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#Brian Pothier
atlanticcanada · 2 years
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Enfield, N.S., dancer in final stages of Michael Bublé dance competition
Eight-year-old Brooklyn Pothier is just as lively as her dance moves.
“It’s just my destiny [to dance],” Brooklyn said. “I love to dance so much!”
Her father, Brian Pothier, says dance is a passion she’s been drawn to since the tender age of two.
“We first noticed that she was jumping around and dancing on her own, just with the music that we had on,” Brian said. “Then when she got older, we realized there might actually be something to this.”
Now others are taking note of the Enfield, N.S., dancer’s talent.
Brooklyn is in the final stages of a North American-wide dance competition hosted by Michael Bublé.
“He’s my favourite singer now,” said Brooklyn. “I like love him now!”
The contest, which was launched in September, is in anticipation of Michael Bublé Week on “Dancing With The Stars” later this month.
Contestants were asked to submit a dance video to Bublé’s song, “Higher,” which Brooklyn choreographed on her own with her mom’s assistance.
Brooklyn’s six-year-old brother, Emmett, who has no formal dance training, also stepped in to help with a supporting dance role in the video.
“Our little guy is quite shy. so to see him supporting her in something she really wanted to do definitely made us proud of both of them,” Brian said.
Brooklyn in currently in the top 25 of the competition, but needs votes from the public to secure a spot in the top 10.
“Every person I see is voting for me and I just feel very thankful that they’re voting for me,” Brooklyn said.
Her family recently had the chance to see Bublé in concert in Halifax where the Canadian crooner made a lasting impression – autographing her sign and leaving behind a souvenir of sorts.
“He threw us one of his sweaty towels,” said Brooklyn.
The winner of the competition will get a trip to Los Angeles for four, including tickets to the “Dancing With the Stars” finale on Nov. 21, tickets to Disneyland, a one-on-one FaceTime with Bublé, as well as a private dance lesson with famous choreographer Derek Hough.
However, Brooklyn says the true prize would be making her family proud.
“We’re probably going to be so happy,” Brooklyn said. “My mom is going to cry in happy tears!”
Voting for the top 10 ends Tuesday at midnight.
To vote for Brooklyn and Emmett, visit the competition's website.
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/VCjB1cN
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the-firebird69 · 2 years
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So I saw some threatened my son-in-law and they did it over and over and over and they're holding him that apartment complex which was pretty big by the way but they started out by waking them up and tell him to get out and then they after four or five times they said we wanted to lay down again with knives in hand so he's sitting there watching them with knives in hand and they told him he's in Worcester and we use knives and to lay over there and stay there one of them said we're going to call the cops and he said what for said your attitude I said call the cops then and they wouldn't so those watching him and he remembers it a little. And they're kind of sleeping and they saw him is going what are you doing I need something to eat I'm starving and drank all night I'm going to puke so go puke in the restroom he said okay so he's looking around I need some water and he's got the water running and he turned on the stove shut the water off and left out the door and it was one of those stores that locked from the inside closed it really quietly and left ran outside saw a rock put in front of the door and drove away down the hill very quietly he's using power he said you can see it too slowly they fell asleep from the gas they woke up right before it blew up cuz he won't come out they all died the witnessed it on film if you want to ask me about it I won't tell you about it this kid's been through hell they're threatening his family meaning Brian Kathy Ali mom and dad and others and friends cuz he knew some of that his friends and they're threatening him with knives to stay there and kidnapped him and for some reason he felt like he had to kill them not sure why kind of makes sense to some people not necessarily to me because it happens all the time but what he was saying was I'm going to do this because I need to be wanted by the police because they are harassing me they were harassing him at that point and it really caused a problem for them and it was a decent idea cuz it helped us a lot he's doing it all the time now and you guys are stooges and thumbs and still doesn't do anything he getting killed worse and I hear what's going on Fargo is happening is associated with cerebus now The sopranos will begin and Tony soprano looks like me a little bit so starting to figure it out the guys an idiot is Tommy f is going to come up here and expend what he's got left and some people like my friend here thinks that the computer has some involvement in his bunker enough to be a problem I'll send out 20% and the rest of it follows it's true too it's a nightmare trying to get through the day so I wish you the best and welcome home Steven seagal and my friend says son-in-law and he says the pointer is if you want to have fun or a moment alone or enjoy something go ahead and do so and you have to shut him out somehow you're only last for a few seconds but it's enough sometimes the last day it's a lot worse than when you went away you're trying not to do that but you're telling them there he is Steven seagal then you're trying to get me out really I was trying to get you out because they tried to commit kidnap me there something funny and they're arguing over there and the idiots here the retards think that that's your captured by and I can tell him it's not it's foreigners and I think they actually do escape but it is at Argo so it doesn't make sense for Argo to start in Fargo to end he thinks that Obama and sigourney make it out later because of where they are and because we can't figure out who it is Obama doesn't sound like Obama at all or act like him unless he's the white guy acts a little like him but not really and sigourney acts like a mild Susan pothier she acts appropriately but women can do that that's all they do is copy they're pretty good at it but that black guy sucks and let's hope it's not Obama
Stephen Segal
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thornescratch · 4 years
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(Okay I usually don’t repost stuff that’s behind a paywall too often, but this is too good not to share. Tarik has done a stellar job taking over at the Athletic; I highly recommend him; he’s worth the subscription.)
From wearing an American flag patterned Speedo on South Beach to scoring four goals with a couple dozen stitches in his leg to subjecting teammates to techno blasted at ear-splitting volume levels in his car, the tales from Alex Ovechkin’s first few seasons in NHL are the stuff of legend inside the Capitals’ headquarters.
In recent days, as Ovechkin authored the hottest goal-scoring stretch of his career in chasing another historic milestone – he is two goals shy of 700 for his career – The Athletic talked to more than a dozen of his teammates throughout the years, as well as members of the Capitals’ staff. The question was a simple one: Tell us your favorite early(ish) Ovi story.
Some had to think long and hard. Others began answering before the question was posed. A few refused to share because, well, it was a little too juicy for public consumption.
But more than enough did tell their Ovi story. And they’re a hoot.
Former Capitals forward Brian Willsie, Ovechkin’s first NHL roommate on the road: One thing we’d often do is we’d dine together or with the group, and we’d come back to the room and we’d order room service dessert. At the start, Alex’s English was coming but it was coming slowly. So I would do the ordering, whether it was fruit, ice cream or something of the sort. But I was telling him the whole time, “You’ve got to start doing this. I’m not going to be your roommate forever.” So finally, one of the nights we got back and he really wanted ice cream. I said, “Nope, I’m not ordering. You got to do it.” It was almost like a father-son thing. I said, “It’s your time, you got to do it.” He was so mad. We just sat there watching TV. He had his arms crossed. It was a staring contest. I told him again, “If you want ice cream, you have to do it.” He was so angry. Eventually, he just jumped out of bed and said, “OK, I do it. What do I say?” So he went over to the desk and ordered ice cream with chocolate sauce. I said, “Order two. Don’t leave me out.” He was super nervous. But he got it all out. He wasn’t confident in his English, but it was better than he thought it was.
Former Capitals defenseman Brian Pothier: We landed in Fort Lauderdale. We hadn’t been south in a while and it was wintertime. Ovi and (Alexander) Semin were like, “Let’s do it. Let’s get in the water.” They changed, ran down to the beach and did this like wild sprint into the water. It was reckless, and it was pretty cold. Then all of a sudden they come flying out of the water screaming because they were getting stung by jellyfish. That was probably 2006 or 2007, so his second or third year. They were fine. They were little jellyfish, but there were a lot of them. They had little marks on them. It wasn’t like they were mutilated, but they had little stings on them. It was pretty funny.
Former Capitals forward Matt Bradley: The people at the hotel were like, “Hey, you can’t go in the water, there’s jellyfish.” We didn’t have swimsuits. I’m pretty sure they went in their underwear. They were excited. It was like they had never seen the ocean. It wasn’t even warm. They just wanted to go in the ocean. I’m 90-percent sure they just had their underwear on.
Former Capitals captain and linemate Chris Clark: He came in the next day and had that big welt. It was all red. The welt is how we found out. I think he ran right through the jellyfish warning signs that were everywhere. I don’t know if he didn’t believe the signs or if he didn’t read them. The fact that there wasn’t anyone in the water should have been a warning to them, too.
Former Capitals forward Brooks Laich: I think he was named captain mid-year one year. Anyway, the first day of training camp the next year we kept saying, “We can’t wait for captain’s dinner this year because Ovi is buying.” Captain’s dinner is at the start of every year; the captain and the two assistants take the entire team out for dinner before the first road game. The captains take everyone out and pay for the entire meal. It’s a gesture to the guys from the leadership group. “We’re like, oh, we can’t wait! Ovi, you’re going to be buying captains’ dinner and we’re already starting to plan it.” He’s like, “Captain’s meal, what’s that?” We couldn’t believe that he didn’t know from the previous three years that he’d been bought dinner by the captains. We’re like, “You gotta take the whole team out for dinner.” And he’s like, “Okay. Sushi Rock, right after practice.” And we’re like, “Whaaaat?” He’s like, “Yeah, we do it today.” Okay. This was Day One of training camp. We tell everyone on the training camp roster that Ovi is buying lunch at Sushi Rock. So 63 guys go to the Sushi Rock for lunch on Day One of training camp – all on Ovi’s credit card. Then we make him buy captain’s dinner again once the team is settled a couple of weeks later. I think he got pissed when we told him he had to do it again. He was like, “I already did it.” We were like, “No, no. This is for the team now.”
Sushi for 63 guys? That’s like at least five, six grand. I love that story because it just encompasses Al. What a fantastic teammate. He’s just like, “Okay, let’s do it today.” And then buys lunch for everybody.
Brooks Laich: It was early on in our career. It might have been our first year, in fact. He was around like the 35, 40 goal mark. He’s established. It’s the second half of the season, and he’s cruising. We get home from a trip. We just got shit-kicked in Florida. We got beat up by Tampa. This is when we flew out of BWI and we had to get on the bus to get shuttled over to our cars. We get to that bus and Ovi gets on the phone with one of our trainers or one of the (equipment vendors). And he’s yelling. The whole bus is quiet. It’s dark. It’s like 1:30 in the morning. And he’s yelling, “These fucking sticks are shit! Call the fucking fabric and tell them to make better sticks!” He called the factory “the fabric.” He thought the word for factory was fabric. Everybody on the bus is just dying.
Former Capitals head athletic trainer Greg Smith: We were down in Miami on our day off. The kid decides to go out on the beach. So he goes out and buys like a European bathing suit, like a bikini, a Speedo. It was an American flag. It was hilarious. It was a Speedo! We’re like, “Ovi, you can’t wear that.” He’s like, “Why? Because of American flag?” We’re like, “No, because it’s a fucking Speedo and your junk is hanging out.” But he thought it was because of the American flag. I have a picture on my phone, of Ovi, in an American flag Speedo, on South Beach. So, of course, we posted it up all over the locker room.
Chris Clark: Half the time it was just the stuff that he wore. He’d come in and I’d be like, “What are you wearing?” He’d say, “What? It’s Dolce.” I’d say, “I don’t care how much it costs or who makes it. It might be the ugliest thing I’ve ever seen.” He had this one pair of pants, that were like jeans on the top but sweatpants in the legs. He was so proud of them. He thought they were the best thing ever.
