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lgna69xxx

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i did! outside section 118, some guy yelled "Monika wirth a K!" and she responded looking directly at me and my buddy "Hi Guys"! with the most gorgeous smile i have ever seen! ........ damn!


Damn! I'm sure i bumped into this hottie earlier tonight! :D
 

Doc Holliday

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i did! outside section 118, some guy yelled "Monika wirth a K!" and she responded looking directly at me and my buddy "Hi Guys"! with the most gorgeous smile i have ever seen! ........ damn!

Really? Damn! How i would have liked to be there! :D

By the way, great win for the Leafs last night. This team looks like a team on a mission: not only the playoffs, but towards the Cup!! I dream of the day when i can celebrate the Leafs winning the Cup among the thousands of Leafs Nation members at Yonge-Dundas Square. One day.......yep, one day it will happen! :D
 

anon_vlad

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There is a good point in the article which seems obvious now that I have read it. It is indeed an accomplishment to get another team to take a veteran who is under-performing (relative to his high guaranteed salary) to free up cap space for your team.

There is another Canadian team which would be well served by finding someone else to pay three of their players whose accomplishments are proportional to their statures, but are inversely proportional to their salaries.
 

lgna69xxx

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One on One with Kris Versteeg

Along with his columns, this season James Duthie will be talking hockey (and other things) with the biggest stars, newsmakers, and characters in the game. This week, Toronto Maple Leafs forward and part-time rapper Kris Versteeg.

James Duthie: You were still celebrating your Stanley Cup victory on June 30th when you were traded to Toronto. How did you find out?

Kris Versteeg: I had a couple of steaks on the barbecue. We were actually watching you guys on the panel talking about trades, and we were kind of joking about it. Then Brent Sopel, who is basically the agent for everyone - he tells everyone they got traded - sent me a text message saying, "Good luck in T.O." I didn't even know. I called Colin Fraser and he said Sopel had told him he'd been traded, too. So if you ever need a new Insider, get Brent Sopel. JD: You seemed to take it very well for a guy going from the Stanley Cup champion to the 29th place team in the NHL.

KV: When I found it was Toronto, I was pretty darn happy. It's a team facing the same challenges we were facing in Chicago three years ago. Plus, it's an amazing hockey market. This is the Yankees of hockey, maybe the biggest sports organization in the world, so I was excited.

JD: You went from 15 minutes a game average ice time to over 21 so far this season. Are you tired yet?

KV: (laughs) No, not a bit. I guess "Q" (Blackhawks head coach Joel Quenneville) was just saving me for this season. I should give him a call and thank him.

JD: You scored 22 and 20 goals your first two seasons, respectively. With the added ice time and playing on the top line, how many can you score this year?

KV: I have no idea. I take them as they come. I'll leave that to you guys.

JD: Okay then, how many can Phil Kessel score?

KV: I think he can score 50. The puck just always ends up on his stick, and he knows where to put it when it ends up there.

JD: Who is the one player on the Leafs who might surprise people?

KV: (Nikolai) Kulemin. He's got such a great set of hands, he's one of the fastest players I've ever seen, and he's got a great hockey sense. If he puts it all together, he will be scary.

JD: Who is the dirtiest player in the NHL?

KV: Scott Hartnell. In the Cup final, Game 3, I was skating down the ice and he clotheslined me. But he's got skill so he can back it up.

JD: Did it feel strange going to the ring ceremony in Chicago when you were no longer on the team?

KV: It did feel a little weird. It was just me and Adam Burish who came back. They were all talking about getting ready to defend their Cup, and they were giving their whole "rah rah" speech, and me and Burish were just sitting in the background laughing, saying, "Yeah, let's get em!" I got Duncan (Keith) going on what I thought about how our two teams would do. Just trying to get under his skin right away.

JD: You were on the bench when Kane scored the Stanley Cup-winning goal. Did you know it was in?

KV: No. When he took the shot, I heard a funny noise. I didn't know if it was a stick that broke or what, but I was actually looking up into the netting above the glass, thinking the puck went up there, and waiting to see if it was going to drop back onto the ice. Then I saw Boynton in the corner trying to celebrate with Kane, and I thought, "Are they joking?" So I just stepped on the ice and threw my gloves in the air. I had no idea if we'd actually won or not. I was so nervous that it wasn't in. My heart was pounding. I was thinking in those first few seconds, "If we end up somehow losing and I chucked my gloves off like I won the Stanley Cup, I am gonna kill Patrick Kane."

JD: What was the craziest part of the victory celebration that you can repeat on a family site like tsn.ca?

