is anyone surprised

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Misplaced Lens Cap
Cosimo Galluzzi
hello vonnie
tumblr dot com
Not today Justin
trying on a metaphor
dirt enthusiast
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styofa doing anything

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Sade Olutola
h
i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
todays bird
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.

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@helmetbonkies
is anyone surprised
squeaky sore loser
guys..... he's a parody of himself
plus... he made the change after his fruitless first game (wore a ccm neck guard then)
that neckguard is older than macklin celebrini, adam fantilli, dylan garand, will cuylle, tyson foerster and kent johnson.
collaring your men… this is how we grow the sport. also oh my god he tried a shiny new neck guard and was like no hafta go back to my 23 year old one
most beautiful he’s ever looked
how fast the night changes
sound on guys iihfhockey know what they’re doing
geno making kindy move so he can sit next to his wife
A lot of us wondered how it would work. Two, sorta, alpha dog guys, top two picks. Did you envision it, where you guys would become as close as you were and sort of establish yourself in the fabric of the city as a tender.
I did to be honest with you. That’s what I was hoping. I remember watching Geno play. Obviously he came over my second year, but I was just waiting patiently for him to come over and hoping it was sooner rather than later. Just having the opportunity to watch him prior to that, knowin how good he was. Obviously you don't ever know. But he just seemed special right from the start. And i think that yeah, i did envision that, that's what i was hoping it would work out as. And it has. And I’mm super grateful for it. And I think whether it's moments like tonight or other things that we've shared, good and bad, that it's been pretty incredible to be part of this team and play with him all this time.
"Pittsburgh is Crosby. Crosby is Pittsburgh. No one in Pittsburgh would understand if he changed teams," Malkin said in an exclusive interview with RG.org. "Although anything can happen, sometimes things happen that have a one percent chance of happening. But before signing my current contract, we talked. And he told me that the Penguins are us: me, him, [Kris] Letang. I signed my contract. He will probably make the same decision."
Malkin, who turns 38 on July 31, signed a four-year, $24.4 million contract with the Penguins on July 12, 2022. Crosby, who turns 37 on August 7, has one season remaining on a 12-year, $104.4 million contract he signed on July 1, 2012.
"Now I can't imagine myself on another team, although two years ago when I signed my current contract, I had different thoughts," Malkin admitted. "We had tough negotiations. Many players changed teams—even Wayne Gretzky. Steven Stamkos recently did it. There aren't many players who've spent their entire careers with one team. Now, I can't imagine going anywhere, but there was such a chance two years ago."
Malkin said that he would only be ready to play until he's 45 in one case: if Crosby signs an eight-year contract with the Penguins.
I want to play for another two years. As for another one, we'll see after that.
"It will be hard, of course, but I have to," Malkin said to RG.org. "I hope I won't play until I'm 45, actually. I want to play for another two years. As for another one, we'll see after that. I still want to spend time with my family. Family is a very important part of life. Many say they want to return to hockey soon after they retire. But I think my body will tell me when to stop. Maybe it will be expressed in a loss of desire to play. Or I'll start wondering if it's time to retire. Probably, it will happen like this: I'll wake up one morning and realize that I don't want to play hockey anymore."
that’s love
this is cute
#does it have more 'my wife is waiting for me in the car' energy#or 'my mom is waiting for me in the car' energy?#the great thing about sidmac is that frequently the answer is both! it's both at the same time.#isn't that a little fucked up? yes. but in a way where i need 20k words on it stat.
wheeze @ultravioletlightwaves
Canadiens head coach Martin St. Louis wouldn’t be surprised to see an NHL player eventually come out as gay.
“I think forget sports … I think we’re in a society now that people do come out,” he said.
There’s no doubt there have been gay players in the NHL before and that there are some today. But they obviously don’t feel comfortable coming out publicly in a league that still has a well-earned reputation for being an “old boys’ club.”
About 25 years ago, Tom Harrington was a CBC sports reporter and host of the Sports Journal magazine show. He was researching a story about an NHL player who was gay while working with a go-between who ran a support group in Toronto that helped professional and amateur athletes who were gay. Harrington was told there was a “prominent” NHL player who had been thinking about coming out.
During the next year-and-a-half, Harrington said he worked with his go-between trying to convince the NHL player to do an interview, but the player was “extremely reluctant and afraid he’d be exposed.” Harrington tried to arrange a phone interview or a meeting with the player, who asked if his voice could be disguised in a phone call in case Harrington recognized him. Harrington promised the go-between he would never reveal the player’s identity unless he permitted it.
“It was a step closer to the beginning of something, but it was also a window into just how terrified he was, and it said a lot about the culture at the time in professional male sports, where players didn’t feel they could even take the initial step to come out, let alone reveal themselves,” Harrington said in a phone interview Tuesday.
Harrington said the player eventually decided not to come out, saying he was too scared of the impact it would have on his family, hockey career and his life after hockey.
“I remember saying at the time (to the go-between): ‘You know, there are a lot of people who would be very supportive of him. There would be businesses lining up to sponsor him to have him as a spokesperson. I’m telling you, there’s an untapped market for someone like this … the Jackie Robinson of gays in sports.’ But, ultimately, it failed.
“I never knew who the player was and to this day I still don’t know who it was,” added Harrington, who retired last year after almost 44 years at CBC.
thinking of this guy this pride month
Sid serving up some prime Geno Face 👰🏻