Former Capitals forward and linemate Mike Knuble: Well, he used to wear these pants that were basically Daisy Dukes with cotton sweatpants attached for legs. We would always point and scratch our heads. One day someone says to Ovi, “Those pants are terrible. What the hell are they? Do you go to the club or go to work out? You have both covered, and we know you don’t work out!” He turns and smiles and says, “Dolce and Gabbana” and just keeps strutting away. We yell back, “They’re ugly as hell.” Now we are interested and decide to look them up. They were like $800 or something like that. Needless to say, we were shocked. We then coined the term “hobo-chic” to describe his really expensive clothes that look like they were from a dumpster. But we loved to give it to him about his attire.
We are eating pregame one day at (then Kettler Capitals Iceplex) and he pops into the room in a freebie NHL entry draft t-shirt from Carolina. It had sort of a Hurricanes logo on it. This is 5-6 years after he was drafted and has been making $9.5 million (a season) for three years. They probably gave him a pre-draft goody bag with a bunch of free crap. He still had the t-shirt from the bag! He didn’t hear the end of that one for a while. Needless to say, he didn’t wear that T-shirt again. I would really love to have a look in his closet one day.
Former Capitals defenseman Steve Eminger: He used to wear these jean shorts that looked like women’s shorts his rookie season. They were so tight, so high. We got a hold of them, cut them up and threw them out. And that was that. He had to go home from the rink in some Capitals gym shorts. That was the last we saw of those shorts. I don’t think he had a lot of clothes at that time. (Jeff Halpern) might have been the aggressor on that one. We were like, “Ovi, that’s it. You can’t ever wear anything like that again.” They were acid-washed!
Capitals forward Nicklas Backstrom: In the beginning when we got here, he was driving me everywhere. The first thing I noticed is, well, you never talk when you go in the car with him because he plays the stereo full blast. Techno, everything. It’s just really fucking loud. There’s no way to talk. If he’s about to say something, he’ll reach over and turn it down, and he’ll ask you a question. And then put it back on full blast.
Another thing with his driving, especially when he was younger, was he loved to go a little faster. He’d always push the pedal and then hit the brakes. So you’re sitting like this (Backstrom pushes himself back in his locker stall and then snaps his head forward). That was a fun thing he always did when we drove together to the airport. He’d go full speed and then hit the brakes. But he would only go full speed for like 200 feet. Then he’d go, “Oh fuck, I’m so scared in case the cops are coming.” That was when he first got that white Mercedes (AMG S63). I think he’s got that back in Russia now.
Capitals defenseman John Carlson: It was maybe my third year, and my aunt made dinner for the whole team (prior to a game in New Jersey). It was a traditional Italian dinner. My cousin owns a deli, so he brought the appetizers and all that. We were all there. And after a couple of rounds of appetizers and soup and whatever else we were having, the pasta and meatballs came out. And Ovi goes up to one of my aunts and asked for, uh, ketchup. That’s a deadly sin. I would say in most cases that gets a slap in the face. But they’re not like that. But it was certainly a shock to them. They couldn’t fathom or understand that anyone would ever want to put ketchup on pasta or meatballs. But they went and got the ketchup because they were good hosts.
Capitals defenseman Dmitry Orlov: Like four or five years ago, we tried to make a reservation for sushi restaurant in Vancouver. We called ahead and tried to get a reservation. So, I remember, we say my last name and (Evgeny) Kuznetsov. And they said, no. They don’t have any space, available rooms, tables, whatever. And we said, what about if we bring Alex Ovechkin? They said, hold on one second. I think the guy talked to the manager or whatever. They give us a table. It was pretty funny because it was all of us – Stan Galiev, me, Kuzy and Ovi. We all were in the hotel room. It was on speaker so all four of us could hear it. It was so funny. Alex just started laughing. At first they had nothing, then right away it was, “Oh yeah, yeah, you guys can come.”
Former Capitals defenseman Brendan Witt: His rack (at Piney Orchard Ice Arena) was always full with like 50 sticks. One day I sawed a bunch of them. He’d wind up, take a shot and he’d go, “What the fuck?” Then the next one would snap. “What the fuck!” You have to think of Ovi yelling, “Fuuuucccckkkk!” You know Ovi taking those big slappers. Just imagine broken blades on one-timers. It was awesome. Usually, when I cut someone’s stick, it was always in the blade and then I would re-tape it properly. I would take off the tape and then hide the cut behind the tape because then you never know. If you do the shaft, then you would see a cut in the graphite. I’d always cut it in the blade, underneath the blade, different angles of the blade. So it breaks differently each time. I swear he went in and got a new stick each time. I don’t think he ever figured out it was me.
Former Capitals coach Bruce Boudreau: I remember telling (then-general manager) George (McPhee) after we traded Chris Clark, “It’s Ovi’s team now, and we got to make him captain, even if he’s not completely ready for it. He’s the captain and the leader of this team and he will be for many years.” So I asked him if he wanted to be captain and he said, “YESSS!” It was really emphatic. “Yes, I want to be captain. I really want it.” He wasn’t like, “Yeah, I don’t know if I’m ready.” None of that. It was, “Yes!” Adamantly. He wanted to be the captain. I said, “You’ve earned it and you deserve it and you’re our leader and we’re going to follow you.”
Greg Smith: Early in his rookie season, he turns to me on the bench and says, “Do you have a wodka?” I said, “A what?” He said, “You know, a wodka?” He does the drinking motion. I said, “Oh, vodka.” I said, “No, I don’t have any vodka. It’s the middle of a game.” I’m thinking what’s wrong with this guy? Then he shows me — and honest to god — it’s a little paper cut on his finger. He’s like, “You know, wodka? It kills germs.” I’m like, “No, no, we have peroxide for that. But don’t drink it.” He pours it on his cut. And then he says, “I need a plaster.” I said, “What is a plaster?” You know how he gets. I have a fanny pack on. He grabs my waist and starts digging around in my fanny pack and pulls out a band-aid and says, “See? Plaster.”
Bruce Boudreau: My go-to stories about Ovi are about how he’s able to be as physical as he is and not get hurt. I remember him going knee on knee with Tim Gleason, who is a big 225-pound guy. Alex went to the room. I went in and he was like, “I’m fine.” It was like nothing happened. I also remember him going knee-on-knee in the playoffs with Sergei Gonchar. Nothing happened to Alex and that guy misses the rest of the playoffs. Those physical things are what I remember most of all. One time, we played Pittsburgh and he got a big cut on his leg. It was about eight inches long and he needed about 25 stitches. He couldn’t even walk. Two days later we were in Ottawa and he played, even though I was amazed at the scar on the inside of his leg. And he scored four goals that night. He’s done that kinda stuff every year of his career. The toughness of him is overlooked sometimes.
NBC Sports Washington play-by-play announcer Joe Beninati: You know he loves cars. It’s his rookie year. He’s a puppy. But he’s Alex. He’s a star and he’s got the big car – a BMW M6. A white M6. He sends it off to get all this aftermarket work done, air dams, ground effects, brakes, rims. One night, we come out of the garage and we’re stopped at a light. We were going to the airport after a game. He’s got his car, he’s all happy, he’s all proud. And here’s this schlub TV announcer pulling up next to him in an M6. He looks at me. I look him and I wave. And he just drops his head. I look back at him and I go, “What, I can’t have one, too?”
Former Capitals senior director of communications Kurt Kehl: We were at a Ravens preseason game, and we had gone down to the sideline. Now we were walking back up to the suite and he sees this stand for Dippin’ Dots. So he buys a little carton of Dippin’ Dots. We take a few steps as he’s eating them. He looooveeees them! He goes back and buys two more. So now he’s got three things of Dippin’ Dots. We’re up in (former Ravens executive) Dennis Mannion’s suite. I’m sitting next to Ovi and he’s got these three things of Dippin’ Dots in front of him. I see George (McPhee), who was big on nutrition, walking into the suite. So I remember sliding the Dippin’ Dots away from Ovechkin and in front of whoever was sitting next to him. Ovi looked at me all confused. I said, “Just wait until George leaves and then slide them back over.”
Joe Beninati: Rookie year, again. Shy, not really good with the language. Whenever we put him on camera, he would be very self-conscious. It’s just about time for Russia to announce the Olympic team. Our producer/director, Bill Bell, is like, “Just get him on camera for a soundbite and ask him what would it mean to you to get selected for the team? Pavel Bure is the GM.” He comes in our studio and he sits down and he gives me an answer, and it’s good. He walks out of our studio where he’s shy and intimidated and not sure about the sound of his own voice. He walks into a scrum of other media. Someone asks him, “What would it mean to you if you make Team Russia?” He answers, “You tell Pavel Bure that I’ll play goalie! I’ll do anything to make the team!” And I’m like, “Ack! Why couldn’t you give that to me just two seconds ago?”
Kurt Kehl: When he first got here, Nate (Ewell, the Capitals’ former director of media relations) and I took him somewhere to do a media interview. We’re coming back and parking at the arena. And on the way back, he’s like, “I’ll take you to lunch. I’ll take you to lunch.” We’re like, “No, it’s okay, Alex. This is part of the job; it’s what we do. You don’t have to reward us for doing our job.” But he was really badgering us. “I’ll take you to lunch. I’ll take you to lunch.” So finally, Nate and I said, “Sure, we’ll go.” He took us to McDonald’s. Because he wanted a burger. I was like, “Wait a minute. I put up this big fight because I thought he was going to take us to Capital Grille. If I knew it was going to be a Big Mac, I wouldn’t have made such a fuss.”
Longtime Capitals equipment manager Craig “Woody” Leydig: It was probably Ovi’s second year and we’re in the equipment room at – I guess it was called MCI Center back then – and anyway I’m sitting there doing some work and he was lacing. He had laced a couple of eyelets. And then there was an impromptu meeting called. He said, “Woodman, would you finish it for me?” And I did. Then he went out that night and had a multiple-point game. And from there, it just became habitual. He’s a creature of habit, like a lot of guys.
Kurt Kehl: When he first got here, he lived with McPhee. I remember telling George at one point, “Hey, if he totally gets in your hair, let me know if I can do anything.” One day George says to me, “Can you take Ovi to Laurel to skate with a couple of guys?” We get up to Laurel in that back rink. (Olie) Kolzig was there. (Jeff) Halpern was there. (Trent) Whitfield was there. I had never seen Ovi skate. And he comes on and starts skating on that back rink. You know how it echoes in there. Hearing him skate. He isn’t a graceful skater. It wasn’t like (Mario) Lemieux or (Alexei) Kovalev skating. It was just pure power. You could hear it in that rink. I had never seen or heard anything like that. And then he let a couple of shots go. And I remember Halpern looking up at me in the stands … and Halpy was almost like, “What the fuck is that?”
Former Capitals director of media relations Nate Ewell: I don’t remember the exact date, but we had played in either Philly or New York because we took the train back. Then the whole team had to take the Metro back from Union Station to Verizon Center. Which in and of itself is kinda absurd if you think about it – all the Caps getting on the Metro. I was standing there with him on the platform and we were talking about world juniors for some reason. I said, “Man, I HATED you!” He just laughed and said, “Why? Why did you hate me?” I was like, “You were always taunting the crowd. You had the tinted visor. I thought you were cocky and brash.” He was like, “I was just having fun.” It’s exactly how people’s perception of him has changed. They all thought here’s this guy that celebrates too much. But once you get to know him, you realize it was just him having fun.
