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Stoffiday

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  1. Like
    Stoffiday reacted to DollarAndADream in S62 Award Predictions + Portal Notifications   
    @Reives@Donno100@MrMaxx44@cheidebrecht@evrydayimbyfuglien
    @bukss_a@Shaka@Jepox@Molholt@124715@iRockstar@troy@pennypenny@Barracuda@Broalie34@10293lolo 2nd
     
    Everybody make sure to get your S62 predictions in! Free potential TPE at the end of the season.  
    If you're new and don't have any idea of who to pick for what, then you can look at the list of other people's predictions and select from those.
  2. Like
    Stoffiday got a reaction from DollarAndADream in Updater(s)   
    I'd be down for it.
  3. Like
    Stoffiday reacted to McWolf in One Last Time   
    But there was no VHLM in S1. So yes, it's S62 but only the 61st season.
    Thanks, man!
  4. Like
    Stoffiday reacted to Advantage in Sullivan Jr. Targeting His Father's Trophy   
    Ryan Sullivan Jr. is stepping into some big shoes, and he is ready for the challenge.  “I know what people will expect and I know that I need to topple those expectations.  I also know what I expect from myself and people would be surprised how high I set the bar for myself.  I expect to be better than he ever was.”
     
    The “he” is of course his father and Hall of Fame player, Ryan Sullivan, who took the VHL by storm on route to three Sterling Labatte Trophies (Top Defender) and two Alexander Beketov Trophies (Most Assists).  He also won a Continental Cup and is widely regarded as a top-5 VHL Defenseman of all-time.  He also has another award that he won in the VHLM and that is his son’s first goal of his professional career.  “I want to win the VHLM Defenseman of the Year.  He did it in Season 28 and it would be a special accomplishment for me.”  What would likely add to how special the accomplishment is that the award is now called the Ryan Sullivan Trophy.  “It would pretty cool to win it yeah.  I don’t think about it too much but I would be lying if I said that wouldn’t be an amazing experience.  Even just being acknowledged for top defenseman of VHLM would be cool enough, but having his name on it adds something for sure.”
     
    Sullivan’s career will kick off soon as he recently signed a 1 year deal for 1.5 Million with the Las Vegas Aces, who should be able to make some noise in the playoffs.
  5. Like
    Stoffiday got a reaction from Banackock in Wanted: VHLM Expansion GM   
    Yay!
  6. Like
    Stoffiday got a reaction from BarzalGoat in GM 193: Ottawa Lynx vs. Yukon Rush   
    I thought I was your greatest achievement!!! Lol just kidding. 
  7. Thanks
    Stoffiday reacted to BarzalGoat in Athanasios Andrianopoulos: Greece’s Hockey Hero [1/2]   
    Draft him for the hockey potential, keep him around for the home cooked Gyros.
  8. Thanks
    Stoffiday reacted to Jose Gonzalez in Athanasios Andrianopoulos: Greece’s Hockey Hero [1/2]   
    JGRS Review
    Information: 9/10 Good job telling us his back ground and everything
    Readability: 10/10 No one can argue this
    Roleplay: 10/10 This shows what people can do when they try on their media spot... keep up the good work.
  9. Like
    Stoffiday got a reaction from BarzalGoat in Athanasios Andrianopoulos: Greece’s Hockey Hero [1/2]   
    Sports Center Theme
     
    Hello, this is Fairly Optimistic, with our top story tonight:
     
    One may not immediately think of Greece as a hotbed for hockey, but that didn’t stop Athanasios Adrianopoulous from taking the world by storm. The Yukon Left Winger is a formidable opponent, standing 6’1 and weighing 200 pounds.
     
    Andrianopoulous was born in Greece, but moved to the UK at an early age, where his friends introduced him to the NHL. Since being drafted to the VHLM, he’s been showing his friends exactly how much he learned. The 25 year old was drafted to the Yukon Rush in Season 62, and is now a mainstay on the roster.
     
    An agile skate,  Andrianopoulous flies across the ice with ease, and is able to find his target quickly and snipe the goal at will.
     
    Over 62 games with the Rush, Andrianopoulous has scored 20 goals, with 30 assists, and has a differential of -16. He is one of Goaltender Rhett Stoffiday’s favorite players.
     
    “You want to talk about a team player, I never have to worry when Double-A is on the ice. He’s a professional, and he makes my job so much easier.  I trust him out there and in life!” Stoffiday said.
     
