#Cole Giordano
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alainas-sims · 9 months ago
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Alexandrea's Journal
My son got married today and I couldn't have been a prouder mother of the groom. I can hardly believe it— he and Mary are both so young still, but then again, so was I. Mary's parents, Agustín and Lorena, insisted on a Catholic church wedding, not like my courthouse wedding to Héctor. Gloria was so happy to be a bridesmaid and show off her dress, though of course she knows today is all about Salvador and Mary. Sal is going to move in with Mary and her family and while I'm sad to see him leave our modest apartment, I know he is in great hands with his new wife.
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ghiessa · 2 years ago
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Yuve Yuve Yu
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3416 · 2 years ago
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Inside the strange and secretive business of team-mandated NHL fines
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By Joshua Kloke | Mar 27, 2023 | The Athletic
Ryan Hartman walked into the Minnesota Wild practice facility with a sense of resolve. The nine-year NHL forward had been a healthy scratch the previous evening against the Philadelphia Flyers.
But righting a wrong was only one of the items on his to-do list.
“Today,” Hartman said, nodding while looking around the Wild dressing room, “is tax day.”
As he does once a month, Hartman will work his way around the Wild dressing room and collect money from his teammates.
The previous night, Hartman pored over a spreadsheet with updated tallies of who owes what. He sent out a flurry of text messages to teammates: “This is what you owe. I’m coming for you tomorrow.”
Call Hartman what you want: the taxman, the team treasurer, the fine master. Hartman has a volunteer position in charge of handling a consistently growing pot of money accrued from Wild players. Most teams require a player like Hartman because large amounts of money changing hands among teammates is a tradition in the NHL. That money is gathered in large part to encourage team building. Part of the money collected is because players voluntarily have put “money on board,” a practice of promising an amount of money before a game a player will owe should the team win, be it for playing in their hometown or, say, if they’re playing in a milestone game.
And then there’s another practice: getting fined for a variety of unconventional infractions.
“There’s so many things you get fined for,” Maple Leafs defenseman Mark Giordano said.
Not every team fines players. And many that do see it as a dwindling yet good-natured practice. It’s one some veterans believe has merit.
Welcome to the strange, almost-secretive world of team-mandated NHL fines.
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Almost a generation ago, Marc-André Fleury was a reserved young goalie trying to man his way through the rules of his new life in the NHL: the unflappable importance of being on time for meetings and flights, the heightened dress codes compared to junior hockey — and, um, being well-mannered.
“There was a guy on Pittsburgh who would always pick his nose in the locker room,” Fleury said. The embarrassment of being caught wasn’t punishment enough. “So every time, guys would shout at him, ‘Hey, 10 bucks.’”
Early in Fleury’s rookie year, he got hit with his own first hefty fine.
“I couldn’t tie my tie,” Fleury said, recalling how then-veteran teammate Marc Bergevin would chirp him relentlessly. “So, I got fined because my tie looked terrible.”
A large percentage of team-directed fines remains contingent on wardrobe choices.
Leafs forward Zach Aston-Reese remembered a former teammate getting fined for wearing Cole Haan shoes. Even with the slowly shifting dress codes among NHL teams, teammates aren’t afraid to dole out fines if a player’s look starts to slip. That goes for accessories, too.
“At training camp, you get a (swag) bag with a bunch of stuff in it,” Maple Leafs defenseman Morgan Rielly said. A former teammate was using it as his travel bag. “We said if he showed up for the next flight with that bag, it’s a $500 fine.”
Most players surveyed for this story agree $500 is the de facto fine amount.
Flyers forward James van Riemsdyk said one of his teammates might get fined this season because “all of his clothes and all of his luggage are either team-issued or NHLPA-issued.”
“You’re in the NHL,” Rielly said. “You’re not supposed to be wearing the same shirt six days in a row. I always think that’s pretty funny.”
It’s always veterans who enforce these kinds of fines.
“This year, we had a younger guy who had a little incident with his wardrobe choice at a dinner,” Buffalo Sabres captain Kyle Okposo said. “Sweatpants on the road. That’s worth a fine. He’s learning.”
Fines don’t stop at wardrobe-related infractions.
“I’m a big believer in the common sense fine,” Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Erik Gudbranson said. “A cheap one.”
Example: Should an NHL player get caught wearing white socks with dress shoes or leave their towel on the floor after coming out of the shower, these are fineable offenses according to Gudbranson, even if it’s just $50.
“Sometimes it can be funny,” Gudbranson said. “But it can also be a sign of respect.”
Not every team takes this approach, however.
New Jersey Devils defenseman Damon Severson was adamant that the Devils don’t have a strict dress code and, therefore, have barely had to fine any players this season.
“If you want to wear white shoes with dress socks, we don’t give a s— about any of that stuff here,” Severson said. “We believe just in being yourself. If you go back a few years, (former Devils general manager Lou Lamoriello) had rules with the dress code and shaving, but it’s kind of the opposite now — and that’s no disrespect to Lou. We want our personalities to be shown.”
Speaking of grooming habits, van Riemsdyk said if one of his Flyers teammates gets caught with a flashy new haircut, that’s a fine. He admits it’s a struggle for players like him who keep it tight up top. He said, almost quietly out of fear of getting found out by nearby teammates, that he got a haircut a few days prior.
“It almost works the other way: You get a haircut every two or three weeks, it doesn’t look like you’ve gotten a cut. Then you can steer clear of (a fine),” van Riemsdyk said.
Edmonton Oilers forward Derek Ryan knew he was going to get hit with a fine ahead of a game against the Arizona Coyotes on Dec. 7. While taking standard laps in warmup, Ryan bumped into a teammate and fell to the ice.
“My helmet went flying everywhere, stick on the ice,” Ryan said.
Wow, that’s embarrassing, Ryan thought to himself.
Equally embarrassing would be the shame of having to pay for the mistake afterward. Every team The Athletic surveyed agreed that when players fall on the ice during warmups, they’re on the hook for $500.
“I remember I knocked (then-teammate Brendan Shanahan) over in warmups,” Islanders forward Zach Parise recalled of the one season he spent alongside the Hall of Famer. “I wasn’t about to impose a fine for that.”
The rule has taken on different iterations league-wide. Fleury said the Wild charge double if a player loses his helmet. The Nashville Predators go the other way, according to defenseman Ryan McDonagh.
“If you fall on one knee, that’s only half the fine. But if it’s a full wipeout, that’s a full fine. You’ve got to be careful out there,” McDonagh said.
Then there’s the fine players are almost terrified of: being late for a team function, a meeting or a departing bus or flight.
“A team sin,” Severson said.
Driving through downtown Columbus en route to a team gala recently, Blue Jackets forward Sean Kuraly realized he was well behind schedule.
“The fine just stamps that you were late,” Kuraly said. “It’s embarrassing. It’s like you’re the guy who’s not following the things that help the team.”
Leafs forward Noel Acciari remembers during his time with the Florida Panthers that if a player was late for a meeting, they’d be on the hook for the next team dinner.
But that would easily be more expensive than a standard $500 fine, no?
“Especially when you know someone else is paying for dinner,” Acciari joked.
The list of fineable offenses doesn’t stop there: If a player, before puck drop, is taking part in a game of Sewer Ball — which players try to keep a soccer ball from hitting the ground in a circle to limber up — and you kick the ball to the ceiling, that’s a fine. Getting the ball stuck in the ceiling raises the fine even more.
