Player Discussion Zdeno Chara - III

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barstool

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Nov 22, 2014
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He has been good pretty much all year.

I was going to come into this thread to point out he didn’t look good tonight, but I’m definitely not at the point of not wanting him back given his contribution overall this season.
He has been good I don't know if Chara accepts good
 
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Bruinaura

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Mar 29, 2014
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One of the invite-holders for Chara’s second training camp with the Islanders, in 1998 in Lake Placid, N.Y., was 26-year-old career minor leaguer Vashi Nedomansky. Early on, they performed the Wingate test, a 45-second, all-out sprint on a stationary bike. Chara went over a minute.
“You’re on the floor. Everything is burning. You’re sore for a day,” Nedomansky said. “But he kept going faster and faster and they had to make him stop. He wasn’t even breathing heavily. They just said, ‘That’s good, buddy, you’re good.’ ”
His training sessions, sometimes three or four per day, had teammates wide-eyed. Weekes remembered seeing Chara, the son of a Czechoslovakian Olympic wrestler, clean-and-jerk 135 pounds with one hand.



Not that stories like this even from his early years are surprising at this point, but still..... :eek:

Zdeno Chara has become the quintessential Bruin — smart, strong, and dedicated - The Boston Globe
 

Dr Hook

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One of the invite-holders for Chara’s second training camp with the Islanders, in 1998 in Lake Placid, N.Y., was 26-year-old career minor leaguer Vashi Nedomansky. Early on, they performed the Wingate test, a 45-second, all-out sprint on a stationary bike. Chara went over a minute.
“You’re on the floor. Everything is burning. You’re sore for a day,” Nedomansky said. “But he kept going faster and faster and they had to make him stop. He wasn’t even breathing heavily. They just said, ‘That’s good, buddy, you’re good.’ ”
His training sessions, sometimes three or four per day, had teammates wide-eyed. Weekes remembered seeing Chara, the son of a Czechoslovakian Olympic wrestler, clean-and-jerk 135 pounds with one hand.



Not that stories like this even from his early years are surprising at this point, but still..... :eek:

Zdeno Chara has become the quintessential Bruin — smart, strong, and dedicated - The Boston Globe

A good article. Mikey the Shoe had no comment :laugh:
 

Bruinaura

Resident Cookie Monster
Mar 29, 2014
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Lol at the title/picture combo

20200113_174219.jpg
 

Alberta_OReilly_Fan

Bruin fan since 1975
Nov 26, 2006
14,331
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Edmonton Canada
congrats to our captain for 1000 games

I still feel ashamed for us all, we ranked the top 50 bruins of all time in around 2013 or 2014 and chara couldnt even get on the ballat as it was in the 30's. I lost interest in the process and stopped paying attention after that, so not sure what eventually happened

if we were doing a top 50 bruins of all time now though... and he wasnt in that top 15-20 group... id really be going balistic

it seems hard to believe... but this is one of the most underrated guys of the past 20 years. its a bit of a shame he got only a single Norris trophy. really is a testament why there needs to be 2 awards for dmen and 1that does go to outstanding defender.
 

Boston Bandit

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Aug 2, 2005
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Zdeno Chara’s Captaincy Keeps on Giving
By
Mick Colageo
Zdeno_Ch%C3%A1ra_2012.jpg

The biggest decision of Zdeno Chara’s hockey career turned out to be the pivotal moment not only for the Boston Bruins’ franchise recovery, rebuild and march to the Stanley Cup in 2011, it has further defined the ongoing building of team- and sport-wide culture.

NHL teams are taking notice and are on a constant lookout to identify and groom such a person to lead them like Chara has led the Bruins.

Like no other sport and probably because of its unique cauldron of speed, skill, violence, emotional swings and dependency on the team concept, success in ice hockey is as reliant on the intangibles as the tangibles, on improvement as much as gift, on resiliency as much as talent, on spirit as much as strategy, and on heart as much as mind.

Losing a superstar talent can devastate a team but not because of aggregate goal totals, it’s because of what that player meant to his team in every dimension from skill to leadership to the setting of examples.

“You have (Chara) in his prime, and his prime is a little different for him with age. He learned to adapt, and we built around him,” said former Bruins GM Peter Chiarelli. “There’s guys that you see leading this team now that learned from ‘Z.’ Not having gone to another organization and seeing the critical mass … and what it takes to change it and move it, it’s hard. And there’s a lot of unintended consequences that happen. To have ‘Z’ steering the ship … it’s immeasurable. The Bruins were fortunate.”

Chara brought sustainable culture

As the world’s premier shutdown defenseman, Chara has posed a massive problem for opponents’ elite forwards. As captain, he has thought things out and has been unafraid to take on time-honored traditions like rookie hazing. In his mind, success depends on a positive atmosphere necessarily including a mutual respect among teammates.

