I do like that Canadian sportsmanship that I hear so much about, all the boo's during the introductions

USA USA
That's more of a Montreal thing - I wouldn't generalize it to the entire country. The Habs fans also booed the US National Anthem during the Habs/B's playoff series last year (btw, to my pleasent surprise, the B's fans cheered the Canadian National Anthem next game in Boston).Trek wrote: I do like that Canadian sportsmanship that I hear so much about, all the boo's during the introductions![]()
Ya, they look like puke.Wulfran wrote:As a Canadian I want to kill:
- the person that designed those yellow pajama top things that are as ugly as Boston's 3rd jersey
- the person who decided we'd wear it
DAMN but Robert Esche played a hell of a game for USA...
i've heard that television stations that have local market hockey contracts are hoping for a lockout, because they will make more money not having to pay for the programming (in other words they can't sell the advertising high enough to defray the cost).noel wrote:And that, ladies and gentlemen, will probably be the most hockey we'll see all year! YAY for the NHL and the Players Union!!! YAY!!!
Yep. Hockey players need to realize that their sport doesn't compare to Baseball, Basketball and Football in popularity. Their contracts need to be in the thousands, not millions.Voronwë wrote: basically the players have no choice but to make some major concessions, because the league is financially better off not operating than operating in its current form.
I think this one of the largest looming issues: there is a fundamental lack of trust between both parties. The owners (historically) exploited the hell out of the players and made a shitload of money off them, but the tide turned in the 80s, once Eagleson was disposed of. Since then, the NHLPA hasn't forgotten about how they were once screwed over, even if a good portion of the teams didn't exist and most of the ownership groups weren't involved. At the same time I think, the owners are afraid of the people in the NHLPA who feel they have an axe to grind and at the same time (some of the owners are) trying to avoid having to publicly defend some of their financial practices.No-one seems to know who's telling the truth about how much the teams are making, and honestly they need to consent to a 3rd party audit to figure it out. If the player salaries are seriously 75% of total income for the teams then that's just downright fucked up. There is no way you can operate a business like that.