|
Post by danvilleshark on Sept 19, 2020 16:40:32 GMT -8
from Michael Traikos of the National Post, Whoever ends up winning the Stanley Cup, which begins on Saturday between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Dallas Stars, will not have an asterisk attached to their name. Although maybe they should, based on everything they went through and how hard it was to get to this point. Of course the hardest part is still to come: Convincing Canadians to care about a final played between two southern U.S. teams that don’t have a pre-packaged star player to build a marketing campaign around. Whether you live in Canada or the U.S., this series won’t be an easy sell. Hard-core hockey fans will no doubt love this series, which will pit Russia’s Andrei Vasilevskiy against Anton Khudobin, four-time Norris Trophy finalist Victor Hedman against future Norris winner Miro Heiskanen, and the likeable Jon Cooper against the even-more-likeable Rick Bowness. But hard-core hockey fans also probably sat glued to their TV sets watching the six-hour, five-OT marathon between Tampa Bay and Columbus early in the first round. It’s the casual sports fan whose wandering eyes the NHL should be worried about. The sporting landscape has never been this crowded, this competitive. The Toronto Blue Jays are in the midst of a playoff run. Unlike last year, the Toronto Raptors are out of the playoffs. But the NBA western final still has Canada’s Jamal Murray up against LeBron James. The person in the Canadian media that writes this article almost every year has an easy job. Find last year's article and change a few words. I like this series
|
|
|
Post by danvilleshark on Sept 19, 2020 16:41:18 GMT -8
Goodrow and Pavs in the circle Goodrow thrown out
|
|
|
Post by danvilleshark on Sept 19, 2020 16:42:41 GMT -8
Look at all the critical ice time Goodrow gets Coach trust him F U DW!
|
|
|
Post by mk391419 on Sept 19, 2020 17:26:58 GMT -8
The person in the Canadian media that writes this article almost every year has an easy job. Find last year's article and change a few words. I like this series I like most Stanley Cup finals series.
|
|
|
Post by coachjules on Sept 19, 2020 17:38:39 GMT -8
Stars and Lightning are pretty much Gary's worst nightmare of a series. from Michael Traikos of the National Post, Whoever ends up winning the Stanley Cup, which begins on Saturday between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Dallas Stars, will not have an asterisk attached to their name. Although maybe they should, based on everything they went through and how hard it was to get to this point. Of course the hardest part is still to come: Convincing Canadians to care about a final played between two southern U.S. teams that don’t have a pre-packaged star player to build a marketing campaign around. Whether you live in Canada or the U.S., this series won’t be an easy sell. Hard-core hockey fans will no doubt love this series, which will pit Russia’s Andrei Vasilevskiy against Anton Khudobin, four-time Norris Trophy finalist Victor Hedman against future Norris winner Miro Heiskanen, and the likeable Jon Cooper against the even-more-likeable Rick Bowness. But hard-core hockey fans also probably sat glued to their TV sets watching the six-hour, five-OT marathon between Tampa Bay and Columbus early in the first round. It’s the casual sports fan whose wandering eyes the NHL should be worried about. The sporting landscape has never been this crowded, this competitive. The Toronto Blue Jays are in the midst of a playoff run. Unlike last year, the Toronto Raptors are out of the playoffs. But the NBA western final still has Canada’s Jamal Murray up against LeBron James. Well maybe the league needs to be worried about the interest of "casual sports fans" but regardless of where I might fall on the serious spectrum, they lost me when the chose to call me an irredeemable racist. I hope Pavelski wins this year but beyond that, no longer care. I haven't watched a game since they condoned their little "protest" and likely won't be back.
|
|
|
Post by mk391419 on Sept 19, 2020 17:58:53 GMT -8
That was a good game.
