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#kyle mrazek
heartlandians · 14 days
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Block 1: Day 1 (14/5/2024), part 1. Photos by: Kyle Mrazek, Megan Tracz, Allied Armorers, Louanne, Betty Tong Casting, Marty Hanenberg, Heather Roscorla and Heartland on CBC.
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chanelfunnell · 1 year
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Yeah I would blame their assistant coach for finding the way about stronger PK
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Soccer Goalie sport director Petr Cech has really interesting former mates from the national squad called Milan Baros (FC Liverpool and so submarine, in the same sport agency like Mrazek and Cech ) and Koller. Apparently great divers but definitely dressed like the Flinstones.
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Well better than McDavid's socks with holes and wearing fur coats as recent trend. Guys just like to play....
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martyredhate · 2 years
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ive been actively trying (and failing) to avoid news about them bc everything they've done is disappointing and stupid but it really hit me right now how DEEPLY disappointing snd stupid they were this offseason. like ok so they traded away debrincat, their 2nd best player, which was supposed to net them a hefty return but ended up being basically nothing. and then they traded away kirby who was supposed to be their future captain yada yada bc what, a developing prospect had a couple low seasons due to injuries beyond his control???? also for basically nothing in return, might i add. and THEN they let strome walk away FOR NOTHING in free agency and also let kubalik walk away to FOR NOTHING and now theres actual validity to those stupid rumors that jonny and kaner are going to leave when they were supposed to be forever hawks and like literally what the fuck is there even to look forward to???? bedard isnt even a guarantee and seth jones for another fucking eight years and no goalies in sight like this team is in fucking shambles and theres no one left to even love :-( genuinely depressed about this.
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midnightsoldier187 · 2 years
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In Kyle Dubas we trust
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sergeifyodorov · 4 months
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hmm i was scrolling through Twitter earlier and as the designated leafs blog in my mind, what are your thoughts on fraser minten? like he’s so interesting to me because in the narrative i’ve created of him he was tavares’ fifth child but then was our balanced by knies being better, but then wjc happened and he still couldn’t crack it. now he’s on the blades (one of the best whl teams i think??) very interesting
NARRATIVELY he's definitely The Tavares Child -- okayyyy so. Sew. this New Generation of leafs (imho starting at Knies and including Easton Cowan as well as minten) kind of... each parallel a member of the Core: Knies is Auston's child (Arizona boy, big strong forward), Cowan is Mitch's child (London Knight, small winger with endless energy) and Minten is JT's child (Captain anywhere he goes, known for maturity and intelligence)... william child + morgan child ->
anyHWAY the real life scouting report under the cut (not too long i don't think)
Minten's a high second-rounder, which is the type of player that's generally designated as an "upper maybe" NHLer -- by which I mean odds-on he'll get NHL games (as Mints has) but it's less likely he'll become a serious full-time player (although many a second-rounder can and does do so!) The most interesting thing about his draft position was that the Leafs, under Kyle Dubas, traded DOWN to get him -- we had a low first-rounder, then traded it to Chicago to get rid of the Mrazek contract and got the pick that would become Mints in return. Many a source says that Kyle wanted Mints anyway and would have taken him with the first-round pick.
The general consensus is that Mints tops out as a middle-six centre, a 3C on a good team or a 2C on a worse one (or a 1C on the Boston Bruins.) His ceiling is probably about 40 or 50 points, maybe more depending on how much power-play usage he gets.
However, it's also noted (and was pretty obvious to me, even watching him at the WJC -- which I'll get to in a second!) that his real value is not and will likely never be in point production. He's a natural centre, good-to-great at faceoffs (a skill that he learned in part from JT!!) and very good defensively. Because he's still a kid, plays a bit physically and tends to be involved in the play at both ends, he probably takes a few too many undisciplined stick infractions, but these things of course can be straightened out with time and wisdom. Also, he's a touch of a personality hire: he was the youngest A on the all-timer Kamloops Blazers last year and was pretty much immediately named C after the Leafs sent him home this year; he was named captain of the CANADIAN WORLD JUNIORS team with zero other experience playing for Canada on the national level. He plays the piano! He's smart, polite, doesn't cause a fuss, wise beyond his years. Takes a guy far.