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All about Brian Pothier : height, biography, quotes
How tall is Brian Pothier
See at http://www.heightcelebs.com/2017/04/brian-pothier/
for Brian Pothier Height
Brian Pothier's height is 6ft (1.83 m)Brian Pothier is ice hockeyBorn: 15 April, 1977Birthplace: New Bedford, Massachusetts Height: 6ft (1.83 m)Weight: 204 lbs (92.5 kg)Astrological Sign: AriesOccupation: Ice Hockey
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earthstory · 5 years
Video
vimeo
Original caption:
In this short film by Clayton Vila, watch Sean Jordan ride Crested Butte and redefine the American cowboy.
Directed by Clayton Vila Skiing by Sean Jordan Executive Producers: Todd Jones, Steve Jones, Drew Holt, Brett Hills Produced by: Drew Holt, Brittany Gibeau Director of Photography: Matthew Pothier 1st Assistant Director: Marc Vance Aerial Cinematography: Todd Jones Movi Operator: Chris Herr 1st AC: Kyle Daley GSS Tech: Brian Wulf Horse Stuntman: Brett Hills Horse Wrangler: Brigid O'leary Pilot: John Whedon Edit Sound & Color: Clayton Vila Voiceover: Cooper Rivers PAs: Jake Burchmore, Jarrod Seavey, James Mcdermond, Colin Gerard, Mackenzie Bodie
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goalhofer · 2 years
Conversation
Where Every Player Played During The 2004-05 NHL Lockout: Ottawa
AHL: Jason Spezza (Binghamton Senators), Chris Neil (Binghamton Senators), Antoine Vermette (Binghamton Senators), Brian Pothier (Binghamton Senators), Anton Volchenkov (Binghamton Senators), Ray Emery (Binghamton Senators) & Chris Kelly (Binghamton Senators)
SEL: Daniel Alfredsson (Frölunda Hockeyklubb), Zdeno Chára (Färjestad Bollklubb) & Chris Phillips (Brynäs I.F.)
Czech Extraliga: Martin Havlát (H.K. Sparta Praha), Václav Varaďa (H.K. Vítkovice) & Martin Prusek (H.K. Vítkovice/H.K. Znojemesti Orli Znojmo)
Didn't Play: Wade Redden & Greg De Vries
Slovak Extraliga: Peter Bondra (H.K. Poprad) & Marián Hossa (H.K. Dukla Trenčín)
UHL: Bryan Smolinski (Motor City Mechanics)
Alpenliga: Peter Shaefer (C.D.H. Bolzano Volpi)
WOAA: Chris Neil (Durham Thundercats)
NL: Mike Fisher (E.V. Zug)
HockeyAllsvenskan: Marián Hossa (Mora Ishockeyklubb)
Metal Ligaen: Todd Simpson (Herning Blå Ræv)
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artwalktv · 5 years
Video
vimeo
In this short film by Clayton Vila, watch Sean Jordan ride Crested Butte and redefine the American cowboy. Directed by Clayton Vila Skiing by Sean Jordan Executive Producers: Todd Jones, Steve Jones, Drew Holt, Brett Hills Produced by: Drew Holt, Brittany Gibeau Director of Photography: Matthew Pothier 1st Assistant Director: Marc Vance Aerial Cinematography: Todd Jones Movi Operator: Chris Herr 1st AC: Kyle Daley GSS Tech: Brian Wulf Horse Stuntman: Brett Hills Horse Wrangler: Brigid O'leary Pilot: John Whedon Edit Sound & Color: Clayton Vila Voiceover: Cooper Rivers PAs: Jake Burchmore, Jarrod Seavey, James Mcdermond, Colin Gerard, Mackenzie Bodie An excerpt from Far Out, now available to rent, download, or buy on DVD: tetongravity.com/farout
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whileiamdying · 5 years
Video
vimeo
In this short film by Clayton Vila, watch Sean Jordan ride Crested Butte and redefine the American cowboy. Directed by Clayton Vila Skiing by Sean Jordan Executive Producers: Todd Jones, Steve Jones, Drew Holt, Brett Hills Produced by: Drew Holt, Brittany Gibeau Director of Photography: Matthew Pothier 1st Assistant Director: Marc Vance Aerial Cinematography: Todd Jones Movi Operator: Chris Herr 1st AC: Kyle Daley GSS Tech: Brian Wulf Horse Stuntman: Brett Hills Horse Wrangler: Brigid O'leary Pilot: John Whedon Edit Sound & Color: Clayton Vila Voiceover: Cooper Rivers PAs: Jake Burchmore, Jarrod Seavey, James Mcdermond, Colin Gerard, Mackenzie Bodie An excerpt from Far Out, now available to rent, download, or buy on DVD: tetongravity.com/farout
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andrewuttaro · 5 years
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New Look Sabres: GM 19 - OTT - Jack It!
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4-2 Regulation Win over Sens
The term “Must-Win” is a bit overused in our contemporary sports parlay. That phrase is placed before everything from pretty standard out-of-conference matchup to run-of-the-mill divisional games. Some games are must-win because if you don’t win em then there will be a new level of hell to pay. Last night was a must-win for the Buffalo Sabres. Rightfully. A loss against the Ottawa Senators would not just have been embarrassing from a skill versus skill perspective, it would have been a seventh loss in a row and trigger more than a couple alarm bells. Luckily it was a win, and a reasonably dominating one too. Still there are some storylines in this game that have been festering and will probably be with us for the weeks and months to come. Before that though let’s talk about Greatest Game Against! Brought to you by the 50th Anniversary Season of the Buffalo Sabres the Greatest Game Against attempts to memorialize the best game against each of Buffalo’s divisional rivals. There is history, and plenty of it, between these two clubs! However the greatest game against the Ottawa Senators is such in a walk, it’s not even close. The Greatest Game Against the Sens was May 13th, 2006. The Buffalo Sabres, a team that surprised many being so good so quickly after the lockout finds themselves in the second round of the playoffs against a team they had encountered many times before. The Senators were no laughing matter sporting the good, young versions of Dany Heatley, Daniel Alfredsson and Jason Spezza, not to mention they had won the Northeast division that season. The Lindy Ruff Sabres had Daniel Briere and Chris Drury backed up by almost peak Ryan Miller with the likes of career-year having Maxim Afinogenov, Jochen Hecht, Jay McKee, and Mike Grier shepherding young guns like Jason Pominville and Tomas Vanek. After a killer first four games of the series Buffalo had the divisional winners on the edge of elimination in their own house. It was a back-and-forth affair: Buffalo’s Henrik Tallinder scores in the first minute before the Sens Alfredsson scored at the midway mark of the first. The Sabres took the lead again in the second period via a Chris Drury powerplay goal only to be equalized again by Brian Pothier. The game went to overtime when the most memorable goal of Jason Pominville’s career for most Sabres fans occurred: Pommer gets the puck in the neutral zone and streams in along the boards crossing in front of Ray Emery in the Sens net. He outmaneuvers Emery putting it in behind for the sudden win. That eliminated the divisional champs and sent the Sabres to a fateful Eastern Conference Final against the eventual Stanley Cup Champion Carolina Hurricanes. A young Elliotte Friedman interviewed Pominville after the hand-shakes who was sobered by the reminder he started that season on waivers. Ryan Miller also had a gem of a post-game interview but its due time we talk about last night’s win over the Sens.
There’s no getting around the fact that the Sabres dominated the first period last night, they dominated every statistical category and the eye-test for you grumpy old men. However, they did not score and for a team in a must-win situation it was an uneasy first intermission. If you were looking for rays of light in what has been an ugly November so far the domineering start might harken back to…uh… last month when these guys pretty reliably jumped out to hot starts regardless of where it went after that. If you’re looking for rainclouds, like a lot of us seem to be doing these days, Jake McCabe and a very much not optimized defensive group shored up their numbers as one of the league’s top 20 dump-in defenses. I am particularly annoyed with the dump-in-chase style because its always statistically detrimental to your momentum in a games and normally signifies a team that does not know what they’re doing as a whole group. This season started with a quick-passing play-together kind of chemistry and I’m wondering where it went. I pray to God it didn’t freeze off with the first snowfall of the season.
Kyle Okposo took a weird hit coming on off the bench and he would leave the game early in the second period. Last time I checked the jury isn’t out on what’s going on there. We didn’t have a lot of time to think about it. Rasmus Dahlin got the puck to Jack Eichel skating along the boards hounded by Dylan DeMelo. Like so many times in his career we saw Jack quick-release a slapper that zipped past Craig Anderson, 1-0 Sabres. After what would turn out to be one of the Captain’s hottest nights, he would be asked by the Athletic’s Joe Yerdon what got him shooting so much more. The answer was something out of some demented Sabres fan fiction from 2015. Eichel said he got a text recently from an old friend named… wait for it… MATT MOULSON telling him he outta shoot more. Hmm. I’ll just let that one percolate in your head. This game was full of ghosts of Christmases past when Anthony Duclair cashed in on a Sens powerplay to even it up about five minutes later. Ok, that’s more of a personal ghost of my past. Halfway through the period Buffalo struck back. This time it was Victor Olofsson carrying the puck into the offensive zone and dropping it off to a 1, 2, 3… quadruple covered Jack Eichel? No matter what Eichel just took the puck and whacked it on net. It went in and Jack’s brace put the Sabres back in the lead 2-1. As this game got into its second half some peculiar things started to unfold. For one, a frustrated Sabres fanbase continued to wonder where we can find Colin Miller in order to free him because the top defensive minutes were not in the most capable hands last night.
Secondly, Rasmus Dahlin got benched. So this saga has already had a full life cycle in the 18 prior games this season so I am not going to prognosticate about why or how except for two things: Ralph Krueger said after the game quote “[Dahlin] just sometimes wanting too much maybe and finding the balance between his amazing genius and skill and what we need to win. He’ll improve from it.” Chad DeDominicis pointed out that’s not ever really been asked of the guy this organization keeps reminding us is still a teenager. Dahlin has, at every step of his career, including when he switch from forward to defense *checks notes* five years ago, been allowed to be creative. Certainly mistakes will be made but as you keep reminding us Ralph: he’s 19. Maybe benching him is riskier than him messing up on the defensive side every now and again. Players like him are not a dime a dozen. The other part of this worth noting is immortalized in my twitter cover photo: Captain Eichel grabbing Dahlin on the bench and giving him some kind of talk. We’ll probably never know exactly what was said but I chose to imagine Eichel imploring the young franchise defenseman to not lose his confidence and not to think too much. Eichel remembers the Dan Blysma era. What became the grievance with Disco Dan was forcing a complicated programmatic game plan on creative players. Everyone was second guessing themselves in the months leading into that Coach’s firing. That same self-doubt inducing split-second confusion is clearly evident in Dahlin these days. Eichel saw it too and addressed it to Dahlin. I chose this as my reality because the best teams in this league transcend their head coaches: the Pittsburgh Penguins, the San Jose Sharks, the Boston Bruins, the Tampa Bay Lightning. The players on those teams are the mood-setters and the leaders. Could you even name the coach on 2 out 4 of those clubs without using google? I’m sure you could name the decisive players on all four of those clubs. I want that for my team and I like to think Captain Jack is doing it.