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 19, 2020 18:14:29 GMT -8
from Michael Traikos of the National Post, Whoever ends up winning the Stanley Cup, which begins on Saturday between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Dallas Stars, will not have an asterisk attached to their name. Although maybe they should, based on everything they went through and how hard it was to get to this point. Of course the hardest part is still to come: Convincing Canadians to care about a final played between two southern U.S. teams that don’t have a pre-packaged star player to build a marketing campaign around. Whether you live in Canada or the U.S., this series won’t be an easy sell. Hard-core hockey fans will no doubt love this series, which will pit Russia’s Andrei Vasilevskiy against Anton Khudobin, four-time Norris Trophy finalist Victor Hedman against future Norris winner Miro Heiskanen, and the likeable Jon Cooper against the even-more-likeable Rick Bowness. But hard-core hockey fans also probably sat glued to their TV sets watching the six-hour, five-OT marathon between Tampa Bay and Columbus early in the first round. It’s the casual sports fan whose wandering eyes the NHL should be worried about. The sporting landscape has never been this crowded, this competitive. The Toronto Blue Jays are in the midst of a playoff run. Unlike last year, the Toronto Raptors are out of the playoffs. But the NBA western final still has Canada’s Jamal Murray up against LeBron James. Well maybe the league needs to be worried about the interest of "casual sports fans" but regardless of where I might fall on the serious spectrum, they lost me when the chose to call me an irredeemable racist. I hope Pavelski wins this year but beyond that, no longer care. I haven't watched a game since they condoned their little "protest" and likely won't be back. Don't leave the blog because of those idiots. Stick around, we're fun people. Screw the Hockey
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 19, 2020 21:58:40 GMT -8
Calgary, Carolina, Chicago, Edmonton and San Jose are among the teams who have asked about Darcy Kuemper.
|
|
|
Post by John96 on Sept 20, 2020 8:05:26 GMT -8
from Michael Traikos of the National Post, Whoever ends up winning the Stanley Cup, which begins on Saturday between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Dallas Stars, will not have an asterisk attached to their name. Although maybe they should, based on everything they went through and how hard it was to get to this point. Of course the hardest part is still to come: Convincing Canadians to care about a final played between two southern U.S. teams that don’t have a pre-packaged star player to build a marketing campaign around. Whether you live in Canada or the U.S., this series won’t be an easy sell. Hard-core hockey fans will no doubt love this series, which will pit Russia’s Andrei Vasilevskiy against Anton Khudobin, four-time Norris Trophy finalist Victor Hedman against future Norris winner Miro Heiskanen, and the likeable Jon Cooper against the even-more-likeable Rick Bowness. But hard-core hockey fans also probably sat glued to their TV sets watching the six-hour, five-OT marathon between Tampa Bay and Columbus early in the first round. It’s the casual sports fan whose wandering eyes the NHL should be worried about. The sporting landscape has never been this crowded, this competitive. The Toronto Blue Jays are in the midst of a playoff run. Unlike last year, the Toronto Raptors are out of the playoffs. But the NBA western final still has Canada’s Jamal Murray up against LeBron James. The person in the Canadian media that writes this article almost every year has an easy job. Find last year's article and change a few words. It is so tired hearing that it's been 10000 years since a Canadian team was in the finals. Don't know anyone who cares. And maybe it wouldn't be like that if Canadian teams didn't feel compelled to mismanage their teams. And maybe the Canadian fanbase has something to do with that.
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 20, 2020 8:44:02 GMT -8
The person in the Canadian media that writes this article almost every year has an easy job. Find last year's article and change a few words. It is so tired hearing that it's been 10000 years since a Canadian team was in the finals. Don't know anyone who cares. And maybe it wouldn't be like that if Canadian teams didn't feel compelled to mismanage their teams. And maybe the Canadian fanbase has something to do with that. Hello Toronto
|
|
|
Post by coachjules on Sept 20, 2020 10:59:28 GMT -8
Well maybe the league needs to be worried about the interest of "casual sports fans" but regardless of where I might fall on the serious spectrum, they lost me when the chose to call me an irredeemable racist. I hope Pavelski wins this year but beyond that, no longer care. I haven't watched a game since they condoned their little "protest" and likely won't be back. Don't leave the blog because of those idiots. Stick around, we're fun people. Screw the Hockey Fun people indeed! the banter here is definitely worth attendance.
