#john colaiacovo
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
tmbmtb · 1 year ago
Text
I've been tossing, I've been turning In my bed and in my head Just for a picture Do you remember that silly old phrase that you used to say-ay? No, I don't believe, I don't believe I don't believe in any scriptures Is it wrong if I believe that maybe you'll come back someday?
✯ Toca La Guitarra, Professor Caveman
0 notes
goalhofer · 6 years ago
Text
Every Jaime Sifers College/Professional Teammate
University Of Vermont Catamounts
Jeff Miles (2002-04)
Brady Leisenring (2002-06)
Bryson Busniuk (2002--03)
Thomas Hajek (2002-03)
John Longo (2002-03)
Scott Mifsud (2002-04)
Jeff Corey (2002-06)
Ryan Miller (2002-03)
Tim Plant (2002-04)
Baron Becker (2002-06)
Phil Youngclaus (2002-06)
Oriel McHugh (2002-04)
Gerard Miller (2002-04)
Joey Gasparini (2002-06)
Ben Driver (2002-06)
Shawn Conschafter (2002-03)
Derek Wagar (2002-04)
Billy Kelly (12 games 2003)
Greg Zemple (2002-03)
Spencer Morton (11 games 2003-04)
Jason Fortin (20 games 2003)
Chris Smart (2002-04)
Chris Mounsey (15 games 2003-04)
Matt Hanson (7 games 2002-04)
Dustin Corbett (4 games 2003)
Tom Child (2002-04)
Travis Russell (2002-06)
Ryan Gunderson (2003-06)
Evan Stoflet (2003-06)
Chris Myers (2003-06)
Dan Owens (2003-04)
Art Femenella (2003-06)
Tom Collingham (2003-06)
Scott Sortal (8 games 2004)
Torrey Mitchell (2005-06)
Dean Strong (2005-06)
Peter Lenes (2005-06)
Kenny Macaulay (2005-06)
Corey Carlson (2005-06)
Mark Lutz (2005-06)
Matt Syroczynski (2005-06)
Slavomir Tomko (17 games 2006)
Kyle Kuk (2005-06)
Mike Arcieri (20 games 2006)
Andy Corran (2005-06)
Reese Wisnowski (2005-06)
Dan Owens (7 games 2006)
Joe Fallon (2005-06)
Toronto Marlies
Johnny Pohl (2 games 2006)
Bates Battaglia (2 games 2006, 2007-09)
Kris Newbury (2006-09)
Brad Leeb (2006-07)
Jeremy Williams (2006-09)
Brett Engelhardt (2006-07)
Brendan Bell (2 games 2006)
Ian White (2 games 2006)
Colin Murphy (2006-08)
Tyler Beechey (2 games 2006)
Ben Ondrus (2006-09)
Jay Harrison (2 games 2006, 2007-08)
Martin Sagat (2006-07)
John Mitchell (2006-08)
Andy Wozniewski (2006-08)
Carlo Colaiacovo (9 games 2006-08)
Staffan Kronwall (2006-09)
Aleksander Suglobov (2006-07)
Steve Chabbert (2 games 2006)
Roman Kukumberg (2 games 2006)
Marc Moro (2006-07)
Mike Hoffman (2 games 2006)
David Turon (2 games 2006)
Dominic D’Amour (2006-07)
Luke Fulghum (8 games 2006-07)
Brad Brown (2006-07)
Chris St. Jacques (18 games 2006-07)
Jeff Corey (2006-07)
Ian MacNeil (2 games 2006)
Jean-Francois Racine (2006-07)
Alex Foster (2 games 2006, 2007-09)
Todd Ford (9 games 2006-08)
Steven Later (2 games 2006)
Robbie Earl (2006-09)
Derek Landmesser (2 games 2006)
Shaun Landolt (2 games 2006)
Tyson Marsh (3 games 2006-07)
Justin Sawyer (4 games 2006-07)
Jean-Sebastien Aubin (2 games 2006)
J.J. Hunter (9 games 2006)
Kip Brennan (1 game 2006)
Mike Jarmuth (1 game 2006)
Erik Westrum (2006-07)
