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mardi 10 novembre 2015

The Hockey Unknows : Brian Bellows




Brian Edward Bellows (born September 1, 1964) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey player. He played nearly 1200 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the Minnesota North Stars, Montreal Canadiens, Tampa Bay Lightning, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and the Washington Capitals. He was a member of the 1993 Stanley Cup-winning Montreal Canadiens.






Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 210 lb (95 kg; 15 st 0 lb)
Position Left Wing
Shot Right
Played for Minnesota North Stars
Montreal Canadiens
Tampa Bay Lightning
Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
Washington Capitals
Berlin Capitals
National team  Canada
NHL Draft 2nd overall, 1982
Minnesota North Stars
Playing career 1982–1999















Playing career

Bellows played junior hockey in the Ontario Hockey League with the Kitchener Rangers. During this time, he was featured in Sports Illustrated, which described him as the hottest prospect since Wayne Gretzky.[1]



Bellows was drafted second overall by the Minnesota North Stars, who had acquired the draft pick in a trade with Detroit with the purpose of having a shot at Bellows. North Stars GM Lou Nanne sent Don Murdoch, Greg Smith, and a first round pick (Murray Craven) to the Wings in exchange for what later turned out to be the second overall draft pick. Bellows was often compared to Gretzky, which led to a tough rookie season. The pressure of such comparisons caused criticisms when he did not live up to them. Bellows improved greatly in the second half of the season and finished with 35 goals. In the playoffs that year, Bellows scored 9 points (5 goals, 4 assists) in 9 games.
Bellows played 10 seasons with the North Stars and was popular in Minnesota for his charity work, as well as his goal-scoring. He had a North Star record 342 goals in 753 games, peaking with 55 goals in 1989–90. In 1990–91, Bellows scored 29 points in the post-season to become the North Stars career playoff point leader, and took the North Stars to the Stanley Cup finals where they fell to the Pittsburgh Penguins.



When team captain Craig Hartsburg was injured partway through the 1983–84 season, Bellows was named interim captain for the remainder of the season. At 19 years and 4 months, Bellows became captain at an earlier age than Gabriel Landeskog and Sidney Crosby. However, because he was an interim captain, Landeskog is still considered the youngest captain in history.[2][3]



On August 31, 1992, Bellows was traded to the Montreal Canadiens for Russ Courtnall. The trade angered Bellows at first, but he relished the chance to play for the Canadiens. Bellows remarked "I hope to score more than last year. I want to come in and prove I can still play to the levels expected. I was shocked [about the trade] but I'm excited about the new change. My idol was Ken Dryden. It's every kid's dream to play for the Canadiens." In the 1992-93 NHL season his 88 points were the second highest season total of his career, and his 15 playoff points helped the Canadiens win the Stanley Cup in 1993.



As his career was winding down, Bellows played for the Tampa Bay Lightning, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and the Washington Capitals. In the 1997–98 NHL season the Capitals made it to the Stanley Cup finals, but lost to the Detroit Red Wings. En route to the Eastern Conference championship, Bellows scored the series-clinching overtime goal in the first round in Game 6 against the Boston Bruins. The 1998–99 season was his last. On January 2, 1999, Bellows scored his 1000th career regular season point, becoming the 54th NHL player to reach that plateau.



Bellows was named to the 1990 Second All-Star team, and played in three NHL All-Star Games (1984, 1988 and 1992). He retired with 485 goals, 537 assists and 1,022 points. He was named the top forward at the 1989 World Ice Hockey Championships, as Canada won the silver medal.

Awards

 

 

Career statistics

 

mercredi 29 avril 2015

Hockey card magic - Lanny McDonald Stanley Cup moments 1989

mardi 21 avril 2015

Terrific night, tough loss as NHL playoff hockey returns to Winnipeg after 19 years

Winnipeg fans welcomed back NHL playoff hockey – and the 'Whiteout' – with great enthusiasm. (Getty)
 Winnipeg fans welcomed back NHL playoff hockey – and the 'Whiteout' – with great enthusiasm. (Getty)

source : yahoo.com

Silence. The puck came out to the point, Francois Beauchemin fired it and Rickard Rakell deflected it into the net 5:12 into overtime Monday night. Just like that, the MTS Centre went from one of the loudest arenas of all-time to one of the quietest.

