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Everything posted by diamond_ace
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The goal of any sports franchise should be to win the cup. If a team can no longer do so in a given season, it is not only acceptable, but the only correct course of action to perform in such a way as to best set themselves up to do so in later seasons, including via improvement of draft pick. I am not only for tanking, I am openly against competing after mathematical elimination. I think it is the dumbest thing a team can possibly do.
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PENS are finally in, although should have been in a week ago. Now the catastrophic collapse has lined us up for Rangers... good luck with that.
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It's a me, Martio
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What's your favorite VHL memory?
diamond_ace replied to Fire Tortorella's topic in VHL League Discussion
When the old website taught me what a DDOS was -
What's your favorite VHL memory?
diamond_ace replied to Fire Tortorella's topic in VHL League Discussion
King of All S23: Won the VHL as a player Won the VHLM as a GM Won the world cup or whatever it was they had that offseason? Won the Fyodorov Challenge -
What will Riga do with 2nd Overall?
diamond_ace replied to Fire Tortorella's topic in VHL.com Articles
Riga will eat one delicious muffin while pondering their pick at 2. -
On October 26, 1996, Francis and Elaine Brookside were in attendance at Stamford Bridge as hometown favorites Chelsea took on the hated Tottenham Hotspur. Elaine was pregnant, but by all indications she wasn’t due for another few weeks. All indications were wrong. At halftime, she felt something unusual, excusing herself to the bathroom stalls under the North End (which would soon be renamed the Matthew Harding Stand, for the club’s former director who had perished in a tragic helicopter accident just four days prior to the match). Once she realized what was going on – she was having the baby, right then and there – she sent a nearby maintenance worker to fetch Francis. He came quickly, along with a few security guards and a member of the stadium’s medical staff, to help Elaine deliver. The two missed the entire second half of the match, including David Lee’s 52nd minute goal that would be the decider, as well as club legend Roberto Di Matteo’s 80th minute security goal, providing Chelsea with the final 3-1 margin, but under the circumstances, they were happy to have their new son, Martin, safe and sound. Growing up, young Martin took well to his parents’ favorite sport, soccer (or to them, football). Blue was always the “colour” for him, and soon his passion for all things Chelsea matched that of Francis and Elaine. He was on a local youth squad as early as 6, and he was always the one guy willing to play goal even though at that age most kids stayed away from it. Through his teen years, he actually looked like a promising prospect to even make a career out of it – that is, until a vacation to Canada for his 16th birthday. He spent two weeks in Canada, traveling among Montreal, Toronto, and Ottawa. While there, he took in a few matches hosted by Montreal Impact and Toronto FC, but also watched a sport wholly unfamiliar to him, ice hockey. Seeing one game in each city (Habs/Flyers, Leafs/Pens, Sens/Wild) he quickly gained an appreciation for the sport and when he returned home he took in every bit of it he could, even asking his parents to send him to the USA when he graduated high school so he could play hockey while pursuing his studies. At 18, Brookside came to the states and enrolled at Mercyhurst University in Erie, PA. Immediately upon arrival at the campus, he got in contact with the coaches of both the soccer and hockey teams and expressed an interest in trying to walk on for both squads. Neither were impressed with the fact that he wanted to do two sports, especially ones whose schedules overlapped somewhat, but what harm could it do? The kid was just a walk on, they figured; he’s not going to make such an impact that he’ll be missed from either team if games ran concurrently, and he’s no lock to make either team, especially hockey as he’d only ice skated and played goal separately, never having combined the two skill sets until now. At soccer tryouts, the scholarship players were given shooting drills against all the potential goalie candidates. The team was looking to fill one spot at the position as their starter was a junior on scholarship and the coach’s nephew held third string just so he could attend the school on their dime. There really was no competition. Brookside easily won the spot, he was probably better than the starter but university politics dictate that a junior scholarship player will always start over a walk on, regardless of talent. Either way, it was close enough that the team certainly wasn’t going to be hurt by keeping the starter, and none of the other options could match Brookside for the spot. Hockey tryouts weren’t so easy. Hockey is a fairly successful sport at Mercyhurst. To take a kid who’s never actually played the game before would be a massive upset. Brookside tried out, yet was clearly fifth best behind two scholarship players and two other walk on candidates. Three would get the roles, so he wasn’t even the best of outside the team. Nevertheless, his determination showed that day to the coach, who agreed to mentor him after the season was done and work him toward a position the following year, considering that one of the scholarship players was a senior and would be graduating, thus leaving a vacancy. Through freshman year, soccer kept Brookside in shape as he watched any hockey games he could (especially later in the season, when soccer had ended) and read about the team in the school paper. As soon as the season finished, the very next day he went to the coach’s office and reported for workouts. Over the remainder of the school year and throughout the summer Brookside blossomed into a phenomenal hockey goalie. Determination and a little coaching goes a long way. However, this would pose one problem: he was a lock to start for the team the following year, but to do so, he would have to give up soccer, the sport upon which he grew up. Brookside thought long and hard about that decision, weighing each side and carefully considering where it would leave him. Ultimately he knew what he had to do. The soccer coach wasn’t too