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Capt.Crunch

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  1. For those who know french, there is a good report by YvesBigras on CH Fans here.

    For those who do not know french, I translated Bigras's report in english (tried to do my bit ^_^ )

    Hello everybody,

    I just came back from the second game and I simply want to give you my comments. The three stars of the game were: 1st: Guillaume Latendresse (1 goal, 1 assist), 2nd: Kyle Chipchura (2 assists) and 3rd Cedric Desjardins (30 shots, 1 goal against).

    I would have put Chipper as the first star and Tender as the second. Its not that Tender was worse than Chipper by Kyle had to kill to penalties taken by Guillaume and one of them went into a 5 against 3. Chipper does his work to perfection. He is not spectacular but he reads the plays very well on both sides of the ice. He is always in excellent defensive position and gives a hard time to opposing players along the boards. Grade: A

    Guillaume played well; he made a couple of real good moves to keep the control of the puck but it felt as if he kept himself in check. I don't know if its his 2 commotions that makes him keep his head high but I though he lacked a bit of Oooomph when he cut to the net. Of his 2 penalties, one was from lack of effort and the other was more or less necessary because the opposite player was too close to Desjardins's net and Guillaume reminded him of the unwritten rule of not being to close to the net. Grade: A or A-

    Cedric Desjardins... what to say about him... Well, he didn't have to make any saves until the 10th minute of the first period and, frankly, Muller could have dressed up as the goalie in the first because there were no action in the Habs's zone. From the start of the second, however, watch out: he was very busy; mainly because of the indiscipline of his teammates. He did good, he goes out very well to cut the angle of the opposite player, but he's going to have to learn not to get out too far in the pros because the other teams will adjust accordingly and he will find himself out of position more often than not. This being said, the guy did very well and he stole two great chances with incredible glove saves. He was also very good when Michael Frolik from the Panthers succeeded to pass by Martin Frechette and cut to the net. Desjardins followed the play very well and stoned him. Grade: A- (and be carefull with your outings!)

    The best defenseman was John Gleed, who has a great skating stride, can pivot at will and makes a great first outlet pass. Not spectacular but solid in all aspects of his game. Grade: B+ (a bit more involvement in the offensive zone and he would have had an A)

    Andre Joanisse did very well, a bit like Gleed, but he hits harder. Ask Frolic, who tried to bypass him like he did with Frechette beforehand. I'll just tell you Pizza Pizza had their money's worth because Frolic saw their add along the board from very close. Grade: B

    Frederic St-Denis, Conrad Martin and Ryan O'Byrne did what they had to do without standing out. St-Denis has a good skating stride and reminds me a bit of Robidas. Martin is more or less the same type as St-Denis. O'Byrne is very imposing and not a lot of players can get by him because of his long reach but he's going to have to work on his deplacements because his feets look like they don't know where to go when the opponent is pressing him. All three: Grade C+.

    Martin Frechette... what to say... Well, lets start by saying he did not fear to pinch in but he took bad decisions as to *when* to pinch in. To sum up his day, I can talk about this one play in the first period when the Habs were one man up and Kostitsyn gave him a great pass, ready for a big fat one timer, and Frechette fanned out on the shot. When he backchecked, he only had to push a little harder to keep Frolic on the outside and away from the net but he chose to pivot at the wrong moment to start backskating and Frolik just gave a little boost and bypassed him like a pylon. I noticed that Muller was waiting for him on the bench to give him advice on what to do and send him back to play on the next shift. Grade: C-

    Lets talk about the forwards now. I already covered Tender and Chipper so I'll talk about the others.

    Mikhail Grabovski. I'll start by saying he was the fastest on the ice by at least two strides. In one play in particular, the puck was free along the Panthers blueline and there was a Florida defenseman covering the center, but by the time he came close to the puck, Grabovski was besides him even if he had to start at his own blue line. Yessiree, he is a rocket. He isn't afraid to cut to the net. In one play, he took the puck, cut to the center from the right wing and shoveled the puck, the defenseman and the goalie into his own net (??). It was NICE. He then stood up and came back to his bench as if nothing happenned. SUPER NICE. Grade: A or A-

    Sergei Kostitsyn (or Kovalev #2). Yes sir. I was wondering if it was Kovy on his first goal on the power play. You know the play where he pivots near the left board and slowly goes near the faceoff circles and shoots a lazer beam on the top corner just above the goalies shoulders? Well, I swear S.Kostitsyn did the same exact play. For his age, he shows great offensive tools and read the game very well. Grade: B+

    Ryan White played a very good game and showed his defensive awareness when one of his backcheck stopped a 3 vs 1 from the panthers. Grade: B

    Gregory Stewart is a very good player that protects the puck very well. At each presence he was very solid on the puck and I never saw an opposing player rob him the puck. He only has to develop a good nose for the net and he could become a good 2nd line power forward. Grade: C+

    Ben Maxwell is the last forward who stood up. He played very well, like we say, on both sides of the puck. He was very good on his defensive backchecks and always put pressure on the puck carrier. He really looked starved [like he wanted the puck]. Grade: C+

    The other forwards were a bit more discrete, without being bad.

