10-19-2011, 11:39 AM
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#175
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Will herf for food
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Mike
Location: Home is where I park it
Posts: 4,075
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Re: NHL '11 - '12 Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by GreekGodX
Datsuyk had 2 rare turnovers behind the net that led to both Wild goals. But we came back and won in OT 3-2.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ahbroody
I didn't see you on the ice. Must have missed your shifts.
Sharks didn't learn their lesson from last year looks like they will drop another tonight. Looking at 1-3 start. I know they changed a decent number of pieces, but there are enough vets that this shouldn't be happening.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GreekGodX
You didn't?! I was even smoking a cigar out there 
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I couldn't help but think of this article I read:
http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/...hat-do-mean-we
Quote:
What Do You Mean, 'We?'
The most overused term in sports
We really need to find a better rebounder.
I can't believe we won that game in the bottom of the ninth.
How do you think we're going to do on Sunday?
Here's the deal: If you don't play for, or you are not an employee of, the team in question, "we" is not the pronoun you're looking for.
"They" is the word you want.
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Because we're talking about sports, there are certain gray areas, of course. I'm a reasonable man. If you're a resident of Green Bay, Wis., you might be able to say "we" when you're talking about the Packers, because you might very well own some small percentage of the team.
If you're a fan of the Toronto Maple Leafs, you can probably say "we," because your faithful devotion to that miserable team is the principal reason they will always be ****. You might as well accept your share of the blame.
College teams present the most interesting dilemma. If you're a student at a university, and you somehow help fund the team through your student fees — I'll freely admit that this might be a purely Canadian, socialist phenomenon — then "we" is appropriate.
But if you've never even attended the school? Then there's no "we" about it.
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But wait, WAIT, the fans said to me the other night. Sports teams are different from all those other objects of affection. Teams are part of the social fabric of a community. They play in a stadium that we probably paid for. Their name includes the name of my hometown. I'll still love the team long after the current players are gone. How come they can say "we," and I can't? I was here before them, and I'll be here after them. I'm more part of this team than they are.
Tell that to Expos fans or Whalers fans or Browns fans or Grizzlies fans. There wasn't much they could do to change the direction of things, was there? "We" would have meant being able to do something about it. "We" means participant, not observer.
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I'm not busting your chops Christos. I've been known to say it too. I just happened accross this article and throught of yours and Mike's recent posts. It's a pretty funny read, although I can't say I entirely agree. I think the author is being a little uptight about it but, it does make for a good laugh.
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“Eating and sleeping are the only activities that should be allowed to interrupt a man's enjoyment of his cigar;” Mark Twain
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