herman said:Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:No, his other "p" word is closer to reality.
Puljuj?rvi?
Is that Swedish for pain?
No, I think it's Finnish for Top-5 pick winger.
I didn't realize how similar Swedish and Finnish are.
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herman said:Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:No, his other "p" word is closer to reality.
Puljuj?rvi?
Is that Swedish for pain?
No, I think it's Finnish for Top-5 pick winger.
Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:No, his other "p" word is closer to reality.
Puljuj?rvi?
Is that Swedish for pain?
No, I think it's Finnish for Top-5 pick winger.
I didn't realize how similar Swedish and Finnish are.
Tigger said:No, his other "p" word is closer to reality.
herman said:So the result of all this is that I have mad respect for Leo Komarov, who speaks Finnish, Swedish, Estonian, Russian, and English, and if the idea is to play a European puck possession style, he'd make a good lingual and cultural hub for a team of youngsters.
herman said:Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:No, his other "p" word is closer to reality.
Puljuj?rvi?
Is that Swedish for pain?
No, I think it's Finnish for Top-5 pick winger.
I didn't realize how similar Swedish and Finnish are.
I'm not a linguist, so this is all by the power of Google... (and not working at work).
They have a similar alphabet (Finnish orthography is based on Swedish, German, and Latin) but completely different origins; Swedish is Germanic, Finnish is Uralic (which has more in common with Estonian and Hungarian). i.e. with only English, I can still get by reading Swedish signs, but would be terribly lost in Findland.
Swedish for pain is sm?rta. The colloquialism "that smarts!" is derived from the same Anglo-Saxon root (smeaort), cousin to the word for to strike (smitan).
Puljuj?rvi appears to be a compound word in Finnish for "group of lakes" (pulju - crowd, j?rvi - lake). As it were, Jesse Puljuj?rvi was born to Finnish parents in Sweden.
So the result of all this is that I have mad respect for Leo Komarov, who speaks Finnish, Swedish, Estonian, Russian, and English, and if the idea is to play a European puck possession style, he'd make a good lingual and cultural hub for a team of youngsters.
Nik the Trik said:herman said:So the result of all this is that I have mad respect for Leo Komarov, who speaks Finnish, Swedish, Estonian, Russian, and English, and if the idea is to play a European puck possession style, he'd make a good lingual and cultural hub for a team of youngsters.
Yeah, except I think something like 90% of people in Scandinavian countries speak English anyway.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:You are right, herman. Finnish and Swedish have about as much in common as Chinese and Swedish. They are from totally different language families. There are tons of people of Finnish heritage around here ? the street signs are in English and Finnish ? and only very rarely can I make out a particle of a word in Finnish that bears some resemblance to English or other Indo-European languages.
BTW, you often hear announcers mispronounce Finnish names. The accent is always on the first syllable (I believe that holds for all Finnish words). Exceptions would be Finnish people who don't have surnames that originate in Finnish (lots of people of Swedish extraction are natives of Finland, like the yeoman leafs d-man Aki Berg; and there are a few Latinized Finnish surnames, like Huselius and Sibelius).
herman said:Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:herman said:Tigger said:No, his other "p" word is closer to reality.
Puljuj?rvi?
Is that Swedish for pain?
No, I think it's Finnish for Top-5 pick winger.
I didn't realize how similar Swedish and Finnish are.
I'm not a linguist, so this is all by the power of Google... (and not working at work).
They have a similar alphabet (Finnish orthography is based on Swedish, German, and Latin) but completely different origins; Swedish is Germanic, Finnish is Uralic (which has more in common with Estonian and Hungarian). i.e. with only English, I can still get by reading Swedish signs, but would be terribly lost in Findland.
Swedish for pain is sm?rta. The colloquialism "that smarts!" is derived from the same Anglo-Saxon root (smeaort), cousin to the word for to strike (smitan).
Puljuj?rvi appears to be a compound word in Finnish for "group of lakes" (pulju - crowd, j?rvi - lake). As it were, Jesse Puljuj?rvi was born to Finnish parents in Sweden.
