I tripped over some peanut butter and landed heart first on the Consol ice. Penguins on the air.
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(07.06.17) @peterdianapghpg: Penguins Kris Letang skates before afternoon practice at UPMC Lemieux Sports Center #Penguins #pens #StanleyCupFinal2017 #NSHvsPIT
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Don't forget, Sid's still a Kid
Arpon Basu | The Fourth Period | March 22, 2006
So Sid the Kid's a crybaby, huh? At least that's what Ottawa Senators captain Daniel Alfredsson thinks of Pittsburgh Penguins phenom Sidney Crosby, but he appears not to be alone in that department.
Montreal Canadiens defenseman Mathieu Dandenault said the same thing this week after playing against Crosby's Penguins and Alexander Ovechkin's Washington Capitals in back-to-back games.
Dandenault, after playing against Crosby last Saturday night, essentially reinforced what Alfredsson said recently, that Ovechkin takes his lumps like a man but Crosby complains to the refs every time he receives a perceived cheap shot. Dandenault watched Ovechkin get knocked around early in the Capitals game against the Habs on Monday night, yet Ovechkin never made so much as a gesture to the referees. Instead, Ovechkin bided his time until an opportunity presented itself, and then he ploughed through Canadiens defenseman Craig Rivet while he had his head down concentrating on keeping the puck in the offensive zone. "That's what I like about him," Dandenault told Journal de Montréal reporter Pierre Durcoher after the Capitals game. "Ovechkin isn't afraid to fight back, instead of just complaining to the refs like Sidney Crosby does. I fully agreed with what Daniel Alfredsson said about Crosby. Sidney has to realize that he's not playing in junior anymore. Dives don't work in the NHL." I haven't watched every single one of Crosby's or Ovechkin's games, but I would imagine they get more or less the same treatment from opponents seeing as they are both clearly the best players on their respective teams. The major difference between the two, however, is that Ovechkin is 20-years old and Crosby is only 18. A lot of people may have a tendency to forget that about Crosby, simply because he's been on the hockey radar for such a long time. His first newspaper interview was at the age of seven, and he was profiled in Sports Illustrated at the age of 16. The two-year difference between Crosby and Ovechkin would already be huge in terms of physical development and maturity, however the more important comparison to make is where the two have been playing hockey the past few years. Ovechkin played for Moscow Dynamo of the Russian Superleague for four years before coming to the Capitals, meaning that he began playing with and against men at the ripe age of 16. Over those same four years, Crosby spent one season playing midget-AAA for the Dartmouth Subways, one season at Shattuck St-Mary's prep school in Minnesota, and two seasons of junior hockey with the Rimouski Océanic. To say that Ovechkin was better prepared to play in the NHL this season would be an understatement of epic proportions. He's had to deal with shots from men who were afraid of a kid making them look bad for four years, and the Russian referees handling his games were probably no less inclined to look out for him as their NHL counterparts are. Crosby was also subject to the same kind of treatment from opponents in junior, but he was more likely to get a call from junior and high school refs than he is in the NHL, especially when he berates officials with obscenities after every perceived slight. Those outbursts, in my eyes, are a clear sign that Crosby has some maturing to do, as is the case for most 18-year-olds. But one area where he is mature is with the media, seeing as reporters have followed his every move for over half his life. When told of Dandenault's remarks following Pittsburgh's game against Crosby's boyhood team in Montreal on Saturday, the phenom took the whole thing in stride.
"Guys are going to make their comments, and that's fine," he calmly replied. "I'm not going to get into a war in the media. I'll do it on the ice. I'm not going to talk about other guys. That's not how I operate." That answer proves that off the ice, Crosby is mature beyond his years. His maturity on the ice is another matter, but he has several years to develop that. So when judging Sid the Kid, it's important to remember that he's just that, a kid. It would therefore be wise to cut that kid a little bit of slack.
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gif made at 28000 ft pens @ stars | 4.5.25
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this is porn. to me.
bonus: okay you guys get it


