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tiefighters · 1 year
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herochan · 1 year
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Batman (Detective Comics)
Art by Carter Wisniewski || IG
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justapillowpetpanda · 9 months
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leafsbabe · 4 years
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twitter review
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Tony DeAngelo
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Roman Ahcan
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Jack Eichel
Ryan Whitney
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Brent Burns (maybe)
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James Wisniewski
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goalhofer · 2 years
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1st NFL Draft Pick By Birth State
Maine: Joe Sabasteanski (94th overall, Brooklyn) 1943
New Hampshire: Adam Kretowicz (188th overall, New York Giants) 1942
Vermont: Steve Wisniewski (29th overall, Dallas) 1989
Massachusetts: Wayne Millner (65th overall, Boston) 1936
Rhode Island: Bill Osmanski (6th overall, Chicago Bears) 1939
Connecticut: Edward Jontos (45th overall, New York Giants) 1936
New York: Bill Shakespeare (3rd overall, Pittsburgh Pirates) 1936
New Jersey: Al Barabas (46th overall, Philadelphia) 1936
Pennsylvania: Joe Stydahar (6th overall, Chicago Bears) 1936
Delaware: Ed Michaels (14th overall, Chicago Bears) 1936
Maryland: William Constable; Jr. (64th overall, Philadelphia) 1936
Virginia: Clarence Parker (13th overall, Brooklyn) 1937
North Carolina: Herm Dickerson (63rd overall, Chicago Cardinals) 1937
South Carolina: William Dickens (52nd overall, Chicago Cardinals) 1937
Georgia: Jac Weller (55th overall, Philadelphia) 1936
Florida: Herbert Plasman (28th overall, Chicago Bears) 1937
West Virginia: Len Barnum (12th overall, Pittsburgh Pirates) 1936
Michigan: Sid Wagner (8th overall, Detroit) 1936
Ohio: Art Lewis (9th overall, New York Giants) 1936
Indiana: Richard Sandefur (39th overall, Pittsburgh Pirates) 1936
Kentucky: Bert Johnson (42nd overall, Brooklyn) 1937
Tennessee: Henry Hammond (38th overall, Chicago Bears) 1937
Alabama: William Francis (44th overall, Detroit) 1936
Mississippi: Riley Smith (2nd overall, Boston) 1936
Illinois: Marty Peters (57th overall, Pittsburgh Pirates) 1936
Wisconsin: Alphonse Leemans (18th overall, New York Giants) 1936
Minnesota: Vernal LeVoir (13th overall, Brooklyn) 1936
Iowa: John Berwanger (1st overall, Philadelphia) 1936
Missouri: Ros Carter (69th overall, Chicago Cardinals) 1936
Arkansas: Paul Bryant (31st overall, Brooklyn) 1936
Louisiana: Gaynell Tinsley (12th overall, Chicago Cardinals) 1937
North Dakota: Vern Oech (42nd overall, Chicago Bears) 1936
South Dakota: Bob Lannon (52nd overall, Philadelphia) 1938
Nebraska: Bernie Scherer (25th overall, Green Bay) 1936
Kansas: Antone Pilney (26th overall, Detroit) 1936
Oklahoma: Bob Reynolds (52nd overall, Green Bay) 1936
Texas: Jimmy Lawrence (5th overall, Chicago Cardinals) 1936
Montana: Milt Popovich (15th overall, Chicago Cardinals) 1938
Idaho: Ed Brett (33rd overall, Chicago Cardinals) 1936
Wyoming: Robert Moan (58th overall, New York Giants) 1938
Colorado: Alex Drobnitch (41st overall, Philadelphia) 1937
Utah: Dale Rennebohm (71st overall, Detroit) 1936
Arizona: Tom Greenfield (139th overall, Green Bay) 1939
Nevada: Mike Jurich (138th overall, Brooklyn) 1941
New Mexico: Pete Zagar (70th overall, New York Giants) 1939
Washington: Del Bjork (58th overall, Chicago Bears) 1937
Oregon: Bobby Grayson (21st overall, Pittsburgh Pirates) 1936
California: Willard Letlow (7th overall, Green Bay) 1936
Alaska: Mark Schlereth (263rd overall, Washington) 1989
Hawaii: Bill Anahu (65th overall, Cleveland Rams) 1940
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junker-town · 4 years
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The NFL’s best remaining free agents, by position
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The new league year is here, but not every big name has been signed yet.
The official start to the new NFL league year is here, with a new collective bargaining agreement and all. It also comes at a time when the world is upended by the coronavirus pandemic, but other than changes to travel and locking down team facilities, NFL free agency is continuing unabated.
With the legal tampering period beginning on March 16, many deals were already agreed upon before free agency actually began. Some became official right at 4 p.m. ET when the new league year kicked off, while others have yet to be finalized until teams can conduct physicals. We’ve also seen a high number of franchise tags this offseason, with players like Dak Prescott and Chris Jones sticking with their teams.
Even after all that, there are a slew of free agents looking for a landing spot in 2020. Below, we’ll point you to the best available players at each position, with updates throughout free agency. Note that not every signing is included, namely for players at the bottom of the roster.
Quarterback
Signed: Kyle Allen, Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Teddy Bridgewater, Chase Daniel, Blaine Gabbert, Chad Henne, Taysom Hill, Brian Hoyer, Case Keenum, Marcus Mariota, AJ McCarron, Colt McCoy, Sean Mannion, Nick Mullens, Nathan Peterman, Dak Prescott, Philip Rivers, Nate Sudfeld, Ryan Tannehill, P.J. Walker, Jameis Winston
Best available: Blake Bortles, Joe Flacco, Josh McCown, Matt Moore, Cam Newton, Kyle Sloter
A strong group of free agent quarterbacks has been quickly depleted, with Dak Prescott getting the franchise tag and Tom Brady, Teddy Bridgewater, and Marcus Mariota landing with new teams. Cam Newton’s reported release made him a late addition to the list and an intriguing option for teams that. missed out on the first wave of QB signings.
Running Back
Signed: Ameer Abdullah, Peyton Barber, Matt Breida, Kenyan Drake, Austin Ekeler, Melvin Gordon, Todd Gurley, Derrick Henry, Jordan Howard, Kareem Hunt, Dion Lewis, J.D. McKissic, DeAndre Washington, Jeff Wilson
Best available: Devonta Freeman, Frank Gore, Carlos Hyde, LeSean McCoy, Lamar Miller, Ty Montgomery, C.J. Prosise, Wendell Smallwood, Chris Thompson, Jonathan Williams
The value of the running back position continues to swing wildly, but that didn’t stop the Titans from putting the franchise tag on Derrick Henry. Other names like Austin Ekeler and Jordan Howard were quickly locked down, too.
Wide Receiver
Signed: Geronimo Allison, Nelson Agholor, Danny Amendola, Robby Anderson, Travis Benjamin, Kendrick Bourne, DeAndre Carter, Randall Cobb, Keelan Cole, Amari Cooper, Phillip Dorsett, Keelan Doss, Larry Fitzgerald, Devin Funchess, A.J. Green, David Moore, Zach Pascal, Breshad Perriman, Demarcus Robinson, Emmanuel Sanders, Tajae Sharpe, Laquon Treadwell
Best available: Taylor Gabriel, Rashard Higgins, Johnny Holton
We already saw two blockbuster wide receiver trades involving DeAndre Hopkins and Stefon Diggs. The Cowboys didn’t let Amari Cooper hit the open market, as they signed him to a lucrative long-term deal. The Bengals tagged A.J. Green, but that still left some compelling names on the market.
Tight End
Signed: Ross Dwelley, Eric Ebron, Tyler Eifert, Darren Fells, Jimmy Graham, Demetrius Harris, Hunter Henry, Jacob Hollister, Austin Hooper, Blake Jarwin, Marcedes Lewis, Greg Olsen, Quinton Spain, Levine Toilolo, Jason Witten
Best available: Charles Clay, Jordan Reed, Luke Stocker, Geoff Swaim, Delanie Walker
A weak draft class at tight end put a premium on the free agents who became available. Hunter Henry got the franchise tag, while Austin Hooper was quickly snatched up. Veterans Greg Olsen, Jimmy Graham and Jason Witten had no troubles landing with teams, either.
Offensive Line
Signed: Daniel Brunskill, Bryan Bulaga, Anthony Castonzo, Jack Conklin, Rashaad Coward, George Fant, Cam Fleming, Ereck Flowers, Marcus Gilbert Graham Glasgow, Joe Haeg, D.J. Humphries, Joey Hunt, Roderick Johnson, Ted Karras, Alex Lewis, Justin McCray, Connor McGovern, John Miller, Justin Murray, Cedric Ogbuehi, Andrus Peat, Ty Sambrailo, Brandon Scherff, Brandon Shell, Matt Skura, Xavier Su’a-Filo, Joe Thuney, Ricky Wagner, Andrew Whitworth, Elijah Wilkinson, Daryl Williams, Stefen Wisniewski, Andrew Wylie
Best available: Demar Dotson, Cordy Glenn, James Hurst, Ronald Leary, Jason Peters
The Colts held on to left tackle Anthony Castonzo with an extension. Guards Joe Thuney and Brandon Scherff would have been next to new deals, but both received the franchise tag fairly quickly. Still, there’s a lot of beef out there!
Edge
Signed: Mario Addison, Arik Armstead, Shaquil Barrett, Vic Beasley, Ronald Blair, Bud Dupree, Dante Fowler Jr., Rodney Gunter, Bruce Irvin, Quinton Jefferson, Matt Judon, Roy Robertson-Harris, Branden Jackson, Carl Nassib, Yannick Ngakoue, Robert Quinn, Stephen Weatherly, Leonard Williams, Derek Wolfe
Best available: Jadeveon Clowney, Markus Golden, Everson Griffen, Clay Matthews, Cameron Wake
Getting to the quarterback is becoming more and more important as crazy-athletic passers continue to enter the league. The 49ers gave Arik Armstead a huge extension, while the Jaguars were quick to tag Yannick Ngakoue.
Defensive Tackle
Signed: Beau Allen, Andrew Billings, Michael Brockers, Adam Butler, Maliek Collins, Tyeler Davison, Sheldon Day, Brandon Dunn, Javon Hargrave, Shelby Harris, Chris Jones, Linval Joseph, Star Lotulelei, Gerald McCoy, Michael Pierce, Dontari Poe, Mike Purcell, D.J. Reader, Jarran Reed, A’Shawn Robinson, Danny Shelton, Ndamukong Suh, Josh Tupou, Antwaun Woods
Best available: Damon Harrison, Margus Hunt, Brandon Mebane
Chris Jones got the franchise tag, which is unsurprising because of how important he was to the Chiefs’ Super Bowl win. After him, D.J. Reader got a huge contract with the Bengals, and the market is beginning to be pretty depleted.
Linebacker
Signed: Vince Biegel, Jon Bostic, De’Vondre Campbell, Jamie Collins, Brandon Copeland, Thomas Davis, Kyler Fackrell, Leonard Floyd, B.J. Goodson, Jordan Jenkins, Devon Kennard, Christian Kirksey, Nick Kwiatkoski, Sean Lee, Cory Littleton, Blake Martinez, David Mayo, Kevin Minter, Nicholas Morrow, Denzel Perryman, Kevin Pierre-Louis, Reggie Ragland, Elandon Roberts, Joe Schobert, Danny Trevathan, Kyle Van Noy, Nick Vigil, Tahir Whitehead, Kyle Wilber, Eric Wilson
Best available: Mark Barron, Anthony Chickillo, Kareem Martin, Alec Ogletree
There are a lot of tackling machines available this year, even after guys like Jamie Collins, Cory Littleton, Thomas Davis, and Joe Schobert got big deals elsewhere.
Cornerback
Signed: Mackensie Alexander, James Bradberry, Bashaud Breeland, Anthony Brown, Ronald Darby, Michael Davis, Pierre Desir, Grant Haley, Vernon Hargreaves, Chris Harris Jr., Byron Jones, Nevin Lawson, Jalen Mills, Emmanuel Moseley, Brian Poole, Xavier Rhodes, Nickell Robey-Coleman, Bradley Roby, Jimmy Smith, Desmond Trufant, Levi Wallace, Trae Waynes
Best available: Prince Amukamara, Eli Apple, Darqueze Dennard, Johnathan Joseph, Logan Ryan
It’s unbelievable that someone as good as Byron Jones hit the open market, and he wasn’t there for long, signing a megadeal with the Dolphins. There are still quite a few corners worth kicking the tires on, however.
Safety
Signed: Vonn Bell, Tre Boston, Chuck Clark, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Anthony Harris, Jeff Heath, Eddie Jackson, Malcolm Jenkins, Karl Joseph, Devin McCourty, Jordan Poyer, Damarious Randall, Andrew Sendejo, Justin Simmons, Jimmie Ward
Best available: Morgan Burnett, Blake Countess, A.J. Howard, Tony Jefferson, Colin Jones, Reshad Jones, Eric Reid
Several big names at safety, like Devin McCourty, Anthony Harris, and Jimmie Ward, were scheduled to be free agents. Unfortunately for teams in need of safety help, all three are staying put, leaving the next tier of safeties for the rest of the league.
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tiefighters · 2 years
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thornburgrealty · 6 years
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Little worried come the adults show
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altusfl · 6 years
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57. The 1988 off-season --- The 1989 draft
The NFL strikes back
The NFL had lost their lawsuit and seen the USFL pilfer most of their American WLAF owners.  The upstart league had signed most of the top 40 players in the 1988 draft pool. The NFL owners were angry and done playing defense.
After consulting with their lawyers and confirming it would not lead to another legal challenge, the NFL decided the one thing they could do was simply outbid the USFL for players.   The average pay for first round picks doubled as the older league reasserted itself.
The Dallas Cowboys, a constant thorn in the USFL’s side, set the pace as they offered presumptive #1 pick Troy Aikman of UCLA almost 3 times what Neil Smith got in 1988.  When the Cowboys leaked what they were prepared to offer Aikman and what Green Bay was talking about offering OT Tony Mandarich, sign-ability became the key word in USFL circles.
The USFL league offices had forewarned Orlando, Carolina, and all of the league’s teams that the NFL would be paying double or even triplemarket value  for first round picks.  The league encouraged the teams at the top of the draft order to try to work out deals with players before the draft.  
While several NFL teams were still perceived as “tight” it seemed pretty apparent that most of the picks in the top 10 were going to be prohibitively expensive, so Ehrhart championed a 24 day “shadow draft” prior to the actual draft, allowing each team a day to try to see if one of a series of “available” players was agreeable to terms.
It was readily apparent that the league’s teams were not going to pay players drafted in consumary positions what the NFL was offering.
The USFL 1989 Draft
Oakland Invaders 1 Deion Sanders CB FSU Orlando Thunder 2 Steve Walsh QB Miami Carolina Skyhawks 3 Donnell Woolford CB Clemson Birmingham Stallions 4 Derrick Thomas LB Alabama San Antonio Gunslingers 5 Eric Metcalf RB Texas Jacksonville Bulls 6 Trace Armstrong DE Florida Arizona Wranglers 7 Broderick Thomas LB Nebraska Pittsburgh Maulers 8 Tom Ricketts OT Pittsburgh Philadelphia Stars 9 Hart Lee Dykes WR Oklahoma State Atlanta Tribe 10 Cleveland Gary RB Miami New Jersey Knights 11 Barry Sanders RB OSU Los Angeles Express (from The Hawaiians) 12 Troy Aikman QB UCLA Orlando (from Spirits of Miami) 13 Bill Hawkins DE Miami Chicago Blitz 14 Burt Grossman DE Pittsburgh Michigan Panthers 15 Andre Rison WR Michigan State New York Generals 16 Andy Heck OG Notre Dame Boston Breakers 17 Joe Wolf OG Boston College Denver Gold 18 Tim Worley RB Georgia Oklahoma Outlaws 19 Brian Williams C Minnesota New Orleans Jazz 20 Eric Hill LB LSU Tampa Bay Bandits 21 Louis Oliver S Florida Memphis Showboats 22 Jeff Lageman DE Virginia The Hawaiians (from Los Angeles Express) 23 Steve Wisniewski G Penn State Houston Gamblers 24 Steve Atwater S Arkansas
It was pretty clear to the Allens that the top 3 prospects in the draft — Troy Aikman, Tony Mandarich, and Barry Sanders would be paid a premium by the NFL.  Oakland’s owners were not on board for a bidding war.  That was OK because George Allen liked the Oakland running game and had no use for rookie QBs.  Allen had also decided the best player in the draft was actually FSU CB Deion Sanders.  Sanders was a student of his position and loved the idea of playing with legendary CB Lester Hayes.  Sanders knew he was likely to go from 4th to 6th in the NFL draft, so he agreed to terms to pay him at double the average salary of the 4th-6th players in the previous year’s NFL draft —IF he was picked #1 overall.  (Sanders would go on to change his pro number to #1).
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Orlando was also successful in landing their pick.  QB Steve Walsh wasn’t happy waiting for a supplemental draft and was annoyed that Jimmy Johnson had apparently settled on Troy Aikman.  He was more than willing to sign a reasonable deal with Orlando to go #2.  While Don Matthews saw Walsh as everyone else did, as a bottom of the first round talent, Matthews was absolutely taken with Walsh’s warrior’s courage and how he made plays when games were on the line.  Orlando landed a player they desperately needed for fan optics and Matthews bought a heart for his team.
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Carolina followed the league’s suggestion and Oakland’s example and reached for a lesser rated player they were fairly sure they could sign.  CB Woolford thought he would go between 7th and 16th in the NFL draft, so going third in the USFL draft made the money competitive. He signed with Carolina.
Birmingham thought they could get OLB Derrick Thomas to stay in state, but NFL sources convinced his agent that much bigger money was waiting for him in the NFL.
San Antonio thought about drafting RB Barry Sanders, but ultimately decided it was too expensive and too risky.  They didn’t want to whiff on Sanders and miss out on a top player for the second year in a row.  Instead they picked local UT all-American RB Eric Metcalf.  The elusive Metcalf might have been a hair small to be a feature back in the NFL, but he had an elite breakaway gear and projected quite well in the USFL where players tended to be slightly smaller and slower.  Metcalf thought at best he might go 13th in the NFL draft to Cleveland.  The money and the destination sounded better in San Antonio.
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Jacksonville saw the player they wanted fall to them in DE Armstrong. Armstrong was a guy who some thought could have gone 8th to 17th or so in the NFL draft.  He was one of several similarly good defensive end prospects in the draft.  Fred Bullard thought he had a great shot at signing him.  Armstrong would ultimately hold off signing to test his luck in the NFL draft.
Arizona went hard after OLB Broderick Thomas making several offers, but were rebuffed.  Thomas would eventually sign for almost 3 times what Arizona initially offered.
Pittsburgh shocked the league when they drafted Pitt OL Tom Ricketts number 8 overall.  It was considered a huge reach rather than a strategic one, but the league had grown accustomed to the Mauler ownership’s desire not to compete with NFL teams for talent. The Maulers were able to land him.
The Stars drafted WR Hart Lee Dykes #9.  He was projected to go somewhere in the mid teens in the NFL draft.  After whiffing on a first round WR the previous year, the Stars paid out the nose for Dykes.
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Atlanta thought long and hard about drafting RBs Barry Sanders or Tim Worley but they were fairly sure the asking price would be substantial for Sanders and they were not sold on Worley. Leeman Bennett also preferred big power backs which made Sanders an unlikely candidate. RB Cleveland Gary appeared to be an end of the first round talent and had local ties.  Bennett thought they could get Gary to take #10 overall money with no premium, and they were correct.
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New Jersey could not believe their luck.  Mouse Davis loved the idea of RB Barry Sanders in his offense. They drafted Barry Sanders and hoped that he would fall to the Detroit Lions at #3.  Their logic was that Sanders was the clear #3 player in the draft and the Lions were unlikely to open the bank for Sanders the way Dallas and Green Bay were preparing to do.   With a cheap QB and roster, New Jersey was prepared to open the vault for Sanders.  Sanders informed the Knights that he wasn’t opposed to playing for them, but he was waiting for the NFL draft.  His decision would not be made until after the NFL draft.
The Hawaiians wanted no part of a bidding war with the NFL. Additionally after their mock day, they realized there were few players in the top 50 who the Hawaiians felt comfortable that they would be able to sign ahead of an NFL team, so they called up Don Coryell and offered the pick to LA.  
Coryell was enamoured with QB Aikman and considered it a win-win scenario.  For pick 23 and LA’s 4th rounder, Coryell would be able to try to woo Aikman away from the Cowboys.  The Tathams were not at all comfortable with the money being discussed.  They felt the team was already at a championship contending level, but acknowledged Aikman was the best QB prospect in quite a few years.  Coryell was given guidelines that he could discuss with Aikman and his agent.  It was made very clear to Aikman’s people that Aikman could overstate those numbers to get a better deal out of Dallas if he wanted, but if he wanted to play in one of the most QB friendly offenses ever built, LA was the place for him.  The logic was that, even if Aikman passed, 3 months of public discussion with Aikman would drive up season ticket sales.  It worked like a charm for LA.
Orlando drafted DE Hawkins about 10 slots earlier than he was likely to go and was able to get Steve Walsh to convince Hawkins to sign.
Chicago drafted DE Burt Grossman and pushed hard to sign him, but Grossman waited on the NFL payday.
Michigan drafted MSU’s WR Andre Rison to replace disgruntled Anthony Carter who was sent to San Antonio for their 2nd round pick. Rison was happy to sign with Michigan for a USFL premium price.
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New York drafted T Andy Heck at the urging of Walt Michaels, but were unable to sign him as Heck had already decided to wait on the NFL money.
Boston drafted G Joe Wolf and were able to sign him and keep their Boston College pipeline open.
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Denver drafted RB Tim Worley and offered him a premium to play for them, but Worley felt he was top 7 or 10 prospect in the NFL draft and chose to wait for that payday.
Oklahoma drafted C Brian Williams out of Minnesota and were able to sign him at a premium.
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New Orleans drafted LB Eric Hill but despite good discussions were not able to sign him.
Tampa Bay, fresh off a championship game appearance, was able to convince S Louis Oliver to sign with them at a premium.
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Memphis tried hard to sign DE Jeff Lageman, but he chose to wait for the NFL draft.
The Hawaiians were torn between drafting G Steve Wiesnewski or just drafting T Tony Mandarich and making a strong, but futile offer as a PR move, and getting on with the later rounds.  Ultimately after the criticism they endured in previous years, they drafted Wiesnewski, but the Penn State guard decided to wait for the NFL.
Houston head coach and defensive guru Jack Pardee was stunned to see SS Steve Atwater still on the board and immediately drafted him.  Pardee convinced the ownership to open the bank to sign the hard hitting safety.
