JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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I think I watched a few episodes when it 1st came out. It was like a comedy sketch. - mdw7413
Edit, not dead. |
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2sticks1puck
New York Rangers |
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Location: The not quite neutral zone Joined: 01.31.2019
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I think they got divorced, I thought I heard that somewhere - Slimtj100
They did. A chance for all of us lol |
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MiloslavHorava
New York Rangers |
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Location: Brooklyn, NY Joined: 02.12.2016
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TheMessiah94
New York Rangers |
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Location: NJ Joined: 07.21.2007
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That was another fun google.  - JRR1285
She's not as good looking as the one on this page.
Edit: As this one.
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rrentz
New York Rangers |
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Location: HUNTINGTON, NY Joined: 07.13.2009
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You should go nuts like a guy using the lights to direct a plane to a terminal at night - mdw7413
It would be a guaranteed way to get my ass on ESPN |
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JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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She's not as good looking as the one on this page. 
Edit: As this one.
 - TheMessiah94
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JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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Can you post a pic, I was jsut telling a "friend" of mine what you wrote and he is curios to see  - MiloslavHorava
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2sticks1puck
New York Rangers |
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Location: The not quite neutral zone Joined: 01.31.2019
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It would be a guaranteed way to get my ass on ESPN  - rrentz
Nah man, I want to see the prudes at the golf channel roast you. Somehow, you'd be the biggest blight in the history of golf |
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mdw7413
New York Rangers |
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Location: I would rather see a dudes hairy balls than his hairy feet-Jimbro Joined: 12.13.2013
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mdw7413
New York Rangers |
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Location: I would rather see a dudes hairy balls than his hairy feet-Jimbro Joined: 12.13.2013
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She's not as good looking as the one on this page. 
Edit: As this one.
 - TheMessiah94
She must have pencil erasers, I would have at least thought tea plates on something that big |
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rrentz
New York Rangers |
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Location: HUNTINGTON, NY Joined: 07.13.2009
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Nah man, I want to see the prudes at the golf channel roast you. Somehow, you'd be the biggest blight in the history of golf - 2sticks1puck
Banned from Bethpage for life!!! |
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JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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She must have pencil erasers, I would have at least thought tea plates on something that big - mdw7413
They might still be pretty big. It's crazy how variable that can be. |
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mdw7413
New York Rangers |
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Location: I would rather see a dudes hairy balls than his hairy feet-Jimbro Joined: 12.13.2013
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They might still be pretty big. It's crazy how variable that can be. - JRR1285
Well then they are over by her armpits or facing straight down which would be awkward.
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JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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Well guys I found out who the lady in the gif is.
Anna Semenovich |
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JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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Well then they are over by her armpits or facing straight down which would be awkward.
 - mdw7413
Or she's really cold. |
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Tonybere
New York Rangers |
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Location: ON Joined: 02.04.2016
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Just a tip. Take advil before you go. 1st time I ever drove golf balls I was probably late teens and in really good shape(or thought I was). I drove 2 buckets of balls and thought someone beat the poop out of me the next day.  - mdw7413
You need to treat being at the range somewhat like being on the course.
When you're playing a round of golf you hit a ball about every 3 or 4 minutes. I've seen guys on the range firing them off like they're getting paid by the swing!
Smoke a bowl, bring a beer and chill the (frank) out, man! |
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mdw7413
New York Rangers |
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Location: I would rather see a dudes hairy balls than his hairy feet-Jimbro Joined: 12.13.2013
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You need to treat being at the range somewhat like being on the course.
When you're playing a round of golf you hit a ball about every 3 or 4 minutes. I've seen guys on the range firing them off like they're getting paid by the swing!
Smoke a bowl, bring a beer and chill the (frank) out, man!  - Tonybere
Thats exactly what I did. |
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jimbro83
New York Rangers |
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Location: Lets Go Rangers!, NY Joined: 12.25.2009
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24 years ago today, Rangers and Nordiques played last game in Quebec City, as I recall it was a little nuts, from NY times the next day:
The fleur-de-lis still flies on hockey jerseys, at least for one more game. In the most tame, least controversial and most cautiously played game of this interesting first-round playoff series, the Quebec Nordiques edged the Rangers by 4-2 at le Colisee this afternoon.
