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Post by danvilleshark on May 19, 2022 8:14:51 GMT -8
After 24 years as San Jose’s AHL head coach, Sommer has just been shifted to senior adviser. In Sommer’s place, John McCarthy will take over as head coach of the Barracuda. The 35-year-old has been a development coach for the Barracuda for the last two years, also serving as assistant coach for part of 2019-20. McCarthy was drafted by the San Jose Sharks in the seventh round in 2006, and carved out a lengthy professional career, highlighted by 88 NHL games, five seasons as the captain of either the Worcester Sharks or Barracuda, and suiting up for USA at the 2018 Olympics. Sommer isn’t the only change behind the Barracuda bench. Assistant coach Jimmy Bonneau, assistant coach Mike Chiasson, and goaltending coach Dany Sabourin will also be moving on. Good for McCarthy, The development has been pretty stagnant for a number of years now and is in need of new blood. Yeah I like the move. McCarthy is the right guy for this.
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Post by LordNelson on May 19, 2022 10:37:22 GMT -8
Good for McCarthy, The development has been pretty stagnant for a number of years now and is in need of new blood. Yeah I like the move. McCarthy is the right guy for this. good move, SJ player development changes are overdue.. But is Joe Will simply re-arranging deck chairs on the Titanic? The new GM may have different ideas on organizing his farm system. McCarthy appears a bit vulnerable to that dynamic, IMO.
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Post by jackalope on May 19, 2022 10:45:41 GMT -8
Yeah I like the move. McCarthy is the right guy for this. good move, SJ player development changes are overdue.. But is Joe Will simply re-arranging deck chairs on the Titanic? The new GM may have different ideas on organizing his farm system. McCarthy appears a bit vulnerable to that dynamic, IMO. I was wondering the same thing, I would think the new GM would like to have some insight on who gets picked as well. Although the way Joe Will explained it, it sounds like they are going the route of GM and possibly something like a pres of hockey operations in order to get more eyes on the overall situation.
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Post by Fugazi on May 20, 2022 10:34:19 GMT -8
FRISCO, Texas – Dallas Stars Head Coach Rick Bowness announced that he will be stepping away as Head Coach of the Dallas Stars effective immediately. Additionally, General Manager Jim Nill announced that assistant coaches John Stevens, Derek Laxdal and Todd Nelson will not return next season.
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Post by danvilleshark on May 20, 2022 12:28:20 GMT -8
FRISCO, Texas – Dallas Stars Head Coach Rick Bowness announced that he will be stepping away as Head Coach of the Dallas Stars effective immediately. Additionally, General Manager Jim Nill announced that assistant coaches John Stevens, Derek Laxdal and Todd Nelson will not return next season. Stars did as well as could be expected I thought. Oh well.....
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Post by jackalope on May 20, 2022 16:56:25 GMT -8
FRISCO, Texas – Dallas Stars Head Coach Rick Bowness announced that he will be stepping away as Head Coach of the Dallas Stars effective immediately. Additionally, General Manager Jim Nill announced that assistant coaches John Stevens, Derek Laxdal and Todd Nelson will not return next season. Stars did as well as could be expected I thought. Oh well..... Yeah everyone was praising Bowness for his coaching and saying that was the reason they went so far in the bubble and pushed Cal to 7 games. Sometimes I think the coach just knows that the message is lost.
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Post by LordNelson on May 25, 2022 13:10:08 GMT -8
Meanwhile, a distraction peek at Sharks 'clusterfuck in the crease'. Some good, and some looking like management ineptness? Remember, new Shark GM is interviewing the Sharks as much as Joe Will & Co. are interviewing him... The good ones won't want to step into a bad roster/Cap situation. Sharks have many poor long term contracts and not a lot of Cap room for the new GM to build with. But goal position has no lock-ins beyond next season. And sharks still could get very lucky with a few of the young names below.
J Reimer (age34) 1 (more) year at $2.2m. Probably team MVP, but sharks need to find their 'next' goalie. If they get something good coming back, trade him this summer. Sign of roster weakness if Shark rely on Reimer heavily next season.
