HONEYMOON OVER FOR JETS AND THEIR FANS

WINNIPEG – It appears the honeymoon is over between the Winnipeg Jets and their fans.

Once rare game tickets at the MTS Centre are now available, and those who attend have booed their 16-18-5 team for inconsistent play that has the club sitting at or near the bottom of their new, tough Central Division.

Armchair general managers have also called for roster changes to the transplanted ex-Atlanta Thrashers team, while likeable head coach Claude Noel has had his job security questioned.

And the fans aren’t the only ones voicing their frustration. Players are fed up with looking for the positives in each loss.

“It’s what you do out on the ice. You can blow smoke as much as you want in the media,” right-winger Blake Wheeler told reporters after the Jets lost a sixth straight game at home on Dec. 14.
“We’ve been blowing smoke for three years – everyone, myself. Everyone that’s stood in front of a microphone for the last three years, we’ve said the same (expletive).”

The airing out of frustrations in Winnipeg is something new. When the Jets were resurrected in 2011, fans enthusiastically embraced the return of the NHL after a 15-year absence.

Thirteen thousand season tickets with a minimum three-year commitment were snapped up, and unlucky fans paid $50 to join a wait list.

The team was loudly cheered by 15,000 grateful admirers at home games, and were even given a standing ovation when the inaugural season ended with an overtime loss and no playoff berth.

After last season’s NHL lockout ended, fans were just happy to head back to the rink and their adoration continued despite another campaign without post-season action.

But in this third season, cracks are starting to show.

When the home winless streak finally ended with a 5-2 victory over Florida on Dec. 20, there was relief, but no fist pumping as the team headed out on the road for what ended up being losses to Vancouver and Edmonton before its three-day Christmas holiday.

Before boarding the plane for the road trip, Wheeler was asked if he senses the marriage with fans is hitting rocky times.

“I think the expectations have risen every year,” he said. “We took a step last year and we just missed the playoffs. I think a lot of us felt we were a playoff team.

“And now, I think this is the best group we’ve had since we’ve been here so I think the expectations have risen pretty linearly since we’ve been here.

“(The scrutiny) comes with the territory. It’s a market that cares about the product on the ice and they’re very passionate. They’re very enthusiastic when you’re winning and very enthusiastic when you’re losing, it’s just a different kind.”

Jets defenceman Zach Bogosian got a different view of fans when he recently missed 15 games with a groin injury.

Did he feel the winds of change while sitting in the press box?

“It’s a touchy subject,” Bogosian said. “They’re usually pretty loud, but sometimes if the team is not playing as well as we should, some people get unhappy.”

Noel acknowledged fans have higher expectations this season.

“I think we’ve had that sense for a while,” he said. “After the first year, we had that sense that they would like more performance and the honeymoon is over.

“We don’t sit here and take our fan base for granted. They expect us to work, and they should, and perform.”

Prior to Winnipeg’s loss to the lowly Sabres in Buffalo earlier this month, Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff revealed he’s felt heat from critics.

“If you’re able to find a way to improve, then you try to act on it,” he said. “But change doesn’t always equate to improvement.

“Change can certainly placate phone calls, emails on the different venues out there, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that’s the proper direction to go.”

© Canadian Press

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Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago

Only Winnipeg people could screw this up. Manitoba is the a hole of north American and Winnipeg is where they would stick the tube for the enema. Just a gross province, a few good people, but for the most part, just a nasty place with nasty people. So, let them lose the team again and go back to their KFC dinners and Dodge neons and BTO cover bands at their weddings. Screw em all. And merry Christmas

Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

I'm a season ticket for the Riders & from Sask. & I still find your comment offensive. Screw you too!!!!

Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago

Are there any Jets fans that can explain why JC Lipon and Adam Lowry are playing bottom six forward roles with St. John's when they should be playing with the big club? Two WHL studs that aren't getting a chance while the Jets stumble through another season.

Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago

Fans think they have it bad in the Peg, they should live in Edmonton

Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago

Screw you times 2! You should hear what they say about us!

Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Times 3 back at you!!!!!

cflsteve
10 years ago

A little too early to panic. Of course the fans will want to see a winner on the ice.However I think the move of NHL teams back to Canadian cities and out of the god awful franchise in the US south will be a major positive to the NHL future.Still a lot of new venues in Winnipeg. Heritage classic at IGF will happen soon as well as the synergy model of getting a Junior WHL franchise similar to Calgary and Edmonton. Give those 50 dollar season ticket spot holders an option of another team to attend games.Once that is done… Read more »

Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago

The point to me though is they will never be a winner, just like Edmonton. No legit NHL superstar will go to either of those cities as free agents or when they have the chance to go to free agency they will bolt for better climates/cities/facilities.

Anonymous
Anonymous
10 years ago

I'm not sure why everyone is always focused on "free agency", especially in the NHL. Bonafide NHL superstars RARELY hit free agency these days. Teams have to draft well, which is not a perfect science.