Ryan Kesler- " I left to win a cup... I honestly regret that now" Kesler on demanding a trade out of Van

Nogatco Rd

Pierre-Luc Dubas
Apr 3, 2021
3,030
5,646
Some players that will never be respected in vancouver are the disruptive ones that led to the teams middling history. Guys like Messier, Virtanen, Keenan, Jeff Brown(?), theres good reason for those guys, but vancouver fans are generally forgiving.
Haha, was going to say... good additions. I don't think he counts as an ex-Canuck, but maybe Janney? I doubt he would be welcomed warmly... :help:
for what it’s worth, the former Mrs. Kirk Maclean wrote an article for the National Post where she denied the Jeff Brown rumor:

It’s a life that takes a toll. To this day, I get asked about a rumour involving infidelity with a man I’ve never met — Jeff Brown, for those of you who follow hockey lore.

 
  • Like
Reactions: kvladimir

Honour Over Glory

#firesully
Jan 30, 2012
81,965
46,282
If he would have won a cup, he wouldn't have regretted it :dunno:

It's a "since I didn't win anyway, I would have preferred to stay" thought. He'd pick not winning in Vancouver over not winning anywhere else, but he at the time left Vancouver because he wanted to win.

Hilariously he blocked a trade to the Penguins at the 2014 deadline and the Penguins ended up winning 2 cups shortly after. Granted I don't know if that would have happened had the Kesler trade actually happened, they almost certainly couldn't have acquired Kessel had they traded for Kesler.
False. Not shocked you don't know your shit.

“I heard Pittsburgh had a deal for me and it fell through, don't know why still to this day,” said Kesler. That’s where it’s interesting to go back and look at other reports on what happened.
 

PullHard

Jul 18, 2007
28,559
2,778
The guy was a complete loser. Only Canucks fans (and I guess certain Ducks fans) say otherwise. Fake tough guy would pick fights and then hide behind linesmen.

Loser. Total loser

Well this is quite an exaggeration.
It is an exaggeration but honestly I don't think it is a huuuuge stretch.

There are a lot of players from that era of Canucks hockey that somehow get spoken about and revered online and on this site that doesn't make a ton of sense to fans outside of that city.

The Sedins are special players but guys like Kesler, Burrows, Bieksa, etc. get spoken about as hockey heroes. Late 2000s/ early 2010s Canucks had some good players and nice depth for the organization overall but personally it seems overstated to a guy on the outside looking in.
 

JianYang

Registered User
Sep 29, 2017
19,582
19,013
It is an exaggeration but honestly I don't think it is a huuuuge stretch.

There are a lot of players from that era of Canucks hockey that somehow get spoken about and revered online and on this site that doesn't make a ton of sense to fans outside of that city.

The Sedins are special players but guys like Kesler, Burrows, Bieksa, etc. get spoken about as hockey heroes. Late 2000s/ early 2010s Canucks had some good players and nice depth for the organization overall but personally it seems overstated to a guy on the outside looking in.

Kesler was a good player. But he was strictly the type of player thay you could love only if he was on your team because there was a significant pest element to his game.

His peak was probably in that Nashville series in the early 2010s. He owned that series, and Nashville had no answer for him.

As for Burrows, it may come as a surprise that he was 6th in the league in even strength goals from around 2009-2011. He was a a Swiss army knife with the exception that he wasn't a good powerplay option.
 

Oilslick941611

Registered User
Jul 4, 2006
17,359
18,301
Ottawa
I actually liked Kessler.

That being said, there is a part of me that loves when a player leaves their team for a chance to win and doesn’t win, especially when the team they leave is a Canadian one.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad