Friday, December 24, 2010

The 2011 FarParker Girls Charity Calendar is Now Available!

Welcome to some of the hottest off-ice hockey memorabilia for 2011!

FarParker.com, in association with our Great Sponsors are proud to offer the 2011 FarParker Girls Charity Calendar. Our team came together to produce this high-quality calendar to help raise funds for our friends at Hockey Fights Cancer, so please provide your support and help us help their team battle this fricken disease!

To order your copy today, please visit us at FarParker's Calendar Page.

Thanks again to everyone who helped create this calendar, from our sponsors to models to staff to friends...and to all our readers, have a very Merry Christmas!

Sunday, December 19, 2010

The Grind

Tagline: What is the true measure of a man? Is it size? Or strength? Is it a commodity, something bought, like a big flashy truck? Not a chance. A real man is dedicated to bettering himself and his family, devoted to improving those around him and in his community. In Vancouver, it took two “sisters” to show everyone what a man truly is.




The Grouse Grind is a well-known – particularly tortuous – outdoor activity that Vancouverites regularly indulge in. It’s a 2.9 km hike up the side of a local ski hill whose banks can be seen from the downtown core. Unwittingly, many tourists and local residents show up to tackle the Grind, only to find themselves sucking air by the time they reach its quarter pole -- well before the real grind has ever even begun. A regular summer sight in these parts is a clog of panting, ill-prepared Grind neophytes wheezing on the trailside, trying to catch their breath and contemplating whether or not to turn around and descend in puffing shame; sometimes they even have their high heels or flip flops dangling from their hands, a glaring badge of ignorance. What these hikers painfully learn is that the Grind is not a simple walk in the park -- it’s a grueling one. The hike can be so demanding that your mind and body will soon rebel against taking another step up the seemingly unrelenting ascent; so exhausting your lungs will feel like they’ve folded up and that your legs were secretly injected with cement. The Grind isn’t just a hike; it’s an obstacle course, a challenge, a litmus test.


There are parallels between Vancouver’s most famous hike and its favourite set of twins. At many times during their careers the Sedins have been confronted with seemingly endless obstacles – rock walls so sheer they seemed impassable. But they have always been obdurate in the face of adversity. They simply put their heads down and keep going, ignoring the pain, the taunts, and the easy way out. Case in point, after being drafted two and three in 1999, the Sedins entered the league in 2000 with high expectations; the year prior Brian Burke’s marquee picks had earned the Guldpucken award for the Swedish player of the year, an honour also won by such luminaries as Peter Forsberg, Hakan Loob and Mats Naslund. But soon after joining the Canucks it seemed the Sedins were subjected to an unrelenting barrage of ridicule. They weren’t the team’s saviours; they were gawky, skinny, awkward looking 20 year olds. Soon they were tabbed as the “sisters”, hounded by Coach Marc Crawford and continually pummelled by seasoned NHL defenders.


Please visit FarParker.com to read the rest of this article, provided by our friends at PuckLife Magazine!











Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Markus Naslund Moments...

By Lisa Ovens, owner of Hockey And High Heels


This week the Vancouver Canucks will be retiring sweater number 19 and celebrating the hockey career of long time Canuck, Markus Naslund during a very special pre-game ceremony at Rogers Arena on Saturday Dec.11,2010. This week, I will offer up some of my personal Nazzy moments I’ve collected over the years, as I celebrate one of the Canucks most talented players and one of my all time favorites.


I've decided to begin with an excerpt from my first book, Hockey & High Heels. It's from the 2002/03 season, a time of pure excitement for hockey in Vancouver. A time when the legendary sell outs began. A time when the city was fascinated by a trio of "brothers from other mothers" who lit the lamp, over and over again. The following is a page from my game diary that was published in the book... I was so impressed with a goal that Markus Naslund scored (but mostly I was impressed with the way he scored it) that I wrote about it as an example of the importance of playing with patience. It became a highlight reel goal, and I was so pleased so see it happen right in front of me.

