This is going to be perhaps the best hockey tournament ever. Enough said.
Oh absolutely, enough said. You deeming this "perhaps the best hockey tournament ever" is all that needs to be said and is proof beyond question.
Who's more of being "a joke", the teams and the tournament that will be one of the best in history, or the people who are complaining day in and day out like a bunch of kids who didn't get what they wanted for lunch?
Well, the funniest joke is you speaking about a tournament that hasn't taken place as one of the best in history. One joke, and it is certainly a joke, is a tournament masquerading as an international tournament when it has non-national teams. The other main joke is a tournament masquerading as a best on best tournament, but denying some teams the right to select players from their own country, and then organizing the tournament so that players have the opportunity to play against their own country. That is indeed a joke.
Are there any more feeble attempts to define this as an international tournament or a best on best tournament, or are we just onto whether or not it is a joke? Whether or not it is a joke is at least a much more subjective topic.
I have never seen such intense pre-tournament games. True, I am not the oldest out here, but the pace and quality of those games I've seen is really something special, and if this is just exhibition.....
See, the problem, as a kid who likes everything (every Canadian team will win the WJC, every player will show up for the World championships etc.) is that it ruins any credibility you would have even as a relatively anonymous poster. You like everything put in front of you. This tournament may have the most intense games of all time, who knows, but you are going to seriously try to make your point based on three exhibition games? Games that plenty of posters have already commented on for their lack on intensity? I can't speak to the quality of play in the exhibitions, but the strategy of justifying the tournament based on exhibitions is pretty ridiculous.
Henrik Sedin just on Sportsnet, on what he thinks about the comparison between the olympics and the world cup, after he had a taste of the pre-tournament game against Finland
"I think when this is over, it's gonna be up there with the olympics for sure. And I think playing in Toronto is a key to that, cause it's played in Canada, its played in one city and you're not travelling around different cities, like we did in '04, so I think it's gonna be up there with the olympics, absolutely."
on playing such an intense game right out of gate
"half way through the game I felt much better, but the first period was, huh, like Daniel said, Daniel said after the game "I was ready to retire after the first period", cause the pace was high, and everyone was just throwing pucks everywhere, it was a real feeling. But half way through the game the game was starting to slow down, you got more comfortable out there so, I felt a lot better going into the third period and into the overtime."
on whether the players like the idea of Team North America/Europe, or if they like the traditional format with 8 countries
"I would say right now I'm excited. When it came out in the news I was a little hesitant about the whole thing, but I'd rather have it this way where all the teams can win and like I said in olympics you can lose one or two games you know you're gonna beat some of the lesser teams and move on anyways into the quarter-final, this year at this tournament you have to be prepared for each and every game to win and that's, I like it better this way."
That's nice that Henrik Sedin seems receptive to the format. That has very little to do with the criticisms of the tournament, but it's nice for him if those are indeed his sentiments.
I get that the Olympics will always have greater credibility than the World Cup, but the World Cup deserves some kind of credit for having a guy like Kopitar being able to play. We wouldn't even see him at all at the Olympics since Slovenia doesn't get past qualification usually.
Kopitar played at the last Olympics, and Slovenia is qualified for the 2018 Olympics... which Kopitar may not play in, partially due to this tournament.
So Sedin was hesitant, but now prefers this format to the Olympics, that's very interesting indeed. I have said all along that I don't like these gimmick teams but comments like this make me glad I have also said I'll keep an open mind and see how all this plays out.
I wonder how some of the biggest haters of this format feel about this? Shocked into silence perhaps? This isn't just some random fan speaking, this is freaking Henrik Sedin!!
World Cup credibility just went up several points IMO. Cool!
Not quite shocked into silence Gary Nylund, nor hiding and refusing to reply (lobbing only weak passive aggressive comments) because my own poorly thought out and poorly researched opinions are repeatedly proven wrong. Simply answering and replying to information as it becomes available. I understand that some prefer the other approach though.
Sure this describes this tournament well.
The funny thing is that the vast majority of people who defend this tournament don't even attempt to defend it as a serious tournament, but an all star exhibition that they want to enjoy. Which is far more defensible than pretending it's a serious tournament with consequential results. No one is saying that people cannot enjoy it that I can see.
The NHL can do whatever format the hell they choose and it will be a lot better than anything else in the world. People are too nationalistic. This tournament seemingly has A LOT of support among the people in Canada, US, or in Europe, if someone doesn't want to watch it or doesn't like it, then don't.
Ahhh, so you will blindly follow whatever the NHL does. Makes sense. The NHL can do "whatever format the hell they choose" (I think I understand what that means) and it will be better than "anything else in the world". There you go. Olympics? WJC? No tournament is better than "whatever format the hell" the NHL creates. Strong argument.
Also, laughable to complain that people are too nationalistic... in what is supposed to be an
international tournament.