Quebec's victory left the Rangers with a 3-games-to-2 lead in the four-of-seven-game Eastern Conference quarterfinal series that will resume with Game 6 on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.
Wendel Clark, the Quebec leader who came into the game without a point in the series, led the attack with one goal, one assist, four shots on goal, one off the cross bar and several other excellent chances on the attack.
Jocelyn Thibault, the 20-year-old goalie starting his second consecutive game, stopped 24 of 26 shots. Several were late in the third period, when the Rangers cranked up the attack.
Except for an empty-net goal in the final minute, all the scoring was in the first period.
Pat Verbeek, who scored one of the Ranger goals in the first period, spent the final few minutes buzzing like a hornet around Thibault's crease. He cracked one shot off Thibault's mask, missed the net by inches on a deflection and blamed himself for not sending his team into overtime.
"I kind of blew it," Verbeek said. "I was a little too anxious."
Clark, who, like Verbeek, is a wing wearing No. 17, eschewed his bully-boy tactics of the earlier games and supplied the skills that made him a leader of the Toronto Maple Leafs before the trade that brought him here last summer.
"My goal was not a relief, winning was a bigger relief," Clark said. Asked if the game sent the Rangers a message, Clark said: "The message was for us. There is no tomorrow."
As for the day after tomorrow at the Garden, Clark said: "We've played two excellent games right there. We got better every game. We still have a few games to play that way."
Clark had said earlier in the series that Quebec's hard hitting would wear down the Rangers, who are an older team. But the Rangers said the slower pace of play today was because of the quick turnaround from their overtime victory on Friday night and the warm, moist air in the building.
"Our guys are fresh," said Ranger Coach Colin Campbell. "It's nice to have home ice going back."
It might have been the last National Hockey League game for the Nordiques in this building. If they lose on Tuesday, the series will be over. And if the team ownership and the government of the province do not come to an agreement on financing for a new arena, there is a strong possibility that the team will be sold and moved to a city in the United States, possibly Denver or Minneapolis.
Perhaps that is why the fans -- a less-than-capacity turnout of 14,647 -- were in a surly mood. They booed "The Star-Spangled Banner" and delayed the game several times by throwing debris on the ice. One of the cups filled with soft drinks nearly hit the referee, Kerry Fraser; another splashed on Jay Wells, a Ranger defenseman. Campbell said some fans threw rolls of coins.
Campbell said the trash-throwing was "a most despicable display" that was "awful" and "embarrassing." Mark Messier, the Ranger captain, called it "disgusting" and said it reflected poorly on the province, on Canada and the sport.
Kevin Lowe of the Rangers said: "It's criminal. With the game on Fox, there's enough stoppages as it is."
Brian Leetch added: "They should be embarrassed. It's classless."
The Nordiques were more lighthearted about it. Craig Wolanin joked that maybe the coins were the provincial government's way of contributing to the building fund for the new arena. Noting that it occurred on Mother's Day, he added, "I should have collected and given my mother some flowers."
In that the home coach has the last call on personnel before the face-offs, Marc Crawford, Quebec's coach, got away from his habit of using Clark and Joe Sakic against Aleksi Kovalev and Sergei Nemchinov, a matchup that was favoring the Rangers.
Kovalev came into the game tied for the team scoring lead with 7 points, but he played his least effective offensive game of the series, managing only one shot on goal.
He said his bruised back was still sore from Wolanin's slash in Game 4, the one that caused a Quebec goal to be negated. "On Friday night, I could only sleep one hour," Kovalev said. "It's just sore. It's tough skating. You can't do the quick moves. It's hard to play. I'll get treatment. It will be better next game."
Was Kovalev bothered by the taunts of the fans and by the criticism he has received by the news media? Don Cherry, Canada's national right-wing hockey oracle, denounced Kovalev on Saturday on the "Hockey Night in Canada" show for faking injuries.
