
Never mind the Bruins winning the Cup, Sidney Crosby’s concussion, the return of the Winnipeg Jets or whether the Guardian Project still exists: the hottest topic during the 2011 offseason for European NHL fans was whether we would get to watch hockey at all.
ESPN lost the European broadcasting rights, so that means no more NHL on ESPN Player – which I imagine is quite a blow for them – and no more NHL on ESPN America, the one and only TV channel we could watch it on. The rights were purchased by Medge Consulting/AMI, and it’s thanks to that fact that most of us in Europe can purchase an NHL GameCenter Live subscription, unless you live in Scandinavia where MTG have instead acquired the rights to broadcast all NHL games this season. If you’re from the Nordic countries and need more information, please click here.
GameCenter Live as viewed on Internet Explorer
ESPN Player proved to be a decent enough way for NHL fans in Europe to watch whatever games we liked, whenever we liked. However, compared to GameCenter Live its options were very limited. With GameCenter you can now choose from either the home or away broadcast – in case a certain commentary team’s bias is too much to handle – and as the commercial says you can watch up to four games at once, chat in-game (a feature that doesn’t appear to exist), view stats, get real-time in-game notifications from around the league: however, some of these features, particularly the viewing of multiple games, requires a high broadband speed which not everyone has. In addition to all games from this season, you can go back and watch any from the last four years that have been archived, and you’re also given access to the NHL Vault where you can watch a selection of classic games dating back to the 1960’s. For more recent games this season you can also watch either full length replays or condensed versions of the game.
Much like ESPN Player, GCL is Flash based, and there are a number of streaming options that are suitable for different broadband speeds. If you’re lucky enough to have a fibre optic connection and thus an insanely high download speed, you can pretty much watch games in very high quality, pretty much HD with no problems (however this may put some strain on your CPU, so be careful). And if your download speed is at a pitiful 1mbps, much like my own, the 800kb option still provides a decent enough quality feed, although you may come across the occasional bit of lag and the stream skipping ahead when you’re behind. If there’s something you missed you can click on a button which allows you to go back 10 seconds, and as many times as you need to, and then whenever you want you can click on Live to jump back ahead.
All in all it’s a pretty awesome deal, but there are a few minor issues with GCL that may lead to annoyance. Firstly, for those of us shifting over from ESPN Player, the way GameCenter Live works may throw you off as it doesn’t appear to be its own separate player or anything. However what the NHL has done instead is integrate it fully into their website, so you can log in to NHL.com with your account and literally jump into a game’s broadcast via a link from the home page. You’ll be left scratching your head at first wondering where GameCenter is, but once you get used to it – which shouldn’t take long – it’s a very efficient system.
Another issue of mine – and this will apply to anyone with smaller browser space – is the way the video is displayed. Basically the way it works it that, the bigger your monitor or the more space you have on your browser that isn’t taken up by toolbars, the bigger size the streaming video is. It looks great on an iMac for example, but annoyingly this works in reverse too, so for my 1280×800 laptop screen and if I want to watch it on Firefox, I have to disable all of my useful toolbars, which will give me a slightly bigger video size but will also prevent me from switching to a Game Day Thread on a forum I’m on, for example, or browsing the net while waiting for the intermissions to be over. Instead I find that Internet Explorer with its default settings is finally being given a purpose, and that provides me with a much more reasonable video size. However in doing this I lose the drop-down menus for some of the options as they for some reason go behind the video. Stupid Flash.
GameCenter’s smaller video on Firefox, at least for me anyway
And speaking of the options to view stats, the ice tracker, etc., that’ll be my final complaint. Not so much the options themselves, those are great. But the buttons located just above the streaming video will actually redirect you to their respective pages and away from the video, so basically if you want to avoid having to reload the video or anything but still want to view the stats and stuff, open them up in separate tabs. This is mainly nitpicking on my behalf, but overall the good things far outweigh the bad – after all, it’s providing us with a way to watch NHL hockey and the options GameCenter Live gives us far exceed anything ESPN Player had to offer over.
As far as pricing goes you can either go with a one-time payment of $159 US Dollars (roughly £102 or 116€) or a monthly payment of $19.95 which eventually works out to just a bit more than the same cost over eight months. And that’s another thing I like about GameCenter: you’re not being forced to pay additional costs for the playoffs unlike with ESPN Player.
There are other versions of GameCenter Live available, such as the PS3 and iPad apps. Provided these options are available to us at PowerPlayGoal.com, we’ll have reviews of those versions up whenever we can.