If a cellphone starts ringing in a team meeting? One player said that’s a fineable offense on his Western Conference team.
Fleury recalled getting a $250 fine for breaking a stick.
“I was real mad after a game, and I swung my stick,” he said. “It was a wood stick, too, so it was only $60. So, they made a profit.”
Still, plenty of players surveyed by The Athletic insist they’ve avoided being fined throughout their entire NHL careers.
“You have to really screw up to get fined,” Rielly said.
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OK, so you owe money for a fine, and it’s time to pay the piper. Sabres fine collector Zemgus Girgensons offers many payment options.
“I’ve got everything. Venmo, Square, check,” he said.
Every fine keeper throughout the NHL has their own manner of collecting fines, but most of them, like Predators fine keeper Colton Sissons, prefer payment electronically.
“We had to change with the times,” Sissons said, noting how he acquired a Square chip reader to accept payments. Sissons set up a separate bank account just for the team’s fine and money-on-the-board funds, and he owns a credit card for that account if he needs to make team-related purchases.
“It’s a business,” he said, only partly in jest. “I catch guys when we’re stuck on the plane together. They know I don’t take any s—.”
Hartman also uses a credit card swiper to collect fines.
“No excuses. If someone says, ‘I don’t have a check today,’ I’m like, ‘Well, hand me your wallet,’” he said.
There are other methods. Some teams such as the Blues and the Oilers take fines directly out of players’ paychecks.
“You didn’t even have to worry. Which is better, because you know it’s being taken care of,” Acciari said of his time with the Blues.
Some teams, like the Leafs, prefer to keep it old school and deal in cash only.
“It’s a hassle to go to the bank,” Leafs defenseman Justin Holl said.
To mitigate the hassle for Rielly, the Leafs collector, he had a safe built into his dressing-room stall at Scotiabank Arena. He’ll remind players of their dues on game days so he can quickly throw the money into his safe, though he openly admits “it’s hard to track guys down.”
It’s hard not to read Rielly’s efforts as him tiring of the process.
“I liked doing it (when he started),” Rielly said of being the fine keeper. “I don’t like doing it as much anymore.”
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So why do it? What benefit is there for the fine keeper?
“Someone’s got to do it,” Girgensons said, shrugging his shoulders.
Multiple NHL players said for a player to be appointed the fine keeper, they only have to tick a few boxes: If you’re a well-liked and trusted veteran, this glamorous job may be yours for the taking.
“It’s actually a lot more work than anyone thinks,” Sissons said.
What about some slight interest in numbers? Perhaps balancing books for an NHL team’s fine fund is a precursor to a career after hockey in finance?
“I did like math class,” Sissons said. “But that’s not why I took the job. I guess people think I’m trustworthy.”
Modest as some of the fine keepers might be, there are perks to the job if you put the effort in. If you’re able to manage large sums of money and transfer them back and forth between a bank account and a credit card, you could be in for some sneaky benefits.
“I pay for things out of my own account, and I get all the points,” Sissons said.
Hartman agrees. After collecting payments from players, he uses a credit card to use that money to shell out for team events.
“The credit card is maxed out right now. We’ve had a few trips recently … with some big dinners,” Hartman said.
He’s not bothered though. The recently-engaged Hartman is thinking long-term: Stay on top of guys, and then use that money to pay for team functions, and those points will add up.
“Maybe I’ll get a honeymoon out of it,” he said, a smile creeping out from behind his thick beard.
Hartman’s plan isn’t devious by any means. Even for him, there is a team-building element to being the collector of the fines, and some NHL players informed of his process appeared slightly jealous. Every month, Hartman will buy three $500 Best Buy gift certificates and hand them out to his three Wild teammates who paid the most money that month into the team’s fund. It’s partly an incentive both for paying on time and for contributing to the team fund, but partly born out of Hartman’s own guilt.
“It’s a discount,” he said, modestly. “I feel bad. But we do spend it.”
And spend they do. Come the end of the season, there is always an effort to put the money back in the hands of the team.
For the Leafs, perhaps that means the team taking in an NFL game on the road. There are Super Bowl parties and Masters parties, too. And on Feb. 27, multiple Leafs took in a Bruce Springsteen concert in Seattle for some team-building and to help accelerate the bonding process for newcomers. The Leafs welcomed recently acquired teammates Sam Lafferty and Jake McCabe then.
“To get into an environment like that and get to know the guys is perfect,” McCabe said of the concert.
The year-end team party often sucks the most money out of the fine fund. The amount of money teams will spend on food, drinks, event space and the event itself varies, but multiple NHL players said somewhere in the range of $50,000 for a year-end party is a fair estimate.
Gudbranson noted how after the team’s head equipment manager, Jamie Healy, logged his 2,000th professional game on Jan. 29, the team dipped into the fund to purchase him a gift.
Ultimately, many NHL veterans view the money they can raise through the fine fund as less of a benefit to the team than the practice itself.
“Us veteran guys have to hold the young guys accountable more,” McDonagh said.
Gudbranson is adamant: The practice of good habits in the NHL has been “lost a little bit.”
The argument that fining young players heightens standards of professionalism league-wide is rooted in history. Gudbranson recalls his rookie duties while playing junior hockey for the Kingston Frontenacs: Unloading equipment from the team bus, mopping floors and helping out with laundry. These duties were not rituals to make players feel beyond uncomfortable, a practice that has no place in hockey. But, according to Gudbranson, understanding the benefits of working for the team is a concept that should be applied in the NHL. And if those concepts, such as respecting the dressing room, are forgotten, Gudbranson believes “the fine system can help with that.”
“You move away from home and your parents aren’t there to parent you anymore. Those little things, they teach you a lot,” Gudbranson said.
Of course, no young NHL player is going to be asked to mop the floor as a form of punishment.
But if fining young players for otherwise asinine offenses maintains a level of professionalism in the NHL, then veterans like Gudbranson aren’t going to be afraid to remind young players to have a credit card nearby at all times.
“You’re a professional athlete,” Gudbranson said. “You’ve got to act the part.”