Adin Hill (25) 1 year at $2.1m. Hill a big question mark with recurring lower body injury, hasn't played since January. Probably a main reason *not* to trade Reimer. Needs to prove he can stay healthy, a make-or-break year for him, I say he breaks. Management will give Hill a long leash (chances) because of the money he's pulling in. 'Niemi sloppy' at times.
Zach Emond (21) 1 year at $786k. In 12 Barracuda games last season, a .867 SV%. Not exactly a hot start at AHL level. Was average back in QMJHL. Needs to rebound and fight for Barracuda #1 job.
Strauss Mann (23) 1 year at $842k. Impressive resume/stats from NCAA Mich, then last season in SEL. I'd guess he's gonna beat out Emond for #1 Barracuda goalie.
Kaapo Kahkonen (25) RFA. Looking for some real NHL $$ now that entry level deal is done. Deserving of a 2 yr NHL contract but Sharks don't have much Cap room for Kahkonen.
Zach Sawchenko (24) RFA. Only saw him play a few times. Big guy similar to Hill, but thought he was fundamentaly better than Hill.. He'll probably be shown the door.
Ben Gaudreau (19) (drafted '21) OHL hot-shot goalie last season, looks like he'll play one more in the OHL. Great asset in the Sharks pipeline, can they screw this one up?
Magnus Chrona (21) (rights from TBL) Starting goalie for NCAA champ Denver. Looks like he'll play senior year of College. Good asset. 6'6" tall is impressive too.
Alex Staylock (34) UFA. Embarrasing Oilers had to send Sharks their practice goalie to get them out of a roster jam. One game, 6 GA. WTF.
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Post by galtfan on May 26, 2022 4:42:44 GMT -8
Meanwhile, a distraction peek at Sharks ' clusterfuck in the crease'. Some good, and some looking like management ineptness? Remember, new Shark GM is interviewing the Sharks as much as Joe Will & Co. are interviewing him... The good ones won't want to step into a bad roster/Cap situation. Sharks have many poor long term contracts and not a lot of Cap room for the new GM to build with. But goal position has no lock-ins beyond next season. And sharks still could get very lucky with a few of the young names below. J Reimer (age34) 1 (more) year at $2.2m. Probably team MVP, but sharks need to find their 'next' goalie. If they get something good coming back, trade him this summer. Sign of roster weakness if Shark rely on Reimer heavily next season. Adin Hill (25) 1 year at $2.1m. Hill a big question mark with recurring lower body injury, hasn't played since January. Probably a main reason *not* to trade Reimer. Needs to prove he can stay healthy, a make-or-break year for him, I say he breaks. Management will give Hill a long leash (chances) because of the money he's pulling in. 'Niemi sloppy' at times. Zach Emond (21) 1 year at $786k. In 12 Barracuda games last season, a .867 SV%. Not exactly a hot start at AHL level. Was average back in QMJHL. Needs to rebound and fight for Barracuda #1 job. Strauss Mann (23) 1 year at $842k. Impressive resume/stats from NCAA Mich, then last season in SEL. I'd guess he's gonna beat out Emond for #1 Barracuda goalie. Kaapo Kahkonen (25) RFA. Looking for some real NHL $$ now that entry level deal is done. Deserving of a 2 yr NHL contract but Sharks don't have much Cap room for Kahkonen. Zach Sawchenko (24) RFA. Only saw him play a few times. Big guy similar to Hill, but thought he was fundamentaly better than Hill.. He'll probably be shown the door. Ben Gaudreau (19) (drafted '21) OHL hot-shot goalie last season, looks like he'll play one more in the OHL. Great asset in the Sharks pipeline, can they screw this one up? Magnus Chrona (21) (rights from TBL) Starting goalie for NCAA champ Denver. Looks like he'll play senior year of College. Good asset. 6'6" tall is impressive too. Alex Staylock (34) UFA. Embarrasing Oilers had to send Sharks their practice goalie to get them out of a roster jam. One game, 6 GA. WTF. Ben Gaudreau (19) (drafted '21) OHL hot-shot goalie last season, looks like he'll play one more in the OHL. Great asset in the Sharks pipeline, can they screw this one up? Hahahaha, sigh, Unfortunately we all know the answer to that question.