"That doesn't bother me because Don Cherry is a sick man," Kovalev said. "He wants to teach little kids to fight and kill and not play hockey. Who would want to listen to him?"
One injury that wasn't in dispute was the concussion sustained by Jeff Beukeboom, the big Ranger defenseman, who left the ice late in Game 4 and sat out today.
"Last night, he got worse," Campbell said of Beukeboom, who may return for Game 6. "Dizzy, upset stomach. It's tough to take your big guy out."
Mike Ricci gave Quebec a 1-0 lead at 4 minutes 53 seconds, scoring just 3 seconds after the end of a Ranger penalty against Verbeek. Ricci beat Mike Richter after a backhanded pass from Clark.
The Rangers got it back at 6:51, on the power play, on a goal by Messier, who beat Thibault from the right side of the slot after a pass out of heavy traffic from Adam Graves.
Clark got his first goal of the series at 11:09 to give Quebec a 2-1 lead. He fired a long, high slap shot after Uwe Krupp and Andrei Kovalenko got the puck away from Stephane Matteau at the blue line.
The Nordiques made it 3-1 just 31 seconds later, at 11:40, when Chris Simon scooted past Messier in the left-wing corner and cruised behind the Ranger net from left to right. When no one put up any resistence, he came around the front and found Richter going down, so he lifted it over him.
"I committed to a wrap-around," said Richter. "I was done at that point."
With Ricci in the penalty box for a gratuitous high stick on Matteau, the Rangers scored on the power play to cut the lead to 3-2 at 17:32. Verbeek got off an uncontested shot from right in front after Messier set him up with a pass from behind the net. Graves created the play by battling for the puck and sending it down to Messier. After the Rangers pulled Richter for an extra attacker in the final minute, Scott Young knocked the puck into the empty net at 19:27. |
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2sticks1puck
New York Rangers |
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Location: The not quite neutral zone Joined: 01.31.2019
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24 years ago today, Rangers and Nordiques played last game in Quebec City, as I recall it was a little nuts, from NY times the next day:
The fleur-de-lis still flies on hockey jerseys, at least for one more game. In the most tame, least controversial and most cautiously played game of this interesting first-round playoff series, the Quebec Nordiques edged the Rangers by 4-2 at le Colisee this afternoon.
Quebec's victory left the Rangers with a 3-games-to-2 lead in the four-of-seven-game Eastern Conference quarterfinal series that will resume with Game 6 on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.
Wendel Clark, the Quebec leader who came into the game without a point in the series, led the attack with one goal, one assist, four shots on goal, one off the cross bar and several other excellent chances on the attack.
Jocelyn Thibault, the 20-year-old goalie starting his second consecutive game, stopped 24 of 26 shots. Several were late in the third period, when the Rangers cranked up the attack.
Except for an empty-net goal in the final minute, all the scoring was in the first period.
Pat Verbeek, who scored one of the Ranger goals in the first period, spent the final few minutes buzzing like a hornet around Thibault's crease. He cracked one shot off Thibault's mask, missed the net by inches on a deflection and blamed himself for not sending his team into overtime.
"I kind of blew it," Verbeek said. "I was a little too anxious."
Clark, who, like Verbeek, is a wing wearing No. 17, eschewed his bully-boy tactics of the earlier games and supplied the skills that made him a leader of the Toronto Maple Leafs before the trade that brought him here last summer.
"My goal was not a relief, winning was a bigger relief," Clark said. Asked if the game sent the Rangers a message, Clark said: "The message was for us. There is no tomorrow."
As for the day after tomorrow at the Garden, Clark said: "We've played two excellent games right there. We got better every game. We still have a few games to play that way."
Clark had said earlier in the series that Quebec's hard hitting would wear down the Rangers, who are an older team. But the Rangers said the slower pace of play today was because of the quick turnaround from their overtime victory on Friday night and the warm, moist air in the building.
"Our guys are fresh," said Ranger Coach Colin Campbell. "It's nice to have home ice going back."