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boxscorehockey · 2 years ago
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22-23 Cut Tracker
Last Update March 31 , 2023
Altybarmakian Andrei Asplund Rasmus Bailey Josh Balcers Rudolfs Bankier Caedan Barrett Evan Beaupit Mason Bellows Kiefer Blichfield Joachim Borgsrtrom Henrik Brannstrom Erik Brodin Jonas Brooks Josh Brown Connor Butcher Will Carlsson Lucas Cehlarik Peter Ceulemans Corson Chekhovich Ivan Cholowski Dennis Chromiak Martin Daccord Joy Dadonov Evgeni Dahlen Jonathan Dineen Cam Dugan Jack Ekholm Mattias Ellis Ryan Elvenes Lucas Ertel Justin Foote Cal Forsbacka-Karlsson Jakob Forsmark Simon Foudy Jean-Luc Giordano Mark Gillies Jon Goncalves Gage Grundstrom Carl Guhle Brendan Gustaffson Erik Guzda Mack Hamrla Patrik Hawryluk Jayce Heineman Emil Henriksson Karl Hicketts Joe Hirose Tairo Hoffman Mike Holtby Braden Howden Brett Hreschuk Aidan Huckins Cole Jeannot Tanner Jenik Jan Jost Tyson Kapanen Kasperi Karlsson- Forsbacka Jakob Katchouk Boris Kayumov Artur Khovanov Alexander Kidney Riley Klefbom Oskar Konovalov Ilya Koskinen Mikko Kuokkanen Janne Lacombe Jackson Lauko Jakub Leason Brett Leddy Nick Mcleod Ryan Milano Sonny Miller Colin Mitchell Ian Muzzin Jake Mysak Jan Orlov Dmtri Oshie T.J. Pageau Jean-Gabriel Palmieri Kyle Patrick Nolan Perevalov Alexander Peterson Jacob Petruzelli Keith Pitlick Rem Poirier Jeremie Ponomarev Vasily (D) Puistola Patrik Pysyk Mark Rask Tuukka Rees Jamieson Ristolainen Rasmus Rittich David Robertsson Simon Robins Tristen Rodrigue Olivier Roulette Conner Roy Joshua Ruotsalainen Artuu Salo Robin Savoie Carter Scott Ian Shvyrev Igor Simon Dominik Smith Givani Stanley Logan Stromgren William Struble Jayden Sturm Nico Subban Malcolm Subban PK Svechnikov Evgeny Texier Alexandre Thomas Akil Thompson Lassi Tracey Brayden Trenin Yakov Trivigno Bobby Tufte Riley Tuomisto Antti Voracek Jakub Weber Shea White Colin Yandle Keith Zhukov Maksim
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la-mousme · 15 days ago
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HIS 5925 Module 8 Makeup
This week’s topic concerning Digital History revolves around the creation of geographical information systems (GIS) and how it implemented more accurate and ethical readings of landscapes and maps. Essentially the introduction of technology into cartography, which allows the conversation of spatial quantitative studies to integrate into the social sciences field. [1] Through a more formal definition of GIS from the Social Science History Association volume 24, the author Anne Kelly Knowles defines the purpose of GIS as a practice that should be directed through a historical lens that converts the archival material into digital form, the material being a geographical site rather than an object. [2] This allows a more dynamic and clear visual evidence in creating spatial arguments, thus increasing the collaborative purpose in digital history.
            In providing brief context, the idea GIS first came to play as beginning prototypes to solve the issue in digitizing geographical data in the mid 1960’s. [3] The rigid and limited access to GIS would soon change as the federal government’s concern in mapping a plethora of data, it would then be accessible to research projects and professionals in ryder to have some improvements made in its productions of more geographical data to be preserved. [4] The database is then turned into an accessible tool as technology have infiltrated the average household, even being used in classrooms during the late 1980s. [5] This in turn made GIS a known tool in the historical world. Knowles state, “Using GIS, however, inevitably heightens one’s awareness of geographical relationships, the physical characteristics of places and regions, and the often unmined historical data contained in maps and other geographical sources”. [6] A program progressing into a source that integrates fields of studies and creating interesting complexities in documenting locational history.
            The 2002 source from the same author, Anne Knowles, makes an integrated analysis, alongside with various professionals in the digital history field, to discuss the uses and future goals for GIS. Specifically in chapter 1, by David Rumsey and Meredith Williams, there is an alternating discussion of the benefits and setbacks of GIS in relation to traditional historical maps.[7] The article does an exceptional job of laying concerns throughout multiple fields, instead of focusing on their own subjective experience of the database.
            An example of beneficial use of the complexities within GIS, is its use of geographical data to essentially fact check or prove the displacement and genocide of the European Jewish population during WWII. The book, Geographies of the Holocaust, exhibits the use of spatial technology around the events surrounding the Holocaust. Specifically for my chapters, “Bringing the Ghetto to the Jew: Spatialities of Ghettoization in Budapest” by Time Cole and Alberto Giordano, provides GIS generated mapping of the displacement and making of ghettos in neighborhoods throughout Budapest. The chapter provides pages upon pages of maps, that even go into specifics of what curfews were set with the additional geographical information in the foot traffics of certain connecting streets. [8] In understanding foot traffic, the information even gave insight on daily activities and what limitations were set on the Jews, further extending the analysis of the Holocaust. [9]
[1] Knowles, Anne Kelly. “Introduction.” Social Science History 24, no. 3 (2000): https://doi.org/10.1215/01455532-24-3-451. 452.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid., 454.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Ibid., 458.
[7] Knowles, Anne Kelly (Ed.). (2002). "Historical Maps in GIS", In Past Time, Past Place: GIS for History. Redlands, CA: ESRI Press. 6.
[8] Cole, Tim, Alberto Giordano, and Erik B. Steiner. “Bringing the Ghetto to the Jew: Spatialities of Ghettoization in Budapest.” In Geographies of the Holocaust. Indiana University Press, 2014. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt16gzbvn.8. 145.
[9] Ibid., 149.
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dlittle30 · 2 years ago
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Social science study of the Holocaust
image: “Mapping the SS Concentration Camps,” Geographies of the Holocaust (Anne Kelly Knowles, Tim Cole, and Alberto Giordano, eds.) The complex realities of the Holocaust are now more than seventy-five years in the past. And yet the history, causes, and variations of this nightmare period have not yet been adequately understood (link). An excellent recent volume makes the case that social…
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stoopsmagazine · 3 years ago
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It’s a little late, but it’s here! Issue 9 of Stoops is now available to order online and in shops very soon!
Who are the cool kids in skateboarding? Let’s not confuse them with the “cool guys.” While that is very subjective, this issue highlights some of our favorite unique individuals in the skate diaspora. Issue 9 includes: - Cover: Sam Partaix - BS Smith, (P) Clément Le Gall - Articles: First Words, Old: Pushing Past 40, In Brief: Elise Hedge, In Brief: Mike Powley, One Offs (Photo Gallery), Documenting The Documenters, Not A Ryan Thompson Interview, The Will Sheerin Interview, Over It. - Photographers: Clément Le Gall, Dharam Khalsa, Clément Harpillard, Reece Leung, Eby Ghafarian, Mike Heikkila, Marco Hernandez, Changsu, Liam Annis, Cole Giordano, Sean Carabarin, Guru Khalsa, Bradford Bishop, Andrew Peters, Joel Powley. - Skaters: Sam Partaix, Will Sheerin, Ted Barrow, Alex Willms, Elise Hedge, Mike Powley, Louie Lopez, Ethan Loy, Vincent Milou, Kevin Bilyeu, Shinpei Ueno, Gage Boyle, Max Taylor, Phil Zwijsen, Max Murphy, Sean Paul, Josh Wilson, Leo Valls, Ryan Thompson, Lurker Lou, Dharam Khalsa, Leo Takayama, Treveon Wade, Jason Waters, Thomas Dritsas, Sergio Cadaré, Jimi Nicol, Shaun Currie, Joy Awosika, Olivier Durou, Aymeric Nocus, Alexis Jamet, Dyshon Whidbee, Radeem Walls. - Writers: Eby Ghafarian, Ted Barrow, Lurker Lou.
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stargazingsims · 3 years ago
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I’m working on another period piece, this time with the fantastic director Art Giordano. I don’t mind the stuffy clothes and tricky lines as much when I’m co-starring with people who don’t hate my guts. Looking back to my early years as an actor, I think it may have been a mistake to romance as many of my co-stars as I could. 
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mrsgiovanna · 2 years ago
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Beautiful Bria 🥰
Did you realise the fit you drew on grown up Giordano looks like the Tenjiku uniform?