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Draft Conclusions and the start of the Tagliabue offensive
While the USFL signed a number of first rounders, the NFL was able to keep 9 of the 10 best prospects in the draft and 14 of the top 20 from signing before the NFL draft. Those players who waited, in general, found that they received astounding offers from the NFL’s worst teams.  
The NFL used this turnaround to fuel their fall advertising campaign against the legitimacy of the USFL.  This would be the first step in what the NFL would refer to as their “Tagliabue Offensive”, so named for the NFL’s commissioner Paul Tagliabue, who replaced under fire NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle after the NFL teams had to pay off the USFL in the NFL’s anti-trust loss.
The USFL would get a lot of flack from the media and from the NFL for their draft as Tony Mandarich — considered the best player in the class — would not even go in the first round.  
Some media sources would cut them a break as Mandarich knew he was too expensive for the USFL and had strategically expressed an intent to sign with the NFL come hell or high water.
“What does the media want the financially struggling Carolina Skyhawks to do?  Draft a player with the third pick in the draft who has said he won’t play for the USFL ….instead of one who will?”  Sports Illustrated’s Dr. Z would write. “This criticism is delusional!  It is utter madness…”
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goalhofer · 5 years
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Every Junior/Professional Antoine Vermette Teammate
Quebec Remparts
Simon Gagne (1998-99)
Eric Chouinard (1998-99)
David Bernier (1998-99)
Martin Moise (1998-99)
Dmitri Tolkunov (1998-99)
Wes Scanzano (1998-99)
Andre Martineau (1998-99)
Simon Tremblay (1998-99)
Maxim Balmochnyk (1998-99)
Daniel Archambeault (1998-99)
Martin Grenier (1998-99)
Jerome Marois (1998-99)
Eric Laplante (1998-99)
Raymond Dalton (1998-99)
Nicholas Bilotto (1998-99)
Joey Fetta (1998-99)
Juraj Kolnik (1998-99)
Marco Charpentier (1998-99)
Sebastien Lucier (1998-99)
Travis Zachary (1998-99)
Sylvain Plamondon (1998-99)
Jeff Leblanc (1998-99)
Cameron Lowe (1998-99)
Tommy Bolduc (1998-99)
Pierre Loiselle (1998-99)
Alexandre Morel (1998-99)
Stuart MacRae (1998-99)
Jonathan Wilhelmy (1998-99)
Sebastien Crete (1998-99)
Nicolas Pelletier (1998-99)
Jean-Philippe Cote (1998-99)
Danick Jomphe (1998-99)
Hunter Lahache (1998-99)
Martin Bilodeau (1998-99)
Eric Jean (1998-99)
Maxime Ouellet (1998-99)
Victoriaville Tigres
Marc-Andre Thinel (1999-2001)
Carl Mallette (1999-2002)
Sebastien Thinel (1999-2001)
Danny Groulx (1999-2001)
Alex Ryazantsev (1999-2000)
Eric Cote (1999-2000)
Matthew Lombardi (1999-2002)
Kristian Kovac (1999-2001)
Teddy Kyres (1999-2001)
Pierre-Luc Sleigher (1999-2002)
Antoine Bergeron (1999-2000)
Carl Gagnon (1999-2002)
Eric Labelle (1999-2000)
Pierre-Luc Daneau (1999-2002)
Joey Fetta (1999-2000)
Jonathan Fauteaux (1999-2001)
Stephane Veilleux (1999-2000)
Mathieu Wathier (1999-2001)
Sandro Sbrocca (1999-2001)
Luc Levesque (1999-2001)
Michael McIntyre (1999-2000)
Guillaume Beaudoin (1999-2000)
Billy Rochefort (1999-2000)
Branwell Beck (1999-2000)
Richard Paul (1999-2001)
Simon St. Pierre (1999-2001)
Patrick Chouinard (1999-2000)
Guillaume Lavoie (1999-2000)
Marc St. Louis (1999-2000)
Jean-Francois Nogues (1999-2001)
Philippe Ozga (1999-2001)
Patrice Poissant (1999-2000)
Martin Autotte (2000-01)
Martin Grenier (2000-01)
Johnny Oduya (2000-01)
Mathieu Brunelle (2000-02)
Patrick Vincent (2000-01)
Sergei Kaltygen (2000-01)
Ivan Curic (2000-01)
Steve Richards (2000-01)
James Sanford (2000-01)
Tommy Bolduc (2000-01)
Karl Morin (2000-02)
Adam Wojcik (2000-02)
David Masse (2000-01)
Hugo Beaudet (2000-01)
Francis Debilly (2000-01)
Sebastien Morrissette (2000-01)
Nicolas Joyal (2000-01)
Frederic Mallette (2000-01)
Guillaume Fornier (2001-02)
Mikhail Deev (2001-02)
Jamie McCabe (2001-02)
Benoit Fournier (2001-02)
Christian Laroche (2001-02)
Robert Snowball (2001-02)
Neil Posillico (2001-02)
Jeff Smith (2001-02)
Carl McLean (2001-02)
Mathieu Daigle (2001-02)
Pierre-Luc Chenier (2001-02)
Tommy Lafontaine (2001-02)
Chris Pottie (2001-02)
Jonathan Walsh (2001-02)
Dan McNeill (2001-02)
Mathieu Beauchamp (2001-02)
Daniel Manzato (2001-02)
Daniel Boisclair (2001-02)
Sylvain Houle (2001-02)
Samuel Duguay (2001-02)
Alexandre Turgeon-Cote (2001-02)
Sami Ciplak (2001-02)
Jean-Michel Filiatrault (2001-02)
Binghamton Senators
Brad Smyth (2002-03)
Jason Spezza (2002-03, 2004-05)
Brian Pothier (2002-03, 2004-05)
Joe Murphy (2002-03)
Alexandre Giroux (2002-03)
Josh Langfeld (2002-05)
David Hymovitz (2002-05)
Chris Kelly (2002-05)
Chris Bala (2002-03)
Toni Dahlman (2002-03)
Julien Vauclair (2002-04)
Jeff Ulmer (2002-03)
Brian McGrattan (2002-05)
Josef Boumedienne (2002-03)
Steve Martins (2002-03)
Bob Wren (2002-03)
Radim Bicanek (2002-03)
Steve Bancroft (2002-04)
Dennis Bonvie (2002-03)
Christoph Schubert (2002-05)
Andy Hedlund (2002-05)
Dean Melanson (2002-03)
Scott Ricci (2002-03)
Joey Tetarenko (2002-03)
Ray Emery (2002-05)
Karel Rachunek (2002-03)
Jeff Szwez (2002-03)
Dean Connolly (2002-03)
Billy Thompson (2002-05)
J.C. Ruid (2002-03)
Joel Kwiatkowski (2002-03)
Alex Johnstone (2002-03)
Chris Lynch (2002-03)
Colin Pepperall (2002-03)
Ray DiLauro (2002-03)
Martin Prusek (2002-03)
Mathieu Chiounard (2002-03)
Andrew Allen (2002-03)
Jeremy Symington (2002-03)
Justin Plamondon (2002-03)
Wade Brookbank (2002-03)
Simon Lajeunesse (2002-03)
Denis Hamel (2003-05)
Serge Payer (2003-04)
Charlie Stephens (2003-05)
Peter Smrek (2003-04)
Brad Tapper (2003-04)
Arpad Mihaly (2003-05)
Mike Brown (2003-04)
Greg Watson (2003-05)
Jody Hull (2003-04)