|
|
|
Post by danvilleshark on Sept 20, 2020 15:15:48 GMT -8
from Michael Traikos of the National Post, Whoever ends up winning the Stanley Cup, which begins on Saturday between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Dallas Stars, will not have an asterisk attached to their name. Although maybe they should, based on everything they went through and how hard it was to get to this point. Of course the hardest part is still to come: Convincing Canadians to care about a final played between two southern U.S. teams that don’t have a pre-packaged star player to build a marketing campaign around. Whether you live in Canada or the U.S., this series won’t be an easy sell. Hard-core hockey fans will no doubt love this series, which will pit Russia’s Andrei Vasilevskiy against Anton Khudobin, four-time Norris Trophy finalist Victor Hedman against future Norris winner Miro Heiskanen, and the likeable Jon Cooper against the even-more-likeable Rick Bowness. But hard-core hockey fans also probably sat glued to their TV sets watching the six-hour, five-OT marathon between Tampa Bay and Columbus early in the first round. It’s the casual sports fan whose wandering eyes the NHL should be worried about. The sporting landscape has never been this crowded, this competitive. The Toronto Blue Jays are in the midst of a playoff run. Unlike last year, the Toronto Raptors are out of the playoffs. But the NBA western final still has Canada’s Jamal Murray up against LeBron James. Well maybe the league needs to be worried about the interest of "casual sports fans" but regardless of where I might fall on the serious spectrum, they lost me when the chose to call me an irredeemable racist. I hope Pavelski wins this year but beyond that, no longer care. I haven't watched a game since they condoned their little "protest" and likely won't be back. I am now looking forward to the next time DW calls me
|
|
|
Post by coachjules on Sept 20, 2020 17:20:54 GMT -8
Well maybe the league needs to be worried about the interest of "casual sports fans" but regardless of where I might fall on the serious spectrum, they lost me when the chose to call me an irredeemable racist. I hope Pavelski wins this year but beyond that, no longer care. I haven't watched a game since they condoned their little "protest" and likely won't be back. I am now looking forward to the next time DW calls me Tell him I said hey
|
|
|
Post by danvilleshark on Sept 21, 2020 8:02:52 GMT -8
The Sharks make the news!
The Sharks haven't played an NHL game since March 11, and they might have to wait a little bit longer before they play another regular-season contest.
The NHL tentatively had been targeting Dec. 1 for the start of the 2020-21 season, but commissioner Gary Bettman indicated Saturday that the league could delay the start of the season to later in December or even January.
If the season doesn't start until early January, the Sharks would go almost nine months without playing a meaningful game. The good news is that even if the NHL delays the start of next season, they don't plan to reduce the length of the campaign.
"I anticipate playing a full season next season, 82 games, full playoffs," Bettman told reporters during his annual press conference before the start of the Stanley Cup Final (H/T NHL.com). "How and when we do that is something that we don't all have enough information to make any decisions, and anything would just be sheer speculation.
"Our goal is to get back to as greatest sense of normalcy as possible under whatever circumstances are presented."
The league still has to figure out where the U.S. and Canada stand regarding the coronavirus pandemic. Can teams travel between the two countries? If they play games in home arenas, will it be safe for fans to attend?
As for the Sharks, this is a crucial offseason for general manager Doug Wilson and his front office.
San Jose entered the 2019-20 season with expectations of making a deep playoff run, but shockingly finished with the worst record in the Western Conference (29-36-5; 63 points). Now, it's up to Wilson to figure out how to get the Sharks back on track and back into contention for the Stanley Cup. They are projected to have just over $14 million in salary cap space, but Joe Thornton, Melker Karlsson, Stefan Noesen and Aaron Dell are unrestricted free agents. Kevin Labanc and Antti Suomela are the notable restricted free agents.
The Sharks must decide who they want to retain, and who to move on from and replace.
For now, though, the Sharks can watch former captain Joe Pavelski and former center Barclay Goodrow go at it in the Stanley Cup Final. Once one of them raises the Cup, the Sharks can turn their attention to the offseason and get ready for the start of next season, whenever that might be.
|
|
|
Post by HOOCH2173 on Sept 21, 2020 8:56:10 GMT -8
FIRE EVERYONE!!!!!