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Lol omg I... was it intentional? No😒
Am I happy about it? Also no 🥲
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alainas-sims · 2 years ago
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Dear Holly,
Thank you kindly for attending the premiere of my new movie, Envy and Etiquette. It is an adaptation of the Regency romance story of the same name, and the first in which I have earned the romantic lead, as Miss Ward had turned down the role. I admit that playing the love interest of a man does sometimes make me long for love again, though I know that no one could compare to Héctor. No matter, for it is simply a role to play and Vito Ferraro is a gentleman about it.
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The children are doing fine, it seems, and I miss the time I cannot spend with them, though I do enjoy working. Salvador is a good kid, with decent grades and a bright mind, and he has been using his creativity to work on a science project when he isn't drawing or helping in the garden. And Gloria has already made friends with the girl in the building next to ours, Betsy Giordano, whose father, Art, owns the restaurant that Héc worked at all those years ago. I am glad they are adjusting well to life without a father, as painful as it is.
— Alexandrea
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mellowmagpie · 7 years ago
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In Other Lands - Sarah Rees Brennan
"So far magic school was total rubbish.”
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donvilaro · 2 years ago
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(P.O.V: Giordano is born)
Niccolo: *going to visit Bria*
Niccolo: *rings the bell*
Nico: *opens the door* Niccolo! What a lovely surprise!
Niccolo: How you've been, Nicki? *hugs her and gives a light (brotherly) kiss on her forehead* Where's Bria?
Nico: She is feeding little Giordano. Wanna see her?
Niccolo: Do you even ask?
Nico: *giggles* This way!
(In baby Giordano's room)
Bria: There, my love~♡ *finishes breastfeeding him*
Giordano (some weeks old): *baby giggle*
Giorno: *kisses Bria's cheek* Tesorina, do you need something? Water, snacks, a pillow for your back?
Nico: *slightly opens the door* There they are *whispering*
Niccolo: I'll assume from here
Bria: Oh, Cole!
Niccolo: Guess I've came in the right hour
Nico: *leaves*
Giorno: Cole, welcome *greets him properly*
Niccolo: Nice to see you, Giorno. Well, hello there, Bria~ *looks at little Giordano looking at him* Is that the famous Giogio the second?
Bria: It's zio Cole, sweetie~♡
Giordano: *keeps staring Niccolo*
Bria: Why don't you hold him?
Niccolo, with a light inner panik: Bria, I don't think—
Bria: Too late!
Niccolo: *gently holding Giordano* Heh... It's kinda... Cute.
Giorno: *hugging Bria by the waist* Guess he liked you
Niccolo: Maybe *notices little Giordano grabbing his tie and almost eating it*
Niccolo: umm ... Bria? Perhaps he's still hungry?
Bria: *laughs* awww I think he's just tired, too excited to see Zio Cole aren't we *takes Giordano*
Giorno: you're actually good with him
Niccolo: hahahah I try... you've got yourself a great family here, protect them at all costs.
Giorno: I will... what about you? When will you settle down?
Niccolo: *smiles* one day, for now I'm just enjoying life
Giorno: *pours them both a drink* to a life well lived?
Niccolo: to family... salut
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poppyflo2 · 2 years ago
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rapturerecords · 4 years ago
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BioShock’s Soundtrack Timeline Quirks and Hiccups
Here’s a question customers have posed while shopping around in this record store: “Is the BioShock soundtrack historically accurate?”
The short answer is no. This is of course including a presumption of a distinct cutoff year. If on the other hand, you would consider the reverse, “Is the BioShock soundtrack historically appropriate?”, well we shall see.
So let’s briefly break down the soundtrack of each game.
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In the first Bioshock, the game opens with the year 1960 before taking us down to the underwater city of Rapture. However, Andrew Ryan had cut off contact with the Surface some time before, coupled with the Rapture Civil War officially starting on New Year’s Day in 1959. Granted several songs in BioShock were recorded in that last decade through the 50s including “Danny Boy” (1952), “Papa Loves Mambo” (1954), “It’s Bad for Me” (1955) and so on.
Frank Fontaine’s smuggling operations could account for the fact of the very late 1959 release dates of Bobby Darin’s “Beyond the Sea” and Noël Coward’s “20th Century Blues”, however Fontaine allegedly died in September 1958 according to the newspaper article in the Rapture Standard.
Even with Fontaine’s shenanigans, it doesn’t account for the 1966 version of Patti Page’s “Doggie in the Window” or the 2004 version of Cole Porter’s “You’re the Top” as seen below. Other songs include the assorted instrumental tracks recorded in the 1990s such as “The Ballroom Waltz”, “And All the While I’m Loving You” or even the 1966 song “Academy Award”. Lastly, there is still the mystery of the numerous instrumental guitar and violin songs supposedly performed or inspired by Django Reinhardt used in BioShock.
Creative Director Ken Levine obliquely mentioned the problem of using re-recordings and alternate versions of songs in a 2007 interview with Electronic Gaming Monthly.
...Or I would research on Wikipedia or talk to my dad, and then I would go and listen to little snippets, and I'd ask myself, "Does this feel like it belongs in Rapture?" [Dealing with this era of] licensed music... is a very complicated process, because generally you're dealing with people who are dead and their lawyers are dead. The rights are often very complicated, and so a lot of times we'd want a song and we wouldn't get it. We'd have to find another person who performed it, or another version of the recording or something like that. We had to be fairly flexible.
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Overall, BioShock 2 does have the most historically accurate soundtrack of the series, excluding the songs reprised from the first BioShock. The game ostensibly takes place in 1968, or 10 years later from 1958 according to the opening titles.
All things considered, its only soundtrack transgression is using the 1976 version of “Daddy’s Little Girl” as seen below.
Aside from that, its newest songs unique to the game are 1945′s “Dream” and “It’s Only a Paper Moon”. Many songs trend older towards the 1920s and 1930s, reflecting the older portions of Rapture seen in the game with some of the oldest tracks being 1929′s “Daddy Won’t You Please Come Home” and “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out”.
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BioShock Infinite and the floating city of Columbia introduces time as central plot point and with it some interesting soundtrack implications. Keeping in mind the setting is 1912, its soundtrack can be broadly divided into three categories
Modern covers of existing period songs were recorded especially for the game such as “After You’ve Gone”, “Will the Circle Be Unbroken”, and the Scott Joplin rags.
Deliberately anachronistic songs are provided as a plot point courtesy of Messrs. Albert Fink and Scott Bradlee rearranging modern songs to sound period such as “Girls Just Want to Have Fun”, “Fortunate Son”, “Tainted Love” and so on.
Lastly there are the period songs meant to evoke the flavor of the 1912 setting.  While some are authentically of the era including some very old Edison cylinders, quite a few bleed into the 1920s and 30s including “Ain’t She Sweet” (1927), “Button Up Your Overcoat” (1929), and “St. James Infirmary” (1930). Bessie Smith manages to crossover to both cities in both BioShock Infinite and BioShock 2 with “I’m Wild About That Thing”, “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out”, and “Need a Little Sugar in My Bowl”. In addition, several recordings are presented “live” in the game, but were recorded much later such as the prison work song recorded by Alan Lomax, “Black Gal” in 1959 and “Shake Sugaree” recorded in 1967.
