32 Thoughts: The Podcast - The One Before

Episode Date: March 2, 2026

In this episode of 32 Thoughts, Kyle Bukauskas and Elliotte Friedman gear up for trade deadline week, diving into Steven Stamkos’ availability and continued interest around Ryan O’Reilly (2:00), R...obert Thomas (11:30), and Jordan Binnington (16:30). They discuss Nazem Kadri’s leadership in Calgary (19:00), Toronto’s path toward potentially selling (26:00), and uncertainty surrounding Elias Pettersson after being benched against Seattle (42:59). The guys also touch on Tyler Myers’ unresolved situation (47:00), Vincent Trocheck speculation (49:00), Seattle’s continued pursuit of a star scorer (50:00), Vegas looking leakier than usual defensively (51:00), and Buffalo’s intriguing options including whether a Rasmus Ristolainen reunion makes sense (52:00). Montreal appears positioned as a gatherer rather than a seller (55:00), and the Final Thought focuses on Jim Hiller being let go by the LA Kings (58:33) Kyle and Elliotte answer listener questions in the Thoughtline (1:08:45).  Today we highlight BC's Tryg Strand and his new track 'Love and War'. Check his music out here. Listen to all the 32 Thoughts music here. Email the podcast at 32thoughts@sportsnet.ca or call the Thought Line at 1-833-311-3232 and leave us a voicemail. This podcast was produced and mixed by Dominic Sramaty and hosted by Elliotte Friedman & Kyle Bukauskas. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Sports & Media or any affiliates

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This, by the way, is the most terrifying podcast of the year for me, right? It's just... The one before. The one before. Because, you know, it's like everything is all over the place and there's so much conflicting information and you don't want to be wrong and you don't want to say anything that you later regret. And it's, this is a disaster class. Everything's got 34 different qualifiers on it. Yes.
Starting point is 00:00:30 Welcome to 32 Thoughts, the podcast presented by the Toyota BZ, go all-electric and a winter-ready Toyota BZ at your local dealer today. Dom, Elliot and Kyle back with you inching closer to trade deadline day on Friday. And if you are hearing this, Matthew Schaefer has scored again. He is a 20-goal man in the NHL for age 18 years old as we talked about. He's already got the record there. And three off of Brian Leach for most goals by a rookie defenseman ever. in NHL history, a reminder, Mr. Friedman, of what can happen if the lottery balls fall your way and it just happens to be a year that a generational talent is waiting for you at June's draft. It's all in the back of many teams' minds as they approach these next few days, how valuable those assets are to say nothing of the players that can help potentially teams try to win a Stanley Cup in the here and now.
Starting point is 00:01:30 So why don't we start there? Why don't we start in Nashville, a team that was open to be better this year. They were out of it. They were back in. They looked out of it. And now again, tough when they slip away against Dallas on Saturday. But picking up another point in that mix in the West that are three points back of the eighth seed in the Western Conference. You mentioned Ryan O'Reilly over the weekend.
Starting point is 00:01:55 Stephen Stamcoast, another name too. Over 600 goals in his career. What have you heard on Stammer? So I was on the TNT postgame show on Sunday from the Pittsburgh Vegas game. And Pittsburgh won that game 5-0. They looked great in doing it. And afterwards, the panel was Liam McHugh, Paul Bissanette, Anston Carter, and special guest, Tuka Rask.
Starting point is 00:02:20 And I got asked about Stephen Stamco's. And I referenced the story where Stamcoast was quoted as saying he wasn't going to waive. and I said, I am not coming on the TNT show and saying that one of the most popular teammates in the NHL, Stamco's, is a liar. Well, someone saw me that and they sent me a note. And that story that was in Nashville was in response to a report from Pierre LeBron that if Stamcoz was asked to waive, he would consider Dallas, Minnesota, or Tampa Bay. and someone reached out and they wanted to tell me that the truth of this whole Stamcoast situation is somewhere in the middle. They said that, you know, Pierre's story was accurate in the sense that if Stamcoast was asked to waive, those are the kinds of teams he would consider.
Starting point is 00:03:18 And basically what I was told is that the Predators players don't know what GM Barry Trots is going to do. He has not approached his guys and said, I need to know if you're willing to waive his no trade clause for Situation X. And I've talked about Ryan O'Reilly a lot and how he's told the team that he doesn't want to go and that he wants to be part of the Nashville team for the playoff push. And Stamco's, I was told, is in the same boat. He doesn't want to leave either. He wants to stay with the team and push. them towards the playoffs. However, I was told that the one situation that could get him to change his mind would be if and only if the team decided they were going to do a complete sell-off.
Starting point is 00:04:12 And then in that case, if Stamco's was approached and asked if he'd be willing to go, he would consider going to certain contenders. And I assume that Pierre is right about the likes of the Stars, the Wild, and his former team, the Light. However, it is his first choice, his desire to compete, stay, and go to the playoffs there, and if there's a sell-off, then we'll see if things branch out into a different direction. By the way, you mentioned the Islanders there. I'm looking at this week, the Eastern Conference standings. Islanders, 75 points in the playoffs by six. What did they have? Three straight two-goal comebacks this week?
Starting point is 00:05:05 Incredible. Them and like the Anaheim ducks have been the comeback kings coming out of the Olympic break. The cardiac kids. When I was a kid, Brian Seip was the MVP of the NFL, the old quarterback of the Cleveland Browns, and he was known as the cardiac kid.
Starting point is 00:05:26 The Islanders and the ducks are like that right now. You also have Pittsburgh in the playoffs by six points without Sidney Crosby. And they blew the game on Saturday in New York, lost in overtime, or in the shootout, rather. But then they pounded Vegas, as we mentioned on Sunday afternoon, including, I think the best game. giveaway I've seen in the NHL this year, the Mr. Rogers Zip. Like, just fantastic.
Starting point is 00:06:00 And I have to shout out to the Buffalo Sabres, also in the playoffs, they're out in the playoffs by seven points, an outstanding road trip, including pounding the Tampa Bay Lightning on
Starting point is 00:06:15 Saturday night. Like, just you're looking at these Eastern playoffs. Who had, the Sebers, Penguins, Islanders, trifecta before the start of the season. Every year, especially in the east the last little while. That's always been the question. When are the tables finally going to flip?
Starting point is 00:06:36 Well, we're here now. It's a dawn of a new era. Toronto, they look cooked. Florida, another lost Sunday, it seems very, very long odds. that the defending Stanley Cup champions, two-time Stanley Cup champions get back into the playoffs in 2026.
Starting point is 00:06:58 Fresh blood, abound in the East Elliott, highlighted by those teams. Pittsburgh, story of the year for me, even with Crosby Healthy, now with them out and them continuing to play this way and pile up points, it's a stunner. but a very impressive one.
Starting point is 00:07:22 Very impressive one. So I just, I want to circle back to Nashville here briefly. You mentioned the players not too sure at this juncture what Barry Trots may do. Do you have any inkling what Barry Trots might do over the next few days? He's always said he's going to get younger, right? He's, he's been consistent about that since the start of the year when that. Nashville didn't start very well. And it's been very impressive about how that group has pulled themselves out of a deep hole and into the race.
Starting point is 00:07:59 I've heard that, you know, we've talked about how it's a bit of a buyer's market because there's a lot of guys available. And Nashville has some guys around their roster. We've talked about them. Eric Halle, Great Olympics, Pyrbix, McCarran, I think is a guy. that he teams like him, teams really like McCarron. And, you know, he's a guy who plays a hard playoff-style game. But the big guys, I just don't know how easy it's going to be able to do that in season. You know, Stamco's deserves a lot of credit and he's really put his game back together.
Starting point is 00:08:43 I mean, at the beginning of the year, we all thought, we're all kind of worried, like, is this it? Is he ever going to find his game again? And he's found it and then some. I don't think anything's impossible. And I do believe Trots has been asked about it. But I just heard, and again, like, things can change with one phone call. I really hate making demonstrative statements at this time of the year. I just heard it was unlikely he was going to move now.
Starting point is 00:09:16 And the same goes for O'Reilly. O'Reilly doesn't have it written, but he's been given the control, but teams have not, even though it's been like, no, no, he doesn't want to leave, no, teams have not run away from it. And they've come back to him and come back to the predators and been saying, hey, we still want to trade for you. and I've heard that even though Nashville has said he doesn't want to go anywhere, they have reserved the right to go to him too and say, if we get an offer we like, then we'll, we're going to take it to him.
Starting point is 00:10:05 We're not, like I haven't heard that they've said, we're just going to do it. Like that hasn't come across my lap, but I have heard that they've reserved the right. to say we can take it to you and we want you to consider it new owner too like i i said this before and i'll say it again kyle i think it's really hard when you're a new owner to wave the white flag when you just buy the team right yes that's always part of the wrinkle i i think it's a
Starting point is 00:10:41 it's a very, very difficult thing to do. And I, just me wondering, as you've talked about it being a buyer's market, could that be part of the equation too where you can only imagine the names that we're discussing here, it's going to take something substantial for the predators to say, all right, maybe we should really consider this, even though we're right there in terms of the race, and maybe that's just not going to be out here, that type of conversation over the next few days.
Starting point is 00:11:21 So we'll see. So that's, okay, Nashville, going to be one to keep an eye on as we go forward. Robert Thomas 2 in St. Louis. So that name you've mentioned here on the pod before, on Saturday on headlines, brought it up again. and as you were saying, you could see a scenario where he is dealt by the Blues sometime between now and Friday. Is there anything new to that?