It might have been the last National Hockey League game for the Nordiques in this building. If they lose on Tuesday, the series will be over. And if the team ownership and the government of the province do not come to an agreement on financing for a new arena, there is a strong possibility that the team will be sold and moved to a city in the United States, possibly Denver or Minneapolis.
Perhaps that is why the fans -- a less-than-capacity turnout of 14,647 -- were in a surly mood. They booed "The Star-Spangled Banner" and delayed the game several times by throwing debris on the ice. One of the cups filled with soft drinks nearly hit the referee, Kerry Fraser; another splashed on Jay Wells, a Ranger defenseman. Campbell said some fans threw rolls of coins.
Campbell said the trash-throwing was "a most despicable display" that was "awful" and "embarrassing." Mark Messier, the Ranger captain, called it "disgusting" and said it reflected poorly on the province, on Canada and the sport.
Kevin Lowe of the Rangers said: "It's criminal. With the game on Fox, there's enough stoppages as it is."
Brian Leetch added: "They should be embarrassed. It's classless."
The Nordiques were more lighthearted about it. Craig Wolanin joked that maybe the coins were the provincial government's way of contributing to the building fund for the new arena. Noting that it occurred on Mother's Day, he added, "I should have collected and given my mother some flowers."
In that the home coach has the last call on personnel before the face-offs, Marc Crawford, Quebec's coach, got away from his habit of using Clark and Joe Sakic against Aleksi Kovalev and Sergei Nemchinov, a matchup that was favoring the Rangers.
Kovalev came into the game tied for the team scoring lead with 7 points, but he played his least effective offensive game of the series, managing only one shot on goal.
He said his bruised back was still sore from Wolanin's slash in Game 4, the one that caused a Quebec goal to be negated. "On Friday night, I could only sleep one hour," Kovalev said. "It's just sore. It's tough skating. You can't do the quick moves. It's hard to play. I'll get treatment. It will be better next game."
Was Kovalev bothered by the taunts of the fans and by the criticism he has received by the news media? Don Cherry, Canada's national right-wing hockey oracle, denounced Kovalev on Saturday on the "Hockey Night in Canada" show for faking injuries.
"That doesn't bother me because Don Cherry is a sick man," Kovalev said. "He wants to teach little kids to fight and kill and not play hockey. Who would want to listen to him?"
One injury that wasn't in dispute was the concussion sustained by Jeff Beukeboom, the big Ranger defenseman, who left the ice late in Game 4 and sat out today.
"Last night, he got worse," Campbell said of Beukeboom, who may return for Game 6. "Dizzy, upset stomach. It's tough to take your big guy out."
Mike Ricci gave Quebec a 1-0 lead at 4 minutes 53 seconds, scoring just 3 seconds after the end of a Ranger penalty against Verbeek. Ricci beat Mike Richter after a backhanded pass from Clark.
The Rangers got it back at 6:51, on the power play, on a goal by Messier, who beat Thibault from the right side of the slot after a pass out of heavy traffic from Adam Graves.
Clark got his first goal of the series at 11:09 to give Quebec a 2-1 lead. He fired a long, high slap shot after Uwe Krupp and Andrei Kovalenko got the puck away from Stephane Matteau at the blue line.
The Nordiques made it 3-1 just 31 seconds later, at 11:40, when Chris Simon scooted past Messier in the left-wing corner and cruised behind the Ranger net from left to right. When no one put up any resistence, he came around the front and found Richter going down, so he lifted it over him.
"I committed to a wrap-around," said Richter. "I was done at that point."
With Ricci in the penalty box for a gratuitous high stick on Matteau, the Rangers scored on the power play to cut the lead to 3-2 at 17:32. Verbeek got off an uncontested shot from right in front after Messier set him up with a pass from behind the net. Graves created the play by battling for the puck and sending it down to Messier. After the Rangers pulled Richter for an extra attacker in the final minute, Scott Young knocked the puck into the empty net at 19:27. - jimbro83
Crazy to think it was only the first round at this point in May. I remember that series, as I was a huge Verbeek fan at the time. I also though we were going to beat the Flyers in the next round, I was wrong. 94-95 was just s hugely deflating series for us. I thought we had a decent shot of defending the cup, oh boy I was wrong.
