An outstanding achievement!black hawks will never forget sam gagne for the rest of their careers, 4 goals, 4 assists against them last night.
An outstanding achievement!black hawks will never forget sam gagne for the rest of their careers, 4 goals, 4 assists against them last night.
An outstanding achievement!
Mowich;1543184 Meanwhile said:I watched the oiler/wings game, oilers played very well, almost lost it late in the game, but similar
to canucks, they tied the game with less than a minute to play, although they played much better than canucks did earlier in the day.
yep, gagne is just rolling along, wonder what the management is thinking now, I'll bet they're rethinking
trading him at trade deadline, although his stock went up significantly in the last 3 days.
Hi Talloola;
when he states that the teams are left to police themselves, he is completely wrong.
The instigator rule prevents teams from having enforcers (goons) to skate around like bodyguards, just to fight when they see their own certain players being bodychecked.
That was allowed, and sometimes groups of players were fighting at once, doesn't happen anymore.
Last night a group of players began to get into a frenzie, but it was soon stopped, and nothing much
happened in the way of fighting.
I also don't believe that the game is left unprotected, I see lots of improvement over the last few
years, and with shanahan it has taken another step forward to initiate severe suspensions for severe
infractions.
Concussions are being addressed, and now doctors can diagnose a concussion, and the player has to do
the rest, back then, it was just getting your bell rung, and get back as quickly as you can, probably
the next game.
I don't believe players milk anything, they want to be on the ice, they want to play, because they know
that if they are out of the lineup too long, someone else will take their place.
Colin Campbell is a player from the past, not the present, shanahan is a player from the present, and in
my opinion we all should stay in the present and not dwell on what happened to players long ago that is
gone nothing anyone can do about that now, but we can concentrate on what is happening now, and I see
progress.
As far as the fighting goes, that is a separate issue concerning violence, (apart from head shots when
body checking etc.)
I am real tired of constantly reading about what people 'away' from the game 'who
dislike and disagree with how the game is played, and don't go to games, seem to
have all of the sarcastic answers, and make statements of how hockey people and fans
think, but in reality they know next to nothing about the game and the players.
I have stated before that I hate the planned fights, they should get rid of those. As far as the
spontaneous fights, I will just leave that to the players, players association, and the NHL, as they
are the ones involved, and they have to figure it out.
I still don't see the concussions coming from fights, of course that can happen,
but on the whole the concussions come from illegal bodychecing. I see the concussions coming from head shots during
the game, as illegal bodychecks.
The players accept and deal with fighting very easily, they seem to use fighting
for different outcomes. They settle built up emotions with a fight, when things
have risen to the frenzy state, and all of a sudden a fight breaks out, and all of a
sudden it is over, and all of a sudden, everything settles down.
A player will start up a fight when his team has not risen to the occasion to
match the intensity of the other team, a fight seems to wake them up, get them
going, and they have stated as much on occasion.
A fight will energize the team, they feed off of it, they appreciate their player
who puts himself on the line, and drops his gloves and squares off with another
player.
As much as many outside the game hate the fighting, when one would look inside the
game, and watch the men who actually play the game, including the coaches and managers, they seem to enjoy the intensity and the energy of a fight.
I do understand the outsider feeling of the goons of the past, they really could
not blend with the rest of the team on an equal basis, they weren't equal, and they
would know they were only there for their goon play, and to create havoc by fighting.
Those players are not in the game any longer, the tough players who also fight can
also play, so they do feel equal, they are equal, they can play, they can feel like
a contributor to the game, so that aspect is 'gone' from the game.
Players who are goons are few and far between now, so that is improvement too, the goons couldn't play
the game, but they would fight, be institgators etc.
The game is too fast, too high end now and none of those goon type players from the past would ever make a team today.
I would like to hear the people who play the game, shanahan, who is in charge of diciplinary decisions,
and others talk about fighting, and hear their input, i'm so tired of those 'who don't watch the game'
deciding that everyone comes to see fighting and violence, and I don't find that to be true, but I
do know when a fight breaks out, everyone stands up, because a fight always creates that, it is a
part of the game that has mixed emotions, fear, excitement, cheering for your own guy to be better,
etc., but if fighting was eliminated, very few people would stay home, there isn't enough fighting in
the game to cause people to pay the money they do, to come to games.