Chris Harrington (2006-08)
Tyson Nash (2006-07)
Boyd Devereaux (2006-07, 2008-09)
David Cloutier (2006-07)
Karel Pilar (10 games 2007)
Kevin Baker (7 games 2007)
Michael Schutte (10 games 2007)
Owen Fussey (14 games 2007)
David Pszenyczny (4 games 2007)
Justin Pogge (2006-09)
Mac Faulker (3 games 2007)
Mikael Tellqvist (3 games 2007)
Brett Aubin (2007-09)
Jiri Tlusty (2007-09)
Michel Leveille (2007-08)
Phil Oreskovic (2007-09)
David Ling (2007-08)
Derrick Walser (2007-08)
Reid Cashman (17 games 2007-08)
Nathan Perrott (8 games 2007-08)
Darryl Boyce (2007-09)
Bryan Muir (2007-08)
Anton Stralman (2007-09)
Tyler Doig (2007-09)
Peter Tsimikalis (2007-08)
Simon Gamache (19 games 2008)
Patrick Wellar (2007-08)
Tony Salmelainen (2 games 2008)
Scott Clemmensen (2007-08)
Dale Mitchell (2 games 2008)
Jeff Miles (1 game 2008)
Matt Grennier (7 games 2008)
Stefano Giliati (2008-09)
Kyle Rogers (2008-09)
Max Taylor (2008-09)
Todd Perry (2008-09)
Tim Stapleton (2008-09)
Mark Bell (2008-09)
Andre Deveaux (2008-09)
Richard Petiot (2008-09)
Ryan Hamilton (2008-09)
Joey Ryan (2008-09)
Juha Uotila (2008-09)
Josef Boumedienne (19 games 2009)
Andrew Martens (19 games 2009)
Josh Engel (2008-09)
Andy Schneider (2008-09)
James Reimer (3 games 2009)
Ashton Rome (7 games 2009)
Jonas Frogren (3 games 2009)
Viktor Stalberg (2 games 2009)
Andy Rogers (3 games 2009)
Jeremy Swanson (3 games 2009)
Nikolay Kulemin (5 games 2009)
Alex Berry (8 games 2009)
Rob LaLonde (9 games 2009)
Adam Munro (2008-09)
Toronto Maple Leafs
Jason Blake (2008-09)
Andre Deveaux (2008-09)
Boyd Devereaux (2008-09)
Jeff Finger (2008-09)
Jonas Frogren (2008-09)
Martin Gerber (2008-09)
Michail Hrabouski (2008-09)
Niklas Hagman (2008-09)
Jeff Hamilton (15 games 2009)
Christian Hanson (5 games 2009)
Jay Harrison (2008-09)
Curtis Joseph (2008-09)
Tomas Kaberle (2008-09)
Pavel Kubina (2008-09)
Nikolay Kulemin (2008-09)
Brad May (2008-09)
Jamal Mayers (2008-09)
John Mitchell (2008-09)
Phil Oreskovic (10 games 2009)
Justin Pogge (2008-09)
Oleksiy Ponikarovsky (2008-09)
Luke Schenn (2008-09)
Matt Stajan (2008-09)
Lee Stempniak (2008-09)
Vesa Toskala (2008-09)
Mike Van Ryn (2008-09)
Ian White (2008-09)
Minnesota Wild
Cody Almond (14 games 2009)
Niklas Backstrom (14 games 2009)
Cam Barker (14 games 2009)
Derek Boogaard (14 games 2009)
Kyle Brodziak (14 games 2009)
Andrew Brunette (14 games 2009)
Brent Burns (14 games 2009)
Cal Clutterbuck (14 games 2009)
Wade Dubielewicz (14 games 2009)
Robbie Earl (14 games 2009)
Andrew Ebbett (14 games 2009)
Josh Harding (14 games 2009)
Martin Havlat (14 games 2009)
Shane Hnidy (14 games 2009)
Petr Kalus (14 games 2009)
Chuck Kobasew (14 games 2009)
Mikko Koivu (14 games 2009)
Guillaume Latendresse (14 games 2009)
Antti Miettinen (14 games 2009)
Owen Nolan (14 games 2009)
Nate Prosser (14 games 2009)
Nick Schultz (14 games 2009)
John Scott (14 games 2009)
James Sheppard (14 games 2009)
