Thursday, May 20, 2010

Praying for the Habs- It's Down to This.....

Enough with the cheering, it's time to pray. If you are offended by our Habs prayers please skip this post. If you've got any other prayers, from any religion whatsoever to add please so in the comment section. 

PLEASE READ OUT LOUD!!!!!


"Our father who art in Montreal. 
Hockey be thy name. 
Thy will be done. The cup will be won. 
On ice, as well as in the stands. 
Give us this day our daily fix, and forgive us our penalties, as we forgive those who cross-check us, 
Lead us not into elimination. 
But deliver us to victory. 
In the name of the fans, Lord Stanley 
& the ghosts of the Forum 
Amen~~ "


 THE HABS 10 COMMANDMENTS
Thou shall have no other Gods before the Habs
Thou shall not bow down or worhsip any crest other than the noble CH;
Thou shall not misuse the name of the HABS or take it in vain.
Remember the Sabbath it is for hockey.
Honour the Habs tradition and the players who proudly wore the teams colours before, so that you may live long and prosper in the eternal kingdom of the Habs.
Thou shall not murder any chances of victory by harbouring negative thoughts.
Thou  shall not commit adultery with a person not of the Habs tribe.
Thou  shall not steal other fans car flags or hats.
Thou  shall not give false testimony against your team and promise to remain positive forever.
You shall not covet your neighbour's team, even if they be playing better

Halak is my shepherd,
I shall have faith;
He makes me believe.
He leads me to victory;
He restores my soul.
He leads me in paths of the winning
for the sake of the
Hab's.
Even though I walk through the valley
of the shadow of the evil Flyers and Kate Smith, I fear no evil; for Halak you are with me;
Your stick and your glove, they comfort me.
Surely goodness and victory shall follow you all the rest of the playoffs and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord Stanley Cup





  1. Jewish Prayer for the Habs

    And you shall love the Habs with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.
    And these words that I command you today shall be in your heart.
    And you shall teach them diligently to your children, and you shall speak of them
    when you sit at home, and when you walk along the way, and when you lie down and when you rise up.
    And you shall draw the logo of the Habs as a sign on your hand, and it shall be painted above and between your eyes.
    And you shall post a Habs banner on the door posts of your house and on your gates.

    Christian Prayers for the Habs
    Hail Martin, full of grace.
    Our Lord is with thee.
    Blessed art thou among hockey coaches,
    and blessed is the team.
    Holy Jacques, coach of the Canaidens,
    pray for a win,
    now and at the hour of our need.
    Amen.
     


     Bless us, O Lord, and this victory over the Fyers
    which we are about to receive from your goodness. 



    Muslim Prayer for the Habs

    The Habs are  great.
    I bear witness that there is no team none worthy of worship except the Habs
    I bear witness that the Habs are the choice of God.  
    I Believe. 

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

A Funeral in Sherbrooke

I've mentioned in several past posts, but it bears repeating, that for personal reasons I don't criticize Premier Jean Charest.
It's not to say that I agree with many of his policies or that I blindly agree with all that he does, but rather because I am somewhat of a friend of the extended Charest family.

Readers should note that I remain politically inactive and have been so for a long time, however friendships endure.

On Friday, my wife and I ventured down to Sherbrooke for the funeral of the patriarch of the Charest clan, Claude, better known as "Red," who was quite a character in his time.  As a young man, he  played hockey in the American Hockey League and went on to become a very successful entrepreneur in the Sherbrooke area. After the untimely death of his wife at a very young age, Red took over the duties of running the Charest household, which was quite a task, considering that there were five children. In those days it was quite unheard of for a single dad to raise a family, but Red was a ground breaker.

The trip down to Sherbrooke was long and uneventful, uneventful that is, until I was nabbed by an intrepid Sherbrooke motorcycle cop for exceeding the speed limit along King Street.
DRAT, those 50km zones!
My copper's keen police sense determined that we were going to the funeral (my wife and I were decked out in black) and he asked helpfully if I needed directions to the funeral home. I felt a brief connection and  a glimmer of hope that perhaps I was to be spared a citation, but alas it was not to be.  He did offer an apology after giving me the ticket, something that no cop has ever done to me before.

Hmmm. Mr. Policeman, we would meet again...

The only silver lining was that 26 kms over the limit, the ticket was only $140 and 2 points. In Montreal it'd probably be $700 and a license suspension or perhaps a guillotining.

My mood had clouded over badly, getting a ticket will  do it to to you every time, but getting one with your wife in the passenger seat is doubly painful.

