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Baozi

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  1. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from CoachReilly in Brampton Assistant General Manager   
    Brampton is proud to announce that Cowboy has agreed to join our front office. Originally one of my own mentors from the original VHL and taught me how to build a world class goalie in Kanou, I'm excited to have Cowboy work with me
  2. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from .sniffuM in S42 Discussion!   
    Please to announce the draft went fairly well.
     
    1.     BRAMPTON BLADES (From Ottawa): E'Twaun Delicious
    6.     BRAMPTON BLADES: Bronson Faux
    18.     BRAMPTON BLADES (From Saskatoon From Bern): Artemis Fowll
    20.     BRAMPTON BLADES (From Bratislava): Franklin Romanowski 
    36.        BRAMPTON BLADES: Larry Esposito
     
    So we'll be running a full lineup of 6 forwards and 4 D and I have a free agent card I can use as well. I'm pleased at what we have to work with, a bunch of active players mixed in with a good support group.
     
    I'd also like to announce that Cowboy will be coming in as the assistant GM here cause well he is a great guy I'll have that announcement up before the season starts.
     
    Initial lineup thoughts:
     
    Taneyev - Faux - Delicious
    Zug - Willcox - Koskinen
    Salvador - Romanowski
    Harkness - Fowll
     
    Harkness and Salvador will double shift on lines, The 4th pairing extra minutes will goto whomever has the best activity going to make it fair Once any of you guys overtake Harkness in TPE, you get his double shift slot
     
    More info to come soon!
  3. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from eaglesfan036 in Brampton Assistant General Manager   
    Brampton is proud to announce that Cowboy has agreed to join our front office. Originally one of my own mentors from the original VHL and taught me how to build a world class goalie in Kanou, I'm excited to have Cowboy work with me
  4. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from Kendrick in Brampton Assistant General Manager   
    Brampton is proud to announce that Cowboy has agreed to join our front office. Originally one of my own mentors from the original VHL and taught me how to build a world class goalie in Kanou, I'm excited to have Cowboy work with me
  5. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from Phil in Welcome to Walcott Your Ass   
    Rafter and Qin back in the house!
  6. Like
    Baozi reacted to Cowboy in Claimed:Taneyev Brampton Sig   
  7. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from Kendrick in Saskatoon GM   
    Gj Kendrick. Gl Ricey.
  8. Like
    Baozi reacted to Duddy in Claimed:Talking about the Draft [Final 6/6]   
    Hello and welcome. My name is Thomas Duddy and I will interview myself about the upcoming Draft as well as some other stuff. With the Draft coming up in just a few days, it’s the perfect time to do an old school interview.
     

     
    “How do you feel about the upcoming Draft?”
     
     
    “Will you attend the Draft or just stay home and sleep?”
     
     
    “Have you had a chance to meet some of the other prospects?”
     
     
    “If you could pick the team that drafts you, what team would it be and why?”
     
     
    “Do you see yourself as the top pick of the Draft?”
     
     
    “You’re pretty full of yourself, eh?”
     
     
    “What would you say are your biggest strengths?”
     
     
    “Thanks for that enlightening interview.”
     
     
     
  9. Like
    Baozi reacted to sterling in S41 Discussion Thread   
    Bonn you puss I'll just add you back in here
  10. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from der meister in S41 Discussion Thread   
    Hypothetically you'd be in for a world of hurt for a little bit of ass. I have contemplated this with the hot admin at my workplace and im not even married yet, just engaged. But then I think of what I'm giving up down the long run and it ain't worth it.
     