Cory Pecker (2003-04)
Tony Tuzzolino (2003-04)
Jan Platil (2003-05)
Rob Ray (2003-04)
Gregg Johnson (2003-05)
John Jakopin (2003-04)
Nathan Gillies (2003-04)
Bryson Busniuk (2003-04)
Grant Potulny (2003-05)
Brandon Bochenski (2004-05)
Anton Volchenkov (2004-05)
Pat Kavanagh (2004-05)
Jesse Fibiger (2004-05)
Chris Neil (2004-05)
Danny Bois (2004-05)
Neil Komadoski (2004-05)
Derek Campbell (2004-05)
Regan Darby (2004-05)
Ottawa Senators
Marian Hossa (2003-04)
Daniel Alfredsson (2003-4, 2005-09)
Martin Havlat (2003-04, 2005-06)
Jason Spezza (2003-04, 2005-09)
Bryan Smolinski (2003-04, 2005-06)
Radek Bonk (2003-04)
Wade Redden (2003-04, 2005-08)
Zdeno Chara (2003-04, 2005-06)
Peter Schaefer (2003-04, 2005-07)
Todd White (2003-04)
Chris Phillips (2003-04, 2005-09)
Josh Langfeld (2003-04)
Karel Rachunek (2003-04)
Chris Neil (2003-04, 2005-09)
Peter Bondra (2003-04)
Shaun Van Allen (2003-04)
Vaclav Varada (2003-04, 2005-06)
Mike Fisher (2003-04, 2005-09)
Brian Pothier (2003-04, 2005-06)
Pyotr Schastlivy (2003-04)
Curtis Leschyshyn (2003-04)
Shane Hnidy (2003-04)
Anton Volchenkov (2003-04, 2005-09)
Patrick Lalime (2003-04)
Rob Ray (2003-04)
Greg De Vries (2003-04)
Serge Payer (2003-04, 2006-07)
Martin Prusek (2003-04)
Todd Simpson (2003-04)
Ray Emery (2003-04, 2005-08)
Dany Heatley (2005-09)
Andrej Meszaros (2005-08)
Chris Kelly (2005-09)
Patrick Eaves (2005-08)
Brandon Bochenski (2005-06)
Christoph Schubert (2005-09)
Brian McGrattan (2005-08)
Tyler Arnason (2005-06)
Steve Martins (2005-06)
Denis Hamel (2005-07)
Mike Morrison (4 games 2005-06)
Dominik Hasek (2005-06)
Tomas Malec (3 games 2005-07)
Brad Norton (7 games 2005-06)
Filip Novak (11 games 2005-06)
Tom Preissing (2006-07)
Joe Corvo (2006-08)
Dean McAmmond (2006-09)
Mike Comrie (2006-07, 2008-09)
Oleg Saprykin (12 games 2006-07)
Josh Hennessy (2006-09)
Alexei Kaigorodov (6 games 2006-07)
Danny Bois (1 game 2006)
Martin Gerber (2006-09)
Lawrence Nycholat (4 games 2006-08)
Randy Robitaille (2007-08)
Cory Stillman (2007-08)
Shean Donovan (2007-09)
Nick Foligno (2007-09)
Luke Richardson (2007-09)
Martin Lapointe (2007-08)
Cody Bass (2007-09)
Mike Commodore (2007-08)
Brian Lee (2007-09)
Brian Elliott (2007-09)
Alexander Nikulin (2 games 2007)
Jesse Winchester (2007-09)
Ilya Zubov (11 games 2007-09)
Filip Kuba (2008-09)
Jarkko Ruutu (2008-09)
Brendan Bell (2008-09)
Ryan Shannon (2008-09)
Alexandre Picard (2008-09)
Peter Regin (2008-09)
Jason Smith (2008-09)
Matt Carkner (1 game 2009)
Zack Smith (1 game 2008)
Alex Auld (2008-09)
Columbus Blue Jackets
Christian Backman (17 games 2009)
Jared Boll (2009-12)
Derick Brassard (2009-12)
Jason Chimera (2009-10)
Mike Commodore (2009-11)
Derek Dorsett (2009-12)
Wade Dubliewicz (17 games 2009)
Nikita Filatov (2009-11)
Chris Gratton (6 games 2009)
Jan Hejda (2009-11)
Kristian Huselius (2009-12)
Rostislav Klesla (2009-11)
Manny Malhotra (21 games 2009)
Steve Mason (2009-12)
Marc Methot (2009-12)
Freddy Modin (2009-10)
Andrew Murray (2009-11)
Rick Nash (2009-12)
Jiri Novotny (17 games 2009)
Michael Peca (21 games 2009)
Aaron Rome (9 games 2009)
Kris Russell (2009-12)
Ole-Kristian Tollefsen (17 games 2009)
Raffi Torres (2009-10)
Fedor Tyutin (2009-12)
R.J. Umberger (2009-12)
Jakub Voracek (2009-11)
Jason Williams (21 games 2009)
Anton Stralman (2009-11)
Sammy Pahlsson (2009-12)
Mathieu Roy (2009-10)
Chris Clark (2009-11)
Derek MacKenzie (2009-12)
Mike Blunden (2009-11)
Milan Jurcina (17 games 2009-10)
Grant Clitsome (2009-11)
Tomas Kana (6 games 2009)
Alexandre Picard (9 games 2009)
Tom Sestito (12 games 2009-11)
Trevor Frischmon (3 games 2009)
Maxim Mayorov (19 games 2009-12)
Nathan Paetsch (10 games 2009-10)
Greg Moore (4 games 2009)
Chad Kolarik (3 games 2010)
Mathieu Garon (2009-11)
Matt Calvert (2010-12)
Kyle Wilson (2010-11)
Scottie Upshall (2010-11)
Ethan Moreau (2010-11)
Sami Lepisto (19 games 2010-11)
Tomas Kubalik (12 games 2010-12)
Craig Rivet (14 games 2011)
Nick Holden (7 games 2010-12)
John Moore (2010-12)
Nate Guenin (3 games 2010)
David LeNeveu (1 game 2011)
Vaclav Prospal (2011-12)
Nikita Nikitin (2011-12)
James Wisniewski (2011-12)
Jeff Carter (2011-12)
Mark Letestu (2011-12)
Ryan Johansen (2011-12)
Aaron Johnson (2011-12)
Cam Atkinson (2011-12)
Jack Johnson (9 games 2012)
David Savard (2011-12)
Colton Gillies (2011-12)
Brett Lebda (2011-12)
Darryl Boyce (8 games 2012)
Ryan Russell (2011-12)
Radek Martinek (7 games 2011-12)
Curtis Sanford (2011-12)
Allen York (11 games 2011-12)
Phoenix/Arizona Coyotes
Adrian Aucoin (2011-12)
Paul Bissonnette (2011-12)
Mikkel Bodker (2011-15, 2015-16)
Alexandre Bolduc (16 games 2011-13, 3 games 2014-15)
Gilbert Brule (3 games 2012)
Kyle Chipchura (2011-15, 2015-16)
Shane Doan (2011-15, 2015-16)
Oliver Ekman-Larsson (2011-15, 2015-16)
Boyd Gordon (2011-13, 2015-16)
Martin Hanzal (2011-12, 2013-15, 2015-16)
Rostislav Klesla (2011-12, 2013-14)
Lauri Korpikoski (2011-12, 2013-15)
Jason LaBarbara (2011-13)
Daymond Langkow (2011-12)
Andy Miele (15 games 2012-14)
Derek Morris (2011-14)
Marc-Antoine Pouliot (13 games 2012)
Taylor Pyatt (2011-12)
Michal Roszival (2011-12)
David Rundblad (2012-14)
David Schlemko (2011-15)
Mike Smith (2011-15, 2015-16)
Michael Stone (2011-15, 2015-16)
Chris Summers (2011-15)
Raffi Torres (2011-13)
Radim Vrbata (2011-14)
Ray Whitney (2011-12)
Keith Yandle (2011-15)
David Moss (2012-15)
Steve Sullivan (2012-13)
Rob Klinkhammer (2012-15)
Matthew Lombardi (2012-13)
Nick Johnson (17 games 2013)
Zbynek Michalek (2012-15, 2015-16)
Chris Conner (12 games 2013)
Chris Brown (11 games 2013-14)
Chad Johnson (4 games 2013)
Jordan Szwarz (2013-15)
Mike Ribeiro (2013-14)
Jeff Halpern (2013-14)
Tim Kennedy (2013-14)
Brandon McMillan (2013-15)
Martin Erat (2013-15)
Connor Murphy (2013-15, 2015-16)
