Hopes for Olympic hockey ride on Feb. 13 game

Whether Latvia’s hockey team gets to play in the 2006 Winter Olympic Games in Turin, Italy, is down to a crucial Feb. 13 game in Rīga. The game in the Rīga Sports Palace (Rīgas Sporta pils) will pit the national team against the rival squad from Belarus in a contest Latvia has to win to qualify for the Olympics.

Qualification is a complicated affair and based on International Ice Hockey Federation seedings, which are determined by rankings in the last Olympic games, and the last four World Hockey Championships. The top eight teams—including hockey superpowers Canada, the United States, Russia, Sweden, Finland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and wannabe Germany—get byes, while host nation Italy is also in, even though it is ranked 19th. Three spots are up for grabs, one from each of the qualification tournaments. Latvia is ranked 10th and is playing in Group B with 13th place Belarus, 16th place Slovenia and 20th place Poland.

The Group B tournament has been underway in Rīga. Group A has been playing in Switzerland and Group C in Austria.

Group B action got underway Feb. 10 with Belarus edging Poland, 3-2, and Latvia getting by Slovenia, 2-1. The next day Belarus easily handled Slovenia, 7-2. But it was only in the last minutes of their game that Latvia opened up a 3-1 lead over a surprisingly tough Polish squad.

With a three-goal lead over Latvia in goal differential, Belarus needs a tie or a win Feb. 13 to qualify. Latvia, on the other hand, must win.

The two countries been long-time hockey rivals. In 1996 Belarus blocked Latvia from the 1998 Olympic Games with a victory in the final game of the qualification tournament also held in Rīga. (Coincidentally, the Latvian head coach then was Leonīds Beresņevs, who returned as head coach this year. ) However, Latvia has fared better than Belarus in recent World Hockey Championships and finished 7th last year.

Latvia’s team has been slow off the mark and the victories against Slovenia and Poland were unexpectedly difficult. Starters Artūrs Irbe, Herberts Vasiļjevs and Aigars Cipruss have been injured and could not play. And Sergei Zholtok, who died in November after collapsing during a hockey game in Belarus, is sorely missed.

Also missing are several players not released from club play in North America’s minor pros, such Raitis Ivanāns and Krišjānis Rēdlihs.

However, National Hockey League players Kārlis Skrastiņš and Sandis Ozoliņš are suited up. Skrastiņš has been playing with Rīga 2000 during the NHL lockout, while Ozoliņš has been idling. They are joined by East Coast Hockey League players Armands Bērziņš and Juris Štāls, who are still pursuing their NHL dreams.

The bulk of the team consists of players based in Latvia and other European countries. They include five from Rīga 2000 and two from Liepājas Metalurgs. Veterans Aleksandrs Semjonovs, Atvars Tribuncovs, Aleksandrs Ņiživijs, Aleksandrs Macijevskis, Grigorijs Panteļejevs, Viktors Ignatjevs, Normunds Sējējs, Rodrigo Laviņš and Igors Bondarevs are playing alongside a younger group that includes Jānis Sprukts, Miķelis Rēdlihs, Mārtiņš Cipulis, Arvīds Reķis and Juris Ozols. Goaltending duties are being shared by Sergejs Naumovs and Edgars Masaļskis.

The Latvia-Belarus game is to be broadcast live over Latvian State Radio 1 (Latvijas Radio 1) beginning at 19:05 EET (17:05 GMT) on Feb. 13. The broadcast also may be heard live over the radio service’s Internet stream, which is available through its Web site, www.latvijasradio.lv. Live text updates of the game’s progress also will be available from the International Ice Hockey Federation’s Web site, www.iihf.com. —Viesturs Zariņš

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

U.S. embassy slams paper over scandal story

The U.S. Embassy in Latvia has reacted strongly to a newspaper story that claims a scandalous exchange of information took place 18 months ago between Latvia’s Prosecutor General Jānis Maizītis and former Ambassador Brian E. Carlson.

The daily paper Neatkarīgā Rīta Avīze reported Feb. 5 that Maizītis breached his professional ethics by writing a letter to Carlson in which he informed the ambassador about the progress of a fraud case involving the Latvian branch of the American company Procter & Gamble, which claimed it had been swindled by local firm Balodis Printing.

“Although according to law the prosecutor does not have to inform persons not involved with the criminal case about the course of a pretrial investigation,” the newspaper reported in a front page story, “Prosecutor General Jānis Maizītis in September 2003 gave detailed information to former U.S. Ambassador Brian Carlson about the case involving fraud against a subsidiary of the U.S. business Procter & Gamble.”

The embassy responded Feb. 6, issuing a press release that blasted the newspaper.

“The unfounded accusations and distorted information contained in this story raise serious questions about the journalistic integrity and political motives of Neatkarīgā Rīta Avīze and the elements that control it,” the press release reads in part.

The newspaper is owned by A/S Preses nams, a company indirectly controlled by Aivars Lembergs—the well-to-do mayor of Ventspils—through the oil company Ventspils Nafta. Lembergs and Maizītis are reportedly not on the best of terms ever since the prosecutor launched an investigation into the privatization of Ventspils Nafta.