Starting point is 00:11:49 Is there anything further you want to expand on with Thomas and the Blues and the future there? Well, there's no question that that is going to be a team to watch this week. And it's interesting, one of the reasons that people kind of didn't, believe it and even I wasn't 100% sure is that St. Louis has kind of threatened this before. They've said, we're going to do it, or we're going to tear it down, or we're going to start over, or we're going to trade our guys. And it hasn't always happened. They've used it as a scare tactic or a motivational tactic. And it's, I don't know if I would say it's like the boy who cried wolf,
Starting point is 00:12:40 but it's almost been like, we've heard this before and we'll believe it when we see it. There was definitely a feeling in the last few days that there was something more to it than we'd seen in the past, that. they were having more of these conversations or more in-depth conversations than in years past. And there was a sense that some of this had advanced a little bit. I think one of the things that could be a factor here, Kyle, is that, A, you know, there's a bit of a changing of the guard there. Even though Doug Armstrong is still under contract, Alex Steen takes over next year as the day-to-day GM. And so, you know, one of the theories around there is that if St. Louis wants to make a big move, then Armstrong could do it on his watch on the way out.
Starting point is 00:13:47 So Steen kind of starts with a fresh slate. I believe that Steen has a big say in what's going on right now. Like I don't think they would do anything without him. knowing about it or having a voice on it because next year technically it's his team but you know one of the things that someone said to me this week is sometimes when you know you're out or you're handing the team like this this situation doesn't happen a lot but there are veterans before who were like I know this is it for me and oh and I know someone's taken over next year and I'm going to do the hard things so they can start clean and I can
Starting point is 00:14:31 kind of wondered if that's what is happening here. And a couple of people I was talking to were wondering if that's what I'm what's happening here. I mean, St. Louis is second last in the Western conference. They're at 53 points. And I just think they feel that they have to change their mix a little bit. And I'll tell you, Kyle, like Thomas has say, but I think they've had some pretty serious conversations with a couple teams about them, including Utah. Now, Eric Engels was flying out to the West Coast, and I also mentioned on TNT. You know, Thomas has been linked to Montreal. You know, I said that, you know, a couple of people that told me they didn't think it was
Starting point is 00:15:18 going to be Montreal. Of course, Kyle, now it will be Montreal, and I look like a complete dunce. but I do think Utah is in there. I always assume there's people I'm not seeing. It's like it's a number one center at five times eight point one two five. Those guys just aren't around there. But I think the blues have also talked to people about Cairo. I think they've also talked to people about folk.
Starting point is 00:15:44 I think they've also talked to people about Baraco. I think they've also talked to people about Biddington. You know, all these players have various. degrees of protection. You know, if they trade these guys, they're trading them for younger players, I assume, guys who might be NHL ready, but aren't as experienced as these guys, you're really changing your group. And so I think they're just going to be a fascinating team this week.
Starting point is 00:16:15 And, you know, at various times I thought that Kyru could be dealt. I've definitely thought that Falk could be dealt. but I thought the whole Thomas thing was a bit of a pipe dream and now I'm actually beginning to think that it could be real and you know we'll see we'll see how it plays out you know the Bennington one is interesting too you know there there are some people out there that don't like the idea of acquiring a goalie in the middle of the year
Starting point is 00:16:42 especially when you don't have a lot of practice time but it's twice in a row now that Bennington's been on a real good team like a superstar team the Four Nations and the Olympics with not a lot of practice time and he's flourished. He's been excellent and also he's been calm. He's been under control. And I don't know where it's going to go with him. I'm really not sure.
Starting point is 00:17:08 But, you know, just the fact that he's now done this twice in a row in a compressed schedule, some of these teams that need goalies, I'd be betting on him. But you don't think Edmonton's going to be one of those teams? I don't. Again, like, I'm so nervous about saying these things. I really am. I'm being a bad co-host continuing to put you in the spot.
Starting point is 00:17:39 I'm sorry. Like, these are all good questions. Like, it's just that, like, it's so funny. You look back and you're like, like, it was funny. Again, on TNT on Sunday, they asked me. about Cadre in Colorado and I'm like, I'm not sure that's going to work. And someone texted me after he was over and said,
Starting point is 00:17:56 I'll bet you. He ends up there. And so he's like, okay, I'll take the bet just because I like to joke and make bets, but fun bets. But, you know, I mean, it's just, it changes. I think Edmonton is going to make its bed with its goaltending. It's done.
Starting point is 00:18:16 Like I said, I heard they're looking for, a D who can play on the right side or a 3C, especially if Newgen Hopkins is going to stay on the wing. I heard those of the spots they're really looking at. And, you know, I mean, there was a report this week about Falk. I think that's true. I think they looked into it. I just heard it's really hard unless St. Louis retains.
Starting point is 00:18:41 I talked about Ekman Larson. I think that's true. I think Ekman Larson has say, and I think that there are a sense. I think they've got, they've probably got a list or a cluster of defensemen and they're going through it to see, you know, what they can do and who they can get. And, you know, a 3C, I don't know that they'll be able to do both. They might only be able to do one. You know, our buddy Bob Stoffer's been on Nick Waugh for a while. And, you know, Nick Waugh is a good player and could be a really good fit. I just, you know, they put Monjapani on waivers. We'll see where that goes.
Starting point is 00:19:18 but I don't know they'll be able to do both of them, but I think they want to do at least one of them. All right. Well, and it's funny with the Cadry avalanche ties. Eric Francis was covering the game in Anaheim on Sunday night and pointed out he noticed Chris McFarlane members of the avalanche staff. Now, as you reminded me, Colorado's in the area. They play Los Angeles on Monday.
Starting point is 00:19:41 And I think they play the docs on Tuesday, I think. I have to double check that, but I think that's what it is. Right. But the fact that they were at the game Sunday as well. Oh, yeah, that's saying everybody going crazy, right? Conroy's in the building, too. And Cadre looked good. That had a beautiful goal in the shootout, too.
Starting point is 00:19:59 He's played very well. The game in San Jose this week, he was excellent. This, by the way, is the most terrifying podcast of the year for me, right? It's just... The one before. The one before, because, you know, it's like everything, is all over the place and there's so much conflicting information
Starting point is 00:20:21 and you don't want to be wrong and you don't want to say anything that you later regret and this is a disaster class. Everything's got 34 different qualifiers on it. Yes. Can I just say quickly? And I do think, I do think Colorado's looking at a center, right? Like,
Starting point is 00:20:38 I don't know if they can pull out one of the big ones like the Trocheque and I've mentioned that I don't think I don't know where Colorado fits on the map for Trocheck, but like I said, I heard he doesn't want to go far west. But, you know, I think they're looking at that group of centers there. And, you know, I think they'd like to do something. But again, their cap situation and also what do they have to move, especially after everything they did to get Brock Nelson last year?
Starting point is 00:21:16 Yes, which was a lot. A lot. Can I just say quickly on Cadrey? I really like Craig Simpson makes this point every year around this time as an ex-player who was traded. And it's an interesting, like he just says, you know, for the life of him, he never understands players that, you know, your name's out there. Is he going to get traded? and now suddenly you're worried and oh my gosh and you can't focus you're not playing well. And it's one thing if you're a guy that, you know, you've got family, it's older,
Starting point is 00:21:56 maybe you know, you've got a wife that's expecting. Like there's other factors that go into it. But as a younger player that's still fairly new to the league or just you're at a different stage of your life, you know, his point is like forget all of that. Like just go play because, If you play awesome, either the team that you currently play for goes, oh, this guy is too good, like I can't, I can't trade him. Or the team that's looking at trading for you is going,
Starting point is 00:22:24 there's no way I can't not get this guy. I'm going to do everything I can to trade for him. And then you're likely getting an opportunity to play somewhere that you're into the playoffs and who knows where it goes from there. So I do love the player mindset of that around how to approach this time of year when you're in that situation of, don't let it paralyze you. This should be something where either you play so well
Starting point is 00:22:50 that the team that you have has to keep you or it's the flip side. And just thinking of Nazim Kadri with how he's come out of the Olympic break and even over the last month here, as his name's been out there a little more and more, he's just continued to play well and is a great example of a guy going,
Starting point is 00:23:09 I don't know if this bothers me. Well, I think also your own bad, advertiser, right? Yeah, it's exactly it. Like, if you want to get traded for, you have to show that you are worth it. And Cadre, I think,
Starting point is 00:23:27 you know, I have a, there's a lot of good things to say about Cadry. The last couple of years in Calgary have been rough, but it hasn't ever affected the way he's played. And it also hasn't ever affected the way that he's treated some of the other young players there.
Starting point is 00:23:45 Like, they will tell you in, in Calgary that he's been an excellent, excellent mentor and example for some of the younger guys there. So he's played well. He's had a good attitude. Like, one of the things, I knew some people obviously who were there this year when he had his 1,000th game celebration. And, you know, he went out of his way after to thank the flames. for the job they did with it.
