Tie Domi Esquire
The Passengers That Unite Us All
- Oct 18, 2010
- 3,068
- 2,397
My guy I uprooted my entire life and moved across Canada twice before I was 25. I've lived in Victoria, Halifax, and Quebec City. I'm not going to read my resume to you, but I have taken plenty of risks. Until further notice, these guys weren't chasing dreams, they were chasing a paycheck.There is a difference between pressure affecting people and cowardice... it is mind-boggling how people think every single person should rise to the occasion under pressure.
This is being said by a bunch of people who likely took very few risks in life and lived a very normal life, calling people who worked like crazy to live their dreams cowards.
My guy I uprooted my entire life and moved across Canada twice before I was 25. I've lived in Victoria, Halifax, and Quebec City. I'm not going to read my resume to you, but I have taken plenty of risks. Until further notice, these guys weren't chasing dreams, they were chasing a paycheck.
There is a big difference between pressure affecting people and cowardice. Cowards are the one who say it's too hard. Succeeding despite the pressure is what men are made of.
Get this weak shit out of my face. Our ancestors fought in f***ing wars, dude. Is it too hard to play hockey in Canada? I'm sure it is for cowards. McDavid and Draisaitl don't seem to have a problem with it.
Florida is a very good example of someone who didn't.
Most teams get a foundation through the draft, but building strictly through the draft or getting secondary free agent signings is a lot harder.
Winnipeg is the extreme example, they need to target players without NTCs/NMCs and free agent signings likely cost a premium.
Im saying the pressure is much less for a hockey player than a player playing for one of those teams/sports.What is this supposed to mean ? The pressure in Toronto or Vancouver is the same as it is for Manchester United or the Dallas Cowboys.
Hahhahahahahahahahahhahahahahaha the way you just changed speeds on me is hysterical. Actual laugh out loud funny. Go on bro, keep posting your posts about how it's harder to win here, how much pressure can affect people.Sounds like a normal life.
Who said it is too hard? So far, Florida players.
No one said it is too hard, just that there is pressure, and not everyone steps up to the occasion.
In all of Canada? No.Is it just too hard to play and win a Stanley Cup in Canada?
For Toronto? Yes. For Montreal? Maybe. For the other five? Not really.Is the media too much?
Not when you consider the six teams based out of California and the NYC metro.Are there too many taxes?
I think weather and nightlife is overemphasized compared to in-season travel, safety, and just overall how modern and nice the city is.Is it too cold?
This is definitely a challenge.Way too many no-movement clauses with Canadian teams on them?
I'm not opposed to scrapping the salary cap. I'm very opposed to a Canadian carve out. The NHL is unique among the four league because nearly every market has a) things that would draw players in, and b) things that would push players away. Canadian teams have a slightly tougher time with the salary cap. They also have advantages.Is the salary cap too strict?
It's different for every franchise. It's not a Canadian issue.What is the issue here? 32 years since the last cup win for a Canadian team.
No it isn't. It is the same. Big metro area, the top sport in the country, the pressure is the same. Whether it is rugby in New Zealand , soccer in England or hockey in CanadaIm saying the pressure is much less for a hockey player than a player playing for one of those teams/sports.
Because most of those Sunbelt teams sucked for long enough (or got lucky enough) to amass a lot of high end talent through the draft.
There's nothing special about sunbelt teams other than Dallas, Florida, and Vegas happen to be recent top teams. So are Edmonton, Winnipeg, and Colorado. Meanwhile, other sunbelt teams remain at the bottom.Florida has like 3 drafted guys contributing, everyone else was acquired by wheeling and dealing.
Dallas didnt tank for their guys either.
McDavid and Draisaitl weren't booed off the ice or lied about in the media when they were swept by the Avalanche.McDavid and Draisaitl play in an absolute pressure cooker and they are practically worshipped as demigods.
This is because they actually deliver in big moments. The media is more annoying in Canada but the game is the same.
nothing special other than all players want to play in these markets (and not in Canada), and they all seem to sign for much better bargain contracts than those that teams in Canada or northern American cities have to pay.There's nothing special about sunbelt teams other than Dallas, Florida, and Vegas happen to be recent top teams. So are Edmonton, Winnipeg, and Colorado. Meanwhile, other sunbelt teams remain at the bottom.
Everything goes in cycles. Ten years ago Chicago had just finished their reign, Pittsburgh was about to win back-to-back Cups, and Washington, St Louis and Colorado would win Cups soon after.
McDavid and Draisaitl weren't booed off the ice or lied about in the media when they were swept by the Avalanche.
Sun belt teams being good is a pretty new thing, just look at 10, 15 or 20 years ago. Panthers were one of the biggest jokes in the league for ages. They hardly had any fanshow come the only good teams are in the Sun Belt then?
Then stop giving them money. The Toronto fan mentality is so backwards to me.It's just not fair, the customers that fund our business want results.![]()
Fair enoughThis is probably because they combined for 13 points in those 4 games. Sort of the point I was making.
Florida has like 3 drafted guys contributing, everyone else was acquired by wheeling and dealing.
Dallas didnt tank for their guys either.
For the Panthers, only our 1C, 3C, and 3D were lottery picks.Because most of those Sunbelt teams sucked for long enough (or got lucky enough) to amass a lot of high end talent through the draft.
I could also run through the risks I've taken, adversity I've faced, tragedies, disappointments, and all that.My guy I uprooted my entire life and moved across Canada twice before I was 25. I've lived in Victoria, Halifax, and Quebec City. I'm not going to read my resume to you, but I have taken plenty of risks. Until further notice, these guys weren't chasing dreams, they were chasing a paycheck.
There is a big difference between pressure affecting people and cowardice. Cowards are the one who say it's too hard. Succeeding despite the pressure is what men are made of.
Get this weak shit out of my face. Our ancestors fought in f***ing wars, dude. Is it too hard to play hockey in Canada? I'm sure it is for cowards. McDavid and Draisaitl don't seem to have a problem with it.
For the Panthers, only our 1C, 3C, and 3D were lottery picks.
If you really wanted to nitpick, we also acquired Tkachuk and Jones packages that included former lottery picks.
Did you even look at these trades before you posted?Where did you get the assets you traded for Tkachuk and Jones? Or Reinhart? Or Bennett? From what I can see, it's all guys that the Panthers drafted, plus some draft picks. If you don't get that value out of the draft in the first place, how many of those trades can still happen?