So the result of all this is that I have mad respect for Leo Komarov, who speaks Finnish, Swedish, Estonian, Russian, and English, and if the idea is to play a European puck possession style, he'd make a good lingual and cultural hub for a team of youngsters.
Bender said:So this is a bit random but I ran into Mike Babcock on Saturday afternoon. I was coming out of the Goodlife Gym at Bay/Bloor and as I walked by I noticed a familiar face. Mike Babcock! I was going to walk on by but I thought hey, what the hell, I'll never see him again. I said excuse me, Mike? He said yes, he asked my name. We shook hands, and said I appreciate what you're doing with our hockey team. He said thanks and I told him to have a good day.
Very courteous guy, seems like a class act.
I was like a raging schoolgirl watching the Beatles in the 1960s.Significantly Insignificant said:Bender said:So this is a bit random but I ran into Mike Babcock on Saturday afternoon. I was coming out of the Goodlife Gym at Bay/Bloor and as I walked by I noticed a familiar face. Mike Babcock! I was going to walk on by but I thought hey, what the hell, I'll never see him again. I said excuse me, Mike? He said yes, he asked my name. We shook hands, and said I appreciate what you're doing with our hockey team. He said thanks and I told him to have a good day.
Very courteous guy, seems like a class act.
While I don't doubt that your telling of the story is how it happened in your head, I imagine it went down more like this:
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Bender said:So this is a bit random but I ran into Mike Babcock on Saturday afternoon. I was coming out of the Goodlife Gym at Bay/Bloor and as I walked by I noticed a familiar face. Mike Babcock! I was going to walk on by but I thought hey, what the hell, I'll never see him again. I said excuse me, Mike? He said yes, he asked my name. We shook hands, and said I appreciate what you're doing with our hockey team. He said thanks and I told him to have a good day.
Very courteous guy, seems like a class act.
The Leafs? primary assistant coaches ? the men who are out on the bench during games and on the ice regularly during practice ? are veteran Jim Hiller and first-year NHL assistant D.J. Smith. Hiller is the man in charge of Toronto?s power play and works mainly with Buds forwards, and Smith runs the Buds? penalty kill and looks after the team?s defense corps. Both are former NHL players, but each has his own approach to day-to-day work: where Hiller is a laid-back man who tries to get to know each roster member as best he can, Smith is appreciated for his sense of humor.
[...]
Toronto has a slew of other important coaching figures, including goalie coach Steve Briere and assistant coach Andrew Brewer, who focuses on faceoffs and video analysis.
When young players are growing up through minor hockey, they all learn a variation of a standard breakout: D-to-D pass, up to the winger, and across to a swinging centre or the far winger who releases wide.
In previous seasons, the Leafs have run similar breakouts while also stretching the zone for long-bomb passes or putting it off the glass and out when in danger. In no particular order, those were their three primary breakouts.
That has changed with Mike Babcock in charge, as the first and ideal breakout option is to hit the centre cutting low up the middle of the ice. There is more risk directing play up the middle, but there is also more reward. An errant play up the wall can be covered up defensively with players retreating to the house or holding their positions, while an errant play up the middle is going to result in a high-percentage scoring opportunity.
Mike Babcock, via Justin Bourne/Sportsnet:
Yeah, for sure, when you think of forechecking in today?s game in the National Hockey League, or any other league, you?re looking to take away the walls. They?re coming hard with one, they?re taking the wall with two, and probably the other side with three, there?s a space that you can execute in front of your net.
Obviously the problem is when you turn the puck over in front of your net sometimes it ends up in your net. But I?m a big believer in getting back and executing fast so you don?t have to play in D-zone coverage at all. You turn pucks over by keeping it along the wall and you end up in the D-zone, and we?d like to be in the offensive zone by making that good first pass.
Under Babcock, the Leafs have improved from one of the worst possession teams in the NHL (45 per cent) to league average (50 per cent), making one of the biggest jumps in the league (along with Buffalo and Montreal).
The Leafs have also gone from allowing the most high-quality scoring chances against in the NHL (14 a game) to the fourth fewest.
On special teams, they are first in shots attempted on the power play (up from 25th last season) and second in shot attempts allowed on the penalty kill (up from 26th).
