Showing posts with label Barys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barys. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Hockey Game: Astana Barys December 2016

Last December we went to a Hockey game.  This year we decided to go again.  Last year we had gotten free tickets from the university.  The seats were pretty good.  This year, we bought our own tickets, and the seats ended up being amazing.  We spent about $42 dollars for all of us (including Yulia's mom) to go and watch the Omsk Avangard.

The stadium is just about a mile from our house and the busses don't run on the street it's on, so we decided just to walk.  We walked there in nice weather, unlike last year when we arrived and left in a blizzard.

By the time we got to the stadium, through security, and gave our coats to the coat check, we were about 5 minutes into the first period.  Our seats were about 7 rows up on the corner behind the goal.  We had a great view of the action on both sides of the rink.  The stadium is very nice and has a huge jumbotron as well and so we were able to see replays of the best plays.

The girls came straight from their figure skating practice, so they are in their special attire.

Dropping the puck. Barys is in blue.

Amazing speed and agility!

Barys fan section. It looks like Ded Moroz and Snegurochka came to cheer for the team!

The game itself was great.  The Avangard team scored in the first period.  The second period was scoreless.  Barys scored at the beginning of the third period, and about five minutes scored again, gaining the lead.  The other team pulled their goalie with about 2 minutes left and attacked furiously.  Astana defended, got the puck out, and scored in the open net with about 25 seconds left in the game.  Everyone immediately through stuffed animals onto the ice (something that was supposed to happen at the end of the game) to be donated to orphanages around the country.  It took about five minutes to clean up all the animals - and it was lots of fun seeing the players, referees, and rink staff gathering them up.

Action!

This #43 (Dustin Boyd, a Canadian) is a local hero. 

Every time our team makes a goal, the fans fly this gigantic Barys shirt.

Third goal with 25 seconds to go. The crowd just blew up!

Players helping to clean the ice. There are 25 seconds still left in the game.

Final score 3:1. We won!

We all had a lot of fun.  One peculiarity of the stadium here is that food is not allowed inside - and so when we sent our kids for treats they had to eat them.  I think the emphasis is on keeping the stadium looking nice.  In the US, of course, the emphasis is on making obscene profits on concessions.

The other big adventure was that Yulia and I were on the kiss cam during a break in the third period.  We totally kissed!

Hockey wasn't a game that I'd ever really been into before seeing it live, but it is a great sport to watch live.  It has a lot of action and is very fast.  We are going to try to go see a basketball game during the winter break as well.

Friday, January 1, 2016

Our First Hockey Game


One of the perks that I get from being the coach of the NU women's basketball team is that the university sports center sometimes gets free tickets to sporting events in town.  I've been to a couple of the basketball games this year with some of my basketball players, for example.

This week, I was asked if my family wanted tickets to the hockey game.  I was happy to say yes to the tickets.  The team here - Barys (or snow leopard) - plays in the KHL (Kontinental Hockey League) with teams from Russia, other former Soviet States, and a couple of teams from Scandinavia. The team just moved (a few months ago) from their old arena on the other side of town to an arena near the other sports arenas - which is only about a mile from our apartment.  Last year we thought about going, but getting to and from the games was problematic.  Now that problem is solved.

I got the tickets on Monday afternoon for the game on Tuesday.  Tuesday the kids' school was cancelled (it was supposed to be the last day of the term) because of a blizzard that raged all day.  The wind and snow was still blowing when I came home from work in the late afternoon and we thought about not going, but decided that we would brave the weather instead.  I ordered two taxis to pick us up at 7:00.  We were taking three of the kids and Yulia's mom (so six of us) since Polina was sick with the flu.  When we went down, our taxi wasn't there.  It took until 7:30 for one of the taxis to show up.  By that time Babushka (Lyudmila, Yulia's mom) had given up on going, so the five of us piled into the taxi who drove us through the blizzard down the road a bit.

View of the blizzard from our window

We arrived at the game 10 minutes into the 1st period - and Baris was already up 2-0 over CSKA Moscow.  We had nice seats behind one of the goals high enough up that we could see the action on both sides.  There was also a very nice scoreboard and screen that showed replays, so we could get into the action.  The arena was only about 2/3 full - we think mostly because of the storm.

Our view of the rink from our seats


Selfie


The girls watching the game

I had never been to a live professional hockey game before (neither had anyone else in the family) and we really enjoyed it.  The game was intense - the final score was 4-3 for Astana.  We saw a fight right in front of where we were (in the game, on the ice) and quite a few power plays because of penalties.  The atmosphere was a lot of fun.

Barys is in blue, CSKA Moscow is in red



Fight

Another fight.


Fans would put up a giant banner every time after Barys scored


Standing ovation after a score


At the end of the game when the team won, lots of people through stuffed bears out onto the ice.  It was the first time that they had done something like that (the announcer said) and it was a lot of fun. Because of the traffic and storm, we decided to just walk home.  The wind had calmed down quite a bit, although it was still blowing.  The snow on the sidewalks had drifted up to four feet in some places.  Because of the way the weather had gone, though, much of the snow was crusted and we could walk along the top.  It took us about 35 minutes to walk home - and by the time we arrived we were plenty chilly.

Teddy bears on the ice and teams shaking hands


Cleaning up the bears after the game


The winners!


Snow Leopard Mascot 


We are really glad that we had the opportunity to go and watch the game.  We had so much fun that we are planning on making it a more regular part of our winter entertainment.