So, when the word violence is used concerning hockey, it is all about fighting I guess, and in my
opinion the serious injuries are from others sources, and I see the league addressing those now,
and it will take time, but when players sit out enough, and get more suspensions for repeat offenses,
they will get the message.
I really am not interested in reading a book that deals with the past, I am concentrating on the 'now' and
watching and seeing progress. A player who writes a book, who was a goon player,
obviously has some issues, well that is the past, it is gone, lets deal with the
here and the now.
Hockey is a tough mans game,even the so called gentlemen players are tough guys,
no one could play this game who aren't mentally and physically tough, and is certainly not for those who hate to see body checking and players being hit and
falling and bouncing off the boards, it is a rough game, a fast game, a game on skates which makes it rather dangerous,
they carry sticks which cause some high sticking, but I see the high sticking as 'accidental' in the game
now, long ago there was stick swinging incidents and intentional high sticking, don't see that any
more.
I am a person who is totally involved all during the hockey season, and watch many
games a week. I notice much improvement and progress since the change in the
diciplinary process, and also much attention is being payed to the information
about concussions, and that is also being addressed by the league, and that is an
ongoing process.
I also see very clearly how much faster and bigger the players are now compared to
years ago, and can also see how that creates a much bigger impact when they hit
each other, the speed creates all of that, hence more injuries.
It is very easy to figure out why many of the critics can't see what I see, as they
don't watch the games, they just bitch about them without keeping up with the times.
Those who write about the game as 'all' violent and say it should stop, must stipulate exactly what
parts of the game they are opposed to, so those areas can be discussed separate, and not just put
everything together as though the whole game is violent.
One aspect of the game that needs a big improvement is the 'officiating', the game
is so fast now, that they miss lots of infractions, not anything horrible, but
enough to see how teams suffer under poor officiating, too many calls are missed,
and too many are called wrong.
He doesn't state that the teams police themselves, talloola. He states that the players are left to police themselves as is evidenced by by the fact that there are still players in the NHL, call them what you like, who are the designated 'fighters' on the team and who are given the job of 'taking care' of certain opponents.when he states that the teams are left to police themselves, he is completely wrong.
It may prevent players from having 'body guards' as such but you and I both know players whose only job is to cause as much trouble as they can and they get away with it time after time with barely a slap on the wrist. I am sure you could quickly name a few of them.The instigator rule prevents teams from having enforcers (goons) to skate around like bodyguards, just to fight when they see their own certain players being bodychecked.
I agree, talloola. It is not the game left unprotected, rather it is the players. At this time, the penalties and punishments handed out by both referees, who are just as befuddled as the players, and the league are so unevenly distributed as to leave both parties in a quandary. As former referee Kerry Fraser states: “The officials are so confused, they don't know what is or isn't' a penalty. That's just the reality of it."I also don't believe that the game is left unprotected, I see lots of improvement over the last few years, and with shanahan it has taken another step forward to initiate severe suspensions for severe infractions.
They are tallola but what about the reasons behind them. Why do players get concussions? Is there anything that can be done to prevent them from happening?Concussions are being addressed
I completely agree, talloola.I don't believe players milk anything, they want to be on the ice, they want to play, because they know that if they are out of the lineup too long, someone else will take their place.
There has been progress, talloola and I don’t advocate ‘dwelling’ on the past either. However, there are times that the past catches up with us and we are forced to look back as will happen this fall when the trial of Tod Bertuzzi begins.Colin Campbell is a player from the past, not the present, shanahan is a player from the present, and in my opinion we all should stay in the present and not dwell on what happened to players long ago that is gone nothing anyone can do about that now, but we can concentrate on what is happening now, and I see progress.
There will always be fights in hockey just as fights happen in other sports. It is the way fights are dealt with that separates the NHL from other types of sports.As far as the fighting goes, that is a separate issue concerning violence, (apart from head shots when body checking etc.)
Don't blame you a bit for feeling that way.I am real tired of constantly reading about what people 'away' from the game 'who dislike and disagree with how the game is played, and don't go to games, seem to have all of the sarcastic answers, and make statements of how hockey people and fans
think, but in reality they know next to nothing about the game and the players.
It is the reasons behind the 'planned fights' that need to be addressed in my opinion.I have stated before that I hate the planned fights, they should get rid of those.
We can only hope that they do just that.As far as the spontaneous fights, I will just leave that to the players, players association, and the NHL, as they are the ones involved, and they have to figure it out.
