happy pride month: boybestfriends edition

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Origami Around
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

if i look back, i am lost

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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$LAYYYTER
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Andulka

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@mack71will2
happy pride month: boybestfriends edition
I love how Will brings out totally different sides of himself depending on who he’s with. Like, what does his vibe with Leno say about him versus his vibe with Gabe, Mack, or Will Vote? Which of these friendships do you think brings out the 'realest' version of Will? Could you provide some insight as to how his dynamic differ with the four?
Ohh great question!
I find it hard to compare Will’s dynamic with any non-Mack entity simply because we have so much less footage and content of those relationships. But based on old BC clips, articles, and the elaborate mind palace I’ve constructed for myself, here’s how I see it.
WillSquared (WillWill? WillVote?)
This is the friendship that brings out the most unfiltered, unbothered, and unpolished version of Will. You know that childhood friend who’s seen you in diapers, held your hair back after five tequila shots on an empty stomach, and listened to your three-hour rant about the guy who ghosted you after saying he wanted you to meet his mom? That’s the vibe. The kind of friendship where you can sit in complete silence for hours, doing absolutely nothing of interest, and it never feels awkward. Where nobody worries about social niceties because he already knows where the fridge is. No need to offer him a Coke or a protein bar. He’s basically a permanent fixture in the house.
WillGabe
Thinking about how Gabe has said before that he and Will think very similarly about things, this feels like the friendship of #twinsies and #samesies. They’re the same flavour of weird. Neither one needs convincing to do something stupid and fun. They’re probably the pair everyone finds mildly annoying at social events because they’re always scheming, laughing too loudly, shoving each other, and accepting dares that get them banned from multiple establishments. They’re both extroverted, high-energy, adaptable people. The perfect vacation partners. The perfect roommates. The type of friends who rarely argue because arguing would cut into valuable fun-having time.
Willeno
Whew, boy. This one feels like a coming-of-age story, tragic and beautiful in its permanence. It’s the friendship that teaches you things about yourself that you can’t unknow, even if you desperately want to return to simpler times. There’s affection there, but also friction. Protection, but also cruelty. I’ve seen your bruises, and you’ve seen mine. Sometimes I press on them just to remind you I know they’re there. I don’t think Will could ever be fully himself around Leno. He was too busy trying to be cool, detached, macho, indifferent, above it all. Meanwhile, Leno seemed to like him best when he was none of those things. Yet he’d still poke fun at the softness he was drawn to, because acknowledging that attraction would’ve meant acknowledging his own softness too. So they spent years orbiting each other. Pushing each other away while keeping each other close. Speaking in half-truths. Never fully saying what they wanted, or who they wanted to be. Then time, circumstance, and fate pulled them apart. Now they’re friends with history.
Willmack
And then there’s Willmack. I think Mack gets the most complete version of Will. Not because Will changed for him, but because he’d already done the work. He’d faced his insecurities, looked honestly at himself, and decided that his quirks, interests, and unconventional hobbies are worth loving. As a result, he was able to meet Mack exactly where he is and love him wholeheartedly, flaws and all. In a lot of ways, Willmack are a combination of all of Will’s prior friendships. They have the comfort of WillSquared, the spark and tension of Willeno, and the attachment of WillGabe.
But what truly separates this friendship from the rest is, in my opinion, Mack. Because Mack has never learned how to want anything quietly. Generational talent, face of the franchise, and future saviour of Canadian hockey. This is a man who moves through life like weather—impossible to ignore, impossible to contain. When he believes in something, he carries it like a banner. And somewhere along the way, that unwavering devotion turned toward Will. I’ve said this before, but Mack would sooner conclude that the ice is crooked, the coach is blind, and the refs are being bribed than admit Will had a bad game. And faith that absolute can change the shape of a person. To be seen that clearly. Chosen that consistently. Held in someone’s certainty even on the days when your own confidence slips through your fingers. In Mack’s eyes, Will’s already enough. And because of that, Will has morphed into the most relaxed, confident, and self-assured version of himself. He laughs louder, blushes brighter, and plans all their little adventures. And Mack is right there beside him, indulging every single one of Will’s whims. Like a flower turning instinctively toward sunlight, Will is slowly unfolding into himself, knowing Mack is delighted to witness it. To witness him and all of his perfectly imperfect ways.
after watching Mack play more publicly on a couple different teams for hockey Canada now, I think it continues to reinforce how dramatically different his relationship is with Will than it is with any of his other teammates regardless of who he’s playing with
Will saw mack in the arms of older men again and decided that he's gonna learn how to play the guitar just to teach mack😌
Summer WillMack Mood board 2.0
1.0
NY Times article titled "San Jose Sharks offseason: Who stays, who goes from the roster?"
