Biggest Joke I've EVER SEEN 1972: Kanada's Humiliation

I found this on youtube and this is what it said on the description:

"We must ignore recent revisionist propaganda by underground CBCnik insurgents.Is all lies. Now is time to be telling true story of Soviet hockey superpower and it's crushing victory, winning all eight games in 72 Summit Series, over country formerly known as Kanada, . Irrefutable evidence direct from archives in Ottawagrad is be seen here.Join us Komrades of Soviet Kanuckistan as we look back at the glorious victorious Summit of '72 and rejoice in Kanada's Humiliation as we look forward to celebrate the Arts & Kulture of Soviet Kanuckistan this Saturday, April the 15th at Lee's Palace, Torontovsk."

does this bother anyone else or do you guys think its just plain embarrassing?




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Malkin Wears the Vapor XXXX Skates too

Looking like Malking is wearing the Vapor XXXX skates as well.

Get them here:

HockeyGiant.com


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The New Vapor XXXX Stick

CHECK OUT OUR NEW HOME:

Could this be the new Vapor XXXX (Vapor 40) stick?

Get it here:
HockeyGiant.com




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Pro Stock Nike Bauer ONE90 Hockey Skate






Alright so I came across these when I was looking on ebay for some gear. These are a pro stock model of the one/90s. In the auction it states that these are "SKATES ARE BAUER 8000'S WITH SOME FEATURES AND THE GRAPHICS OF THE ONE90'S." I think they look pretty sweet if you ask me.

Get them here:
HockeyGiant.com




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Johnson to sign with Kings

Michigan star defenseman Jack Johnson is negotiating a contract with the Los Angeles Kings today, ending speculation of whether the sophomore would forgo his two remaining years of eligibility.

Johnson confirmed his departure in an exclusive interview with The Michigan Daily this afternoon.

"I thought I was ready for a new challenge," Johnson said. "With all my close friends, the seniors, gone now and everything, I thought it was time for me to pretty much go for a new challenge."

So much for him being difficult to sign.

Given the young phenom is going to be playing in the NHL beginning Tuesday, you have to think the Carolina Hurricanes would like a do-over of the deal that saw them acquire Eric Belanger and Tim Gleason for a player who posted nearly a point a game in the NCAA from the blueline.

GM Jim Rutherford was obviously dealing for the 'now' — something that doesn't appear to have paid off given their position in the standings.

At least with the NHL's wonky division-play heavy schedule, North Carolina hockey fans won't have to worry about him terrorizing them in person.

Johnson's the early favourite for the Calder Trophy in 2008, regardless of where the Kings sit in the standings. He's just a terrific player — one of the best young defencemen to join the league in years — and should make an immediate impact over the Kings' final six games of the regular season.

Not that they need him or anything.




Fedoruk: Let fighters wear gloves

The NHL should take a page from the UFC when it comes to fighting, says in-the-spotlight Flyers enforcer Todd Fedoruk.

Fedoruk, who spent the night in hospital earlier this week after being at the wrong end of a nasty knockout, says maybe NHL tough guys should wear padding on their hands under their gloves.

"You look at extreme fighting, they've got those four-ounce gloves on," Fedoruk said.
Such padding would lessen the blows, he argued.

Despite being knocked out cold by Colton Orr of the New York Rangers on Wednesday night, Fedoruk doesn't want fighting to be taken out of the game.

"If you want to change something, do something to lessen the blow," Fedoruk said in an interview with The Canadian Press. "If it takes a three-ounce glove or something like that, that role players have to wear which would only cover the knuckle part, maybe that's something you can do. But I just don't think you can take fighting out of the game."

The small gloves that fighters wear in mixed martial arts is an idea that Fedoruk embraces.

"They're trained fighters and a lot of the NHL guys are trained fighters," he said. "I myself do a lot of training in the off-season that has to do with fighting. If they (the NHL) think too many bad things are happening to us, maybe that's a solution. But taking fighting out of the game is definitely not a solution.

"You just can't do it. It's ingrained in the roots of hockey."

NHL tough guys have become so big and so strong, there's concern in some quarters about the damage they now inflict on each other.

No argument from the 6-2, 240-pound Fedoruk.

"Well yeah, I'm proof of it," he said. "Not only what happened with Colton Orr but what happened earlier this season with (Derek) Boogaard."

Boogaard smashed Fedoruk's face in during an Oct. 27 fight. He required surgery.
"It was close to ending my career but luckily it didn't," said Fedoruk. "Yes, the guys are bigger.


But I just think it's our choice to do this. There is a reason for it. Orr came after me the other night because the game before I hammered (Jaromir) Jagr. Orr was only doing his job. And I'm more than willing to deal with it. It's my job."

Take out fighting and it's no longer hockey, Fedoruk said.