And has happened when a player has sustained numerous head shots in fights over a number of years.I still don't see the concussions coming from fights, of course that can happen
And some current medical studies would back that up.but on the whole the concussions come from illegal bodychecing. I see the concussions coming from head shots during the game, as illegal bodychecks.
That does not apply across the board talloola. Some former 'fighters' have spoken out about the anxiety and stress they have undergone prior to a fight and that their only release comes after the fight is over. Some of them have taken to alcohol and drugs in order to get through.The players accept and deal with fighting very easily
Again I would point out that fighting is not allowed in other sports and when it happens is dealt with severely so why should hockey be any different. Football and rugby are 'manly sports' with a lot of physical contact and pent up emotion. Yet let any player stoop so low as to punch another and they are met with an automatic game expulsion and the possibility of further suspension.they seem to use fighting for different outcomes. They settle built up emotions with a fight, when things have risen to the frenzy state, and all of a sudden a fight breaks out, and all of a sudden it is over, and all of a sudden, everything settles down.
A player will start up a fight when his team has not risen to the occasion to match the intensity of the other team, a fight seems to wake them up, get them going, and they have stated as much on occasion.
A fight will energize the team, they feed off of it, they appreciate their player who puts himself on the line, and drops his gloves and squares off with another player.
There are those within the game who also question the need for fighting. Not all of them are united in their enjoyment of the fight but you won't catch them showing anything but positive emotions on a nationally broadcast game.As much as many outside the game hate the fighting, when one would look inside the game, and watch the men who actually play the game, including the coaches and managers, they seem to enjoy the intensity and the energy of a fight.
Not completely.I do understand the outsider feeling of the goons of the past, they really could not blend with the rest of the team on an equal basis, they weren't equal, and they would know they were only there for their goon play, and to create havoc by fighting. Those players are not in the game any longer, the tough players who also fight can also play, so they do feel equal, they are equal, they can play, they can feel like a contributor to the game, so that aspect is 'gone' from the game.
True, but sometimes one goon is all it takes to knock out a star player.Players who are goons are few and far between now, so that is improvement too, the goons couldn't play the game, but they would fight, be institgators etc.
As a matter of fact players like Matthieu Schneider who is currently with the NHLPA; Murray Costello, former player and past pres of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association; Keith Primeau who played 15 years in the league; David Branch – pres of the Canadian Hockey League; former 15-year Flyer Ian Laperriere; Alyn McCauley who played with the Leafs, Sharks, and Kings but was forced to retire at age 30 due to injuries; David Perron formerly of the Blues, and many others I could name, have all come forward to speak about changes needed in the NHL.I would like to hear the people who play the game, shanahan, who is in charge of diciplinary decisions,and others talk about fighting, and hear their input,
And the stats covering viewing audiences for Olympic hockey or IIHF hockey would back you up on that, talloola. Sure the game has its fanatics who insist that fighting etc be an integral part of the game but I believe the majority of fans do not feel that way at all. I believe the majority of fans would rather be treated to a fast paced, well-played game that showcased the true talents of the athletes involved.but if fighting was eliminated, very few people would stay home, there isn't enough fighting in the game to cause people to pay the money they do, to come to games.
Just as the former goon turned author is now doing.I really am not interested in reading a book that deals with the past, I am concentrating on the 'now' and watching and seeing progress. A player who writes a book, who was a goon player, obviously has some issues, well that is the past, it is gone, lets deal with the here and the now.
Again, the same could be said of football which is not exactly for the faint of heart.Hockey is a tough mans game
It is all of that talloola but under controlled circumstances such as those we see in Olympic and IIHF hockey the game is just as exciting and just a rough, fast, and dangerous but without the injuries seen in the NHL.even the so called gentlemen players are tough guys, no one could play this game who aren't mentally and physically tough, and is certainly not for those who hate to see body checking and players being hit and falling and bouncing off the boards, it is a rough game, a fast game, a game on skates which makes it rather dangerous, they carry sticks which cause some high sticking, but I see the high sticking as 'accidental' in the game now, long ago there was stick swinging incidents and intentional high sticking, don't see that any more.
All true.I notice much improvement and progress since the change in the diciplinary process, and also much attention is being payed to the information about concussions, and that is also being addressed by the league, and that is an ongoing process.
