
Hotstove Hockey Talk
KK Hockey —
Pierre LeBrun, Mike Milbury and David Shoalts join Ron MacLean on the HNIC Hotstove.
Make sure to check out the “fight-helmet” Pierre introduces.
Sunday scuttlebutt: On the salary cap, the trapezoid, head shots, Zetterberg deals, and revenue sharing
Snapshots —
Sunday scuttlebutt: On the salary cap, the trapezoid, head shots, Zetterberg deals, and revenue sharing By George Malik November 08, 2009, 12:30PM Sunday morning/afternoon's crop of columns from the NHL's biggest talking heads include this gem from the Boston Globe's Kevin Dupont, who doesn't seem to understand that the NHLPA chose to hold the line on this year's salary cap so that a good hundred or so players were re-signed by their teams instead of packing their bags and moving to other cities, engaging in a necessary evil that they'll pay out via escrow withholdings: November 8, Boston Globe : NHL clubs this season must abide by a $56.8 million ...
Fantasy Hockey Scouts: Daily Dosage - Nov 9th, 2009
Fantasy Hockey Scouts —
Dosage Express Stastny gets the stats... Eller might stick around... A-Mac comes back... have you seen the fight helmet?
Daily Diarrhea
After two ...
The Hot Stove With Ron MacLean and Friends
The Rat Trick | A Florida Panthers Blog —
On Saturday night during the hockey season, you need to make sure that you catch “The Hot Stove” which is on between the 2nd and 3rd periods on Hockey Night In Canada . Ron MacLean always has some very interesting topics to discuss with his colleagues each and every Saturday. If you can’t watch it live, records it, or find it on You Tube. This week’s show, however, you have to see! Thanks for watching. Cheers
The Morning Skate: Will General Managers Act on Head Shots?
Slap Shot —
The N.H.L. general managers are meeting today and tomorrow in Toronto and David Shoalts in The Globe and Mail writes “Head shots will dominate the agenda,” although he believes that, “adopting an on-ice penalty directed at them is still a long shot.” In yesterday’s Toronto Star, Damien Cox wrote the general managers were more likely to adopt a half measure and eliminate the trapezoid behind the goal, the legal area for goaltenders to handle the puck. The thinking is that if goalies can play the puck anywhere, they can clear it more easily and spare their defensemen from being creamed by a forechecker more often. That’s O.K. as far as it goes. The ...


