Archive for the 'Sports' Category

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NHL Winter Classic Contest

I’ll start by saying what you can win:

A Stanley Cup trip for four, that includes airfare, hotel accommodations, ground transportation, and tickets to a Stanley Cup Final Game.  Winners will watch the game with an NHL legend.  They also will enjoy a private viewing of the Stanley Cup and a $1,000 shopping spree at NHL.com.

What do you have to do?

Spot the player that is missing the Reebok logo from their jersey.

The Problem:

Only people in attendance and U.S. television viewers are eligible.

Either way, it sounds like a pretty good contest to me.  You can read the full article from NHL.com here.

What Coulda Been

This should’ve been the new Hockey Night In Canada theme.
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Towes vs. Kane

Jonathan Towes and Patrick Kane currently sit 5th and 7th in all-star voting for Western Conference forwards.

These are their videos to help win some fans over.  Vote for your All-Star here.

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A Second NHL Team In Toronto?

From the Globe and Mail:

TORONTO — NHL governors are talking informally about placing a second hockey team in Toronto alongside the Maple Leafs, The Globe and Mail has learned.“Why shouldn’t we put another team in the best and biggest market in the world?” one of several NHL governors who spoke with The Globe anonymously said of the Greater Toronto Area.

According to this governor, one idea floated is for prospective owner Jim Balsillie to be rewarded with an expansion team in Toronto after helping to restore financial ballast to the Nashville Predators.

“I’ve heard this exact scenario,” a second governor said.

Calgary Flames co-owner Harley Hotchkiss, a former chairman of the NHL board of governors, is also aware of the Balsillie movement.

“I’ve heard bits and pieces of this scenario, although not in that kind of detail,” he said. “Our priority is to have the existing franchises solid.”

“[It is] an interesting scenario,” Mr. Hotchkiss added, “ but I can only speak generally.”

Richard Peddie, president of Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, said the organization would not automatically reject the idea of a second team in Toronto.

“When and if the league brings expansion to the table, we’ll listen and decide what is best [for hockey],” he said.

As to the potential impact on the Maple Leafs, the first governor dismissively waved his hand. “The Maple Leafs would not be hurt one bit. In fact, it would help them. They could make all kinds of money renting the Air Canada Centre to the other team.”

Richard Rodier, a Toronto lawyer who acts as spokesman for Mr. Balsillie on hockey matters, declined to comment. Bill Daly, the deputy commissioner of the NHL, did not respond to a request for comment.

Two more NHL governors said the league should put a second team in Toronto, although one of them said it should be by relocating an existing franchise rather than expanding.

“I don’t think it can be an expansion team,” a governor said. “We can’t expand because we would be the laughingstock of professional sports.

“We’ve got too many troubled franchises. We’ve got to look at relocating a couple of them. These franchises were troubled long before the economic downturn and next year is going to be worse on them.”

Mr. Balsillie, the co-CEO of Research in Motion Ltd., angered league executives by attempting to buy the Nashville Predators with the intent of moving the franchise to Hamilton.

The league will never allow Mr. Balsillie to put a team in Hamilton for two reasons, according to one governor. One is that the city would be a tough sell for U.S.-based teams, and the other, more significant reason, is the belief it would ruin the Buffalo Sabres.

“It’s a minor-league town,” the governor said of Hamilton. “How could we sell a team from Hamilton? Do you think the New York Rangers want to put the Hamilton Steelers on their marquee at Madison Square Garden? Do you think anyone in Manhattan would buy tickets to see them?”

He also said a team in Hamilton would mean thousands of fans in the Niagara Peninsula who attend Sabres games would simply drive to Hamilton to avoid border lineups.

“We do not want to kill the Sabres,” the governor said. “But if there was a second team in Toronto, that would not hurt Buffalo.”

A comparable situation exists in Los Angeles, where the Staples Center houses three professional teams – the Kings of the NHL, plus the Lakers and Clippers of the NBA.

A third governor thinks the Buffalo Sabres might accept a second team in Southern Ontario as well if it made business sense. He said that means charging Mr. Balsillie as much as $700-million (U.S.) for an expansion franchise.

Off To Pittsburgh!!

We’re off to Pittsburgh to see the Leafs play the Penguins tonight!

GO LEAFS GO!!

Third Jerseys Return

Check out the Atlanta Thrashers and St. Louis Blues’ new third jerseys which they have added this season.

R.I.P. Ron Lancaster

From TSN.ca:

Football lost a legend today with the passing of former CFL quarterback and coach Ron Lancaster, who died of an apparent heart attack Thursday.  He was 69-years old.

“Our league has lost its ‘little general’.  And our country has lost a giant of a man,” said CFL Commissioner Mark Cohon. “Ron Lancaster is deeply loved across Canada, as a CFL player, coach, broadcaster and mentor, but most of all as a true friend. His career spanned eras, bridged west and east, and delighted our fans. But his life transcended sport, because the young man who came here from Pennsylvania grew into a true Canadian hero – a role model who often towered above the rest, and yet remained resolutely down to earth, at the same time.”

A native of Pennsylvania, Lancaster began his CFL career with Ottawa in 1960, winning the Grey Cup in his rookie season.  He was dealt to Saskatchewan after the 1962 season and he stayed there for 16 years.  He led the Roughriders 14 consecutive playoff appearances and five Grey Cup games, winning in 1966.