Starting point is 00:24:15 You know, I think people understand that Cadre would like to go to a contender, but I heard he's also very sensitive about the way it gets presented because he wants to do right by the flames. He said, you know, he signed with them willingly. He's going to get paid a lot of money over his contract. and they've treated him really well. So, like, you know, I know it's gotten out that he wants to be traded, but I've heard he's kind of like, yeah, I do because I want to win,
Starting point is 00:24:55 but I don't want to attach any negative stench to the flames organization. Like I heard that's important to him. So it's a challenge. to me it's interesting you know what do the flames think is an acceptable deal for him you know I mean
Starting point is 00:25:19 that's that's the other question here so you know maybe it can work but the best advertisement he's been for himself is how well he's played and how well he's been both on and off the ice
Starting point is 00:25:36 in southern Alberta. No question. No question there. Okay. Toronto. Yep. Three games out of the break. At no point over those nine periods,
Starting point is 00:25:51 really did we see a team showing signs of, we're going to figure this out. We're going to try to push to get in. It went opposite. Again on Saturday, full credit to Ottawa. You could tell that game made everything. to them. They smelt blood partway through the second period, and the result was really not in question from that point onwards. And when Craig Barubi is standing in the press conference
Starting point is 00:26:17 post game pointing to his heart, pointing to his head and saying, I can't give those to the players, they've got to bring that on their own. Things are typically not in a great spot. So, as they seemingly march towards their role as sellers. We have talked about the names that have been out there for a while. You've already mentioned OEL, Bobby McMahon, Scott Lawton. As you talked about on the weekend, starting to widen the scope, the Maple Leafs, of who they would look at and possibly consider moving.
Starting point is 00:26:54 Now, I'm still going to assume that does not mean Austin Matthews, that does not mean William Neelan, I don't imagine. John Tavares is in that conversation either. Ditto Matthew Nyes. But beyond that, Morgan Riley, Jake McCabe, go down the list from there. Are all those names potential? I'm wary of names, like particularly in Riley's case, you know, he's got say over it, right?
Starting point is 00:27:26 And I just don't know that they've gone to him and talked to him about it. So I think it's a little bit irresponsible to throw his name around unless I have a reason to. Okay. Like I said, the thing I'd heard is that, and you know, Kyle, we were both there on Saturday morning for the morning skate against Ottawa, and you can feel it in their room. It was very quiet. You know, it's not like there's a lot of guys in the room, you know, yucking it up when the media is there. It's a very business-like room normally, and I say that respectfully. But it just seemed really quiet when we were there.
Starting point is 00:28:09 They lost two in a row, and you could just feel like, you know, guys were like, okay, the media's here, get into the stall, and try to get out of here as quick as we possibly can. And again, I'm not trying to whine or complain or say it's a negative. You just get to a point where it's a tough time in your season. and it's almost like nobody even wants to talk to each other. It happens sometimes, and you could feel that on Saturday morning. And, you know, like I said, Kyle, I just think that I think the Maple Leafs are asking themselves some questions here. And that is, you know, is this a one-year thing?
Starting point is 00:28:53 Do we have to consider doing more than we thought? we were going to do can we turn it around a little quicker like kind of Boston has like I said I think right before the Olympics they were like okay this is not going to be our year and let's talk about the UFAs
Starting point is 00:29:16 okay and now it's this is not going to be our year and it's really not our year and you get to a point where you almost say and this is what I think's happened you say let's just say to teams talk to us. Talk to us about our guys. Like, that's kind of what happened in Vancouver.
Starting point is 00:29:37 You know, Vancouver sent out an email earlier in the year, talked to us about our UFAs, and a couple weeks later, you know, Quinn Hughes was gone. And I don't think there's going to be anything like that. Like, I don't think Matthews or Nylander are going anywhere right now. But I do think Toronto wants to know, you know, what's, what's the market for us? our guys. Who are guys, who are other teams interested in? You know, what are teams willing to do? And, um, you know, I, I think that's, I think that's what Toronto was trying to do here. Um, I think at the very least, Kyle, it raises the possibility that they could do something this week that surprises us. I don't know what I would say the percentage of that is,
Starting point is 00:30:29 but I do think it's possible. You know, my point, and I've said this for a little bit now, is that they wanted to add pieces and then see if they could flip those pieces into something that could help them now. Like, say, for arguments sake, a Rob Thomas kind of guy. Like, could they accumulate stuff and then do that? Like, I don't think that's going to be possible, but I do think that they were, you know,
Starting point is 00:30:55 could we do that? You know, is that something we could get involved in with our additions? You know, now I think they're thinking a little bit bigger. Okay. It, uh, you know, that nine year streak looks like, uh, it could be staying at nine for, for Toronto. It's just been, it's been a long time since that organization has had to have these conversations. It feels heavy. There's no question.
Starting point is 00:31:28 Right. It feels very, very heavy right now, but I really try not to overreact. But there's been a couple of, like every year, every team has a segment that feels kind of heavy. We've had two of them now this year in Toronto. Right. And I think we're all very curious about where this is going. Yeah. And maybe most concerned
Starting point is 00:31:56 we were talking about it after the game on Saturday is that a lot of the issues we saw early in their season defensively that had kind of gone away, it's popping up again. It's kind of come back round, which is never a good sign. What did you think of
Starting point is 00:32:15 Barube's post-game comments about heart? And the head. For sure, I mean, I, you know, when I, when I, I look at the game and show tape or we go over things, there's a certain way we need to play the game. But, you know, I can't give guys this or this. And that's, that's on, they have to, that they have to come with that. That's got to be on them. Like, they got to bring the heart and the competitiveness that's needed. And it's all the little things. That's, they got to bring
Starting point is 00:32:51 that. They got to want to bring that. We can bring the X's and O's. and I can go in there and yell and scream at them all I want. That, you know, that doesn't, that's not going to, that doesn't do anything either. I still think, I don't know how many, for how many guys, it's still in the back of their minds, and this is just me thinking, which could be dangerous. Yes. I think how they handled game five and game seven last year against Florida,
Starting point is 00:33:21 I think that's still in the mind of the head coach. I know the team's a little different. There's some guys there that weren't there last year, some that were that are now elsewhere. I still think that's pretty fresh in his mind of what happened. And I just wonder, different set of circumstances. But again, like you win three games going into the Olympic break, giving yourselves a chance
Starting point is 00:33:52 and it's one thing to just be outdone by better teams coming out but that's not been the story in the three games for Toronto it's run deeper than that that's kind of what I think
Starting point is 00:34:07 any time like I thought Barubei was really measured because I remember Healy when we worked together he would always tell me there's some things you can do that really are a red line for a player.
Starting point is 00:34:26 Question their injury. Call them soft. And, you know, I would put questioning their heart with that. And so when Rubei did that, I was like, oh, boy, like, that's a red line. But the one thing that gave me pause is that he was really measured when he said it. He wasn't ripping them. He was explaining more than he was ripping. Like if he really came out and said,
Starting point is 00:34:59 these guys have no heart, like, then it's a five alarm blaze. But he was almost trying to do it more of a challenge than he was actually trying to trash them, right? Not that I'm convinced it's going to work. Yeah. Yeah. But I didn't sense he was just lighting the whole, trying to light the whole season on fire or anything like that. No, but I just wondered if it was like reality said him. Like that's part of it too. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:32 Yeah. Why there was a little more. And I will say too, like as fiery as we see Ruby on the bench and at times when he's in the room in between periods, generally. He is often quite measured when he's at the podium. And that's the one thing I wasn't sure about. Like when he was first hired in Toronto is, okay, what are we going to get in the tougher moments when he's up there to fielding questions?
Starting point is 00:36:03 But he's, for the most part, that's been kind of the theme for him. But now with where things are at and what's ahead here, just wonder if that helped make his demeanor a little it made it a little easier for him to just have a little bit closer resting heart rate
Starting point is 00:36:25 as he was delivering what he felt there after the game Saturday. So one of the great sports books of all time is the Jordan Rules by Sam Smith. It's a book on, it's a real inside book on the Chicago Bulls. It's really well done. And there's a story. story he tells in there about Phil Jackson, who was the master
Starting point is 00:36:49 motivator. And the Bulls have a bad game and he's doing a film session and all of a sudden they cut, after one player makes a bad play, they cut in the
Starting point is 00:37:05 scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz. And the players all start laughing. And another player makes a bad play and they cut in the tin man. And they think this is hilarious. And then, of course, you know what happens next.
Starting point is 00:37:22 They bring in the cowardly lion. And one of the players, I don't remember who it was from the book, but he says, you do realize he's telling us we've got no heart, no brains, and no guts. And all of a sudden the room goes silent. and all the players are mad. And it's like message received. And when I saw that, that's what it reminded me of. Now,
Starting point is 00:37:56 it wasn't as harsh. It wasn't as cutting as that old film session was, but it was there. Subtly was. It was subtle, but it was there. Just the point. I just wanted to say quickly,
Starting point is 00:38:14 So after the morning skate on Saturday, I bumped into Jake Sanderson in the hallway. Yep. And he's one guy I really have always enjoyed talking to. And he's insightful and just has such a thirst for getting better. So saw him, I said, hey, you know, congrats again on gold medal over at the Olympics. And he was going, he goes, man, I just,
Starting point is 00:38:42 he goes, there's so much that I learned over there. I said, oh yeah, like what? He goes, I've just got so much to get better at as a player, which is kind of an interesting thing to say given, you know, he was selected to a pretty damn good American team that won gold. And that's one of his first takeaways. But he just talked about how it resonated with him, not that they practiced a ton over there,
Starting point is 00:39:08 but when they did, it was often the best of the best guys that were the last ones out there working on. the most minute of details, the smallest little things. He goes, I watched Jack Eichol for what felt like forever after a practice one day, just working on backhand passes. That was it. Just working on getting backhand passes down. And of course, there's all the off-eye stuff in terms of routines
Starting point is 00:39:33 and different ways to get their body right. He is always up on the best ways to handle all of that stuff. But you can just tell for a guy that's always going. and okay, give me more information, give me more ways that I can be better myself. It was like some sort of fantasy cap in a way for him. And I'm sure he's not the only guy, whether you played for Team USA or somewhere else, one of the other 12 nations there, that would have walked away from that Olympic experience feeling something similar, given who you were able to be around and call a teammate for two
Starting point is 00:40:10 and a half weeks. I've always admired, you know, one of the first. of the things that I feel I could do a better job of, Kyle, is watch practice, especially the end of practice. Like, one of the challenges about the end of practice is oftentimes, you know, the first or second player comes off and they open up the room, right? And you can't watch the end of practice to see what the guys work on. I wish sometimes I did a better job of that, because I think it adds good questions, you know, what's a player trying? Like, one of the things I really used to love doing when I covered baseball was watching batting practice.