    Juraj Mikus wasn't bad but I was waiting to see a bit more out of him after hearing all the good things the scouts said of him. I didn't see it. He did not look confortable on the ice. He has good assets and you see he reads the play well but its as if he reads the play in a different langage. He only has to get a bit more familiar to the north american game.

    Great report by the eternal Blind Gardien on HFBoards here.

    For those who do not want to click... here is the reports (assembled):

    Starting with goalies and D this time...

    Desjardins was indeed the star for the Habs. Not that the Panthers outplayed us or anything, he didn't steal the game. But it was a lot closer than 5-1, and if you wanted to switch him with Shantz at the other end, the outcome might not have gone our way. He made some great saves indeed, several with his flashy glove waving, but also a great toe one on a PP, great robbery. I sort of saw him looking like a Huet today, which never really occurred to me during the Mem Cups, but you know, he doesn't necessarily look technically great or flash any specific goaltending skill, but he just kept getting the job done one way or the other. Impressive game. But then, goalies are like that. Lacasse was dressed as the backup today.

    O'Byrne came out FLYING in the first period, I thought. It was night and day. This was more like what I call the "Cornell 3rd year" version of O'Byrne where he actually held onto the puck at times and made some moves up ice with it. He kind of tailed back off to his Game 1 inconsistencies in the 2nd and 3rd periods, though. But for that brief, glorious first, I hope I saw a sign of things to come.

    St-Denis was a crucial addition to the lineup, IMO. He may not necessarily have done anything sparkling or special that showed on the scoreboard, but just having a guy who would carry the puck and take a few risks skating with it, pinching, etc, that helped put the Panthers back on their heels a bit early on. Together with O'Byrne's good start, it really was the crucial difference between tonight's convincing win and last night's narrow loss... our D had some composure and was keying the transition, and St-Denis played a part in that. I don't know if he's really a guy we would ever want to sign, especially since his role is made rather redundant by Sanford and Benoit, but he has skill.

    Joanisse was also new to the lineup and I thought he handled himself reasonably well. Decent size to him. Gleed, Martin, and Frechette managed to look better than last night individually and as a group. I'm not sold on any of them as players we need think of for the future of the Habs (or even Bulldogs), but they at least held in there tonight where they didn't last night. As I mentioned earlier, Martin dropped the gloves with Tuma in the first. Maybe Frechette would be my pick as the best of the bunch, but it's marginal. Obviously they like Gleed for character or something too.

    And up front...

    Latendresse got first star, although I think I would have gone with Chipchura ahead of him. But you know, these two are really growing on me as a duo, and Chipchura is really showing some creativity and skill that I wasn't always convinced he had, despite the fact that he's my favourite prospect and all. I guess he still doesn't wow with his skillset, and whether it's roughness in his stride or always juggling the puck a bit, it never seems to matter because he always gets the job done and often creates something successful out of nothing. When you have his hustle and intelligence going with Latendresse's hands, they are magic together at times. They continued to kill penalties together too. Good game for both of them. Still not dominating on Latendresse's part, but because of the win I think his game got more recognition than last night, although I didn't see him to be any better or worse. D'Agostini also continues to be the perfect complementary addition to that line, he just provides a little of whatever the line needs, whenever it needs it. I wish that line could just keep rolling on all year for the Bulldogs. Too bad.

    Grabovski didn't get quite the results he had in Game 1, but he was still dynamic and entertaining at times. Maybe the Panthers knew to key on him a bit too. I still really like the way he'll go into traffic and danger zones, even as a flashy guy who could make a living just on his flash and decide to stay out of danger. A couple of times I wondered if maybe he was trying too hard to set up Kostitsyn, kind of realizing that he's a bit above this level of game and was getting a bit too fancy to try to spread the glory around. Kostitsyn had a very good game, he made some nifty moves too and really looked a lot like his London self setting up on the PP. I think that Aubin is a good fit to stay on that line, he put himself in place for some one-timer attempts again, and he has the offensive vision to see what Grabo and Kosty are trying to do and get involved in it. I would keep that unit together.