After being the runner-up in 1966, he was named the CFL’s Most Outstanding Player in 1970 and again in 1976.  Lancaster was named an All-Canadian in 1970, 1973, 1975 and 1976.

When he retired, he left as the CFL’s all-time leader in passing touchdowns with 333, a record that was later broken by Damon Allen.

Lancaster also sits second all-time on the CFL’s list with with 3,384 pass completitions, 6,223 pass attempts and 50,535 yards passing.

He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1982 and the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame in 1985.

In a recent poll of CFL experts conducted by TSN, Lancaster was voted the seventh-best player in the league’s history.

“Ronnie was one of the greatest football players and even more important, one of the greatest human beings I have had the privilege to know,” said Riders President/CEO Jim Hopson in a statement. “His loss will be deeply felt in Saskatchewan and across the nation as Ron touched so many people through his playing, coaching and commentator work.

“We could never thank Ron enough for everything he did for the Roughriders and the community. He left behind a legacy to this province as arguably the greatest and most popular player of all time.”

As a coach, Lancaster was twice named CFL Coach of the year and won Grey Cup titles with the Edmonton Eskimos in 1993 and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 1999. He finished runner-up in 1996 and 1998.

“I have seen very few people cry in football but I’ll always remember the tears of joy rolling down Coach Lancaster’s face after we won the ’93 Grey Cup,” said former Eskimo Larry Wruck. “He was just so passionate about the game of football.”

Willie Pless had high praise for his former coach. “Ron was the best head coach I played for in my 14 years in the CFL,” Pless said. “He had been in the trenches himself so he was a players coach, who put a tremendous amount of trust and faith in his veteran players.”

Lancaster had been serving as Hamilton’s senior adviser to organizational development and providing analysis on the team’s radio broadcasts.  He stepped down after being diagnosed with cancer earlier this year.

“We are all shocked by Ron’s sudden passing and on behalf of everybody in the Tiger Cats organization and all of our fans in TigerTown, we wish to extend our utmost sympathies to Ron’s family,” said Ticats president Scott Mitchell in a statement.

“Despite all the tremendous accolades that come with such great accomplishments, he was the most sincere, honest and straightforward person you could ever meet.  He treated owners the same way he treated the part time volunteer staff and had a modesty about him that was truly uncommon. One of the great storytellers in sports history, with a great sense of humour, Ron never pretended to be anything other than what he was; A family man who loved football.”

The Ticats will have a moment of silence and show a photo tribute to Lancaster on the ArcelorMittal Dofasco Tigervision prior to kickoff of Friday night’s game against Winnipeg.

Former teammate Hugh Campbell, who first met Lancaster 45 years ago, was saddened by the loss of his close friend.

“Ron Lancaster was exactly what you got. His words and body language were unfiltered,” Campbell said.  “Ron’s love for Bev and family was always at the center of his life. He believed in hard work and thoroughly enjoyed his interaction with the huge variety of people in his life. Ronnie would turn a simple conversation with someone he knew forever or a fan he just met into a fun experience. I have a really good book’s worth of info going through my head, but it’s a struggle to put it into words. We were kids when we met and our families have been great friends.”

“This is a profound loss,” said Eskimo President and CEO Rick LeLacheur. “He was a  tremendous competitor, leader, mentor and friend. There are few people who have left as big an impact on our league as Ron Lancaster.”

Lancaster is survived by his wife Bev, three children Lana, Ron and Bob and his four grandchildren.

More Red Bull & Vodka anyone?

A funny little diddy of a drunk russian high jumper doing his thing, kinda.

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Wakestock 2008

It’s that time again for one of my favourite events of the year – the world’s largest wakeboard festival, the Wakestock World Series!  This weekend long festival takes place July 24-27.  The 2008 band lineup has been finally released, and as of right now includes:

Friday July 25
CAVALERA CONSPIRACY
DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN
THROWDOWN
AGE OF DAZE
KATLEEN TURNER OVERDRIVE
FAREWELL TO FREEWAY
DEAD AND DIVINE

Saturday July 26
GZA & RZA of WU-TANG CLAN
HOT WATER MUSIC
SILVERSTEIN
CLASSIFIED
REBEL EMERGENCY + More TBA

Sunday July 27
METRIC
WE ARE SCIENTISTS
DRAGONETTE
LIGHTS
CRASH PARALLEL
SHAWN HEWITT + More TBA

Included with the live music of these bands is the wake boarding talent of the world in the WWA World Series competition, the Billabong pro railslide competition, the oakley launch pool, pro skate demos as well as the Island of the Ams contest, discounted merch tables, pro freestyle moto-x, and the famous bud light bikini contest.  There are also several after-parties thrown in the heart of downtown Toronto.  The early bird cost of a weekend pass costs $49.50.  After June 22nd however the cost rises, with each individual day costing similiar to the original early bird cost of the entire weekend.

the day the song went away

the CBC will not be using the legendary ‘Hockey Night in Canada’ theme song next season after it decided not to sign a new license agreement according to the song’s publisher.What a sad day for Canadian hockey!! There was nothing like running into the living room when you hear “da dada da da” – you knew it was Game On. and I guess game 6 was the last night that they will use it.

heres some details – According to the publisher, the CBC was offered a new license on ‘virtually identical terms to those that have existed for the past decade (approximately $500 per use)’ but the network has chosen to move in a new direction.

what a sad sad sad day………………..