Starting point is 00:40:48 And, you know, who would take ground balls and where guys would try to hit or in the NBA, like an hour and a half, two hours before a game. Like one of the best shooting routines I ever saw was Ray Allen. He had a fantastic shooting routine. And occasionally when he would come to Toronto, I'd watch him do it. And, you know, you realize that that's what's separated. eight's good from great. And I loved it when you told that story because I think the best players work on the most
Starting point is 00:41:22 boring things. Like I'd watch basketball practice and at the end, just players doing dribbling drills. Like I remember when I first picked up a basketball, my uncle had me doing like figure eights around my legs and, you know, catching the ball through my legs. And I was like, this stuff is so boring. but the best players, they do that. Gary Galley would always talk about Ray Bork, and Ray Bork would practice, you know,
Starting point is 00:41:50 he'd go to his backhand side, and they'd hard rim pucks around the boards, and he had to stop it on his backhand, and how good it was. He was at it. And, you know, I really love that stuff, Kyle. Like, I think the best of the best turn the most mundane thing into a competition and they do it do it really well.
Starting point is 00:42:13 I love that story when you were talking about it with with Sanderson because I do think it separates the grades. Yeah, no question. So we interviewed Megan Oldham on Saturday. Of course, won gold for Canada over the Olympics and the free ski big air. She has a line, work hard and silence, let your success be the noise, which can apply to that. And you don't have to be an athlete to apply that to certain aspects of your life. That's really, really good. Really great for Megan.
Starting point is 00:42:44 Let her to an Olympic gold medal. Ditto for Jake Sanderson. Okay, a couple of the things we wanted to go through here, just on the trade front. We're going to get to the coaching change in L.A. here, of course, too. The big news on Sunday there. Vancouver.
Starting point is 00:43:00 Anything else new there? Peders' names come up. That's a big contract. He's got say. He got benched on Saturday in Seattle. And we thought he was hurt. Like he got hit by the puck. And so we actually thought he was injured.
Starting point is 00:43:15 Like he looked injured. And I actually give him credit. He's like, nope. Um, I got benched. I don't know. You know, Kyle, I really, I really don't know there. I know there. See, one of the things is I don't like to dump on anyone else's reporting because
Starting point is 00:43:32 there's so much stuff here and I'm not perfect. I'm not all knowing. I'm not all seeing. and, you know, you, there's some things that you just don't see or you're just not right about. And there's been some reports that it's been a little hot around Patterson. I haven't heard that. I've heard it's been quiet and I've heard that, you know, the Canucks are not willing to retain on him, especially because as his deal continues, you know, if you,
Starting point is 00:44:08 you know, I talked to one team about this in particular. They said if you, if you look at Pedersen's contract, it eventually gets to a point where it is cap over cash. I mean, the other thing, too, is it's still got, you know, he's only going into his third year of eight next year. There aren't a lot of teams that want to retain for six years. Like, that's, that's a lot. So his cap hit is 116. Next year, it's 11. And then the following two years, 27, 28, and 28, 29,
Starting point is 00:44:49 they're the last two really big years of cash. It's 14.5 and it's 12 and a quarter. And then the last three years of his deal, it's 8.7. And so, like, one GM was telling me that as a, if you're the trading team, the team that's trading that contract away, the reason you're not going to retain is you're going to say for the last three years of that deal, it's $3 million underneath the cap hit. So it's a real break for the team that gets them.
Starting point is 00:45:24 And they said that's in addition, nobody wants to hold a contract for six years. That's number one. But number two is you really don't want to do it if it's, you know, if it's cash under cap for three years like that. you know, I'll say this about the Canucks. You know, one of the things they've kind of said privately about Patterson is, and I think Rutherford talked about it on that podcast with John Shannon and Darren Millard, but one of the things they've kind of talked about privately is that maybe he's not
Starting point is 00:45:58 putting up a ton of points, and he's only got, you know, 35 points and 51 games this year. but they think his effort has really improved, and they think his two-way play has been better. And, you know, I don't know what kind of point producer. I don't know if he's going to be a 102-point guy again. Like, I just don't know. He went 102 to 89 to 45, but only in 64 games, and now he's at 35 and 51.
Starting point is 00:46:29 I think the Canucks feel very strongly that his effort, this year has been a lot better. And I think that just affects the overall situation. I wish I had a good answer here. I wish I understood why it's not working well for him. But like I said, I've just heard they're not, they don't want to retain on him. All right. And Meyer's still mulling things over?
Starting point is 00:46:58 Yeah, I think everybody was hoping we would know by Monday morning after this podcast comes out. I think a lot of the say has to do with how long is Detroit willing to hold the offer? And at this point in time, I don't have that answer. Steve Eisenman not exactly volunteering it to me. No, it's not popping up in the WhatsApp. Yeah, I mean, you know, the other thing, too, is, you know, Trocheck sounds like L.A. and Utah is not going to happen. Minnesota, you know, Bill Garron, he talked about it when he made the Quinn Hughes trade. He comes in with his offer, right?
Starting point is 00:47:43 He's like, this is my offer. And I think he's done that with the Rangers. And the question is, like, do the rain, and so the Rangers kind of know, do they continue to shop it around and see if, you know, Detroit can beat it or Carolina can beat it or someone else can beat it? or, you know, do the wild get tired of waiting and they go do something else? Like, I heard the wild also kicked around on Charlie Coyle, but I don't think Columbus is doing anything with that right now. So that's one of the things I think we're waiting on Trocheck. You know, someone did say to me, they kind of wondered,
Starting point is 00:48:22 they thought of the centers, Trocheck might go first. But I just, I don't know. I think he's the one most likely to go of that foursome, Trocheck, Thomas, O'Reilly, Cadry, he's the one, I think, who's most likely to go. All right, I can see that. That makes sense. Okay, anything else here, trade-wise,
Starting point is 00:48:56 famous last words that you want to touch on before we go any further. Well, yeah, let me go through a couple of things here. Seattle, I don't think they've given up on big offensive player or somebody who juices their lineup offensively. And that's Shane Wright to me, and we'll see where that goes. You know, I did say on the last pod that I thought if they wanted to do right for Lefrenier, it would be done already. and it's a sign that that's not going to happen. I did get a couple of people who told me that was true
Starting point is 00:49:38 that don't count on that kind of a deal. You know, it was interesting. Kelly McCrimmon, the Vegas GM, he was at Vancouver, Seattle on Saturday night. They showed him on the broadcast. They've been struggling a little bit. You know, the one thing about Vegas, that their goaltending hasn't been very good this year.
Starting point is 00:50:05 So we'll see. Some of it I wonder if it's like post-Olympic exhaustion for a lot of their guys. I don't know. But Mark Stone got hurt again. They haven't looked pretty. They've looked leakyer defensively than I generally see from them.
Starting point is 00:50:28 Dallas, we now know that Tyler Sagan is out for the year. I was very sore to see that. I heard Sagan really wanted to play this season. I really like what Glenn Gullison said about keeping him around and using his brain. I really, I like that a lot. And Jim Nill also confirmed that they don't like the idea of term until they sort out Jason Robertson, they don't like the idea of term. And so I know Myers has kind of indicated he'd like to go there. It's not a lot of money, but there is another year. I know some people wondered about Rasmus Ristelainen there.
Starting point is 00:51:16 Again, he's got term. You know who I wonder about for Ristelainen, and it's kind of funny. But, you know, I mentioned on one of the pods recently that I think Buffalo is looking for some beef on the blue line. Like they were kind of like, would they ever take them back? And, you know, Buffalo's right side of the D right now, it's their handedness is a bit mixed up. But like obviously they've got Dalline.
Starting point is 00:51:44 They've got Kessel Ring, who actually is a right-hand shot, and they've got power, who's been playing with Byron. So, I mean, Sabres fans could let me know, do they think that makes sense? but if you're looking for a D with some beef, I mean, you kind of know that guy already.
Starting point is 00:52:05 It just could be purely in my head. But, you know, obviously now Dallas is going to have the ability to do some things, even though they're using some of that money already. I'm actually really interested in Buffalo. I am. This is going to be a really interesting deadline for them. Because they're going and they look, good and yes i mean was dalian not the best player for sweden that you saw at the
Starting point is 00:52:33 i did i you know i thought raymond was really good but i thought dalian was the best guy there i really did like it's so far to watch yeah i thought he was the best guy there and you know it was really interesting and we forgot to mention it last week was he came back and said he was okay for that overtime against the u.s and he didn't understand why he didn't play i heard those comments went over like a thunderbolt in sweden like just though they did not go over very well there. But it's interesting, they're going really well. And like I said, I think Takka is staying, even if he's not extended.