    But yeah....hot admin is hot.
  11. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from der meister in VHL Cup Finals, GM 7!: Riga vs. New York   
    I take my shutdown duties very seriously!
  12. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from Phil in NA Semi-Finals, GM 5: Quebec vs. New York   
    Hi

    I'm tfong I like being in the playoffs and the finals
  13. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from BOOM in S41 Discussion Thread   
    I just thought he was drunk and finally wrote things properly.
  14. Like
    Baozi reacted to Munk in S41 Discussion Thread   
    I knew i cyd count on a fellow calgardian :3
  15. Like
    Baozi reacted to gorlab in S41 Discussion Thread   
    I want to kiss XXX
  16. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from Fire Tortorella in VHL 40 in 40 #38: It's That Time Again Final 6/6   
    Kekkekekekekeke
  17. Like
    Baozi reacted to Victor in VHL 40 in 40 #38: It's That Time Again Final 6/6   
    It's That Time Again

    It has been a while, both for 40 in 40 articles, and this particular episode, but it's time for a big return. The creator of the original VHL 20 in 20 series, the excellent Zero, used his last article to ask the question: who is the greatest player in VHL history? In a league based on results it is quite surprising how rarely this question is asked or at least both asked and then analysed in depth. Nonetheless, 20 seasons have passed since the last such article and it is long past time to re-ignite the debate, find out if the answer has changed, and investigate if it's the right one.

    Truthfully, there is no reason to beat around the bush: the majority of the replies have not altered since S21. Perhaps the main reason why the best player ever debate is almost non-existent in the VHL is because the answer is pre-determined for so many. Since his retirement following a full VHL career in Season 8, no one has come close to matching Scotty Campbell's 600 goals and 1,239 points. His award case is slightly more within reach, but Campbell was also top scorer a record five times, alongside countless other offensive awards, as well as twice being named playoff MVP and thrice regular season MVP (a trophy now named after him). Lack of championships is not an argument which can be held against Scotty Campbell for he won a cup with three of his four teams, and four Continental Cups is matched only by contemporary Doug Schneider and beaten by one other man (more on him later). Possibly above all the tedious listing of Campbell's frankly ridiculous list of accolades is the fact that he is accepted as the best by all generations of VHL members, from those who witnessed him to those who joined 30 seasons later and could possibly be expected to have a more favourable opinion of modern big names.

    "Even though he might have played in a time with weaker competition, his numbers are just insane. The way Campbell dominated the league is something im sure we will never see again, which I believe makes him the greatest of all time." - James Assayag, agent of Hall of Famer Jukka Hakkinen and currently Jakob Ackerman

    "It's Scotty Campbell plain and simple. He put up the crazy numbers that no one will ever beat and it might have been in the early years he still put up the numbers." - Greg Harbinson, agent of Hall of Famer Markus Strauss and currently Devin Sundberg

    "Even though I wasn't in the league during his career, it has to be Scotty Campbell. He leads the league in just about every important category for a forward; there's nobody who really even comes close to the numbers he put up. To dominate the VHL like he did, even if it was early in the league's history, is an incredible feat. I don't think anyone will be able to match what Scotty Campbell did." - Willem Janssen

    "The league may have been very different in the early seasons but there is absolutely no denying his dominance. When people say Gretzky is the greatest NHL player ever the only thing that even needs to be looked at is the record books and you can do the same in the VHL with Campbell. No one has been able to come close to beating his points total from S5 and it can't be denied that Scotty on a team meant a cup forthcoming." - Robert Sharpe, agent of Hall of Famer Alexander Beketov and currently Jackson Miller

    "This is pretty tough because different eras have different strengths, and players in Season 1 had less TPE than they do now. At the end of the day, it has to be Scotty Campbell, he was the most dominant player of his era by a large margin. When you think of the early days it's him. He is the Wayne Gretzky of the VHL." - Tyler Owens, agent of Milos Denis

    "Last time I participated in this, I very tactfully suggested that Scotty Campbell is the greatest of all time, and my opinion hasn't changed much since then. There's no doubt that there's been a number of great players since then, or even "better" players, arguably. I'm sure dropping a stud like Naomi Young in the VHL's first era, she would be even more dominant than Scotty. However, Campbell is and was just unbelievably ahead of everybody in almost every category in almost any timeline. He dominated no matter the setting; regular season, playoffs, or World Cup. While his era was certainly less developed and maybe "easier," he did start on equal footing with everybody else in the league. I just think he's too far ahead of everybody, both during his career and afterward." - Hall of Famer Jardy Bunclewirth, agent of Hall of Famer CAL G