As I returned to the driver's seat, all I could mutter was "Don't say a Frigging Word!!!" to which she just smiled demurely, inflicting another measure of pain.

To make matters worse, I should have taken up the cop's offer of directions, because shortly thereafter I became miserably lost, stupidly depending on the technology of my hitherto trusty GPS device, which uncharacteristically announced in a coy female voice (without a hint of embarrassment) that it too, was hopelessly lost.

After stopping for directions from a local who answered my French queries in English, we were back on our way. I had forgotten how obliging country folks are and how many people in Sherbrooke spoke English. I started to feel better.

We got to the funeral home and were neatly instructed where to park, where to go and what to do. I was reminded that French Catholic funeral homes are exceedingly efficient.

We entered the building and walked past a long lineup of people, who were patiently waiting to walk by the casket and greet the family. Just as I attempted to cut the line, my wife grabbed my arm and directed me back to the end of the line. Oh well....

The hall was filled with politico types, most of whom I only knew from seeing on TV. All were bedecked with tiny lapel pins that identified them as National Assembly members, Order of Canada inductees and various other organizations including several police departments. After paying our respects it was off to Church for mass and as I placed my car in the funeral cortège, I noticed that we were to benefit from a nifty VIP police motorcycle escort, with of course my favourite motorcycle cop, who gave me a polite salute in recognition. Eccchh!!!

We zipped through the streets, with the cops seamlessly blocking each intersection which we passed, giving rise, in small measure, to feelings of royalty.

The Church's left front side was filled with politicians, mostly members of the National Assembly and including ex-Premiers including Lucine Bouchard. Brian Mulroney and Mila had the front seat and my wife and I were seated across from the lovely Yolande James, who was looking particularly fetching. Too bad it can't be said of all, including the education Minister who could probably use a fashion makeover.

Fittingly, Peter Mackay, the Defence Minister was representing Ottawa. His father Elmer was a good friend and cabinet colleague of Charest  in the Mulroney government. 

During the service the Health Minister was pulled out of the pews rather unceremoniously by an aide.  It must have been serious and it was. I later found out that several cyclists were mowed down in Rougemont, a town we drove by coming down to Sherbrooke.

The Premier made a nice speech about his father and the long service finally came to  a close. As we left the church I noticed Lawrence Bergman, the MP from Cote Saint Luc and Hampstead, alongside Steven Cummings, a Charest fundraiser and self-proclaimed spokesman for the Jewish community. Both looked a little glum, probably because attending church is likely not their favorite pastime.

Outside the church, Brian Mulroney worked the crowd like an old pro, shaking hands and slapping backs with a wide grin, perhaps forgetting that he was in fact attending a funeral.

The Charests held a small reception in a local museum which we attended briefly before making our way home.

Foolishly trusting my GPS to get us home, the device took us on a nice 'tour de ville' which I actually turned out to enjoy. Sherbrooke has a fine Anglo history which is reflected in the many street names that hark back to jolly old England.
It's a city where Wellington Street turns into Queen and where Argyle crosses Dominion and  King bisects Portland. It's a city that proudly remembers it wartime heritage and is home to the most elegant war memorial outside Montreal.

We finally left via the beautifully named "Jacques O'Brady" highway and as I took to the road for the long trip home I was up for some pleasant conversation, I turned to my wife. "So dear, what did you think of the whole affair?"

She stared straight ahead and after a pregnant pause said but two words.
"Don't speed!"

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

French Language Ayatollahs Determined To Impose Bad French Music on the Public

The furor over the Quebec City's Summer's Festival plan to include English artists has once again opened another tedious debate between language elitists who wish to impose bad French music on a public that steadfastly demands the highest quality entertainment whether it be in English or French.

French language militants fail to realize that the organizers are not the enemy of the French language, certainly not front men, doing the bidding of Anglo imperialists whose only quest is to subjugate Francophones and assimilate then into the Anglo community.
If organizers can be accused of anything, it is of practical realism. If the Festival is to remain profitable, top English artists are a necessity. It seems that Quebec City residents, even unilingual ones, are not the rubes that militants pretend, to be fobbed off with second and third class talent. Quebeckers, as well as just about everyone else in the civilized world (regardless of language) recognize talent and expect to get the most for their money when shelling out hard earned dollars on concerts.

