Showing posts with label San Jose Sharks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Jose Sharks. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Exclusive: Remenda Responds To Sharks Firing

DREW REMENDA E-MAIL To 415 Media:


Drew Remenda DRemenda@sjsharks.com

9:08 AM (46 minutes ago)

Rich:




Don't know how you found out besides you work at your craft. Everybody jumped on it after you broke the news.

Thank you for the kind words. However I have to say the Sharks treated me very well. John Totora was a gentleman and very compassionate.


So be it. I have no ill will or hard feelings. I have nothing but respect and admiration for the people that make up that team both on and off the ice.



Thank you for all the nice things you wrote about me over the years.
Take care of yourself.

All the Best
Drew

Remenda San Jose Exit: Too Honest; Sharks TV Color Analyst Ouster Still a Shocker Day After

 Drew Remenda took the high road in his reaction to the news on Tuesday that the Sharks fired him.


"They decided not to renew my contract," Remenda told the San Jose Mercury News. "It wasn't because of anything I did or anything wrong. It was explained to me they wanted to take the broadcast in a different direction. Honestly, we parted amicably."


I would beg to differ.


Because I'm not a hockey guy and because this is a mostly media blog I'm going to offer you an opinion as to why the mucho-popular Sharks TV color analyst was shown the door. This comes from someone close to the subject in question and who knows the franchise inside and out.


Too honest. Maybe too expensive too. But more of the former than the latter. Nevertheless, a "shocking development" said the individual who also indicated they were as surprised as anyone else.


Moreover, the person told me, the Remenda ouster might be something of an ominous sea change for the entire Sharks organization.


Which, in the big picture, might explain this matter.


Remenda had a sort of take-no-prisoners attitude when it came to his broadcasting style; he pulled no punches and told it like it is; good, bad or indifferent. He was fiercely loyal to the team and didn't mind showing his disgust at critics, like this volatile encounter.


Apparently the Sharks have cherry-picked an unlikely scapegoat for their latest playoff meltdown and that involves, curiously, Remenda. Not a face of the franchise, but a huge fan favorite off the ice who, ironically enough, after leaving the organization in 2006 to go back to his native Canada, was lured back a year later.


My gut says the Sharks weren't happy with Remenda's critical assessment after the LA Kings disaster. I also believe, and this is just a guess, they weren't entirely thrilled with his non-Sharks work with the NBC Sports cable network. Again, just a guess.


Even so, by showing him the door in a rather out-of-the-blue moment, the organization has enraged its passionate fan base. It's also very clearly taken a gigantic risk that the outrage will, with time, pass.


I don't think so.


Which only further reinforces the notion that as a TV analyst, Remenda was too honest. When the team played well, he was the first to offer a huzzah. And then some.


But when they went south, he was also not afraid to speak his mind. Not the Remenda way to sugarcoat. That, and his paycheck to a lesser extent, may have led to his firing.




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Friday, December 18, 2009

In the booth with Randy, Drew and Dan; SJ Sharks broadcast crew among Bay Area elite


SAN JOSE, CA
12-18-'09
12: 34 AM PST


Rarely has yours truly looked forward to covering a freaking hockey game, high up in the catwalks of the HP Pavilion in downtown San Jose, only this time it would be different. Far-out freakin' different.

I'm more an NBA/NFL, college football sorta-guy, but I've managed to get unexpectedly hooked, (no pun) to the San Jose Sharks for a variety of reasons, but the biggie for me, is their dynamic broadcast trifecta of Randy Hahn, Drew Remenda and Dan Rusanowsky.

Along with Ted Robinson, Greg Papa, and Jon Miller, the Sharks brilliant broadcast contingent are some of the best tonsils in town, not to mention the fact that all are very nice people. And ever so accommodating.

A few weeks back, I thought about the idea of actually sitting in the booth with the guys and writing a first-hand account of their duties. A part of me hinted that maybe these broadcasters were indeed good, (and they are) but would I get a dose of their real personality OFF the air?

As good, focused and tactically supreme as Hahn and Remenda, a great majority of their appeal comes from their likability factor. Walking though the stands with Hahn, shouts of "Hey Randy!" permeated the arena. Remenda is a bona-fide rock star in San Jose and could probably be the mayor if he wanted the job.

As I arrived at the building and schmoozed with a few media wags in the press lounge, Hahn quickly noticed my mug and we jettisoned up, I mean, way, way up, into the stratosphere of HP Pavilion. Soon after, Remenda joined us and we had our initial run-through.