KV: There are definitely a couple I can't repeat, but the night before the parade, we were on a bus, just going from restaurant to restaurant, bar to bar, and everywhere we got off, there were literally thousands of people in the street. It was insanity. We brought the Cup out on State and Division, where the college kids hang out, and you could not move the Cup for a two-block radius, there were so many people. We couldn't even get it back to the bus. That's when the Cup keeper was the most scared the Cup might not make it back. It's funny, when everyone is touching it, you kind of feel like it is your own child and you are trying to protect it.

JD: I went on YouTube this morning to watch your rap at the Cup parade again, and I also found you singing a Fergie song, doing "Save a Horse" with Patrick Kane on stage, and doing karaoke with Cristobal Huet. You are quite a...uhh...versatile performer.

KV: (laughs) Yeah, everyone has a camera phone these days. I like to bust out any genre. I can be a country singer, a hip hop artist...I don't have a great voice, it's not very graceful, but I'll do them all.

JD: What's your go-to tune right now?

KV: Eminem, "Love the Way You Lie". I can bust that out.

JD: The Eminem part or the Rihanna part?

KV: (Laughs) The Rihanna part. Definitely.

JD: Have you tried out your talents on Leafs teammates yet?

KV: I've done a few songs, but Tyler Bozak has Bieber Fever. He just sings Justin Bieber all day, and he's louder than me so he drowns me out.

JD: He'll appreciate that. When did you find out they misspelled your name on the Stanley Cup?

KV: I was called by Mike Bolt, one of the Cup carriers. He apologized right away. He had the cup in Toronto and told me to come over to his house and look at it. I got to raise the cup with the misspelled name, and they fixed it a couple of days later. You can still tell a little bit that it was changed. Hey, I'm probably never going to go down in the history books, so if that's a way of being remembered, I'll take it.

JD: You've had some good nicknames. "Verbeauty", "Verstud"...but the one I'm most intrigued with, I don't think I can even say. Rhymes with witch. How did you get that handle?

KV: It was our Bantam AAA year, and the manager on our team nicknamed me that because I'm always complaining. So we were losing 1-0 one game and I was playing pretty bad and my Grandma got frustrated at me in the stands. She's usually a very quiet, soft-spoken lady, but sometimes when I'm not working hard, she gets mad. So all of a sudden she starts yelling, "Skate, b****, skate! My Mom had to calm her down and say, "Grandma, you can't yell that when there are hundreds of people in the stands."

JD: That may be best Hockey Grandma story I've ever heard. The most lopsided traded in NHL history: 1967; Boston gets Esposito, Hodge and Stanfield from Chicago for Pit Martin, Jack Norris and Gilles Marotte. Did Kris Versteeg for Brandon Bochenski even the score for the Hawks?

KV: (laughs) Not even close. Bochenski is a good player. The most lopsided trade Chicago's way is the Patrick Sharp-Matt Ellison one.

JD: You played a key role in ending Chicago's 49-year drought. Now you are in Toronto, where it's been 43 years. Maybe this is your calling. Maybe you're the drought breaker?

KV: I'm sure hoping I can be the drought-breaker. But lots of work ahead. Baby steps.
 

Special K

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Watching the Pens/ Leafs game and a great fight between Toronto's Colton Orr and Pitts' Deryk Engelland. Great back and forth fight with Orr getting the better of him until Engelland landed the KO blow ending the fight. Be sure to catch it on hockeyfights.com tomorrow!
 

Doc Holliday

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Watching the Pens/ Leafs game and a great fight between Toronto's Colton Orr and Pitts' Deryk Engelland. Great back and forth fight with Orr getting the better of him until Engelland landed the KO blow ending the fight. Be sure to catch it on hockeyfights.com tomorrow!

Yeah, i saw it. Lucky punch. Orr will get him back, if not in this one it'll happen in the next one.

Leafs look good...it was 4-2 until Crosby scored with just over 40 seconds left in the 2nd period. Later....
 

SexyNadya

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Go Leafs Go !

Yeah, i saw it. Lucky punch. Orr will get him back, if not in this one it'll happen in the next one.

Leafs look good...it was 4-2 until Crosby scored with just over 40 seconds left in the 2nd period. Later....

And your Leafs won Darling 3-0 well done !

:)
 

Doc Holliday

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Bizarre night for Colton Orr......he scored the first goal of the game & got a concussion. I don't remember the last time he lost a fight, although he would have won it if it wasn't for that lucky punch near the end of the fight. Oh well!

Leafs win 3-2!!!! Leafs unbeaten so far!! Monster game by the Monster!!! Next up for the Leafs: the NY Rangers on Friday evening......go Leafs!
 

Doc Holliday

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And your Leafs won Darling 3-0 well done !

