By Stephen Fragano
For hockey lovers, Oct. 7, the first day of the NHL regular season, has been a much-awaited date. For New York Islander fans specifically, the ninth of October holds even more weight as it is the first game of the Isles’ regular season and the first ever regular season game played in Brooklyn’s Barclays Center.
The Barclays Center is a well-equipped, state-of-the-art arena compared to the dated Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum where the Islanders have played since their first season in 1972. However, there is a buzz of dissatisfaction with the move in Islanders nation.
There is a wide range of reactions to the move from happy, to indifferent, to frustrated to all-out abandonment regarding the move. I can understand the frustration and dissatisfaction from those who live close to Hempstead, New York’s, Coliseum. The team has been a local mainstay for over four decades and is close to the Long Island Expressway., the Northern and Southern State Parkway. There are also some physical disadvantages of the Barclays as a hockey venue, but does the move warrant as much negativity as it has been receiving?
I think it would take much more than a relatively minor move to make abandoning one’s favorite team justifiable. When the Islanders’ contract with the Coliseum was about to expire and everyone knew they would not renew there was a lot of speculation that the team would go to Kansas City, Missouri or Quebec City, Canada. Compared to a move to another state or country, the move to another county on Long Island is peanuts. They kept their name, still play in New York and are still on the island. For some reason the “Kansas City Islanders” just doesn’t make much sense. What many fans fail to think of is the increased draw for fans from within NYC and points north. The new home in Brooklyn is interesting because it helps the team branch out as a member of NYC’s five boroughs.
Another thing which has drawn a lot of negativity is the team’s new third jersey. It is mostly black and white with a small presence of orange. Many complain that it lacks a sense of tradition and is a sell-out to the Brooklyn Nets fans. The best way to get rid of it is to vote with your dollars and refuse to buy it. In any event, and maybe it’s just me, jerseys should play second fiddle to athletic ability. If a team wins me a Stanley Cup, I don’t care if the players skate around in pink dresses. It definitely would not be pretty, but as long as they win, I could live with it.
There should be some more smiles in Isles nation. This past season proved to be one of the most impressive seasons in recent years. The combination of experienced players like Johnny Boychuk and Nick Leddy plus young, already-established players like Travis Hamonic and Brock Nelson. Plus new call-ups like Michael Dal Colle should prove to build the team into a consistent contender for years to come. At least that’s the plan.
Andy • Oct 7, 2015 at 10:27 am
How do Americans allow people to just move their sports teams. Sports are supposed to be entertainment, yes they have become a business but fans get attached and it becomes a away of life. For the biggest superpower in the world its frankly stupid. Something so sensible and obvious as gun control is a big no no, cant do that we have our rights, yet take your sports team away from the place its named after and people that support them live and that’s fine: yet makes no sense. If Kansas City or Quebec want a NHL team and have the fan base to do it…………. GIVE THEM A NEW TEAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! DUH. To harp on that the Islanders could have been moved is ridiculous you don’t move a team, you disband it and start a new one. I agree as Islander fans we should look at the fact it wasn’t practical to stay at the coliseum and relaize once it voted against there had to be a change but it wasn’t the fans fault it was voted down and this move costs us more money and more time to support OUR team DON’T ASK US TO BE HAPPY ABOUT IT. You also talk about needing a larger fan base. Our fan base filled the barn last year perfectly fine. Again this article is just another person that doesn’t understand but is given a platform so writes.
abbeyroad2013 • Oct 7, 2015 at 9:59 am
I am not sure it’s possible to be this confused, uneducated and delusional. But you have done a fine job. Quite obviously, you are no fan of the NY Islanders. If you were, you would surely understand that they belong to US, the LONG ISLAND fans, who are being run over in this process, thrown to the side and forgotten. And DON’T tell me Brooklyn is on Long Island. ANY clear thinking adult knows Long Island begins and ends with Nassau and Suffolk County. Brett Yormack is clueless when it comes to hockey. CLUELESS. They are the new kids on the block, we Long Island fans have been there for 43 years. The entire venture is a disaster and doomed to fail.