I don't think McDavid would pull a Lindros, but if he did, I don't think most people would really blame him.
This is just a random tweet so who knows if it's legitimate... but man
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Completely believe that to be true without proof or reservation. In fact, I kinda assumed that before the draft even.
Would love to have McLellan as the Flyers coach.
I can see Ken Hitchcock getting canned too if they lose in the 1st round.
Curtis Pashelka
‏@CurtisPashelka
McLellan: "Till my last breath, I will have a ton of respect for Joe Thornton."
:'(
all the quotes from TMac make me hate DW so much more. Dude spent the whole offseason actively making the team worse and TMac gets fired as a result. Fuck him.
So what will the Sharks do now?
So what will the Sharks do now?
Tortorella is available
Randy Carlyle! HE WON A CUP
Tortorella is available
Randy Carlyle! HE WON A CUP
in a fire
in a fire
I'd take TMac over Lindy Ruff any day of the week if it wasn't for that fucking balls-to-the-wall end of season we had that has me so damn hyped, even though it'll end up being fucking nothing I'm sure.
it's from that day the Oilers shat on the Kings playoffs dream, someone posted a picture of the oilers logo and I joked about using that as an avatar until the playoffs ended IF they could beat the Kings that day, the fuckers actually did and it was glorious, but I've been stuck with it ever since, it's horrible but bleh I've had worseDid you lose an avatar bet?
After his arrest, Stoll was released on his own recognizance and was given a court date of July 1 at 8:30am pt.
Stoll will probably be able to negotiate a "slap on the wrist," a former state prosecutor told TSN on Saturday.
Michael Pariente, who has been a criminal defence lawyer in Las Vegas since 2006, said he's represented dozens of people accused of drug possession - many of them Canadian - and in every case, the prosecutor has offered first time offenders a plea deal.
Pariente said prosecutors in Clark County, Nevada, would probably allow Stoll to plead guilty to misdemeanour possession of a dangerous drug not to be introduced into inner state commerce. If he does plead guilty to that misdemeanour, Stoll, who was released Friday night on $5,000 bail, according to court records, would probably pay a fine of up to $1,000. He's also be required to take online drug awareness court, a computer course that requires about four hours of time but can be completed anywhere.
Wonder if he can ask to go to the same jail as Voynov?
Kyle Dubas sounds like a smart dude at the very least. Hopefully that eventually translates to success.
I don't know how to link directly to the interview but you can find the segment on this page http://www.sportsnet.ca/590/brady-and-walker/
I don't know how it works in Canada, but you seem to have a gross misunderstanding on how the justice system works in America if you have moneycross-posting
I've got some bad news for Stoll (yes I went to check Nevada law, I'm bored)
[...shall by punished by if weight for substance schedule 1 (MDMA) is more than...]
Is 4 grams or more, but less than 14 grams, for a category B felony by imprisonment in the state prison for a minimum term of not less than 1 year and a maximum term of not more than 6 years and by a fine of not more than $50,000.
and for coke:
A category E felony is a felony for which a court shall sentence a convicted person to imprisonment in the state prison for a minimum term of not less than 1 year and a maximum term of not more than 4 years. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b) of subsection 1 of NRS 176A.100, upon sentencing a person who is found guilty of a category E felony, the court shall suspend the execution of the sentence and grant probation to the person upon such conditions as the court deems appropriate. Such conditions of probation may include, but are not limited to, requiring the person to serve a term of confinement of not more than 1 year in the county jail. In addition to any other penalty, the court may impose a fine of not more than $5,000, unless a greater penalty is authorized or required by statute.
so basically
for MDMA: 1 year at least mandatory minimum, no parole/suspension of sentence possible
for coke: 1 year, but may be suspended at discretion of judge
... so either the judge fucks him over because he has TWO crimes at once (and he gets 2 years) or the judge can suspend the second sentence (and he gets 1 year in county jail, not state prison (what's the difference?)) or he pulls the "i'm rich bitches" card and we'll see
Wonder how he can get out of the mandatory minimum charge though.
Wonder if he can ask to go to the same jail as Voynov?
An update on a blog I wrote a few weeks back about team personnel compensation:
There has been confusion in NHL circles about where exactly fired coaches/executives fit into all this if they remain under contract.
The initial explanation on this I got from someone in the know was that he thought if you were fired, even if still under contract, that the team in question did not qualify for draft pick compensation from the team hiring the fired person. It is also what most team executives I had spoken with thought.
However, NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly, who authored the memo on this, told ESPN.com Monday that for coaches, general managers or presidents of hockey operations who are fired but remain under contract, their teams are privy to draft pick compensation if they choose to pursue it.
But the team can also waive the draft pick compensation if they want, Daly said.
The reason many teams would waive in most cases is that they’re more interested in getting the person who is under contract but no longer working for the team off the books. So why discourage a hire elsewhere.
Still, it certainly adds a new wrinkle to it all.
Let’s take fired Boston Bruins general manager Peter Chiarelli as an example. He has three years left on his deal. As per Daly’s interpretation of the rule, the Bruins do in fact have the right to draft pick compensation if they want it.
Now, you would think the Bruins wouldn't want to block any attempt at another team to hire Chiarelli since they owe him a salary for three more years. But the point is, they apparently could demand a pick if they wanted.
What’s interesting about all this, is that it runs counter to what many team executives believed was the original point of wanting to bring back compensation. One executive told ESPN.com Monday that he had always thought the rule was just to protect, for example, a team like Detroit Red Wings when they allow Steve Yzerman or Jim Nill to go elsewhere for better opportunities, not to try and squeeze a pick out of someone you fired.
Which is why this has the potential now to be very intriguing -- and potentially contentious -- moving forward. We shall see.
Yeah, I was just reading that. I fully expect teams to exercise this if an executive tries to sign with a rival team.
Sharks also fired their Video Coordinator Brett Heimlich today.
What the fuck?
I got to watch the draft down in Miami somehow and I couldn't believe it.
What the fuck?
I got to watch the draft down in Miami somehow and I couldn't believe it.
Off-topic off-topic: I'm thinking about replaying the Mass Effect trilogy, this time all on PS3. I had a pretty disjointed ME experience: played ME2 on PC first, then ME1 also on PC (didn't finish), then ME3 on PS3. Picked up ME1 during its PS3 release but never really got past the first part and also picked up ME2 used for PS3 as well.
ME2 is probably one of the best games I've played last gen. I bought day one based on the hype alone without knowing much about the ME series and easily ate up a good amount of hours on it.