Clayton Stoner (14 games 2009)
Casey Wellman (14 games 2009)
Greg Zanon (14 games 2009)
Marek Zidlicky (14 games 2009)
Houston Aeros
Jean-Michel Daoust (2009-10)
Jon DiSalvatore (2009-10)
Maxim Noreau (2009-10)
Chad Rau (2009-10)
Nathan Smith (2009-10)
Duncan Milroy (2009-10)
Danny Irmen (2009-10)
Andy Hilbert (2009-10)
Ryan Gunderson (2009-10)
Petr Kalus (2009-10)
Jamie Fraser (2009-10)
Colton Gillies (2009-10)
Robbie Earl (2009-10)
Cody Almond (2009-10)
Peter Zingoni (2009-10)
Clayton Stoner (2009-10)
Justin Falk (2009-10)
Carson McMillan (2009-10)
Brandon Rogers (2009-10)
J.P. Testwuide (2009-10)
Matt Kassian (2009-10)
Tony Hrkac (2009-10)
Brandon Buck (2009-10)
Ryan Lannon (2009-10)
Trent Campbell (3 games 2010)
Craig Weller (5 games 2009)
Marco Scandella (7 games 2010)
Barry Brust (2009-10)
Anton Khudobin (2009-10)
Ryan Nie (1 game 2010)
Matt Pierce (1 game 2010)
Ross Rouleau (1 game 2010)
Dylan Hunter (1 game 2009)
Matt Fornataro (1 game 2009)
Brock Sheahan (1 game 2010)
Brandon Straub (2 games 2010)
Darcy Kuemper (3 games 2010)
Wade Dubielewicz (2009-10)
Chicago Wolves
Jason Krog (2010-11)
Darren Haydar (2010-11)
Jared Ross (2010-11)
Spencer Machacek (2010-11)
Andre Deveaux (2010-11)
Paul Postma (2010-11)
Nigel Dawes (2010-11)
Ryan Garbutt (2010-11)
Mark Matheson (2010-11)
Fredrik Pettersson (2010-11)
Riley Holzapfel (2010-11)
Tim Miller (2010-11)
Michael Davies (2010-11)
Arturs Kulda (2010-11)
Mike Siklenka (2010-11)
Andrey Zubarev (2010-11)
Angelo Esposito (2010-11)
Noah Welch (2010-11)
Andrew Kozek (2010-11)
Akim Aliu (2010-11)
Boris Valabik (2010-11)
Jamie Hunt (2010-11)
Patrice Cormier (11 games 2010)
Tim Stapleton (4 games 2011)
Peter Mannino (2010-11)
Sergio Somma (5 games 2011)
Michael Forney (9 games 2011)
Eddie Pasquale (2010-11)
Patrick Rissmiller (6 games 2010)
Carl Klingberg (8 games 2011)
Kip Brennan (12 games 2011)
Ben Maxwell (2 games 2011)
Josh Godfrey (4 games 2011)
Patrick Galivan (5 games 2011)
Adam Huxley (18 games 2011)
Drew MacIntyre (20 games 2010)
Matt Krug (1 game 2011)
Chris Carrozzi (1 game 2011)
Dave Phillips (1 game 2010)
Ondrej Pavelec (1 game 2011)
Alan Dorich (1 game 2011)
Will Colbert (2 games 2011)
Ian McKenzie (2 games 2011)
Jack Combs (3 games 2011)
Zach Redmond (3 games 2011)
Brett Festerling (5 games 2011)
Adler Mannheim
Adam Mitchell (2011-13)
Chris Lee (2011-12)
Yanick Lehoux (2011-14)
Mike Glumac (2011-13)
Ken Magowan (2011-14)
Christoph Ullmann (2011-14)
Ronny Arendt (2011-14)
Frank Mauer (2011-14)
Yannic Seidenberg (2011-13)
Marcus Kink (2011-14)
Craig MacDonald (2011-13)
Steve Wagner (2011-14)
Nikolai Goc (2011-14)
Niko Dimitrakos (2011-12)
Shawn Belle (2011-13)
Matthias Plachta (2011-14)
Denis Reul (2011-14)
Marc El-Sayed (2011-14)
Florian Kettemer (2011-14)
Felix Brueckmann (2011-14)
Fred Brathwaite (2011-12)
Steven Bar (12 games 2012)
Richard Gelke (13 games 2012)
Dennis Seidenberg (2012-13)
Marcel Goc (2012-13)