    "There have been some phenomenal players in the VHL over the ages, but for me none compare to the first great. Nobody had as much sheer talent and ability to dominate the league as Scotty Campbell. True, it was a different league back then with completely different talent levels, but in no era has anyone had such a step up against their peers. Campbell was the VHL's first true superstar, and his legacy has lived on for a reason. They don't call him the VHL's Wayne Gretzky for nothing." - Noah Lefevre, agent of Gifford Shock


    Scotty Campbell found success in Vasteras and everything thereafter was a formality

    Plain and simple, as stated by these fine men, Scotty Campbell was the best of his time, possibly more so than any generational great. Although his 630 TPE was the most by any forward at the time of his retirement (and remained quite high for much of the first two decades), Campbell's dominance was not a foregone conclusion. For the first three seasons of the league's existence, Campbell was matched in TPE by Calgary's Brett Slobodzian who in fact was the league's best players for two of the three years. Sadly, this juggernaut match-up came to an end when Slobodzian's career was derailed by off-ice incidents in the off-season: he returned for two seasons as a mere shadow of himself and retired as an extreme version of the VHL's Mario Lemieux to Campbell's Gretzky.

    Mike Szatkowski, Kevin Brooks, and Christian Stolzschweiger hit 900 points after Campbell but their peaks were much too short and their eras too intertwined to be considered legitimate threats to Campbell's crown. There is no statistical argument to be had here, we instead have to look at one of the main points in several of the above quotes: Campbell's generation and how it stacked up against the future.

    At the conclusion of Season 17, Grimm Jonsson became the first (and to date, only) player other than Campbell to be crowned VHL MVP three times, as well as becoming the first 1,000 TPE player in the league. This may seem a requirement for Hall of Fame status these days, but this was quite an accomplishment back then: until Season 25, Matt Bailey at 954 and David Henman with 878 rounded out the top three all-time “TPE whores”. When I answered this question in Season 21, I replied with Jonsson, with the core of my argument being that he was, by virtue of his TPE, a better and more talented player than Campbell. This seems a strange argument in hindsight, since many players after Campbell would have performed better than Campbell if they had played in the same era: that's not really Campbell's fault though. We can safely say now that most of today's stars would be a much better match for Jonsson (if not superior to him) if they played in the lower quality which was the second decade. Fortunately, while this argument doesn't hold up, Jonsson did excel by the same criteria as Campbell, in that he was the best of his time.

    "I'd have to go with Grimm Jonsson. The ultimate leader and his statistics go along with it. He embodies what a captain is all about and he is the type of player you build your roster around. Campbell played in a time where it was easier to score." - Hall of Famer Joey Kendrick, agent of Hall of Famer Kameron Taylor

    Ultimately Grimm Jonsson's career was split in two parts, one in New York, whom he led to a franchise-first championship with four Messier (now of course Grimm Jonsson) Trophies in five season, one in Seattle, where he took all the individual honours as the league's best forward. Was Jonsson's peak too short to stand a chance? It was as close to Campbell as most people can get and don't let the career stats fool you: Jonsson played in an era where one season a defenceman, Tomas Jenskovic (Campbell's protege) led the VHL in scoring. It's a matter of opinion obviously and while the majority opts for Campbell, I supported Jonsson last time and don't now only because the last 20 seasons have provided us with a few more legitimate contenders.


    Grimm Jonsson: the first successful “next Campbell”

    Who are these men? Before we get to them, a mention for those who I was surprised were no one's nominee in their answers. Recently retired Odin Tordahl has dominated his own era in a way unseen since Jonsson and though I have often mentioned that the past generation surprisingly lacks in Hall of Fame quality, Tordahl's talent can not be in question. A slow career start akin to Jonsson meant the fellow Scandinavian's career stats are also less impressive than many players who have no chance in this argument (Josh Vestiquan, Carl Jacobs, Mikka Virkkunen, and Alexander Chershenko to name but a few). Yet when Tordahl got going, especially in his last four seasons in New York, there was almost no stopping the winger. Thrice VHL top scorer, perhaps the main thing holding back Tordahl was his sole MVP honour, in part due to the dominance of Tuomas Tukio.