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Post by cjelli on May 26, 2022 7:31:01 GMT -8
Meanwhile, a distraction peek at Sharks ' clusterfuck in the crease'. Some good, and some looking like management ineptness? Remember, new Shark GM is interviewing the Sharks as much as Joe Will & Co. are interviewing him... The good ones won't want to step into a bad roster/Cap situation. Sharks have many poor long term contracts and not a lot of Cap room for the new GM to build with. But goal position has no lock-ins beyond next season. And sharks still could get very lucky with a few of the young names below. J Reimer (age34) 1 (more) year at $2.2m. Probably team MVP, but sharks need to find their 'next' goalie. If they get something good coming back, trade him this summer. Sign of roster weakness if Shark rely on Reimer heavily next season. Adin Hill (25) 1 year at $2.1m. Hill a big question mark with recurring lower body injury, hasn't played since January. Probably a main reason *not* to trade Reimer. Needs to prove he can stay healthy, a make-or-break year for him, I say he breaks. Management will give Hill a long leash (chances) because of the money he's pulling in. 'Niemi sloppy' at times. Zach Emond (21) 1 year at $786k. In 12 Barracuda games last season, a .867 SV%. Not exactly a hot start at AHL level. Was average back in QMJHL. Needs to rebound and fight for Barracuda #1 job. Strauss Mann (23) 1 year at $842k. Impressive resume/stats from NCAA Mich, then last season in SEL. I'd guess he's gonna beat out Emond for #1 Barracuda goalie. Kaapo Kahkonen (25) RFA. Looking for some real NHL $$ now that entry level deal is done. Deserving of a 2 yr NHL contract but Sharks don't have much Cap room for Kahkonen. Zach Sawchenko (24) RFA. Only saw him play a few times. Big guy similar to Hill, but thought he was fundamentaly better than Hill.. He'll probably be shown the door. Ben Gaudreau (19) (drafted '21) OHL hot-shot goalie last season, looks like he'll play one more in the OHL. Great asset in the Sharks pipeline, can they screw this one up? Magnus Chrona (21) (rights from TBL) Starting goalie for NCAA champ Denver. Looks like he'll play senior year of College. Good asset. 6'6" tall is impressive too. Alex Staylock (34) UFA. Embarrasing Oilers had to send Sharks their practice goalie to get them out of a roster jam. One game, 6 GA. WTF. Ben Gaudreau (19) (drafted '21) OHL hot-shot goalie last season, looks like he'll play one more in the OHL. Great asset in the Sharks pipeline, can they screw this one up? Hahahaha, sigh, Unfortunately we all know the answer to that question. Well, keeping the young goalie out of the Barracuda "pipeline" looks wise.