As the famous old New York Yankee manager, Yogi Berra said, "It's a question of déjà vu, all over again."
The very same debate took place back in the summer of 2008 when language militants complained that it was inappropriate to have Paul McCartney give a free concert celebrating the 400th anniversary of the founding of the City of Quebec.
Over 250,000 people attended and were treated to an entertaining set of old Beatles classics as well as some post-Beatles tunes, all of course sung in English. Considering that the population of Quebec city is only about 500,000 people, the concert obviously drew people from far and wide.

Today militants are again making a play to impose their views on a reluctant majority, invoking the 'Father Knows Best" argument, the one that holds that they alone should be the arbiters of what may be seen or heard by Quebeckers, despite what the public wants.
« Let free people do whatever they want to do » 
Laissez donc les gens libres de faire ce qu’ils ont envie de faire » )
...is the opening line by French language radical Louis Prefontaine, who spends the rest of his blog piece doing cartwheels to justify why this should not be allowed to happen and why English artists should not be allowed at the Quebec Summer Festival.

It's the type of attitude found in North Korea or some other tin pot country where the local "Dear Leader" imposes his musical preferences on a captive nation, where books are banned according to political agenda and television is controlled to promote 'clean thinking' and where the public must be protected from itself.
French language militants see themselves as waging the good fight, one where they alone understand what is best for the nation, displaying an attitude no different than Muslim radical clerics who demand that women be covered up in public because it is "God's will"
Perhaps our very own language ayatollahs would be shocked to be compared to religious zealots, but the comparison is valid and if the shoe fits... well, there's little difference in the imposition of a language or culture by decree than there is in the imposition of a state religion, one to which all must adhere to by force. Just like the radical mullahs, our language ayatollahs wish to ban what they do not like.

Too harsh a comparison? I don't think so.

No longer satisfied with forcing students into French language school against their will, they now want to control what people choose as entertainment. It may not be long before we face the dreaded  'thought police' who will be charged with rooting out English everywhere. Perhaps we can add the term 'languagecrime' to the dictionary, to go along with the famous Orwellian term of  'thoughtcrime.'
Life imitates art.

Now the issue of English artists at the Quebec Summer Festival is rather interesting and begs the question as to why Francophones prefer English music.

They do so because English music is better. Sorry.

Don't get me wrong, Francophones are a talented lot and have some very good musical groups. The problem is that there are not enough and the good ones are not as good as the Paul McCartneys or the Black-eyed Peas. It is a fact that Quebec concert goers understand all too well.

The reality that militants don't want to face, is the fact that internationally, music is English. No artist that sings exclusively in any other language but English can expect fame and fortune on the international scene.
Just ask Celine Dion who removed the accent from her name to appear more like an Anglophone and learned to sing in English in order to seek her fame and fortune.

I mentioned in a recent column how on the talk show Tous le Monde en Parle French chanteuse Charlotte Gainsbourg was cruelly realistic when she was asked why she chose to sing in English. 'It's just easier..."

Quebec is a small nation of just seven  million Francophones. To believe that they can compete in French against the entire world that sings in English is absurd. While one or two artists can be considered world class, that's about it. Everyone else is, well, second or third rate. And so any concert that is exclusively French is by definition, inferior.

The lack of depth is the real reason that people don't want to hear more than a few French songs at the Bell Centre or go to concerts in Quebec City without international talent (English.)

When the students of UQAM, a Montreal French language university made a innovative one-shot video to the Black-Eyed Peas monster hit "I got a Feeling," our intrepid language ayatollah, Louis Prefontaine complained that they should have sung in French. Had they done so, do you think six million people would have watched the video? Not a chance!
SEE THE VIDEO....... READ MY POST ABOUT IT


Many years ago, I attended a French musical, Notre Dame de Paris which was then the talk of the town in Montreal. While the audience was enthralled, I was shocked at how amateurish the production was. Although the price of admission was close to a $100 (12 odd years ago) the music was canned and the staging rather minimalist to be kind, something one would expect in a high school production. The real disappointment were the voices of the leads, none of whom would make understudy on Broadway.

The same of course goes for French television, which is inferior to Canadian television, which is inferior to American television and so both Anglos and Francophones choose to watch US shows (even dubbed.) Could you imagine being forced to watch  CBC and CTV exclusively (minus the American content) your whole life? Bah!!!!

Before somebody comments on how good Quebec television is, let me tell you that it is a tedious collection of low budget soap operas and bad imitations of American game shows. The rest of the schedule consists of badly dubbed American shows, with the occasional provincial talk-show thrown into the mix, where local Quebec artists regale the audience with fabulous stories of their 'breakthrough' in France and Belgium.