"I think if fighting was banned the NHL would like what the all-star game looked like this year," he said. "Back and forth, goal after goal, nice play after nice play . You going to watch that for 60 minutes? It gets a little boring."

Tough guys have an important part on each and every club.

"If you were in the dressing room you would really see it," said Fedoruk. "The respect that tough guys get from the other players and the type of role that the tough guy plays in the room, most tough guys on every team are good guys, they're the glue, they keep the team together. .

"They bring a light-heartedness to the dressing room, they keep the team tight, they look after everybody and I think that's a big role on a hockey team."

He points to his days in Anaheim last season when rookies Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry were happy to have him around.

"Having that tough guy really helps out the young guys on the team," said Fedoruk. "Being in Anaheim, that was a really young team and I played with Getzlaf and Perry and they were really appreciative of the comfort level they feel. Because if they don't feel comfortable, they can't play their game. And I think that's what the tough guys bring."




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Pens Have the Worst Rink in the League

Im not sure if you guys have seen this but i had to post it.




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Lemieux no longer planning to sell Pens


PITTSBURGH (AP) - Now that there is a new arena deal in place, Mario Lemieux and his partners no longer plan to sell the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Lemieux, the former Penguins star and Hall of Famer, and his investors bought the Penguins in federal bankruptcy court in 1999. They first put the team up for sale in 2005, but a proposed buyout by venture capitalist William (Boots) Del Biaggio III - a friend of Lemieux's - fell through.

Three months ago, Lemieux and partner Ron Burkle negotiated an estimated US$175-million sale of the 40-year-old franchise to Canadian businessman Jim Balsillie, but he pulled out within a few days of the planned closing date. He apparently balked at the NHL's insistence that he couldn't move the franchise even if an arena agreement wasn't reached.

Selling the Penguins would have allowed Lemieux, one of the most popular athletes in Pittsburgh history, to escape blame if the team had relocated. The Penguins were free to move after their Mellon Arena lease expires in June - possibly to Kansas City, with Del Biaggio as the owner - but a deal to build a new $290-million arena in Pittsburgh was finalized Tuesday.

With young stars Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Jordan Staal, the Penguins figure to be a contending franchise for years and Lemieux prefers to keep his stake in the team.

"We went through a lot the last few years and we see that the team is turning around and we want to be part of it," Lemieux said. "Ron wants to be part of it, the ownership group wants to be part of it and I want to be part of it."

Lemieux became the first star athlete to buy the major pro sports team he once played for when he leveraged the more than $25 million owed him by the franchise in deferred compensation into a large stake in the team.
"I've said for years my goal was to keep the Penguins in Pittsburgh and win the Stanley Cup," Lemieux said. "We have one out of two. It's a good start."




Teams approve new system for NHL draft

There will be a new format for determining the order of selection for the 2007 NHL Entry Draft.

NHL teams have voted 23-6 (with one abstention) in favor of introducing a ranking system that places a greater emphasis on playoff performance than regular season results.

Under the existing format, non-playoff teams were placed one through 14 with the lowest regular-season point totals getting the higher pick in the draft, subject to the draft lottery which allows the winning non-playoff team to move up as many as four places.

The remaining 16 teams were seeded 15 through 30 based on inverse order of regular-season finish with one exception - the Stanley Cup-winning team automatically received the 30th and final pick of the first round.

The new format will work as follows:

- The 14 non-playoff teams will be seeded in inverse order of regular-season finish, just as they used to be, with the draft lottery remaining the same.

- Teams that lose in the first round of the playoffs, except those that won regular-season division titles, will be slotted next in inverse order of regular-season point totals.

- Regular-season division winners that did not advance to the Conference finals will be slotted next, in inverse order of regular-season point totals.

- Teams that make the Conference finals will be slotted next, in inverse order of regular-season point totals.

- The two teams that make it to the Stanley Cup final will get the final two picks - No. 29 for the Cup finalist and No. 30 for the Cup champion.

It is a little more difficult to explain than it was, but the basic premise is the farther a team proceeds in the playoffs, the later it will pick in the entry draft.

The concept was initially proposed by the Detroit Red Wings, who argue that playoff success is the true measure of a team's success in any given year and the draft order should reflect that.

The six teams which voted against the change were the Buffalo Sabres, Florida Panthers, Minnesota Wild, New York Islanders, San Jose Sharks and Washington Capitals. The Montreal Canadiens abstained. All remaining NHL teams voted in favor of the change.




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New RBK 9KO Reebok Hockey Stick




This new RBK 9KO clearly reveals the holes in the shaft of the stick, which is supposed to make the RBK 9KO 20% more aerodynamic than other sticks.

What do you think of the stick? How durable do you think it will be? Will the holes in the shaft really make it that much better or is it just a marketing ploy by Reebok?