    I said good things about Maxwell in Game 1, and I think he had an even better game today. Still out there in all situations and was up front for a 5-on-3 PK again, but he also had a bit more urgency in his regular shifts too, and seemed to click well with Stewart and White making room for him. I thought his game today was up there with Tlusty, and better than Frolik. For 18 year olds in this tourney, hopefully that is as good a sign as it seems to be on the surface. Stewart was really good on the forecheck, again almost every game he comes up with a good steal or forces a play that turns into a scoring chance. Not often, but it always happens eventually. He makes the opponents hear footsteps, which is a good thing. White still hasn't really found himself yet, but he started to look more involved and get into things more when he got switched to play with Maxwell. While the idea of having him provide a physical and defensive presence on the Grabovski line might have looked good on paper, they just never really seemed to be able to click. He's in his element now on a 3rd line.

    Once again, the 4th line really didn't get much of a chance. It's unforunate for Mikus, he looks like he has more to show, but he hasn't really had the big opportunities to do so yet. Perhaps against York they'll let the big guys take a bit of a break and somebody like Mikus will get a chance to play a lot and step out of the shadows a bit. He looks a bit bigger and stronger than how I had imagined him, and I think if you put him on one of the top two lines he might just be doing as much to impress us as, say, Kostitsyn is.

    Picard-Hooper also isn't getting a lot of opportunity, although at one point they did swap him and Chipchura for a shift just to keep him warm I guess. Hard to get a read on him with little opportunity. Mouton didn't do anything. He didn't fall over or look hideously out of place relative to the competition either, I guess.

  2. They already broadcast the same thing anyways. Adding more english would not mean much because its already radio emitted tofu.

    Trust me, there are a lot of french bands that doesn't get airtime because the major french radio broadcasters want to air bland, middle of the road music.

    Also, for Rock Détente (also known as Rock Matante, or the radio where you listen to song that were popular 5 years ago [they made an effort there, before, it was actually songs from 10 yrs before]) to see english as a way to get more customers is the height of irony.

  3. I already posted about this in the lounge but I think the same answer applies here.

    Yes, its copy/paste, but its the best and most complete answer I have about the subject...

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    I'll take the other side of the argument.

    But, first and foremost, we can all agree that it was not the time, not the place and certainly not the right way to approach the subject.

    To add insult to injury, the question was asked by a complete outsider who wanted to create an interesting story.

    There. That's what I think about Friday's story.

    However, since this occasion is used by most to rehash old arguments, I'll use this opportunity to present another opinion.

    Most people you will meet in Montreal will know about the Montreal Canadiens. You should not be surprised to hear your 40 year old waitress start a conversation and have an opinion on whether Souray should be traded or not during the playoffs.

    Hockey in Montreal is much more than a madonna concert, a baseball game or F1.

    Les Canadiens de Montréal are MY team. Just as they were my father's team and my grandfather's team.

    Les Canadiens de Montréal used to be a tradition, a Saturday night event. You used to look at the games on tv with your father, hear about it in family reunions.

    I used to wonder, as a little boy, at that no 10 that was streaking without helmet in the offensive zone.

    I remember the stories told to me by my father, who doesn't watch hockey anymore BTW. Stories about my grandmother wanting to do something about Richard's suspension in 55. The only way she found of protesting is to stop buying Campbell soup for a few years.

    You see, they are MY team. They are not a generic concession who is looking at a big left handed center. They are part of my past. As a French Canadian. As a Quebecker.

    To my knowledge, the Habs had a lot of things going for them before 1969. They had the C formula, the famous "Formule C", used to acquire players at an incredibly young age in a quasi-permanent fashion.

    They had a series of farm clubs, in which they could stack boatloads of talent who were only waiting for a chance to play in the big leagues.

    They also had a tremendous network of French Canadien volunteers working for them throughout the province of Quebec. At a time when information was at a premium, they had a whole province ready to talk to them about promising young guys.

    I think Ken Dryden, in his book "The Game" describe the fall of the habs last Dynaty best:

    "Most of what has happened these past twenty-five seasons I couldn't have guessed. I knew that the dominance of the Canadiens would diminish. Nobody could sustain the pace of fifteen Stanley Cups in twenty-four years. Pollock and Bowman were gone. The farm system had been built during a sponsorship time when teams could sign up kids almost at birth, and when every Canadian kid wanted to play for the Canadiens or Leafs, and when every non-Canadian kid, every American or European, didn't matter. When sponsorship ended in 1969 and a universal draft of players forced kids to play with whichever team chose them, the Canadiens had enough players already in their system to trade their surplus for future draft picks to teams desperate to compete and survive. But by 1979 all that was coming to an end. The next generation of great players was getting spread around. Denis Potvin, Brian Trottier and Mike Bossy had all gone to the Islanders. Wayne Gretzky and Mark Messier were in the WHA. The Canadiens had been reduced finally to equal ground, and while equal ground, with proper care, might produce good teams, it won't generate domination"

    So? Where are we now?