As the Anaheim Ducks celebrated their 5-4 victory and 3-0 first-round series lead over the Winnipeg Jets, you could hear their whoops and hollers all the way up to the rafters. Fans started filing out. 

After maybe a minute, some chanted, “Go, Jets, go!” But soon they faded, and there was no sound again. Hundreds stayed in their seats, stunned.

Nineteen years they had waited for this. Nineteen years they had waited to see an NHL playoff game in Winnipeg. Now they had to process a bittersweet mix of emotions – pride, excitement, frustration, disappointment.

 “That’s one you’ll always remember,” said Jets winger Blake Wheeler. “Just too bad it wasn’t a more fond memory.”

There had been Winnipeg weather – cold, wind, snow – and talk of omens. There had been a return of Winnipeg’s traditional “whiteout,” fans in white jerseys and white shirts and white hats, fans with white wigs and white hardhats and white helmets with red lights flashing on top. There were white suits and at least a couple of white tuxedos. There was at least one wedding dress.

There were roars like you’ve never heard before. They didn’t just cheer Winnipeg goals. They cheered Anaheim icings.

“That’s as good a building as I’ve ever seen in my life,” said Jets coach Paul Maurice, who has been behind the bench for more than 1,250 NHL games in the regular season and playoffs.

Yet the Jets blew a third-period lead for the third time in three games. Yet they gave up the tying goal to Ryan Kesler with 2:14 left in regulation – the same Ryan Kesler the fans had been jeering all night.
Yet they couldn’t cash in on a power play right after that. Bryan Little hit a post, then got robbed by goaltender Frederik Andersen.

This franchise still hasn’t won a playoff game since the Atlanta Thrashers entered the NHL in 1999-2000. This city still hasn’t witnessed an NHL playoff victory since April 21, 1996.

“It was a special, special night for us in terms of the energy from the fans and the city,” said Jets winger Lee Stempniak. “We certainly feed off that emotion. We have great fans. They’re a huge part of our home-ice advantage. It’s hard to put into words how tough this loss is.”

* * * * *
The last time this city hosted an NHL playoff game was April 28, 1996. The original Jets were facing the Detroit Red Wings at Winnipeg Arena, the old barn with the portrait of the queen, and everyone knew a loss would mean more than elimination. A loss would mean relocation.

The Jets lost, and so the fans said goodbye. They stood and cheered as players shook hands, and then they stood and cheered some more as the Jets acknowledged them one last time. A homemade banner unfurled from the upper deck: “OUR JETS WILL FLY 4 EVER.”


.
The NHL left Winnipeg for Phoenix in 1996 and returned via Atlanta in 2011.
The NHL left Winnipeg for Phoenix in 1996 and returned via Atlanta in 2011.

Fans wept. Even players wept. The problem wasn’t a lack of passion for the team or the game. The problem was economics and politics.

“The team when it left was a victim of circumstances,” said NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. “The government agreement was over. There was no prospect of a new building. There was nobody that wanted to own the team here.”

The Jets moved to Phoenix – and took the traditional playoff whiteouts with them – and Winnipeg became a minor-league town. But in the mid-2000s, two things happened: the MTS Centre was built for the AHL’s Manitoba Moose with 15,000 seats, just enough for an NHL team if the opportunity ever arose, and the NHL introduced the salary cap, changing the dynamic for small markets.

Mark Chipman and his partners at True North Sports and Entertainment waited patiently and quietly, and they got their chance when the Atlanta Thrashers ran into trouble and the NHL ran out of options in 2011.

Winnipeg would be the smallest market in the league. It would have the smallest arena in the league.

But its time had come (again). People partied at Portage and Main. They bought 13,000 season tickets in 17 minutes – and it took that long only because the computers needed 15 minutes to process the credit cards.

As soon as winger Andrew Ladd arrived for a visit, he knew he wasn’t in Atlanta anymore. The team had just been sold. It didn’t have a new nickname or a logo yet. But as he stood at baggage claim, a fan recognized him and said: “Welcome to Winnipeg.”

Chipman announced at the draft the team would be called the Jets, and the city celebrated again. Then came the new logo. Then came the new uniforms.

Before the first season started, the fans already had gotten to know the players and adopted them. One player visited an elementary school. A little girl handed him a can of Barq’s Root Beer she had brought from home. She had heard him mention in a radio interview it was his favorite.