Starting point is 00:53:09 I think it could be a really fascinating deadline for them. Carolina, I think they're around Trocheck. New Jersey, I said on the last pod that I really wasn't sure. what they were up to. I heard some things on the weekend, but I could not get them confirmed. So let me just be careful, because I think the devils, you know,
Starting point is 00:53:40 I couldn't get confirmations or denials, but I think they have some of their D out there. Like not Luke Hughes. Yeah. And I don't think. Not Nemitz? I don't know. I honestly don't know about him.
Starting point is 00:53:56 Not Luke Hughes. and I don't think Peschi. I didn't hear NAMIC. I'll be honest, I didn't hear it. But, you know, maybe some of the other D. Okay. I think we've talked a lot about these other teams. Like, Washington's an interesting one to me because I'm going to be a tough battle for them to make the playoffs.
Starting point is 00:54:23 So I think if they add, I think they're. preference is to add someone they could keep for a while. Like we all know what they said and Chris Patrick came out and said it that they need somebody who can make life a little easier for them to score, right? It's too hard for them to score. But I can't imagine they're too big in the in the rental game and they're more into the if we add can have them for a while. and you know
Starting point is 00:54:55 Montreal Montreal is another team I don't see them being in the big rental game I think Montreal's a gatherer give us somebody that's going to be around for a while yes
Starting point is 00:55:09 I still think we want to have yeah somebody who's going to be part of our group for a while maybe a middling rental if they had to but somebody's going to be part of their group,
Starting point is 00:55:26 grows with the rest of them. And, you know, Florida, it's tough losses. They beat Toronto, but now they lost the Buffalo. They lost the Islanders. And I'll be honest, and I said this on TNT on Sunday, I can't get a good handle on this Bobrovsky situation. I just don't know. And again, the one thing I've been waiting for in Florida is,
Starting point is 00:55:49 do they wave the white flag and do guys get shut down? Yes. Because Bill Zito is kind of, we'll see where we're at come the deadline and now it's becoming clearer and clearer with the two losses
Starting point is 00:56:05 over the weekend for them. What their fate may be. I think they wanted to see could they make a charge in a week. Right. They're just running out of a racetrack to do that. Yeah. I know Boston lost on Saturday,
Starting point is 00:56:18 but just it's a lot of ground to make up. There's a three-pointer between Columbus and New York, Ottawa One. It's, the task is very tall. Yeah. Okay. It's going to be,
Starting point is 00:56:31 going to be some week. Like, Utah, too. Utah, they tried on Panarin, tried on Trocheque, around on Thomas. The other thing, too, someone said to me is,
Starting point is 00:56:46 watch some of the UFAs this week. Do they get signed by Tuesday, Wednesday? Like the big one, like Columbus apparently has said, like if you'll remember Columbus last year, they kept Proverov through the season and signed them just before free agency. Yep. And so they've done that
Starting point is 00:57:08 and they're not uncomfortable with the idea of doing that again if they have to with Coil and Jenner and Marchment. but I'm not sure how comfortable every other team will be with that. Like, sure would. You know, where are we on Tuesday? Some of these other, McMahon. Like, you know, the fact that McMahon is still there tells you two things. They're considering extending them and they haven't gotten what they want for them.
Starting point is 00:57:40 Right. They have time. They have time. And it seems like that's kind of. be the theme over the next little bit. Going back to the buyer's market that it is, how many are willing
Starting point is 00:57:54 to wait it out until the 11th hour if they believe they can. It'll be some week. Going to be some week. Hopefully it gives us plenty to dig into on Friday. It's not just a recap show.
Starting point is 00:58:10 Well, don't forget, we're dropping the pot on Saturday next week. Correct. We'll record after the deadlines and the dust settle on Friday. I don't know if there'll be anything left to you, but we'll get something done on Friday. And there's always something that happens that I don't see, a big one. Okay, time now for the final thought presented by the Toyota BZ go all-electric and a winter-ready Toyota BZ at your local dealer today. The Los Angeles Kings, Elliot, on Sunday, made a coaching change.
Starting point is 00:58:45 is out after just over two years on the job. DJ Smith named the interim coach for the remainder of this season. Also Matt Green, former king now working in player development. He's going to join the staff behind the bench as well. In the meantime, a lot of people understandably are wondering about the timing of all of this. We've seen the struggles for the Kings here over the last little while. They lost five of six. There was the humiliating one against Edmonton.
Starting point is 00:59:13 and as we heard from Ken Holland after the announcement came out, that's when he really started to think that this change was necessary. But the fact that things were teetering a little bit before the Olympic break, nothing was done then. And now a couple games out of it, a change is made. What did you make, Elliot, of the decision here on Sunday and Ken Holland's reasoning behind it all? We talked about this a little bit in Friday's pod, Kyle,
Starting point is 00:59:42 about how Ken Holland does not like to change coaches during the season. I think that when he fired Jay Woodcroft in Edmonton and replaced him with Chris Knoblock, I think that was the first time he ever did it. And this is now the second. And, you know, he just is not a huge fan of it and he has to be dragged into it. Now, I watched this media conference on Sunday. When you talk about timing, you're asking the same question that everybody else is asking. why just do it at the Olympic break?
Starting point is 01:00:14 And number one, I think it's because he doesn't like it. And number two, I think he was hoping that acquiring Panarin at that time would put a jolt into their team that he wouldn't have to do it, right? And obviously we know that, you know, that's not what happened. They come out. And I know everybody talks about the 8-1 loss to the Oilers. And that was really bad, no question about it. But Kyle, I think also the one the night before when they were facing that depleted Vegas team and they led going into the third period and they lost, I think those two back to back, you know, they're killers.
Starting point is 01:00:59 And this is supposed to be. And the fial injury is out of their control. Like, I mean, you know, what can they do? But you can control, maybe you're going to lose, but you got to. to play better than you did in those two games against the Golden Knights and the Oilers. And the other thing, too, I always wonder is in situations like that, you're coming to the end of the year, it's Copatar's last season. You want the season to be magical for Copatar. That matters, right? And now you're, they won on Saturday. They beat the flames. So they're three
Starting point is 01:01:34 points out of the playoffs. The other thing I was wonder in situations like this, do the Kings have data behind the scenes that tells them in a post-Copatar era, like if they go into the post-Copatar era like this, losing badly at home, falling out of the playoff race, it could be really bad for them, like business-wise. And I don't know the answer to that, Kyle, I don't. but I can't help but look at decisions like this and say, do they have information behind the scenes that tells them they cannot end the season like this?
Starting point is 01:02:20 It's always something I ask. And you know what? I think, too, you know, Hiller really protected the players. We talked about it on previous pods about how some of the fans would get frustrated by some of his answers. and it's because he wasn't going to bury the players to the media. He just wasn't going to do it. But, you know, unfortunately, it was time.
Starting point is 01:02:48 The way they came out, even Ken Holland, he doesn't like to do it, it was as plain as the nose on the face. Unfortunately, it was just time. I think it's really interesting about Matt Green going on the bench and the way that, from the media conference, the way they talked about Matt Green, having a relationship with Brand Clark. And it's to me the question, and, you know, you dealt with DJ when he was in Ottawa as a head coach.
Starting point is 01:03:18 I'm always curious to see, okay, you get your second chance. What did you do right the first time and what did you do wrong the first time? How do you build on what you did right and how do you fix what you did wrong? You say, I did this wrong last time. I've learned from it. I'm not going to do it again. Everybody is, everybody deserves a second chance. And, you know, the thing about DJ Smith here is he's in the chair.
Starting point is 01:03:46 You know, he has the inside lane. If he can make this work, he puts himself in position to be the full-time head coach of the Los Angeles Kings. So even though it sucks because you're replacing the guy you worked with, you really have no other choice, but to give it your best effort and to take control the situation because you have the best chance of getting the job now. And, you know, they're banged up, as you said, Fiala. Doubtie got hurt the other night, didn't play Saturday against Calgary. But I'm always curious about deployment.
Starting point is 01:04:24 You know, does he give Brent Clark a longer leash? Is there a way he can get byfield going offensively? and I do think that Ken Holland is trying, trying to get somebody who can get his offensive players the puck. I think he tried for Trocheck. I don't think that's going to happen. But, Kyle, I just think the Kings got backed into a corner. It'll be interesting. Smith has the inside. He's got the pole position. But, you know, there's going to be talk about Woodcroft, who's an assistant in Anaheim, particularly if they get into the playoffs.
Starting point is 01:05:03 And as you said, Anaheim's in good position right now. A rising tide floats all boats, right? And you know that there's going to be talk about Woodcroft, Holland, if Smith doesn't grab hold of the job. And what will be interesting is, of course, when he was in Ottawa,
Starting point is 01:05:25 that was a young group trying to get out of rebuild mode, and now here in L.A., you know, he's in charge of one of the oldest rosters in the league. The other thing that stuck out to me when DJ Smith was taking questions on Sunday, he brought up, I mean, we touched in a little bit with Toronto and Craig Barubi earlier, but he brought up the way they lost last year to Edmonton that it carried forward to this year, that he goes, you could still feel it within the room, that it was something that he goes, it stops now, like it's here we are beginning of March. and you're still trying to put to bed
Starting point is 01:06:03 what was a very difficult end of their year last season and letting that series slip away against Edmonton. But it's incredible that this far end of the year, that's still a talking point within the organization. I understand things can linger, but that was an eye-opener for me. I don't know if it's not a bad away for you. Yeah, you know, I generally am not a fan of that.