The list of improvements is longer than that, but that?s a glimpse of how dramatic some of the shifts have been. In every case, the progress is primarily a credit to systemic and deployment changes brought in by the coaching staff.
They also deserve credit for the fact so many players look better than the past few aimless seasons. James van Riemsdyk, Leo Komarov, Tyler Bozak and Jake Gardiner lead the way there, but it?s been a nearly team-wide transformation.
Potvin29 said:Mirtle has an article about Babcock today as well.
He highlights some of the team improvements from last season:
Under Babcock, the Leafs have improved from one of the worst possession teams in the NHL (45 per cent) to league average (50 per cent), making one of the biggest jumps in the league (along with Buffalo and Montreal).
The Leafs have also gone from allowing the most high-quality scoring chances against in the NHL (14 a game) to the fourth fewest.
On special teams, they are first in shots attempted on the power play (up from 25th last season) and second in shot attempts allowed on the penalty kill (up from 26th).
The list of improvements is longer than that, but that?s a glimpse of how dramatic some of the shifts have been. In every case, the progress is primarily a credit to systemic and deployment changes brought in by the coaching staff.
They also deserve credit for the fact so many players look better than the past few aimless seasons. James van Riemsdyk, Leo Komarov, Tyler Bozak and Jake Gardiner lead the way there, but it?s been a nearly team-wide transformation.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/maple-leafs-making-case-for-mike-babcock-as-nhls-coach-of-the-year/article27989580/
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Potvin29 said:Mirtle has an article about Babcock today as well.
He highlights some of the team improvements from last season:
Under Babcock, the Leafs have improved from one of the worst possession teams in the NHL (45 per cent) to league average (50 per cent), making one of the biggest jumps in the league (along with Buffalo and Montreal).
The Leafs have also gone from allowing the most high-quality scoring chances against in the NHL (14 a game) to the fourth fewest.
On special teams, they are first in shots attempted on the power play (up from 25th last season) and second in shot attempts allowed on the penalty kill (up from 26th).
The list of improvements is longer than that, but that?s a glimpse of how dramatic some of the shifts have been. In every case, the progress is primarily a credit to systemic and deployment changes brought in by the coaching staff.
They also deserve credit for the fact so many players look better than the past few aimless seasons. James van Riemsdyk, Leo Komarov, Tyler Bozak and Jake Gardiner lead the way there, but it?s been a nearly team-wide transformation.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/maple-leafs-making-case-for-mike-babcock-as-nhls-coach-of-the-year/article27989580/
While I think he manages to oversell the (low, as he admits) possibility of the team making the playoffs, the general point is right on the money. But Babcock won't win the Jack until the team makes the playoffs.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:While I think he manages to oversell the (low, as he eadmits) possibility of the team making the playoffs, the general point is right on the money. But Babcock won't win the Jack until the team makes the playoffs.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Potvin29 said:Mirtle has an article about Babcock today as well.
He highlights some of the team improvements from last season:
Under Babcock, the Leafs have improved from one of the worst possession teams in the NHL (45 per cent) to league average (50 per cent), making one of the biggest jumps in the league (along with Buffalo and Montreal).
The Leafs have also gone from allowing the most high-quality scoring chances against in the NHL (14 a game) to the fourth fewest.
On special teams, they are first in shots attempted on the power play (up from 25th last season) and second in shot attempts allowed on the penalty kill (up from 26th).
The list of improvements is longer than that, but that?s a glimpse of how dramatic some of the shifts have been. In every case, the progress is primarily a credit to systemic and deployment changes brought in by the coaching staff.
They also deserve credit for the fact so many players look better than the past few aimless seasons. James van Riemsdyk, Leo Komarov, Tyler Bozak and Jake Gardiner lead the way there, but it?s been a nearly team-wide transformation.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/maple-leafs-making-case-for-mike-babcock-as-nhls-coach-of-the-year/article27989580/
While I think he manages to oversell the (low, as he admits) possibility of the team making the playoffs, the general point is right on the money. But Babcock won't win the Jack until the team makes the playoffs.