Top 25 NHL Articles on Substack

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5 Sports Things You Missed This Weekend

Featuring artistic swimming, the Razorback Republic's dominant NCAA track performance, and Florida's stranglehold on the hockey world
I really need to work on my framing here, because I went to the Ireland-Canada cricket match on Friday and said to someone “I like bringing attention to weird sports.” He said… “cricket’s not a weird sport!” He’s right! It’s the second-most popular sport in the world! It’s only about half as weird as football. (Try explaining the intentional grounding r…
Rodger Sherman ∙ 10 LIKES
Carter B
Thanks for the comments on the NCAA track championships. Last year the University of Texas women ran the 5th fastest 4x100 ever. Relays are a rare bread where they just aren't run all that much outside of college so not surprised colleges can practice them and have some great times.
Because they aren't run at "regular" track events like the Diamond league, they need a way for national teams to qualify so they hold a special relay-only track event before the Olympics just to get the top teams. It was fun watching it this year as so little in track is team based.

Why do NHL teams lack creativity?

An example from EDM-DAL
I occasionally hear from coaches who deplore the conservative nature of NHL tactics. Many such complaints are valid, though I would argue that NHL hockey is as dynamic and creative as ever. All four remaining teams in these Stanley Cup finals give their players permission to make plays off the rush, empower their Ds to join as F4 and employ various set …
Jack Han

When it comes to NHL coaching turnover you need to follow the money

A look at how dollars make the difference when it comes to coaching changes.
Since the start of the 2022-23 season, 27 of the 32 NHL teams have changed head coaches at least once. Since the end of last season there have been 19 head coaching changes after Sheldon Keefe was fired on Thursday, before a two-year contract extension even kicked in.
Sean Shapiro ∙ 29 LIKES
Nick
The news of Brindamour and his staff being extended got me thinking…how does it work with whole coaching staffs? Once Brindamour is extended does he then work with GM to extend the rest of the staff? Is each inidividual negotiated separately?
JERRY GANTT
Another excellent story


Google abandoned "don't be evil" — and Gemini is the result

AI labs need to treat accuracy, honesty and unbiasedness as core values.
Even with 29 days in a leap year, the end of February creeps up on you every time. So on Thursday, it will be time for the monthly edition of Silver Bulletin Subscriber Questions. There’s still time for paid subscribers to submit questions — you can do that
Nate Silver ∙ 323 LIKES
Yuri Bezmenov
Spot on, Nate. The underlying issue with Google, Gemini, and all big tech companies is the humans running them. They are incapable of seeking truth because their entire world view is about distorting it to push leftist narratives. 95% of tech employee political donations go to the stunning and brave Dems. Teaching AI to virtually erase one race is one step away from physical erasure.
Yerushalmi
Nobody seems to have noticed the other major problem with Raghavan's "explanation": It doesn't actually say what was wrong with Google Gemini.
Sure, you can infer it. The post says that "if you ask for X, you should receive X" and that "you don't want to receive Y". And it says "we failed to account for cases A, B, and C". But it *doesn't* say explicitly, anywhere in the post, "People who asked for X received Y".
It wasn't an explanation, or an apology. It was a blurring.

The Greatest National Anthem(s) of All-Time

My Incredible NHL Debut
As you may have seen or heard on the Internet, I recently realized my months-long goal of playing the national anthem on guitar at an NHL hockey game, what critics are already calling the greatest national anthem playing of all-time basically. At least far as I’m concerned.
Dave Hill ∙ 26 LIKES
Lisa Marie Dockery
Welcome back to Substack! Its been a while
John the Fireman
Rock on, Dave 🤘

November 1, 2023

This is 60: Diamond (Michael) Scott Responds to The Oldster Magazine Questionnaire

"I see this period of my life as an opportunity to step into my legacy years with unbridled freedom and grace."
From the time I was 10, I’ve been obsessed with what it means to grow older. I’m curious about what it means to others, of all ages, and so I invite them to take “The Oldster Magazine Questionnaire.” Here, journalist, editor, and “global book ambassador”
Sari Botton ∙ 106 LIKES
Diana M. Wilson
"You'll never see me retire." Amen to that!
Alison Krupnick
I admire his attitude and love the line about stepping into the legacy years with unbridled freedom and grace. For me, part of that unbridled freedom is to eat as many delicious meals as possible.