Anyway, the WJC: just an absolute hackjob by the coach and one of those years that really demonstrates that Hockey Canada still thinks it can get ahead by being Canada (the ol' throw bodies at the wall shtick) and not, like, because of its actual quality of development. I think bowing out when they did was a bit unlucky, but they absolutely were NOT primed to win it all -- especially because the coach basically seemed to have no concept of... line construction? or anything of the sort? Like he just tossed players together from a hat once (1) and decided they were just going to play out the tourney like that -- no real concept of "x is the playmaker, y is the shooter, z is the forechecker" or "these three are the transition line that take d-zone draws and use their speed to create rush chances/o-zone draws" or even something so simple as "this defensively-minded, slower centre is perhaps not the best match for the winger notorious for being opportunistic and shooty." Also, not to put too fine a point on it but a player can have a bad WJC and it doesn't mean anything, or a good WJC and it also doesn't mean anything -- Jesse Puljujarvi rose his draft stock by a good chunk in 2016 by having a FANTASTIC WJC, and he's currently on an AHL tryout. It's a small sample size, mostly played with teammates they barely know and against competition about a half-step up from what they're used to. Weird statlines happen.
Back to MINTS because we're still talking about him. Yess currently he's on the Blades -- traded from the Blazers because the Blazers are garbage and they want to Do Right By The Player and put him on a competitive team (done for two reasons: one, because it can be demoralizing to be the best player on a bad team, and two, because being on a good team in juniors often means you get actually good-for-your-development linemates and usage). He was generally not expected to make the Leafs at ALL this season (I mean, 20-year-old second-rounder, right?) and cracking the roster out of camp, even though he only got three games and has a rather blank statline is SUPER impressive. I'm pretty sure this is his last year of CHL eligibility, after which he'll probably either get put on the Marlies for a year to keep cooking or he'll make the Leafs again and stick around. Either way, he's slid twice I think so we burn a year of his ELC.
and my opinion of the boy? I love him. Let's go baby leafs baby leafs forevar
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sabtalkshockey · 2 years
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no because fuck kyle davidson. let’s give away all of patrick kane’s help. and of all goalies mrazek? really?
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boxscorehockey · 3 months
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Goalie Alphabetical Directory
Last Updated March 3 2024
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Allen Jake Alnefelt Hugo Andersen Frederik Annunen Justus Askarov Yaroslav Augustine Trey Binnington Jordan Bjarnason Carson Blackwood Mackenzie Blomqvist Joel Bobrovsky Sergei Brennan Tyler Brossoit Laurent Bussi Brandon Campbell Jack Clara Damian Comesso Drew Comrie Eric Copley Pheonix Cossa Sebastian Daccord Joey Daws Nico Demko Thatcher Dostal Lukas Driedger Chris Ersson Samuel Fedotov Ivan Fleury Marc-Andre Forsberg Anton Fowler Jacob Francouz Pavel Gajan Adam Garand Dylan Georgiev Alexandar Gibson John Greaves Jet Grubauer Philip Gustavsson Filip Halak Jaroslav Hart Carter Hellberg Magnus Hellebucyk Connor Hildeby Dennis Hill Adin Hofer Joel Hrabal Michael Husso Ville Ingram Connor Jarry Tristan Johansson Jonas Jones Martin Kahkonen Kaapo Keyser Kyle Knight Spencer Kochetkov Pyotr Kokko Niklas Kolosov Alexei Korpisalo Joonas Kuemper Darcy Lankinen Kevin Larsson Filip Leinonen Topias Lennox Tristan Levi Devon Lindberg Filip Lindbom Olof Lindgren Charlie Luukkonen Ukko-Pekka Lyon Alex Malek Jakub Markstrom Jacob Martin Spencer Merilainen Leevi Merzlikins Elvis Montembault Samuel Mrazek Petr Murashov Sergey Nedeljkovic Alex Oettinger Jake Portillo Erik Poulter Isaac Primeau Cayden Prosvetov Ivan Quick Jonathan Raanta Antti Ratzlaff Scott Reimer James Rittich David Samsonov Ilya Saros Juuse Saville Isaiah Schmid Akira Shesterkin Igor Silovs Arturs Skinner Stuart Soderblom Arvid Sogaard Mads Sorokin Ilya Stauber Jaxon Stevenson Clay Svedeback Philip Swayman Jeremy Talbot Cam Tarasov Daniil Tendeck David Thompson Logan Tolopilo Nikita Ullmark Linus Vanecek Vitek Varlamov Semyon Vasilevskiy Andrei Vejmelka Karel Vladar Daniel Wallstedt Jesper Wedgewood Scott Wolf Dustin Woll Joseph Zavragin Yegor