    A standard team in a standard league? A product like Coke or McDonald's? A brand name with its history resumed to a nice, shiny selling point?

    You think Montreal is that crazy about hockey because its simply "cultural"? Is it only a phenomenon? Like poutine?

    You guys really think it's to be taken for granted? That its not going to die off if properly cultivated?

    While I have a particular interest in hockey, in young up-and-coming players, in systems, in the strength of particular teams, I can assure you that my family, my friends, my boss, citizens not immersed in hockey like I am become hockey fans again in spring because of "Les Canadiens", and Lafleur, and Carbonneau, and Roy, and Richard, and Béliveau.

    Its one of the few times in the year when you can yell on a bus between 7 and 10 on a Saturday night with a walkman on and, instead of receiving glares, you will only get a single, repetitive question:

    "So? What's the score?"

    But what can we do about it?

    The entry draft, free agency seem to condemn us to uniformity, doesn't it?

    Well, you could start by having scouts who cover the province of Quebec like the times of old. You could start by knowing about every single goddamned player in your own backyard.

    You could start by listening to home grown free agents, guys like Ian Lapperière, who would have killed to have a shot to play for the "Bleu, blanc, rouge".

    You could, at least, make an effort to go and get a few guys who grew here. Who get it. Who remember what a spring in Montreal means when the habs are in the playoff.

    It has been reported that Dandenault, Bégin and Bouillon were close to tears after game 7 against the Hurricane.

    Did it matter as much to Kovalev, Zednik and Bulis?

    I am not saying that you cannot care about your team is you are a European. You can learn to care. Just as Mario Lemieux did with the Penguins, just as Denis Savard did with the Blackhawks and Luc Robitaille with the Kings.

    But if you want to really rise above the lot, to anchor yourself in the tradition and history, it is my belief that you must take Gainey's route: you must learn a bit of french.

    Is Koivu a leader on the ice? You bet. Do people respect him? Immensely. Is he the best center in the Canadien's lineup? Yes.

    But to go beyond that, to be part of the legend, to be as big a star in Montreal than in Finland, as the captain of "Les Canadiens", he must at least learn to say "Bonjour" and "Bonsoir".

    We don't ask for much. Most of us are perfectly proficient in the english language. We switch more often than not in english if we see that you have trouble speaking french.

    However, as garbled your french sentenced came to be, you will have our profound admiration because, at least, you tried.

    Is the Canadiens a simple logo owned by the Gillett group and the NHL?

    Maybe.

    But we have to be careful. The end of the Dynasty was less than 30 odd years ago. Evacuate the french content of "Les Canadiens de montreal" at your own risk.

    The danger is not that I stop going to games. The danger is that I might stop going to games with my son and that I forget to tell him the story of his great-grandmother who wanted to punish Clarence Campbell by refusing to buy Cambell soup. That I forget to tell the story of little people who cared so very much but could do so little.

    The danger is that I stop complaining about the french representation in the habs lineup and that I listen to hockey like I listen to other sports. As a product to be bought, consummed and thrown away.

    We b!tch and moan about this situation because we still care.

    Trust me, the worst thing that can happen to a franchise is indifference.

    Ask the Expos...

  4. Here is a text I did on another discussion board following Koivu's incident. I did it late at night and it might prove a bit "passionate" but I think it provides another view of things.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    I'll take the other side of the argument.

    But, first and foremost, we can all agree that it was not the time, not the place and certainly not the right way to approach the subject.

    To add insult to injury, the question was asked by a complete outsider who wanted to create an interesting story.

    There. That's what I think about Friday's story.

    However, since this occasion is used by most to rehash old arguments, I'll use this opportunity to present another opinion.

    Most people you will meet in Montreal will know about the Montreal Canadiens. You should not be surprised to hear your 40 year old waitress start a conversation and have an opinion on whether Souray should be traded or not during the playoffs.

    Hockey in Montreal is much more than a madonna concert, a baseball game or F1.

    Les Canadiens de Montréal are MY team. Just as they were my father's team and my grandfather's team.

    Les Canadiens de Montréal used to be a tradition, a Saturday night event. You used to look at the games on tv with your father, hear about it in family reunions.

    I used to wonder, as a little boy, at that no 10 that was streaking without helmet in the offensive zone.

    I remember the stories told to me by my father, who doesn't watch hockey anymore BTW. Stories about my grandmother wanting to do something about Richard's suspension in 55. The only way she found of protesting is to stop buying Campbell soup for a few years.

    You see, they are MY team. They are not a generic concession who is looking at a big left handed center. They are part of my past. As a French Canadian. As a Quebecker.

    To my knowledge, the Habs had a lot of things going for them before 1969. They had the C formula, the famous "Formule C", used to acquire players at an incredibly young age in a quasi-permanent fashion.

