AHL all-stars meet Swedish club amidst jersey medley

League introduces new format, many jerseys

On Wednesday night, the AHL's best players will face off against Färjestad BK of the Swedish Hockey League in the uniquely formatted 2014 AHL All-Star Classic. The St. John's IceCaps are hosting this year's festivities.

Now I have to level with you. I thought this was going to be a quick and easy post. Show you a couple photos of the teams' jerseys and move on. Oh yeah sure, if it were only so simple. Folks, to my surprise, the AHL has given us six different sweaters to discuss in relation to All-Star Week in St. John's.

So settle in.

Morning skate

It all started Tuesday morning at practice. The AHL All-Stars wore jerseys that looked like they could very well be game uniforms. Half the players wore white while the other half wore blue. But it was just practice.

Skills Competition (AHL All-Stars)

Tuesday night then brought the Skills Competition which pitted the All-Stars against the SHL's Färjestad BK — we'll get to their jerseys next. The AHLers wore blue versions of the game jersey.

Skills Competition (Färjestad BK)

Meanwhile, Färjestad sported these white Reebok Edge ad-free (mostly) versions of their uniforms. It's pretty sharp compared to what they usually wear. (I'll get to that.)

AHL 2014 All-Star Classic

Finally we get to the actual game jerseys for Wednesday. The AHLers will don white as Färjestad BK wear green. 

The AHL All-Stars' jersey utilizes the very first Reebok Edge template, which was introduced at the 2007 NHL All-Star Game in Dallas. It's an awful look in my mind — and I usually like modern jersey styles — but it continues to survive thanks to the AHL.

Meanwhile, knowing what little I do about European hockey, I expected Färjestad to have ridiculous jerseys. But in fact, they came out on top here. This is the kind of classic hockey sweater I was anticipating when the Dallas Stars rebranded themselves over the summer.

Too bad Färjestad only wears them for special events.

Färjestad BK (SHL)

This post would be incomplete without a quick look at what Färjestad normally wears. And as you'd expect, it's covered in advertising.

Mark my words. If the NHL ever allows this, I'm shutting down Icethetics.

In case this is the first you're hearing of a European team coming to North America for an AHL All-Star Game, allow me to wrap up with some brief background on Färjestad BK, who hail from Karlstad, Sweden. They've been around a while. They were founded in 1932 and have won four Swedish league championships in the past 12 years, most recently in 2011.

Currently, Färjestad's roster includes one American and one Canadian. It's also without three of its Norwegian-born stars — Ole-Kristian Tollefsen, Martin Roymark and Anders Bastiansen — who are suiting up in Sochi this week. Like the NHL, the SHL is taking a break for the Olympics. At this point, teams have played 49 of their 55 games. Färjestad is 23-26 and in 8th place out of 12 teams.

If all this talk about the AHL All-Star Classic has you eager to watch the game, it'll air tape delayed on NHL Network and live on several other regional sports networks. Click here to see if it's available in your area.

Phantoms prep for relocation with new sweaters

The AHL's Adirondack Phantoms will move to Allentown, Penn. next season and become the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. The team's new home and road jerseys were unveiled last fall on Nov. 25.

The Phantoms originally left Philadelphia in 2009 — after a 13-year run — when their arena was set to be torn down. They were sold and moved to Glens Falls, N.Y. as a temporary home but the new ownership always intended to bring the team back to Pennsylvania.

The move to Allentown will coincide with the opening of the new PPL Center in August.

The only change to the Phantoms logo is that a new blue will replace purple as the trim color. Icethetics reader Billy Carpenter reported this after seeing the jerseys up close. He snapped a photo which can be seen in the slideshow up top.

While the logo remains mostly unchanged, the same can't be said for the uniforms. The jerseys are a hodgepodge of design elements from the more modern Reebok Edge templates and the fact that they don't match is sure to irk some fans.

No word yet on whether the Phantoms will keep their Flyers-inspired third jersey — though there's no particular reason for them to drop it at this point.

At the end of the season, we'll have a little retrospective on the Phantoms' Adirondack era.

Your Olympic jersey rankings are confusing

The Icethetics Cover Story series debuted last week focusing on the new national team uniforms being worn in Sochi this month. In it I included a wealth of polls and rating widgets so everyone could quickly share their feedback.

At the end of the article, I shared my rankings and set up a poll asking readers to pick their top three favorites to form a community ranking. But between that poll and the individual ratings for each country, I was surprised to find wildly different results.

Take a look at these lists to see what I mean.


By Top 3 Poll

The poll, listing all 14 nations, allowed readers to select up to three favorites. This list is in order of most votes to fewest.

  1. Canada
  2. Slovakia
  3. Sweden
  4. United States
  5. Russia
  6. Germany
  7. Czech Republic
  8. Latvia
  9. Finland
  10. Slovenia
  11. Austria
  12. Norway
  13. Switzerland
  14. Japan

By Individual Ratings

Readers cast individual ratings for each nation. There was no comparison to other nations for this setup.

  1. Sweden
  2. Slovakia
  3. Germany
  4. Austria
  5. Latvia
  6. Slovenia
  7. Norway
  8. Russia
  9. Switzerland
  10. Canada
  11. Czech Republic
  12. Finland
  13. United States
  14. Japan

How strange is that? On their own, the U.S. and Canada were ripped by voters, yet they ended up in most people's top three. Sounds like some of us are having trouble being honest with ourselves.

So while Canada and the U.S. fell sharply, Austria jumped from 11th to 4th when you look at individual ratings instead of top three selections. What I find funny is that Slovakia ended up second in both groups. And we all just flat out hate Japan's jerseys.

What do you make of these results? Did you vote with your head or your heart?