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mitchbeck · 1 year
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AMERICAN HOCKEY LEAGUE SELECTS FIRST AND SECOND ALL-STAR TEAMS
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SPRINGFIELD, Mass. … The American Hockey League announced today the 2022-23 AHL First and Second All-Star Teams, as voted by AHL coaches, players, and media in each of the league’s 32 member cities. 2022-23 AHL First All-Star Team Goaltender ― Dustin Wolf, Calgary Wranglers (53 GP, 41-9-2, 2.08 GAA, .932 SV%, 7 SO) Defenseman ― Darren Raddysh, Syracuse Crunch (50 GP, 13-38-51, +19, 1 PPG) Defenseman ― Christian Wolanin, Abbotsford Canucks (49 GP, 6-49-55, +12, 24 PPA) Forward ― Alex Barré-Boulet, Syracuse Crunch (67 GP, 23-59-82, +25, 7 PPG) Forward ― Michael Carcone, Tucson Roadrunners (63 GP, 31-53-84, +5, 14 PPG, 5 GWG) Forward ― Matthew Phillips, Calgary Wranglers (64 GP, 36-39-75, +17, 10 PPG, 15 GWG) 2022-23 AHL Second All-Star Team Goaltender ― Joel Hofer, Springfield Thunderbirds (45 GP, 25-15-5, 2.57 GAA, .918 SV%, 4 SO) Defenseman ― Lucas Carlsson, Charlotte Checkers (60 GP, 19-33-52, +24, 3 PPG, 1 SHG) Defenseman ― Brogan Rafferty, Coachella Valley Firebirds (70 GP, 9-42-51, +31, 2 PPG) Forward ― Trey Fix-Wolansky, Cleveland Monsters (58 GP, 29-41-70, 11 PPG, 2 GWG) Forward ― Max McCormick, Coachella Valley Firebirds (69 GP, 28-39-67, +17, 11 PPG, 2 SHG) Forward ― T.J. Tynan, Ontario Reign (70 GP, 8-71-79, 3 PPG, 35 PPA) Each All-Star Team member will receive a custom-designed crystal award in recognition of his selection to the 2022-23 AHL First and Second All-Star Teams. Recent AHL All-Star Team selections include P.K. Subban (2010), Jonathan Bernier (2010), Kyle Palmieri (2012), Tyler Johnson (2013), Jonathan Marchessault (2013), Justin Schultz (2013), Gustav Nyquist (2013), Jake Allen (2014), Mike Hoffman (2014), Petr Mrazek (2014), Matt Murray (2015, 2016), Jacob Markstrom (2015), Colin Miller (2015), Brandon Montour (2016), Frank Vatrano (2016), Mikko Rantanen (2016), Travis Boyd (2017), Mason Appleton (2018), Carter Verhaeghe (2019), Alex Nedeljkovic (2019), Kaapo Kahkonen (2020), Jake Bean (2020), Josh Norris (2020), Drake Batherson (2020), Jeremy Swayman (2021), Morgan Barron (2021), Taylor Raddysh (2021), Calen Addison (2021), Logan Thompson (2021), Josh Mahura (2021) and Stefan Noesen (2022). The winner of the 2022-23 Fred T. Hunt Memorial Award (sportsmanship, determination, dedication to hockey) will be announced Friday. 2022-23 AHL First All-Star Team
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Dustin Wolf, Goaltender (Calgary Wranglers): Winner of the Baz Bastien Award as the AHL’s top goaltender as a rookie in 2021-22, Dustin Wolf has followed up with another remarkable season, leading the AHL in wins (41), goals-against average (2.08), save percentage (.932), shutouts (7), minutes played (3,120), shots faced (1,594) and saves (1,486). Wolf, a 21-year-old native of Gilroy, Calif., also earned co-MVP honors at the 2023 AHL All-Star Challenge in Laval back in February, and picked up a victory in his NHL debut with the Calgary Flames on Apr. 12. He becomes the first AHL goaltender to garner back-to-back First Team All-Star nods since Bob Janecyk in 1981-82 and 1982-83, and the first ever to do so in his first two pro seasons. Darren Raddysh, Defenseman (Syracuse Crunch): Sixth-year pro Darren Raddysh has had a breakout season in 2022-23, shattering his previous career highs with 13 goals, 38 assists and 51 points in just 50 games played with Syracuse. Raddysh is tied for third in scoring among AHL defensemen despite spending most of the second half of the season in the NHL, where he has skated in 16 games with the Tampa Bay Lightning. The Toronto native also represented the Crunch at the 2023 AHL All-Star Classic. Christian Wolanin, Defenseman (Abbotsford Canucks): Christian Wolanin leads all AHL defensemen with 