    Goaltenders like Tukio have a legitimate claim to be the next Campbell, who scored as much as he did in part because great goaltenders didn't become numerous until the third decade. Aidan Shaw, Daisuke Kanou, Alexander Labatte, Benjamin Glover, Remy LeBeau and of course Tukio all have claims to be called the VHL's greatest ever goaltenders, and perhaps the size of this list, much like for the best defenceman discussion, is what holds back the goaltending position from claiming this title. There is of course a certain irony that the increasing influence of goaltenders, which has helped turn down goal totals and claimed MVP honours (unthinkable in the days of Campbell and even Jonsson) and thus stymied many a forward who had hopes of beating Campbell, is also the reason for goaltenders to be almost out of consideration for best player of all-time.

    "In the end I went with a goalie, and it was an incredibly difficult choice given that he had a counterpart who was equally talented. Daisuke Kanou is a name newer guys will recognize from the award ballot, as the Playoff MVP Trophy is named after him. Kanou won three of these awards, and an equal number of cups in the late teens and early twenties of the league's existence. He wasn't a clear cut better player than Aidan Shaw (who has the top goalie trophy named), and both were incredible players. But I decided that Kanou is the greatest player of all time because he had one thing that Shaw didn't: a lot of cups. It was a hard choice, especially when you try and stack up against guys like Cambpell, Boulet, Jenkins and newer names like LeBeau and Low. But I think that Kanou has to take the cake." - Kyle Snow, agent of Hall of Famer Daniel Braxton

    In place of expected nominations such as Shaw, Tukio, Tordahl, or even a defenceman like Labatte or Braxton, I was surprised by one response, both for what it was and that I had never considered the option. Indeed, while you can try to compete with Campbell against your own generation with a large trophy case, you could also try to get as close to his stats as possible. That's next to impossible in this day in age but some recent Hall of Fame inductees did come close, maybe not to 1,200 points, but an equally impressive 900. Calgary lifer Volodymyr Rybak edged as close as anyone to this mark but Phil Rafter became the first player to reach 900+ points and 400+ goals since the elite quartet of Campbell, Szatkowski, Stolzschweiger, and Brooks (trio even since Brooks didn't quite get 400 goals).

    "Phil Rafter: One the best players to ever grace the VHL, 5th most in all time points in the league. All this while everyone around him was working with crazy amounts of TPE as well. Only under 100 point plateau twice in his career, and even though he didn't leave the league with more than one cup, he was the benchmark for forwards during the late 20s and early 30s." - Conner Low


    A strange image in between Phil Rafter paragraphs, but won't somebody think of the goalies?

    Rafter set himself up for great things from his rookie season by hitting 100 points, a total rarely achieved by any rookie and often by those, like Jardy Bunclewirth and Michael Angelo, and recently Travis Boychuk, who spend extra post-draft season in the VHLM. Rafter got full eight VHL seasons and thanks to a strong start, his 120+ point seasons at his peak added up to a higher total than similar greats before, during, and after his time (like Jonsson and Tordahl for example). Was there an element of luck for Rafter? Without a doubt, but you don't hit 900 career points on luck alone, and any champion and great player needs something extra to push them over. It is, though, up to debate whether Rafter was the best forward of his generation, a dilemma which even pushed his induction into the Hall of Fame back by two seasons, and will undoubtedly lessen his chances of improving a position of a top 10 if not top 5 greatest forward to number 1.

    Rafter spent his whole career on a line with a record-breaking player: David Smalling, who once held the single season hits record, is the career leader in the stat, and won the most ever five Scott Boulet Trophies. Smalling was one face of a growing amount of superb two-way forwards in the league, a quality now almost a pre-requisite to be considered a great (just compare Tordahl or Niklas Lindberg's hit totals to Campbell, Szatkowski, and Jonsson). Smalling didn't get as many points as Rafter, often the player with least penalty minutes in a season, and if you combined the two Davos greats, you might have the perfect forward. Unless of course that already happened.

