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Vancouver Off-Topic / Current EventsThe off-topic forum for Vancouver, funnies, non-auto centered discussions, WORK SAFE. While the rules are more relaxed here, there are still rules. Please refer to sticky thread in this forum.
What the hell? Feel sorry for the Flames? I'm sorry but no die hard Canuck fan should EVER feel sorry for the Flamers or their fans. Same goes for feeling sorry for the Oilers and their fans.
I actually feel sorry for the oilers and their fans just because that is a Canadian team.
What the hell? Feel sorry for the Flames? I'm sorry but no die hard Canuck fan should EVER feel sorry for the Flamers or their fans. Same goes for feeling sorry for the Oilers and their fans.
Agreed!
The only one I feel sorry for is Iginla, but I'll get over that after he helps bring us the Gold
Actually, I feel even sorrier for Pat Quinn... wtf was he thinking??
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Originally Posted by Godzira
Does anyone know how many to a signature?
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Originally Posted by Brianrietta
Not a sebberry post goes by where I don't frown and think to myself "so..?"
Yeah the only person I feel sorry for is Pat Quinn. Iginla can continue to shoot blanks in a Flames jersey, but once he puts on the Canada jersey, he'd better do something!
__________________ Do Not Put Aftershave on Your Balls. -604CEFIRO Looks like I'm gonna have some hot sex again tonight...OOPS i got the 6 pack. that wont last me the night, I better go back and get the 24 pack! -Turbo E kinda off topic but obama is a dilf - miss_crayon Honest to fucking Christ the easiest way to get a married woman in the mood is clean the house and do the laundry.....I've been with the same girl almost 17 years, ask me how I know. - quasi
I actually feel sorry for the oilers and their fans just because that is a Canadian team.
They have Eberle, MPS and almost certainly a top 3 pick this year. They'll most likely suck next year and will end up with another top 5 pick. I also doubt they felt sorry for us when they were winning all those cups back in the 80's.
How can we feel sorry for the Alberta teams? We don't even have a cup to our name. We have had success this season and had some interesting playoff series recently, but no cup. Since 94, the Oilers and the Flamers have made it to the final dance. They can go fuck themselves, that includes Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal.
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"A chicken crossing the street is poultry in motion"
^ i feel the same, but at the same time i'd like to see a canadian team get the cup (obviously i'd like that to be us first and foremost lol). 17 years since montreal won it..
but honestly, i think we're gonna have more trouble with the 2nd part of the trip due to olympic hangover.. plus we're, what, 9 - 1 against the east? we should blow through the first 8 games easily...
The Vancouver Canucks have avoided it for as long as possible but the crater in their calendar has finally caught up to them.
On Thursday the Canucks left the comfy confines of General Motors Place in Vancouver to embark on the longest road trip in NHL history, a 14-game, 13-city, 42-day voyage that spans 20,737 kilometers.
It begins with an 18-day, eight-game stretch leading into the Olympic break and ends with six contests over nine days finishing March 10.
Forget unchartered territory, the mere concept of this trip is so alien it’s headache inducing.
The reason for the mammoth trek across North America is simple – GM Place is the official ice hockey venue for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games and that entails much more than slapping a sign on the side of the building.
The painstaking conversion includes expanding the penalty boxes and player benches to accommodate additional people, building dressing rooms with capacity for 14 23-man teams, drastically altering the look and feel inside the arena and fully equipping the building to broadcast the most sought after sport at the Games to the world – and don’t forget that what goes up, must come down.
Tired yet?
All this work, which will be completed by a crew of hundreds working around the clock leading up the first game, a women’s preliminary round match-up between Canada and Slovakia on February 13, leaves the Canucks without a home for 42 days. During that time the players and staff have absolutely no access to the building.
“I try not to think about it like that, but now that you said it, it is overwhelming,” admitted Ryan Kesler, who had three assists in Vancouver’s final home game Wednesday night, a 3-2 win over St. Louis.
“You look at the road trip and see that we’re going to be gone for 18 days to start so it’s going to be one of those things where we’ve got to get our rest in and we’ve got to be smart about we eat.”
Added Rick Rypien, “I don’t think people realize, with this road trip there’s a lot of traveling, a lot of being on planes, a lot of jumping from one place to another right after you play and getting ready for the next game.”