    His opponents have other things to say, as he also has 68 hits to his credit, and there’s still quite a few games to be played! Andrianopoulous has scored 2 Game winning goals for the rush, and four power play goals.
     
    It hasn’t gotten to his head, however, as Andrianopoulous has embraced his role as a team-player in Yukon, and has accompanied his team on many charity events, even scoring a hole-in-one in the team’s charity golf tournament.
     
    Andrianopoulous is also never shy about bringing his culture into the locker room, often cooking Gyros for his teammates and making sure that they are included in all events and functions. Even though he’s very proud of his Greek heritage, he wishes to join a North American franchise, so that he can continue to experience the sport up close and personal in the place where it originated.
     
    As far as superstitions, Andrianopoulous doesn’t believe in them. He feels that as long as he calms himself before the game, and gets into the zone, he can succeed!
     
    On a holiday, Rhett Stoffiday took Andrianopoulous to Nashville, known as the “Athens of the South,” to see the Parthenon, a large art museum in Downtown Nashville.
     
    “I wanted to bring him here to see a little bit of home right here in East Tennessee. I reckon he’s a bit homesick, so I definitely wanted to help him to feel like we’re all behind him!” Stoffiday would later state.
     
    If this season is any indication of things to come, this Greek titan will be a formidable mainstay on the starting lineup of the Rush for as long as they’ll have him. Don’t be surprised if he makes a jump for the VHL very soon, perhaps even sooner than even the Gods could predict!
     
    For Sportscenter, I’m Fairly Optimistic.
     
    Closing Theme
  10. Like
    Stoffiday got a reaction from Tagger in Country Strong: The Biography of Rhett Stoffiday [1/2]   
    Humble Beginnings:
     
    Rhett Levi Stoffiday was born on December 7th, 1993 in Nashville, Tennessee on his grandparents’ farm. His mother left his life early on, and his father worked in the United States Navy.
     
    Due to this, Rhett lived with his grandparents for the better part of the year, splitting his time between both his mother’s parents, and his father’s parents. His father’s parents lived in Tom’s River, New Jersey, where his father had played Goalie in High School and College. Rhett would spend the majority of his time in New Jersey with his father’s parents taking up hockey just as his father had done, then spend his summers back in his hometown of Nashville working on his maternal grandparents’ farm, moving horses and cattle around and gaining his strength..
     
    Once his father retired from the Navy in 1999, Rhett moved with him, and his paternal grandparents to a new home in Las Vegas, Nevada. The desert was new to Rhett, who would still visit his grandparents each summer in Tennessee, but was now finding himself far away from the ice rinks where he would practice. It seemed like hockey was over for Rhett, as he turned his attention to football, and academics.
     
    Knowing that his son had potential, Rhett’s father, Link, would take him to Sante Fe Station Ice Arena in Las Vegas to practice, and eventually enroll him in a Peewee Team. His father would even get back out on the ice, trying out and being signed to the Las Vegas Wranglers from 2000-2004.
     
    Big Country:
     
    To honor a commitment to his maternal grandparents, each summer, Rhett would travel back to Tennessee to see them and work on the farm. Realizing what Rhett was doing, his grandfather had a summer rink, complete with artificial ice, created on the large property they owned. Rhett would practice his aiming by hitting various targets his grandfather would set up, everything from cups, to pots, to bales of hay; anything that could be aimed at and hit, was! During this time, however, Rhett would continue to work on the farm, building up his core strength and making sure that his grades were top-notch. To practice his speed and stick-handling, his grandfather would throw cow pies at him. Eventually, after being pelted enough times with these, He became fast enough to where his grandfather, in 2004, would take him to Bridgestone Arena in Nashville for a skills competition with other young players his age. Rhett was at this time 11 years old, and 5’5” tall, but weighed about 170 pounds.
     
    Rhett was teased by other boys for his size, which made him confide in his grandfather that he wanted to go home and forget about Hockey, and that he’d never be as good as his father. His grandfather quickly took him aside and told  him, “You’re going to let these city slickers tell you how to stop a puck?! You’re my grandson, and your Daddy’s son! You show them what Big Country can do!” With that, Rhett went between the pipes. Completely unexpectedly, out the corner of his eye, he saw his father, Link, sitting in the stands. He looked at his father, who smiled and fist pumped to him. In the next moment, a puck flew at Rhett’s face.
     
    It was in that moment, that every bit of training Rhett had ever had came to light, and on that day...Rhett would earn the nickname, BIG COUNTRY. Rhett stopped every single puck that came at him that day, and even some that didn’t! He was photographed, and given his trophy. In a show of great sportsmanship, he reached out his glove to his opponents, and made forever friends with each of them.