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TheMessiah94
New York Rangers |
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Location: NJ Joined: 07.21.2007
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24 years ago today, Rangers and Nordiques played last game in Quebec City, as I recall it was a little nuts, from NY times the next day:
The fleur-de-lis still flies on hockey jerseys, at least for one more game. In the most tame, least controversial and most cautiously played game of this interesting first-round playoff series, the Quebec Nordiques edged the Rangers by 4-2 at le Colisee this afternoon.
Quebec's victory left the Rangers with a 3-games-to-2 lead in the four-of-seven-game Eastern Conference quarterfinal series that will resume with Game 6 on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.
Wendel Clark, the Quebec leader who came into the game without a point in the series, led the attack with one goal, one assist, four shots on goal, one off the cross bar and several other excellent chances on the attack.
Jocelyn Thibault, the 20-year-old goalie starting his second consecutive game, stopped 24 of 26 shots. Several were late in the third period, when the Rangers cranked up the attack.
Except for an empty-net goal in the final minute, all the scoring was in the first period.
Pat Verbeek, who scored one of the Ranger goals in the first period, spent the final few minutes buzzing like a hornet around Thibault's crease. He cracked one shot off Thibault's mask, missed the net by inches on a deflection and blamed himself for not sending his team into overtime.
"I kind of blew it," Verbeek said. "I was a little too anxious."
Clark, who, like Verbeek, is a wing wearing No. 17, eschewed his bully-boy tactics of the earlier games and supplied the skills that made him a leader of the Toronto Maple Leafs before the trade that brought him here last summer.
"My goal was not a relief, winning was a bigger relief," Clark said. Asked if the game sent the Rangers a message, Clark said: "The message was for us. There is no tomorrow."
As for the day after tomorrow at the Garden, Clark said: "We've played two excellent games right there. We got better every game. We still have a few games to play that way."
Clark had said earlier in the series that Quebec's hard hitting would wear down the Rangers, who are an older team. But the Rangers said the slower pace of play today was because of the quick turnaround from their overtime victory on Friday night and the warm, moist air in the building.
"Our guys are fresh," said Ranger Coach Colin Campbell. "It's nice to have home ice going back."
It might have been the last National Hockey League game for the Nordiques in this building. If they lose on Tuesday, the series will be over. And if the team ownership and the government of the province do not come to an agreement on financing for a new arena, there is a strong possibility that the team will be sold and moved to a city in the United States, possibly Denver or Minneapolis.
Perhaps that is why the fans -- a less-than-capacity turnout of 14,647 -- were in a surly mood. They booed "The Star-Spangled Banner" and delayed the game several times by throwing debris on the ice. One of the cups filled with soft drinks nearly hit the referee, Kerry Fraser; another splashed on Jay Wells, a Ranger defenseman. Campbell said some fans threw rolls of coins.
Campbell said the trash-throwing was "a most despicable display" that was "awful" and "embarrassing." Mark Messier, the Ranger captain, called it "disgusting" and said it reflected poorly on the province, on Canada and the sport.
Kevin Lowe of the Rangers said: "It's criminal. With the game on Fox, there's enough stoppages as it is."
Brian Leetch added: "They should be embarrassed. It's classless."
The Nordiques were more lighthearted about it. Craig Wolanin joked that maybe the coins were the provincial government's way of contributing to the building fund for the new arena. Noting that it occurred on Mother's Day, he added, "I should have collected and given my mother some flowers."
In that the home coach has the last call on personnel before the face-offs, Marc Crawford, Quebec's coach, got away from his habit of using Clark and Joe Sakic against Aleksi Kovalev and Sergei Nemchinov, a matchup that was favoring the Rangers.
Kovalev came into the game tied for the team scoring lead with 7 points, but he played his least effective offensive game of the series, managing only one shot on goal.