Jochen Hecht (2012-14)
Jason Pominville (7 games 2012-13)
Doug Janik (2012-13)
Mirko Hofflin (2012-14)
Alex Foster (10 games 2012)
Dominik Bittner (2012-14)
Dennis Endras (2012-14)
Simon Gamache (2013-14)
Jon Rheault (2013-14)
Martin Buchweiser (2013-14)
Mike Vernace (2013-14)
Kai Hospelt (2013-14)
Eric Schneider (8 games 2014)
Christopher Fischer (2013-14)
Dorian Saeftel (1 game 2014)
Tobias Kircher (1 game 2014)
Alexander Ackermann (7 games 2014)
Springfield Falcons
T.J. Tynan (2014-15)
Ryan Craig (2014-15)
Sean Collins (2014-15)
Austin Madaisky (2014-15)
Kerby Rychel (2014-15)
Dana Tyrell (2014-15)
Luke Adam (2014-15)
Michael Chaput (2014-15)
Frederic St. Denis (2014-15)
Marko Dano (2014-15)
Mike Hoeffel (2014-15)
Josh Anderson (2014-15)
Thomas Larkin (2014-15)
Trent Vogelhuber (2014-15)
Lukas Sedlak (2014-15)
Domenic Monardo (2014-15)
Brian Gibbons (2014-15)
Denny Urban (2014-15)
Corey Cowick (2014-15)
Hubert Labrie (2014-15)
Adam Cracknell (18 games 2015)
Jerry D’Amigo (2014-15)
Frank Milano (10 games 2015)
Nathan Oystrick (12 games 2015)
Brett Ponich (2014-15)
Andrew Chirniwchan (12 games 2015)
Alexander Wennberg (6 games 2015)
Mike Little (3 games 2015)
Mike Cornell (11 games 2014)
Yann Sauve (17 games 2015)
Derek Docken (6 games 2015)
Mathieu Gagnon (20 games 2015)
Dillon Heatherington (3 games 2015)
Steve Weinstein (3 games 2015)
Rick Pinkston (6 games 2015)
Will Weber (2014-15)
Steven Shamanski (1 game 2015)
Riley Wetmore (1 game 2015)
Tyler Sikura (2 games 2015)
Joonas Korpisalo (3 games 2015)
Steve McCarthy (3 games 2014)
Matthew Zay (3 games 2014)
Patrick Cullity (3 games 2015)
Cody Goloubef (3 games 2015)
Seth Ambroz (4 games 2015)
James Livingston (6 games 2015)
William Karlsson (15 games 2015)
Oscar Dansk (2014-15)
Scott Munroe (2014-15)
Anton Forsberg (2014-15)
Lake Erie/Cleveland Monsters
T.J. Tynan (2015-17)
Michael Chaput (2015-16)
Daniel Zaar (2015-17)
Josh Anderson (2015-16)
Alex Broadhurst (2015-17)
Frank Milano (2015-17)
Oliver Bjorkstrand (2015-17)
Trent Vogelhuber (2015-16)
John Ramage (2015-17)
Kerby Rychel (2015-16)
Michael Paliotta (2015-16)
Ryan Craig (2015-17)
Markus Hannikainen (2015-17)
Dillon Heatherington (2015-17)
Lukas Sedlak (2015-16)
Steve Eminger (2015-16)
Dean Kukan (2015-17)
Nick Moutrey (2015-17)
Justin Falk (2015-16)
Andrew Bodnarchuk (14 games 2016)
Manny Malhotra (2015-16)
Mark Cundari (7 games 2016)
Derek Deblois (2015-16)
Eric Roy (10 games 2016)
Aleh Yevenka (2015-17)
Zach Werenski (2015-16)
Steve Weinstein (4 games 2016)
Steve McCarthy (17 games 2016)
Anton Forsberg (2015-17)
Brett Gallant (2015-17)
Austin Madaisky (1 game 2016)
Peter Quenneville (1 game 2016)
Vinny Saponari (1 game 2016)
Austin Farley (2 games 2016)
Seth Ambroz (3 games 2016)
Blake Tatchell (5 games 2016)
Jan Hejda (11 games 2016)
Joonas Korpisalo (2015-17)
Paul Bittner (2016-17)
Joe Devlin (2016-17)
Brad Thiessen (2015-17)
Justin Scott (2016-17)