Julie Snyder's imitation of Howie Mandel on the Quebec version of "Deal or No Deal" is so bad that it makes Pamella Wallin's Canadian version of "'Who Wants to be a Millionaire" seem almost riveting.  Errr, maybe not.... LINK.

To sum up, Americans like to go to shows that feature Celine Dion because she is talented. Quebeckers like to see Paul McCartney or the Black-Eyed Peas for the same reason.

Having language shoved down one's throat in school is an outrage. Demanding that one's personal entertainment dollars be spent according to someone else's politically correct selection is beyond the pale.

Perhaps Mr. Prefontaine can write a code à la Herouxville that would describe how we should all dress, act, speak, eat, think and vote.

Maybe then he and the other French language ayatollahs will finally live in the Quebec of their dreams.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Harper Taking Quebec Apart One Brick at a Time

Wikipedia describes the anecdote wherein a frog placed in a pot of boiling water, will jump out, but if it is placed in cold water that is slowly heated, it will not perceive the danger and will be cooked to death. The story is often used to describe the inability of people to react to significant changes that occur gradually.

I can't think of a more apt metaphor to describe Quebec's deteriorating situation as a powerful and distinctive partner in the Canadian federation.
Historians may very well point to the failed referendum of 1995 and the subsequent rise of the Bloc Quebec as the turning point where the Province of Quebec and Francophone influence began its precipitous  spiral downward as a political force in Canada.

Until then, Quebec had maintained it's position in the political driver's seat by voting federally as a group for one of the two main parties, thus controlling whether the Conservatives or the Liberal ruled Canada. Because Canadian voters split the vote rather evenly between Liberal Ontario and the Conservative western provinces, Quebec was in the envious position of deciding which party would rule Canada. This pattern repeated itself with Trudeau, Mulroney, Chretien and Martin, who all owed their final political success to Quebec. In repayment, all these Prime Ministers duly rewarded Quebec with strong representation in the cabinet, where the province's interests were jealously protected.

When the Bloc Quebecois took over this voting bloc, Quebec was left unrepresented in the halls of power. Although both the Liberals and the Conservatives, in search of a majority, tried for many years to win back Quebec voters, making all sorts of promises and delivering all sorts of goodies, it was not to be.

Quebeckers foolishly overplayed their hand and embraced the adopted role of the spoilt child who refused to eat dinner.

Quebeckers have finally convinced Stephen Harper that Quebec is a dead end, a place where governments go to die, not to find majorities. Coldly turning his back on the Province, Harper is slowly and deliberately setting out to take Quebec out of the Canada equation and like the oblivious frog in the pot of cold water, the heat is being turning up.


As the Bloc merrily spins the illusion that tells Quebeckers that the province's interests are being looked after, nothing could be farther from the truth. The dangerous lie is literally killing the political interests of Quebec. Perhaps that is exactly what the Bloc Quebecois wants.


One only has to look at the anti-Quebec climate that reigns in the Conservative government where already established policies that are crippling Quebec are maintained and where new legislation seeks to reward others and weaken Quebec is the order of the day.

The opinions of Quebeckers and it's leader is now being roundly ignored and in some cases being outright mocked by Harper and his minions. On issues like the environment, the oil sands, energy efficiency and climate change, where Quebec is diametrically opposed to Conservative polices, the Prime Minister seems to gloat in his ability to humiliate Premier Charest as payback for past slights.

IMMIGRATION
Although not a Harper initiated policy, the political dividends of maintaining a policy of mass immigration is not lost on the Conservatives. Each year Quebec's demographic situation deteriorates, especially the French fact. Another twenty years or so, Francophones will represent less than 20% of Canada's population, a benchmark that precludes any talk of 'two nations.'


PARLIAMENTARY SEATS
Mr. Harper's proposed law, Bill C-12, to add 30 seats to Parliament, all outside Quebec is the clearest signal that he is bent on taking Quebec down. The proposition that Parliament become truly 'representative' means that Quebec will lose even more in the future,  forever burying  the concept that Quebec should maintain 25% of the seats regardless of the demographic reality for the sake of the "two nations" concept.