Again, all true.I also see very clearly how much faster and bigger the players are now compared to years ago, and can also see how that creates a much bigger impact when they hit each other, the speed creates all of that, hence more injuries.
Then they shouldn't be critical of the game should they.It is very easy to figure out why many of the critics can't see what I see, as they don't watch the games, they just bitch about them without keeping up with the times.
And you would be right in doing so, talloola.Those who write about the game as 'all' violent and say it should stop, must stipulate exactly what parts of the game they are opposed to, so those areas can be discussed separate, and not just put everything together as though the whole game is violent.
Improvements in the game will only come about when some of the dinosaurs that currently mask themselves as NHL owners get past the idea that blood and guts are a necessary part of hockey. As more owners like Mario Lemieux start to speak out against the current state of affairs in the league, the greater the chances are that players will get the protection they deserve and the game of hockey will remain a treasured part of our lives.One aspect of the game that needs a big improvement is the 'officiating', the game is so fast now, that they miss lots of infractions, not anything horrible, but enough to see how teams suffer under poor officiating, too many calls are missed,and too many are called wrong.
He doesn't state that the teams police themselves, talloola. He states that the players are left to police themselves as is evidenced by by the fact that there are still players in the NHL, call them what you like, who are the designated 'fighters' on the team and who are given the job of 'taking care' of certain opponents.
It may prevent players from having 'body guards' as such but you and I both know players whose only job is to cause as much trouble as they can and they get away with it time after time with barely a slap on the wrist. I am sure you could quickly name a few of them.
I agree, talloola. It is not the game left unprotected, rather it is the players. At this time, the penalties and punishments handed out by both referees, who are just as befuddled as the players, and the league are so unevenly distributed as to leave both parties in a quandary. As former referee Kerry Fraser states: “The officials are so confused, they don't know what is or isn't' a penalty. That's just the reality of it."
They are tallola but what about the reasons behind them. Why do players get concussions? Is there anything that can be done to prevent them from happening?
I completely agree, talloola.
There has been progress, talloola and I don’t advocate ‘dwelling’ on the past either. However, there are times that the past catches up with us and we are forced to look back as will happen this fall when the trial of Tod Bertuzzi begins.
Moore-Bertuzzi civil case has 2012 start date
There will always be fights in hockey just as fights happen in other sports. It is the way fights are dealt with that separates the NHL from other types of sports.
Don't blame you a bit for feeling that way.
It is the reasons behind the 'planned fights' that need to be addressed in my opinion.
We can only hope that they do just that.
And has happened when a player has sustained numerous head shots in fights over a number of years.
And some current medical studies would back that up.
That does not apply across the board talloola. Some former 'fighters' have spoken out about the anxiety and stress they have undergone prior to a fight and that their only release comes after the fight is over. Some of them have taken to alcohol and drugs in order to get through.
Again I would point out that fighting is not allowed in other sports and when it happens is dealt with severely so why should hockey be any different. Football and rugby are 'manly sports' with a lot of physical contact and pent up emotion. Yet let any player stoop so low as to punch another and they are met with an automatic game expulsion and the possibility of further suspension.
There are those within the game who also question the need for fighting. Not all of them are united in their enjoyment of the fight but you won't catch them showing anything but positive emotions on a nationally broadcast game.
Not completely.
True, but sometimes one goon is all it takes to knock out a star player.
As a matter of fact players like Matthieu Schneider who is currently with the NHLPA; Murray Costello, former player and past pres of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association; Keith Primeau who played 15 years in the league; David Branch – pres of the Canadian Hockey League; former 15-year Flyer Ian Laperriere; Alyn McCauley who played with the Leafs, Sharks, and Kings but was forced to retire at age 30 due to injuries; David Perron formerly of the Blues, and many others I could name, have all come forward to speak about changes needed in the NHL.
And the stats covering viewing audiences for Olympic hockey or IIHF hockey would back you up on that, talloola. Sure the game has its fanatics who insist that fighting etc be an integral part of the game but I believe the majority of fans do not feel that way at all. I believe the majority of fans would rather be treated to a fast paced, well-played game that showcased the true talents of the athletes involved.
Just as the former goon turned author is now doing.
Again, the same could be said of football which is not exactly for the faint of heart.
It is all of that talloola but under controlled circumstances such as those we see in Olympic and IIHF hockey the game is just as exciting and just a rough, fast, and dangerous but without the injuries seen in the NHL.