Please leave a comment and let us know what you think!

Get it here:

HockeyGiant.com





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Nolan: Simon suspension too harsh

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (CP) - New York Islanders head coach Ted Nolan says the NHL's 25-game suspension of winger Chris Simon was too harsh. "To take away the rest of his regular season would have been plenty enough," Nolan told newyorkislanders.com Monday. "But to say he can't be part of the team for the Stanley Cup playoffs does not seem fair."

Nolan, who also coached Simon with the OHL's Soo Greyhounds, said he wasn't defending Simon's two-handed chop to the face of New York Rangers forward Ryan Hollweg, but said something wasn't right with Simon. The rugged Islanders winger suffered a concussion after being hit by Hollweg into the glass just before the incident.

"I've known Chris since he was a teenager," Nolan said. "He doesn't take out personal vendettas when it's 1-1 with six minutes left in the biggest game of the season against our biggest rival. That's just not the player or person he is.

"I was thinking (the suspension) would be 12 games. This way Chris would be out for the last two games we have against the Rangers at the Coliseum. Maybe the rest of the regular season. But not beyond that."

"He knows what he did was wrong and we're all happy the other player (Hollweg) was not injured and returned to the game," said Nolan. "Chris is going to need some time, but when he's ready he'll still be a part of our team. As I said, Chris was very proud to be an Islander this season and he is a very important player for us. He made a mistake, but everyone who cares about this franchise is going to be there for him."

The Islanders play at Montreal on Tuesday but don't expect to hear Nolan address the suspension.

"I'll tell you what: this is the last we're talking about it," he said. "The media was here today and we addressed this issue. But this is not going to continue in Canada tomorrow and for the rest of the trip. It's over today. From now on in, our responsibility is to rally around Chris and win as many games as we can."




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Samsonov regrets signing with Canadiens

It's been a season of disappointments for the Montreal Canadiens, especially for Sergei Samsonov.

The high-priced Russian forward, who was a healthy scratch for the sixth time on Saturday, pulled no punches this weekend saying he regretted signing with the team last summer.

"I've been blamed for everything that has gone wrong. Why stop now?" Samsonov told the Gazette.

"Obviously, looking back, I regret my decision (to sign with the Canadiens). All you can do is make things different and learn from your mistakes. Things could have been done and handled differently."

After a 53-point season last year with Boston and Edmonton, Samsonov signed to a two-year, $7.05 million contract with the Canadiens in July. He is arguably the biggest free agent bust from last summer, scoring just nine goals and 26 points this season. Head coach Guy Carbonneau tried to light a spark under the former first-round pick like scratching him out of the lineup and shuffling him between all four lines.

The Canadiens placed him on waivers on Feb. 7 and also tried to trade him to one of 10 preferable teams indicated on his contract.

"I need a different, a fresh start," Samsonov told the Gazette.

"I'm looking forward to that. This hasn't worked out the way I expected, but life goes on. I thought this was going to be a better fit, because of the guys in the lineup and the way management portrayed things. But it was never meant to be."

The 28-year-old has one more year remaining on his contract that will pay him $3.525 million next season.




Perezhogin Hitting Stafford With a Baseball Swing

I think this definatly out does what Simon and the rest have done but fo r some reason most people dont remember it.




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Nike Goalie - "Bank Robbery"

ahahhahaahha first time I saw this. Had to add it.



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Wideman’s Shootout Blunder

Heres the clip of Dennis Wideman falling during a shootout a few months back.I know it isn’t new, but I really couldn’t have a hockey site without including this hilarious video. Enjoy!




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Ugliest Hockey Skates Ever Made


The Micron hockey skate, although made in Canada, was a shameful display of engineering and style. The boot of the skate was made completely of plastic, as if they attached blades to a couple of painted Javex bottles.
Sadly, these skates did make their way into the National Hockey League and were even worn by Kevin Lowe for a period of time.




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Worst Helmet Ever Worn


As you can see, this is the ugliest helmet of any kind ever produced. Not only that, it was probably the worst name for a helmet, or any hockey equipment for that matter.

That said, the XL7 is now the name of a Sport Utility Vehicle produced by Suzuki…which is also ugly. Someone with some authority over at Suzuki should tell them to stick to motorcycles.

So there you go. If you are producing any type of product and you want it to be at least remotely cool, don’t name it “XL7″.


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Bertuzzi vs Simon vs Janssen vs McSorley

Simon


Bertuzzi


Janssen


McSorley


Alright so whats the worst cheap shot?




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Simon's costly stick puts Rangers in 8th

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) - Ryan Hollweg was able to smile, knowing the vicious shot he took to the face from Chris Simon led to the New York Rangers' biggest win of the season.

Hollweg was felled by Simon late in the third period Thursday night when the New York Islanders' forward angrily charged him and nailed him with a clothesline hit with his stick.