Mack and Will are the only two listed as "untouchables."
On Will’s Future with the Sharks: New Draft Picks, Developmental Hurdles, Trade Rumours, and the Willmack Factor
I got a very thoughtful ask about Will’s fate with the Sharks after drafting yet another 2OA: his game, the areas he still needs to develop, the looming Misa/Stenberg situation, trade rumours, and, of course, the whole Willmack of it all. So I thought I’d make a proper long post about it. This is purely my opinion, and I absolutely welcome different perspectives if anyone disagrees. Buckle up, this is gonna be a long and hopefully enjoyable ride.
Does being a 4OA centre moved to wing make Will less valuable than two 2OAs?
Not necessarily. Draft position and player quality aren’t the same thing. Will going 4OA doesn’t mean there were automatically three players better than him; it means three players were picked before him. Teams draft based on need, projection, risk, and what they value at the time. Years later, development can completely flip those rankings. That’s why the Misa situation is complicated, but not catastrophic. The org can believe Misa is the best centre available now and still believe Will is an elite NHL player. And if Will ultimately develops into the better overall player, it would hardly be the first time a 4OA pick outperformed players taken ahead of him.
Was Will being moved to wing actually a demotion, especially after the Misa pick?
I don’t see it that way. I think the Misa pick probably stung, because of course it did. Will was supposed to develop as a centre, and then the Sharks drafted another high-end centre. That had to make the writing on the wall feel a little bolder. But instead of spiraling, Will adapted. He leaned into right wing, and started carving out a different kind of indispensability. That was the smartest thing he could have done. Up until very recently, Will’s been saying he can play wherever the team needs him, but he knows where the opportunity is. He knows Mack wants him there. He knows their chemistry gives him the best chance to produce, stay visible, and remain central to the rebuild. So he finally decided to—very loudly and proudly if I may add—announce himself as a right wing. Clearly he’s embracing his new role.
Is Will only benefiting from Mack, or does Mack benefit from Will too?
That is the part people miss: Will isn’t just being elevated by Mack. He elevates Mack too. Will’s a scorer and creator. His game runs on instinct, timing, and opportunism in the best sense. The quick passes, the no-look plays, the way he finds soft ice — all of that becomes more dangerous because Mack can actually keep up with him. When Will is not there, Mack sometimes looks like he is passing to ghosts. It even took him a minute with Sidney Crosby, which is insane because he’s literally Captain Canada and arguably the face of hockey itself. But Mack’s so used to Will being in those exact spaces at those exact moments that even elite chemistry elsewhere does not look quite as automatic.
Would Mack really choose winning over Will?
This is where I strongly disagree with the idea that Mack would simply choose winning over Will. Yes, Mack cares about winning more than almost anything. That is his life’s purpose, his operating system. But the part people keep missing is that Mack does not seem to experience Will as separate from winning. He experiences Will as part of the answer. A lot of people frame it as a clean choice: personal attachment on one side, competitive success on the other. But that only works if Mack draws a hard line between the two, and from everything we have seen, he doesn’t. The relationship seems more integrated than that. Elite players are always looking for someone who sees the game the same way they do, someone who instinctively understands the timing, the risks, and the possibilities other people miss. Those partnerships are not obstacles to success. They become the foundation of it.
How do we know Mack sees Will as necessary?
I think there is a real argument that Mack has repeatedly chosen Will over every other version of winning available to him: over his own goals, over the easy play, over the play that would make the bench happy, and over the play that would make every hockey bro screaming about “the right hockey decision” happy.
Because when Mack looks at the ice, he does not seem to see a choice between Will and winning. He sees Will as the thing that makes winning possible. Will is hockey to him, in a literal, practical, visceral sense. He is woven into the way Mack understands the game, imagines success, and wants hockey to feel. And this translates off the ice too. Mack has stood in front of reporters for the nth time and talked about how special Will is, how smart he is, and how he just needs guys who can play with him. Do you know how crazy that is to say about your own teammates? That is not how you talk about just some guy.