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Post by cjelli on May 26, 2022 7:33:14 GMT -8
Meanwhile, a distraction peek at Sharks ' clusterfuck in the crease'. Some good, and some looking like management ineptness? Remember, new Shark GM is interviewing the Sharks as much as Joe Will & Co. are interviewing him... The good ones won't want to step into a bad roster/Cap situation. Sharks have many poor long term contracts and not a lot of Cap room for the new GM to build with. But goal position has no lock-ins beyond next season. And sharks still could get very lucky with a few of the young names below. J Reimer (age34) 1 (more) year at $2.2m. Probably team MVP, but sharks need to find their 'next' goalie. If they get something good coming back, trade him this summer. Sign of roster weakness if Shark rely on Reimer heavily next season. Adin Hill (25) 1 year at $2.1m. Hill a big question mark with recurring lower body injury, hasn't played since January. Probably a main reason *not* to trade Reimer. Needs to prove he can stay healthy, a make-or-break year for him, I say he breaks. Management will give Hill a long leash (chances) because of the money he's pulling in. 'Niemi sloppy' at times. Zach Emond (21) 1 year at $786k. In 12 Barracuda games last season, a .867 SV%. Not exactly a hot start at AHL level. Was average back in QMJHL. Needs to rebound and fight for Barracuda #1 job. Strauss Mann (23) 1 year at $842k. Impressive resume/stats from NCAA Mich, then last season in SEL. I'd guess he's gonna beat out Emond for #1 Barracuda goalie. Kaapo Kahkonen (25) RFA. Looking for some real NHL $$ now that entry level deal is done. Deserving of a 2 yr NHL contract but Sharks don't have much Cap room for Kahkonen. Zach Sawchenko (24) RFA. Only saw him play a few times. Big guy similar to Hill, but thought he was fundamentaly better than Hill.. He'll probably be shown the door. Ben Gaudreau (19) (drafted '21) OHL hot-shot goalie last season, looks like he'll play one more in the OHL. Great asset in the Sharks pipeline, can they screw this one up? Magnus Chrona (21) (rights from TBL) Starting goalie for NCAA champ Denver. Looks like he'll play senior year of College. Good asset. 6'6" tall is impressive too. Alex Staylock (34) UFA. Embarrasing Oilers had to send Sharks their practice goalie to get them out of a roster jam. One game, 6 GA. WTF. Signing both Hill and Reimer to a 2 years contract was stupid. Neither could be moved at the deadline, and they are stepping on each other's toes with Kahkonen in.
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Post by Fugazi on May 29, 2022 10:58:50 GMT -8
Statement from Jason Spezza:
"I love hockey. Since the age of three, I've been lucky enough to live out my dream and do what I love for so many years," said Spezza. "I eat, sleep, dream hockey and it's always been there for me. There are too many people to thank individually but I'm forever grateful and indebted to the Ottawa Senators, Dallas Stars, Toronto Maple Leafs and Hockey Canada for their support and belief in me as a player and person. To my teammates, coaches, support staff, trainers and equipment staff - a heartful thank you for everything. Through countless hours at the rink - whether on the ice or with those behind the scenes - I have been so fortunate to have forged friendships for life.
Hockey has been my life's work and to be able to come home to Toronto and bookend my playing career where it started was incredible. To the fans - in Ottawa, Dallas, Toronto and across the league - your impact on the game is immeasurable. I'll never be able to replicate that feeling of stepping onto the ice to the roar of the crowd, but it is something I'll always remember. Thank you.
Looking forward, I'm very grateful to the Leafs for the amazing opportunity to transition into this new role. It enables me to continue to follow my passion; learn and live new experiences within the game I love.
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Post by Fugazi on May 29, 2022 11:02:04 GMT -8
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 1, 2022 13:07:50 GMT -8
MONTREAL -- Montreal Canadiens general manager Kent Hughes announced on Wednesday that the team has agreed to terms on a three-year contract extension with head coach Martin St-Louis (2022-23 to 2024-25).
St-Louis officially becomes the 32nd head coach in franchise history.
St-Louis, 46, was named interim head coach on February 9, 2022, taking over from Dominique Ducharme. Under his leadership, the Canadiens posted a 14-19-4 record.
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 6, 2022 16:24:49 GMT -8
BOSTON - Boston Bruins General Manager Don Sweeney announced today, June 6, that the team has relieved Bruce Cassidy of his duties as head coach.
Cassidy has served as head coach of the team since February 7, 2017.
The search for the next head coach of the Boston Bruins will begin immediately.
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Post by danvilleshark on Jun 7, 2022 7:56:12 GMT -8
Patty's wife in the news
She send her son to a woke private school and is shocked at the outcome....
"Not only must we recognize that we participate in a racist system that continues to exclude and undervalue people of color, but we must also confront the root causes and manifestations of structural racism."