Starting point is 01:06:36 I think, again, I think you have to learn your lessons and make sure they don't happen again. But when I screwed up to swimming in 2016, I thought about it at least once a day. for like three years. I kind of forgave myself for it. I said, you know, you can't dwell in anymore. You have to kind of let it go. You can't let it have sort of like a grab on your body and your psyche. But there would be moments, like quiet moments where I'd be doing nothing.
Starting point is 01:07:22 And all of a sudden it would pop into my head. I didn't beat myself over it, but it was just never far away. and then I remember one day, like it was literally three years later, I woke up and I said, oh my God, like I didn't think about it yesterday and it kind of finally went away. Wow. I think that's bad. I don't think that's really good on my part. And I don't think what you were talking about is really good on the King's part at all.
Starting point is 01:07:54 You have to be better than that. And I would say that about myself, too. but I understand why it happens. Now, a lot of time to try to pick up the pieces here for DJ Smith and the rest. Right back at it. Colorado Monday, three points out, trying to still make something of this season. As you pointed out, Elliot, the last one of Von Ze Copatar's Hall of Fame career. That was the final thought presented by the Toyota BZ.
Starting point is 01:08:26 With that, we will take our first break and come back with another edition of the thought line. 32 thoughts of the podcast continues after this. All right, welcome back. It's time once again for the thought line, Elliot. It was a lot of podcast listeners at Scotia Bank Arena on Saturday
Starting point is 01:08:54 for the Battle of Ontario. They were in a good mood. Senators fans in particular, of course. One such Sends fan, just prior to the game, did approach me and said, hey, and I was like, yeah? And they said,
Starting point is 01:09:08 you wearing Sens pajamas? I'll never tell. but they understood the assignment. Yeah. Excellent. What do you got? Okay, so I do want to do a few shoutouts. Number one, so you know last week, Brett Kulak was traded from Pittsburgh to Colorado, right?
Starting point is 01:09:31 Yes. So I got a tip that that one was happening. And I tried to reach out to the two teams. I reach out to Brendan McClack. Nicholas, the great media relations director of the avalanche, and he was quiet, didn't say anything. And then I called Jamie Cartmel, the media relations guy from Edmonton, and he says, why are you calling me?
Starting point is 01:10:02 You do realize Kulak plays for Pittsburgh now, right? I was like, oh, my God. Oh, my God. It was like a day or two after the Olympics, so I'm blaming it on that. But Cartmel laughing says, I better hear this on the pod. And then he goes, he says, also, I can't confirm or deny for you. So he kept the stick up. He did.
Starting point is 01:10:31 It was pretty funny. I probably can count on one hand how many times you've done that or maybe only one finger. I don't know if I've ever done that before. But like I said, I'm chalking it up to post-Olympic exhaustion. So we had a thought line caller, a last pod who asked about three-on-three hockey, right? And I got a few responses about it. And I wish I would have remembered some of this stuff. But last week, the double IHF, the International Ice Hockey Federation, announced a new three-on-three
Starting point is 01:11:07 league. It's called the U.HL, the Ultimate Hockey League, and it's going to begin play in Europe in 2007, and the hope is to take it worldwide in 2008. And also, I was sent, and I wish I would have remembered the social media user who sent this to me. I'm sorry I can't find it, but thank you. The Associated Press reported in November of 2024 that the double IHF is preparing a proposal to add three-on-three to the Winter Olympics as soon as 2030. And you'll remember, Kyle, we talked about basketball. In the summer games, they have the regular basketball that we're all used to, and they also have a three-on-three tournament.
Starting point is 01:11:55 The double IHF wants to follow suit with hockey. So thank you to all those people who sent that in. Also, two years ago at the 2024 Winter Youth Olympics. in South Korea, there was a three-on-three hockey competition. So if you look at the eight teams competing, the gold medalist was Latvia, Denmark won the silver, Kazakhstan won the bronze, beating Austria in that bronze medal game, and the other countries that were competing,
Starting point is 01:12:37 were Poland, Great Britain, Taiwan, and Spain. So, you know, there's some countries that do have a bit of hockey tradition, but there's a lot of other countries there, they're trying to build one, right? And you hear that and you're thinking, hey, those are perfect places to play three-on-three just to get started. So there is some growth in three-on-three internationally, and I wanted to mention that. A couple of the things. I just wanted to shut out on Friday night.
Starting point is 01:13:09 I went to Brantford, Ontario, which is just outside of Hamilton, to see the Brantford Bulldogs. And the Brantford Bulldogs were sold to the Hyman family. And Spencer Hyman, for example, is the GM now. And their previous owner was Mike And Lauer. And Mike Anlauer, who also owns the Ottawa Senators, he was honored and they put up a banner. He was basically inducted to the team's hall.
Starting point is 01:13:36 of Fame and he was honored before the game was a great ceremony, beautifully done. And let me just say this. It was ran with military precision, quick, move fast, Reed Duthy, who was the MC, did a great job keeping it going. And that is the key for some of these ceremonies they can really drag. That one was perfectly timed and ran. It was a great event. and I wanted to thank Stephanie Barrett, who invited me and brought me there.
Starting point is 01:14:10 She was a great host. Then on Saturday morning, Kyle, before I went to the morning skate between the Maple Leafs and the Ottawa Senators, I went briefly. There was a special showing of the new reimagined Youngblood movie. If you've never seen Youngblood, it was Roblo. from the 80s as a young hockey player and they've kind of done a reimagining for the 21st century. It debuted last year during the film festival.
Starting point is 01:14:46 It's in theaters across Canada and the U.S. next Friday. I won't be seeing that on that day because it's the trade deadline, but I'll be seeing it right after. Hubert Davis, who is the director, he did a brief speech opening it. and the lead Ashton James is from Toronto. He did a Q&A with Donovan Bennett after it was over. There were a bunch of young hockey players and their families
Starting point is 01:15:13 who went to watch the film at the Hockey Hall of Fame. I hear it's quite good, and I wish them really well. I also wanted to thank Julian and McKenzie, because when I got to work on Saturday, I had a copy of Black Aces waiting for me, Julian's new book and I wanted to shout it out and wish them good luck with that. I'm looking forward to reading it. And finally, finally, I would like to say, I know that some of you have my notifications on have complained that I am too fast with tweeting out goals in big moments.
Starting point is 01:15:49 And I have really tried to slow it down. I really have. I don't like to ruin it for anybody and I really have tried to slow it down. On Saturday morning, Kevin McGrane of the Toronto Star said that I outdid myself with a spoiler on the last day of the Olympics. And said, what do you mean? He goes, I, Kevin is a curler. And he had, knowing he had to cover the hockey and everything else he had to do and it was the curling was really early in the morning, even earlier than the hockey. he had shut down all knowledge of what was happening in the curling and he was going to watch the gold medal of that competition after the men's hockey final
Starting point is 01:16:39 and he said I get your notifications and at that moment just before like 20 minutes before a puck drop you had to retweet that Canada had won gold in curling and I felt horrible Kevin's like stay in your lane for gosh sakes You know at the Olympics you retweet or you tweet out Canadians who win medals because you're so happy for them And happy for the country Never did I consider that I was spoiling curling for somebody else So Kevin I am sorry
Starting point is 01:17:17 And to all of you I am trying to be slower And it was a star set at night at the rink on Saturday too with Megan Oldham and Piper Gillis and Paul Porre. They were all in the house with their... Yeah, you were really interviewing a bunch of them. It was great. I wasn't ready
Starting point is 01:17:34 to rid myself of the Olympic mindset just yet. And it was, because as we've talked about, we were kind of in our own hockey bubble over there. So to be able to interact with some of the other Canadian Olympians that were elsewhere within Milano Cortina,
Starting point is 01:17:50 that was really great. And wonderful stories across the board. there. Okay, something quick before we dive in in earnest. Adam from New Jersey, wanted to include Elliot, Kyle, Dom, and Porter. I don't know why Griffin got the last name treatment there, but Elliot, Kyle,
Starting point is 01:18:06 Dom, and Porter. Elliot isn't as funny as he thinks he is. Oh, and now I know why you picked this one. As I was teaching a, yes, well, he is now realizing what we've all been preaching for many years. As I was teaching a yoga class this
Starting point is 01:18:22 Sunday in front of roughly 30 people, the Bluetooth for my music would not connect, so I taught the class without music and used the old You Plan God Laughs line and it didn't even get a single chuckle. All the best, appreciate the countless hours of entertainment, driving to and from classes. It's all in the delivery, maybe.
Starting point is 01:18:44 I would say, Adam, that the problem was not your line. It is a great line. It is that you have a humorless class. Yes. It's the 30 people on the, yoga mess. They need to lighten up. It's not your fault. It's not my grandmother's lion's fault. No. It is your class's fault. Good. Glad we settled that. Okay. Parker in New York City. Hello, Kyle Elliott and the most important person of the pod, Dom. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 01:19:13 Always love listening to the pod and always admire how much most of you do for the pods. But as a fellow stagehand and union member, I appreciate that you all note how important and integral the broadcast crews are to what you all do. So thank you for noticing the hardworking people who generally don't get noticed unless something is wrong or broken. Yes, that has never lost on either of us. Correct. Each and every week. Anyways, here is my question.