:)

Thank you sweetie! :D

By the way, even though your team lost a tough one tonight, Carey Price was magnificient!! Tampa Bay shot 46 times at him & the game wouldn't even have been close if it wasn't for Price. Maybe they did do the right thing by keeping him, after all.
 

lgna69xxx

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It was a good even fight, until Orr took the last punch, but hey, even a tough guy doesnt win them all. Orr also had a goal and was a +2 in only 1:48 of ice time. i am sure he would gladly take a punch if it meant he would score a goal and be +2 every game where he lost a fight lol, but knowing how his teammates love him he would most likely be happy with just a win. Great team effort tonight, Leafs are 3-0 .. better start than last year, lets keep it going into NYC friday night... GO LEAFS GO!
 
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Special K

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Joe.t

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Bizarre night for Colton Orr......he scored the first goal of the game & got a concussion. I don't remember the last time he lost a fight, although he would have won it if it wasn't for that lucky punch near the end of the fight. Oh well!

Leafs win 3-2!!!! Leafs unbeaten so far!! Monster game by the Monster!!! Next up for the Leafs: the NY Rangers on Friday evening......go Leafs!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2Qtef3DECI
 

lgna69xxx

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A man with a plan... great article

http://www.thestar.com/article/873359--brian-burke-reveals-his-method-for-leafs-success


Brian Burke’s approach to making the Leafs a respected contender is simple. He soaks up something important from almost everyone he meets, and seeks out those he can learn from. Some of the most important lessons he’s picked up along the way: be decisive, realize assets come in many forms, and while you can’t always be compassionate, fairness is not negotiable.

“As you walk along the path, you have to be willing to find something on the side that helps you.”

“I called Bill Polian (Indianapolis Colts president). This is eight or nine years ago probably, well before we had a salary cap. I said, ‘We’re going toward a salary cap, I know we’re going to have one.’ I (didn’t) have the first idea how to handle a salary cap, how to manage a salary cap and I certainly don’t want to learn on the fly. I don’t want to hit the ground walking on this. If they put in a cap, what do I do? He said, ‘C’mon in. Talk to our cap guys.’ So I spent the better part of a day going over how they manage the cap.”

“Later on in the day, I’m sitting in Bill’s office and he had a depth chart and there was a little red box on three of the offensive linemen. I said, ‘What’s the little red box?’ He said, ‘They’re all unrestricted free agents.’ Of course, I’m thinking old system NHL where you’ve got to get something for everybody. And I went, ‘Oh my God, what are you going to do?’ and he looked at me like I had two heads. ‘What do you mean, what am I going to do? I’m going to replace them.’ I said, ‘You’re not going to get anything for them?’ and he said, ‘Yeah, I’m going to get back all the cap space.’ People say to me, you’ve got to get something for Tomas Kaberle. No, I don’t. I get $4.2 million back if he decides not to stay at the end of the year.”

“He’s a valuable contributor and he’s a real good guy. If we keep him for the year and he walks, he walks. I get $4.2 million back. I let Ruslan Salei walk in Anaheim. We didn’t get anything for him but I needed him to make the playoff run we did when we went to the conference finals (in 2006). I told him at the deadline, ‘I’m not moving you. I need you to play the next 20 games, have the spring of your life, then I’ll help you get the big dough somewhere else.’ He did.”

“Lesson learned, in the cap system first things first. You do not have to get a return on every asset like you did in the old system. The cap room comes back to you, that’s an asset. There’s an example.”

“My two outside guys, the guys I would rely on most for advice, would be Bill Polian and Ned Colletti. Ned Colletti (L.A. Dodgers GM) was there when we won the Cup in Anaheim. I was happy that he was there. Bill Polian and I won our championships the same year, which was really cool.”

“I remember calling Bill Polian before I did the Pronger deal (in Anaheim). I said, ‘I think I can get Pronger from Edmonton but it’s a horrible, horrible price. We’re overpaying badly.’ And Polian said, ‘You can get Chris Pronger? Hang up the phone, call Edmonton and make the deal.’ I said, ‘It ties up so much of our cap on defence.’ And he said, ‘No one has ever won a championship in the NFL without spending on defence. Hang up the phone and call.’ I was going to make the deal anyway, it didn’t push me over, but there’s a seasoned, championship executive in the most popular sport in North America and that’s the decisiveness a guy like that has. That was a lesson: Boom. Do it.”

“With Colletti, it was the same thing. . . . He said, ‘Do it, get him.’ These guys are valuable . . . if you’re having a dispute with ownership, and we haven’t had one here and we didn’t have one in Anaheim. Guys frequently have friction with their owner. Call a guy, ask what he would do, how he would handle it. Problems with the media . . . ‘We’ve got a problem guy here, what do you do with your guy if you have problems.’ They’ve been great influences and great help.”

“I used to drive up to Manhattan Beach and have coffee with Ned at 6 in the morning. I could leave my house at 5 o’clock. Up at 4:30, shower, drive up to Manhattan Beach, meet Ned at this little breakfast place and talk about what we’re trying to do with our teams. I went to spring training with them. I went to Vero Beach to see them in spring training. I went up to see games at Dodger Stadium, met with his key people. His key people met with us last year during the Edmonton/Calgary trip. I think he’s coming here this year over the New Year’s break to see the world junior and see us play two home games.”

