
Gary Bettman tears down Paul Bissonnette's 'ridiculous' theory about Florida NHL teams
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman knocked down a 'ridiculous' claim by commentator Paul Bissonnette that NHL teams based in Florida have a big advantage due to the lack of a state income tax.
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Bettman tore down the argument during an appearance on TNT's panel on Monday night prior to Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final between the Edmonton Oilers and Florida Panthers.
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As the group of commentators lobbed questions towards Bettman, who has served as NHL commissioner since 1993, it came to Bissonnette's turn at the plate.
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The former NHLer, who is affectionately known as BizNasty, brought up his previously aired concerns about the perceived competitive advantage for the teams in Florida.
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'I don't want to take anything away from the teams from Florida and the state of Florida,' Bissonnette began. 'Any plans maybe in the future to implement a balance as far as the no state tax?'
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Bettman was all over it, instantly shooting down any notion of the sort.
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'It's a ridiculous issue,' the 73-year-old began. 'When the Florida teams weren't good, which was for about 17 years, OK, nobody said anything about it.
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NHL commissioner Gary Bettman calls Paul Bissonnette's concern about the NHL & Florida's lack of state tax "ridiculous."
Bettman adds, "I was watching you during the prior rounds. Your attire was a little suspect in terms of your journalistic objectivity." 🏒🎙️ #NHL #StanleyCup https://t.co/eLmLyNCi2c pic.twitter.com/25Tuu8gKnm
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) June 9, 2025
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'For those of you that played, were you sitting there with a tax table? No, you wanted to go to a good organization in a place you wanted to live where you wanted to raise your kids and send them to school. You wanted to play in a first-class arena with a first-class training facility with an owner, an organization, a GM and a coach that you were comfortable with. And you wanted to have good teammates so you would have a shot at winning.
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'That's what motivates. Could it be a little bit of a factor if everything else were equal? I suppose, but that's not it. By the way, state taxes are high in Los Angeles, high in New York. What are we going to do, subsidize those teams?'
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While Bettman's argument is fair, it can't be denied that Florida is on an unprecedented run of success. Between the Panthers and the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Sunshine State has boasted the Eastern Conference champion in each of the past six seasons.
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Bissonnette also jokingly asked if his team of choice — the Toronto Maple Leafs — could perhaps get a bit of a break with some big decisions looming in free agency this summer.
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CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
How the Edmonton Oilers fandom became a kind of religion
Social Sharing For the second year in a row, the Edmonton Oilers are facing off against the Florida Panthers in the Stanley Cup Finals — and the culture of the Oilers fanbase has reached a new kind of fever pitch. Today on Commotion, CBC Edmonton reporter Min Dhariwal and professor Judith Ellen Brunton discuss how the intensity of Oilers fandom in Edmonton transcends mere hometown boosterism to resemble something more like a religion. We've included some highlights below, edited for length and clarity. For the full discussion, listen and follow Commotion with Elamin Abdelmahmoud on your favourite podcast player. WATCH | Today's episode on YouTube: Elamin: Min, I'll start by maybe offering my condolences over game three. I hope things get a little bit better. But we're not here to talk about what is happening on the ice…. Give me a sense of the vibe, of what happens when the Oilers are in the finals. Min: Yeah, well, after a game like game three, the vibe kind of gets knocked down a couple of notches. But I mean, this run has been as good if not better than last year's, and the city is just alive, right? It doesn't matter if you go into a store, you jump into a cab, the driver might be wearing an Oilers jersey, or might have a flag on the car. You go downtown, you see flags and Oilers paraphernalia in the windows, up in the towers. On game days, the downtown just becomes a zoo … and people are wearing their jerseys all day long. So it has certainly made spring and summertime in Edmonton the last couple of years very different from how it used to be for many, many years. Elamin: Judith, the premise of this conversation is, it's not just that a city gets excited when their team is in the finals. It's that there is something different about this fandom. You're a professor of religious studies. Your particular area is Alberta and the way that religious ideology intertwines with the province's culture of oil, oil production, prosperity and also hockey. You recently wrote about this for The Conversation, about how the history kind of amplifies the intensity of this fandom. Can you unpack that idea of where this fandom maybe meets religion? Judith: For sure. I mean, you said it: when there's something weird going on, that's a good moment for a scholar of religion to appear, so here I am. I think that whenever we talk about shared values or zeal, or identity or commitment, that's a good moment to think about religion, because one way to describe religion is just kind of a technology of shared values, or a way people organize their values together. And scholars of religion and sport, which include my co-author for that piece, Cody Musselman, have studied a lot about how team sports act really religionally…. They have lots of rituals. They have prayers and superstitions. Folks wear special clothing, they have certain ideas of how to preserve purity. So a lot of that is already going on with sports. And then of course we can add oil to this, because Oilers evoke another aspect of Canadian society that I think for some people has almost religious importance, which is resource extraction. And in Canadian culture, oil has always been kind of entangled with religion — both religion as we would recognize it institutionally, but also kind of this idea that it's a blessing from God, or it's tied up in ideas of what a good life is and how to live it. So for lots of people in resource extraction communities like Alberta, the possibility of success and the good life that that promises really gets valued over and above other possible risks, including environmental. And the Edmonton Oilers showcase this worldview for sure, in which there's this idea of triumph and luck and rugged work pays off. This is a belief that functions on the ice and in the oil field. So luck is really central to both oil worldviews and hockey worldviews. Historically, this is essential for perseverance within fossil fuel extraction. Striking it rich in the oil fields is really entangled with the idea of divine providence. And sports, similarly, is thrilling, right? You can put all this work in, you can have all the great plans, you have all the right players, but it really takes luck to strike it rich. So oil culture is definitely, in the case of the Oilers, pairing this idea of divine favour with an insistence on rough-and-tumble endurance, which is definitely what's happening on the ice.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Oilers contemplating at least one lineup change for Game 4 of Stanley Cup final