Captain Jack scored a hat trick for the second time in his career. The third one came in similar fashion to the first as he skated along the boards and ripped one through traffic past the opposing goaltender. The hat storm goal made it 3-2. The Sens had already evened it up before that with a real blast from the Sabres past Tyler Ennis. It was really a tip-in originating with Ron Hainsey but that will count for Ennis the Menace. Nonetheless Eichel had the game winner but he wasn’t done yet. As the third period ticked away and it became clear this would be the game to break the losing streak the Sens pulled Anderson and Eichel launched an intercontinental missile into the open net to reach the four-goal dick trick. Do I need to explain that? I’ve learned my readers are a hockey-literate bunch. Well for those of you who don’t know Joe Thorton was once asked what he’d do with four goals in a single game. He said in such a scenario he’d pull his dick out and stroke it. Well last night our Captain Jacked it and pulled off the dick trick! I guess I have to mark this postgame explicit now, don’t I? It was over. The Sabres won 4-2 in regulation to collect all two points and finally get a win in November, the month they strung together ten in last year.
As always I’d appreciate a like, share and if you really want to be nice a comment on this blog. I think there is a lot to talk about with this team right now, in spite of the win. Moreover, either tomorrow or Tuesday you’ll be seeing another Sabres post on Southtowntickets.com. In it we’ll be discussing the simply befuddling question: What’s wrong with the Buffalo Sabres? The something wrong here is probably complex then let’s finally trade a defenseman but that will come into it as well. The Reply Guy of the game goes to @CaptPantalones (Brandon Andrerson) whose son got a Jack Eichel stick in the pregame skate. That’s a special kind of memory I suspect he won’t ever forget having seen the Captain tap in three goals the same night. That’s even more heart-warming then the Wedding I went to during this game, but I promised I wouldn’t brag about that here. Tonight, after a must-win Bills game in Miami I might add, the Sabres will take on another team they probably should beat: the Chicago Blackhawks. I’m almost afraid to say that because the Hawks have had our number a few times in the years since their dynasty team fell into the gutter and United Center isn’t a friendly place for any visitor. You got to start stringing those wins together again before the trip down to Florida next week. They’ve got a couple soft targets before the Bruins later in the week to do it so let’s see if we get the fun Sabres back. Last night came with a little treat beyond the Eichel Dick Trick: the Toronto Maple Leafs got rocked 6-1 by the Pens. The Atlantic Division isn’t the straightforward hierarchy we thought it was going to be. Not yet at least. Let’s Go Buffalo!
Thanks for Reading.
P.S. I hope Dahlin comes back from his benching to deke the pants off Alex Nylander tonight!
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flauntpage · 5 years
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Tonight is the 15th Anniversary of the Great Flyers-Senators Brawl
I can’t believe it’s been 15 years since the most memorable regular season game of my sports writing career.
What happened in this game had never happened before in the history of hockey, and since the sport has almost completely gotten away from fighting, it’s likely it will never happen again.
But man, it was glorious.
After the jump is a copy of the story I wrote that night, back when I was just a freelance writer for ComcastSportsNet.com, which is now NBCSPhilly.com
The story is OK by my standards – but there’s some stuff that was left out. So, I’ve added some more details in bold text that will hopefully paint a fuller picture of that beauty of a hockey game.
What a night.
Feisty Flyers Beat Up Senators 
(This really needed a better headline, but SEO wasn’t really a thing then…)
3/5/04
Anthony J. SanFilippo
ComcastSportsNet.com Contributor
Martin Havlat has no one to blame but himself.
All the guy had to do was keep his stick down when the Flyers last met the Ottawa Senators in Canada’s capital city last month.
But instead, he mistook himself for an Iron Chef and Mark Recchi’s head for a nice pot roast.
(It was the second time Havlat had clipped a Flyer in the face with his stick and he was getting a reputation for being a bit too cavalier with it. He had high-sticked Kim Johnsson in the playoffs the season before and the high stick on Recchi certainly appeared blatant and infuriated everyone on the Flyers from the GM’s box on down.)
Flyers coach Ken Hitchcock vowed revenge. (It was one of Hitch’s great quips – “Someone is going to make him eat his lunch.”)
What happened Friday night was not what he had in mind, but hey, he’ll take it and so will the sell-out crowd who witnessed one of the most memorable games in the history of the Flyers franchise.
What happened? Let’s see… where should we begin?
How about the end, where, when the game concluded, the Flyers had seven skaters and a goalie, and the Senators six skaters and a goalie — on the entire squad.
In a game fresh out of 1974, a combined 23 players were tossed from the game for engaging in several melees on the ice. The goalies went toe-to-toe, the coaches screamed unprintable words back and forth at each other across the bench, and blood was spilled. The gloves dropped after every faceoff in the game’s final minutes. Records for penalty minutes were shattered. After the game general manager Bob Clarke went head-hunting, looking for an Ottawa official to tear apart. Even the media from each country had to be separated following an incident.
All the while, Havlat dodged the combat better than President Clinton during Vietnam, hiding on the Ottawa bench or in the penalty box serving penalties for booted teammates.
(Oh, the days when you could inject a little political humor into a sports story. Such a bygone era.)
Oh yeah, the Flyers defeated the Ottawa Senators 5-3. But back to the good stuff.
All told there were a combined 419 minutes in penalties, smashing the league record of 406 set by the Minnesota North Stars and Boston Bruins in February, 1981.
The Flyers obliterated their own team record of 194 penalty minutes set in March, 1979 against the Los Angeles Kings with 213 on Friday.
The two teams also broke a record for most penalty minutes in a period by amassing 409, smashing the league mark of 379 set in the same 1979 Flyers-Kings squabble.
And it all started when a frustrated Senators squad took a run at Sami Kapanen.
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“(Rob) Ray went after Sami and started throwing punches at him,” said Donald Brashear. “If you want to screw around, we will take care of business.”
So Brash did. And he beat Ray to a pulp, leaving the Senators’ tough guy dripping blood drops on the ice.
A couple of Senators didn’t take too kindly to Brashear’s easy knockout and went after him as he was skating off the ice. A rumble ensued. Every possible glove and stick was on the ice.
“They were mad because their tough guy got beat up,” Hitchcock said. “Then their next two (fighters) go after two guys who don’t fight at all. That’s why what happened, happened.”
(This is partly true, but also partly disingenuous. Yes, the fighting went on longer than probably necessary because Ottawa coach Jacques Martin threw Chris Neil and Zdeno Chara onto the ice after the Brashear-Ray fight and they went after two non-fighters in Radovan Somik and Mattias Timander. But, in reality, the Flyers were looking for an opportunity to have Havlat pay for his actions, and Martin was rooting him to the bench. That’s what pissed off the Flyers most – a lack of accountability on the part of the Senators, so things got ugly.)
Even the goalies dropped the gloves, as Esche landed a couple of shots to Patrick Lalime’s head.
Brashear amassed 34 minutes of penalties all by himself. He was tossed along with Esche, Danny Markov — who dropped them with Todd Simpson — and Branko Radivojevic, who traded blows with Shaun Van Allen. Ray, Lalime, Simpson and Van Allen all got the gate for Ottawa. All this occurred at 18:15 of the third period.
(I was in the arena, so I didn’t get to hear Jim Jackson and Gary Dornhoeffer call this action until a few days later. Comcast Sports Net re-aired the game as an “Instant Classic” five days later and it drew a higher rating than most live Flyers regular season games at the time. The NHL was not happy with this because they were on a crusade to curb fighting, and replaying this game was promoting it. But Dorny and J.J. were great calling this game. Some great moments including Dorny saying, “Fans can’t stand this though. They don’t like this at all,” as the Wachovia Center was in a frenzy.
It was the best brawl of the season. But that was just the appetizer for a seven-course meal.
Three seconds later, on the very next faceoff, secondary fighter for Ottawa, Chris Neil, jabbed Radovan Somik in the groin with his stick. Somik jabbed back. Then Neil punched him, and every player on the ice went at it again.
More penalties. More ejections. (One of my favorite moments here is poor public address announcer Lou Nolan trying to announce the penalties when another fight broke out and he stopped reading the penalties and let out an exasperated “Oh, boy” over the mic.)
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Good-bye to Somik, Neil and Mattias Timander and Zdeno Chara, who also went at it on the same faceoff.
(While this was going on, the players who were ejected were standing in the hallway just steps from the tunnel, watching the feed on a mini TV that Comcast Sports Net had set up in the hallway where reporter Matt Yallof was able to interview players between periods and postgame. When Markov and Brashear saw Neil and Chara jump a couple of non-fighters, they darted back up the tunnel and started screaming at referees Marc Joannette and Dan Marouelli. Brashear even sent one of the equipment guys back into the locker room to get his helmet and gloves – even though he had already been kicked out of the game! At this juncture Hitchock started chirping at Martin. He was telling the Sens coach that all he had to do was put Havlat on the ice and this would all come to a conclusion. Instead, Martin responded by sending Havlat on the ice – to go to the penalty box and serve a teammates penalty. Hitchcock was steamed and directed his players to keep up the physical play. He was going to send a message to Martin for his coaching cowardice.)
Fast forward another three seconds. Michal Handzus, one of Somik’s good friends on the Flyers, attacked Mike Fisher as soon as the puck dropped.
Thanks for playing gentlemen.
By this point, the crowd was in a state of euphoria.
The officials seemed to plead to the benches to end the chicanery.
Oh, but they were far from done.
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A mere 23 seconds later, as it appeared cooler heads had prevailed, Recchi drilled Wade Redden into the boards. Redden turned around and attacked John LeClair. Recchi grabbed Brian Smolinski.
More gloves, more penalties, four more players shown the door.
Two seconds later it was Patrick Sharp pounding on Jason Spezza.
Adios Amigos.
Ten fights in 32 seconds. Must be another record.
All the while Havlat just watched from his island.
“My team didn’t forget what Havlat did last game,” Recchi said. “I’d be pretty upset if I were his teammates, I’ll tell you that.”
(Here’s the reference to being accountable for your actions when you do something like high stick an opponent. You need to be prepared to face the consequences – and Havlat never did.)
And if the show of sportsmanship on the ice wasn’t enough, what happened off of it was just the cherry on top.
First, Brashear allegedly was making gestures down the hallway between the two locker rooms, mocking slitting his throat at Senator player Todd Simpson.
When asked about it, Brashear said, “No comment.”
(Brashear later admitted that he did make the gesture, but it was just in conversation, not really reported anywhere. But he was pissed at Simpson because Simpson and Brian Pothier were the guys who jumped him after fighting with Ray. The shouting in the hallway between the two locker rooms was insane. I was on the elevator with Bob Clarke and he was cursing the Senators the whole way down. He was walking with a purpose toward the locker room area and when he didn’t turn to go where he usually would to go into the Flyers locker room, it dawned on me that he was heading toward the Ottawa locker room. So I followed…more on this later… )
When peppered by a Canadian reporter as to why he sucker-punched Ray, Brashear said “I didn’t sucker punch him. If I’d have sucker punched him he would be laying on his back.”
Brash then said he started the whole bru-ha-ha.
“Of course I started it, why wouldn’t I start it?” he said. “Did you watch the last game? You figure it out.”
(Brash was always a great quote. Always.)