Jordan Maletta (2016-17)
Joe Pendenza (2016-17)
Zac Dalpe (20 games 2017)
Marc-Andre Bergeron (2016-17)
Aaron Palushaj (2016-17)
Ryan Stanton (2016-17)
Cody Goloubef (16 games 2016)
Blake Siebenaler (2016-17)
Alex Petan (14 games 2017)
Akim Aliu (13 games 2017)
Sam Vigneault (16 games 2017)
Vitalii Abramov (4 games 2017)
Kyle Thomas (12 games 2017)
Jacob Graves (19 games 2017)
Dalton Prout (7 games 2017)
Dante Salituro (5 games 2017)
Shawn Szydlowski (7 games 2017)
Miles Koules (7 games 2017)
Gabriel Carlsson (3 games 2017)
Frank Hora (3 games 2017)
Ryan Collins (5 games 2017)
Sheldon Brookbank (6 games 2017)
Michael Houser (1 game 2017)
Kole Sherwood (2 games 2017)
Scott Harrington (2 games 2017)
Keith Aulie (3 games 2016)
Scott Savage (3 games 2017)
Mike Brown (11 games 2017)
Utica Comets
Reid Boucher (2017-19)
Michael Chaput (2017-18)
Patrick Wiercioch (2017-18)
Zack MacEwen (2017-19)
Nikolay Goldobin (2017-18)
Philip Holm (2017-18)
Michael Carcone (2017-19)
Cole Cassels (2017-18)
Cameron Darcy (2017-19)
Wacey Hamilton (2017-19)
Alex D’Aoust (2017-18)
Guillaume Brisebois (2017-18)
Adam Comrie (2017-18)
Carter Bancks (2017-19)
Darren Archibald (2017-18)
Dylan Blujus (2017-19)
Jayson Megna (2017-18)
Ashton Sautner (2017-18)
Joe Labate (2017-18)
Andrew Chirniwchan (2017-18)
Griffen Molino (2017-18)
Tony Cameranesi (2017-18)
Evan McEneny (2017-19)
Tanner MacMaster (2017-18)
Jalen Chatfield (2017-19)
David Dziurzynski (2017-18)
Jordan Subban (16 games 2018)
Frankie Simonelli (9 games 2018)
Zac Lynch (8 games 2018)
Marco Roy (6 games 2018)
Anton Rodin (7 games 2018)
Justin Taylor (2 games 2018)
Willie Corrin (2 games 2018)
Matt Leitner (5 games 2018)
Joe Faust (2 games 2018)
Mathieu Brodeur (4 games 2018)
Yan-Pavel Laplante (5 games 2018)
Cliff Watson (6 games 2017)
Richard Bachman (2017-19)
Thatcher Demko (2017-18)
Joel Lowry (1 game 2017)
Justin Hamonic (1 game 2018)
Brian Ward (1 game 2017)
Aaron Irving (1 game 2018)
Caleb Herbert (1 game 2018)
Mackenzie Stewart (2 games 2018)
Nolan Valleau (5 games 2018)
Brady Brassart (9 games 2018)
Danny Moynihan (11 games 2018)
Anton Cederholm (12 games 2018)
Lukas Jasek (2018-19)
Brendan Woods (2018-19)
Brendan Gaunce (2018-19)
Jonathan Dahlen (2018-19)
Vincent Arseneau (2018-19)
Tyler Motte (2018-19)
Kole Lind (2018-19)
Brandon Anselmini (2018-19)
Vincent Arseneau (2018-19)
Mitch Eliot (2018-19)
Jonah Gadjovich (2018-19)
Reid Gardiner (2018-19)
Jesse Graham (2018-19)
Olli Juolevi (2018-19)
Tanner Kero (2018-19)
Ivan Kulbakov (2018-19)
Stefan LeBlanc (2018-19)
Michael Leighton (2018-19)
Marek Mazanec (2018-19)
Tom Pyatt (2018-19)
Kyle Thomas (2018-19)
Aaron Throw (2018-19)
Mitchell Vanderlaan (2018-19)
0 notes
biofunmy · 5 years ago
Text
Want a Sweet Gig? Don’t Coach the Toronto Maple Leafs
TORONTO — If there is one thing most hockey observers can agree on, it’s that coaching the Toronto Maple Leafs is a perilous job.