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 7, 2022 17:45:09 GMT -8
Patty's wife in the news She send her son to a woke private school and is shocked at the outcome.... "Not only must we recognize that we participate in a racist system that continues to exclude and undervalue people of color, but we must also confront the root causes and manifestations of structural racism." pbs.twimg.com/media/FUnvMKqVEAArM_T?format=jpg&name=large
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 7, 2022 17:46:00 GMT -8
Commiefornia Baby
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 8, 2022 12:31:49 GMT -8
EDMONTON — There is soft skill all over the place, but the National Hockey League playoffs are a hard, hard place.
So the player who helps get you through an 82-game regular season is a necessary one, but not necessarily one who can help you through the grind that is the NHL playoffs. See Maple Leafs, Toronto.
And as our game moves slowly away from the hard places where it once resided — away from fighting, from intimidation and, to an extent, hitting — that playoff player becomes increasingly rare.
Evander Kane becomes increasingly rare.
“He revamped the top six,” Zach Hyman said of the addition of Kane in January. “Just a massive addition.”
Which areas will Oilers look to improve over offseason?
There are likely 22-25 legit top-line left wingers in the game today. Guys who are no-doubt first-liners on the left side.
But how many come in a six-foot-two, 210-pound package? And in that subset, how many can keep up with Connor McDavid? With hands soft enough to score 35 a season, hard and willing enough to keep the flies off the game’s top player?
Unique? In today’s game, Kane is just this side of a unicorn.
Today, that unicorn is an unrestricted free agent, one who has seduced a hockey city with his prodigal skills, despite a reputation that brought him here under cloudy circumstances.
“I’ll go back to when I was in a similar, but very different situation a few months ago,” began Kane, when asked about his plans for free agency, on Tuesday. “Where I was had the opportunity to pick where I wanted to go. Edmonton was interested in me, and I was interested in them. The way I looked at it was, you’ve got two of the best players in the world, a team that you know wants to win now and is primed to win now.
“I'm happy to say that we had some success doing that. I've been very happy with my time here,” continued Kane, who turns 31 in August. “The fans have been phenomenal. The people in the city have been phenomenal. This has got to be the best organization I've played for. So, I have no complaints and, just like everybody else, I'm curious looking forward to see what happens.”
'He helped our team bigtime' Draisaitl and McDavid on Kane's great fit with Oilers
Ken Holland, the Oilers general manager, told us a series ago that he’d love to re-sign Kane. But there is a salary cap, and what does the leading goal scorer in the NHL playoffs command on the market?
Six million dollars? Seven million? Eight?
“I can sign anybody. But someone's gotta go,” reasoned Holland. “If you love everybody, somebody's not staying.
“Can you keep him? I can keep anybody. But I can't keep ‘em all.”
There are salary cap machinations that would have to take place: trading Tyson Barrie’s $4.5-million cap hit; moving Zack Kassian at $3.2 million; perhaps having to choose between which restricted free agent to sign, Kailer Yamamoto or Jesse Puljujarvi.
Then there is the baggage that has dogged Kane throughout an NHL career spent on the outs with teams in Winnipeg, Buffalo and San Jose, where he was kicked off the island by the Sharks players. San Jose GM Doug Wilson was seduced by Kane once. Now the two sides are in arbitration, as the Sharks seek to void the seven-year deal they signed with Kane, while he wants some or all of the $22.9 million they would have paid him.
Here in Edmonton, however, where Kane and his girlfriend welcomed a baby boy during these playoffs, Kane has been by all accounts a stellar teammate. And, boy, did he help this team win.
“Guys like that are rare,” said Leon Draisaitl. “What did he score? Thirteen goals in the playoffs? By playing hard, but doing it the right way. Those guys are hard to come by. Those are the guys that you can go on runs with, the type of guys that you're going to win with, eventually.
“He was amazing off the ice. He was a great teammate, and on the ice he had a great year.”
Us folks outside the dressing room will have our opinions. But those words come from inside. From a leader on the team, no different than Dustin Byfuglien in Winnipeg or Logan Couture in San Jose.
Draisaitl knows, better than you or I, how valuable Kane is to the Oilers.
So here we are.