49 assists and 55 points this season while skating in 49 games for Abbotsford in his first campaign in the Canucks organization. Wolanin, who has also played 16 games in the NHL with Vancouver this year, had a 13-game scoring streak from Nov. 10 to Dec. 9, and participated in the 2023 AHL All-Star Classic in Laval, his second career All-Star nod. Originally a fourth-round pick by Ottawa in the 2015 NHL Draft, Wolanin signed a two-year extension with Vancouver on Mar. 23. Alex Barré-Boulet, Forward (Syracuse Crunch): Alex Barré-Boulet earns his second career postseason All-Star berth with a First Team selection as he ranks second in the AHL in assists (59) and points (82) – both career highs – over 67 games with Syracuse. The fifth-year pro is also tied for third in plus/minus among AHL forwards with a plus-25 rating, and he became the Crunch franchise’s all-time leader in goals, assists and points over the course of this season. A native of Montmagny, Que., Barré-Boulet was previously a Second Team All-Star in 2019-20, and was named the league’s outstanding rookie in 2018-19. Michael Carcone, Forward (Tucson Roadrunners): The AHL’s leading scorer heading into the final weekend of the regular season, Michael Carcone has nearly doubled his previous career high with 84 points (31 goals, 53 assists) in 63 games for Tucson in 2022-23. Carcone also leads the league with 263 shots on goal, and ranks second with his 14 power-play tallies. The seventh-year pro from Ajax, Ont., recorded 30 points during a 15-game scoring streak from Dec. 17 to Jan. 31, the longest in the league this season. Matthew Phillips, Forward (Calgary Wranglers): A 2016 draft pick by his hometown Calgary Flames, Matthew Phillips has set career highs across the board for the second year in a row, recording 36 goals (tied for the AHL lead), 39 assists, 75 points and a plus-17 rating in 64 games for the Wranglers. The fifth-year pro has also tied an all-time AHL mark with 15 game-winning tallies, helping Calgary to a league-best 50 victories and the best record ever for a Flames AHL affiliate. The AHL Player of the Month for November also skated in his first AHL All-Star Classic. 2022-23 AHL Second All-Star Team
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Joel Hofer, Goaltender (Springfield Thunderbirds): Joel Hofer earns a Second Team AHL All-Star nod on the strength of a 25-15-5 record, a 2.57 goals-against average and a .918 save percentage in 45 appearances for Springfield this season. Hofer is also tied for second in the league with four shutouts, and ranks third in minutes played (2,660) and shots faced (1,283) while helping the Thunderbirds to their second straight trip to the Calder Cup Playoffs. A 22-year-old native of Winnipeg, Man., Hofer has also played six games this season with the St. Louis Blues, who selected him in the fourth round of the 2018 NHL Draft. Lucas Carlsson, Defenseman (Charlotte Checkers): Lucas Carlsson ranks second among AHL defensemen in scoring with 52 points (19 goals, 33 assists) in 60 games heading into the final weekend of the regular season for Charlotte. Carlsson’s goal, assist and point totals all represent career highs for the native of Gavle, Sweden, who is in his fifth season of pro hockey in North America. The 25-year-old blueliner also owns a team-best plus-24 rating, and has chipped in three power-play goals and one shorthanded marker as well. Brogan Rafferty, Defenseman (Coachella Valley Firebirds): A Second Team All-Star as a rookie in 2019-20, Brogan Rafferty secures his second career selection this season as he sits tied for third among AHL defensemen in scoring with 51 points in 70 games for Coachella Valley. The fourth-year pro from West Dundee, Ill., is also tied for second among blueliners with 42 assists, and ranks third among all AHL skaters with a plus/minus rating of plus-31. The Quinnipiac University product joined the Seattle Kraken as a free agent on July 13, 2022. Trey Fix-Wolansky, Forward (Cleveland Monsters): Trey Fix-Wolansky has carried the Cleveland offense all season, pacing the team with 29 goals and 41 assists in 58 games played to tie the franchise single-season record with 70 points. The 23-year-old native of Edmonton, Alta., has scored 11 times and added 19 assists with the man