Mike Babcock, who was fired on Wednesday after four-plus years with the team, was the sixth Leafs coach to be dismissed since 2006, following Peter Horachek, Randy Carlyle, Ron Wilson, Paul Maurice and Pat Quinn. To replace Babcock, the team promoted Sheldon Keefe from its American Hockey League affiliate, the Toronto Marlies.
The former N.H.L. general manager Craig Button attributed Toronto’s long list of coach firings to an imbalance between performance and expectations in a city that has been aching for a Stanley Cup since 1967.
“When the expectations exceed what the reality is, I think that always creates some unfair criticism of the coach,” Button said.
The truth is that coaching anywhere in the N.H.L. has become perilous. Last year, for instance, four coaches were fired in November.
But Toronto is a particularly impatient market. Its titleless streak is the longest active drought in the N.H.L. The Maple Leafs had been tied with the St. Louis Blues, who last season won the Stanley Cup for the first time in their 52-year history.
In the first two months of this season, Babcock’s Leafs were 9-10-4, which had them sitting at 10th in the Eastern Conference standings. They were riding a six-game winless streak when Babcock was fired.
Brian Burke, former general manager of the Leafs, understands the pressure of Toronto. When the chants of “fire Wilson” became too loud in March 2012, Burke fired his good friend.
Less than a year later, Burke, too, would be fired.
Now a television analyst for Sportsnet, Burke said the news media tended to add to the pressure.
“The problem is when the team struggles, all 80 to 100 of those media people pick up a rock and throw it,” he said, adding: “The biggest art to coaching or managing here is to tune out the white noise. And social media makes it very hard, much more difficult than it was 15 years ago.”
Paul Dennis, a sports psychologist, worked with the Leafs as a development coach from 1989 until 2009 and saw a number of coaches fired.
He used to advise the coaches to practice what they preached to the players: Tune out the things out of your control.
“So your job is to focus on tactics and strategies to get the best out of your players for the next game,” Dennis said. “It’s easy to say, but as long as you can do that, you’ve got a chance.”
Several days ago, amid rumors of his imminent firing, Babcock said, “If my kids were young, I’d never coach in Toronto.”
The implication was that he would not have wanted to put his young children through the turmoil in this success-starved hockey market.
For years the Leafs had trouble attracting elite free agents, and many players, including Phil Kessel and Larry Murphy, found more success when they left. (In a surprise, John Tavares, a native of the area, signed with the team last season.)
Babcock, 56, was widely considered the best coach in hockey. He won a Stanley Cup in Detroit in 2008 and led Canada to back-to-back Olympic gold medals, although in each case he had an elite lineup.
It seemed as if Babcock was the answer. In 2015 he was awarded an eight-year contract worth a reported $50 million.