All true.
Again, all true.
Then they shouldn't be critical of the game should they.
And you would be right in doing so, talloola.
What I am specifically opposed to is the fact that current penalties and fines levied do not match the gravity of some of the incidences of extreme violence such as throwing a player head first into the boards with obvious intent to injure. Nor do they do much to discourage behavior such as slashing and tripping either of which has the potential to cause serious injury.
I do not believe the game of hockey to be violent. I do believe that some players are the very embodiment of violence and that the sooner the league is rid of every last one of them the better. Yet as I write that I believe, given the correct application of a clear and binding set of rules and regulations, the need for enforcer types would vanish. Until that happens, the punishment must start fitting the crime.
Improvements in the game will only come about when some of the dinosaurs that currently mask themselves as NHL owners get past the idea that blood and guts are a necessary part of hockey. As more owners like Mario Lemieux start to speak out against the current state of affairs in the league, the greater the chances are that players will get the protection they deserve and the game of hockey will remain a treasured part of our lives.
Last month Dion Phaneuf was voted the "most over-rated" player in a similar poll... these guys sure don't like the Leafs![]()
'These guys' being the NHL players, so you have to think there's some validity to it.
I heard that Nash was willing to move too, but he's also the type of guy that it is going to be very costly to get. I just hope he doesn't end up with the Rangers (where careers die) or Montreal (where non-francophone careers die). I hear some murmurs out of Cannucknuckleheadville about a Luongo for Nash swap but I can't see that being enough for Nash, at this point: Mason is already a decent goaltender but the rest of the team in front of him has gaping holes).
I also laughed when I heard about the new Sports Illustrated NHL player poll, talking about the all star players that are the easiest to get off their game/intimidate. Kessel scares easy, NHL players poll claims
1. Phil Kessel
2. The Sedins
3 Alexander Semin
4. Patrick Kane
5. Ilya Kovalchuk
The top goaltenders to get rattled were Luongo and Mike Smith. This is all pretty subjective (and a lot of BS in some cases) but I thought it was interesting. Last month Dion Phaneuf was voted the "most over-rated" player in a similar poll... these guys sure don't like the Leafs![]()
Looks like the Rangers and Red Wings are good for the final; both are hot and solid.
He doesn't state that the teams police themselves, talloola. He states that the players are left to police themselves as is evidenced by by the fact that there are still players in the NHL, call them what you like, who are the designated 'fighters' on the team and who are given the job of 'taking care' of certain opponents.
It may prevent players from having 'body guards' as such but you and I both know players whose only job is to cause as much trouble as they can and they get away with it time after time with barely a slap on the wrist. I am sure you could quickly name a few of them.
I agree, talloola. It is not the game left unprotected, rather it is the players. At this time, the penalties and punishments handed out by both referees, who are just as befuddled as the players, and the league are so unevenly distributed as to leave both parties in a quandary. As former referee Kerry Fraser states: “The officials are so confused, they don't know what is or isn't' a penalty. That's just the reality of it."
They are tallola but what about the reasons behind them. Why do players get concussions? Is there anything that can be done to prevent them from happening?
I completely agree, talloola.
There has been progress, talloola and I don’t advocate ‘dwelling’ on the past either. However, there are times that the past catches up with us and we are forced to look back as will happen this fall when the trial of Tod Bertuzzi begins.
Moore-Bertuzzi civil case has 2012 start date
There will always be fights in hockey just as fights happen in other sports. It is the way fights are dealt with that separates the NHL from other types of sports.
Don't blame you a bit for feeling that way.
It is the reasons behind the 'planned fights' that need to be addressed in my opinion.
We can only hope that they do just that.
And has happened when a player has sustained numerous head shots in fights over a number of years.
And some current medical studies would back that up.
That does not apply across the board talloola. Some former 'fighters' have spoken out about the anxiety and stress they have undergone prior to a fight and that their only release comes after the fight is over. Some of them have taken to alcohol and drugs in order to get through.
Again I would point out that fighting is not allowed in other sports and when it happens is dealt with severely so why should hockey be any different. Football and rugby are 'manly sports' with a lot of physical contact and pent up emotion. Yet let any player stoop so low as to punch another and they are met with an automatic game expulsion and the possibility of further suspension.