    They had a series of farm clubs, in which they could stack boatloads of talent who were only waiting for a chance to play in the big leagues.

    They also had a tremendous network of French Canadien volunteers working for them throughout the province of Quebec. At a time when information was at a premium, they had a whole province ready to talk to them about promising young guys.

    I think Ken Dryden, in his book "The Game" describe the fall of the habs last Dynaty best:

    "Most of what has happened these past twenty-five seasons I couldn't have guessed. I knew that the dominance of the Canadiens would diminish. Nobody could sustain the pace of fifteen Stanley Cups in twenty-four years. Pollock and Bowman were gone. The farm system had been built during a sponsorship time when teams could sign up kids almost at birth, and when every Canadian kid wanted to play for the Canadiens or Leafs, and when every non-Canadian kid, every American or European, didn't matter. When sponsorship ended in 1969 and a universal draft of players forced kids to play with whichever team chose them, the Canadiens had enough players already in their system to trade their surplus for future draft picks to teams desperate to compete and survive. But by 1979 all that was coming to an end. The next generation of great players was getting spread around. Denis Potvin, Brian Trottier and Mike Bossy had all gone to the Islanders. Wayne Gretzky and Mark Messier were in the WHA. The Canadiens had been reduced finally to equal ground, and while equal ground, with proper care, might produce good teams, it won't generate domination"

    So? Where are we now?

    A standard team in a standard league? A product like Coke or McDonald's? A brand name with its history resumed to a nice, shiny selling point?

    You think Montreal is that crazy about hockey because its simply "cultural"? Is it only a phenomenon? Like poutine?

    You guys really think it's to be taken for granted? That its not going to die off if properly cultivated?

    While I have a particular interest in hockey, in young up-and-coming players, in systems, in the strength of particular teams, I can assure you that my family, my friends, my boss, citizens not immersed in hockey like I am become hockey fans again in spring because of "Les Canadiens", and Lafleur, and Carbonneau, and Roy, and Richard, and Béliveau.

    Its one of the few times in the year when you can yell on a bus between 7 and 10 on a Saturday night with a walkman on and, instead of receiving glares, you will only get a single, repetitive question:

    "So? What's the score?"

    But what can we do about it?

    The entry draft, free agency seem to condemn us to uniformity, doesn't it?

    Well, you could start by having scouts who cover the province of Quebec like the times of old. You could start by knowing about every single goddamned player in your own backyard.

    You could start by listening to home grown free agents, guys like Ian Lapperière, who would have killed to have a shot to play for the "Bleu, blanc, rouge".

    You could, at least, make an effort to go and get a few guys who grew here. Who get it. Who remember what a spring in Montreal means when the habs are in the playoff.

    It has been reported that Dandenault, Bégin and Bouillon were close to tears after game 7 against the Hurricane.

    Did it matter as much to Kovalev, Zednik and Bulis?

    I am not saying that you cannot care about your team is you are a European. You can learn to care. Just as Mario Lemieux did with the Penguins, just as Denis Savard did with the Blackhawks and Luc Robitaille with the Kings.

    But if you want to really rise above the lot, to anchor yourself in the tradition and history, it is my belief that you must take Gainey's route: you must learn a bit of french.

    Is Koivu a leader on the ice? You bet. Do people respect him? Immensely. Is he the best center in the Canadien's lineup? Yes.

    But to go beyond that, to be part of the legend, to be as big a star in Montreal than in Finland, as the captain of "Les Canadiens", he must at least learn to say "Bonjour" and "Bonsoir".

    We don't ask for much. Most of us are perfectly proficient in the english language. We switch more often than not in english if we see that you have trouble speaking french.

    However, as garbled your french sentenced came to be, you will have our profound admiration because, at least, you tried.

    Is the Canadiens a simple logo owned by the Gillett group and the NHL?

    Maybe.

    But we have to be careful. The end of the Dynasty was less than 30 odd years ago. Evacuate the french content of "Les Canadiens de montreal" at your own risk.

    The danger is not that I stop going to games. The danger is that I might stop going to games with my son and that I forget to tell him the story of his great-grandmother who wanted to punish Clarence Campbell by refusing to buy Cambell soup. That I forget to tell the story of little people who cared so very much but could do so little.

    The danger is that I stop complaining about the french representation in the habs lineup and that I listen to hockey like I listen to other sports. As a product to be bought, consummed and thrown away.

    We b!tch and moan about this situation because we still care.

    Trust me, the worst thing that can happen to a franchise is indifference.

    Ask the Expos...

  5. Boy. that question is one of the most explosive you can ask...

    Its a valid one but don't stress too much if you get impulsive reactions!