upset, actually, as last year’s starter had redshirted earlier in his career so he had two seasons left anyway. From then on, Brookside was a mainstay on the Mercyhurst University hockey team, starting every game for his last three seasons and earning a scholarship. Sophomore year went by relatively uneventfully, but junior year saw NHL, SHL, and VHL scouts in attendance at games. Some were there to watch star forward Daniel DeCenti, others for power defenseman Spencer Sarboom, yet most would watch closely to catch a glimpse of yet another spectacular save from Martin Brookside, who seemingly burst onto the hockey scene from nowhere. After junior year, he passed on the opportunity to declare for the NHL Draft, leaving only the SHL and VHL as options, because he wanted to finish what he started and not only compete for his team senior year, but finish his degree in marketing and set himself up with a backup career with Brookside Chocolates, a company recently started by his uncle Gary, once hockey was no longer able to support him. It was a risk that paid off. After the third to last game of Brookside’s senior year, he was approached by a representative of the VHL. This was no ordinary scout. This was a GM. This was the big time. Extending his hand in greeting, Jason Glasser, GM of the Calgary Wranglers, introduced himself to Brookside. After explaining that he’d been looking for a new designated player for the franchise upon the pending retirement of Clark Marcellin, and that he’d hoped to make it a goalie, he watched this game and needed to look no further. Brookside was his man, if he’d have him. Naturally, Brookside accepted, under the condition that he could finish out the year at school, which was of course no problem – and the rest is history.
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Claimed:No but seriously, this draft yo! [Final 6/6]
diamond_ace replied to Tagger's topic in Archived Career Tasks
The race for S44 1st overall is officially underway... -
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I don't see anything in the OP saying that we have to post submitted, but the fact that everyone is now posting submitted worries me. I submitted, btw - in case I do actually need to post that.
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Not sure if you're familiar with them already or not, but if not, check out a band called Alt-J.
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stock photographs
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rare express
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Come back to me when the two rookies with 92 points in Season 17 are relevant in Season 42.
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And for those of you who don't stack up the S45 picks, S44 isn't exactly going to be barren either
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Coach is definitely the proper choice for this.
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Wow can't believe this place is still running
diamond_ace replied to petrovicnilstormgunnarsson's topic in Introduce Yourself
<---Lars Intranquilo and Clark Marcellin before (I know you were around for Intranquilo, I think you were still around at the beginning of Marcellin). Currently Martin Brookside, soon to be Kerkko Hyvärinen. -
Do you think I should get into the HOF as a Builder, now that I've stepped down from Calgary? I was a VHL GM, VHLM GM, and VHLM Commish, not to mention extended stays on the Mag. Which one of you would win in a fight? In a hockey game? In skee ball? In pool?
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This is not a purchase, but rather a question: Going into next season, with the money I have remaining plus my final contract, I will have enough money to purchase three Jagrs. Is there anything preventing purchase of multiple of the same thing in the same season, if it's not one of the ones that specifically says?
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So 2nd place in Boulet for several seasons, just enough to make sure your trophy cabinet looks bare for HOF voting when it doesn't really tell the whole story (and FISTED ANALLY BY A CIRCUS MONKEY on one of those occasions - deservedly lost the rest, but perennial 2nd is still good, just ask Higgins) then switch to a position you never really planned on, nor built for, and inexplicably dominate that position despite being better built for the original position where you somewhat struggled?
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Word has it that Jason Glasser, former VHL GM, VHLM GM, and VHLM Commissioner, has lent his image to be used in the latest series of rankings due to come out by the VHL Scouting Center. It is under the heading VHLSC: S43 Rankings #7 and he is attributed to having promoted the prospect Souryuu Kaminogi with a quote pertaining primarily to the player's Asian heritage as well as his skills applicable to a future hockey career. These words were not actually from the touted VHL personality, but since the rankings have come out, he has agreed that Kaminogi is a good prospect nonetheless: "Kaminogi is still out there improving, which is a great sign for a player at this stage in his career. By now, many of the players who were going to fall off would have done so already. Kaminogi, as with any good prospect, has not done so and has continued to work on his game. I wouldn't personally have brought up his Asianness, as I generally believe that a player's skills and potential are the only criteria worth judging on and that a region of origin is pretty irrelevant, except for statistical purposes. However, I fully stand behind the general sentiment of the Rankings quote that is attributed to me. Kaminogi is among players from this draft class that have some real potential."
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False. The guy who cares about the VHLM was at work.
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The pens in Atletico Madrid and Leverkusen game were just miserable...
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As someone who has actually been a GM until just recently, and who has done this, goalie switches are almost always done with just a PM to Jardy. It makes no sense to send in a full new set of lines just to switch the goalie. You, as NOT A GM, might think it makes sense to require a full line switch, but it's never been a requirement since at least S26, don't know why it would suddenly start being a requirement now.