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 21, 2020 8:59:26 GMT -8
The Sharks make the news! The Sharks haven't played an NHL game since March 11, and they might have to wait a little bit longer before they play another regular-season contest. The NHL tentatively had been targeting Dec. 1 for the start of the 2020-21 season, but commissioner Gary Bettman indicated Saturday that the league could delay the start of the season to later in December or even January. If the season doesn't start until early January, the Sharks would go almost nine months without playing a meaningful game. The good news is that even if the NHL delays the start of next season, they don't plan to reduce the length of the campaign. "I anticipate playing a full season next season, 82 games, full playoffs," Bettman told reporters during his annual press conference before the start of the Stanley Cup Final (H/T NHL.com). "How and when we do that is something that we don't all have enough information to make any decisions, and anything would just be sheer speculation. "Our goal is to get back to as greatest sense of normalcy as possible under whatever circumstances are presented." The league still has to figure out where the U.S. and Canada stand regarding the coronavirus pandemic. Can teams travel between the two countries? If they play games in home arenas, will it be safe for fans to attend? As for the Sharks, this is a crucial offseason for general manager Doug Wilson and his front office. San Jose entered the 2019-20 season with expectations of making a deep playoff run, but shockingly finished with the worst record in the Western Conference (29-36-5; 63 points). Now, it's up to Wilson to figure out how to get the Sharks back on track and back into contention for the Stanley Cup. They are projected to have just over $14 million in salary cap space, but Joe Thornton, Melker Karlsson, Stefan Noesen and Aaron Dell are unrestricted free agents. Kevin Labanc and Antti Suomela are the notable restricted free agents. The Sharks must decide who they want to retain, and who to move on from and replace. For now, though, the Sharks can watch former captain Joe Pavelski and former center Barclay Goodrow go at it in the Stanley Cup Final. Once one of them raises the Cup, the Sharks can turn their attention to the offseason and get ready for the start of next season, whenever that might be. They're stuck in cap hell with a bunch of old guys. Tell me something new, like Doug Wilson just got fired
|
|
|
Post by John96 on Sept 21, 2020 9:29:48 GMT -8
The Sharks make the news! The Sharks haven't played an NHL game since March 11, and they might have to wait a little bit longer before they play another regular-season contest. The NHL tentatively had been targeting Dec. 1 for the start of the 2020-21 season, but commissioner Gary Bettman indicated Saturday that the league could delay the start of the season to later in December or even January. If the season doesn't start until early January, the Sharks would go almost nine months without playing a meaningful game. The good news is that even if the NHL delays the start of next season, they don't plan to reduce the length of the campaign. "I anticipate playing a full season next season, 82 games, full playoffs," Bettman told reporters during his annual press conference before the start of the Stanley Cup Final (H/T NHL.com). "How and when we do that is something that we don't all have enough information to make any decisions, and anything would just be sheer speculation. "Our goal is to get back to as greatest sense of normalcy as possible under whatever circumstances are presented." The league still has to figure out where the U.S. and Canada stand regarding the coronavirus pandemic. Can teams travel between the two countries? If they play games in home arenas, will it be safe for fans to attend? As for the Sharks, this is a crucial offseason for general manager Doug Wilson and his front office. San Jose entered the 2019-20 season with expectations of making a deep playoff run, but shockingly finished with the worst record in the Western Conference (29-36-5; 63 points). Now, it's up to Wilson to figure out how to get the Sharks back on track and back into contention for the Stanley Cup. They are projected to have just over $14 million in salary cap space, but Joe Thornton, Melker Karlsson, Stefan Noesen and Aaron Dell are unrestricted free agents. Kevin Labanc and Antti Suomela are the notable restricted free agents. The Sharks must decide who they want to retain, and who to move on from and replace. For now, though, the Sharks can watch former captain Joe Pavelski and former center Barclay Goodrow go at it in the Stanley Cup Final. Once one of them raises the Cup, the Sharks can turn their attention to the offseason and get ready for the start of next season, whenever that might be. 14M isn’t a small amount of cap space and of the free agents only Jumbo and Labanc are worth even considering resigning, and neither will cost much.