One thing sticks out right away: both Hahn and Remenda are anal about preparation. Ditto radio broadcaster, Rusanowsky, whose vivid description is a virtual audio hockey ballet. Sure, you say, everyone prepares. True, to a point, but these guys are beyond the scale. I never saw more notes and data cards perched near the booth, as I did with Drew and Randy. God only knows how they're able to pull off the info wonderland in the two and a half hours of broadcast time, but remarkably, they do.

--20 minutes to game time---We're up in the booth. I meet a Bette Midler/Joy Behar look-a-like named Janice Baker-Kinney. Baker-Kinney acts as the director of the show, but that would be cutting her short. She zips out funny one-liners, does a literal pre-game dance in front of the boys and provides me detailed gossip about her life in Bay Area sports TV production.

Baker-Kinney has seen it all; she used to work for the Giants and A's broadcasts and had some hilarious stories about various Bay Area athletes and play-by-play men. Between her pointed banter and NY persona, I might as well have been at the nearby comedy club Improv.

Beyond the usual, don't do this and you can do that's, Baker-Kinney primed the guys ready for action as we neared the drop of the opening puck. The arena quickly filled up with the masses, 17,000-plus and hated Anaheim was the opponent. Remember, these are the guys that upset the Sharks just a year ago in the opening round of the NHL playoffs, but frankly, that's hockey minutiae to me; I'm here to hang with Randy, Drew and Dan--let's get on with the show, shall we?

We're back up in the sky-high broadcast booth, after Hahn and Remenda do their pre-game intro downstairs in the auxiliary booth. A humongous bank of high-def monitors are everywhere. Three alone for Remenda, including a personalized telestrator gizmo that would have impressed Captain Kirk.

Remenda and Hahn sit side-by-side, with stat man, John Bonasera in the next seat, separated by radio guy Rusanowsky I was in the back row sitting directly over, with a headset and mike. Had I had any real gusto in me, I almost could have offered up a quick take on the action, but I thought better. Hell, I've sat in the green room at the Ed Sullivan Theatre in NY for about ten Letterman shows and the same with Larry King in LA. This was 10x better.

Hockey is a great game on TV, but even better in person when you actually see it. Now I know what they all are talking about; even the uniforms look cool and the fans have a sort of roguish way about them, but that's another story.

THE GAME--The action starts and the play is fierce. Even without any scoring, the sheer athletic prowess is evident and both Hahn and Remenda are at their usual spot-on delivery. Having worked together for a number of years, (Hahn just finished his 1000Th Sharks broadcast--Remenda is a vet himself and former coach) both know how to pace and conduct the broadcast. Its evident in the first few moments.

Remenda carries a distinct red sharpie pen and likes to gesture a lot. Having coached and been an NHL disciple, its as if he takes the Sharks performance personally, and boy does he ever. In fact, what makes Remenda stand out is his unbridled ability to critique; not to rip for ripping sake, but you get a sense that you're not listening to the company line.

Sure, Hahn and Remenda want the Sharks to do well because it's good for the broadcast, but the pair have the creative freedom and are quite willing to dole out some negatives if the situation merits. Its refreshing and it speaks volumes about how serious these guys are about the show. Amen to that.

Fortunately, everything I hoped for was evident. The guys were nice and thoroughly cool; not to suggest if they happened to be un-cool, I would have wrote anything different. They are, in fact, total professionals. They laugh, giggle, and make little cracks here and there--everything you see and hear is 100% genuine. It helps that their crew is nice too.

On this night, the very talented Jamie Baker is working as extra color man on the ice. Baker is also an ex-player and knows the ins and outs of NHL hockey. Usually, he only works on radio, but tonight he's working TV. Every thing's fluid.

The Sharks would win 4-1 and star player Joe Thornton is the hero. I joke to one of the audio guys that I'm a good-luck charm; previously, the Sharkies had lost five straight at home. Score one for the Big Vinny factor.

**I don't normally root hard in this business; but as a kid growing up in Oakland, my team was and will always be the Raiders. To a lesser extent, the A's and Warriors too.

Now I'm rooting for another team: your 2009 San Jose Sharks. Quality organization. Great facility. Excellent PR dept--the works.

But beyond anything else, the Sharks broadcasters are in an elite class of broadcasters. This area is known for that, with the late, great Bill King. And Lon Simmons and Hank Greenwald. Jon Miller too and even the A's massively talented Ken Korach.

In that exclusive club, I would add Remenda, Hahn and Rusanowsky to the mix. We are lucky to have them here in the Bay Area and they are a delight to listen to and watch.

Go Sharks!

(photo courtesy of Ryan Leong)

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