“I was asked to be in a think tank at Wharton this summer, at the University of Pennsylvania. It was mind-boggling, the people they had in the room. People from all of sports. It was kind of like Sesame Street. Three of these things belong together, one of these things is not the same. I was like, ‘How did I get in this room?’ They were talking about issues that face sports — the economy, sponsorship dollars — and (team president/CEO) Mark Murphy was there from the Packers. I’ve always admired Mark Murphy. He was a great player, an important player in the NFLPA and now he’s on the management side, struck up a friendship, exchanged e-mails . . . To me, I think you can always learn.”

“There’s lots of lessons. Working for Pat Quinn was like getting an MBA. He’s a brilliant guy and a great teacher.”

“You know what I’d really like to do? I’d like to be able to speak French. I keep telling myself I’m going to learn and I haven’t done it yet. It’s a function of time more than anything. As far as hockey goes, you can do everything better. The day you stop learning, the day you stop improving is the day, really, you’re on the back nine. As long as you’re willing to learn and think you’re going to learn, then I think you’re still climbing the hill.”

“I think most GMs become friends with the GMs in their town . . . I have struck up a friendship with (Blue Jays’ GM) Alex Anthopoulos. I’m really impressed with him. I think he’s a really good guy, a really smart guy. Paul Beeston is a wonderful asset in terms of bouncing things off of, a very bright guy. I really like Bryan (Colangelo, the Raptors GM). He’s a really good guy but I don’t like to be seen with him in public. He’s taller than I am. He’s better looking than I am. He speaks better than I do and he dresses better than I do. So whenever I appear with him, I come off looking short and barely literate and not well-dressed. I like Bryan but I don’t like getting on stage with him.”

“I know what I don’t know, which I think is a key to be successful. There’s 30 teams and 30 farm teams. Each team in the NHL has somewhere between 40 and 50 contracts. There’s always unsigned draft choices in junior and in Europe. There’s no way you can mentally master the database as a GM. Anyone who says he knows every player in the league – knows in terms of how he plays, which way he shoots, what his propensities are – any GM who tells you that is lying. This year, there’s going to be three, four new guys on every team. Some of whom, I’ll have seen in junior, some of whom I’ll have seen in the American league but some of whom, I’ll have never seen. You got to start by conceding that you’re not going to know every player. So you darn well better have people who do. I place great weight in the people that work for me. I do take their recommendations and when they say, this is what we ought to do, that’s what we do.”

“I do believe in star power in the front office. I do believe it’s critical to have heavyweight candle-power in the front office. I had Bob Murray in Vancouver with Dave Nonis. These are GM-calibre guys working underneath me. Here, we’ve got Dave Nonis again. Dave Poulin, again GM-calibre guy. Claude Loiselle, same thing. I think it’s a top-heavy group and I think that’s important. You want to be successful, look at Kenny Holland (in Detroit). He’s got Jim Nill who is a GM-calibre guy.”

“The blueprint is never going to change for me but you inherit different assets everywhere you go.”

“If you’re picking 24 to 30, that’s not much different than a second-round pick. Everywhere I’ve gone we’ve tried to add free agents. We tried to add assets that don’t cost the team any corporate assets. I place great stress on coaching. We have an integrated system as far as our farm team goes. Our farm team plays the exact mirror-image system that our big club plays, which is amazingly not true everywhere. So when a kid comes up and plays for the Leafs, the only thing different is the building. He knows the forecheck, he knows the PK, he knows all that stuff. I believe in strength in coaching at the minor-league level. I think Dallas Eakins is just a top young coach.”

“Basically, I take the assets I have, who can play in this system, who can be a top six, who can be a bottom six, give them a chance and start putting people on airplanes.”

“The assets you have in a cap system are players, draft choices, cash, cap room and tagging room, which is the ability to sign players into future years. You need to have cap space in future years. You need to have contracts available too if you want to add players so you have to be under 50 contracts. Those are all assets.”

“Compassion is not the right word. What you owe your players is fairness. You can’t always be compassionate. You sometimes have to trade a guy whose wife is expecting, which is not compassionate. But I think if you say to the player, ‘Look I don’t have a choice. We need to do this deal’ and you explain it, which is fair. You owe your players fairness. The standard player’s contact, the word ‘compassion’ does not appear in there, but fairness is something every employee is entitled to. I value that with my non-playing employees too. The Christmas break is an example of that.

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Doc Holliday

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Great article, Iggy! I'll bet you some general managers that have struggling teams have also read this article (or should!).

Boy, isn't great to be a Leafs fan these days? I love it! :D
 
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