Edmonton Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch directs his team during practice in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Tuesday, June 10, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette FORT LAUDERDALE — The Oilers could mix things up for Game 4 of the Stanley Cup final. Head coach Kris Knoblauch said Wednesday he's contemplating at least one lineup change with Edmonton trailing the Florida Panthers 2-1 in the best-of-seven title series. One potential switch for the Oilers, who are coming off an undisciplined 6-1 defeat Monday, could see defenceman Troy Stecher draw in for John Klingberg. Knoblauch declined to name his starting goaltender for Thursday after Stuart Skinner was pulled in the third period of Game 3. Edmonton forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, meanwhile, remains a question mark after missing Tuesday's practice. The 32-year-old with five goals and 13 assists in these playoffs was also a game-time decision Monday. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 11, 2025. Joshua Clipperton, The Canadian Press

Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
How Canadian NBA star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander began charting his path to MVP when he was a teen
Before turning heads as an NBA All-Star and fashion icon, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was a kid with a singular focus: becoming the best he could be at basketball. What he didn't have (at first) in height, he made up for in dedication, persuading his coach to unlock the school gym for him at 6 a.m. each morning so he could train. That coach was Dwayne Washington, founder and director of basketball club Uplay Canada in Hamilton, where Gilgeous-Alexander grew up. Washington was also a science teacher at Sir Allan MacNab Secondary School, where Gilgeous-Alexander – known to fans simply as SGA – attended part of high school. Washington was SGA's club coach and his high-school coach during that time. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander conquered the NBA. Now, he's conquering the fashion world Now, the Oklahoma City Thunder star and recently named MVP is playing in his first NBA Finals –and OKC fans hope he'll help the team win their first championship for their city. Washington spoke to The Globe and Mail ahead of Game 3 in the series about what it's like to watch SGA take centre stage – and what can be learned from his example. How did you first get to know Shai Gilgeous-Alexander? He came to one of our club tryouts. He was entering eighth grade. He was pretty short. He didn't stand out much. The only thing that stood out was that he was very locked in and focused on whatever we were telling him. He wasn't looking around, he wasn't distracted. His concentration was extremely sharp. What was he like to coach? His goal-setting was high. And those goals are everything you see today – MVP, All-Star. It was a long list. He was task-oriented, trying to work on his skills all the time. He'd come in the morning for his own practice, make me get up at 6 a.m., and then at 12 o'clock he would eat lunch in the health room and we'd watch video of different players. Then we had practice after school, and then he would go to the YMCA, and then go home and do his homework. He was very focused and disciplined. He didn't get distracted. He knew what he wanted to do. When SGA was trying to become the best he could at the game, was it all about that discipline and focus – or were there also other things you could see he was doing? It was discipline and consistency. What he would do is take all the drills and videos and work on them, tirelessly. He does it to this day. He would work, work, work, work, work and try to master everything to exhaustion. It was pretty cool to see. You see kids do that when they try to get As or valedictorian. He was trying to become a valedictorian in basketball. I read that you tried to bring some of your teachings as a science teacher into the game of basketball. Tell me about that. One hundred per cent, I've done that for 20 years. He was just the only one who cared about it. I brought in geometry, physics, biology. And I related it to basketball, his body, you know – projection, trajectory, motion, speed, pace. The truth is, I've taught a lot of guys these things – they don't care, it's boring, they're looking at their phone, they're on to the next thing. But he was 14 going on 37 in terms of his focus. He just really took to it. He's a special guy and a gifted learner. How have you seen his work ethic, and these other traits you're describing, on display during the playoffs and finals? He is very meticulous about where he needs to get, how he's going to get there and when he needs to get there. There's not a lot of wasted energy, because he has to play the whole game. I can tell what he's going to do before he does it, because he's setting things up early. It's like a high-level boxing match: jab, jab, jab, hook; jab, jab, jab, body shot. It's very intelligent. It's pretty cool to see it all play out, almost as if it's a great actor and you see the person studying their lines in the hallway and then they get on stage and put it together. What was it like to see SGA named NBA MVP – the first Canadian to win the award since Steve Nash? It was a surreal feeling. I don't have a word for it. I would just say it was a surreal moment. SGA is a star, but there are three other Canadians in this year's finals as well. As someone who's coached so many young players in this country, how does it feel to see Canadians succeed? It's satisfaction. You take so much time away from your family, kids, your own goals, dreams. All that time was worth it because you see guys not wasting your efforts. You want them to be happy and do something with it, it doesn't have to be the NBA, it could just be learning transferable skills. But to see them do it at the highest level, it justifies the time – because we're never going to get that time back. So, it's really rewarding. What advice do you have for parents of young athletes about how they can nurture their talent? I would say [make sure the kid is] a well-rounded athlete. Shai played a lot of other sports. He is able to make decisions on the court because he has a balanced experience – for example, lateral movement with soccer; with football, toughness. The issue is for every Shai, there are people who don't know when to rest their bodies, eat, sleep, turn their phone off. Shai goes to bed early, he turns his phone off, he eats balanced. His mind, body, his spirit – it's all on the same page. Make sure the kid is well-rounded. They'll thank you later. What other lessons do you think anyone watching can learn from SGA? For parents whose kids love sports, it would be great if they were watching the games with them. See how Shai goes about manipulating the game and controlling the tempo. He's not a big physical force – he's someone who's doing it with mind and effort. Those are the two things that our children can control: their effort and mindset. He's not LeBron James, he's not the biggest guy on the court. He controls what he controls and when you do that, you can perform very well. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.