Brandon Yip (2 games 2014)
Brandon Gormley (2013-15, 2015-16)
Lucas Lessio (2013-15)
Thomas Greiss (2013-14)
Mark Visentin (1 game 2014)
Louis Domingue (7 games 2014-15, 2015-16)
Sam Gagner (2014-15)
Tobias Rieder (2014-15, 2015-16)
Joe Vitale (2014-15, 1 game 2015)
B.J. Crombeen (2014-15)
Andrew Campbell (2014-15)
Jordan Martinook (2015-16)
Justin Hodgman (5 games 2015)
Max Domi (2015-16)
Anthony Duclair (2015-16)
Brad Richardson (2015-16)
Alex Tanguay (2015-16)
Kevin Connauton (2015-16)
Klas Dahlbeck (2015-16)
Nicklas Grossmann (2015-16)
Steve Downie (2015-16)
Viktor Tikhonov (2015-16)
Stefan Elliott (19 games 2016)
Tyler Gaudet (14 games 2015-16)
Jiri Sekac (11 games 2016)
Dustin Jeffrey (7 games 2016)
Craig Cunningham (10 games 2015-16)
Laurent Dauphin (8 games 2015-16)
Sergei Plotnikov (13 games 2015-16)
John Scott (11 games 2015)
Anders Lindback (19 games 2015-16)
Nicklas Treutle (2 games 2016)
Chicago Blackhawks
Jonathan Toews (2014-15)
Patrick Kane (2014-15)
Marian Hossa (2014-15)
Brandon Saad (2014-15)
Duncan Keith (2014-15)
Patrick Sharp (2014-15)
Brad Richards (2014-15)
Kris Versteeg (2014-15)
Brent Seabrook (2014-15)
Bryan Bickell (2014-15)
Andrew Shaw (2014-15)
Niklas Hjalmarsson (2014-15)
Marcus Kruger (2014-15)
David Rundblad (2014-15)
Michal Roszival (2014-15)
Johnny Oduya (2014-15)
Teuvo Teravainen (2014-15)
Daniel Carcillo (2014-15)
Joakim Nordstrom (2014-15)
Andrew Desjardins (2014-15)
Trevor Van Riemsdyk (2014-15)
Kimmo Timomen (2014-15)
Kyle Cumiskey (16 games 2015)
Corey Crawford (2014-15)
Scott Darling (2014-15)
Antti Raanta (2014-15)
Anaheim Ducks
Ryan Getzlaf (2016-18)
Ryan Kesler (2016-18)
Corey Perry (2016-18)
Rickard Rakell (2016-18)
Jakob Silfverberg (2016-18)
Cam Fowler (2016-18)
Andrew Cogliano (2016-18)
Sami Vatanen (2016-18)
Hampus Lindholm (2016-18)
Josh Manson (2016-18)
Ondrej Kase (2016-18)
Patrick Eaves (2016-18)
Kevin Bieksa (2016-18)
Joseph Cramarossa (2016-17)
Logan Shaw (2016-18)
Shea Theodore (2016-17)
Chris Wagner (2016-18)
Korbinian Holzer (2016-18)
Brandon Montour (2016-18)
Clayton Stoner (2016-17)
Jared Boll (2016-18)
Ryan Garbutt (2016-17)
Stefan Noesen (12 games 2016)
Nate Thompson (2016-17)
Mike Sgarbossa (9 games 2016)
Nick Sorensen (5 games 2016)
Simon Despres (1 game 2016)
Emerson Etem (3 games 2016)
John Gibson (2016-18)
Jonathan Bernier (2016-17)
Dustin Tokarski (1 game 2016)
Nic Kerdiles (7 games 2016-18)
Adam Henrique (2017-18)
Derek Grant (2017-18)
Francois Beauchemin (2017-18)
Kevin Roy (2017-18)
Dennis Rasmussen (2017-18)
J.T. Brown (2017-18)
Marcus Pettersson (2017-18)
Jaycob Megna (12 games 2017)
Ryan Miller (2017-18)
Reto Berra (5 games 2017-18)
Team Canada
Brent Burns (2011)
Cal Clutterbuck (2011)
Carlo Colaiacovo (2011)
Matt Duchene (2011)
Jordan Eberle (2011)
Marc-Andre Gragnani (2011)
Evander Kane (2011)
Andrew Ladd (2011)
Marc Methot (2011)
Rick Nash (2011)
James Neal (2011)
Dion Phaneuf (2011)
Alex Pietrangelo (2011)
Mario Scalzo (2011)
Luke Schenn (2011)
Jeff Skinner (2011)
Jason Spezza (2011)
Chris Stewart (2011)
John Tavares (2011)
Travis Zajac (2011)
Jonathan Bernier (2011)
Devan Dubnyk (2011)
James Reimer (2011)
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Your Favorite NHL Team Is Going to Blow It at the Trade Deadline
It happens once a year like clockwork. The names are usually big, the expectations are always high and even though you know you will come away disappointed, you can’t avert your eyes from it. No, it’s not a big budget DC movie—it’s the NHL’s trade deadline.
Instead of wasting your time by looking at the needs of teams and potential available players and getting your hopes up, I’m going to give you the straight truth about the deadline—your GM will botch it and/or the players your team gets won’t matter. Maybe your team will acquire a draft pick that becomes the star player that leads your team to a title in 2026, but chances are, your GM will screw up the pick like he’s screwed up everything else.
So here’s why your stupid team will screw up the trade deadline.
Listen to the latest episode of Biscuits, VICE Sports’ hockey podcast
31. Arizona Coyotes
When your organizational philosophy is, “Spend as little on the team as possible so we can invest it in cryptocurrency,” the Stanley Cup isn’t in your future. John Chayka took over a team with 76 points two seasons ago and, after an offseason designed to improve the team immediately, they are on pace for 61 points this season. That would be the fewest points in team history. Look for Chayka to acquire dead salary cap money or a talented young player he will trade again in two years.
30. Buffalo Sabres
What possible trade can a team make when the team is haunted? Can it acquire a Ghostbuster? Jack Eichel has to be one of the five unhappiest millionaires in the world. Why does Stephen King set all his books in a fake New England town when Buffalo is clearly the scariest place in the world? The Sabres are somehow worse than they were two years ago when they landed Eichel.
29. Ottawa Senators
https://sports.vice.com/en_ca/embed/article/wjp8zb/ottawa-deserves-better-than-eugene-melnyk?utm_source=stylizedembed_sports.vice.com&utm_campaign=vbppmx&site=sports
We are two weeks away from owner Eugene Melnyk firing the GM, coach, trainer, a popcorn guy in the lower bowl of the Accumulated Debt Center, and a parking attendant so he can do the jobs himself and save a few bucks. I’m no hockey scientist but when your trade deadline strategy is to shed money like you’re Montgomery Brewster, the Stanley Cup isn’t in your plans. Ever. Melnyk should just put himself in the lineup for a Leafs game and get it over with. Maybe he’ll do that after he deals Erik Karlsson for 35 cents on the dollar.