We all knew this was coming, didn’t we?
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Post by John96 on Jun 8, 2022 15:20:49 GMT -8
EDMONTON — There is soft skill all over the place, but the National Hockey League playoffs are a hard, hard place. So the player who helps get you through an 82-game regular season is a necessary one, but not necessarily one who can help you through the grind that is the NHL playoffs. See Maple Leafs, Toronto. And as our game moves slowly away from the hard places where it once resided — away from fighting, from intimidation and, to an extent, hitting — that playoff player becomes increasingly rare. Evander Kane becomes increasingly rare. “He revamped the top six,” Zach Hyman said of the addition of Kane in January. “Just a massive addition.” Which areas will Oilers look to improve over offseason? There are likely 22-25 legit top-line left wingers in the game today. Guys who are no-doubt first-liners on the left side. But how many come in a six-foot-two, 210-pound package? And in that subset, how many can keep up with Connor McDavid? With hands soft enough to score 35 a season, hard and willing enough to keep the flies off the game’s top player? Unique? In today’s game, Kane is just this side of a unicorn. Today, that unicorn is an unrestricted free agent, one who has seduced a hockey city with his prodigal skills, despite a reputation that brought him here under cloudy circumstances. “I’ll go back to when I was in a similar, but very different situation a few months ago,” began Kane, when asked about his plans for free agency, on Tuesday. “Where I was had the opportunity to pick where I wanted to go. Edmonton was interested in me, and I was interested in them. The way I looked at it was, you’ve got two of the best players in the world, a team that you know wants to win now and is primed to win now. “I'm happy to say that we had some success doing that. I've been very happy with my time here,” continued Kane, who turns 31 in August. “The fans have been phenomenal. The people in the city have been phenomenal. This has got to be the best organization I've played for. So, I have no complaints and, just like everybody else, I'm curious looking forward to see what happens.” 'He helped our team bigtime' Draisaitl and McDavid on Kane's great fit with Oilers Ken Holland, the Oilers general manager, told us a series ago that he’d love to re-sign Kane. But there is a salary cap, and what does the leading goal scorer in the NHL playoffs command on the market? Six million dollars? Seven million? Eight? “I can sign anybody. But someone's gotta go,” reasoned Holland. “If you love everybody, somebody's not staying. “Can you keep him? I can keep anybody. But I can't keep ‘em all.” There are salary cap machinations that would have to take place: trading Tyson Barrie’s $4.5-million cap hit; moving Zack Kassian at $3.2 million; perhaps having to choose between which restricted free agent to sign, Kailer Yamamoto or Jesse Puljujarvi. Then there is the baggage that has dogged Kane throughout an NHL career spent on the outs with teams in Winnipeg, Buffalo and San Jose, where he was kicked off the island by the Sharks players. San Jose GM Doug Wilson was seduced by Kane once. Now the two sides are in arbitration, as the Sharks seek to void the seven-year deal they signed with Kane, while he wants some or all of the $22.9 million they would have paid him. Here in Edmonton, however, where Kane and his girlfriend welcomed a baby boy during these playoffs, Kane has been by all accounts a stellar teammate. And, boy, did he help this team win. “Guys like that are rare,” said Leon Draisaitl. “What did he score? Thirteen goals in the playoffs? By playing hard, but doing it the right way. Those guys are hard to come by. Those are the guys that you can go on runs with, the type of guys that you're going to win with, eventually. “He was amazing off the ice. He was a great teammate, and on the ice he had a great year.” Us folks outside the dressing room will have our opinions. But those words come from inside. From a leader on the team, no different than Dustin Byfuglien in Winnipeg or Logan Couture in San Jose. Draisaitl knows, better than you or I, how valuable Kane is to the Oilers. So here we are. We all knew this was coming, didn’t we? What Draisaitl probably doesn't know is what Kane did in Winnipeg and San Jose that lead to him going to Buffalo and Edmonton. Which is where all highly valuable, very sought-after, players go.
