; therefore, he appears to be planning on basically "boycotting" supplying his company's products to the revived chain, regardless of how the asset management firms currently running (the remnants of) the chain, Angelo Gordon & Co., along with Solus Asset Capital Management, come to him with offers - cash; credit; etc.; it apparently no longer matters to Larian how, or even whether, they approach his company, but I think the rest of us reserve the right to call him a "party pooper" for reacting to the news so harshly, especially since I'm sure his company will still end up supplying the new FAO Schwarz location in Manhattan that is scheduled to re-open soon:


(in other news, even in Hong Kong, the N.Y.C. subways can't remain open!)

As of this week, chapter 11 bankruptcy/restructuring, and possible chapter 7 liquidation/complete shutdown happened for Sears Holdings, the parent company of the Kmart (discount) and Sears department store chains - specifically, as early as this past Monday, when the company most likely missed a scheduled $134 million debt payment, and possibly also start shutting down 150+ more locations; unfortunately, the company no longer seems able to shift enough assets/cash between CEO Eddie Lampert's personal investment firm and its corporate structure, allowing Kmart and Sears to obtain slightly higher amounts of cash, as both the company and Lampert's firm seemed capable of doing in the past... I feel it should be remembered, though, that Kmart alone went through restructuring twice even beforit merged with Sears (1995 and 2002), so, had it been up to me, that chain might very well have already become "history" by now, and, personally, I would've just left Sears alone and let outside investors figure out what they thought might have ended up best for the 3,500-4,000+ Sears locations that existed back in 2005!


Now, if you'll allow me to "reminisce" again, as I did with Toys "R" Us earlier this year, I've visited pretty much all of the Sears locations around here in my life so far, along with a few in other states, as well as some of the now-shuttered Canadian locations (especially the one along the back end of Toronto Eaton Centre mall); that being said, even when I was barely starting my K-12 years, nobody I ever headed to any Sears locations with seemed to use them as much more than "pass-through" places to get to malls such as Rockaway and Willowbrook (northern N.J.), although my father, being a mechanic/trucker practically his entire (working) life, always trusted Craftsman tools, but, aside from the occasional Levi's purchase there, again, we mostly just "passed through" those buildings to get into one local mall or another in order to be able to be "mall rats" elsewhere nearby!

Anyway, in other retail news these past few days:


Now, normally, in the past, I'd just up and head over there, but, with NJT completely ******** the bed these past few weeks in order to catch up on very overdue maintenance work, I'm debating whether or not to even bother with that whole "grand re-opening" (Fri. 11/16), since the risk of getting stuck aboard a disabled train seems infinitely higher right now; unfortunately, I won't have as much of a choice in the matter come the following weekend, though (Sat. 11/24), since I'll be headed off to MSG once again that night for Cornell v. Harvard, although, perhaps, I could fit both of those "return trips" in one right after the other - visiting the new FAO in the afternoon, followed by heading down from there (30 Rock, in the former "NBC Experience" location) to MSG that evening after checking that place out, although that day would no longer be the "grand re-opening" day/weekend for FAO!

Speaking of sports, I'm still debating which Maine @ UConn game I'll most likely be checking out in a couple of weekends' time; the problem with attending the Friday night game (7 P.M. 10/26), or any night games in Hartford, for that matter, will be me not returning home until at least 3 A.M., and, having already done so after the BU @ Northeastern game I attended back in November 2016, I do not want to have to randomly wander around the streets of Manhattan again, waiting for the trains to restart, so I'm still leaning toward that Saturday afternoon game (3 P.M. 10/27)!

On a more personal note, though, I was just barely able to even make this post, since we had just been without any Optimum cable/Internet/phone services for the past five days now, as of today (Tuesday), but, thankfully, Verizon FiOS services our area, so, if events similar to this outage episode keep happening, we might end up on the phone twice in the foreseeable future, once to leave Optimum after, personally, my entire life so far, and then again later in order to join Verizon FiOS!

To fill you in now on Cornell-Harvard @ MSG in late November, specifically the weekend after Thanksgiving, I'll be sitting in section 211 - don't know exactly where just yet, but at least I'll definitely be in a "center-ice" section for that game!


...also, it looks like the Colgate v. Quinnipiac game out on Long Island 12/29 will start at a bit earlier time than most other "neutral-site" college hockey games tend to start:


...even so, I might still end up there to close out this (calendar) year!