NO SOUP FOR YOU! QUEBEC
The stimulus package created in 2009 to combat the recession, clearly bypassed Quebec, with the bulk of the money going to Ontario and British Columbia. While Quebec screamed that its damaged wood industry needed help too, Ottawa politely demurred. Immediately before Quebec deposited it's 2010 budget, the province found out it wouldn't be receiving an expected $2.23 billion payment for having harmonized the GST and provincial tax, another slap in the face. LINK

NATIONAL REGULATORY AGENCY FOR STOCK MARKETS
The creation of a national regulatory agency to regulate the financial stock markets is another direct threat to Quebec power and authority. Although Ottawa has told Quebec that it doesn't have to join, the effect would be devastating to be left out. If pension and mutual funds made it mandatory for companies included in their portfolios to be regulated federally, it would signal the de facto end of the AMF, Quebec's regulatory body.

NO MORE PORK
Quebec had always expected and received an unfair share of Federal pork projects. That is no more. Recently military maintenance contracts have all gone to companies out west. Quebec has it's nose up against the window pane looking in, while everyone else is eating.

BILINGUALISM IN THE SUPREME COURT
Harper is set to use his majority in the senate to deal another humiliating defeat to those calling for judges to be bilingual. While the other parties try to make political hay by forcing the issue and perhaps embarrassing the government, the Conservatives view it as an opportunity to tap into anti-Quebec feelings that are running at the highest historical levels ever across the country.

What's next?
Equalization payments. Last year Quebec received over eight billion dollars from other provinces, a crucial part of the provinces operating budget. Already there is rumblings that the structure and the size of the program is to change.

Ironically, the only way Quebec can change its political fortunes is to vote massively for the Liberals or the Conservatives, something unlikely to happen. Getting its foot back in the door is the only way to reverse anti-Quebec policies, but it's unlikely to happen.

And so like the frog in the pot of water Quebeckers just don't realize that they will be cooked very soon.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

This Is what it Feel's Like to Be a Penguins Fan

What can I say that hasn't already been said relating to the Habs knocking off the Pittsburgh Penguins.

You know how good it feels to be a Canadiens fan right now.
Here's how rotten it feels to be a Penguins fan today.

These comments lifted directly from the Penguins fan board at HF Boards.

BEFORE THE GAME
Game 7 is gonna be great!

GO PENS!!! Beat the worms. Or squash them with a steel toed boot

MAF is due one for those games that makes us rejoice he is a Pen... 
Halak will get shelled and all the Pens fans will be chanting "HALLLAAAAKKKK!", it will be 57-0 and Crosby will score all 57 goals.
May the best team win tommorow.....
NO !   I want the Habs to win !

I had a dream, that Halak was chased from the net in the first period.

5-1 pens crosby with the hat trick

Man I HOPE the Pens lose, a team with beer league offensive abilities beating top 2 SC favorites in the East would be crazy.

Will be wearing my lucky Staal jersey, WE CAN'T LOSE!
If experience is even worth a damn, then the Pens will show it tonight. No excuses, boys. You've been here before, and you've gotten the job done before. You know what you have to do to win in this type of situation, so just go out there and do it

Blowout win for the Penguins tonight.

I'm so nervous for our boys. Do not be denied.

Malkin will get the first one, and the Canadiens will go home empty-handed tonight. LET'S GO PENS!

Montreal fans are extremely cocky going into this game, hope karma slaps em in the mouth

please beat these stinking undeserving habs so i can bust everybody's chops tommorow, hab fans are so annoying!!

Go pens. I'm sick of habs fans ... enough already. Unleash hell.

I've always been a big believer that in a best of 7 series, the cream will always rise to the top. Let's get our cream on. Together.

All the game in this series have been really close, "nail biters", would it be too much to ask for a blowout tonight?

Gonna get obliterated in my basement with lots of smashables around. Let's burn these ****ers to the ground.

Come on, don't close out the Igloo with a loss to a team you're better than. I expect a win.

The time is now or never for the big guns to step up. Crosby, Malkin, Staal, Fleury, Gonchar, etc.
Defend the title and put these squirts out tonight.

Geno is so friggin due for a big night on the score board. He's been pretty damn good the last couple of games and I can't wait to see how much jump he comes out with for game 7.

good job by some pens fans on the main board predicting a blow out for us

If there's one thing that I'm confident about, it's that both he and Sid are gonna come out with fire in their eyes. Whether or not that translates into actual goals will be a different thing all together, but at least we know we can expect their absolute best efforts.



DURING THE GAME

I'm sick of hearing Halak's pads in surround sound!

Guerin's out there. Unreal. I want Bylsma fired now. Not after the game. Now

Have I mentioned that my hatred for the Habs, already my least favorite Canadian team, has multiplied by a factor of like, five?