“It’s so hard to make it, to grow it,” said Chara of winning culture. “It’s all about people. When you look at – other teams have very skilled players, goal scorers or first-rounders and all that. But it’s all about the character and it’s all about heart and it’s all about, like, whoever is willing to buy in and do what the identity or the culture is.

“I always say, to me it’s always about the heart of the player because, once you know that he’s willing to do certain things, the rest of it is up to coaches to show him the system. It’s up to him to improve his skills, but if you have a skill and you have that but you don’t have the character and will to do whatever team identity is or culture, then it’s not going to work.”

Chara a big-picture leader

Coaches often allude to what they learned reading about military heroes, but Chara looks at an entire branch of the armed services.

“I like to compare it to the Navy,” he said. “They always go through all that training, and they try to pick the right personnel, the right personalities, for whatever the team they will be on later on in their career – the SEAL team (for example).

“Because they don’t look for the most accurate shooter, right? At the first, they look for somebody who’s going to do whatever it takes because, then, they will put him on the stand and tell him, ‘You’re going to shoot thousands of rounds until you’ll be so accurate that you become one of the best shooters or snipers. But we want to make sure you have everything here (pointing to his heart), what it takes, because the rest of it we will teach you.’ So I think that’s, here, you get people like players here that accept their role and are willing to take that hard and buy into the culture and the identity because the rest of it is always in the system.”

When teams lack a culture of success, they wonder how are they ever going to get it back.

It’s no wonder the Bruins continue to place significant value on a player approaching his 43rd birthday (March 18).

Chara’s one-year contract for 2019-20 carries a $2 million cap hit but guarantees another $1.5 million ($1.25M when he played his 10th games and another $250,000 assuming the Bruins make the playoffs). He will get another $250,000 if the Bruins win the Stanley Cup.

As a shutdown defenseman, Chara has mentored young players like Brandon Carlo, Matt Grzelcyk and his regular partner Charlie McAvoy. As captain, he has instituted a culture of mutual respect in which he and fellow leaders Patrice Bergeron, David Krejci, Brad Marchand and Tuukka Rask allow a personality like David Pastrnak to take center stage and, at the same time, make sure everyone understands the equal importance of Sean Kuraly, Chris Wagner and Joakim Nordstrom.
 
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Boston Bandit

Registered User
Aug 2, 2005
4,079
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Zdeno Chara’s Captaincy Keeps on Giving
By
Mick Colageo
Zdeno_Ch%C3%A1ra_2012.jpg

The biggest decision of Zdeno Chara’s hockey career turned out to be the pivotal moment not only for the Boston Bruins’ franchise recovery, rebuild and march to the Stanley Cup in 2011, it has further defined the ongoing building of team- and sport-wide culture.

NHL teams are taking notice and are on a constant lookout to identify and groom such a person to lead them like Chara has led the Bruins.

Like no other sport and probably because of its unique cauldron of speed, skill, violence, emotional swings and dependency on the team concept, success in ice hockey is as reliant on the intangibles as the tangibles, on improvement as much as gift, on resiliency as much as talent, on spirit as much as strategy, and on heart as much as mind.

Losing a superstar talent can devastate a team but not because of aggregate goal totals, it’s because of what that player meant to his team in every dimension from skill to leadership to the setting of examples.

“You have (Chara) in his prime, and his prime is a little different for him with age. He learned to adapt, and we built around him,” said former Bruins GM Peter Chiarelli. “There’s guys that you see leading this team now that learned from ‘Z.’ Not having gone to another organization and seeing the critical mass … and what it takes to change it and move it, it’s hard. And there’s a lot of unintended consequences that happen. To have ‘Z’ steering the ship … it’s immeasurable. The Bruins were fortunate.”

Chara brought sustainable culture

As the world’s premier shutdown defenseman, Chara has posed a massive problem for opponents’ elite forwards. As captain, he has thought things out and has been unafraid to take on time-honored traditions like rookie hazing. In his mind, success depends on a positive atmosphere necessarily including a mutual respect among teammates.

“It’s so hard to make it, to grow it,” said Chara of winning culture. “It’s all about people. When you look at – other teams have very skilled players, goal scorers or first-rounders and all that. But it’s all about the character and it’s all about heart and it’s all about, like, whoever is willing to buy in and do what the identity or the culture is.

“I always say, to me it’s always about the heart of the player because, once you know that he’s willing to do certain things, the rest of it is up to coaches to show him the system. It’s up to him to improve his skills, but if you have a skill and you have that but you don’t have the character and will to do whatever team identity is or culture, then it’s not going to work.”

Chara a big-picture leader

Coaches often allude to what they learned reading about military heroes, but Chara looks at an entire branch of the armed services.

“I like to compare it to the Navy,” he said. “They always go through all that training, and they try to pick the right personnel, the right personalities, for whatever the team they will be on later on in their career – the SEAL team (for example).