It was the same Canadian television reporter who crashed into a Comcast SportsNet reporter (not this one) during an interview with Senators coach Jacques Martin.
Looking like Tyrone Power and Basil Rathbone in “The Mark of Zorro,” the two reporters, wielding microphones, nearly killed each other.
(The CSN reporter was Yallof. I don’t want to make this sound like a stereotype, because it certainly doesn’t fit the bill for all Canadian TV employees, but, when it comes to hockey, both the Canadian TV guys and their cameramen have shown a propensity over the years to be a little more bullish when it comes to getting into position for a media scrum. The energy was so high that night that a little effort to create elbow room led to tempers flaring in the hallway between TV guys. It was just like this:
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It was a lot more exciting than what Martin had to say, which was nothing.
Maybe that’s why Clarke called Martin “a gutless puke.”
Wait, when did that happen?
Oh, yeah. Clarkie stormed downstairs from his cozy perch atop the arena and had to be restrained from going after Martin in the Senators locker room.
He later eyeballed Senators G.M. John Muckler in the hallway before voicing his displeasure with NHL supervisor of officials, Claude Loiselle, who happened to be in attendance for the game.
Clarke said a lot more that can’t be reprinted here, but it was yet another priceless moment in the middle of a priceless turn of events.
(This was Clarke at his best. He made it all the way down the hall just outside the Senators locker room and was calling for Martin to come out. Some Flyers employees were holding him back as he yelled to Martin, “Come out here now you fucking gutless puke!” Muckler came out instead, but Clarke was already on his way back down the hallway and he just stared at Muckler the whole time. It was so WWE. Clarke addressed reporters afterwards. He said he wasn’t going to hit Martin if he came out of the locker room – although it sure looked like he wanted to – but rather wanted to challenge him for sending Neil and Chara after Somik and Timander. “Their tough guy [Rob Ray] got beat up and then their next two lines fought guys who don’t fight,” Clarke said.  “I understand Rob Ray fighting Donald Brashear. That’s okay. […] But don’t go after guys who don’t know how to defend themselves like Somik and Timander.”
Lost in all of this translation was the fact that the Flyers dominated Ottawa for the game’s first 55 minutes.
After allowing Neil to score the first goal of the game 4:07 in, Claude LaPointe, Recchi and Markov all put the puck past a shaky Lalime giving the Flyers a 3-1 lead after one period.
Kim Johnsson and Alexei Zhamnov also scored while Chara and Petr Bondra added goals for the Senators.
The win and the fights didn’t come without a cost, though. The Flyers lost three defensemen in the game and will have to make due with minor leaguers for at least Saturday’s game in Washington.
Chris Therien and Joni Pitkanen both left the game in the first period with injuries. Therien suffered a strained left shoulder, and Pitkanen was listed as having his “bell rung,” although Hitchcock later said it was a concussion.
Markov will also be out of the lineup serving a one-game suspension for picking up his third game misconduct of the year. This leaves the Flyers with Johnsson, Timander and John Slaney as the only blue liners remaining on the roster.
Kapanen was an emergency fill-in on defense for the last two periods against Ottawa and may see some time there against Washington.
Hitchcock also said Phantoms defenseman Freddie Meyer and Joey Hope could see time.
Of course, there’s also the possibility of Clarke pulling off a trade once he calms down.
With the win, the Flyers (35-16-12-6, 88 points) remained tied for the top spot in the Eastern Conference with Tampa Bay and moved seven points ahead of New Jersey in the Atlantic Division.
(Final notes: The only Flyers who were left available for the final minute of the game were Johnsson and Slaney on defense, Zhamnov, Simon Gagne, Tony Amonte, Kapanen and Lapointe with Sean Burke in goal…. It’s amazing the Flyers made it to Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals despite all their injuries. They were without Keith Primeau, Jeremy Roenick, Eric Desjardins and Marcus Ragnarsson in this game alone – Todd Fedoruk and Dennis Seidenberg were healthy scratches. Chris Therien and Joni Pitkanen got hurt in the first period of this game. Clarke went out and traded for Vladimir Malakhov at the trade deadline three days later, but he also traded Therien, which proved costly because in the playoffs, Hitchcock had to frequently play Sami Kapanen as a sixth defenseman because of how injured they were… These two teams met again one more time on April 2 that season at Wachovia Center. Everyone was looking for a sequel – it turned out to be a dud. The Flyers lost 3-1 and the teams combined for 10 minutes in penalties total as neither team wanted to lose anyone to injury or suspension since it was the penultimate game of the regular season and the playoffs were around the corner. )
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hanchaouiayoub · 5 years
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Cowboy from Teton Gravity Research on Vimeo.
In this short film by Clayton Vila, watch Sean Jordan ride Crested Butte and redefine the American cowboy.
Directed by Clayton Vila Skiing by Sean Jordan Executive Producers: Todd Jones, Steve Jones, Drew Holt, Brett Hills Produced by: Drew Holt, Brittany Gibeau Director of Photography: Matthew Pothier 1st Assistant Director: Marc Vance Aerial Cinematography: Todd Jones Movi Operator: Chris Herr 1st AC: Kyle Daley GSS Tech: Brian Wulf Horse Stuntman: Brett Hills Horse Wrangler: Brigid O'leary Pilot: John Whedon Edit Sound & Color: Clayton Vila Voiceover: Cooper Rivers PAs: Jake Burchmore, Jarrod Seavey, James Mcdermond, Colin Gerard, Mackenzie Bodie
An excerpt from Far Out, now available to rent, download, or buy on DVD: tetongravity.com/farout
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ozkamal · 5 years
Video
vimeo
In this short film by Clayton Vila, watch Sean Jordan ride Crested Butte and redefine the American cowboy. Directed by Clayton Vila Skiing by Sean Jordan Executive Producers: Todd Jones, Steve Jones, Drew Holt, Brett Hills Produced by: Drew Holt, Brittany Gibeau Director of Photography: Matthew Pothier 1st Assistant Director: Marc Vance Aerial Cinematography: Todd Jones Movi Operator: Chris Herr 1st AC: Kyle Daley GSS Tech: Brian Wulf Horse Stuntman: Brett Hills Horse Wrangler: Brigid O'leary Pilot: John Whedon Edit Sound & Color: Clayton Vila Voiceover: Cooper Rivers PAs: Jake Burchmore, Jarrod Seavey, James Mcdermond, Colin Gerard, Mackenzie Bodie An excerpt from Far Out, now available to rent, download, or buy on DVD: tetongravity.com/farout
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cancersfakianakis1 · 6 years
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Long Term Late Toxicity, Quality Of Life and Emotional Distress In Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Patients Treated With Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy
Publication date: Available online 4 June 2018 Source:International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics Author(s): Lachlan J. McDowell, Kathy Rock, Wei Xu, Biu Chan, John Waldron, Lin Lu, Shereen Ezzat, David Pothier, Lori J. Bernstein, Nathaniel So, Shao Hui Huang, Meredith Giuliani, Andrew Hope, Brian O’Sullivan, Scott V. Bratman, John Cho, John Kim, Raymond Jang, Andrew Bayley, Jolie Ringash PurposeTo report long-term (> 4 year) toxicity and quality of life (QOL) in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients treated with intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) in a non-endemic center.Materials/Methods.A cross-sectional cohort study enrolled NPC patients who were disease-free and ≥4 years post-IMRT ± chemotherapy. Physician-reported adverse events (CTCAE v4.03) and patient-reported QOL (FACT-H&N, FACIT-F), utilities (EuroQOL-5D), head and neck symptoms (MDASI-HN) and emotional distress (HADS), were collected. Consenting patients also underwent endocrine screening and audiometry.ResultsAmong 107 patients enrolled, median age at enrollment and time since treatment were 57 (32-81) and 7.5 years (4.2-11.1) respectively. Most patients (99%) received 70Gy/35#; the majority (93%) received concurrent chemotherapy. Mean scores for the FACT-H&N, FACIT-F, and EQ-5D were 105.0 (46-148), 116.6 (44-160), and 0.85 (0.29-1.00) respectively. Dry mouth, mucus, swallowing/chewing, memory and teeth/gum problems scored highest on the MDASI-HN; mean symptom severity and symptom interference scores were 2.3 and 2.4, respectively. Grade 3 or higher physician-reported adverse events were noted in 50 patients (47%); most frequently hearing (46, 43%). Audiometry revealed significant bilateral hearing loss (≥Grade 3) in 68 patients (72%). Depression (25%), anxiety (37%), and fatigue (28%) were common and strongly correlated with QOL. The majority (69%) of patients developed hypothyroidism; one patient (1%) developed pituitary dysfunction requiring hormone replacement. V50>90 and V45>99 to the thyroid correlated with significantly higher rates of hypothyroidism.ConclusionsDespite the implementation of IMRT, NPC survivors still experience many physical symptoms which impact long-term QOL many years after treatment. Depression, anxiety and fatigue remain common in long-term survivors and are highly correlated with QOL. https://ift.tt/2JrHwHy
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sporkeyllc · 6 years
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Located in Troy, New York, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), known primarily as a private research university and space-grant institution, is not necessarily a school you think about when it comes to the National Football League. But on February 5th, 2018, one of the school’s alumni and former football players was named as he Head Coach of the NFL’s Detroit Lions.
Matt Patricia, a four year letterman with the Engineers football team, played offensive line from 1992 through 1995 for RPI. Patricia stayed on at RPI the following season as a graduate assistant with the football team, a year that would be the first as a football coach, a profession he has been highly successful at, culminating with his appointment as the next Lions head coach.
Initially, Patricia took his highly coveted engineering degree from RPI and worked as application engineer for a couple of years in East Syracuse, New York. But the coaching bug got the best of him and he returned to football as a defensive line coach for Amherst College where he spent the next two seasons.
That led Patricia to Syracuse University where he got another coaching opportunity to add to his resume. This time, he worked on the other side of the ball as a graduate offensive assistant for the Orangeman where he remained for three seasons, from 2001 until 2003.
But his big break came the following season when the former RPI offensive lineman was hired to join the coaching staff of the New England Patriots. Patriots Head Coach Brian Belichick took a chance on Patricia and brought him in as an offensive assistant coach in 2004. In the following seasons he held the coaching positions of Assistant offensive line coach, Linebackers coach and Safeties coach, until being named the Patriots Defensive Coordinator in 2012.
As the Patriots Defensive Coordinator, Patricia has been highly successful and made a name for himself throughout the NFL. During his time with the team, the Patriots have won three Super Bowl titles, two of which featured Patricia as coordinator, in 2014 and 2016. Not always provided with star players, he was able to develop defensive schemes and worked with players who fit those schemes, to help keep New England competitive. He is known for his versatility and for the ability to come up with a defensive game plan that is focused on each individual opponent.
The 43-year old Patricia is a native of the state of New York. He was born in Sherrill, New York and spent his high school years at Vernon-Verona-Sherrill High School in Verona, New York. That led him to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), where he made a name for himself both on the football field and in the classroom.
Clearly, RPI is not a school you would expect NFL players or coaches to come from. However, their hockey program has sent several players to the National Hockey League. Those players include Adam Oates, Joe Juneau, Darren Puppa and Brian Pothier.
Known as one of the smartest coaches in football, Patricia is using his knowledge to successfully transition to attacking NFL offenses on the football field. Fans of the NFL recognize Patricia as the coach with the backwards baseball cap, hoodie and that signature pencil behind his ear. It will be interesting to see what look he presents as an NFL Head Coach.