28. Montreal Canadiens
Imagine being two years removed from having traded PK Subban and still being in charge of that roster? This is like Exxon letting the guy who crashed an oil tanker into an iceberg chart courses for all future tanker voyages. And now the Habs are letting Marc Bergevin make another round of franchise-altering decisions. Somehow I doubt Max Pacioretty for Ryan Callahan straight up will help the Habs end their Stanley Cup drought.
27. Vancouver Canucks
Listening to Jim Benning talk about why he re-signed Erik Gudbranson as opposed to trading him should make clear why the Canucks are doomed. Instead of fleecing a team for a second-round pick, Benning wanted to lock up a defenseman that’s never been good but people thought he’d be good a decade ago. Also, he’s tall. A professional talented evaluator is basing decisions on the length of a guy’s stick. I’m excited to see if Benning forgets to trade Thomas Vanek. “Oh, right, that guy is a UFA after this season, isn’t he? That’s on me, guys. My bad.”
26. Edmonton Oilers
Canadian teams all suck again, huh? Do you think the Oilers have a handler for Peter Chiarelli at things like the GM meetings? Like, there’s a guy with a taser that renders Chiarelli unconscious if he ever wanders into a room alone with David Poile so he doesn’t trade Connor McDavid for Nick Bonino. “The Oilers are in the market for some wingers” is a damn fun sentence to type. What a league!
25. Detroit Red Wings
This once-proud franchise is desperately and obviously in need of a rebuild, which was why after last season it was fun to hear Ken Holland say, “Nobody wants to see a rebuild.” Hey, when you’re packing 6,000 per night into a taxpayer-funded pizza joint, you have to get to 85 points any way you can. Waiting to trade Petr Mrazek until his value was at an all-time low is the type of progressive thinking you want from a general manager that’s not under contract for next season. Hanging on to Mike Green until he has a lingering upper-body injury days before the deadline? Holland is playing chess while you’re playing checkers, my friends.
24. Chicago Blackhawks
It’s hard to see a way the Blackhawks bounce back any time soon. Cap circumvention is no longer allowed and they are out of valuable players to package with bad contracts in trades that only help in the short term. What exactly would Stan Bowman have to attach to Brent Seabrook to get another team to take him? The formula for time travel? The pee tape? They say it’s wrong to take delight in the misery of others but that does not include the Blackhawks.
23. Florida Panthers
I love that the guy who let Jonathan Marchessault and Reilly Smith go to Vegas in exchange for massage coupons is once again helming a pivotal point for the franchise. What do you think Dale Tallon would have paid for Erik Gudbranson in a trade? Aleksander Barkov and a first? Tallon is probably only still employed by the Panthers because of a human resources paperwork error. He’s Milton from Office Space but with power. He will yet again be given the opportunity to drag the team down even further because nothing matters in this organization. It’s a great reflection of America, when you think about it.
22. New York Rangers
I totally have faith in a front office that fancied itself a contender seven months ago when it gave Kevin Shattenkirk a gigantic contract and is now announcing to the world it will sell anyone that is bolted to the ice. You mean the fellas that overpaid Brendan Smith and then sent him to the AHL are plotting the course for the future? How do you not have confidence in that sort of vision?!? This is also the leadership group that chose Dan Girardi over Anton Stralman. The Rangers went 54 years between their last two Stanley Cups and it will be another 100 years before they win another one.
21. Columbus Blue Jackets
The Blue Jackets could somehow acquire John Tavares, Erik Karlsson, Ryan McDonagh, Rick Nash, and sign a 24-year-old clone of Wayne Gretzky created from his DNA, and John Tortorella would still find a reason to play Jack Johnson and Brandon Dubinsky 40 minutes a night. This is also the team that let William Karlsson go in the expansion draft, so there’s no one to trust here. Either the trade will be bad or the trade will be good and Tortorella will cut the player’s ice time because he refused to block a shot with his dick in practice.
20. New York Islanders
Garth Snow has botched more picks than a greasy-handed defensive back and wasted the prime years of a Hall of Famer, but hell yeah, let’s have him in charge of the biggest decision in franchise history… what to do with John Tavares. In any other sport, the GM trades the elite talent headed for free agency when the team is at best a coin flip to make the playoffs, then pushes to re-sign him in the offseason. But this is the dumbest sport in the world, so the GM that’s underwhelmed for a decade will hang onto Tavares for the rest of the season and potentially lose him for nothing instead of reaping a bounty of futures at the deadline (that he’d probably botch, anyway). The Islanders are the Kobayashi Maru of hockey.
19. Carolina Hurricanes
This is the fourth season of Ron Francis’ reign as GM and he’s got a shot to bring the Hurricanes to the playoffs for the first time since 2009. Francis already messed up his best chance to improve the goaltending with his idiotic signing of Scott Darling (please do not search for my opinions on Darling before this season) and now the team is one or two pieces away from being a perennial playoff contender, so look for him to pull the trigger on someone like Kris Versteeg or James Wisniewski, moves that won’t help or hurt either way.
18. Colorado Avalanche
Joe Sakic is still in charge of the Avalanche, right? It’s amazing how after he netted a bunch of prospects and picks for Matt Duchene, suddenly people wondered if he was now good at his job. He is not. It’s not a great transaction history for Patrick Roy’s best buddy. He found a way to get less for Nick Holden than the Rangers did. Life is a mystery but you can be assured that Sakic will get suckered by someone that had fewer than 1,000 points in their NHL playing career.
17. Calgary Flames
Brad Treliving has done well and the Flames are headed in the right direction, but there’s still a little bit of that We Need Guys Who Will Punch Your Dicks Guys thing that doesn’t help. I could see the trade report across the scroll: “Flames acquire C Zac Rinaldo from the Coyotes in exchange for sixth-round pick.” And that will be the Flames’ only move.
16. Los Angeles Kings
Dean Lombardi’s ghost is still running things if the Kings think Dion Phaneuf on the roster for the next 100 years helps. The Kings won two Cups after robbing the Blue Jackets blind at the deadline so I will withdraw this if there is a big Kings-Blue Jackets trade on Monday that sends Artemi Panarin to the Kings for Phaneuf in a 1-for-1 deal. Maybe the Coyotes are the new Blue Jackets but somehow I don’t think Tobias Rieder is headed toward a Jeff Carter/Marian Gaborik finish to the season.
15. New Jersey Devils
It’s been an unexpectedly great season for the Devils, who look locked into a playoff spot with two months to play. But really, what did Ray Shero really do here? He answered a late night drunk dial from Peter Chiarelli and robbed him in the Adam Larsson-Taylor Hall trade; won a draft lottery that landed him Nico Hischier, and dealt Adam Henrique for Sami Vatanen in a no-brainer deal that was only possible because of winning the draft lottery. Shero is due to drop a turd on the floor. Maybe he brings Douglas Murray out of retirement.
14. Philadelphia Flyers
Ron Hextall hasn’t been a buyer since becoming a GM in 2014, as the Flyers have mostly been bad thanks to another former Flyer running the team into the ground. Hextall has made some good deals away from the deadline, and getting Petr Mrazek was one of them. I guess what I’m saying here is the Flyers suck and there’s nothing Hextall can do to help this team win a Cup this year. The Flyers have been run by an ex-player since 1994; guess how many times they’ve won the Cup over that stretch? It’s zero. That was an easy game.
13. Anaheim Ducks
Last year, Bob Murray acquired Patrick Eaves and the Ducks lost in the conference finals with Eaves missing most of the playoffs with a high-ankle sprain. Two years ago, Murray loaded up by landing Patrick Maroon, Brandon Pirri, and Jamie McGinn, who made it possible for the Ducks to lose in the first round in seven games instead of six. The list of times Murray did the wrong thing goes on and on.
