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Around SBN: Chan Sung Jung Wins Thriller Over Dustin Poirier

The Ducks might also be looking to deal and here's hoping Sather is able to saddle the Booshirts with Demitra for at least 15 years.

over 2 years ago Potvindenisnyi003_tiny BCISLEMAN 6 comments 0 recs  | 

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Man, this is going to be tough

We don’t play Chicago until March 2, which means we will have to deal them a catastrophic injury (or two) that is immediately diagnosable as such, so that they have time to make a deal with us within the next 36 hours.

Do we have any friends around the league who can rough them up before then?

Lighthouse Hockey: Side effects may include Weight gain and frequent game loss.

by Dominik on Dec 9, 2009 4:13 PM EST reply actions  

Ideally Huet goes down for the season on March 2...

as we are working on the details of a Sopel-Sutton deal that would already involve multiple picks and we throw in Biron for their first rounder.

by BCISLEMAN on Dec 9, 2009 4:48 PM EST up reply actions  

Demitra

Oh, and I love the Demitra/NYR speculation bit. The Rangers definitely need more injury-prone forwards who disappear at critical moments.

And really, Gaborik/Demitra chemistry? I know it’s real, but clearly Gaborik doesn’t need Pavol to rack up points with abandon.

Lighthouse Hockey: Side effects may include Weight gain and frequent game loss.

by Dominik on Dec 9, 2009 4:24 PM EST reply actions  

shhhh!!!!

Dom…the idea is for Sather to tie a contract (15 years is over the top, I’ll settle for 5-10) at maybe$5 mil per. If you start making rational objections maybe he gets second thoughts.

by BCISLEMAN on Dec 9, 2009 4:51 PM EST up reply actions  

Watch that kind of talk!

Instead of injuries, maybe Buff and Sopel for Tambellini and a half full cup of gatorade?

SHOOOOOOOT IT!!!! Anon

by burpchelischili on Dec 11, 2009 10:01 AM EST reply actions  

they are probably hoping to defer any dumping until the offseason. Hard to imagine with the way players have been dropping like flies injury-wise. Sooner or later something will happen and they will have to make a move.

by BCISLEMAN on Dec 14, 2009 4:07 PM EST up reply actions  

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May 24, 1980: Tonelli to Nystrom. At long last, the steady build of the New York Islanders from expansion doormat to surprise semifinalist to annual contender reaches the promised land: Buoyed by a late season trade for Butch Goring that gave the team the depth up the middle GM Bill Torrey had been seeking, the Islanders knock off the Philadelphia Flyers in six games.

The victory justified the faith in coach Al Arbour who guided them from their second season to their first Stanley Cup seven seasons later. The Islanders would not be the first expansion team to win the Stanley Cup, but they would be the only one capable of a dynasty.

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May 21, 1981: This time it was much easier. After falling to "only" 91 points in the 1979-80 season, the Islanders returned to their division title tradition, piling up 110 points -- a whole 13 points over second-place Philadelphia.

Between the quarterfinals (where they beat the upstart Oilers in six games) and the finals, the Islanders reeled off eight consecutive wins -- with a four-game sweep of archrival Rangers in between. As they defeated the Minnesota North Stars in five games for their second Cup, their goal difference in the final was a combined +10.

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May 16, 1982: Another year, another landslide title. The Islanders won the Patrick Division by a whopping 26 points over the second-place Rangers, and were seven points clear of their nearest competition for the President's Trophy, the still-not-quite-ripe Edmonton Oilers.

A first-round scare against the Pittsburgh Penguins turned in the Isles' favor thanks to John Tonelli's heroics, and a true dynasty was on its way: Past the Rangers in six games, then an eight-game sweep of the Quebec Nordiques and Vancouver Canucks to run away with the Stanley Cup.

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Four years, four Cups, 16 consecutive playoff series wins (a record that would grow to 19 until the rematch with the Oilers the following year). Mike Bossy scored 60 goals yet again, and Wayne Gretzky became acquainted with Billy Smith's crease.


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