    :D

    The whole thing starts over 300 years ago really... You have to understand that France used to dominate a large part of North America (the first map is around 1743 I believe... no garantee though!)

    The whole lot was given to england by France in 1763 in the Traité de Paris, following the conclusion of the 7 years war.

    A few years before, in 1759, a english general, Wolfe, beat the french Montcalm at quebec. This event, called "The Conquest" (La Conquête) by some and "The Defeat" (La défaite) by others, is usually used to symbolise english domination over french territories in north america.

    Of course, it is a bit simplistic because the english already deported and assasinated a large part of another north american french nation in 1755, Acadia (L'acadie), of which england gained possesion in 1713. According to some, Acadia was a lot more prosper than the quebec province at the time and better established. They are the ancestors of Louisiana's Cajuns (A deformation of Acadians... by way of Acadjuns, cadjuns, Cajuns...).

    Ok... back to the main topic...

    If I remember correctly, 1763 marks the start of the american "war of independance". I once heard that england was very worried that the old "nouvelle france" would be interested to join the emerging american nation. I think you guys tried to seduce and/or invade us but it didn't work.

    Pressured by the american revolt, England decided to try to convince us to stay with them by letting us practice our Catholic faith without interruption (they were protestan). This is very important because it is mainly by holding to our catholic "roots" that we would be keeping our language.

    In 1791, canada is divided in 2 parts, "lower canada" (mainly french) and "higher canada" (english). Our southern neighours are now a new nation (the united states of america). Canada's population is bolstered by a large number of english loyalists.

    End of the "history lesson".

    As a people, french canadians always made an effort to establish their unique identity. Under french domination, we were "habitant" (translated "inhabitants") to france's paysans (meaning we were owners of the lands... and not subserviant), with the english, we became "Canadiens" (pronounced Canayens! by old people)to their "English". When the inhabitants of canada became "Canadiens", we were "Canadiens francais". I guess Quebecer is a reaction to the possibility of being "canadiens francais" and federalist...

    It is said that the Catholic faith has a lot to do with us staying french all that time. French canadians stayed devout a long time. Going to church was a major activity and helped us stay in contact.

    In terms of social status, most french canadiens were into agriculture. Money and big business were mostly controlled by english and american interests. Montreal was still a big business center, and a strong clivage between rich english/poor french canadiens soon made itself felt. (please note that it is a generalization... there were surely rich french canadien families, but the "majority" were english controled interest.)

    My father was under the obligation to speak english in the workplace. The reason was that many of the bosses did not speak french. To speak french could make you loose your job. Things were this harsh.

    To be reach higher education, you either had to have money or wanted to be part of the church.

    There were a lot of repressions during this period and a lot of us "french canadiens" are still sensible about the subject. We did not live it but it is close enough for our father's generation to tell us how it was.

    This status ended around 1960. This period is called "the quiet revolution". The school system was taken over by the state (it was a responsability of the catholic church before), education became obligatory, laws were introduced to quell english dominion, people stopped looking at the church for guidance, business became more open to french canadiens...

    Right now montreal is the biggest urban community in quebec. It is divided in two: west and east. In the west island, it is perfectly possible to live in perfect english. Outside montreal's boundary, english is a bit rarer (except at places close to the US border) and you might have some difficulty to find someone who speak english without accent.

    To us, language is more than a "code". Its an identity. It is something that makes us different and unique from our neighbours. It has been a way to mark us as "different", if not "lesser", for about 200 years. It is now, since 40 years or so, a matter of pride.

    We have a healthy and lively french canadian culture, french canadian radio and tv, french canadian movies, french canadian theatre, french canadian publishing industry... we have our own star system.

    We are not that religious anymore. Hardships brought on us by the catholic church has made us skeptic at best where religion is concerned. I guess (and that is a wild wild extrapolation!!) that language has taken a bit of the space that was filled with catholism in terms of identity.

    In many ways, we carry the burden of close to 300 years of devout catholic pathos. We value humility, a large part of us are wary of wealth, we can be provincial at times.

    But we are peacefull and, if our latin blood makes us sometimes mercurial and loud, we are not prone to fight or revolt that easilly.

    Remember, we were 49.6% to vote yes to 1995's referendum. 1.4% more votes and we would have a clear mandate for separation.

    Well, 1.4% wasn't enough and we did not revolt, we did not cause violence. We accepted it like civilized men.

    I'll bring up another post about the montreal canadiens. I wrote it some time ago to speak my mind about the koivu incident. But I think this post is a good primer to understand our concern for french in quebec.

  6. Man o man, its been some time since I've posted here!

    Question:

    Is there a difference between the version you are using and EHM manager 2005?

