Salt won't spoil my hockey feast

Got an appetite for hockey that nothing else could satisfy? Oh, and cable, too, you'll need that. Well, through the rest of the month, Center Ice is free. Here's how I'll be taking advantage of it this weekend.

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It's over. It's all over. It being the lockout and the wait for hockey.
It's over. It's all over. It being the lockout and the wait for hockey.
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Call me a flip-flopper. That's fine. But I am, in fact, geeked for opening weekend in the NHL. That's not to say I'm not salty. As SVM managing editor Jeff Rogers acknowledged earlier this afternoon, it takes many years for my bitterness to dissipate.

We were talking hockey – well explaining it, really – with SVM multimedia guru Angel Sierra. When I referred to Patrick Kane's Stanley Cup-clinching goal against my Flyers in Game 6 of the 2010 finals as the "softest Cup-clinching goal the sport will ever see," Jeff responded asking, "You're not bitter at all, are you?"

I am. I'm German. This is how it goes. And I'm yet to forgive the league and its players for any of its stoppages.

That being said, the NHL is back and, even if it doesn't look like the NHL I adore until the playoffs are nigh, I feel obliged to break down five must-see games this opening weekend. Your local cable provider should feature NHL Center Ice, which you'll have full access for free through the rest of the month.

In order to properly plan for the first two games, you'll want to either set up a second TV in the living room, subscribe to NHL Gamecenter (50 bucks for the season might be a far cry from the free olive branch fans were seeking, but it's a good deal), or call a local watering hole to make sure they can put both games on. Heck, I've already done that for you, if you'd care to join us at The Stables in Dixon.

Saturday

Chicago at Los Angeles
When: 2 p.m.
Where: Staples Center, L.A.
Why: Speaking of salt, let me get this off my chest: Congrats to former Flyers teammates on the ice and at the clubs Mike Richards and Jeff Carter on doing what they could not in Philly. There I said it. Let's move on. If the Blackhawks will be contenders this season, that will have to be their netminders' mantra: "Let's move on." Corey Crawford and Ray Emery will see more rapid-fire action than Latvia did against Russia in the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. The Hawks are one of seven teams that will play two games this weekend. Get used to the concept of back-to-back games. If the Hawks' tilt shouldn't go well against the defending Stanley Cup champs, there won't be a lot of time to stew.

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