There are those within the game who also question the need for fighting. Not all of them are united in their enjoyment of the fight but you won't catch them showing anything but positive emotions on a nationally broadcast game.
Not completely.
True, but sometimes one goon is all it takes to knock out a star player.
As a matter of fact players like Matthieu Schneider who is currently with the NHLPA; Murray Costello, former player and past pres of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association; Keith Primeau who played 15 years in the league; David Branch – pres of the Canadian Hockey League; former 15-year Flyer Ian Laperriere; Alyn McCauley who played with the Leafs, Sharks, and Kings but was forced to retire at age 30 due to injuries; David Perron formerly of the Blues, and many others I could name, have all come forward to speak about changes needed in the NHL.
And the stats covering viewing audiences for Olympic hockey or IIHF hockey would back you up on that, talloola. Sure the game has its fanatics who insist that fighting etc be an integral part of the game but I believe the majority of fans do not feel that way at all. I believe the majority of fans would rather be treated to a fast paced, well-played game that showcased the true talents of the athletes involved.
Just as the former goon turned author is now doing.
Again, the same could be said of football which is not exactly for the faint of heart.
It is all of that talloola but under controlled circumstances such as those we see in Olympic and IIHF hockey the game is just as exciting and just a rough, fast, and dangerous but without the injuries seen in the NHL.
All true.
Again, all true.
Then they shouldn't be critical of the game should they.
And you would be right in doing so, talloola.
What I am specifically opposed to is the fact that current penalties and fines levied do not match the gravity of some of the incidences of extreme violence such as throwing a player head first into the boards with obvious intent to injure. Nor do they do much to discourage behavior such as slashing and tripping either of which has the potential to cause serious injury.
I do not believe the game of hockey to be violent. I do believe that some players are the very embodiment of violence and that the sooner the league is rid of every last one of them the better. Yet as I write that I believe, given the correct application of a clear and binding set of rules and regulations, the need for enforcer types would vanish. Until that happens, the punishment must start fitting the crime.
Improvements in the game will only come about when some of the dinosaurs that currently mask themselves as NHL owners get past the idea that blood and guts are a necessary part of hockey. As more owners like Mario Lemieux start to speak out against the current state of affairs in the league, the greater the chances are that players will get the protection they deserve and the game of hockey will remain a treasured part of our lives.
yeah, that poll is dumb, and being anonymous makes it null and void, and it isn't accurate anyway.
I can speak for the sedins quite accurately, nothing intimidates them, and they are afraid of nothing.
Pretty much right on schedule, and exactly what I was expecting.
You can speak for the Sedins?
Wow. That explains everything - you're their official spokesperson.
I did not speak 'for' the sedin's, I spoke my opinion about them, as hockey players.
I just have to add, that when mat cooke was doing mean things to other players,several times, (mark sevard had to retire because of concussion), I notice mario lemieux did nothing to him, or said nothing about him, as his owner, and he only stopped playing later, when he was finally suspended after new rulings were introduced, but lemieux did come out and complain about 'other' instances with 'other' teams.
A couple of the penguin players openly criticized cooke at the time.
I agree that Mario should have done something about Cooke much earlier, talloola. For the blind-side hit on Marc Savard, Cooke was neither given a penalty nor was there any follow-up suspension - something that might have prevented him from going on to make the knee-to-knee hit on Ovechkin and the check from behind that sent Fedor Tyutin into the boards headfirst during the 2010/11 season. The fact that both hits did not result in serious injury was pure happenstance. Cooke didn't receive any penalty for the Ovechkin hit but he was suspended for 4 games after the Tyutin hit but that wasn't enough to get the message across as he later came from center ice during a game with the NY Rangers to deliver an elbow to the head of Ryan McDonagh. The latter hit happened shortly after the GM's and Bettman had met to discuss plans for addressing the problem of concussions. During that meeting, Mario suggested that fines be levied for teams that employed 'dangerous players' but it wasn't until the public outcry against Cooke's behavior that he finally stood by his earlier words and applauded the NHL after they suspended Cooke for the remaining 10 games of the regular 2010/11 season and the first round of play-offs. Since then, Mario has been outspoken about the need to address dangerous plays and players, and for that I heartily applaud him.
You said that you spoke 'for' the Sedins.
That's what you said, don't blame me for what YOU said.
'I don't agree with the results of the poll, so therefore it's wrong.'