    I toyed a lot with EHM manager 2005's demo, and while I put a lot of effort into planning my team, I didn't always understand the results (I tend to lose a lot).

    I try to look at each games, see the mistakes my players make, try to adjust my lineup and my practices according to what I think should be successfull, let players settle down on their lines, but nothing revealing seems to come up.

    I tend to feel disconnected to the results.

    Have you encountered the same problems with your version?

    P.S.: It is really a shame because I tend to like very much these simulations...

  7. I agree completely with Jack.

    The best way to make sure you don't get scored now is by placing emphasis on "puck possesion".

    Unfortunately, keeping the puck also means "taking chances", holding the blue line in the offensive zone (and "not" having your defense in the neutral zone), flushing the "one man wonder" forecheck, winning faceoffs and promoting players who can make themselves open to passes (you can see that as "offensive positioning").

    It means taking chances and slacking a bit on the reactive play.

    I'm not seeing that from the team right now.

  8. Yeah. I'm sure he's going to play all of 2 shift!

    After all, we have to be carefull so he doesn't make mistakes...

    Actually, he should play more respectable minutes if:

    1- We are not behind in goals (we need veterans to take the pressure of scoring goals)

    2-We lead by more than 2 goals (we need veterans to keep the lead)

    3-We get less than 5 penalities (everybody know we don't put offensive minded players on the PK)

    4-We get less than 5 power plays (a player must prove himself before coming to the power play... the rest of the opportunities are given to veterans who don't produce and need a boost)

    So,

    We might see Kosty a bit more when we lead teh coyotes 3-1 after 1 period and 1/2, IF the referees are sleeping

  9. I'm just tired of the good Ol' defensive minset...

    Julien recently commented on Gretzky in the "Journal de Montreal" that he was impressed on the emphasis such a player put on backchecking, even on the last legs of his carreer...

    Yeah.

    I'm sure we will all remember Gretz as an exceptional defensive player... *ahem*

  10. And, BTW, I was against the hossa move and prefered taking a chance on him than dressing Sundstrom.

    I still think this team's mindset is too defensive and that not enough space is given to youth developpement.

    Maybe I was wrong with hossa.

    Big deal.

    The fun here is not being right or wrong, its discussing our perceptions with other fans in a relaxed and respectfull atmosphere.

    In hindsight, I am glad Hossa don't seem to pan out like he was supposed to be. Proves we might have taken a good decision after all.

  11. Napier.

    Pls stop being childish.

    This is absurd.

    Your original comment made you appear cocky, your follow up aggresive, your later ones paranoid and your last one childish.

    All reactions were probably based as much on your perceived tone than your content.

    Don't take it that personal.

    Sheesh...

  12. I don't think anyone talked about trading bulis.

    I think his detractors are for putting him where he seems to belong...

    On a third line.

    After all, what's the problem with having a good third line? Bulis-Begin and a guy with a bit better finishing skills would make a great defensive minded line who can control the puck and have some great scoring chances.

    As I explained to my girlfriend yesterday, line 1 and 2 mindset can be resumed as "You win a game by having one goal more than your opponent".

    Line 3 and 4 are more oriented towards "You win a game by having your opponent score one goal less than you"

    I just think Bulis fits better at the top of the "one less goal" line: the 3rd.

  13. The problem for me is not Bulis's many qualities but the fact that he seems to lack the "killer instinct". He may be a terrific 2 way player but he seems to have little offensive awareness.

    That and he thinks too much.

    Either he is not well positioned to receive the rebound or he doesn't have the reflex to shoot the puck at the net when receiving a quick pass that creates a scoring chance.

    Is it the result of a too long stint of the defensive lines? Is it inherent?

    I don't know.

    The only think I see is I would rather have a young guy with proven finishing skills (Perez) than a defensive minded forward on the first line.

    After all, in this "new" NHL, we are seeing that it is as important to know how to play with the puck than know how to angle the puck carrier or cutting line passes.

    Puck possesion and finishing is not only good for the offense... It helps the defense too...

  14. I still trust Bob Gainey.

    However, I understand the points given and I agree with some of them.

    1) The case for Bonk

    I completely agree that Laperrière would fit better on the 3rd line than Bonk. Just having Bégin and Laperriere on the same line would be a dream come true.

    I think we miss a bit of grit and character on our team and Lappy would be part of the solution. Bonk does not bring the grit a good 3rd/4th line player should have in my books.

    However, we have to understand that Bonk was seen as a capable 2nd line backup in case Ribs became injured or did not perform up to par with his last season.

    Of course, playing on ottawa's 1st line will have the effect of boosting your numbers but it was surely greatly part of the equation.

    Bonk was, at the time, a 2nd/3rd candidate. Laperriere was 3rd/4th. 2nd/3rd won.