Belichick has been his mentor since joining the Patriots, and now it’s time for Patricia to put what he’s learned to use to help the Detroit Lions reach their first ever Super Bowl.
Continue to check www.sporkey.com for more sports updates! And don’t forget to follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for weekly Sports Trivia and more!
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goalhofer · 5 years
Text
Every Junior/Professional Antoine Vermette Teammate
Quebec Remparts
Simon Gagne (1998-99)
Eric Chouinard (1998-99)
David Bernier (1998-99)
Martin Moise (1998-99)
Dmitri Tolkunov (1998-99)
Wes Scanzano (1998-99)
Andre Martineau (1998-99)
Simon Tremblay (1998-99)
Maxim Balmochnyk (1998-99)
Daniel Archambeault (1998-99)
Martin Grenier (1998-99)
Jerome Marois (1998-99)
Eric Laplante (1998-99)
Raymond Dalton (1998-99)
Nicholas Bilotto (1998-99)
Joey Fetta (1998-99)
Juraj Kolnik (1998-99)
Marco Charpentier (1998-99)
Sebastien Lucier (1998-99)
Travis Zachary (1998-99)
Sylvain Plamondon (1998-99)
Jeff Leblanc (1998-99)
Cameron Lowe (1998-99)
Tommy Bolduc (1998-99)
Pierre Loiselle (1998-99)
Alexandre Morel (1998-99)
Stuart MacRae (1998-99)
Jonathan Wilhelmy (1998-99)
Sebastien Crete (1998-99)
Nicolas Pelletier (1998-99)
Jean-Philippe Cote (1998-99)
Danick Jomphe (1998-99)
Hunter Lahache (1998-99)
Martin Bilodeau (1998-99)
Eric Jean (1998-99)
Maxime Ouellet (1998-99)
Victoriaville Tigres
Marc-Andre Thinel (1999-2001)
Carl Mallette (1999-2002)
Sebastien Thinel (1999-2001)
Danny Groulx (1999-2001)
Alex Ryazantsev (1999-2000)
Eric Cote (1999-2000)
Matthew Lombardi (1999-2002)
Kristian Kovac (1999-2001)
Teddy Kyres (1999-2001)
Pierre-Luc Sleigher (1999-2002)
Antoine Bergeron (1999-2000)
Carl Gagnon (1999-2002)
Eric Labelle (1999-2000)
Pierre-Luc Daneau (1999-2002)
Joey Fetta (1999-2000)
Jonathan Fauteaux (1999-2001)
Stephane Veilleux (1999-2000)
Mathieu Wathier (1999-2001)
Sandro Sbrocca (1999-2001)
Luc Levesque (1999-2001)
Michael McIntyre (1999-2000)
Guillaume Beaudoin (1999-2000)
Billy Rochefort (1999-2000)
Branwell Beck (1999-2000)
Richard Paul (1999-2001)
Simon St. Pierre (1999-2001)
Patrick Chouinard (1999-2000)
Guillaume Lavoie (1999-2000)
Marc St. Louis (1999-2000)
Jean-Francois Nogues (1999-2001)
Philippe Ozga (1999-2001)
Patrice Poissant (1999-2000)
Martin Autotte (2000-01)
Martin Grenier (2000-01)
Johnny Oduya (2000-01)
Mathieu Brunelle (2000-02)
Patrick Vincent (2000-01)
Sergei Kaltygen (2000-01)
Ivan Curic (2000-01)
Steve Richards (2000-01)
James Sanford (2000-01)
Tommy Bolduc (2000-01)
Karl Morin (2000-02)
Adam Wojcik (2000-02)
David Masse (2000-01)
Hugo Beaudet (2000-01)
Francis Debilly (2000-01)
Sebastien Morrissette (2000-01)
Nicolas Joyal (2000-01)
Frederic Mallette (2000-01)
Guillaume Fornier (2001-02)
Mikhail Deev (2001-02)
Jamie McCabe (2001-02)
Benoit Fournier (2001-02)
Christian Laroche (2001-02)
Robert Snowball (2001-02)
Neil Posillico (2001-02)
Jeff Smith (2001-02)
Carl McLean (2001-02)
Mathieu Daigle (2001-02)
Pierre-Luc Chenier (2001-02)
Tommy Lafontaine (2001-02)
Chris Pottie (2001-02)
Jonathan Walsh (2001-02)
Dan McNeill (2001-02)
Mathieu Beauchamp (2001-02)
Daniel Manzato (2001-02)
Daniel Boisclair (2001-02)
Sylvain Houle (2001-02)
Samuel Duguay (2001-02)
Alexandre Turgeon-Cote (2001-02)
Sami Ciplak (2001-02)
Jean-Michel Filiatrault (2001-02)
Binghamton Senators
Brad Smyth (2002-03)
Jason Spezza (2002-03, 2004-05)
Brian Pothier (2002-03, 2004-05)
Joe Murphy (2002-03)
Alexandre Giroux (2002-03)
Josh Langfeld (2002-05)
David Hymovitz (2002-05)
Chris Kelly (2002-05)
Chris Bala (2002-03)
Toni Dahlman (2002-03)
Julien Vauclair (2002-04)
Jeff Ulmer (2002-03)
Brian McGrattan (2002-05)
Josef Boumedienne (2002-03)
Steve Martins (2002-03)
Bob Wren (2002-03)
Radim Bicanek (2002-03)
Steve Bancroft (2002-04)
Dennis Bonvie (2002-03)
Christoph Schubert (2002-05)
Andy Hedlund (2002-05)
Dean Melanson (2002-03)
Scott Ricci (2002-03)
Joey Tetarenko (2002-03)
Ray Emery (2002-05)
Karel Rachunek (2002-03)
Jeff Szwez (2002-03)
Dean Connolly (2002-03)
Billy Thompson (2002-05)
J.C. Ruid (2002-03)
Joel Kwiatkowski (2002-03)
Alex Johnstone (2002-03)
Chris Lynch (2002-03)
Colin Pepperall (2002-03)
Ray DiLauro (2002-03)
Martin Prusek (2002-03)
Mathieu Chiounard (2002-03)
Andrew Allen (2002-03)
Jeremy Symington (2002-03)
Justin Plamondon (2002-03)
Wade Brookbank (2002-03)
Simon Lajeunesse (2002-03)
Denis Hamel (2003-05)
Serge Payer (2003-04)
Charlie Stephens (2003-05)
Peter Smrek (2003-04)
Brad Tapper (2003-04)
Arpad Mihaly (2003-05)
Mike Brown (2003-04)
Greg Watson (2003-05)
Jody Hull (2003-04)
Cory Pecker (2003-04)
Tony Tuzzolino (2003-04)
Jan Platil (2003-05)
Rob Ray (2003-04)
Gregg Johnson (2003-05)
John Jakopin (2003-04)
Nathan Gillies (2003-04)
Bryson Busniuk (2003-04)
Grant Potulny (2003-05)
Brandon Bochenski (2004-05)
Anton Volchenkov (2004-05)
Pat Kavanagh (2004-05)
Jesse Fibiger (2004-05)
Chris Neil (2004-05)
Danny Bois (2004-05)
Neil Komadoski (2004-05)
Derek Campbell (2004-05)
Regan Darby (2004-05)
Ottawa Senators
Marian Hossa (2003-04)
Daniel Alfredsson (2003-4, 2005-09)
Martin Havlat (2003-04, 2005-06)
Jason Spezza (2003-04, 2005-09)
Bryan Smolinski (2003-04, 2005-06)
Radek Bonk (2003-04)
Wade Redden (2003-04, 2005-08)
Zdeno Chara (2003-04, 2005-06)
Peter Schaefer (2003-04, 2005-07)
Todd White (2003-04)
Chris Phillips (2003-04, 2005-09)
Josh Langfeld (2003-04)
Karel Rachunek (2003-04)
Chris Neil (2003-04, 2005-09)
Peter Bondra (2003-04)
Shaun Van Allen (2003-04)
Vaclav Varada (2003-04, 2005-06)
Mike Fisher (2003-04, 2005-09)
Brian Pothier (2003-04, 2005-06)
Pyotr Schastlivy (2003-04)
Curtis Leschyshyn (2003-04)
Shane Hnidy (2003-04)
Anton Volchenkov (2003-04, 2005-09)
Patrick Lalime (2003-04)
Rob Ray (2003-04)
Greg De Vries (2003-04)
Serge Payer (2003-04, 2006-07)
Martin Prusek (2003-04)
Todd Simpson (2003-04)
Ray Emery (2003-04, 2005-08)
Dany Heatley (2005-09)
Andrej Meszaros (2005-08)
Chris Kelly (2005-09)
Patrick Eaves (2005-08)
Brandon Bochenski (2005-06)
Christoph Schubert (2005-09)
Brian McGrattan (2005-08)
Tyler Arnason (2005-06)
Steve Martins (2005-06)
Denis Hamel (2005-07)
Mike Morrison (4 games 2005-06)
Dominik Hasek (2005-06)
Tomas Malec (3 games 2005-07)
Brad Norton (7 games 2005-06)
Filip Novak (11 games 2005-06)
Tom Preissing (2006-07)
Joe Corvo (2006-08)
Dean McAmmond (2006-09)
Mike Comrie (2006-07, 2008-09)
Oleg Saprykin (12 games 2006-07)
Josh Hennessy (2006-09)
Alexei Kaigorodov (6 games 2006-07)
Danny Bois (1 game 2006)
Martin Gerber (2006-09)
Lawrence Nycholat (4 games 2006-08)
Randy Robitaille (2007-08)
Cory Stillman (2007-08)
Shean Donovan (2007-09)
Nick Foligno (2007-09)
Luke Richardson (2007-09)
Martin Lapointe (2007-08)
Cody Bass (2007-09)
Mike Commodore (2007-08)
Brian Lee (2007-09)
Brian Elliott (2007-09)
Alexander Nikulin (2 games 2007)
Jesse Winchester (2007-09)
Ilya Zubov (11 games 2007-09)
Filip Kuba (2008-09)
Jarkko Ruutu (2008-09)
Brendan Bell (2008-09)
Ryan Shannon (2008-09)
Alexandre Picard (2008-09)
Peter Regin (2008-09)
Jason Smith (2008-09)
Matt Carkner (1 game 2009)
Zack Smith (1 game 2008)
Alex Auld (2008-09)
Columbus Blue Jackets
Christian Backman (17 games 2009)
Jared Boll (2009-12)
Derick Brassard (2009-12)
Jason Chimera (2009-10)
Mike Commodore (2009-11)
Derek Dorsett (2009-12)
Wade Dubliewicz (17 games 2009)
Nikita Filatov (2009-11)
Chris Gratton (6 games 2009)
Jan Hejda (2009-11)
Kristian Huselius (2009-12)
Rostislav Klesla (2009-11)
Manny Malhotra (21 games 2009)
Steve Mason (2009-12)
Marc Methot (2009-12)
Freddy Modin (2009-10)
Andrew Murray (2009-11)
Rick Nash (2009-12)
Jiri Novotny (17 games 2009)
Michael Peca (21 games 2009)