Starting point is 01:19:45 When prospect players who have signed their entry-level contracts don't play the full amount of games required to burn the first year of their ELC, How is the pay handled? My understanding is that players, in general, get paid per game, but what about players who get sent down during the season or preseason without burning their first year? And do preseason games count for signed players as part of their pay? Love the pod. And as a Colorado kid living in NYC, go abs go. Okay, so first of all, thank you, Parker.
Starting point is 01:20:19 Let me answer a few of these. you don't get paid your salary during the preseason. Like there's per diem and there's stuff like that, but you don't get paid a salary during the preseason. That's number one. While you're in the NHL, if you are on a one-way deal, which means you get paid,
Starting point is 01:20:42 most NHL players are on one-way deals, which means you get paid in the NHL or the HL or the ECHL one-s salary, which is your NHL salary, it doesn't matter. You get it all the time. But if you're on what's called a two-way deal, which means one salary in the NHL and one salary in whichever minor league you're playing in, it just depends on where you are. If you're in the NHL, you get your NHL number. If you're in the American Hockey League or the ECHL or wherever else you might be, you get your minor league number. And that's basically the way it goes. And what you're talking about for, was he talking about like playing your 10 games? Is that what you think he's referring to? Yeah, I think so. So like not burning a year and getting sent back down to junior. So then what happens, pay wise?
Starting point is 01:21:35 Well, if you're in junior, you're not making your NHL salary. However, the way it works is your contract can only slide up until a certain age. And a slide means you, like there are some situations where, if you don't play 10 games, even though you collect an NHL salary for whatever that number is, one to nine games, if you get sent down, your contract rolls over. So the next year, you're still in year one of three. When you're no longer in the NHL, you're not getting that NHL salary. You're getting your junior number or whatever it's going to be. But the way it works is you reach a certain age where your contract can't slide anymore.
Starting point is 01:22:20 So even if you play less than 10 games, then you're still on your contract. Excellent. Okay. Stephen from Montreal. If I explain that wrong, I'll hear it, but I think I've got that right. No, that was succinct. Stephen from Montreal. Greetings fellow hockey nerds.
Starting point is 01:22:38 Kyle Hairstyle Bukascus, Dom the Slovakian Patriot Sharmati, and Elliot, the raccoon Wrangler Friedman. I was watching my Montreal Canadiens the other night and noticed that they disliked. This allowed a Cole Cofield goal because he kicked the puck towards Ilius Sorokin of the Islanders, and Sorokin knocked the puck in. I was always under the impression that the puck has to be intentionally kicked in the net, presumably without hitting another player and most certainly without hitting the opposing team. In my 25 years of watching hockey, I've never seen this happen and was curious about your takes on this. By this logic, if a player kicks the puck 200 feet down.
Starting point is 01:23:20 the ice and the opposing goalie handles the puck and accidentally fires it into his own net. That wouldn't count. Seems like a weird situation, but the similarities are there. I've been listening to you guys since you only had 31 thoughts, so love the pod. I appreciate you guys getting me through the long work weeks. Shout out to Elliot. I'm a big fan of your work and your sense of humor always seem to get me. Also, shout out to my fiancé Alex. It's our 10-year anniversary. And here I am writing a long email to you guys. Have a great day and stay away from the raccoons in traffic. I hear they drive Toyota BZs. Well, if they knew it was good for them, they would. That's right. It was good for us, too.
Starting point is 01:24:04 Yeah. We are, as long as the raccoon or any other animal has legally achieved their driver's license, we are pro animals driving cars. Tunesis, the driving cat, if you want to drive a Toyota B Z, we are completely in support of it. Stephen, let me tell you something. I hope you treat Alex like a queen. That is the number one thing I'm saying to you. I don't even know who you are, but I'm betting if she's put up with you for 10 years, you are the luckiest man on the earth, and I hope you treat her right.
Starting point is 01:24:43 That's number one. Number two, Stephen, the rule you're looking at in the rulebook is 49.2. And it's pretty simple. A goal cannot be scored by an attacking player who kicks a puck that deflects into the net off any player, goalkeeper, or official. If it is not a distinct kicking motion, it's a goal. But if you kick it and it hits somebody and goes in, it's no goal. I know some people think this is crazy, but it's pretty simple. Those skates now are so sharp and those cuts are so ugly, they do not want people kicking at pucks. Yes. And the playing question with Coughfield last week, it's understanding how the rule is written. Pretty cut and dry way. That one was disallowed. Thank you very much, Stephen. Caleb from the Fraser Valley. Hello, King Dom, Thatcher Demko's worst nightmare, and the great and honorable representative of Raccoons Canada. These intros are just too much. My name is Caleb and I'm a Canucksman.
Starting point is 01:25:48 You guys are very creative. I give you. guys a lot of credit. Caleb the Canucks fan from the Fraser Valley, Vancouver seems to be tanking despite what Gary says, and I'm all for it. My question is, though, about the cap floor. Could Vancouver just sign some UFAs to one-year deals grossly over their market value just to meet the cap floor? I won't say any names, but there's a few contracts out there that would be believable if that were the idea behind it. I'm sure there's an answer to it that I'm am just unaware of. Otherwise, I'm sure the late Arizona coyotes probably would have exploited it already. But if not, please let Vancouver know that I'd be willing to lace them up for seven to eight
Starting point is 01:26:31 figures. Thanks, guys. Keep up the great work. Caleb, there's nothing wrong with your idea. Nothing. It absolutely could happen. As a matter of fact, when the Philadelphia 76ers were doing their tankathon for years and years and years trying to get all the picks that turned into, you know, Joel Embeded and Ben Simmons and players like that. They, they once signed JJ Reddick, who's now the Laker coach to a one-year contract, I think $22 million. So in the NBA, that strategy has been done. I don't know that there's anything like that in the NHL that's too much like that.
Starting point is 01:27:10 Like we've seen guys sign, you know, one times five deals and stuff like that, but nothing outrageous. However, there's nothing that prevents it. And to be honest, I'm a little surprised that someone hasn't done it. Right. Well, I guess I suppose somebody has to sign the checks at the end of the day and maybe where that's the issue lies. You're right. Okay.
Starting point is 01:27:33 You got me there. Marcus and Johan, hello, the two thoughts and Mr. 30 thoughts, Friedman. Yes. I tried sending my question to Elliott's fax number, but kept getting the error message fax machine not found. So I resorted to an email submission instead. That's good, guys. That's, that's very, very good. Yes.
Starting point is 01:27:54 Whoever has that fax machine is not admitting to it. That's right. And it's clearly not plugged in. My son, who's 11, plays at the North Shore Winter Club. He watched Connor Bardard. Oh, yeah. That's turning out, what are they feeding kids there? I know.
Starting point is 01:28:12 Yeah. It's turning out stud after stud after stud after stud. Yeah. I still get the sweaty palms at the sight of seeing your minor hockey team name next to theirs. Is it a tournament during the year? That's going to be a tough night. He plays the North Shore Winter Club. He watched a Badard and Celebrini train this past summer, and he is a stickhead.
Starting point is 01:28:34 He is wondering, how do players change their stick curve away from what is available at the local hockey stores? For example, how did dry sidle choose the burger flipper? When do they try changes to their sticks? Well, I think what's the line that has often been uttered on this podcast that greatness borrows, but genius steals? Yes. So there's a lot of that that goes on amongst the peers of players in the NHL. Once upon a time, you could get, you know, a manufacturer would send you kind of like a mold of a blade, and the player would literally use their hand to kind of go, okay, I want, okay, I want, okay.
Starting point is 01:29:15 the toe to be open like this and the heel to kind of be like that and go, all right, and you send it back to the manufacturer and say, make me a bunch of sticks that has that curve. And they would. But now there's, I mean, there's already so many variations out there. And there's always, like, I mean, we did a brief piece in the show on Saturday of Stephen Halliday using Austin Matthews stick, the same specs that that Matthews uses. And there's a lot of that that goes on around the league. even if maybe not every player uses it in games,
Starting point is 01:29:45 but there's always sharing of ideas and I want to see what this guy uses and what kind of curve is this guy have. So generally it's based off of that and getting somebody else's pattern in your hand and going, now I want to try that. And you get whichever brand that you're aligned with to make up a batch, you know, with your name on it
Starting point is 01:30:06 and with the rest of your specs that you prefer. So that's generally how it goes. or I want it like Zegras has it, but a little less tow hook or something like that. And small adjustments are made that way. But it's very rare for a player to like start right from scratch in today's day and age. It's usually based off of another one that's already out in the world, maybe not available retail wise, but certainly is accessible for those that play at the top level. And oftentimes, Kyle, people will fiddle around with it in practice, right?
Starting point is 01:30:39 For sure. That's often where you'll see the genesis of it. Hey, I see what you've got there. Let me try this. Yeah. Let me fiddle around with it. I mean, when I used to do a lot of baseball, you know, there would be times when somebody would break a bat or a couple bats and they'd run out and they say, oh, okay, I had to grab this guy's bat because I had none left. And I've seen situations before.
Starting point is 01:31:07 I can't really off the top of my head, but when guys would hit a home run with someone else's bat. that and be like, I better try these specs. So sometimes it's just fluke and things like that. Yes. Yeah. And guys are always, or a lot of guys are always tinkering or curious. And the players do have the ability. Like, you don't see it at the retail level.
Starting point is 01:31:30 There's, like, you can go with a wider blade in the NHL to a certain point, a longer blade too. So there's that ability to fiddle around things too beyond. beyond just the curve and the lie of it as well. So thank you, Marcus and Johan for that. Okay, a couple more here. This is from Danny. Hello again.