|
|
|
Post by jackalope on Sept 21, 2020 14:39:21 GMT -8
The Sharks make the news! The Sharks haven't played an NHL game since March 11, and they might have to wait a little bit longer before they play another regular-season contest. The NHL tentatively had been targeting Dec. 1 for the start of the 2020-21 season, but commissioner Gary Bettman indicated Saturday that the league could delay the start of the season to later in December or even January. If the season doesn't start until early January, the Sharks would go almost nine months without playing a meaningful game. The good news is that even if the NHL delays the start of next season, they don't plan to reduce the length of the campaign. "I anticipate playing a full season next season, 82 games, full playoffs," Bettman told reporters during his annual press conference before the start of the Stanley Cup Final (H/T NHL.com). "How and when we do that is something that we don't all have enough information to make any decisions, and anything would just be sheer speculation. "Our goal is to get back to as greatest sense of normalcy as possible under whatever circumstances are presented." The league still has to figure out where the U.S. and Canada stand regarding the coronavirus pandemic. Can teams travel between the two countries? If they play games in home arenas, will it be safe for fans to attend? As for the Sharks, this is a crucial offseason for general manager Doug Wilson and his front office. San Jose entered the 2019-20 season with expectations of making a deep playoff run, but shockingly finished with the worst record in the Western Conference (29-36-5; 63 points). Now, it's up to Wilson to figure out how to get the Sharks back on track and back into contention for the Stanley Cup. They are projected to have just over $14 million in salary cap space, but Joe Thornton, Melker Karlsson, Stefan Noesen and Aaron Dell are unrestricted free agents. Kevin Labanc and Antti Suomela are the notable restricted free agents. The Sharks must decide who they want to retain, and who to move on from and replace. For now, though, the Sharks can watch former captain Joe Pavelski and former center Barclay Goodrow go at it in the Stanley Cup Final. Once one of them raises the Cup, the Sharks can turn their attention to the offseason and get ready for the start of next season, whenever that might be. 14M isn’t a small amount of cap space and of the free agents only Jumbo and Labanc are worth even considering resigning, and neither will cost much. I think this is viable especially since its a "win now" mentality. I'd like to see Noesen come back (if he even wants to). Hell if patty, jumbo and labanc take somewhere around the league min, it would definitely help the middle of the roster that is extremely week. That became evident when Logan and Hertle got injured and no one was left to step up to the top lines. Except patty of course but realistically expecting patty to play on the top line for an extended period is no Buenos. So that does leave some cash left to do something with, and the goalie situation is interesting if Dell doesn't re-sign then the new kid might be ready to step up? On a side note I do think there is going to be an odd man out situation on Defense and question is will it be Pickles or EK65 (granted either of them allow themselves to be moved).
|
|
|
Post by John96 on Sept 21, 2020 15:55:10 GMT -8
14M isn’t a small amount of cap space and of the free agents only Jumbo and Labanc are worth even considering resigning, and neither will cost much. I think this is viable especially since its a "win now" mentality. I'd like to see Noesen come back (if he even wants to). Hell if patty, jumbo and labanc take somewhere around the league min, it would definitely help the middle of the roster that is extremely week. That became evident when Logan and Hertle got injured and no one was left to step up to the top lines. Except patty of course but realistically expecting patty to play on the top line for an extended period is no Buenos. So that does leave some cash left to do something with, and the goalie situation is interesting if Dell doesn't re-sign then the new kid might be ready to step up? On a side note I do think there is going to be an odd man out situation on Defense and question is will it be Pickles or EK65 (granted either of them allow themselves to be moved). Pretty much with you. Noesen played well but he was also waived and picked up for nothing after starting the year in the minors. He was playing for a contract and brought some juice to a team that was dying a slow death. He's a fourth line grinder. Fine to bring him back at the minimum. Jumbo and Patty could come back but it needs to be for league minimum and as fourth liners who aren't taking jobs away. Plus it needs to fit with whoever else they get for the fourth line and maybe that's not Noesen. They really need to figure what they have/want from True, Kellman, Gambrell, and Gregor. None seemed to have anything more than average third line skill at best and none looked like the have any kind of specialty to put them over the top. Point being that they don't need those four guys in the same lineup at full health. I think it makes most sense to look into moving Vlasic and that may only be just because nobody is going to give you good value for Karlsson at this point. Goalie is the biggest question mark. Doubtful they bring back Dell. They need someone who can push/replace Jones.