Lastly, Burial at Sea features a coda. Both Patsy Cline songs “She’s Got You” and “Back in Baby’s Arms” were recorded in the 1960s, well after the 1959 date of the events of the game. However in a tragic twist of fate, she would die shortly after recording the songs in a plane crash.
Creative Director Ken Levine again mentioned the problem of finding music “that sounds great to the modern ear” in a 2012 interview with Wired magazine.
But one of my favorite parts of my job is choosing the licensed music. BioShock Infinite is set in an interesting time because it’s right at the beginning of jazz and blues. Music before jazz and blues is not very listenable. I mean popular music -– it’s really kind of awful. You know, the John Philip Sousa marches and stuff. And then you get jazz and blues coming in, with the early stuff like ragtime.
It’s much more challenging to find music from that era that sounds great to a modern ear. BioShock was set in 1959, so we had this huge slate of great music to choose from. But here we don’t have all the chord progressions, and the things we like didn’t exist or had just started to exist. So finding music has been a really interesting challenge...
The most important thing is that you get people to feel things. I’ll give you a hint: There weren’t flying cities in 1912 nor were there underwater cities and genetic technology in 1959 (laughs). So, yeah, you play a little fast and loose. You could argue that this is Columbia and we do things a little differently.
You’ve already heard some of the strange musical things in the game...
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Less discerning record customers may have grabbed the wrong discs and are surprised to find the recordings don’t match what they’ve heard.
I have taken the liberty of conducting a synchronization of a number of the more unusual re-recordings which the games use instead of the originals. These are presented in the new stereophonic sound format, be advised it is recommended to have two speakers far apart to get the full effect, or at the very least avoid having two speakers that are too close together.
The original older track is on the listener’s left while the newer one used in the games are on the listener’s right.
Some of the more fantastically-minded among us down here in Rapture might be tempted to simply blame the above on those newfangled Tears. But it is the records that speak for themselves.
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Patti Page’s “The Doggie in the Window”
1952 Mercury Records version (original)
1966 Columbia Records version (used in BioShock)
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Cole Porter’s “You’re the Top”
1934 Victor Records version (original)
2004 version with Vince Giordano and The Nighthawks (used in BioShock)
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Mills Brothers’ “Daddy’s Little Girl”
1950 Decca Records version (original)
1976 Ranwood Records version (used in BioShock 2)
The original versions of the songs are featured occasionally here with the addendum that they were not actually used in the game. They are marked with the RRR for Rapture Records Recommendation.
There are number of other instances where an artist recorded more than one version of a song, typically well before, such as Noël Coward’s 1959 “Party’s Over Now” and his slightly longer 1932 version. But that’s left for another revolution of the record.
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chuckepisodes · 4 years ago
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Chuck vs. The Lethal Weapon Part 2
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Sarah took Cole into the interrogation room as he was fixing himself up while you, Chuck and Casey were watching and listening in from the other side. "After that, it was eight, maybe nine guys until the door." Cole told Sarah, explaining to her how he escaped.
" Oh, come one. We're supposed to believe that he took out nine guys and escaped a FULCRUM holding facility all by himself?" Chuck asked. "Please, I don't think we can trust this guy." "I've done nine before." Casey said, turning to look at you both. " You've taken out nine guys?" you asked. " Just saying it's doable."
"So when they questioned you about the Intersect..." Sarah began. " I didn't tell them anything. It's not my first dance, Walker. If I talked, then Chuck, Y/N, Casey, you... are all in the crosshairs. Not an option." " Why come back here after you escaped?" " I wanted to make sure you were safe."
"I still kinda ship this." you quietly said to Chuck, leaning over a bit. Chuck smirked and put his arm around you.
You later all gathered around the screen to get more info from Beckman. "Thanks to information provided by Mr. Barker, we now know that FULCRUM is protecting a man that goes by the code name "Perseus. " " Beckman began. "Perseus is the head scientist behind FULCRUM's effort to build their own Intersect." Cole said, placing a file in front of you and Chuck to look at. "Anything, guys?" Sarah asked, hoping one of you flashed on it. You just both shook your heads no. " I spent the past year undercover trying to get close to him, but only the inner circle is ever allowed contact with the man." Cole told you all. "Intel tells us Perseus is attending a formal event tonight at the Swiss Consul's office. The State Department has arranged invitations for the two of you." Beckman said. " Um, the two, the two of who?" Chuck asked. " Agent Walker and Agent Casey." " Are you sure, General? I'd be happy to accompany Agent Walker." Cole said. " I bet you would." you said with a smirk. "Chuck and I'd be happy to go, too." " Oh, aren't you two popular?" Casey said. "I mean, you know, we are, we are the Intersects and everything." Chuck added. " Neither Agent Barker nor Bartowski and L/N will be going on this mission. FULCRUM is still actively searching for the three of you. You will all stay in Castle and monitor by remote feed. If you recognize anyone, you'll have radio." Beckman explained. "Well, at least no one's telling us to... " you started, leaning closer to Chuck. "You heard the General. You two stay in the bunker." Casey said. "And there it is." Chuck said, turning his head to look at you. "Mm-hm."
Sarah and Casey were all dressed up and arriving at the party while you, Chuck and Cole were down in Castle, doing surveillance. "Video check. Do we have a signal?" Sarah asked.
" Yep, we got you. And you look fantastic. Sarah, is that dress CIA issue, or do you just make everything look that good?" Cole asked, still trying to flirt with her. "Cole? Can we leave the flirting for another time?" you asked. "Oh like you and Chuck never flirt on a mission." "Not the point. Let's get back to business." Chuck said. "Okay, too many cooks in the kitchen. Chuck, you get in Casey's ear, I'll get in Sarah's." Cole said. "And me?" "You just keep a lookout and make sure we don't miss anything." "Sure." you said, not that excited. "Okay, you two, split up. Sarah, you've got an unsecured exit at 2:00. The guy in the bad suit standing in front of the Swiss flag is packing." Cole began. " Casey, you got a bogey." Chuck warned. "Honey it's a tray of crab cakes coming in." you said, looking at him and giving him a funny look. "I'm just trying to be helpful, okay? Works up an appetite on missions." You just smiled and shook your head. "Sarah, the Italian minister for trade is headed your way. Now he can get a little handsy." Cole told her.
"Hello. I'm Paolo Giordano. I saw you arrive and couldn't help but admire your beauty." The man said as he took Sarah's hand and kissed it.
"His wife's name is Isabella and he has three little bambinos." Cole told her.
" Thank you. How are Isabella and the children?" Sarah asked. "Senorina." The man told her as he left awkwardly.
You and Chuck let out a soft laugh. " Nicely done." you said.
"Thank you." "Who else haven't we seen?" Casey asked.
"I don't know, look at the people by that ice goose thing." Chuck suggested. As Casey walked over, you and Chuck saw this one man and you both flashed on him. " Oh, okay, I just flashed." you and Chuck said at the same time. "The shorter balding gentleman in the sweater wearing the glasses-- that has got to be Perseus." Chuck told them.
" I have a visual. Moving in." Casey said.
"His name is Howard Busgang. He's a research scientist with the Department of Defense." you informed.
"Good job, Y/N and Chuck." Sarah said.
"Hey... Just you know...Doing what we do." you said as you looked at Cole. "So nine guys, huh? Really, you're not fudging that number? Not even a little bit?" Chuck asked Cole. " Sounds harder than it is. Always go for the knee." " You mean like sweep the leg?"