The first regular-season game was Oct. 9, 2011. The fans cheered as the clock counted down. When the play stopped with 1.6 seconds left, that gave them one more chance to chant: “Go, Jets, go!” The standing ovation continued through the final horn and didn’t end until after the last man had left the ice.

And the Jets had lost to the Montreal Canadiens, 5-1.

* * * * *

Soon Winnipeg wasn’t happy just to be back in the NHL.

“Our first year, they wanted a winning team,” said defenseman Jim Slater, who has spent his entire 10-year NHL career with the franchise. “Everything you read and hear on the radio, there’s obviously those fans who want it to happen right now.”

General manager Kevin Cheveldayoff remained patient – too patient for some. But he replaced coach 
Claude Noel with Maurice last season, and the Jets made a run. He made a number of moves this season, and the Jets made the playoffs.

After the Jets clinched April 9, they returned from Denver after a 1-0 shootout victory over the Colorado Avalanche to find about 200 fans waiting for them at the airport. It was 2:30 a.m. It was a Thursday night – or a Friday morning, rather. But there they were, wearing jerseys, holding signs, cheering as the players walked to their cars.


.
The Jets are still looking for the franchise's first NHL playoff victory. (AP)
The Jets are still looking for the franchise's first NHL playoff victory. (AP)

“Where we’re parked, I don’t even know how they know where we are, let alone what time we’re going to be home,” Little said. “I don’t think you’d see that in a lot of other places.”

Most season-ticket holders exercised their option to buy playoff tickets. Less than 1,000 were made available to the public for Games 3 and 4 of this series, and they sold out in six minutes – and it took that long only because the computers needed five minutes to process the credit cards. If you were looking on StubHub on Monday afternoon, only eight tickets were for sale. Eight. The cheapest was $649.

“Not a lot of people know where Winnipeg is on a map, but they definitely know where their hockey team is, and we take a lot of pride in that,” Slater said. “It’s a small community, but a big community with hockey.”

Maurice, who has also coached the Hartford Whalers, Carolina Hurricanes and Toronto Maple Leafs, said the connection between the city and the team in Winnipeg was unlike any he had seen before.

They appreciate having an NHL team again. They appreciate this NHL team for how hard it plays. He feels a responsibility to bring out the best in their loved ones.

“You get the feeling like you’re kind of like the teacher here and you’ve got their kids, and their kids are the Winnipeg Jets hockey team,” Maurice said. “And through the course of the regular season they’ve been getting pretty average to below-average marks, and they’re finally getting some good grades. They kind of come over and thank you, like, ‘Hey, my kids are doing great.’ ”

Fans lined up Monday night, waiting for the gates to open. Dean Cockrell, 63, was first at the ropes.
“The last game, it was sad,” said Cockrell, who was there 19 years ago. “The team was leaving. I don’t know that anybody really knew how to react back then. I think for a lot of people this is surreal. I’m in the older generation, so I remember. I think for a lot of people, they were so young, they really don’t remember the old Jets, so this is going to be exciting for them, too. You have another whole generation now.”

* * * * *

Look at it this way, Winnipeg. To lose, you have to be in the game. This is part of being in the NHL, part of making the playoffs. And the series isn’t over yet. Just last year, the Los Angeles Kings lost Game 3 in OT at home and fell into a 3-0 first-round series deficit. They rallied to win the series and the Stanley Cup.

David Thomson, a co-owner of the Jets, rode down an elevator without a word Monday night. Asked for his feelings, he said: “It was an extraordinary game and a wonderful atmosphere.”

He paused.

“And there’s Game 4.”

He paused again.

“And there’s Game 4.

jeudi 9 avril 2015

Ryan Reaves wears heart on sleeve


Ryan Reaves has channeled the memories of fallen friends and feels stronger as a result. John Russell/NHLI/Getty Images

source : espn.com

They're hard to find on a left arm covered with tattoos, but St. Louis Blues forward Ryan Reaves wears the tributes proudly on his forearm.

There's the nickname "Philly Bluntz" for Phil Haiart. Another nickname, "T-Bone," surrounded by water for Trevor Price. And a microphone dangling from a locker for Bruce Oake, who enjoyed boxing and competing in area rap battles.

Three close friends, all gone before getting the chance to truly begin their lives. They still motivate Reaves as he chisels out his place in the NHL.

"It's crazy. For how young I am, I've lost a lot of people. I've lost three really good friends that have been really close to me," Reaves, 28, said. "You can't take anything for granted. Here I am now trying to make a career for myself and I have friends back home that are dying at a real young age and parents who are burying them."

