renberg
Registered User
Simple solution: keep him in Philly and don’t send him to Allentown. He could have been the third goalie in the Flyers rotation.How many Russian speakers want to live in Allentown for a one year job?
Simple solution: keep him in Philly and don’t send him to Allentown. He could have been the third goalie in the Flyers rotation.How many Russian speakers want to live in Allentown for a one year job?
Bruh. The Bensalem in me hurts in Russian.You live in Bustelton?
The Phillies have a Spanish interpreter for a dozen Spanish players.
And in the minors, there are teammates and coaches who speak Spanish.
I mean probably 10% of the US population speaks decent Spanish.
But when they had an Italian pitcher, doubt they had an interpreter for him.
Problem is there aren't that many Russian speakers around, it's not like you can find a fluent Russian speaker at the drop of a hat, and there are few Russian players at the AHL level. If you want to start moving Russians through your system, you pretty much have to commit to drafting 1-2 every year or finding the few who'll play at the AHL level (Asinimov last season).
Easier at the NHL level, where the talent justifies the cost and there are more Russian players (b/c they're more willing to come over for NHL money and perks).
How many Russian speakers want to live in Allentown for a one year job?
The Flyers have learned their accommodations for foreign prospects are lacking. If they wanted to solve this problem, they could send me on a two week paid working trip to Ocean City, MD and I could go up and down the town, which is heavily staffed by young Euros of all persuasions. I could dig up an assigned native-language friend for every player in the organization, all willing to work for ice cream shop wages.
This is an easy problem, especially for a team with money.
Simple solution: keep him in Philly and don’t send him to Allentown. He could have been the third goalie in the Flyers rotation.
Hell, from my own personal experience there were at least two skating instructors for the general public that worked at the Skate Zone which is obviously where the Flyers operate out of. It's been a couple years since i've been around that but I imagine they're still there or have been replaced by similar people.The Flyers have learned their accommodations for foreign prospects are lacking. If they wanted to solve this problem, they could send me on a two week paid working trip to Ocean City, MD and I could go up and down the town, which is heavily staffed by young Euros of all persuasions. I could dig up an assigned native-language friend for every player in the organization, all willing to work for ice cream shop wages.
This is an easy problem, especially for a team with money.
I went to a good Uzbek restaurant in Bustleton. It was a BYOB. Everyone brought their own bottle of Vodka.Bruh. The Bensalem in me hurts in Russian.
You think all those graduates can actually speak Russian fluently?In addition to hanging out with a hockey team? Probably a good amount. You could probably find someone fresh out of college and looking for a gap year. 169 Russian major programs averaging 40 people. Would just take some emails.
You act like we are asking the team to translate Linear A
You think all those graduates can actually speak Russian fluently?
And if you can, would you want to hang around a minor league hockey team in Allentown, bored out of your gourd, or go to Washington, where there are numerous positions for Russian speakers with much better promotion opportunities?
You think all those graduates can actually speak Russian fluently?
And if you can, would you want to hang around a minor league hockey team in Allentown, bored out of your gourd, or go to Washington, where there are numerous positions for Russian speakers with much better promotion opportunities?
The Jersey Shore is full of Eastern Europeans coming in for seasonal employment at low wages on the US scale that are begging for the work to allow them to extend their stay. They’d be close in age to Kolosov too.
You think all those graduates can actually speak Russian fluently?
And if you can, would you want to hang around a minor league hockey team in Allentown, bored out of your gourd, or go to Washington, where there are numerous positions for Russian speakers with much better promotion opportunities?
You'd have to vet them.The Jersey Shore is full of Eastern Europeans coming in for seasonal employment at low wages on the US scale that are begging for the work to allow them to extend their stay. They’d be close in age to Kolosov too.
You'd have to vet them.
I'd suspect some have Russian mafia ties and others are FSB plants - and given the current state of Russia, some are both. And you want to make sure if you're hiring someone to hold Kolosov's hand, that they're not going to get him into trouble.
I just think they were over whelmed by events, not sure they expected either Kolosov or Fedotov to come over last spring. They now have three Russians on the NHL roster, so that's not a big issue, but harder to pull off in Allentown.
You'd have to vet them.
I'd suspect some have Russian mafia ties and others are FSB plants - and given the current state of Russia, some are both. And you want to make sure if you're hiring someone to hold Kolosov's hand, that they're not going to get him into trouble.
I just think they were over whelmed by events, not sure they expected either Kolosov or Fedotov to come over last spring. They now have three Russians on the NHL roster, so that's not a big issue, but harder to pull off in Allentown.
Ocean City in particular had two prostitution/human trafficking incidents that made them quite a bit more strict in who they bring over these days.
This is a ridiculous thread.