Way to come up big Sid.
 
god damn u halak!!

Halak. Cheese and Rice. (????)

I HATE Halak!


Omg **** you Halak!

***** you Halak!!!!!
 
Is their a more obnoxious and outright villainous hockey team in National Hockey League history than the Montreal Canadiens!?

i think i will be hating Fleury for a long.. long.. long.. time.

I ****ing hate Halak.... MALKIN SCORE A ****ING GOAL ALREADY!!!

Hockey gods have forsaken us
Malkin needs to get his head out of his ****ing ass
Every single minute that goes by I feel myself reaching for the power button
Major league fail going on so far this game. .... this is the single worst effort i have ever seen in a game 7
Pens chugged down the stupid juice this morning.

That's season boys. Halak is the best goalie in the history of the NHL. Hands down. Congrats Habs.
if you watch the video closely you'll see that instead of putting a body on Moen, Gonchar is consulting his crystal ball.

Gonchar looked like a pylon on that one.

That's the kind of defensive coverage you'd see in Midget B

I'm mailing him a punch in the face.

I almost broke my TV when I saw that.


Useless Russian players. pathetic lazy-ass pinko commie

Halak just saved their season. Anyone who says he isn't a good goalie is lying to themselves.
We better score here. I'm about ready to knife a kitten right now.... >.<

I tink you are right, he's sure playing like the goalie of NHL history. Not even Roy has stats like this guy.
Fleury laughing it up in pregame about how 'fun' this is going to be. Guess what jackoff, this isn't peewee league.

Halak's the only reason they've gotten as far as they have. Hmm now I know how the Caps fans felt
With that goal, Dominic Moore ties Crosby and Geno for goals scored in this series. One.
Thanks Fleruy, way to suck you POS.
Someone kill me please.  I have started crying.
When Crosby, Malkin, and Fleury are being outplayed by Lapierre, Moore, and Halak, you're up ****'s creek without a paddle. 
What good are saves when the rest of the team is filled with retards with cement skates.
 I think I saw Halak's hand shaking when they scored the 4th goal on Fleury
screw you pansy sid... drive to the net make a play. You are a baby.
I feel physically sick. I do believe I will cry if we lose.
I think I just threw up in my mouth.  
WHY AM I STILL WATCHING THIS GAME?!?!?!..... can someone please answer
Scott Gomez is the worst Alaskan ever.
Urg at 4-0 i went into the bathroom and shaved off the playoff beard. i come out and its 4-2. I'm out of hair now and need 2 more goals... Do i ummm move onto other parts to shave?


Golden Diamond's Avatar
Last one out get the lights. ****ing disgrace.

Is the game over yet? I can't bear watching this right now...
WTF is happening?? This is pitiful. They are falling apart
Someone post a few "too many men" pics, pensblog style.

AFTER THE GAME
Game... Set... Match...

I'm going to miss watching Hockey in June... :-(

habs = the luckiest team on the world... gets all the breaks and bounces...

just sucks

I'm so furious that I'm shaking. Blow up the Igloo with MAF, Guerin, Feds and Poni inside.

Good season, but I can't be magnanimous about the Pens losing to the Habs ... disgrace.

The better team won this series.Now I have to root for the fricken Habs to win the cup. At least there is some consolation in losing to the eventual cup winner.

Don't wanna rub it but yeah, that was definitely the most pathetic defensive effort I've ever seen by a player. And in a game 7 too. Gonchar just proved there why he is garbage.

halak i hate u...

F the Habs. The first solid confident team they run into will wipe the floor with them.

no shame in losing to halak, he may well be a one year wonder, but its a hell of a playoff year
We have been quite terrible, but also... it just wasn't meant to be. Halak has been too good at the same time as we've been terrible. Simply cannot believe we are losing against Montreal.

And we're out like the fat kid.

Fixed

As Therrien once said, "It was a 'patetic' performance."

Go <whoever wins western conference>

Montreal is a joke...... At set for halak  (except?-.ed)

The line to apologize to Bob Gainey forms on the left.
 

"Leaders aren't born, they are made. And they are made just like anything else, through hard work. And that's the price we'll have to pay to achieve that goal, or any goal."- Vincent Lombardi


What Crosby did was politely dismiss the Habs series win and then he wrapped it all up with a pretty bow by saying "credit to them".




Wasn't that Fun???
If you aren't there already, there's still time to join;
 


And for your entertainment;


 
 



 And to re-live Game 7 as seen in Pittsburgh.....