advantage, figuring in on the scoring of nearly half of Cleveland’s 61 power-play goals this season. Fix-Wolansky, a seventh-round pick by Columbus in the 2018 NHL Draft, has also skated in nine NHL games with the Blue Jackets in 2022-23. Max McCormick, Forward (Coachella Valley Firebirds): A ninth-year pro from De Pere, Wis., Max McCormick had already set career scoring highs by the All-Star break, when he represented Coachella Valley at the AHL’s midseason showcase in Laval. He has continued his standout season through the second half and has amassed 28 goals and 39 assists for 67 points along with a plus-17 rating in 69 games for the Firebirds entering the final weekend of the regular season. A 2011 draft pick by Ottawa, McCormick is in his second season with the Seattle Kraken organization. T.J. Tynan, Forward (Ontario Reign): T.J. Tynan earns his third consecutive postseason All-Star Team selection, having recorded 71 assists and 79 points in 70 games for Ontario in 2022-23. The AHL’s MVP in both 2020-21 and 2021-22, Tynan is just the fourth player in league history to record at least 70 assists in back-to-back seasons, and will join Art Stratton (four times) as the only AHL players ever to lead the league in assists on three separate occasions. The AHL Player of the Month for January also participated in his fourth career AHL All-Star Classic this winter. AMERICAN HOCKEY LEAGUE HOME Read the full article
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sch-nn · 2 years
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MRAZEK GONE THANK U KYLE
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heartlandians · 1 year
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Block 8: Day 9 (2/12/2022). Photos by: Kyle Mrazek
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readyfreddy · 2 years
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New hockey crush aquired: petr mrazek
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mr-c-c · 3 years
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I want Jack Campbell to stay in Toronto, but if he doesn't get what he wants, he could look elsewhere for a deal he feels he is worth.  But him wanting to stay is a positive.  Campbell is set to be a free agent, hopefully a deal can be reached. If Nick Ritchie continues to not impress, it's a no-brainer to get rid of him.  Michael Bunting on the other hand has been playing well and contributing.  A no-brainer to keep him. There are other choices for players to deal away that have under performed or don’t want to re-sign if they are RFAs or UFAs so they can have cap space to keep Campbell.  It will be interesting to see who stays and who goes.
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torontoarenas · 2 years
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Leafs in the Playoffs! 8
you know what it is. it’s my eighth year of doing this.
Boston
Nick Foligno (2021)
Calgary
Byron Froese (2015 to 2016)
Carolina
Frederik Andersen (2016 to 2021)
Jake Gardiner (2011 to 2019)
Josh Leivo (2013 to 2018)
Stefan Noesen (2021)
Colorado
Nazem Kadri (2010 to 2019)
Dallas
[none]
Edmonton
Cody Ceci (2019 to 2020)
Seth Griffith (2016)
Zach Hyman (2016 to 2021)
Florida
Mason Marchment (2020)
Los Angeles
Trevor Moore (2018 to 2020)
Garret Sparks (2015 to 2019)
Minnesota
[none]
Nashville
Alex Biega (2022)
David Rittich (2021)
NY Rangers
Greg McKegg (2014 to 2015)
Pittsburgh
Brian Boyle (2017)
Kasperi Kapanen (2016 to 2020)
St. Louis
Tyler Bozak (2009 to 2018)
Calle Rosen (2017 to 2019; 2020)
Tampa Bay
Zach Bogosian (2021)
Riley Nash (2021)
Toronto
Nick Abruzzese (2022 to present)
Joey Anderson (2021 to present)
Colin Blackwell (2022 to present)
T. J. Brodie (2021 to present)
Michael Bunting (2021 to present)
Jack Campbell (2020 to present)
Kyle Clifford (2020; 2021 to present)
Carl Dahlstrom (2022 to present)
Pierre Engvall (2019 to present)
Mark Giordano (2022 to present)
Justin Holl (2018 to present)
Michael Hutchinson (2019 to 2020; 2021 to present)
Erik Kallgren (2022 to present)
David Kampf (2021 to present)
Ondrej Kase (2021 to present)
Alexander Kerfoot (2019 to present)
Timothy Liljegren (2020 to present)
Ilya Lyubushkin (2022 to present)
Mitch Marner (2016 to present)
Auston Matthews (2016 to present)