As Sarah and Casey were heading into the room, they accidentally ran into a man. "Ooh. Ooh, I'm sorry. Excuse me." The man apologized.
" That's him." Cole said, pointing at the man. "Well, yeah. You're a little late to the party. We just flashed." Chuck told him. " No, not Busgang, him. He was the guy who was torturing me. He's Fulcrum." All of a sudden, all the cameras went down and it was just static on all the screens. "Where'd they go? Where'd they go? Where'd they go? " you asked, panicking a little. "My guess is that Fulcrum made them, and they just jammed the signal." Cole explained.
Cole left for a sec and came back in with a case and pulled out a gun. "Your friends are in trouble." " Yeah we've gathered that. We have to call General Beckman." you said. " For what?" " So she can tell us what to do next." " I'll tell you what we do next. We go to the consulate and we save them." Cole told you as he got the gun ready. "No, no, no, no. Sarah and Casey specifically said for us to stay here." Chuck told him as the two of you quickly got up to join Cole. "Yeah, well, sometimes things don't always go according to plan, Chuck. You have to improvise." " Look, you can't just go run off and be the hero all the time." " It's not about wanting to be a hero, Chuck. It's about needing to be." Cole then took out another gun to make sure it was ready to go as well. "Two guns, huh? Oh, you really are a badass." " No, Chuck, one gun. One for you and this one...for Y/N." Cole explained handing you two the guns. You both hesitantly grabbed them. Cole then pulled out another gun for him. You and Chuck took a deep breath and looked at each other a little nervous. "Let's go." Cole said as he clapped you both on the shoulder and walked out. You and Chuck were absolutely not ready for this.
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tkmedia · 3 years ago
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NHL Expansion Draft 2021: Full list of players available for Seattle Kraken
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The NHL announced the protected lists for the 30 teams involved in the NHL Expansion Draft. (Vegas is exempt.) With the names of those protected come the guys who could be snatched up by the Seattle Kraken. There are a number of big names that have everyone trying to figure out just what general manager Ron Francis will do. Will he take Canadiens netminder, and future Hall of Famer, Carey Price and his hefty cap hit? Is Vladimir Tarasenko the sniper he needs or is his health a big question mark? There's also a number of guys who would fit in nicely but are free agents and the chances of signing them are not high (i.e. Alex Ovechkin).  EXPANSION DRAFT: Date, time, rules & more for Seattle Kraken team selectionRegardless of what Francis, coach Dave Hakstrol and Co. end up doing, there's a good chance the Kraken will be a playoff contender in just their first season. For now, let the intrigue and the guessing WWRFD (that's: what will Ron Francis do?) begin. Here's a look at every player they can pick.
List of players made available by all 30 NHL teams
Anaheim DucksAndrew Agozzino (F) David Backes (F) Sam Carrick (F) Chase De Leo (F) Ryan Getzlaf (F) Derek Grant (F) Danton Heinen (F) Adam Henrique (F) Vinni Lettieri (F) Sonny Milano (F) Andrew Poturalski (F) Carter Rowney (F) Nick Sorensen (F) Alexander Volkov (F) Trevor Carrick (D) Haydn Fleury (D) Brendan Guhle (D) Jacob Larsson (D) Josh Mahura (D) Kevin Shattenkirk (D) Andy Welinski (D) Ryan Miller (G) Anthony Stolarz (G)Arizona CoyotesDerick Brassard (F) Michael Bunting (F) Brayden Burke (F) Michael Chaput (F) Hudson Fasching (F) Christian Fischer (F) Frederik Gauthier (F) John Hayden (F) Dryden Hunt (F) Andrew Ladd (F) Lane Pederson (F) Tyler Pitlick (F) Blake Speers (F) Tyler Steenbergen (F) Jason Demers (D) Cam Dineen (D) Alex Goligoski (D) Jordan Gross (D) Niklas Hjalmarsson (D) Ilya Lyubushkin (D) Dysin Mayo (D) Aaron Ness (D) Jordan Oesterle (D) Vili Saarijarvi (D) Josef Korenar (G) Marek Langhamer (G) Antti Raanta (G)Boston BruinsAnton Blidh (F) Paul Carey (F) Peter Cehlarik (F) Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson (F) Taylor Hall (F) Cameron Hughes (F) Ondrej Kase (F) Alex Khokhlachev (F) Joona Koppanen (F) David Krejci (F) Karson Kuhlman (F) Sean Kuraly (F) Curtis Lazar (F) Greg McKegg (F) Nick Ritchie (F) Zach Senyshyn (F) Chris Wagner (F) Linus Arnesson (D) Connor Clifton (D) Steven Kampfer (D) Jeremy Lauzon (D) Kevan Miller (D) John Moore (D) Mike Reilly (D) Jarred Tinordi (D) Jakub Zboril (D) Callum Booth (G) Jaroslav Halak (G) Tuukka Rask (G)Buffalo SabresDrake Caggiula (F) Jean-Sebastien Dea (F) Cody Eakin (F) Steven Fogarty (F) Zemgus Girgensons (F) Andrew Oglevie (F) Kyle Okposo (F) Tobias Rieder (F) Riley Sheahan (F) Jeff Skinner (F) C.J. Smith (F) Will Borgen (D) Brandon Davidson (D) Matt Irwin (D) Jake McCabe (D) Colin Miller (D) Casey Nelson (D) Michael Houser (G) Carter Hutton (G) Dustin Tokarski (G)Calgary FlamesByron Froese (F) Glenn Gawdin (F) Justin Kirkland (F) Josh Leivo (F) Milan Lucic (F) Joakim Nordstrom (F) Matthew Phillips (F) Zac Rinaldo (F) Brett Ritchie (F) Buddy Robinson (F) Derek Ryan (F) Dominik Simon (F) Mark Giordano (D) Oliver Kylington (D) Nikita Nesterov (D) Alexander Petrovic (D) Michael Stone (D) Louis Domingue (G) Tyler Parsons (G)Carolina HurricanesMorgan Geekie (F) Steven Lorentz (F) Jordan Martinook (F) Max McCormick (F) Brock McGinn (F) Nino Niederreiter (F) Cedric Paquette (F) Sheldon Rempal (F) Drew Shore (F) Spencer Smallman (F) Jake Bean (D) Jake Gardiner (D) Eric Gelinas (D) Jani Hakanpaa (D) Dougie Hamilton (D) Maxime Lajoie (D) Roland McKeown (D) Joakim Ryan (D) David Warsofsky (D) Antoine Bibeau (G) Jeremy Helvig (G) Petr Mrazek (G) James Reimer (G) Dylan Wells (G)Chicago BlackhawksRyan Carpenter (F) Brett Connolly (F) Josh Dickinson (F) Adam Gaudette (F) Vinnie Hinostroza (F) Brandon Pirri (F) John Quenneville (F) Zack Smith (F) Calvin de Haan (D) Anton Lindholm (D) Nikita Zadorov (D) Collin Delia (G) Malcolm Subban (G)Colorado AvalancheTravis Barron (F) Pierre-Edouard Bellemare (F) Matt Calvert (F) J.T. Compher (F) Joonas Donskoi (F) Sheldon Dries (F) Vladislav Kamenev (F) Gabriel Landeskog (F) Ty Lewis (F) Jayson Megna (F) Liam O'Brien (F) Brandon Saad (F) Miikka Salomaki (F) Kiefer Sherwood (F) Carl Soderberg (F) T.J. Tynan (F) Mike Vecchione (F) Kyle Burroughs (D) Dennis Gilbert (D) Erik Johnson (D) Jacob MacDonald (D) Patrik Nemeth (D) Dan Renouf (D) Devan Dubnyk (G) Jonas Johansson (G) Hunter Miska (G)Columbus Blue JacketsZac Dalpe (F) Max Domi (F) Nathan Gerbe (F) Mikhail Grigorenko (F) Ryan MacInnis (F) Stefan Matteau (F) Cliff Pu (F) Kole Sherwood (F) Kevin Stenlund (F) Calvin Thurkauf (F) Daniel Zaar (F) Gavin Bayreuther (D) Gabriel Carlsson (D) Adam Clendening (D) Michael Del Zotto (D) Scott Harrington (D) Dean Kukan (D) Cameron Johnson (G)Dallas StarsNick Caamano (F) Andrew Cogliano (F) Blake Comeau (F) Justin Dowling (F) Tanner Kero (F) Joel L'Esperance (F) Adam Mascherin (F) Matej Stransky (F) Taylor Fedun (D) Ben Gleason (D) Joel Hanley (D) Niklas Hansson (D) Julius Honka (D) Jamie Oleksiak (D) Mark Pysyk (D) Andrej Sekera (D) Sami Vatanen (D) Ben Bishop (G) Landon Bow (G) Colton Point (G)Detroit Red WingsRiley Barber (F) Kyle Criscuolo (F) Turner Elson (F) Valtteri Filppula (F) Sam Gagner (F) Luke Glendening (F) Darren Helm (F) Taro Hirose (F) Vladislav Namestnikov (F) Frans Nielsen (F) Bobby Ryan (F) Evgeny Svechnikov (F) Dominic Turgeon (F) Hayden Verbeek (F) Alex Biega (D) Dennis Cholowski (D) Danny DeKeyser (D) Christian Djoos (D) Joe Hicketts (D) Dylan McIlrath (D) Marc Staal (D) Troy Stecher (D) Jonathan Bernier (G) Kevin Boyle (G) Kaden Fulcher (G) Calvin Pickard (G)EXPANSION DRAFT: Full list of players protected by all 30 teamsEdmonton OilersTyler Benson (F) Alex Chiasson (F) Adam Cracknell (F) Tyler Ennis (F) Joseph Gambardella (F) Seth Griffith (F) Dominik Kahun (F) Jujhar Khaira (F) Cooper Marody (F) James Neal (F) Alan Quine (F) Patrick Russell (F) Devin Shore (F) Anton Slepyshev (F) Kyle Turris (F) Bogdan Yakimov (F) Tyson Barrie (D) Oscar Klefbom (D) Slater Koekkoek (D) Dmitry Kulikov (D) William Lagesson (D) Adam Larsson (D) Kris Russell (D) Mikko Koskinen (G) Mike Smith (G) Alex Stalock (G)DUNCAN KEITH: Oilers add three-time Stanley Cup championFlorida PanthersNoel Acciari (F) Patrick Bajkov (F) Juho Lammikko (F) Ryan Lomberg (F) Brad Morrison (F) Aleksi Saarela (F) Frank Vatrano (F) Lucas Wallmark (F) Alex Wennberg (F) Scott Wilson (F) Lucas Carlsson (D) Kevin Connauton (D) Tommy Cross (D) Radko Gudas (D) Noah Juulsen (D) Brady Keeper (D) Brandon Montour (D) Markus Nutivaara (D) Ethan Prow (D) Anton Stralman (D) Philippe Desrosiers (G) Chris Driedger (G) Sam Montembeault (G)Los Angeles KingsAndreas Athanasiou (F) Michael Eyssimont (F) Martin Frk (F) Carl Grundstrom (F) Bokondji Imama (F) Brendan Lemieux (F) Blake Lizotte (F) Matt Luff (F) Drake Rymsha (F) Austin Wagner (F) Mark Alt (D) Daniel Brickley (D) Kale Clague (D) Olli Maatta (D) Kurtis MacDermid (D) Jacob Moverare (D) Austin Strand (D) Christian Wolanin (D) Troy Grosenick (G) Jonathan Quick (G)Minnesota WildWilliam Bitten (F) Nick Bjugstad (F) Nick Bonino (F) Joseph Cramarossa (F) Gabriel Dumont (F) Marcus Johansson (F) Luke Johnson (F) Victor Rask (F) Kyle Rau (F) Mason Shaw (F) Dmitry Sokolov (F) Matt Bartkowski (D) Louie Belpedio (D) Ian Cole (D) Brad Hunt (D) Ian McCoshen (D) Brennan Menell (D) Dakota Mermis (D) Carson Soucy (D) Andrew Hammond (G) Kaapo Kahkonen (G)Montreal CanadiensBrandon Baddock (F) Joseph Blandisi (F) Paul Byron (F) Phillip Danault (F) Laurent Dauphin (F) Jonathan Drouin (F) Michael Frolik (F) Charles Hudon (F) Corey Perry (F) Michael Pezzetta (F) Eric Staal (F) Tomas Tatar (F) Lukas Vejdemo (F) Jordan Weal (F) Cale Fleury (D) Erik Gustafsson (D) Brett Kulak (D) Jon Merrill (D) Gustav Olofsson (D) Xavier Ouellet (D) Shea Weber (D) Charlie Lindgren (G) Michael McNiven (G) Carey Price (G)Nashville PredatorsMichael Carcone (F) Nick Cousins (F) Matt Duchene (F) Mikael Granlund (F) Rocco Grimaldi (F) Erik Haula (F) Calle Jarnkrok (F) Ryan Johansen (F) Sean Malone (F) Michael McCarron (F) Rem Pitlick (F) Anthony Richard (F) Brad Richardson (F) Colton Sissons (F) Yakov Trenin (F) Frederic Allard (D) Matt Benning (D) Mark Borowiecki (D) Erik Gudbranson (D) Ben Harpur (D) Josh Healey (D) Tyler Lewington (D) Connor Ingram (G) Kasimir Kaskisuo (G) Pekka Rinne (G)New Jersey DevilsNathan Bastian (F) Christoph Bertschy (F) Brandon Gignac (F) A.J. Greer (F) Andreas Johnsson (F) Ivan Khomutov (F) Nicholas Merkley (F) Brett Seney (F) Ben Street (F) Marian Studenic (F) Will Butcher (D) Connor Carrick (D) Josh Jacobs (D) Ryan Murray (D) David Quenneville (D) Colby Sissons (D) P.K. Subban (D) Matt Tennyson (D) Colton White (D) Evan Cormier (G) Aaron Dell (G) Scott Wedgewood (G)New York IslandersJosh Bailey (F) Cole Bardreau (F) Kieffer Bellows (F) Casey Cizikas (F) Austin Czarnik (F) Michael Dal Colle (F) Jordan Eberle (F) Tanner Fritz (F) Joshua Ho-Sang (F) Ross Johnston (F) Otto Koivula (F) Leo Komarov (F) Kyle Palmieri (F) Richard Panik (F) Dmytro Timashov (F) Travis Zajac (F) Sebastian Aho (D) Braydon Coburn (D) Andy Greene (D) Thomas Hickey (D) Mitchell Vande Sompel (D) Parker Wotherspoon (D) Ken Appleby (G) Cory Schneider (G)New York RangersColin Blackwell (F) Jonny Brodzinski (F) Phillip Di Giuseppe (F) Gabriel Fontaine (F) Julien Gauthier (F) Tim Gettinger (F) Barclay Goodrow (F) Anthony Greco (F) Ty Ronning (F) Anthony Bitetto (D) Brandon Crawley (D) Tony DeAngelo (D) Nick DeSimone (D) Mason Geertsen (D) Jack Johnson (D) Darren Raddysh (D) Brendan Smith (D) Keith Kinkaid (G)EXPANSION DRAFT FRENZY: Ryan Ellis, Jared McCann, Barclay Goodrow among players swapped before trade freezeOttawa SenatorsAvailable Vitaly Abramov (F) Michael Amadio (F) Artem Anisimov (F) J.C. Beaudin (F) Clark Bishop (F) Evgenii Dadonov (F) Jonathan Davidsson (F) Ryan Dzingel (F) Micheal Haley (F) Jack Kopacka (F) Zachary Magwood (F) Matthew Peca (F) Logan Shaw (F) Derek Stepan (F) Chris Tierney (F) Josh Brown (D) Cody Goloubef (D) Mikael Wikstrand (D) Joey Daccord (G) Anton Forsberg (G) Marcus Hogberg (G) Matt Murray (G)Philadelphia FlyersAndy Andreoff (F) Connor Bunnaman (F) David Kase (F) Pascal Laberge (F) Samuel Morin (F) German Rubtsov (F) Carsen Twarynski (F) James van Riemsdyk (F) Jakub Voracek (F) Mikhail Vorobyev (F) Chris Bigras (D) Justin Braun (D) Shayne Gostisbehere (D) Robert Hagg (D) Derrick Pouliot (D) Nate Prosser (D) Tyler Wotherspoon (D) Brian Elliott (G) Alex Lyon (G) Felix Sandstrom (G)Pittsburgh PenguinsPontus Aberg (F) Anthony Angello (F) Zach Aston-Reese (F) Josh Currie (F) Frederick Gaudreau (F) Mark Jankowski (F) Sam Lafferty (F) Sam Miletic (F) Evan Rodrigues (F) Colton Sceviour (F) Brandon Tanev (F) Jason Zucker (F) Cody Ceci (D) Kevin Czuczman (D) Mark Friedman (D) Jesper Lindgren (D) Andrey Pedan (D) Marcus Pettersson (D) Juuso Riikola (D) Chad Ruhwedel (D) Yannick Weber (D) Casey DeSmith (G) Maxime Lagace (G)San Jose SharksRyan Donato (F) Kurtis Gabriel (F) Dylan Gambrell (F) Jayden Halbgewachs (F) Maxim Letunov (F) Patrick Marleau (F) Matt Nieto (F) Marcus Sorensen (F) Alexander True (F) Christian Jaros (D) Nicolas Meloche (D) Jacob Middleton (D) Greg Pateryn (D) Radim Simek (D) Martin Jones (G)St. Louis BluesSam Anas (F) Sammy Blais (F) Tyler Bozak (F) Kyle Clifford (F) Jacob de la Rose (F) Mike Hoffman (F) Tanner Kaspick (F) Mackenzie MacEachern (F) Curtis McKenzie (F) Austin Poganski (F) Zach Sanford (F) Jaden Schwartz (F) Nolan Stevens (F) Vladimir Tarasenko (F) Nathan Walker (F) Robert Bortuzzo (D) Vince Dunn (D) Petteri Lindbohm (D) Niko Mikkola (D) Mitch Reinke (D) Steven Santini (D) Marco Scandella (D) Jake Walman (D) Evan Fitzpatrick (G) Jon Gillies (G) Ville Husso (G)Tampa Bay LightningAlex Barre-Boulet (F) Blake Coleman (F) Ross Colton (F) Yanni Gourde (F) Tyler Johnson (F) Mathieu Joseph (F) Boris Katchouk (F) Alex Killorn (F) Pat Maroon (F) Boo Nieves (F) Ondrej Palat (F) Taylor Raddysh (F) Gemel Smith (F) Otto Somppi (F) Mitchell Stephens (F) Daniel Walcott (F) Luke Witkowski (F) Andreas Borgman (D) Fredrik Claesson (D) Sean Day (D) Cal Foote (D) Brian Lashoff (D) Dominik Masin (D) Jan Rutta (D) David Savard (D) Luke Schenn (D) Ben Thomas (D) Christopher Gibson (G) Spencer Martin (G) Curtis McElhinney (G)MORE: Maroon fourth player to win three straight Stanley Cups with two different teamsToronto Maple LeafsAvailable Kenny Agostino (F) Joey Anderson (F) Adam Brooks (F) Pierre Engvall (F) Nick Foligno (F) Alex Galchenyuk (F) Zach Hyman (F) Alexander Kerfoot (F) Kalle Kossila (F) Denis Malgin (F) Jared McCann (F) Riley Nash (F) Stefan Noesen (F) Nic Petan (F) Scott Sabourin (F) Wayne Simmonds (F) Jason Spezza (F) Antti Suomela (F) Joe Thornton (F) Zach Bogosian (D) Travis Dermott (D) Ben Hutton (D) Martin Marincin (D) Calle Rosen (D) Frederik Andersen (G) Michael Hutchinson (G) David Rittich (G)Vancouver CanucksSven Baertschi (F) Justin Bailey (F) Jay Beagle (F) Travis Boyd (F) Loui Eriksson (F) Jonah Gadjovich (F) Tyler Graovac (F) Jayce Hawryluk (F) Matthew Highmore (F) Lukas Jasek (F) Kole Lind (F) Zack MacEwen (F) Petrus Palmu (F) Antoine Roussel (F) Brandon Sutter (F) Jimmy Vesey (F) Jake Virtanen (F) Madison Bowey (D) Guillaume Brisebois (D) Jalen Chatfield (D) Alexander Edler (D) Travis Hamonic (D) Brogan Rafferty (D) Ashton Sautner (D) Josh Teves (D) Braden Holtby (G)Washington CapitalsDaniel Carr (F) Nic Dowd (F) Shane Gersich (F) Carl Hagelin (F) Garnet Hathaway (F) Axel Jonsson-Fjallby (F) Alex Ovechkin (F) Garrett Pilon (F) Brian Pinho (F) Michael Raffl (F) Michael Sgarbossa (F) Conor Sheary (F) Zdeno Chara (D) Brenden Dillon (D) Nick Jensen (D) Lucas Johansen (D) Michal Kempny (D) Paul LaDue (D) Cameron Schilling (D) Justin Schultz (D) Craig Anderson (G) Pheonix Copley (G) Zach Fucale (G) Vitek Vanecek (G)Winnipeg JetsMason Appleton (F) Marko Dano (F) Jansen Harkins (F) Trevor Lewis (F) Skyler McKenzie (F) Mathieu Perreault (F) Paul Stastny (F) CJ Suess (F) Nate Thompson (F) Dominic Toninato (F) Nathan Beaulieu (D) Jordie Benn (D) Dylan DeMelo (D) Derek Forbort (D) Luke Green (D) Sami Niku (D) Nelson Nogier (D) Tucker Poolman (D) Mikhail Berdin (G) Laurent Brossoit (G) Eric Comrie (G) Cole Kehler (G) Read the full article
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