“Because they don’t look for the most accurate shooter, right? At the first, they look for somebody who’s going to do whatever it takes because, then, they will put him on the stand and tell him, ‘You’re going to shoot thousands of rounds until you’ll be so accurate that you become one of the best shooters or snipers. But we want to make sure you have everything here (pointing to his heart), what it takes, because the rest of it we will teach you.’ So I think that’s, here, you get people like players here that accept their role and are willing to take that hard and buy into the culture and the identity because the rest of it is always in the system.”

When teams lack a culture of success, they wonder how are they ever going to get it back.

It’s no wonder the Bruins continue to place significant value on a player approaching his 43rd birthday (March 18).

Chara’s one-year contract for 2019-20 carries a $2 million cap hit but guarantees another $1.5 million ($1.25M when he played his 10th games and another $250,000 assuming the Bruins make the playoffs). He will get another $250,000 if the Bruins win the Stanley Cup.

As a shutdown defenseman, Chara has mentored young players like Brandon Carlo, Matt Grzelcyk and his regular partner Charlie McAvoy. As captain, he has instituted a culture of mutual respect in which he and fellow leaders Patrice Bergeron, David Krejci, Brad Marchand and Tuukka Rask allow a personality like David Pastrnak to take center stage and, at the same time, make sure everyone understands the equal importance of Sean Kuraly, Chris Wagner and Joakim Nordstrom.
Chara a legend in Brady’s shadow

Whenever Chara is done defending, the Bruins’ team concept will be forever improved. He will never be as loved as Patriots contemporary Tom Brady, but his stamp on his franchise is no less indelible.

“I hear people say a lot of times, they say, ‘Hey, you’re getting way more banged up than Tom does or you play more games or you play way more physically,’ this and that. But I think you can’t take anything away from Tom,” said Chara. “He’s doing other things that are very spectacular. Obviously, it’s not maybe as physically demanding and harsh playing the quarterback position, but it’s super hard seeing those plays and making those throws, and being so accurate and clutch.”

That and 70,000 people screaming while you bark signals.

“It’s just a different sport, different role,” said Chara. “I’m never being the guy that being like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m in the shadow of Tom Brady. I should get more recognition.’ I’ve never been that kind of a guy and I never will be. I’m just trying to focus on what I can do and how I can do it.”

Because of their captain’s forward thinking, the Bruins are in a mighty good place going forward.
 

Bruinaura

Resident Cookie Monster
Mar 29, 2014
47,193
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Chara a legend in Brady’s shadow

Whenever Chara is done defending, the Bruins’ team concept will be forever improved. He will never be as loved as Patriots contemporary Tom Brady, but his stamp on his franchise is no less indelible.

“I hear people say a lot of times, they say, ‘Hey, you’re getting way more banged up than Tom does or you play more games or you play way more physically,’ this and that. But I think you can’t take anything away from Tom,” said Chara. “He’s doing other things that are very spectacular. Obviously, it’s not maybe as physically demanding and harsh playing the quarterback position, but it’s super hard seeing those plays and making those throws, and being so accurate and clutch.”

That and 70,000 people screaming while you bark signals.

“It’s just a different sport, different role,” said Chara. “I’m never being the guy that being like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m in the shadow of Tom Brady. I should get more recognition.’ I’ve never been that kind of a guy and I never will be. I’m just trying to focus on what I can do and how I can do it.”

Because of their captain’s forward thinking, the Bruins are in a mighty good place going forward.
Chara's Instagram >>>>>>>>>>>>>>Brady's Instagram

;)
 

Bruinaura

Resident Cookie Monster
Mar 29, 2014
47,193
92,911
“It’s just a different sport, different role,” said Chara. “I’m never being the guy that being like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m in the shadow of Tom Brady. I should get more recognition.’ I’ve never been that kind of a guy and I never will be. I’m just trying to focus on what I can do and how I can do it.”
I love that.

Don't blab about it, just do it.
 
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Jean_Jacket41

Neely = HOF
Jun 25, 2003
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I’m so grateful for Chara.

One of the greatest D ever.

Great captain.

Won the Bruins their only Cup in my lifetime.

Still a force and shutting down opposing team best players at 42y.

Enraging Habs fans losers.

Hopefully he keeps playing for some years. It will be a very sad day when he hangs them out.
 
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Smitty93

Registered User
Dec 6, 2012
8,365
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I wanna know where the Italian Home for Children is and go live there

It's in Jamaica Plain, next to Faulkner Hospital. It's a K-8 school that also includes a residential program for some students. It helps kids with behavioral and educational issues.

In high school, we had a senior project where we'd spend the last two months of our senior year volunteering instead of going to class (with the exception of AP classes). I volunteered as a teacher's aide at the Italian Home for Children, and it was the most rewarding work I've ever done, but also proved to me that I didn't have the mental strength to be a teacher. I could never do what they do full-time.

The Italian Home for Children is amazing and the impact they have on kids' lives is incredible. I absolutely love that place.
 
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