    Smalling set a single-season hits record in his rookie season just a year after Leeroy Jenkins first broke into the 400 hits territory: they were both then beaten by Tukka Reikkinen's 430 during his MVP season in Season 30. Jenkins and Reikkinen once got my vote as the two players better than Campbell, for combining 800+ points with hit totals which rivalled physical specialist Smalling. There is more to these two of course: Reikkinen had a superb offensive season in S27 and has the distinction of being the only player to win a cup with both Vasteras and New York, two teams who have always struggled to win championships. Jenkins has a trophy case while almost matches Campbell's, with every offensive award imaginable, as well as four Scott Boulet Trophies – the record he held with Boulet which Smalling beat. Not least of course, Jenkins was the first player to win more Continental Cups than Campbell: winning his record-breaking fifth in his final season in the league.

    "I have been one who loves himself a good power forward so guys like Tukka Reikkinen or Leeroy Jenkins are very intriguing. I think they are the only two who both appear in the record books for both most points and most hits, so I'd throw their names into the discussion." - David Collier

    "Leeroy Jenkins didn't make a lot of friends during his run in the VHL, and perhaps that could hurt him in this conversation. He hopped from team to team looking for a lot of Continental Cups, and he ended up adding five to his resume by the time he retired. The Season Thirty-One Hall of Fame inductee would win four Scott Boulet Trophies as the league's best two-way player and also won four more major individual awards over his time in the league, including the Most Valuable Player. Campbell is the easy choice. He has 268 more points than anyone else, and while he never had to play the best goaltender of his era (Matthew Pogge was a teammate of Scotty) that number is incredibly hard to ignore. With that being said, I think it's time to shine a light on arguably the best two-way player to ever lace up the skates. Jenkins would finish with 815 points (good enough for eighth all-time by the time he retired) and a ridiculous 2182 hits (2nd all-time when he retired). I tend to lean favourably to players that could do it all, and while he is not the greatest offensive threat in VHL history, a case can be made that Leeroy Jenkins is the best all-around talent to ever play." - Chris Miller, agent of Hall of Famer Ryan Sullivan

    I tend to agree with my current GM and while I was once swayed in favour of Reikkinen, it does seem that he had the benefit of retiring two seasons after Jenkins and thus being fresher in memory. It also didn't hurt that he dominated the recent Season 40 Hall of Fame tournament playing alongside Jenkins. That said, Jenkins had it all, and with a better rookie season like Rafter, he would be the runaway contender for Campbell's throne. Jenkins was hurt by an increased attention for defencemen and goaltenders for individual honours and this makes his trophy case not as big as it could have been. That is a flaw for him and clearly the different flaws of Jonsson, Jenkins, Tukio, Rafter, and Tordahl is what continues to allow Scotty Campbell to dominate this vote, but there is no doubt a debate to be had here. Perhaps in the next 20 seasons someone will come along to make this debate obsolete and we will finally have a defined candidate to go to as the anti-Campbell. Until then, this has been the S41 recap of the best player of all-time, far from conclusive but of course it never could be.

    End of Part 38
    Special thanks to all those who responded to my question
  18. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from .sniffuM in S41 Waivers Thread <25 TPE   
    Brampton claims delicious.
  19. Like
    Baozi reacted to twillcox94 in Claimed:AIM-11 and Travis Willcox to Lead the Blades [Final: 6/6]   
    Willcox and AIM-11 to Lead the Blades

     
     
    BRAMPTON - With the beginning of season forty-one rapidly approaching, the Brampton Blades will once again look to make their way into a playoff spot to compete for the Founder's Cup. Last season ended in disappointment for the Blades, as they were taken out in five games by the Minot Gladiators in the opening round of the VHLM playoffs. After a rough start to the season for the Blades, young guns A.C. Savage, Travis Willcox, and AIM-11 were able to end the season hot and push the Blades into a playoff spot. After losing A.C. Savage to the Turku Outlaws, the Blades will rely heavily on Travis Willcox and AIM-11 to make a repeat appearance in the VHLM playoffs. 
     