Author's note: My mom, Stella is in this excerpt, and I should offer a little of her back story so everyone who didn't read the book will understand: my mom was the youngest of 18 children and she was a child of the Depression - it'll all make sense as you read on...

Patience

Game Diary January 26, 2003
Phoenix Coyotes vs. Vancouver Canucks

I was thrilled to host my mom for tonight’s game. Although we went to countless football games starring my brothers, this was the first time we were going to a live professional hockey game together. This was special. Plus, I bought the single seat beside us for Stacey as a birthday present. Also, today was January 26th, Phoenix Coyotes’ managing partner, Wayne Gretzky’s, birthday. Hope your birthday was a great one, Wayne! But, would the Canucks spoil the Great One’s day, by defeating his Coyotes?

Mom, Stacey, and I dined in the Brew House Grill, high above the ice, before the game. This gave us an opportunity to catch some of the Super Bowl on TV. As I watched the football game, I couldn’t help but think of the NHL’s Stanley Cup Playoffs just around the corner. The Canucks hope to prove themselves as a Playoff contending team, an elite team, and a team to be taken seriously. Could this be their year?

Game on…

Only one puck made it past either goaltender tonight. The sold out, Canucks crazy crowd had been quite anxious for a goal. Thanks to the statisticians, the people whose job requires them to record EVERY possible streak or slump any given team could find themselves in, the Canucks have been held in a ‘not scoring the first goal’ slump for the last 11 games.

Hockey Pucik


Finally, this ‘not scoring the first goal’ slump came to an end, and this goal happened to be one of my favorite goals this season. It all happened where important work is done during a hockey game. Bertuzzi had passed the puck to Naslund, positioned in "the Office" behind the Coyotes’ net. Naslund stood there for a moment. Would he go to the left, or to the right? Oh, he’s going left, no right, NO, left, again. The Coyotes were doing their job defensively as Markus faked his moves, back and forth.

I turned to my mom on my left, and said…

Lisa: Mom, what do you think Markus will do?
Mom: He doesn’t have room to do anything right now.

I took a sip of my beer, turned to my right, and asked Stacey…

Lisa: What do you think Markus will do with that puck?

Markus is still there, faking left, then faking right.

Stacey: Hmmm, I’m not sure. He could try a pass and possibly assist on a goal, but Nazzy doesn’t have an open lane to make such a pass. Jimbo Jumbo Peanut, Lis?

Lisa: Thanks, Stace.

I ate my peanut and looked at Markus. He was still behind the net. He’s going right. NO, left again. I looked at my mom again. She’s sitting on the edge of her seat. But she’s a patient woman. She once told me that when she was a child, they only had one toy to play with, and she literally had to wait days for her turn to play with it. Mom was the wife to my impatient father. A mother to us children whose catch phrases included, ‘Are we there, yet. But, I want it now. I can’t wait…’ My mom is the most patient person I know. But Markus Naslund was quickly becoming a close second.

Oh, he’s going right, again.

The Coyotes’ goaltender must be growing tired of shaking his head from side to side. Markus Naslund made everybody wait. More importantly, he made himself wait. Finally, the time became right. He snuck around the right side of the net, and with a flick of his wrist, roofed the puck right into the corner. Yes!

These days, I don’t know which is faster: Hockey, or Life itself. But, I do know patience is a virtue, a skill required, yet often forgotten, in both arenas.

Great goal, Nazzy, and totally worth the wait.

Vancouver Canucks Markus Naslund

If you enjoyed this excerpt, you just might enjoy the rest of the book! Visit the Shop at h&hh.com to get a copy at a very special price, or check out Lisa’s new book, For the Love of Empty Net Goals – My Adventures Living Hockey

Happy Hockey!

photo credits:

Naslund: Lisa Ovens

Hockey puck: Andrew Lavigne