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 21, 2020 17:17:37 GMT -8
I think this is viable especially since its a "win now" mentality. I'd like to see Noesen come back (if he even wants to). Hell if patty, jumbo and labanc take somewhere around the league min, it would definitely help the middle of the roster that is extremely week. That became evident when Logan and Hertle got injured and no one was left to step up to the top lines. Except patty of course but realistically expecting patty to play on the top line for an extended period is no Buenos. So that does leave some cash left to do something with, and the goalie situation is interesting if Dell doesn't re-sign then the new kid might be ready to step up? On a side note I do think there is going to be an odd man out situation on Defense and question is will it be Pickles or EK65 (granted either of them allow themselves to be moved). Pretty much with you. Noesen played well but he was also waived and picked up for nothing after starting the year in the minors. He was playing for a contract and brought some juice to a team that was dying a slow death. He's a fourth line grinder. Fine to bring him back at the minimum. Jumbo and Patty could come back but it needs to be for league minimum and as fourth liners who aren't taking jobs away. Plus it needs to fit with whoever else they get for the fourth line and maybe that's not Noesen. They really need to figure what they have/want from True, Kellman, Gambrell, and Gregor. None seemed to have anything more than average third line skill at best and none looked like the have any kind of specialty to put them over the top. Point being that they don't need those four guys in the same lineup at full health. I think it makes most sense to look into moving Vlasic and that may only be just because nobody is going to give you good value for Karlsson at this point. Goalie is the biggest question mark. Doubtful they bring back Dell. They need someone who can push/replace Jones. It's going to be Lerner or Fluery in Vegas so one of them are gonna hit the market. Personally if Lerner was available that's the guy I would want to push Jones.
|
|
|
Post by jackalope on Sept 21, 2020 17:42:46 GMT -8
Pretty much with you. Noesen played well but he was also waived and picked up for nothing after starting the year in the minors. He was playing for a contract and brought some juice to a team that was dying a slow death. He's a fourth line grinder. Fine to bring him back at the minimum. Jumbo and Patty could come back but it needs to be for league minimum and as fourth liners who aren't taking jobs away. Plus it needs to fit with whoever else they get for the fourth line and maybe that's not Noesen. They really need to figure what they have/want from True, Kellman, Gambrell, and Gregor. None seemed to have anything more than average third line skill at best and none looked like the have any kind of specialty to put them over the top. Point being that they don't need those four guys in the same lineup at full health. I think it makes most sense to look into moving Vlasic and that may only be just because nobody is going to give you good value for Karlsson at this point. Goalie is the biggest question mark. Doubtful they bring back Dell. They need someone who can push/replace Jones. It's going to be Lerner or Fluery in Vegas so one of them are gonna hit the market. Personally if Lerner was available that's the guy I would want to push Jones. Same here. Although the rumors I read is Vegas and Lehner agreed verbally to a contract back in June. Flower would be a good fit if the team was committing to a full rebuild (expectations would be low and he would provide decent numbers but probably unable to provide the support needed to win a cup). I hate to say it but, (at this point anyway) this next season is fully dependent on the rebound(s) of Jones and Karl provided either are not moved. I really wish the team could win the cup so they can go into full rebuild/Jumbo, patty can retire and get some high draft picks developed. But obviously DW/Hasso are not at that point unless the cup is won first.
|
|
|
Post by Getzlaffedat on Sept 21, 2020 18:58:59 GMT -8
Goodie in the circle against Pavs last minute of the game. Wins. Misses empty net in the zone. Very Goodrow
|
|
|
Post by oaklandshark on Sept 21, 2020 19:02:47 GMT -8
Great game..go lightning
|
|
|
Post by John96 on Sept 22, 2020 7:15:15 GMT -8
Someone actually voted Tristan Jarry for the Hart.
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 22, 2020 7:38:28 GMT -8
Someone actually voted Tristan Jarry for the Hart. Must have been a blogger
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 22, 2020 9:05:31 GMT -8
|
|
|
Post by HOOCH2173 on Sept 22, 2020 9:39:37 GMT -8
Saw Sharks Breaking news and low and behold my excitement dwindled... <img src="//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/bbcode/twitter-preview.png" tweet_url=" BREAKING NEWS- Bob Boughner has been named #SJSharks head coach. — SiriusXM NHL Network Radio (@siriusxmnhl) September 22, 2020
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>" alt="Twitter Placeholder">
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 22, 2020 9:52:57 GMT -8
|
|
|
Post by HOOCH2173 on Sept 22, 2020 9:54:34 GMT -8
Dead last when March 2020 rolled around, but sure let's make him the head coach! Come on.
|
|
|
Post by Fugazi on Sept 22, 2020 9:56:57 GMT -8
Dead last when March 2020 rolled around, but sure let's make him the head coach! Come on. Wash, Rinse, Repeat
|
|