Starting point is 01:31:51 First of all, thank you so much for answering my previous question a few months back on first ever goals. I could not believe that A, it got selected, and B, Kyle butchered the delivery so badly. Danny, just like Adam and his yoga class, the issue was the audience. audience. Danny says, I feel like I should propose another question and give Kyle a chance to redeem himself. Before I get to the question, a discussion a few weeks back on contract signings and fax machines reminded me of Jumbo Joe signing his contract extension while shirtless atop his riding mower. What a legend. Yes. That was a beauty. Okay, my question is, with the new NIL rules enticing more players to go from Canadian Junior Leagues to the NCAA and an influx of recent high-end prospect,
Starting point is 01:32:41 coming through the ranks, Celebrini and Will Smith, to name a few, which Stanley Cup winning team has had the most NCAA alumni on their roster. Kyle, good luck delivering this one. You're all the best. The future and maybe even the present is Teal. All right. Hmm. Did that one resonate?
Starting point is 01:33:01 Now, off the top of my head, top of my head, knowing his philosophy, is it one of the devil's teams? They are, there's a devil's team tied for second. Okay. Very good. Because Lou Lamarillo, very USA hockey. I mean, obviously Scott Stevens, OHL guy, Scott Niedermeier, WHL guy, Ken Danico, WHL guy, Martin, Broderk, Quebec League guy. But he took it a real point of pride that he had NCAA players or U.S.-born players on his roster.
Starting point is 01:33:38 So that would be the first team off the top of my. my head without even looking at anything, I would have guessed Devils. So they're tied for second? Yes, they're 1995 Cup winning team. They had 13 guys with NCAA backgrounds. Okay, so somebody had more than that, eh? Yes. Okay, I'm going to be honest.
Starting point is 01:33:59 I'm looking at Stanley Cup winners. I'm just because Devils was my automatic number one guess. let's see who else would I look at and say that is a team that could be the answer and that devil's team maybe not surprisingly the only in the top six that is not from the 21st century yes I would I would definitely believe that it would be teams later
Starting point is 01:34:33 that would be at the top so I'm going to look at it Okay. My next guess, Ducks, 07. Wow. They are fourth with a letter. Right there. Family feud styles, you're on the board. Ain't no strikes.
Starting point is 01:34:50 I don't want this to go too long. John O'Hurley's walk around, rub your hand, ask you, okay. Don't have any strikes yet? My family feud is with Richard Dawson. Yeah, right, right. So I will say my other guess here, 2018 Capitals.
Starting point is 01:35:07 No. Okay. I missed it. You're right close there. So the top team was the year prior. Pittsburgh Penguins in 2017, they had 15 guys. 15, eh? Yeah. And when they won the year before, they had 13. So that ties the 95 devils. You know, it was interesting. I was looking at the penguins. And obviously, Coonitz is the guy who jumps out to you as like the NCAA guy. But you think, you know, you look at some of the key, I was thinking about it, some of the key players of that team. You know, Malkin neither. Crosby, obviously, not one.
Starting point is 01:35:51 And I was thinking, too, Chris LaTang is not an NCAA guy. And their goalie, Matt Murray, was not an NCAA guy. Ron Hainesie, who was on that team, not an NCAA guy. Trevor Daley. He did two years in UMass. Oh, right, of course. Hinesy was. You know why?
Starting point is 01:36:12 Because I keep thinking of him playing Hamilton Bulldogs. That's why. That's stupid. But Trevor Daly, not an NCAA guy. Like, I was, I just, I thought five or six guys, I was like, no way it's Pittsburgh. I wouldn't have gotten it. Yeah. Sneakly, I wouldn't have gotten it.
Starting point is 01:36:31 Kessel, of course. Yeah. Yeah. Gensel. Benino, Gensel, Matt Cullen. Yeah. You know what? I just didn't go deep enough.
Starting point is 01:36:43 Yeah. Suddenly it adds up. So they are the leaders in that regard. 15 guys well over half the roster when they went back to back in 2017. Thank you, Danny. I hope I didn't screw it up this time. Okay. Probably did.
Starting point is 01:36:57 One more. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. One more here. Voice mail. This is from Harry and Raleigh. Hey, Kyle and Elliot. My name's Harry, and I live out in Raleigh, North Carolina. And I was just, I was overjoyed to find out about Brennan Buckey's extension and that it included the donation to the Autism Society of North Carolina. Now, what I was wondering was, how common is that across the National Hockey League? And what is the largest? So if you got to be able to.
Starting point is 01:37:28 any of your favorite donations or a list of some of the largest, I'd love to hear it. Hope y'all have a wonderful morning. Bye. So, Harry's talking about athlete charitable donations. Yeah. Right? Okay. So, I mean, one of the guys we should shout out, it just happened last week, and
Starting point is 01:37:45 that's Alexander Barkoff. And Alexander Barkoff has for a while now in Florida, he has had a working relationship, with, and I'm just going to check, I'm just Googling the name of the hospital here. It's Joe DiMaggio's Children's Hospital. Like, he has had a long relationship with them. He's been buying, like a lot of players through their contracts do sweets. And they open them up to people who couldn't otherwise go for a lot of different reasons. And it's a great thing that they do.
Starting point is 01:38:23 And Barcove's done it. and the he gave a seven it was called quote unquote a significant seven figure gift to the hospital this year in addition to his usual donation and you know he was very emotional as he as they spoke about him if you watch the press conference or you saw any photos from it you could see how much it meant to bark of like it kind of reminded me when Josh Allen won the MVP the bill's quarterback a couple years ago that a number of kids send him videos from the children's hospital he goes and visits and Alan got really choked up about it and it was very similar like it's a beautiful thing to do there are so many athletes out there who are charity oriented I almost hate sometimes mentioning one or two because there's so many that we're leaving out but you know P. K. Suban obviously raised a lot of money for the hospitals in Montreal but the one I always remember, because I remember hearing it from their teammates, the Sedeen twins gave
Starting point is 01:39:29 million dollar donations to a hospital in Vancouver. And the thing that stood out about that was they wanted it to be private. And the hospital, the Canucks and some of their teammates, BX had told the story once, had to convince them that they had to go public with it. And they were like, no, we're not going public. And finally, the hospital administrators told them, The only reason we're asking you to do this is if you go public, historically, we can prove our donations go up. If people hear that the sedans are donating to this hospital, more people will donate. And that's why they have finally agreed to do it. Not because they wanted the notoriety, but because it was proven to them that the hospital would do better if everybody knew that they would be doing something that the sedans did.
Starting point is 01:40:24 as well. So that's the story I kind of always remember. Yeah, there's some great ones like that and on a lot that just are done quietly. But you mentioned the suites. Like my first year in Ottawa was the year that Bobby Ryan signed his big contract with the senators. And shortly thereafter, he had announced that he was setting up a suite. It was like Bobby's All-Star kids, kids from the Children's Hospital in Ottawa that would come to games. I really like, you know, like going to games in Nashville. And on the one end of the rink, they've got banners not set up for not necessarily players that are honored for how many years or how long they played with the organization, but it's players that have charities associated within the team and the different names of them
Starting point is 01:41:08 and kind of what they support and who they support. And I just thought that's, that's a nice touch whenever you walk into that building and seeing, you know, who's involved in that way beyond the hockey stuff. That's a nice touch. I've always found walking into Bridgestone or that they have. There's a lot of examples out there, and Brandon Bussie among them, which is really cool. Yes, a lot of great people
Starting point is 01:41:32 who do great things for charity. Okay, well, we'll leave it there. 1833, 311, 32, 32, if you would like Harry, like to leave a voicemail for us, or you can email us at 32thoughts at sportsnet.com. We'll back to conclude this edition of 32 Thoughts, the podcast, after the break. Okay, before we go, I know I don't say this enough, but as you know, only so many hours in a day,
Starting point is 01:42:14 and we really do appreciate spending a couple of them here with us twice a week, each and every week throughout the hockey season, especially now in the lead-up to trade deadline on Friday. Before we get there, though, a couple of games that can be seen nationally across the network. For those interested, Tuesday night on Sportsnet 1, the Dallas stars are in Calgary to face the flames on the air at 9 Eastern 7 o'clock mountain time for those that want to catch that. Scotia Bank Wednesday night hockey this week, the Toronto Maple Leafs in New Jersey to face the Devils. David Amber and Co. have the Hockey Central pregame show at 630 Eastern puck drop from Prudential
Starting point is 01:42:54 Center shortly after 7ET. And of course, all these games can be streamed on Sportsnet Plus as well. Taking us out today, a track from Trigg Stran, who was born and raised in BC's Columbia Valley. Strand played in the BCHL for three years before earning a scholarship at the University of Guelph Griffin's grinding through five seasons before taking his game to the pro ranks in Sweden. But when the pandemic brought his hockey career to a close, he shifted to a different kind of arena.
Starting point is 01:43:26 With a high-energy blend of rock, blues, country, and folk, Strand's new track, love and war is packed with gritty, hook-heavy riffs built for open skies and raised hands. Keep an eye out for the release. of three new singles over the next few months. You can catch this track along with all the others we've featured this year on 32 Thoughts to Music, playlist that can be found on Spotify. Trade deadline coming up on Friday.
Starting point is 01:43:52 Until then, enjoy Trig Strand and Love and War on 32 Thoughts, the podcast. my motor fix tall black coffee generate

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