Aaron Rome (9 games 2009)
Kris Russell (2009-12)
Ole-Kristian Tollefsen (17 games 2009)
Raffi Torres (2009-10)
Fedor Tyutin (2009-12)
R.J. Umberger (2009-12)
Jakub Voracek (2009-11)
Jason Williams (21 games 2009)
Anton Stralman (2009-11)
Sammy Pahlsson (2009-12)
Mathieu Roy (2009-10)
Chris Clark (2009-11)
Derek MacKenzie (2009-12)
Mike Blunden (2009-11)
Milan Jurcina (17 games 2009-10)
Grant Clitsome (2009-11)
Tomas Kana (6 games 2009)
Alexandre Picard (9 games 2009)
Tom Sestito (12 games 2009-11)
Trevor Frischmon (3 games 2009)
Maxim Mayorov (19 games 2009-12)
Nathan Paetsch (10 games 2009-10)
Greg Moore (4 games 2009)
Chad Kolarik (3 games 2010)
Mathieu Garon (2009-11)
Matt Calvert (2010-12)
Kyle Wilson (2010-11)
Scottie Upshall (2010-11)
Ethan Moreau (2010-11)
Sami Lepisto (19 games 2010-11)
Tomas Kubalik (12 games 2010-12)
Craig Rivet (14 games 2011)
Nick Holden (7 games 2010-12)
John Moore (2010-12)
Nate Guenin (3 games 2010)
David LeNeveu (1 game 2011)
Vaclav Prospal (2011-12)
Nikita Nikitin (2011-12)
James Wisniewski (2011-12)
Jeff Carter (2011-12)
Mark Letestu (2011-12)
Ryan Johansen (2011-12)
Aaron Johnson (2011-12)
Cam Atkinson (2011-12)
Jack Johnson (9 games 2012)
David Savard (2011-12)
Colton Gillies (2011-12)
Brett Lebda (2011-12)
Darryl Boyce (8 games 2012)
Ryan Russell (2011-12)
Radek Martinek (7 games 2011-12)
Curtis Sanford (2011-12)
Allen York (11 games 2011-12)
Phoenix/Arizona Coyotes
Adrian Aucoin (2011-12)
Paul Bissonnette (2011-12)
Mikkel Bodker (2011-15, 2015-16)
Alexandre Bolduc (16 games 2011-13, 3 games 2014-15)
Gilbert Brule (3 games 2012)
Kyle Chipchura (2011-15, 2015-16)
Shane Doan (2011-15, 2015-16)
Oliver Ekman-Larsson (2011-15, 2015-16)
Boyd Gordon (2011-13, 2015-16)
Martin Hanzal (2011-12, 2013-15, 2015-16)
Rostislav Klesla (2011-12, 2013-14)
Lauri Korpikoski (2011-12, 2013-15)
Jason LaBarbara (2011-13)
Daymond Langkow (2011-12)
Andy Miele (15 games 2012-14)
Derek Morris (2011-14)
Marc-Antoine Pouliot (13 games 2012)
Taylor Pyatt (2011-12)
Michal Roszival (2011-12)
David Rundblad (2012-14)
David Schlemko (2011-15)
Mike Smith (2011-15, 2015-16)
Michael Stone (2011-15, 2015-16)
Chris Summers (2011-15)
Raffi Torres (2011-13)
Radim Vrbata (2011-14)
Ray Whitney (2011-12)
Keith Yandle (2011-15)
David Moss (2012-15)
Steve Sullivan (2012-13)
Rob Klinkhammer (2012-15)
Matthew Lombardi (2012-13)
Nick Johnson (17 games 2013)
Zbynek Michalek (2012-15, 2015-16)
Chris Conner (12 games 2013)
Chris Brown (11 games 2013-14)
Chad Johnson (4 games 2013)
Jordan Szwarz (2013-15)
Mike Ribeiro (2013-14)
Jeff Halpern (2013-14)
Tim Kennedy (2013-14)
Brandon McMillan (2013-15)
Martin Erat (2013-15)
Connor Murphy (2013-15, 2015-16)
Brandon Yip (2 games 2014)
Brandon Gormley (2013-15, 2015-16)
Lucas Lessio (2013-15)
Thomas Greiss (2013-14)
Mark Visentin (1 game 2014)
Louis Domingue (7 games 2014-15, 2015-16)
Sam Gagner (2014-15)
Tobias Rieder (2014-15, 2015-16)
Joe Vitale (2014-15, 1 game 2015)
B.J. Crombeen (2014-15)
Andrew Campbell (2014-15)
Jordan Martinook (2015-16)
Justin Hodgman (5 games 2015)
Max Domi (2015-16)
Anthony Duclair (2015-16)
Brad Richardson (2015-16)
Alex Tanguay (2015-16)
Kevin Connauton (2015-16)
Klas Dahlbeck (2015-16)
Nicklas Grossmann (2015-16)
Steve Downie (2015-16)
Viktor Tikhonov (2015-16)
Stefan Elliott (19 games 2016)
Tyler Gaudet (14 games 2015-16)
Jiri Sekac (11 games 2016)
Dustin Jeffrey (7 games 2016)
Craig Cunningham (10 games 2015-16)
Laurent Dauphin (8 games 2015-16)
Sergei Plotnikov (13 games 2015-16)
John Scott (11 games 2015)
Anders Lindback (19 games 2015-16)
Nicklas Treutle (2 games 2016)
Chicago Blackhawks
Jonathan Toews (2014-15)
Patrick Kane (2014-15)
Marian Hossa (2014-15)
Brandon Saad (2014-15)
Duncan Keith (2014-15)
Patrick Sharp (2014-15)
Brad Richards (2014-15)
Kris Versteeg (2014-15)
Brent Seabrook (2014-15)
Bryan Bickell (2014-15)
Andrew Shaw (2014-15)
Niklas Hjalmarsson (2014-15)
Marcus Kruger (2014-15)
David Rundblad (2014-15)
Michal Roszival (2014-15)
Johnny Oduya (2014-15)
Teuvo Teravainen (2014-15)
Daniel Carcillo (2014-15)
Joakim Nordstrom (2014-15)
Andrew Desjardins (2014-15)
Trevor Van Riemsdyk (2014-15)
Kimmo Timomen (2014-15)
Kyle Cumiskey (16 games 2015)
Corey Crawford (2014-15)
Scott Darling (2014-15)
Antti Raanta (2014-15)
Anaheim Ducks
Ryan Getzlaf (2016-18)
Ryan Kesler (2016-18)
Corey Perry (2016-18)
Rickard Rakell (2016-18)
Jakob Silfverberg (2016-18)
Cam Fowler (2016-18)
Andrew Cogliano (2016-18)
Sami Vatanen (2016-18)
Hampus Lindholm (2016-18)
Josh Manson (2016-18)
Ondrej Kase (2016-18)
Patrick Eaves (2016-18)
Kevin Bieksa (2016-18)
Joseph Cramarossa (2016-17)
Logan Shaw (2016-18)
Shea Theodore (2016-17)
Chris Wagner (2016-18)
Korbinian Holzer (2016-18)
Brandon Montour (2016-18)
Clayton Stoner (2016-17)
Jared Boll (2016-18)
Ryan Garbutt (2016-17)
Stefan Noesen (12 games 2016)
Nate Thompson (2016-17)
Mike Sgarbossa (9 games 2016)
Nick Sorensen (5 games 2016)
Simon Despres (1 game 2016)
Emerson Etem (3 games 2016)
John Gibson (2016-18)
Jonathan Bernier (2016-17)
Dustin Tokarski (1 game 2016)
Nic Kerdiles (7 games 2016-18)
Adam Henrique (2017-18)
Derek Grant (2017-18)
Francois Beauchemin (2017-18)
Kevin Roy (2017-18)
Dennis Rasmussen (2017-18)
J.T. Brown (2017-18)
Marcus Pettersson (2017-18)
Jaycob Megna (12 games 2017)
Ryan Miller (2017-18)
Reto Berra (5 games 2017-18)
Team Canada
Brent Burns (2011)
Cal Clutterbuck (2011)
Carlo Colaiacovo (2011)
Matt Duchene (2011)
Jordan Eberle (2011)
Marc-Andre Gragnani (2011)
Evander Kane (2011)
Andrew Ladd (2011)
Marc Methot (2011)
Rick Nash (2011)
James Neal (2011)
Dion Phaneuf (2011)
Alex Pietrangelo (2011)
Mario Scalzo (2011)
Luke Schenn (2011)
Jeff Skinner (2011)
Jason Spezza (2011)
Chris Stewart (2011)
John Tavares (2011)
Travis Zajac (2011)
Jonathan Bernier (2011)
Devan Dubnyk (2011)
James Reimer (2011)
1 note · View note
goalhofer · 6 years
Text
Every Chris Neil Teammate
OHL
Brett Angel (1997-99)
Ryan Armstrong (1998-99)
Scott Atkins (1996-97)
Alex Auld (1997-99)
Michael Barber (1998-99)
Colin Beardsmore (1996-97)
Scott Behrens (1997-98)
Luc Belliveau (1996-97)
Brendan Brooks (1997-98)
Matt Carmichael (1996-98)
Steve Chabbert (1997-99)
Mike Cirillo (1996-99)
Ryan Cirillo (1996-98)
Lee Cole (1996-97)
Dwight Cormier (1996-97)
Rob Davison (1997-99)
John Dean (1997-99)
Sean Degagne (1998-99)
Tomas Dolak (1997-98)
Chris Eade (1998-99)
Omar Ennaffati (1997-99)
Adriano Fiacconi (1996-98)
Aaron Fox (1996-97)
David Froh (1996-97)
Ryan Gardner (1996-98)
Brett Gibson (1997-99)
Trevor Gillies (1996-98)
Oak Hewer (1998-99)
Allen Hitchen (1997-98)
Warren Holmes (1998-99)
Samu Isosalo (1998-99)
Denis Ivanov (1997-98)
Mark Jerant (1997-99)
Michal Krupa (1997-98)
Greg Labenski (1996-99)
Josh Legge (1998-99)
Mike Loach (1996-97)
Steve Lowe (1996-97)
Ryan MacDonald (1996-97)
Scott MacKenzie (1998-99)
Morris Marshall (1996-97)
Peter McCague (1996-98)
Dean McIntosh (1996-97)
Luc Messier (1998-99)
Jim Midgley (1996-97)
Todd Miller (1997-98)
Lorne Misita (1998-99)
Steve Montador (1996-98)
Jaret Nixon (1996-97)
Matt Osborne (1997-98)
Tony Pappas (1996-98)
Jeremy Pedder (1997-99)
Geoff Peters (1997-98)
Jamie Piercey (1996-99)
Ryan Power (1996-97)
Mark Provenzano (1996-97)
Bobby Reed (1997-99)
Tyler Rennette (1996-98)
Rodney Richard (1997-99)
Scott Roche (1996-97)
Jeff Scharf (1996-97)
Carson Smith (1996-97)
Gabriel Spilar (1998-99)
Rob Stanfield (1997-98)
Valeriy Svoboda (1996-97)
Ryan Taylor (1996-97)
Troy Turyk (1996-97)
Chris Van Dyk (1996-97)
Dustin Virag (1996-97)
Jamie Vossen (1996-97)
Rich Vrataric (1996-97)
Nick Vukovic (1997-99)
Jeff Washbrook (1996-97)
Casey Wolak (1997-98)
Scott Wray (1996-99)
UHL
Denis Afinogenov (1998-99)