    Forwards Travis Willcox and AIM-11 will be leaders for the Blades
     
    AIM-11 will be extra motivated to have a good season for the Blades, as he was selected by HC Davos with the thirteenth pick in the season forty-one VHL draft. A good performance will secure him a spot with the big club next season. In seventy-two games with the Blades last season, AIM-11 finished with 110 points, ranking him amongst the top of the club lead. This off-season he has also developed a defensive game to go hand in hand with his dynamic offence. He can now be relied on to be a factor on the penalty kill, making him a candidate for the top two-way forward in the league. With another full season under his belt and a plenty of practice hours accumulated in the off-season, AIM-11 will be the heart of the Blades' offence.
     
    Travis Willcox, who is is eligible for the season forty-two VHL draft, will be looking to rise in the draft rankings with a strong season with the Blades. The eighteen year old started strong with the Blades last season, but tapered off at the end of the season, where he saw his ice time fall to the lowest on the team. He finished with fifteen points in twenty-two games, but showed a more defensive style of game as he adjusted to the VHLM. Willcox has trained his offensive game heavily in the off-season, and with the play-making ability of AIM-11, Willcox will be sure to add more to the Blades' offense. Still, Willcox will be relied on to play a physical style of play and wear down the opposing team's forwards.
     
    " AIM-11 and Travis Willcox will be crucial to our success this upcoming season. AIM-11 will anchor our top line and provide the bulk of our offense. He is a dynamic puck handler who has his home behind the net where he has one of the best passes in the league. Willcox is a player who is a great net front presence, so with AIM-11's passing ability and Willcox's strong net front play, we will look for plenty of goals within four feet of the net. Both players are also very responsible defensively, so both will be expected to also go head to head against other team's top lines and keep their chances to a minimum. " - General Manager Terrence Fong
     

    AIM-11 will be the key to the Blades' offense
     
    Brampton will be fighting for a playoff spot from from the get go, having to compete against Minot and Saskatoon for the final two playoff spots behind Yukon. The loss of A.C. Savage will be a hard bullet to take, but Travis Willcox and AIM-11 are two players that will be capable of carrying the team into the promise land.
  20. Like
    Baozi reacted to gorlab in S41 Discussion Thread   
    So are the S40 Award predictions doubled or tripled?
     
     
    cuz I know I bought triple award predictions but then like 3-4 weeks later the BoG announced that award prediction multipliers were no longer a thing... 
  21. Like
    Baozi reacted to Victor in Ban Thread   
    Devise22 has been suspended from posting for 25 hours for letting me down. VHL Awards Ceremony hosting contract torn up with Laichly Rift's Pajodcast as we sign a better deal with Blades of Steel.

    Laich this if you feel justice is served.
  22. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from gorlab in S41 Discussion Thread   
    Warning you now I don't pass!!
  23. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from BOOM in S40 All-Star Game Rosters   
    That NYA line!
  24. Like
    Baozi reacted to Victor in (S42) RW - Mac MacInnis, TPE: 74   
    Player Information

    Username: Merica
    Full Name: Max MacInnis
    Position: RW
    Age: 20
    Handedness: Left
    Recruited By/From: Kendrick

    Player Attributes

    Total Points Earned: 74

    CK = Checking: 40
    FG = Fighting: 40
    DI = Discipline: 40
    SK = Skating: 70
    ST = Strength: 40
    PH = Puck Handling: 53
    FO = Face Offs: 40
    PA = Passing: 40
    SC = Scoring: 70.5
    DF = Defense: 40
    EX = Experience: 40
    LD = Leadership: 40

    Other
    Jersey Number: 91
    Height (inches): 73
    Weight (lbs.): 185
    Birthplace: Rochester, NY, United States

    Awards

    Career Stats

    Player Movement

    Past Players
  25. Like
    Baozi got a reaction from BOOM in New York Americans Jersey Retirement   
    Boooooooooom
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