Necessary is really the word here. Mack does not talk about Will like an option. He talks about him like a requirement, like something is missing from the equation when Will is not there. And for someone as singularly obsessed with winning as Mack is, that says everything. If winning were truly the only thing that mattered, then anyone could fill the role as long as the results came. But Mack keeps returning to Will specifically. Keeps looking for him. Keeps trusting him. Keeps building him up. Keeps insisting, over and over again, that people understand what he sees.
That’s because when Mack chooses Will, he chooses hockey.
Why does Mack’s belief in Will matter so much?
I think it matters to Will more than people realize. Will is proud, stubborn, and competitive in that “held his breath until he passed out because he refused to lose and had his family pelt him with balls to keep his reflexes sharp” kind of way. He’a not naturally built to be anyone’s sidekick. He wants to be the best, and if he cannot be the best, he at least needs to know he is seen as extraordinary by the one person whose opinion seems to matter most.
That is why Mack’s belief in him is so important. Mack never made Will feel small. He fell for Will’s hockey first. Before they were friends, before they were teammates, before whatever the hell this became, Mack already saw the world in him. He respected him. He hated him a little bit because of how good he thought he was. He put him on that pedestal and, frankly, has shown very little interest in letting him climb down.
So Will can be second to Mack without it turning poisonous. He can play on his wing without feeling like he has been diminished. He can love Mack’s greatness without needing to compete with it every second, because Mack has never treated him like less than an equal. Mack looks at Will like the ice is crooked, the refs are bribed, the coach is blind, and the whole world is wrong before Will Smith could ever just be having a bad game. That kind of blind devotion is insane. But it is also exactly why Will can breathe there.
So where does Stenberg actually fit into all of this?
The question isn’t “can Will beat Misa or Stenberg at their jobs?” The question is “can anyone else do Will’s job on Mack’s line?” Right now, I don’t think the answer is yes. Will has been Mack’s most stable, natural linemate. Their production together speaks for itself, but so does the eye test. The organization markets them together, talks about them together, and treats them as the emotional centre of the rebuild. Will isn’t some random chess piece. He’s the second face of the franchise. Furthermore, Stenberg shoots left. Will shoots right. If anything, Stenberg complicates the left-wing picture more than Will’s spot. The more obvious pressure point is Cherny, or the structure of Misa’s line. Stenberg could help deepen the lineup, give Misa a more dynamic winger, and reduce the burden on Mack’s line. That’s not the same thing as replacing Will. Line blending will happen. Stenberg might get looks with Mack. That’s normal. But Will being permanently displaced from Mack’s wing? I don’t buy it.
Does Will still have things to prove?
Absolutely. He needs to get stronger, be harder on the boards, become more reliable away from the puck, and trust his shoulder enough to go into dirty areas without hesitation. But he knows that. He is not stupid. If anything, this new wave of competition probably lights a fire under him. He is too proud, too calculating, and too aware of the stakes with the playoffs push next season not to come back sharper.
Would the Sharks seriously trade Will?
No chance. Grier clearly values Will. The team clearly values Will. The Sharks have cap space, organizational investment, marketing incentive, on-ice chemistry, and their franchise player’s very obvious attachment all pointing in the same direction. And Mack would absolutely raise hell if the organization seriously considered moving him.
So what is the bottom line?
Unless the sky turns purple and Will wakes up having forgotten how to play hockey, I think he is fine. He and Mack are on solid ground. Stenberg is not replacing him. The Sharks are not trading him. And if Will uses this offseason the way I think he will — bulking up, rehabbing the shoulder, getting nastier on the boards, and coming back playoff-ready — then the noise is going to look very silly very quickly.
the mayeday family foundation will donate $94,000 to boston children's hospital – $9,000 of which was earned by wsh as he hit 9 home runs! he also gave his signed jersey to a kid from the hospital 🫂
his walk up song oh my god someone write the baseball au NOW
video is from willmackupdates!!
botg from after the game
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bye
smiley polite cat
princess diana
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little jump
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Postgame Interview: Macklin Celebrini Bronze Medal Game | Canada v. Norway | May 31, 2026