MoneyManny
Registered User
- Jun 28, 2021
- 1,221
- 1,869
Fringe NHLers are still hockey gods. Nothing to be ashamed about.
I don’t know if he took at as an insult or as someone finally telling him the truth about himself as a pro. He’s playing in the best league in the world, but he’s reached his max. People need to be told the truth at times. Maybe not when he was young and dreaming but this is an adult at the end of a bounced around middling career that if I recall was full of injury problems that were never going to let him be who he might’ve been when he was drafted. He was 28/29 when this happened. He knows he needed to here and im not even convinced he was insulted.Remember. No matter what happens. Any thread on the main board about the oilers? Needs to be negative. One way or another. While he took it as an insult, many players in the league are tossed out there to kill the clock or to force a pass change. That is what clock killers do
damn and Kenny was generally one of the nicer GMs to players lol
honestly that comment is pretty mild, what if this dude had a run in with Mike Keenan or something
The irony being that after he quit hockey he started picking up casual shifts as an unskilled labourer and finding more fulfillment in that than sitting on a bench. Now he's started his own business where he helps labourers (often of the minimum wage variety) find work.I'd love to get a job in the NHL as a clock killer for 1m per year. Slater should have had better self awareness.
If he quit the league because of that it's probably because he had only played hockey all his life and hadn't had the opportunity to work a 70k-80k per year job as a clock killer.
I'm guessing you didn't actually watch the clip. He's not upset about it, doesn't sound like he ever was. Just made him think about areas in his life he could make a positive impact and used that as a catalyst.damn and Kenny was generally one of the nicer GMs to players lol
honestly that comment is pretty mild, what if this dude had a run in with Mike Keenan or something
That's the way I took it too.I don’t know if he took at as an insult or as someone finally telling him the truth about himself as a pro. He’s playing in the best league in the world, but he’s reached his max.
Who called it an insult?I’ve heard more cutting comments between players on the ice.
Pretty tame “insult” to make you reconsider your career.
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Former Oilers defenseman reveals the words from Ken Holland that ended his career
He played in two seasons with the Oilers, only a total of 37 games, before calling it a career.www.yardbarker.com
Ideal 6th/7th defenseman.I think it's actually a compliment.
Most franchises would love to have a bottom-pairing D that doesn't do negative shit out there on the ice.