Cory Banika (1998-99)
David Beauregard (1998-99)
Robin Bouchard (1998-99)
David Bouskill (1998-99)
Kevin Boyd (1998-99)
Bob Brandon (1998-99)
Joe Dimaline (1998-99)
Denis Emilyantsev (1998-99)
Mike Feasby (1998-99)
Scott Feasby (1998-99)
Nick Foley (1998-99)
Joel Gardner (1998-99)
Dale Gignac (1998-99)
Chad Grills (1998-99)
Jan Klimes (1998-99)
Sergei Kharin (1998-99)
Denis Khlopotnov (1998-99)
Lubos Krajcovic (1998-99)
Igor Malykhin (1998-99)
Chris Maillet (1998-99)
Mike Masini (1998-99)
Don McSween (1998-99)
Rob Melanson (1998-99)
Frankie Nault (1998-99)
Jason Pain (1998-99)
Andrei Petrakov (1998-99)
Andrei Petrunin (1998-99)
Vadim Podrezov (1998-99)
Grant Richison (1998-99)
John Vary (1998-99)
Mark Vilneff (1998-99)
Joakim Wassberger (1998-99)
Paul Willett (1998-99)
ECHL
Chad Alban (1999-2000)
Scott Cherrey (1999-2000)
Jason Clarke (1999-2000)
Benoit Cotnoir (1999-2000)
Dave Craievich (1999-2000)
Steve Debus (1999-2000)
Jason Elders (1999-2000)
Sean Farmer (1999-2000)
Hugues Gervais (1999-2000)
Dereck Gosselin (1999-2000)
Russ Guzior (1999-2000)
Josh Harrold (1999-2000)
B.J. Kilbourne (1999-2000)
Jeff Kozakowski (1999-2000)
John McCabe (1999-2000)
Jason Metcalfe (1999-2000)
Dennis Mullen (1999-2000)
Tom Nolan (1999-2000)
Chad Onufrechuk (1999-2000)
Anders Sorensen (1999-2000)
Bobby Stewart (1999-2000)
Lee Svangstu (1999-2000)
Mark Turner (1999-2000)
David Van Drunen (1999-2000)
Mitch Vig (1999-2000)
Ian Walterson (1999-2000)
David Whitworth (1999-2000)
IHL
Dave Baseggio (1999-2000)
Frederick Beaubin (1999-2000)
Vyacheslav Butsayev (1999-2000)
Ivan Ciernik (1999-2000)
Danton Cole (1999-2000)
John Emmons (1999-2000)
Mike Fountain (1999-2000)
Erich Goldmann (1999-2000)
Konstantin Gorovikov (1999-2000)
Kevin Grimes (1999-2000)
John Gruden (1999-2000)
Jani Hurme (1999-2000)
Kory Karlander (1999-2000)
Shane Kenny (1999-2000)
Derek King (1999-2000)
Dieter Kochan (1999-2000)
Mike Maurice (1999-2000)
Jason McBain (1999-2000)
Jason Metcalfe (1999-2000)
Kevin Miller (1999-2000)
Todd Nelson (1999-2000)
Warren Norris (1999-2000)
Ed Patterson (1999-2000)
Rostislav Pavlikovsky (1999-2000)
Robert Petrovicky (1999-2000)
Philippe Plante (1999-2000)
Michel Picard (1999-2000)
Dennis Pinfold (1999-2000)
Karel Rachunek (1999-2000)
Travis Richards (1999-2000)
Darren Rumble (1999-2000)
Yves Sarault (1999-2000)
Petr Schastlivy (1999-2000)
Konstantin Shafranov (1999-2000)
Jeff Shevalier (1999-2000)
Andrei Sryubko (1999-2000)
Chris Szysky (1999-2000)
David Van Drunen (1999-2000)
Buddy Wallace (1999-2000)
AHL
Brandon Bochenski (2004-05)
Danny Bois (2004-05)
Derek Campbell (2004-05)
Regan Darby (2004-05)
Ray Emery (2004-05)
Jesse Fibiger (2004-05)
Denis Hamel (2004-05)
Andy Hedlund (2004-05)
David Hymovitz (2004-05)
Gregg Johnson (2004-05)
Pat Kavanagh (2004-05)
Chris Kelly (2004-05)
Neil Komadoski (2004-05)
Josh Langfeld (2004-05)
Brian McGrattan (2004-05)
Arpad Mihaly (2004-05)
Jan Platil (2004-05)
Brian Pothier (2004-05)
Grant Potulny (2004-05)
Christoph Schubert (2004-05)
Jason Spezza (2004-05)
Charlie Stephens (2004-05)
Billy Thompson (2004-05)
Antoine Vermette (2004-05)
Anton Volchenkov (2004-05)
Greg Watson (2004-05)
NHL
Daniel Alfredsson (2001-04, 2005-15)
Craig Anderson (2010-17)
Tyler Arneson (2005-06)
Magnus Arvedson (2001-03)
Alex Auld (2008-12)
Chris Bala (2001-02)
Cody Bass (2007-09, 2010-11)
Brendan Bell (2008-09)
Andre Benoit (2010-12)
Ben Bishop (2012-13)
Mike Blunden (2016-17)
Brandon Bochenski (2005-06)
Danny Bois (2006-07)
Peter Bondra (2003-04)
Radek Bonk (2001-04)
Dennis Bonvie (2002-03)
Mark Borowiecki (2011-13)
Derick Brassard (2016-17)
Benoit Brunet (2001-02)
Alexandre Burrows (2016-17)
Bobby Butler (2009-12)
Chris Campoli (2008-10)
Matt Carkner (2009-12)
Cody Ceci (2013-17)
Zdeno Chara (2001-04, 2005-06)
Jonathan Cheechoo (2009-10)
Alex Chiasson (2014-16)
Ivan Ciernik (2001-02)
Fredrik Claesson (2015-17)
Mike Commodore (2007-08)
Mike Comrie (2006-09)
Cory Conacher (2012-13)
Mike Condon (2016-17)
Erik Condra (2011-15)
Joe Corvo (2006-08)
Jared Cowen (2009-15)
Matt Cullen (2009-10)
Stephane Da Costa (2010-13)
Toni Dahlman (2001-03)
Kaspars Daugavins (2011-13)
Greg De Vries (2003-04)
Chris DiDomenico (2016-17)
Shean Donovan (2007-10)
Chris Driedger (2016-17)
David Dziurzynski (2011-13)
Ryan Dzingel (2015-17)
Patrick Eaves (2005-08)
Ray Emery (2002-04, 2005-08)
Andreas Englund (2016-17)
Mike Fisher (2001-04, 2005-11)
Nick Foligno (2007-12)
Martin Gerber (2006-08)
Matt Gilroy (2011-12)
Scott Gomez (2015-16)
Sergei Gonchar (2010-13)
Derek Grant (2012-13)
Colin Greening (2010-14)
Eric Gryba (2011-14)
Jyrki Jokipakka (2016-17)
David Hale (2010-11)
Denis Hamel (2003-04, 2005-07)
Andrew Hammond (2014-17)
Ben Harpur (2015-17)
Dominik Hasek (2005-06)
Martin Havlat (2001-04, 2005-06)
Dany Heatley (2005-09)
Ales Hemsky (2013-14)
Josh Hennessy (2006-08, 2009-10)
Chris Herperger (2001-02)
Shane Hnidy (2001-04)
Mike Hoffman (2011-17)
Marian Hossa (2001-04)
Jody Hull (2001-04)
Jani Hurme (2001-02)
Alexei Kaigorodov (2006-07)
Erik Karlsson (2009-17)
Matt Kassian (2012-14)
Chris Kelly (2003-04, 2005-10, 2016-17)
Rob Klinkhammer (2011-12)
Zenon Konopka (2011-12)
Mike Kostka (2015-16)
Alex Kovalev (2009-10)
Filip Kuba (2008-12)
Joel Kwiatkowski (2001-03)
Brooks Laich (2003-04)
Patrick Lalime (2001-04)
Simon Lajeunesse (2001-02)
Josh Langfeld (2001-04)
Martin Lapointe (2007-08)
Guillaume Latendresse (2012-13)
Curtis Lazar (2014-16)
Pascal Leclaire (2008-11)
Brian Lee (2007-11)
David Legwand (2014-15)
Robin Lehner (2011-15)
Curtis Leschyshyn (2001-04)
Francis Lessard (2010-11)
Mike Lundin (2012-13)
Clarke MacArthur (2013-17)
Shawn MacEachern (2001-02)
Tomas Malec (2005-07)
Dean McAmmond (2006-08)
Max McCormick (2016-17)
Brian McGrattan (2005-08)
Curtis McElhinney (2010-11)
Steve Martins (2001-04, 2005-06)
Andrej Meszaros (2005-08)
Marc Methot (2012-17)
Milan Michalek (2009-15)
Mike Morrison (2005-06)
Bill Muckalt (2001-02)
Alexander Nikulin (2007-08)
Brad Norton (2005-06)
Filip Novak (2005-06)
Lawrence Nycholat (2006-08)
Jim O’Brien (2011-13)
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (2012-17)
Nick Paul (2015-17)
Serge Payer (2003-04, 2006-07)
Ricard Persson (2001-02)
Andre Petersson (2011-12)
Dion Phaneuf (2015-17)
Chris Phillips (2001-04, 2005-16)
Alexandre Picard (2008-09)
Brian Pothier (2002-04, 2005-06)
Tom Preissing (2006-07)
Martin Prusek (2001-04)
Matt Puempel (2014-16)
Tom Pyatt (2016-17)
Karel Rachunek (2001-04)
Rob Ray (2002-04)
Wade Redden (2001-04, 2005-08)
Peter Regin (2009-13)
Luke Richardson (2007-08)
Jamie Rivers (2001-02)
Charles Robinson (2015-16)
Randy Robitaille (2007-08)
Andre Roy (2001-02)
Jarkko Ruutu (2008-10)
Bobby Ryan (2013-17)
Sami Salo (2001-02)
Oleg Saprykin (2006-07)
Peter Schaefer (2002-04, 2005-07)
Petr Schastlivy (2001-04)
Christoph Schubert (2005-09)
Ryan Shannon (2008-11)
Jakob Silfverberg (2011-13)
Todd Simpson (2003-04)
Bryan Smolinski (2002-04, 2005-06)
Derek Smith (2009-11)
Jason Smith (2008-09)
Zack Smith (2009-17)
Brad Smyth (2002-03)
Jason Spezza (2002-04, 2005-14)
Viktor Stalberg (2016-17)
Cory Stillman (2007-08)
Mark Stone (2011-17)
Andy Sutton (2009-10)
Marek Svatos (2010-11)
Joey Tetarenko (2002-03)
Kyle Turris (2011-17)
Shaun Van Allen (2002-04)
Vaclav Varada (2002-04, 2005-06)
Phil Varone (2015-17)
Julien Vauclair (2003-04)
Antoine Vermette (2003-04, 2005-08)
Anton Volchenkov (2002-04, 2005-10)
Chris Wideman (2015-16)
Patrick Wiercioch (2011-15)
Jesse Winchester (2007-12)
Colin White (2016-17)
Todd White (2001-04)
Tommy Wingels (2016-17)
Juha Ylonen (2001-02)
Mika Zibanejad (2011-16)
Ilya Zubov (2007-08)
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