But below the surface were reports that General Manager Kyle Dubas and Babcock had clashed over coaching philosophy and roster construction. Dubas preferred a lineup of speed, and Babcock wanted a grinding type of player. Dubas handed out rich contracts to the team’s young star forwards — Auston Matthews, William Nylander and Mitch Marner — and there was little salary cap space to add the grit to the lineup that Babcock wanted. Over time, his favorites were moved out.
And it was no secret that some players chafed at Babcock’s domineering ways, which the former Leafs player Carlo Colaiacovo, who was briefly coached by Babcock in Detroit, characterized as “stubborn.”
Then there was the team’s awkward front-office structure, which may have exacerbated its problems.
Brendan Shanahan, the Maple Leafs’ president, hired Babcock before choosing a general manager, even though traditionally the general manager hires the coach to ensure that they share a vision.
“It’s flawed at its most crucial element,” said Button, the former general manager of the Calgary Flames. “A coach-G.M. relationship is imperative to success. To me, you create unnecessary conflict when you do it the other way around. Shanahan has to take some of the blame. You’re foisting people on each other.”
If Babcock wasn’t the answer, who is? Shanahan and Dubas have put their faith in Keefe, 39, who had not coached an N.H.L. game before Thursday night, when Toronto beat the Arizona Coyotes in Phoenix, 3-1.
The pressure now shifts to Dubas, 33, who made a name for himself as an analytics guru with the Soo Greyhounds of the Ontario Hockey League. Dubas hired Keefe to coach the Greyhounds in December 2012, and Keefe turned around a faltering team. He coached the Marlies to a Calder Cup championship in 2018.
Keefe is closer in age to Dubas and may be able to communicate better with the younger players.
“I think he’s young enough that he can identify with today’s player more so than Mike,” Dennis said. “Today’s players are different. Managing egos and ice time are probably more important than strategies and tactics.”
Sahred From Source link Sports
from WordPress http://bit.ly/2rq0oPz via IFTTT
0 notes
wigmund · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
From Biomedical Picture of the Day; March 9, 2017:
Gonad Infinitum
Although we inherit two copies of our genes (one each from mom and dad), they rarely meet inside our cells. But during meiosis, when we make our own sex cells – sperm or eggs – something odd happens. Pairs of gene-carrying chromosomes line up and swap bits – perhaps genes carrying traits like eye color or big feet. This ‘genetic recombination’ gives each egg or sperm a different set of traits to pass on to our own children. Meiosis occurs in all sexually reproducing creatures, including the roundworm, Caenorhabditis elegans, whose sex cells develop in a pouch-like gonad. Cells in this gonad move from left to right at different stages in meiosis and produce proteins highlighted in three different colors (overlaid at the top). The red-colored proteins help to form the synaptonemal complex – a sort of scaffold that helps chromosomes align and enables the genetic 'mash-up' that occurs in generation after generation.
A contributor to this work, Consuelo Barroso-Guttierez, is a member of this MRC LMS group
Written by John Ankers Image by Jinmin Gao; Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; Image copyright held by original authors; Research published in Genes and Development, November 2016
0 notes
goalhofer · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
2005-06 Toronto Marlies Roster.
Front: #31 Jean-Sebastien Aubin, assistant coach Greg Gilbert, #12 John Pohl, head coach Paul Maurice, GM Kyle Dubas, #40 Marc Moro, co-owner Larry Tannenbaum, #17 Kris Newbury, assistant coach Dallas Eakins and #31 Ben Scrivens.
2nd row: Trainer, co-owner Michael Friisdahl, #23 Alex Foster, #18 Brent Aubin, #77 Staffan Kronwall, #19 Jeremy Williams, #18 Dominic D’Amour, #9 Brendan Bell and equipment manager.
3rd row: Trainer, #43 Jay Harrison, #12 Aleksander Suglobov, #15 Brett Engelhardt, #79 John Mitchell, #22 Ian MacNeil, #44 Colin Murphy and assistant equipment manager.
Back: #5 Brad Brown, #10 Robbie Earl, #11 Brad Ross, #8 Carlo Colaiacovo, #79 Brady Vail, #7 Erik Westrum and #56 Andy Wozniewski.
0 notes