darko
Registered User
- Feb 16, 2009
- 70,272
- 7,803
Because they good. The best teams have the most obnoxious fans.
Their fans are more obnoxious than usual.
Because they good. The best teams have the most obnoxious fans.
Not as obnoxious as Australian hockey fans: "Guys, we're head and shoulders above the rest of division three AINEC"... **** off, we get it!![]()
Oh Aussie hockey fans are the worst especially that Mike guy that posts on here.
heres the video if no one has seen it
If the Canadian media wants to talk about Lias Andersson instead of their country winning gold, that's fine by me.![]()
Pretty sure that if Sweden had won and Dube had thrown his silver medal into the crowd, then a very high percentage of the people that are okay with what Lias did would be calling Dube down to the dirt, while those of us saying that it wasn't an okay thing to do would still be saying that.
Canadian media already feasting on this gift of a side story.
Rangers should publicly protect him, say he's passionate etc. Advise him behind closed doors to apologize.
People are super forgiving after public apologies.
Lias has absolutely nothing to apologize for. It's his medal. It's not a Purple Heart, it's a U20 Hockey medal.
He doesn't turn it down, he thought it was ok to get it in his hand. When he realized it wasn't he put his head forward. He doesn't treat anyone or anything with disrespect. He simply treats the medal with disinterest, he doesn't want it. In reality he isn't being disrespectful to the medal or anyone else. Your feelings about his choice to give the medal away is simply a reflection of you and your feelings and has nothing to do with him.Here's my problem. Some of you keep saying how "I love his passion" or "I love a kid that cares" or something along those lines.
But if you watched the games -- you know, the thing that actually matters above all else -- Andersson PROVED that he plays with passion and cares. He strengthened his reputation as a battler, leader, warrior -- whatever superlatives you can think of -- with his play on the ice.
His play. On. The. Ice.
If Andersson simply took the medal and skated away, not a single soul would say anything other than -- "what a warrior this Andersson kid is. He had an excellent tournament. He can play for my team any day".
Watch the video again. Lias turns down the IIHF's official's attempt to put the medal on, then skates away with the IIHF official's hand extended for a handshake, then tosses the medal into the crowd. Lias wasn't the only teenage Swede who "battled" and "fought" that day. He had an entire team go about the process the way it was intended to go. I've been watching this tournament since the late 1980s -- Andersson isn't the first teenage "warrior" or "battler" who lost a crushing game.
That's not being a "warrior" or a "battler" or a "kid". That's called being a sore loser, and the overwhelming majority of parents that have kids involved in competitive anything have taken or would take their kid aside and say "You, know. That's not how you're supposed to act."
This Canadian roster is trash on paper compared to their previous years and they barely broke a sweat throughout the tournament. Really didn't believe they would medal this year.
He doesn't turn it down, he thought it was ok to get it in his hand. When he realized it wasn't he put his head forward. He doesn't treat anyone or anything with disrespect. He simply treats the medal with disinterest, he doesn't want it. In reality he isn't being disrespectful to the medal or anyone else. Your feelings about his choice to give the medal away is simply a reflection of you and your feelings and has nothing to do with him.
Steve, the problem with what you're saying, is that the medal is not a "gift"! He earned that medal on the ice!No.
In your reality he's not being disrespectful. You either agree with what he did, or your don't. Considering all the criticism, public hate mail and flak he's catching from thousands upon thousands of people from across the hockey spectrum -- players, media, fans, coaches -- I'd say the best thing to do would have been to take the stupid medal, put it around his neck and go cry in the locker room like the thousands upon thousands of 2nd-place winners in the history of sport.
And yes, I hope it's a reflection of me. I've never thrown away a gift or an award in front of the person who gave it to me. And I'm teaching my kids to act the same.
If it's so meaningless then why the hell is he trending on Twitter?
Andersson has received a lot of support from reputable media figurehead and players.
Only receiving criticism from people who want all players to be robots and not show emotions.
Steve, the problem with what you're saying, is that the medal is not a "gift"! He earned that medal on the ice!
He, along with the rest of the Swedish team woke up with a silver medal on the day of the game, and when the final game ended, they didn't win the silver medal, they LOST the gold!
As I said on another post, and as you mention in your post above, the didn't act as the NORM, his reaction was different, and god forbid, in today's politically correct world, he's being criticized for it...