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There’s No Disputing Malkin Can Be a Star
Jeff Z. Klein and Karl-Eric Reif | New York Times | November 12, 2006
Last season the N.H.L. reaped its first real crop of superstars in years: Washington’s exciting Russian, Alexander Ovechkin, and Pittsburgh’s husky Nova Scotian, Sidney Crosby. This season there are more sensational rookies: Slovenia’s Anze Kopitar in Los Angeles, the Polish-born Canadian Wojtek Wolski in Colorado, Alaska’s Matt Carle in San Jose and Ontario’s Jordan Staal in Pittsburgh. All are well worth watching, but first among equals is yet another Pittsburgh talent, Evgeni Malkin, a lanky 20-year-old forward from Magnitogorsk, Russia.
The second selection in the 2004 draft, Malkin postponed his departure for the N.H.L. He remained with his club team in the Russian Superliga, Metallurg Magnitogorsk or Magnitka, as its fans often call it supposedly with the understanding that he would be allowed to play in North America for the 2006-7 season. The situation was complicated when the Russian hockey federation refused to renew an agreement that allowed N.H.L. clubs to sign away players for a relatively low $200,000 transfer fee.
When Pittsburgh tried to sign Malkin last summer, Metallurg demanded something substantially larger than what had been the standard transfer fee. The Penguins argued that they did not have to pay anything, since the agreement with the Russian federation had expired.
What ensued did not quite rise to the cloak-and-dagger level of the Peter Stastny and Alexander Mogilny episodes of the Cold War period, but a bit of foreign intrigue was involved nonetheless. Malkin signed a one-year contract with Metallurg in August reportedly worth $3.45 million but then bolted the team a few days later in Helsinki, Finland, and was spirited off to Los Angeles and then Pittsburgh.
Malkin missed the Penguins’ first four games because of a shoulder injury, but his Oct. 18 introduction to the N.H.L. was a smash in more ways than one. He scored Pittsburgh’s only goal in a 2-1 home loss to the Devils, dazzled with his passes and shattered the glass with an errant slap shot.
He scored goals in each of his next five games, becoming the first N.H.L. player to score in his first six games since the Hall of Famer Joe Malone did it in the league’s inaugural 1917-18 season. The goals have not come by accident; several, like the dipsy-doodle split-the-defense number he scored in a rematch with the Devils on Oct. 24, have been of highlight-reel quality.
Malkin, a center in Russia, made the transition to left wing for his first nine games, playing on Crosby’s line opposite yet another gifted youngster, Colby Armstrong. On Wednesday against Tampa Bay, Malkin moved back to center. He did not do much, but his replacement on Crosby’s line, Nils Ekman, scored three goals in 4 minutes 10 seconds.
Pittsburgh, twice Stanley Cup champions in the early 1990s but a sad-sack club on the brink of bankruptcy in recent years, is reaping the rewards of the high draft picks brought its way by years of losing. Malkin, Crosby, Staal, Armstrong, defenseman Ryan Whitney and goaltender Marc-André Fleury are all among the team’s best players and all are between 18 and 23, boding well for a new victory march of the Penguins in the near future.
There is one potential hitch: Metallurg is suing the Penguins and the N.H.L. in United States federal court over Malkin’s signing.
“They all like to talk about democracy, the American way, and then they shamelessly steal our best players,” Gennady Velichkin, Metallurg’s general director, told Reuters. “He was our gold diamond, our prize possession. He had a contract with us. We were building the whole team around him, and now he is gone.”
Metallurg is seeking an injunction that would prevent Malkin from playing for the Penguins. The hearing is scheduled for Wednesday in federal court in Manhattan.
With Malkin in its lineup last season, Metallurg dominated the Russian Superliga with a 42-5-4 record, including a 25-game unbeaten streak, and was so strong it clinched the regular-season title with a month and a half left on the schedule.
But this season has been a bit of a struggle for the club. Malkin is gone, of course, as are several of the team’s top scorers. Last week, Metallurg was seventh in the 19-team Superliga, with an 11-9-1 record.
Another change from last season: Dave King, the coach, is no longer with the team. King, a former coach of the Columbus Blue Jackets and the Canadian national team, joined Metallurg for 2005-6 and was the first North American to head any Russian club. After Metallurg crashed out of the playoffs with a semifinal loss to Roman Abramovich’s richly financed Avangard Omsk, King returned for the start of this season. But a 3-4-1 start prompted his firing.
“We lost four players to the N.H.L. and others to other Russian clubs,” King said from his home in Scottsdale, Ariz., “All signed away. The problem was that our team had pushed through a leaguewide $11 million salary cap to keep expenses down. But without a system to keep track of payrolls, a lot of clubs ignored the cap. We stuck to it, because it was our manager’s idea.”
King said he enjoyed his stint in Magnitogorsk, a steel city of 415,000 in the southern Urals about 900 miles east of Moscow. “It was built under Stalin in the 1930s and placed well to the east so the Germans could not bomb it,” he said. “Those huge steelworks go 24 hours a day, and the city is covered in coal dust.
“It’s a spartan place, and the steelworkers there really like the team hockey is practically the only thing to do. We had great, raucous fans the atmosphere is like a soccer game, with singing, drumming, flares going off.”
King, who lived with his wife in a modest apartment in Magnitogorsk “each day was fascinating,” he said, “like a new adventure” came away with great respect for Russian players in general.
“They have tremendous skill levels,” he said. “And not just Malkin, who was electrifying. Even the fourth block of players on any team could do amazing things skating and stick-handling. They might not have the desire or the physicality to play in the N.H.L., but they all have the skills. The Russian league is definitely the second best in the world.”
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@kris letang speaks with the media after today’s practice. (11.11.2013)
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important lessons from coach malkin [x]
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Suzie Cool is the Pens' new in-game host, apparently.
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i spy a tyson barrie in a blue groomsmen suit???



via susanna (mikko)
natemac wedding // aug 13, 2025
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ej's stories | 14 Aug 2025 | pool toys
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wedding week hotel

wedding venue
after party


ty ej🦞 (and don't forget, yachting and ej's lobster adventures)
natemac wedding // aug 13, 2025
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Thanks, Ty.
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