Simon was ejected, and Petr Prucha scored on the resulting long power play to lift the Rangers to a 2-1 win and a sweep of the home-and-home series between the local rivals.

"The best retaliation is to score on that power play," Hollweg said. "I couldn't feel any better than when that puck went in."

Hollweg stayed down on the ice for several minutes after the hit and was bleeding from the chin when he got up. He took a few stitches and had his face numbed, but expects to play Saturday when the Rangers visit Pittsburgh.

"I feel good," he said. "We got the win. I kind of lost my hearing for a bit after it happened. I might've been out for a second or two. The pain goes away when you get those two points."

The hit was reminiscent of often-replayed clips of Marty McSorley's swinging stick shot to the head of Donald Brashear, and Todd Bertuzzi's blindside punch against Steve Moore. Those both drew lengthy suspensions, and Simon could conceivably be shelved for the Islanders' remaining 15 regular-season games.

"I feel bad for taking a penalty that led to us losing the game," said Simon, who cut his remarks short. "I think I'll wait until I talk to the league office, and then I'll answer all questions afterward. I've always been known as a team guy, and I feel real bad about letting the team down."

Prucha smacked in a shot from the slot, off a feed from Michael Nylander with 5:14 left in the game and 1:17 into Simon's penalty.

The Islanders killed off the rest of the power play and thought they tied the game with 20.4 seconds left. Marc-Andre Bergeron's shot was stopped by Henrik Lundqvist and Trent Hunter slid the puck back to the goal line where Lundqvist barely swept it out.

After a lengthy video review, with fans chanting "Goal! Goal!" while accompanied by the organist, referee Kevin Pollack signaled no goal.

"I turned around and saw the puck just sliding toward the goal," Lundqvist said. "It's almost like slow motion. You try to get back with your stick. It's hard to see if it's a goal or not."

As tough as the save was, waiting for the ruling became excruciating to the helpless goalie.

"I looked up at the big TV there. Some replays it looked like a goal and some it looked like a save," Lundqvist said. "There was still 20 seconds left and they still had a big chance after that. It felt like the game was over almost but you have to get back in the game."

It was the second crucial call to go against the home team during an action-packed third period.
Hollweg drove Simon into the boards with a hard, clean check. Simon got up angrily and met Hollweg as they came together again. Hollweg fell to his back and rolled over onto his stomach by the boards.

"I just finished my check on the half wall," Hollweg said. "I think he was a little fazed by it. I turned around, and the next thing I knew he's winding up and hitting me in the face."

Simon, who gave the Islanders a 1-0 lead in the second period, was ejected - slapped with a match penalty for deliberate attempt to injure.

"I didn't really have time to react to it," Hollweg said. "It's scary to your health but in the back of my mind I couldn't believe he did it."

Paul Mara scored a power-play goal for the Rangers to tie it in the middle period. The Rangers used a pair of 2-1 wins over their biggest rival to move into position for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.

The Rangers are 4-0-1 in their past five games and have moved into an eighth-place tie in the Eastern Conference with 15 games left. The seventh-place Islanders are just three points ahead despite failing to earn a point for just the third time in 21 games (12-3-6).

"It's not easy to see a teammate lose his cool, and to have it happen with six minutes left in the game - it's a tough one to swallow," said Brendan Witt, a hard-hitting Islanders defenseman.

"We were undisciplined, and it cost us."

The Rangers also won 2-1 on Monday at Madison Square Garden but needed a shootout to beat Rick DiPietro, who made an Islanders-record 56 saves.

Both he and Lundqvist were stellar again, but for the second time in four nights Lundqvist - the Rangers' second-year goalie - was one save better. Lundqvist made 30 stops, DiPietro blocked 28.

Just like Monday, the Islanders struck first.

Richard Park carried the puck behind the Rangers net and passed it off to Arron Asham in the slot. The rugged forward wound up for a big drive that hit traffic in front and didn't get to Lundqvist. The puck bounded to Simon, who scored his 10th this season and fifth in eight games at 3:33 of the second period.

Mara tied it with his first with the Rangers just more than 8 minutes later.

Matt Cullen won an offensive-zone faceoff back to Karel Rachunek, who moved the puck to his defensive partner at the right point. Mara, playing despite a shoulder injury sustained in Monday's win, loaded up for a shot that rocketed past DiPietro and flew back out at 11:54.

Notes: Rangers C Brandon Dubinsky, taking the place of injured forward Marcel Hossa, made his NHL debut. Hossa, who sprained a knee Monday against the Islanders, is expected to be out up to a month. . The Islanders had their fifth home sellout of the season, including both meetings with the Rangers, who will visit twice more.




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Finally a good fight..

Finally some old time hockey!!!!




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