Justin Trudeau's Disregard For Father's Day A National Disgrace

Justin Trudeau's personal neurosis regarding manhood and the family unit is dividing citizen from citizen, community from community— for a purpose.
In Canada, Father's Day is observed to honor fatherhood every year on the third Sunday of June. Although not a public holiday, many Canadians celebrate this day to show appreciation and give respect to fathers and father figures. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
Brad Salzberg ∙ 25 LIKES
Ivan F. Filippov
Brad, you posted very good article! I liked most the stats regarding percentage of transgender or non-binary in general population. That information should be known to all hard-working adults. Unfortunately, very few people are aware of it. Unfortunately, I disagree with you regarding the information regarding the anti-family stance being rooted in communist ideology. That is not true at all! I am 76 years old, and my father was born in Russia in 1919. As much as I hate socialist/communist regimes, I can testify the family based on Mather and Father, was a corner stone of that regime. There in no doubt about it. Please, do yourself a favor and research it. I am sure that you will find a confirmation of what I am saying. P.S.: My father's family emigrated from Soviet Union to Czechoslovakia in 1936 where I was born and in 1983, I emigrated with my wife in children to Canada. Two parents’ family was a cornerstone of all communist regimes.
alan skelhorne
in my mind, i don,t know how this fairy princess is still walking around, him and mr. wraparound in bc, both of them should be swinging. and thats my rant of the day brad,

May 23, 2023

Ten (Years) For Fighting. The Deadly Toll of Fighting in Ice Hockey: An Analysis of Premature Mortality Among NHL Players.

When I first discovered NHL ice hockey as a teenager, I thought the fighting was kind of cool. These goons were willing to beat each other up and risk losing a tooth or ten, just to defend the honor of their teammates. Now that I’m a physician and public health researcher, it’s decidedly less charming to me. We’ve all learned about the
Jeremy Faust, MD ∙ 29 LIKES
Bryan Sean McKown
"The Deadly Toll", thank you for your important medical questions. As a survivor of a TBI categorized as "severe", I am quite aware that the brain can get bounced back & forth if you will, coup & counter coup if you won't. Competent studies need a cohort with data on the different intentsity of repeated impacts on the brain. I would think (as a JD not a MD) there may be some data on "headers" in soccer or NFL defensive backs who did plenty of "checking" bouncing off blockers & tackling helmet first. Thank you again for your medical observations.
Ryan McCormick, M.D.
An important post, thank you for sharing. I have counseled multiple boys and young men to give up hockey after repeated concussions produced neuropsychiatric and cognitive problems, some of which affected life trajectories and potentials. The contact sports can still be fun without the checking, heading in soccer, tackling in football, etc. etc.
Testosterone and other factors drive many towards violent sports, both in terms of participation and observation, but as we age, the folly of that behavior becomes more apparent and hard to watch.

April 27, 2023

Good Reading -- April 2023

Facts and Figures 14% — cash and checks as an estimated share of total payments in 2023, down from 42% in 2010. ATMs peaked in 2019 at 470,000 and stood at 451,500 at the end of 2022. The average American drove 4% fewer miles in 2022 than in 2019. (Source: DoT)
Phil Ordway ∙ 6 LIKES
Kevin Bracker
Love the "Pessimism" article. It is fascinating to me how we as a species tend to assume that things are getting worse when the reality is that they are getting better over time. That it covers all groups is even more intriguing.

March 8, 2023

Midweek Roundup 3.8.23

Previewing Ohio State, a deeper look at Michigan’s dominant top line, and a brief word on Mel Pearson’s continued unwelcome presence at Yost
Saturday night, the University of Michigan men’s hockey team will take on the Ohio State Buckeyes for the fifth time this season. Ohio State has claimed three of the four previous meetings—one in a rout, one in a shootout, and one outside at Cleveland’s FirstEnergy Stadium.
Sam Stockton ∙ 3 LIKES

January 23, 2023

Why the Montreal Canadiens should consider an emergency recall of Joshua Roy

With all of the injuries plaguing the Habs, they may need to use the ability to temporarily recall a junior player.
For the past few games, the Montreal Canadiens have been icing 11 forwards, and while they sport a surprising 3-2 record in their last five contests, this is a situation that will soon become untenable. They can scarcely afford to lose more players to injury, and the constant double shifting is bound to take a toll sooner than later.
Matt Drake ∙ 7 LIKES

October 19, 2022

On Moritz Seider, becoming dominant, and the importance of Ben Chiarot

Calder Trophy in hand, on the next steps for the Red Wings next franchise defenseman
Let’s talk about plus-minus and Moritz Seider. I know, plus-minus is a flawed stat, there are much better overall metrics to judge a player. But when it comes to wins and losses, and a franchise defenseman, plus-minus can be a strong indicator of whether a team will make the playoffs or not.
Sean Shapiro ∙ 9 LIKES