    2) The D

    I don't believe Brisebois would have stayed in montreal. He made it quite clear that he was fed up with his negative experience and wanted to get some fresher air somewhere else.

    That being said, our D is still weak. I agree that we should have traded Garon for a D instead of a 3rd line center.

    -Markov was a nice surprise

    -Keeping Rivet was a great decision (I would have traded him after 2002-2003's season)

    -Kovy will turn out good enough

    -Bouillon is solid and steady

    -I like Dandy's speed

    -Souray got Rivet's last season braincramp bug

    -Streit might not cut it

    -The jury is still out on Hollywood Ron (past habs)

    Yes... we miss,at least some dept there. Our Hamilton cupboard looks quite empty.

    3)Turgeon

    I don't agree with bringing back Turgeon. I don't believe in bringing back relics.

    All in all, I think we have a better team than last year. The most problematic part of the team IMO is not the players in the organisation but the lack of faith in youth.

    All around the league you see great young addition to other teams. Prospects who are getting quality ice time as a reward for hard work and the liberty of making mistakes, as long as they show they learned from them.

    We seem to be taking a more Darwinian approach in MTL. At that rate, we will end up with a lot of panicky 2 way forward type who don't take the body much (for fear of being out of posiiton), who don't take chances (because they never took such thing) and who are not used to finishing...

    A bleak prospect to say the least

  15. Our guys got thrown around in the first...

    I don't like than, nobody to reply for the knee on knee on Kovalev.

    Sens are a LOT more gritty his season.

    Volchenkov, Chara, Neil, McGrattan...

    The things that bugs me when we get checked right now is that I don't see anyone who can strike back.

    I get all worked up and tell myself: "kill them all! Kill them all!"

    Then I think about our size and it becomes: "Ok... damn... lets skate. Get away!"

  16. Speaking for myself, I AM thankfull for RDS's diffusion.

    As a matter of fact, I am a more than happy to pay for RDS's broadcast. If it weren't for hockey, I would probably not subscribe to cable in the first place.

    However, I am not simply content of receiving the signal. The audio portion of the game is, for me, an important part of my hockey experience.

    I have some friend who would be just as happy to watch the game on mute. Not me.

    Play by play comments brings me into the match. While I may not need a guy telling me that there is a big check, an increadible goal or a spectacular save going on, it just brings that much more intensity to the game I'm watching.

    The best play by play guys will change the tempo of their voice as the game goes on, basically screaming like maniacs when the game gets frantic. While it may be a fuss for others, great play by play helps me zone in on the match.

    As for the analysts, it may be important to note that I haven't played a lot of hockey and that I have definitely never coached. Furthermore, I have started to follow the habs pretty recently (in 1998-1999).

    Having someone who knows the game better than me give timely comments and pointers during a match just brings another level of enjoyment.

    It helps me to look for other things than the obvious plays, like how the players position themselves without the puck, the work habits of opposing teams, the kind of judgement the coaches make, backchecks, different ways to work along the boards, how different players learns to roll with the checks (I remember Dany Dube noting that Ribeiro had a better time rolling with checks because he kept his skates parrallel to the boards more... I never even tried to notice something like that).

    Good analyst will also know when to shut up, letting the play by play guys go on with describing the play.

    In any case, I am happy if some of my doodling with digital cable and AM radio helps fellow fans listen to a better game (as opposed to a bitter game... yuck yuck yuck)...

  17. Its been said time and time again, but Steve Begin's leadership just comes up too often to count.

    Did you see him react on Plek's goal saturday night? He was truly happy for the guy, even if it wasn't on his trio.

    Another thing happenned today: Dags got demoted to the fourth. Begin's reaction?

    « Des gars comme Dagenais doivent jouer avec confiance. Un marqueur qui ne produit pas donne l’impression que tout va mal. Tout ce qu’il faut à Pierre c’est d’obtenir ce premier but. Après, ça se mettra à rentrer tout seul. Souvenez-vous il y a deux ans. Il avait commencé la saison dans la Ligue américaine et c’est retrouvé ici à attendre. Il a marqué 17 buts en 50 matchs, mais au début il ne jouait presque pas. Ça va venir dans son cas. Moi et Chris Higgins allons l’aider. On va y mettre de l’énergie et de la vitesse afin de lui offrir des occasions de marquer. Je suis certain qu’il va en profiter », commentait Steve Bégin après l’entraînement.

    In short: Dagenais is a scorer. These player look bad when they are on a slump but its just the matter to get the first goal. Me and Higgins are going to put our energy and speed on the line to help him scoring chances. I'm sure he will take advantage of it.

    It may look mundane but I cannot fail to underline the behavior of a player who truly puts the team first and foremost.

    Its sure nice to see! :/)

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