The bankrupt Balodis Printing, which was based in Bauska, is accused of defrauding Procter&Gamble Marketing Latvia of thousands of dollars. Balodis Printing was declared insolvent in 2002.

The newspaper article, and a similar story distributed by the news agency LETA, questions the prosecutor general’s ethics in providing information to a foreign government.

But the embassy in its press release said Carlson initiated the contact with Maizītis after it became clear that other Latvian officials were dragging their feet in the investigation.

“Mischaracterizing the nature of the Balodis Printing fraud case in order to launch an ill-considered attack on Prosecutor General Maizītis,” the embassy’s press release reads, “can only be seen as suggesting that there are some here in Latvia who do not want the prosecutor general to do his job, which is central to promoting the rule of law.”

Carlson was ambassador until the end of last year.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Prāta Vētra in Helsinki lacked luster

Prāta Vētra

Prāta Vētra opened for R.E.M. when the American band played in Helsinki.

At precisely 8 p.m. on Jan. 29 in Helsinki’s Hartwall Areena,  world-renowned rock group R.E.M. bassist Mike Mills introduced the Latvian popular music group Prāta Vētra (known in English as BrainStorm). This was the group’s last performance together with R.E.M., on a concert tour through several Eastern European cities, including Rīga.

I travelled to Helsinki to find out two things: How does BrainStorm sound without its original bass player Mūmiņš (Gundars Mauševics, who was killed in a May 2003 automobile accident) and how does the Latvian band stack up against a world famous rock group?

Unfortunately, at the start of the concert only a few hundred listeners had entered the hall. This was due to two circumstances. First, concertgoers were not permitted to take drinks into the hall, so many took advantage of drinking beer in the outer hallways of the arena. Second, the Finnish public was there to see R.E.M.

Our boys from Latvia seemed rather pale and tired as they started their set. (The preceding concert in Saint Petersburg was cancelled because transportation was delayed at the border between Estonia and Russia.) Only by the end of the set was BrainStorm warmed up.

I thought frontman Renārs Kaupers was just going through the usually ritual dance motions without any real emotion or feeling. The public wasn’t convinced about the performance, but did applaud politely after every song. The reaction of the public was probably a big surprise for BrainStorm, who were warmly received by the home crowd a few nights earlier in Rīga.

The group members seemed to be caught up in themselves and shared little if any contact with one another. Guest bassist Ingars Vilums didn’t even take a glimpse at the bored drummer Kaspars Roga. I wonder if Vilums has found his real place in the group yet. Māris Miķelsons was as usual on the ball and performed his keyboard and accordian parts with precision. Guitarist Jānis Jubalts played well for the most part, but started the song “Kitten Who Did Not Want to Give Up” at a dreadfully slow pace.

The sound as usual was less than perfect for an opening act and it seemed as if soundman Tālis Timrots was prevented from pressing certain sound and volume buttons. The fact that the songs were sung in English didn’t appease me. Even though Kaupers has improved his English immensely over the past 10 years, his English lyrics don’t stand up to his lyrics in Latvian. This was not the best BrainStorm show I have seen. I was disappointed, expecting more from Latvia’s top pop band.

After BrainStorm finished its 35-minute set, a 30-minute intermission followed. During that time 12,000 spectators filled the hall eagerly awaiting R.E.M. From the very first beat, singer Mike Stipe danced and pranced, singing with full force. Bassist Mike Mills played well and sang great harmonies. Even though Peter Buck played horribly and at times completely wrong notes, second guitarist Scott McCaughey covered up for his mistakes. Guest drummer Bill Riefen didn’t shine much, but then again R.E.M’s material wouldn’t let him. Guest keyboardist Ken Stringfellow was steady all night. Still the group performance relied mostly on Stipe. Throughout the entire concert, he controlled the group and the audience as a cult fugure. As Stipe conducted, audience members rhythmically waved their hands in unison, singing along to hits like “Losing my Religion” and “Man on the Moon.”

After the concert I asked R.E.M. guitarist McCaughey what he likes about BrainStorm.

”Renārs is a great frontman,” he answered. That is exactly how I feel. Without Kaupers, BrainStorm would not have enjoyed the success it has so far. Undoubtedly Brainstorm has been where no other Latvian group has been before, but borrowing a line from one of its songs, ”What’s next?”.

BrainStorm should get out on tour of the European and American club circuit. It just doesn’t cut it to release an album or a video and naively hope that somebody is going to notice. You have to tour and then tour some more. Bruce Springsteen played between 250 and 300 concerts a year before he became famous. This is really the only way for BrainStorm to ever hope of achieving the same. The band might just be content with being popular in Eastern Europe.

Then again, it could wait for Stipe and R.E.M. to call for help again…

Details

In concert in Hartwall Areena

Prāta Vētra

Helsinki, Finland:  2005

Raitis Freimanis lives in Stockholm, Sweden, and is a founding member of the Latvian-Canadian band Skandāls.