



Pittsburgh Penguins’ Sidney Crosby (87) falls to the ice after being held by Washington Capitals’ Mike Green in the first period of the NHL Winter Classic outdoor hockey game in Pittsburgh, Saturday, Jan. 1, 2011. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)PITTSBURGH (AP) - Mike Knuble teed up a puck on a wooden platform a few inches above Heinz Field’s green grass and lofted a perfectly placed wrist shot between the uprights.
Call it the first goal by an NHL player on the Pittsburgh Steelers‘ home turf. Or was it the first field goal?
On a postcard-perfect midsummer 85-degree day _ one that was 47 degrees above the average high temperature for Jan. 1 in Pittsburgh _ the sight of the Penguins'Sidney Crosby, the Capitals'Knuble and three other players exhibiting their skills Tuesday while previewing the NHL Winter Classic illustrated the not-uncomfortable juxtaposition between football and hockey.
As Penguins president David Morehouse said, Pittsburgh has long been known as a football town, but it’s now one of the best hockey towns, too. For one day, hockey will enjoy a change of venue as the Capitals and Penguins shift what might be the sport’s best rivalry _ even NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said so _ into one of the NFL’s best-known stadiums.
Somehow, everything seems to fit.
As the NHL drew up preliminary plans for a game that will showcase Crosby and Alex Ovechkin to the sport’s biggest single-game TV audience outside of the Stanley Cup finals, it realized a hockey rink fits perfectly for spectators between Heinz’s 20-yard lines. Center ice will be at the 50. There was no such comfortable fit when the Winter Classic rink was wedged into baseball’s Fenway Park and Wrigley Field the last two seasons.
Go outside and play, indeed.
“We’re going to have an unbelievable chance to make great memories in a special event like this,” Crosby said. “It seems like this is a great setup. I don’t know what the baseball stadiums were like, but this one seems like a pretty normal fit.”
Steelers president Art Rooney II already anticipates some players lobbying to attend the game before the team leaves for Cleveland and a regular season-ending game the following day. Maybe director of football operations Kevin Colbert will, too; he is one of the Penguins’ biggest fans.
Even the matchup seems perfectly suited to the one-game-can-mean-everything environment so prevalent in football. While Capitals vs. Penguins on New Year’s Day will be only one of 82 regular-season games for both teams, it will mean more than that.
For Ovechkin, who might be the NHL’s most skilled offensive talent but doesn’t yet have a Stanley Cup title to prove it, it’s a chance to upstage his biggest rival on Crosby’s home ice. For Crosby, it’s an opportunity to be the biggest star in not one but two Winter Classics; he won the first in Buffalo in 2008 with a shootout goal.
How big is the rivalry becoming? Penguins forward Max Talbot is glad Ovechkin wasn’t in Heinz Field with Capitals teammates Knuble and David Steckel because he “hates” him.
“It’s obviously a big rivalry,” Talbot said. “I remember this past season when I was hurt and watching a game against Washington (the Capitals' 5-4 overtime win on Feb. 7) and it was probably the most intense regular-season game I’ve seen.”
The rivalry already is so good _ the teams’ seven-game Eastern Conference playoff series two seasons ago was one of the NHL’s most compelling in years _ Crosby doesn’t believe it will intensify by moving outdoors.
“I don’t think you can imagine it being more intense than it already is,” Crosby said. “It’s there.”
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