He said his bruised back was still sore from Wolanin's slash in Game 4, the one that caused a Quebec goal to be negated. "On Friday night, I could only sleep one hour," Kovalev said. "It's just sore. It's tough skating. You can't do the quick moves. It's hard to play. I'll get treatment. It will be better next game."
Was Kovalev bothered by the taunts of the fans and by the criticism he has received by the news media? Don Cherry, Canada's national right-wing hockey oracle, denounced Kovalev on Saturday on the "Hockey Night in Canada" show for faking injuries.
"That doesn't bother me because Don Cherry is a sick man," Kovalev said. "He wants to teach little kids to fight and kill and not play hockey. Who would want to listen to him?"
One injury that wasn't in dispute was the concussion sustained by Jeff Beukeboom, the big Ranger defenseman, who left the ice late in Game 4 and sat out today.
"Last night, he got worse," Campbell said of Beukeboom, who may return for Game 6. "Dizzy, upset stomach. It's tough to take your big guy out."
Mike Ricci gave Quebec a 1-0 lead at 4 minutes 53 seconds, scoring just 3 seconds after the end of a Ranger penalty against Verbeek. Ricci beat Mike Richter after a backhanded pass from Clark.
The Rangers got it back at 6:51, on the power play, on a goal by Messier, who beat Thibault from the right side of the slot after a pass out of heavy traffic from Adam Graves.
Clark got his first goal of the series at 11:09 to give Quebec a 2-1 lead. He fired a long, high slap shot after Uwe Krupp and Andrei Kovalenko got the puck away from Stephane Matteau at the blue line.
The Nordiques made it 3-1 just 31 seconds later, at 11:40, when Chris Simon scooted past Messier in the left-wing corner and cruised behind the Ranger net from left to right. When no one put up any resistence, he came around the front and found Richter going down, so he lifted it over him.
"I committed to a wrap-around," said Richter. "I was done at that point."
With Ricci in the penalty box for a gratuitous high stick on Matteau, the Rangers scored on the power play to cut the lead to 3-2 at 17:32. Verbeek got off an uncontested shot from right in front after Messier set him up with a pass from behind the net. Graves created the play by battling for the puck and sending it down to Messier. After the Rangers pulled Richter for an extra attacker in the final minute, Scott Young knocked the puck into the empty net at 19:27. - jimbro83
Did Ranger Saver hack your account? |
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jimbro83
New York Rangers |
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Location: Lets Go Rangers!, NY Joined: 12.25.2009
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Crazy to think it was only the first round at this point in May. I remember that series, as I was a huge Verbeek fan at the time. I also though we were going to beat the Flyers in the next round, I was wrong. 94-95 was just s hugely deflating series for us. I thought we had a decent shot of defending the cup, oh boy I was wrong. - 2sticks1puck
they lost first two games of Flyers series in overtime but they should have won both games, then Lindros and company were just too much
that series was the #1 reason why they traded Zubov and wanted to get tougher on the blueline |
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jimbro83
New York Rangers |
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Location: Lets Go Rangers!, NY Joined: 12.25.2009
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Did Ranger Saver hack your account?  - TheMessiah94
ha! no, just copied and pasted that story |
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JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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Did Ranger Saver hack your account?  - TheMessiah94
I was gonna say the same. |
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2sticks1puck
New York Rangers |
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Location: The not quite neutral zone Joined: 01.31.2019
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they lost first two games of Flyers series in overtime but they should have won both games, then Lindros and company were just too much
that series was the #1 reason why they traded Zubov and wanted to get tougher on the blueline - jimbro83
We should of. I know momentum changes things, but I'm not sure they wouldn't have just won 4 straight from us anyway. |
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JRR1285
New York Rangers |
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Location: Coach's decision, PEI Joined: 02.21.2008
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they lost first two games of Flyers series in overtime but they should have won both games, then Lindros and company were just too much
that series was the #1 reason why they traded Zubov and wanted to get tougher on the blueline - jimbro83
I was a big Ulf fan but losing Zubov was inexcusable. |
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