Posts Tagged ‘Summer sucks’

Doogie2K
Jun 26th, 2011
12:39PM UTC

The Canadiens Diaspora: Spring 2011 Edition

Tampa sure loves their ex-Habs and ex-Oilers, don't they?

Okay, so this list was supposed to be published after the trade deadline, but that didn’t work out so good. Thus the use of boilerplate text on both posts. Anyway, you know the drill: anyone who was Habs property at some point who played a game in the NHL is on the list with their post-trade deadline team. Note the retirements of Craig Conroy, Robert Lang, Donald Brashear, and Mathieu Schneider; Mark Recchi has since followed. This will also be the last list to use the old Thrashers logo, with that team becoming the Winnipeg Jets II earlier this month.

The companion ex-Oilers post can be found here.

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Doogie2K
Jun 26th, 2011
12:35PM UTC

The Oilers Diaspora: Spring 2011 Edition

Yes, it's late. Just like everything else. Shut up.

Okay, so this list was supposed to be published after the trade deadline, but that didn’t work out so good. Thus the use of boilerplate text on both posts. Anyway, you know the drill: anyone who was Oilers property at some point who played a game in the NHL is on the list with their post-trade deadline team. We’ve already had a couple of deals since the Finals, which will be reflected the next time I post this (probably after the first month of the season). This will also be the last list to use the old Thrashers logo, with that team becoming the Winnipeg Jets II earlier this month.

The companion list of ex-Habs can be found here.

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Doogie2K
Aug 4th, 2010
6:59PM UTC

Hitmen to Play Outdoor Game


Curtis Glencross tells us what he really thinks of signing Raitis Ivanans (Sun Media)

Yes, I know, all the hullabaloo is about the Flames and Habs playing the Heritage Classic on the 20th, complete with Ronald McDonald-inspired jerseys1, but really, the most exciting news of the day for me is that the Hitmen will be following it up with a game against Jordan Eberle’s alma mater, the Regina Pats, the next night. I believe this will be the first outdoor game in WHL history, so I’m incredibly excited that I could be a part of that. I mean, there’s every possibility that the weather could be crappy, because either a) it’s 15 C out and Chinooking or b) it’s -20 C out like it was in Edmonton seven-plus years earlier, and hey, it’s Alberta, so why not have both? But I digress. Outdoor hockey. Not every day you get to be a part of that kind of spectacle or atmosphere. I wonder if the Hitmen will reach back into Calgary’s WHL/WCHL past and play with the sweaters of the Calgary Buffaloes or something like that; goodness knows the Pats have the history to bring to bear for this thing. I also wonder how well-attended it will be, especially by people without the money or interest in going to the NHL event.

Speaking of, what’s even more exciting is that there might be a possibility I could go to both games. I mean, I’m purely speculating here, so don’t go running off saying this is a done deal, but it sure would be nice if there were some sort of package for Hitmen season ticket holders to get good seats to the Monday game and shitty high seats to the Sunday game. Again, I’ll get to be part of a once-in-lifetime event, seeing an outdoor Habs game with my Montreal-born-and-raised mom, and furthermore, I’ll get to laugh when the Habs beat the Clownshoes Flames while non-ironically wearing that Godawful barberpole the Habs put out a couple of years back when the Centennial celebration began. (As an aside, thank God the Habs went conservative and settled for bringing back the late Forum-era numbering as their only “throwback.” I liked some of those designs, but the barberpole across from the McDonald’s jerseys would’ve been too much. Though if you’re going to recall ’24, why not go all out and bring back the globe jersey?)

Regardless of how it turns out, though, this is a very exciting time to be a hockey fan here in Calgary. I’m already anxious for February.

1 – Yes, yes, I know that they’re based on the 1924 Calgary Tigers, who played in the city’s first Stanley Cup Final against the Canadiens. I figured this would happen, and I have a tremendous amount of respect for the Flames for actually reaching that far back into the city’s hockey heritage, which most people probably didn’t even know existed. Note, however, that hockey sweaters used to have a million stripes, whereas now they don’t, because they look awful in new materials with more vibrant dyes and lighting and white ice. So it was with the Habs, so it is with the Flames.

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Doogie2K
Jun 30th, 2010
1:20PM UTC

The Canadiens Diaspora

Back in February, I went through the NHL and found all the ex-Oilers I could, and how they came to and left the team. For a follow-up, I decided to go through the ex-Habs, to see if I could find any sort of similarities or patterns in how they left the team. This list only considers players who played at least one NHL game in 2009-10, and is only up to date as of the end of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

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Doogie2K
Jun 10th, 2010
10:13PM UTC

SNN Predicts: The Results Are In!

Alright, folks, here’s how we finished up:

Doogie Hoop Matt Gerard Result
4-1 4-1 4-2 4-1 4-2
1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 W-L
1 1 0 1 GO
8-7 11-4 7-8 8-7 W-L
36 28 35 36 GO
1 4 4 0 PS

You may notice the extra row at the end. Because Gerard and I perfectly tied, the second tiebreaker had to come out, and I arbitrarily selected perfect series. Not because it gave me second place (that was a happy accident), but because it was the only damned thing I had left that I’d tracked.

That sixth game was an absolute classic. It’s a bit of a shame, in a way, that the final goal was a touch anticlimactic, with the delayed reaction of everyone in the building not named Patrick Kane. Then again, there’s something pure and enjoyable about Kane’s whoop of joy being the only sign that the ‘Hawks had just won the Cup for damned near five seconds. Still, the game itself was entertaining pretty much from start to finish: even when the ‘Hawks tried to sit on their lead in the third, they got a few quality chances, and did more by sound positioning than they did by playing that Godforsaken dump and chase that most teams do when they defend a late lead.

The goaltending was awful, sure (neither ‘keeper had a SV% over .900, and the series was the third-highest scoring Final of all-time), but overall, I can’t complain one bit about the quality of the series. What many in the hockey world –including three of us — expected to be a coronation turned out to be a heck of a series with a number of lead changes, history in the making (Briere’s 12 points, one off Gretzky’s record, and 30 points on the playoffs, besting Brian Propp for the Flyers record), and defining moments, the kind of series that wouldn’t have been possible a few years ago (remember the slogfests of the early aughts?). Plus, Game 6 was apparently the highest-rated NHL game since the mid-70s. It did the unthinkable and outdid the NHL’s dream matchups of the last two years in pretty much every way. It’s too bad the salary cap is going to ravage this Chicago team over the summer: I’d love to see more of this next year.

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