April 24, 2022

Saturday Commentary and Review #81

The New American Right, Brexit Betrayal and Immigration, China's Expanding Influence in Pacific and Australia, NASCAR Loses Its Soul, Australia's DEEP Archaeological Past
Reformers and radicals on the American right have had a very tough time these past few decades, and have lost every single major battle that they have conducted against both Democrats and Republicans. One need only look back at the debacle that was the Tea Party, heavily libertarian and constitutionalist in orientation, only to be swallowed up whole an…
Niccolo Soldo ∙ 65 LIKES
John Carter
Regarding Trump doing a coups in 2024, that's really just the same fantasy that bewitched the right between 2016 and 2020. There's no question it would work and no question it would be wildly popular. The problem is, as you said, he's a reality TV star. All flash, no substance. What he isn't is a man of action.
That seems to be a fundamental problem in American politics. A Caesar should be from the warrior caste. Only, in the age of hyperreality, the only people with widespread name recognition are entertainers - wrong personality type. And in the age of managerialism, the flag officers aren't even warriors, but gray bureaucrats with the souls of merchants.
John Carter
On NASCAR: that the sport would be gelded in the name of safety comes as no surprise. The mantra of "safety first" has been used to systematically and ruthlessly gut every aspect of our culture, corralling everything into a fenced off, padded, regulated, predictable, and deeply boring place. Safety first means directly what it implies: all other considerations are secondary to safety, therefore whatever restrictions can be justified in the name of safety will be justified, regardless of their costs. The result is a world that is extremely safe for the occupational class, but inhospitably toxic to the human soul.

In memory of those who "died suddenly" in the United States, April 12-18 (Part 1)

Five musicians, three football players, four in law enforcement, three sailors (on the same aircraft carrier), three elementary school teachers, four prisoners and all too many more
Jay Binder, Top-Notch Casting Director for Broadway, Dies at 71 April 15, 2022 Jay Binder, who served as the casting director for nearly 100 Broadway productions, from Lost in Yonkers, Laughter on the 23rd Floor and The King and I to Chicago, The Lion King and A Gentleman’s Guide to Love & Murder, has died. He was 71.
Mark Crispin Miller ∙ 49 LIKES
Metta Zetty
Thank you, Mark, for honoring those who have been lost. Your work is admirable:
Angie Card
Wow!

It's far from perfect, but it's all we've got

As the NHL and hockey world face their biggest non-lockout crisis since World War II, we might want to adjust our expectations a little and have some perspective
Exceptional times call for exceptional players. And that’s why Sean Day made his NHL debut with the Tampa Bay Lightning Tuesday night. You may remember when Day received ‘exceptional player status’ from Hockey Canada to…
Ken Campbell ∙ 8 LIKES
Very unprecedented times. I’m sure that all involved are doing the best they can for the game and the players.

June 14, 2021

Good and Bad News for the Restaurant Revitalization Fund

Additional funding might be on the way but the SBA made a big change
The Good News Given the initial number of applicants to the Restaurant Revitalization Fund during its first two days, with businesses seeking nearly $70B, it wasn’t a matter of if, but rather, how senators and house representations would pursue additional funding.
Barb Leung ∙ 1 LIKES

Weekly Mape Update: Issue #1

Welcome to the first edition of the Weekly Mape Update! This newsletter will cover the latest updates from the Maple Finance ecosystem, including protocol announcements, ongoing governance proposals, and more.
Maple Finance ∙ 2 LIKES


August 14, 2021

Rise In Prices Of Used Cars Decoded

Why is there a sudden rise in used car demand and prices? Here is all you need to know
We are sure that you have read multiple different perspectives and analysis on how Covid-19 has completely changed our lives. While the Covid narrative has many facets to it, we are sure you might not have seen the following scenario playing out - a rise in demand for second hand cars in India.
Vista Capital Research ∙ 1 LIKES

August 28, 2021

Underrated Growth Stock - Affle

Want to study a high growth technology platform business? Look at Affle!
The Indian tech industry has been a champion of yesterday with a lot of potential for tomorrow. Structural tailwinds combined with high quality of services rendered by Indian tech giants have helped create a robust tech industry. Nifty IT index has generated over 90% in returns in the last year while Nifty has delivered returns of about 43% in the same …
Vista Capital Research

August 25, 2021

5 Reasons Why You Should Buy Dabur

Find out why Dabur is a strong investment for your portfolio
Often when growth outlook tapers or inflation becomes a big concern, investors turn to FMCG stocks. As a matter of fact, even when the market is witnessing a bull run FMCG stocks are a key aspect of an investor’s portfolio. That’s why it can be said that FMCG stocks are “evergreen stocks”.
Vista Capital Research ∙ 1 LIKES
ORUGANTI SUDHAKAR
Excellent analysis

Volume 17: June 9, 2023

Scroll on for some of our signature pop culture-related snark as well as what we're reading, watching, and listening to at the moment.
Gilmore Girls Corner Which season is the best season to watch Gilmore Girls? We know what you’re thinking. Fall, of course. The series literally screams autumn. Well, not for everyone. With summer upon us, I decided to go digging for some summer-related Gilmore trivia. According to an article that Nicole Pomarico wrote for
Coffee With a Shot Cynicism

Volume 21: August 18, 2023

Scroll on for some of our signature pop culture-related snark as well as what we're reading, watching, and listening to at the moment.
Gilmore Girls Corner This week’s episode is for all the people that can’t take criticism very well, for the people who cry at work, for the people who’ve always tried their best… You get the picture. Three years ago, Jenny Singer wrote an article in
Coffee With a Shot Cynicism