Vancouver opens its seemingly infinite jaunt in Toronto during Hockey Day in Canada this Saturday before jet setting to Montreal, Ottawa, Boston, Tampa Bay, Florida, Columbus and Minnesota prior to the light at the end of the first tunnel coming into focus.
For 18 of 26 Canucks, once Feb. 15 rolls around, they get a well deserved, much needed break while the NHL goes on hiatus for the Olympics.
Roberto Luongo, Ryan Kesler, Daniel and Henrik Sedin, Sami Salo, Christian Ehrhoff and Pavol Demitra (and possibly Mikael Samuelsson) either aren’t as fortunate or are the fortunate ones, depending on how you look at things.
They’ll each be representing their country at the Games and will squeeze at least another three games into their already packed schedule.
Although envious of the Olympians now, Alex Burrows knows that when the breather in question is at hand, it’ll help break up the monotony of life on the road.
“It really helps that we’ve got it cut in two,” said Burrows. “I think those first eight games are going to be hard, then we’ve got a little time to rest, then we go back at it, if you look at it that way, and that’s the way I’m looking at it, it shouldn’t be too bad.
“We’ve got to take it one game at a time and as long as we’re winning, we should have a good time.”
The post-Olympic portion of the trip is less forgiving than earlier on with Vancouver visiting six cities (Columbus, Detroit, Chicago, Nashville, Colorado and Phoenix) in nine days, a stretch that includes two sets of back-to-back games. Forty-four percent of the total kilometers traveled (9,129) will be tackled during this second leg.
Similar to when you were saddled in the backseat of the old family station wagon as a kid, the trip was a blast if you were having fun. As Burrows pointed out, it’ll be the same for the Canucks, a team that has made a habit of stealing wins in opposing barns lately.
Winning on the road seemed nearly impossible for the Canucks early on this season as they dropped their first four outings and were 3-8-0 before getting into a groove. Vancouver now carries a 10-11-1 road record having won six and collected points in seven of their last 10 games in enemy territory.
“I’ve always said we’re a good road team, we’ve been showing it in our last 10 games [and when the trip begins] we’re going to take care of things the same way we’ve been trying to take care of business here, which is one game at a time,” assessed coach Alain Vigneault, who also touched on perhaps the most discussed issue of the trip: what and how to pack for such a gargantuan haul.
For the first four games the Canucks are faced with wintery conditions during an Eastern swing in Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa and Boston, that means fuzzy tuques, thick jackets and layered socks. Then a quick two-game set down South will have the team in need of light shorts, breathable t-shirts and loose sandals, before things cool off again in Columbus and Minnesota.
There’s only room for so many suitcases on the team plane so the players had to get strategic with their packing.
“I don’t know about this one, this is a tough one, we’re going through all sorts of climates, so snow coats, sandals, flip-flops, shorts, bathing suits, all kinds of stuff,” laughed Luongo, about what his carry-on will include.
“I’ll probably go with two or three suits and just keep it simple and obviously lots of socks and lots of underwear, plus some off day clothes,” added Rypien.
If you travel like forward Darcy Hordichuk, you’ve got to put the saying less is more to good use.
“The guys are laughing, every time I pack for a four-day trip they bug me about bringing a massage table because I bring a big bag. I don’t know what I’m going to do for this trip to get all the clothes in there,” smirked Hordichuk, admitting that sometimes he doesn’t make use of everything he packs.
“My wife always laughs that I pack about 20 pairs of underwear and I come back home and 19 of them are untouched.”
All the packing, traveling, time zones, climate changes, etc., are a lot to get your head around, but above all else there are 28 points up for grabs for the Canucks and although right now it’s the elephant in the room, how they handle their road rage could define their season.
“I won’t say it’s make or break because there’s still 15 or so games afterwards and mostly at home, so that’s going to help,” said Burrows, “but it could be a big swing either way.
“We’re not looking at it that way, I know it’s boring but we’re looking at it one game at a time.”
wait a sec... Hordichuk doesn't change his underwears?
Atlanta Thrashers left wing Ilya Kovalchuk is a two-time 50-goal scorer. The Kings, Boston, Vancouver and another Eastern team are competing for him. (James Guillory / US Presswire)
Reported by LA Times so its credible.
I have no idea what we're going to give up or who we're going to have to drop to make room for his salary.