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 14, 2022 13:10:36 GMT -8
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Post by danvilleshark on Jun 14, 2022 15:33:28 GMT -8
Good move for the knights. Now where does Trotz go? The Peg?
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Post by John96 on Jun 14, 2022 19:27:23 GMT -8
Good move for the knights. Now where does Trotz go? The Peg? Happy they didn’t get Trotz.
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Post by John96 on Jun 18, 2022 15:44:58 GMT -8
See Nick Backstrom underwent hip resurfacing surgery. Same procedure Jovanovski and Kesler went through and it ended their careers.
Hope he recovers well but if not, it’s a shame. Classy player who was criminally underrated.
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Post by danvilleshark on Jun 21, 2022 7:50:17 GMT -8
See Nick Backstrom underwent hip resurfacing surgery. Same procedure Jovanovski and Kesler went through and it ended their careers. Hope he recovers well but if not, it’s a shame. Classy player who was criminally underrated. Yeah he came back to try to play this season but was not at all the same guy. At his age I think he is done. Absolute class act and great player.
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 21, 2022 9:50:54 GMT -8
On this day 25 years ago, the Sharks selected Patrick Marleau with the second overall pick in the NHL Entry Draft.
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 21, 2022 9:59:47 GMT -8
Fuck Jay Woodcroft
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Post by HOOCH2173 on Jun 21, 2022 10:19:39 GMT -8
Fuck Jay Woodcroft Haunting and the stuff Nightmares are Made of!
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Post by Fugazi on Jun 21, 2022 17:24:27 GMT -8
Wash, Rinse, Repeat. I wonder what Joe Pavelski thinks about this move
FRISCO, Texas – Dallas Stars General Manager Jim Nill announced today the hiring of Pete DeBoer as the team’s head coach. DeBoer becomes the 25th head coach in franchise history and the 10th in Dallas Stars history.
“Pete brings a wealth of experience to our dressing room, and we’re thrilled to name him our next head coach,” Nill said. “Every team that he has taken over has not only shown immediate improvement but has been ultra-competitive in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He has taken five teams to the Conference Finals, and two of those to the Stanley Cup Final, in his 14 years as a head coach. His resume displays the high standards he sets and his ability to get his team to play up to that level consistently. We’re excited to welcome Pete and his family to Dallas.”
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Post by sjsharks59 on Jun 21, 2022 17:29:53 GMT -8
Wash, Rinse, Repeat. I wonder what Joe Pavelski thinks about this move FRISCO, Texas – Dallas Stars General Manager Jim Nill announced today the hiring of Pete DeBoer as the team’s head coach. DeBoer becomes the 25th head coach in franchise history and the 10th in Dallas Stars history. “Pete brings a wealth of experience to our dressing room, and we’re thrilled to name him our next head coach,” Nill said. “Every team that he has taken over has not only shown immediate improvement but has been ultra-competitive in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He has taken five teams to the Conference Finals, and two of those to the Stanley Cup Final, in his 14 years as a head coach. His resume displays the high standards he sets and his ability to get his team to play up to that level consistently. We’re excited to welcome Pete and his family to Dallas.” 🤦🤦🤣🤣
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Post by John96 on Jun 22, 2022 5:37:37 GMT -8
Wash, Rinse, Repeat. I wonder what Joe Pavelski thinks about this move FRISCO, Texas – Dallas Stars General Manager Jim Nill announced today the hiring of Pete DeBoer as the team’s head coach. DeBoer becomes the 25th head coach in franchise history and the 10th in Dallas Stars history. “Pete brings a wealth of experience to our dressing room, and we’re thrilled to name him our next head coach,” Nill said. “Every team that he has taken over has not only shown immediate improvement but has been ultra-competitive in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He has taken five teams to the Conference Finals, and two of those to the Stanley Cup Final, in his 14 years as a head coach. His resume displays the high standards he sets and his ability to get his team to play up to that level consistently. We’re excited to welcome Pete and his family to Dallas.” Pavs might be a fan. DeBoer was all about funnelling shots from the point and no forward thrives on that more than Pavs.
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