Growing up in Winnipeg, Reaves and his younger brother, Jordan, both came by their athletic prowess naturally. Their father, Willard, was a standout running back at Northern Arizona University who starred for the Canadian Football League's Winnipeg Blue Bombers. Named the CFL's Most Outstanding Player in 1984, the elder Reaves was a local legend when he retired in 1990 before joining the local sheriff's service.

When Ryan and Jordan were young, their dad once locked them in a jail cell for an hour, just to instill in them a healthy appreciation for what could happen should they follow the wrong path. But there was nothing Willard Reaves could do to shield Ryan from the tragedy he would encounter again and again.

Playing for St. John's-Ravencourt School in January 2004, Reaves was days away from his 17th birthday and competing in the Winnipeg High School Hockey League Tournament of Champions. It was there that he first heard that Price had collapsed on the bench while competing for the school's junior varsity squad. Later that day, Price passed away at age 16.

"He had a heart attack playing hockey," Reaves said. "A minor heart attack, I guess, and he never made it."

Price's legacy has been preserved with the Travis Price Classic, a charity golf tournament now entering its sixth year. Reaves makes a point to attend the event, which last year raised $318,000 for a children's summer camp.

Reaves was barely 17 and still coming to terms with the loss when the unthinkable happened again.
It was the 2005 trade deadline day in the Western Hockey League when Reaves, playing for the Brandon Wheat Kings, was summoned by the team's general manager. Assuming he had been traded, he bid his junior teammates a swift farewell.

He was instead greeted by his mother, Brenda, who had made the 135-mile drive from Winnipeg and was sobbing in the GM's office. She shared the news that Haiart, another close friend from St. John's-Ravencourt, had been murdered during a gang shootout in Winnipeg's West End.

Haiart had done nothing more than land in the wrong place at the worst possible time. He was 17.

Reaves grieved in the way that came most naturally. He strapped on his gear and took to the ice. In an empty Brandon arena, Reaves skated alone for close to two hours.

"I kind of broke down on the ice at one point. Nobody else was out there. So it was good to have my
alone time," Reaves said. "I drove in for the funeral two days later and then had to drive back. We had a game that night."

The shocking murder drew considerable attention to a local drug turf war that Willard Reaves had witnessed through his work. The crisis hit close to home following Haiart's murder, culminating at the Winnipeg courthouse where Willard was responsible for escorting inmates from their correctional facility to the courtroom where they stood trial. One fateful day, he found himself escorting Haiart's killer, a gang member named Jeff Cansanay.

"I had to make sure his personal safety was protected," Willard Reaves said. "Being in the elevator with them, I know what I would love to do. But I had to leave that at the door. I had to separate that, and I did."

In the wake of these losses, Reaves threw himself into hockey. All that grit and grief and motivation got the attention of the Blues, who drafted him in the fifth round of the 2005 draft, seven weeks after Cansanay received a life sentence for second-degree murder.

After two brief stints with the Blues early in 2010-11, Reaves was called up again for a late-season playoff push and showed enough to cement a roster spot. Then came the news.

On March 29, 2011, Oake died of a drug overdose at age 25. Ryan and Jordan Reaves had grown up next door to Oake and his younger brother, Darcy. The boys had been practically inseparable their entire lives. When Reaves got married last summer, Darcy and Jordan shared best man duties while Bruce's father, acclaimed CBC sportscaster Scott Oake, was the master of ceremonies.
Again confronted by tragic loss, Reaves had an unimaginable decision to make: continue fulfilling his NHL dream or take a step back in that quest to attend the funeral of a lifelong friend.

"What I said to him was you need to seize the opportunity and we'll see you when you get home at the end of the season. We left it at that," said Scott Oake, who is working to establish a non-profit rehabilitation facility in his late son's memory.

"Bruce wouldn't have wanted him to leave a golden opportunity in the NHL to come home and mourn. We know Bruce's passing affected Ryan. He's got the ink to prove it. There was much more to be achieved by chasing his dream. We had that discussion and everybody was good with it."

The day after losing a close friend for the third time in seven years, Reaves earned an assist in a 10-3 win against the Detroit Red Wings. Through it all, Oake's memory weighed heavily on him.
"It was tough. Especially not being able to go to the funeral," Reaves said. "That made me think about him a lot more, that I couldn't be there for his family."

