Fans Sound Off: Carolina Hurricanes Message Boards and Blogs
Posted by gercohen on October 23, 2006
Assignment: Original writing piece for an organization, the Carolina Hurricanes NHL hockey team (with which I have no affiliation). Site visitors may be those who regularly frequent message boards and are familiar with the written and unwritten rules, or they may be new to the genre and will welcome a FAQ on etiquette. Users might just come once or twice to the site, or may revisit to see updated resources and news about the fan message board universe.
You may be in the capacity crowd when 18,730 fans converge on the RBC Center for home dates for the 2006 NHL Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes, but the fun doesn’t have to end when the game is over. You might be a fan from afar, a former Raleigh area resident, or even a resident of another country, perhaps the native land of one of the Canes European-born players.
MESSAGE BOARDS
Hundreds of our fans are using online message boards to share their experiences, commenting on the team and individual players. Tickets are traded, photos posted and shared, and stories told and retold. Here at carolinahurricanes.com we want to let you know how to get in on the action.
Anyone with an internet connection can join the online Carolina Hurricanes world. Message board users can make up their own screen names and stay relatively anonymous, or post with their real names, and even upload avatars like that of Scoreboards message board moderator Jeffbear.
BLOGS
In addition to message boards, the blog phenomenon allows individual fans to set up their own individualized weblogs, posting commentary, with most allowing readers of the blog to chime in with their comments. A good blog will also have a blogroll, linking the reader to other similar sites or resources.
AN ONLINE FAN COMMUNITY
Online fan communities have largely developed on their own, but both national media and the team itself have also hosted message boards or set up blogs. This article will catalogue numerous message boards and blogs that focus on the Canes, as well as give casual fans pointers on using those boards. Message boards can be of two varieties, moderated, and those with standards. Scoreboards moderator Jeffbear discusses differences:
“I think it’s important to deal with the stance regarding moderation and Standards up front. There’s a huge difference between an actively moderated board and a loosely moderated board in terms of what posters can get away with in terms of behavior, and it’s good to make people aware of the rules up front … and then enforce them. All message boards generate their own conventions in terms of slang terms, user handles, avatar pictures and the like. Those things need to be explained in a good FAQ”
GAME DAY THREAD
Fans seem to enjoy the message board game-day thread, where the moderator posts an introduction to the game a day or two in advance, fans make predictions and talk about injuries, and during the game fans listening on the radio or watching on TV post commentary. Fans returning from the game also chime in later. A regular season game might see 100+ postings, while a playoff game might have over 300.
CANES MESSAGE BOARD CATALOGUE
To get you started, here’s an extensive list of Carolina Hurricanes oriented message boards:
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The Scoreboards is a national umbrella message board covering hockey, baseball, football, and basketball, with individual boards for each team. There are 1,422 members of the board with privileges to post anywhere. A smaller number of those post on the Canes board The greatest activity on this board is for NHL hockey, with 1,700 separate discussion threads, compared with 600 each for baseball and football. The Scoreboards Canes board is the newest Canes message board, becoming active August 24, 2006, and already has 304 discussion threads. The systemwide moderator has posted community standards, covering harassment, disruption, vulgarity, solicitation, spamming, and use of copyrighted materials, while Canes Scoreboards moderator Jeffbear has posted a FAQ for the site, covering the history of the board, including the migration of participants from several other boards in the past, as well as inside jokes, and short bio sketches of some frequent posters. There is a general search function, and a member list and the ability to send private messages to members exists. The member list includes profiles and the ability to search posts by member. For those with greater interest in the Scoreboards, Jeffbear discusses the history of both Scoreboards and Canes message boards in general.

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Letsgocanes.com (LGC) is an independent board with 1,055 members, 6,926 threads, and over 375,000 individual posts. Members can send private messages to other members, and start new threads Its Canes discussion thread includes the obligatory game day thread and even a place for new members to introduce themselves. On the top menu bar is a FAQ that is more focused on technical issues than the Scoreboards FAQ. LGC has separate sections for ticket exchanges, commentary on subjects such as other NHL teams, minor league hockey, and member initiated polls. There is a general search function, and a member list and the ability to send private messages to members exists. The member list includes profiles and the ability to search posts by member. LGC moderator Caniac suggests in a message about the development of that message board: “I would say it is beneficial if a new user lurks for a little bit to see how the site works and how they’re supposed to act and even type.”

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HFBoards.com (short for Hockey’s Future) is an umbrella site like Scoreboards but for NHL hockey only, with almost 30,000 members systemwide. Its Canes message board does not have separate section for different aspect of hockey like LGC, but all threads shown in inverse order of last posting. This makes finding threads more difficult. Its FAQ is very similar to LGC’s. There is a general search function, and a member list and the ability to send private messages to members exists. The member list includes profiles and the ability to search posts by member.
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ESPN maintains message boards for every professional sport and team. Its Canes message board is lightly used, with 75 topics and 402 messages dating back only to October 1, 2006. Board managers have posted that all boards were reset on that date and older messages eliminated. No member list or contact capabilities exist, making this board less useful to posters. (ESPN has no message board specific logo)
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The Insiders (also known as scout or fanhome) maintains a Canes message board that is organized much like HFBoards. It was one of the most active Canes message boards until mid-summer 2006 when most posters deserted to Scoreboards after a dispute with management over long-term prospects of maintaining the boards Its structure is similar to that of HFBoards. Now there are only a few posts per week.

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An official Carolinahurricanes.com message board existed for many years. Sanctioned by the team, the board went down during the 2006 Stanley Cup finals, was replaced for a time by a link to an outside board, and now is totally down. A Canes official has stated that the board wastaken down because it had too much traffic.
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News & Observer Carolina Hurricanes forum. Very lightly used, no search function, does allow other posts by a user to be searched after clicking on a post by that user. No special graphics. No FAQ.
CANES FAN BLOGS CATALOGUE
While anyone can start a free blog, here’s a list of Canes fan blogs found from a Google search and from blogrolls:
- Sweet tea, Barbecue and Bodychecks “Rants about hockey (chiefly the Carolina Hurricanes) from an Adopted Southerner” by the AcidQueen. Posts made several times a week, good blogroll.
- Carolina Hurricanes blog Hokejowy A Canes blog maintained by a fan from Poland.
- Red and Black hockey. Self-styled rants and raves about the Canes.
- Stormbringer’s Blog of Madness Daily posts from a Virginia based fan who is a Triangle expatriate.
- Penalty Killer. From Chris, an Apex fan who makes several posts a week. Extensive blogroll.
- Canes Country. By Bubba, an unidentified fan
- Canes blog central. These are “official” house blogs of the Carolina Hurricanes, which do not allow comments to be posted. Among those blogging are defenseman Mike Commodore, TV play-by-play analyst John Forslund, Youth and Amateur coordinator Paul Strand, and Canes Media Relations Director Mike Sundheim.
- Life and Times of a Caniac Self styled as “A sarcastic, hockey-loving teenager’s view on life and the Carolina Hurricanes.”
- Caniac’s blog. Defunct blog, active during the 2005-2006 season.
- Hockey puck_it Defunct blog, active during the 2005-2006 season.
- Hurricanes Hockey News Defunct blog, active during the 2005-2006 season.
OVERTIME
Those who just can’t get enough hockey will find message boards and blogs a place to find information, make acquaintances, share ideas, and kill time until the next game.
hurricanes fan said
Hey my site isn’t defunct…..just took some time off, and it will get more intense during the playoffs.
gercohen said
I see that you have a bunch of entries beginning October 28. I have to revise my writing for week 12 of the course and will update your status to a current (rather than defunct) blog. Thanks for writing!