     
    Back to Vegas:
     
    His PeeWee team had caught on to the fact that Rhett was making waves back east, and Rhett was moved up to a junior team. This team was known as the Green Valley Giants. The Giants would go on to win their division each year he played, but would never get past the second round of the playoffs. During this time, Rhett was active in football as well, playing Center for his Middle school. Throughout high school, Rhett would play with a travel hockey team known as the Henderson Outlaws. The Outlaws would finally bring a coveted title in the 2005-2006 season. He would stay with the Outlaws as starting goalie until he graduated, 15th of his class, from Paseo Rivera High School in 2011. It was at this point, he had to decide where to go to college.
     
    The Commodore:
     
    Knowing that there was a distinct possibility that he would be able to continue playing hockey into the future, he consulted with his father and grandparents as to where to go. The easy answer would be going to UNLV, which had a wonderful hockey program, and was far cheaper. It seemed that this would be the best way to go until a phone call from an unexpected old friend came across the line. During the call, Rhett was offered a full-ride scholarship to come home, to Nashville, and attend Vanderbilt University. He would be their backup goalie, as their current goalie was out with an injury, but was expected to be back soon.
     
    The 2012-2013 season came around, and Vanderbilt’s starting goalie, Denton Tolleson, seemed like he wasn’t getting any better. He had sustained a concussion that took him out of action for far longer than he had planned. During a practice with the team, Coach David Manning came over to Rhett and asked if he would be ready to start for the first game of the season. Ecstatic, Rhett readied himself for play. On October 4th, 2012, Rhett put on his Vandy sweater, and went between the pipes.
     
    The South Wall:
    It was a disaster. Rhett would let seven pucks through that evening, losing to the University of Tennessee Knoxville, 7-2. The embarrassment made him question his abilities again, even going so far as to refuse to walk to the locker room until every other player had left the ice.
    Coach Manning benched Rhett just as soon as he had a chance, putting in Conrad Sawyer, the third string goalie. Conrad would be the Goalie for three games, before taking a groin injury, which put him out for the season.
     
    With nowhere to turn, and with the entire team at his back, Coach Manning put Rhett back in on November 7th, 2012. The air was different this night, and Rhett’s father was in attendance. It would be that night, that they would face UNLV. Many of Rhett’s former teammates were on that UNLV squad, and went out to wish Rhett luck. It was expected that this would be a lost game.
     
    During the first period, Vandy did very little to help Rhett to stave off pucks, and by 5 minutes in, UNLV was up by 3. Then it began. Realizing his team needed to believe, he looked to his father, who he could see on the sidelines. His father looked worried, but pulled out a large sign that read, “Trust in Big Country!” It was in that moment, the loud boos began to fade. His gaze fell to the forward, his former teammate Brock Fenton, who came barreling down the way. He readied himself, and in one fell swoop, caught the puck as it roared towards him.
     
    There was an eerie calm that came over the arena...and then...Cheers.
     
    Rhett would never leave the net again for as long as he was at Vanderbilt. He would graduate cum laude with a degree in Business and a minor in American History in 2016.
     
    The VHLM:
     
    After college, Rhett attempted to finally branch out and see what would happen if he entered the draft. After a long evening, Rhett was drafted by the Yukon Rush in Round 10, Pick 59. He was unheralded, and for good reason. Stoffiday was welcomed to the Rush with open arms, to be the backup to their goalie, Victor. After three games, and in a move that Stoffiday credits with kick starting his career, Yukon has decided to make HIM the starting goalie. His greatest triumph came against the Ottawa Lynx, where he played “out of his skin,” winning a hard fought victory again former teammates Sidney Crosby and Ryan Kastelic. Stoffiday would remain the starting goalie for the Rush for the rest of the season.








     
  11. Thanks
    Stoffiday reacted to Bushito in Stoffiday [2/2]   
    Any time bud
  12. Like
    Stoffiday got a reaction from Bushito in S62 Mid-Season PT Special!   
    This... Is.... GORGEOUS!!! Thank you! 
  13. Like
    Stoffiday got a reaction from McWolf in GM 105: Saskatoon Wild Vs. Yukon Rush   
    BLANKED 'EM! WHOO!
  14. Like
    Stoffiday reacted to BarzalGoat in Rhett Stoffiday Rookie Profile [1/2]   
    When your prized goalie prospect starts making MOVES on that TPE grind >>>>>>>>>>
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