As the Blues head down the stretch toward the hard road of the playoffs, Reaves continues to play for his three friends. He honors them with his play and his tattoos and with any time he can share with their families. Collectively, the spirit of these young men has guided him through this season, in which he's posted career highs in goals and points while earning the trust of Blues coach Ken Hitchcock.

Ryan Reaves has made it. And Price, Haiart and Oake have been with him the entire time.
"I think about them a lot. Sometimes it's in a weird dream where they pop up. It's fun to see them once in a while in a weird way like that. Just thinking about how short life is, I think that's what keeps you motivated," Reaves said.

"They're really good friends and really close to the family. Guys who were lost too early. It's a tough situation, but it makes me stronger thinking about them."
 

lundi 9 juin 2014

Player of the day : Brian Bellows #player #day #hockey #nhl #montreal #stars




Brian Edward Bellows (born September 1, 1964) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey player. He played nearly 1200 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the Minnesota North Stars, Montreal Canadiens, Tampa Bay Lightning, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and the Washington Capitals. He was a member of the 1993 Stanley Cup-winning Montreal Canadiens.






Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 210 lb (95 kg; 15 st 0 lb)
Position Left Wing
Shot Right
Played for Minnesota North Stars
Montreal Canadiens
Tampa Bay Lightning
Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
Washington Capitals
Berlin Capitals
National team  Canada
NHL Draft 2nd overall, 1982
Minnesota North Stars
Playing career 1982–1999















Playing career

Bellows played junior hockey in the Ontario Hockey League with the Kitchener Rangers. During this time, he was featured in Sports Illustrated, which described him as the hottest prospect since Wayne Gretzky.[1]



Bellows was drafted second overall by the Minnesota North Stars, who had acquired the draft pick in a trade with Detroit with the purpose of having a shot at Bellows. North Stars GM Lou Nanne sent Don Murdoch, Greg Smith, and a first round pick (Murray Craven) to the Wings in exchange for what later turned out to be the second overall draft pick. Bellows was often compared to Gretzky, which led to a tough rookie season. The pressure of such comparisons caused criticisms when he did not live up to them. Bellows improved greatly in the second half of the season and finished with 35 goals. In the playoffs that year, Bellows scored 9 points (5 goals, 4 assists) in 9 games.
Bellows played 10 seasons with the North Stars and was popular in Minnesota for his charity work, as well as his goal-scoring. He had a North Star record 342 goals in 753 games, peaking with 55 goals in 1989–90. In 1990–91, Bellows scored 29 points in the post-season to become the North Stars career playoff point leader, and took the North Stars to the Stanley Cup finals where they fell to the Pittsburgh Penguins.



When team captain Craig Hartsburg was injured partway through the 1983–84 season, Bellows was named interim captain for the remainder of the season. At 19 years and 4 months, Bellows became captain at an earlier age than Gabriel Landeskog and Sidney Crosby. However, because he was an interim captain, Landeskog is still considered the youngest captain in history.[2][3]



On August 31, 1992, Bellows was traded to the Montreal Canadiens for Russ Courtnall. The trade angered Bellows at first, but he relished the chance to play for the Canadiens. Bellows remarked "I hope to score more than last year. I want to come in and prove I can still play to the levels expected. I was shocked [about the trade] but I'm excited about the new change. My idol was Ken Dryden. It's every kid's dream to play for the Canadiens." In the 1992-93 NHL season his 88 points were the second highest season total of his career, and his 15 playoff points helped the Canadiens win the Stanley Cup in 1993.



As his career was winding down, Bellows played for the Tampa Bay Lightning, Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and the Washington Capitals. In the 1997–98 NHL season the Capitals made it to the Stanley Cup finals, but lost to the Detroit Red Wings. En route to the Eastern Conference championship, Bellows scored the series-clinching overtime goal in the first round in Game 6 against the Boston Bruins. The 1998–99 season was his last. On January 2, 1999, Bellows scored his 1000th career regular season point, becoming the 54th NHL player to reach that plateau.



Bellows was named to the 1990 Second All-Star team, and played in three NHL All-Star Games (1984, 1988 and 1992). He retired with 485 goals, 537 assists and 1,022 points. He was named the top forward at the 1989 World Ice Hockey Championships, as Canada won the silver medal.

Awards

 

 

Career statistics