Ilya Mikheyev (2019 to present)
Petr Mrazek (2021 to present)
Jake Muzzin (2019 to present)
William Nylander (2016 to present)
Morgan Rielly (2013 to present)
Nick Robertson (2020 to present)
Kristians Rubins (2021 to present)
Rasmus Sandin (2019 to present)
Brett Seney (2021 to present)
Wayne Simmonds (2021 to present)
Jason Spezza (2019 to present)
Alex Steeves (2021 to present)
John Tavares (2018 to present)
Joseph Woll (2021 to present)
Washington
[none]
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anzekopistar · 3 years
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Free agency recap so far:
Zach Hyman: 7x5.5M with Edmonton
Alec Martinez: 3x5.25M with Vegas
Petr Mrazek: supposed 3 year deal with Toronto
Kyle Palmieri: supposedly will stay with Islanders
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itsjuliak5 · 4 years
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Aquarius Hockey Players ♒
Aquarius: January 20th - February 18th
~~~
Sean Kuraly and Ryan Reaves - January 20th
Kirby Dach, Brayden McNabb, Ryan Suter, and Jonathan Quick - January 21st
Robby Fabbri - January 22nd
Zack Kassian - January 24th
Philippe Myers and Noah Hanifin - January 25th
Wayne Gretzky - January 26th
Kevin Shattenkirk and Joel Eriksson Ek - January 29th
Colin White and Thomas Chabot - January 30th
Tyler Seguin and Jacob Markstrom - January 31st
Kyle Palmieri - February 1st
Brock McGinn - February 2nd
Darnell Nurse - February 4th
Adam Henrique and Otto Leskinen - February 6th
Steven Stamkos and Ryan O’Reilly - February 7th
Robert Hagg and Patrik Nemeth - February 8th
Andre Burakovsky and Mathieu Joseph - February 9th
Alexandar Georgiev - February 10th
Alex Galchenyuk - February 12th 
Kaapo Kakko and Michael McLeod - February 13th
Nikolaj Ehlers, Petr Mrazek, and Brandon Sutter - February 14th
Jaromir Jagr - February 15th
Blake Comeau - February 18th
~~~
These are a bunch of Aquarius hockey players! I definitely missed a few, but I got a few of the main ones along with some surprises!
Other lists: Pisces players, Aries players, Taurus players, Gemini players, Libra players, and Sagittarius players.
Tagging: @quintnsbyfield  💙
Also if you’d like to be tagged in any upcoming one I make, just message me and I’ll tag you no problem!
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boxscorehockey · 3 months
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2023-24 Alpha Goalies
Last Updated February 28, 2024
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Allen Jake Alnefelt Hugo Andersen Frederik Annunen Justus Askarov Yaroslav Augustine Trey Binnington Jordan Bjarnason Carson Blackwood Mackenzie Blomqvist Joel Bobrovsky Sergei Brennan Tyler Brossoit Laurent Bussi Brandon Campbell Jack Clara Damian Comesso Drew Comrie Eric Copley Pheonix Cossa Sebastian Daccord Joey Daws Nico Demko Thatcher Dostal Lukas Driedger Chris Ersson Samuel Fedotov Ivan Fleury Marc-Andre Forsberg Anton Fowler Jacob Francouz Pavel Gajan Adam Garand Dylan Gaudreau Benjamin Georgiev Alexandar Gibson John Greaves Jet Grubauer Philip Gustavsson Filip Halak Jaroslav Hart Carter Hellberg Magnus Hellebucyk Connor Hildeby Dennis Hill Adin Hofer Joel Hrabal Michael Husso Ville Ingram Connor Jarry Tristan Johansson Jonas Jones Martin Kahkonen Kaapo Keyser Kyle Knight Spencer Kochetkov Pyotr Kokko Niklas Kolosov Alexei Korpisalo Joonas Kuemper Darcy Lankinen Kevin Larsson Filip Leinonen Topias Lennox Tristan Levi Devon Lindberg Filip Lindbom Olof Lindgren Charlie Luukkonen Ukko-Pekka Lyon Alex Malek Jakub Markstrom Jacob Martin Spencer Merilainen Leevi Merzlikins Elvis Montembault Samuel Mrazek Petr Murashov Sergey Nedeljkovic Alex Oettinger Jake Portillo Erik Poulter Isaac Primeau Cayden Prosvetov Ivan Quick Jonathan Raanta Antti Ratzlaff Scott Reimer James Rittich David Samsonov Ilya Saros Juuse Saville Isaiah Schmid Akira Shesterkin Igor Silovs Arturs Skinner Stuart Soderblom Arvid Sogaard Mads Sorokin Ilya Stauber Jaxon Stevenson Clay Svedeback Philip Swayman Jeremy Talbot Cam Tarasov Daniil Tendeck David Thompson Logan Tolopilo Nikita Ullmark Linus Vanecek Vitek Varlamov Semyon Vasilevskiy Andrei Vejmelka Karel Vladar Daniel Wallstedt Jesper Wedgewood Scott Wolf Dustin Woll Joseph Zavragin Yegor
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