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NHL Deputy Commissioner Shuts Down Report About Possible Ban Of Ovechkin & Russians Under Biden

NHL Deputy Commissioner Shuts Down Report About Possible Ban Of Ovechkin & Russians Under Biden

Yahoo9 hours ago
NHL deputy commissioner Bill Day shut down reports that the league was never involved in any plans to expel Washington Capitals captain Alex Ovechkin or Russians from the NHL in 2024.
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FROM THE ARCHIVES: Revisiting The Always Passionate Dale Hunter And His Quest For A Cup
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Revisiting The Always Passionate Dale Hunter And His Quest For A Cup

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Revisiting The Always Passionate Dale Hunter And His Quest For A Cup

This piece was originally published in The Hockey News magazine, vol. 51, issue 37, on Jun 19, 1998 BY MICHAEL ULMER There is grey hair where it was once jet black, no speed where there once was a little. Time has tinged every outward feature in 38-year-old Dale Hunter and left him untouched inside. Five years removed from his infamous late hit on then-New York Islander Pierre Turgeon, Hunter is in the Stanley Cup final for the first time in 18 seasons. The Washington Capitals' captain has moved from villain to sympathetic character. Hunter's nastiness, which spilled out so graphically in the Turgeon hit, has kept him in the game far longer than much more talented players. His game, once a potent cocktail of intimidation and skill, could be riveting and repellent, skillful and chilling. His shopworn features and six-word sentences are what the game was once about. 'Dale Hunter,' said teammate Bill Ranford, 'is a true-blue Canadian hockey player.' In person, Hunter is unerringly gentle natured. The gap between the on-ice persona and the off-ice demeanor is startling. 'People in the media are looking for flash. He doesn't say much, he's not interesting to the electronic media in particular,' said Washington coach Ron Wilson. 'It's like watching a Sutter brother get interviewed. But what Dale does off the ice, his work ethic, he hasn't changed a bit.' 'I don't think the passion changes as you get older,' Hunter said. 'I think as you get older, you enjoy every minute more.' Only three times has Hunter advanced as far as a division final (twice with the Quebec Nordiques, once in Washington) and each time his team was swept. Once an upper echelon star, Hunter has no false pride about his standing. 'I'm a role player,' he said without a trace of embarrassment."You do what you have to to keep playing.' 'He's still relentless and 1 think he has shown in the past, he'll do anything to win,' Wilson said, 'good or bad.' The bad happened in the 1993 playoffs when Hunter blind-sided Turgeon seconds after the Islanders' star scored a series-clinching goal. The late hit left Turgeon with an injured shoulder. Hunter was hit with a 21-game suspension the following season and there are those who will argue Turgeon, coming off a career 132-point season, has never been the same player. Hunter said the chance to hold the Stanley Cup, not a lasting repositioning of his image, made advancing to the final so memorable. 'That was in the past,' he said. 'You know to win a Stanley Cup is every kid's dream. You don't dream of losing a Stanley Cup when you're out in the yard. You dream of winning it.' Hunter worked the fringes of the first Caps' appearance in the final in the club's 24-year history, holding down an effective fourth line with Chris Simon and Craig Berube. He played between six and 11 minutes a game, most spent bashing Buffalo Sabres' defenders about in their own end. He had no goals and three assists in 17 games. Playing as hard as he can has been Hunter's hallmark since he broke in with Quebec in 1981. An incendiary competitor, he topped 200 penalty minutes for his first six years in the league and four times hit the 20-goal mark in that span. After seven seasons in Quebec, Hunter was shipped by the Nordiques to Washington. It would have been a disastrous deal, but for the first-round draft choice shipped to Quebec that the Nordiques used to draft Joe Sakic in 1987. Hunter is playing out another one-year contract, as he has the past couple of seasons, and clearly his days in the league are dwindling to a precious few. If Hunter's ability to reach trouble has slowed, his taste for it has not. 'I believe the harder the game, the tougher the situation, the better he's going to play,' Berube said. 'It's like when we work out. We'11 go ride the bike and he'll say we'll do 30 minutes, nice and easy. We get 10 minutes into it, he doesn't like it. he pushes it so hard that when you're done riding, you're cooked. That's Dale.'

Former Kings Defender Signs PTO With Minnesota Wild
Former Kings Defender Signs PTO With Minnesota Wild

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Former Kings Defender Signs PTO With Minnesota Wild

On Monday (Aug. 11) afternoon, former Los Angeles Kings' defender Jack Johnson was revealed to have signed a professional tryout (PTO) contract with the Minnesota Wild. Johnson, who is 38 years old, spent parts of six seasons with the Kings between 2006 and 2012 before joining the Columbus Blue Jackets. He has also played with the Pittsburgh Penguins, the New York Rangers, the Colorado Avalanche, and the Chicago Blackhawks. Through 1228 career games, Johnson has scored 77 goals and added 265 assists for 342 points, which comes out to a 0.28 points-per-game average. Johnson looks to continue his long career by earning a contract with another new team.

Kraken Agree To A Two-Year Deal With Ryker Evans
Kraken Agree To A Two-Year Deal With Ryker Evans

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kraken Agree To A Two-Year Deal With Ryker Evans

The Seattle Kraken have signed the third and final RFA on their NHL roster, agreeing to a two-year, $2.05 million contract with defenseman Ryker Evans. The 23-year-old played his first full season up in the NHL, scoring five goals and 25 points in 73 games. Evans looked comfortable in the NHL, playing as a top-four defenseman while Vince Dunn was out with an injury and on the third pairing when the Kraken defense core was healthy. 'Ryker took a positive step forward in his first full season in the NHL,' Kraken general manager Jason Botterill said. 'Since turning pro, he's shown improvement year over year, and we're confident he'll take his game to another level next season. We're happy to have him under contract." Evans was a second-round pick (35th overall) in the 2021 NHL Draft, now skating in 109 NHL games in his career. Evans is shaping up to be a large part of the Kraken's future as they shift into a new era focusing on youth. Evans is a stout defender with solid puck skills that make him a dual threat. He was selected to Team Canada's World Championship roster, where he got to rep the Maple Leaf for the first time in his career. In eight games, Evans recorded two assists and a plus-6. With Dunn and Ryan Lindgren seemingly pencilled into the top four, it appears Evans will start the season as a third-pairing defenseman, but he'll be given every opportunity to fight for a larger role.

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