12. Minnesota Wild
Some GMs get their jobs because they were awesome at hockey decades ago; others get the gig because their dads were GMs. Meet Chuck Fletcher, the guy who let Alex Tuch go to the Vegas and gave up a first- and second-round pick at last year’s trade deadline for Martin Hanzal, who legally dies before every postseason. I don’t know what Fletcher has up his sleeve this year but I bet it’s used to overpay for someone who doesn’t help the Wild win more than five playoff games.
11. St. Louis Blues
Doug Armstrong might be Batman. He’s made a lot of bad moves yet he uses these diversion tactics and people think he’s a hero. He’s adapted to the darkness. Remember the Ryan Miller deal? Goodness. That was also the Steve Ott deal. The Blues have been fading since a strong start so your only hope is he’s out fighting crime and using a weirdly deep voice instead of taking calls from other GMs.
10. San Jose Sharks
Doug Wilson has been pretty much winging it since he tried to shame Joe Thornton into accepting a trade a few years ago and then the Sharks got good again. Despite an aging core, Wilson never looked at rentals, and instead focused on getting players with term left on their contract, like Jannik Hansen. Why make your team much better in the short term when you can do virtually nothing to help it over a longer timeline with guys like Hansen? Sharks hockey, baby!
9. Dallas Stars
Jim Nill once traded a conditional first-round pick for Kris Russell. That’s the end of this section.
8. Pittsburgh Penguins
Jim Rutherford has actually made some helpful moves at the deadline to help the Penguins win Cups. But just like other wise GMs, Rutherford has already fortified his contender with [squints at roster] Riley Sheahan and [rubs eyes] Jamie Oleksiak. When you run out of cap space, you always do it for a 30-point center and the Dallas Stars’ worst defensemen. Someone should do a study on how many GMs create legacies by winning titles with another GM’s players and put Stan Bowman and Jim Rutherford statues outside the Other People’s Titles Hall of Fame.
7. Washington Capitals
Against all odds, after a summer of shedding salary and useful players, the Capitals are still near the top of the league. Objectively worse than they have been the past two years, Brian MacLellan has said he doesn’t expect the team to be buyers like they were last year, because as we all know, Alex Ovechkin will not continue to age, nor will Nicklas Backstrom. It’s also important to pin your team’s perpetual shortcomings on two months of Kevin Shattenkirk, this way you can be gun shy about landing a big name again. If at first you don’t succeed, trade for Michal Kempny.
6. Toronto Maple Leafs
https://sports.vice.com/en_ca/embed/article/yw34xw/nhl-gms-keep-their-jobs-whether-they-suck-or-not?utm_source=stylizedembed_sports.vice.com&utm_campaign=vbppmx&site=sports
From the team that brought you “Patrick Marleau for three years and $19 million” last summer comes the exciting late-winter follow-up, “some guy Mike Babcock likes that isn’t all that helpful.” I don’t know who is coming to Toronto but you know it will be someone that gets too many minutes and isn’t all that skilled. Maybe it will be Roman Polak’s cousin Greco Polak who will play 22 minutes a night because he’s “hard to play against.” Someone should let the Leafs know their window to win a title is open sooner than they expected so they should go back in time and get Marleau’s cap hit off the books so they can add an expensive defenseman.
5. Winnipeg Jets
I like to picture Kevin Cheveldayoff around deadline day like other people are when it comes to visiting the dentist. He knows he has to go but he’s constantly putting it off for silly reasons. “What’s that? Ken Holland’s on the phone? Oh, um, tell him I can’t talk trade right now because… ummm… my dog’s sick, yeah. Sorry.” Then enough time passes and instead of his teeth falling out his team falls apart. They say when a door closes, God opens a window. Maybe that window is a championship window in Winnipeg and God is Cheveldayoff, ready to land a fourth-line winger for a sixth-round pick.
4. Nashville Predators
David Poile does all his work before the deadline so he can spend deadline day doing things like signing 37-year-old men that haven’t played hockey in eight months. When it’s time to load up at the deadline, that’s when Poile lands all his playoff healthy scratches, like PA Parenteau and Mike Santorelli. The Preds lost James Neal in the expansion draft and as a Cup favorite, it’s great to see Nashville looking into offensive-minded replacements like Rick Nash, because any time you can snag a guy that hasn’t cracked 40 points in three seasons and consistently falls flat in the playoffs, you have to look into that.
3. Boston Bruins
Once you add Nick Holden to a Cup contender, isn’t your job already done? Don Sweeney can put his feet up and relax now that he added the defensemen who was run over during last year’s playoffs by the run and gun Ottawa Senators. When you have a fast moving boat, it’s always important to tie anchors to it. Look for Sweeney and Cam Neely to add to the “Bruins culture” by acquiring 100 pounds of literal grits to rub on David Pastrnak’s body.
2. Tampa Bay Lightning
Steve Yzerman is a tremendous GM when it comes to arriving at a job where the foundational pieces are already there or using a terrible CBA to leverage great RFAs into taking bad deals because other GMs are too chicken shit to use an offer sheet. At the trade deadline, this is when Yzerman lands guys like Braydon Coburn and Ryan Callahan. He’s also the guy who let Jonathan Marchessault walk for nothing and gave three-goal scorer Callahan $6 million a year through 2020. That’s the guy you want evaluating talent for a Cup favorite.
1. Vegas Golden Knights
What a season. What a time to be a sports fan. An expansion team with championship aspirations in its first year. And what other general manager would you have in charge of a team like this other than George McPhee? The guy who traded Filip Forsberg for Martin Erat and got in on the ground floor of the Capitals Can’t Get Past The Second Round movement is now tasked with getting the team over the top. Maybe a trade of Alex Tuch for Brent Seabrook? Tie McPhee to a blackjack table all day Monday. It’s the only way Vegas wins.
This article originally appeared on VICE Sports CA.
Your Favorite NHL Team Is Going to Blow It at the Trade Deadline syndicated from https://australiahoverboards.wordpress.com
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thedepressedweasel · 7 years
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Victoria Remington:
Name: Victoria Rose Remington Alias: Vickie Age: 23 DOB: N/A Birthplace: London, England (or some Pokemon region based on England) Gender: Female Species: Gardevoir Hair: Light green Eyes: Red Personality: Mature, serious, no nonsense, kind, caring Pro(s): Can conjure spells (she’s a Fairy-type after all), can even put others in a sleeping trance via Hypnosis (she even did this to Olga after the latter got brutally poisoned by Anna during their fight, so they could try to do something about the poison as well as the pain that it caused Olga) Con(s): Gets flustered easily Likes: Reading, conjuring spells, looking out for people she cares about Dislikes: Immaturity Attire: A red Victorian-style necklace, a teal-green bolero with puffed sleeves at the shoulder, white lace ruffled cuffs and a light teal ribbon that acts as an opening of said jacket and two matching smaller ribbons on each cuff, respectively, a flowy white ankle-length dress with a slit on the right side and light green ankle boots Friend(s): Olga Volkova (Midnight!Lycanroc), Matt Brown (Lucario), Ioannis Pyranopoulos (Incineroar), Michael John (Zoroark), Jadwiga Wisniewski (Delphox), Heloise DuBois (Gothitelle) Relative(s): Heloise DuBois (Gothitelle) Enemy/ies: Anna Jandova (Salazzle) Bio: Born and raised in London, England (or some Pokemon region based on England), Victoria, along with her Kalosian-born cousin named Heloise DuBois, came from a wealthy family. When both cousins emigrated to the Unova Region, they met and befriended many Pokemon, including Matt, Michael, Jadwiga, Olga and others except Anna, whom they couldn’t stand because of her stuck-up attitude and her arrogance. This Gardevoir is willing to conjure any spell. Voice actress: Helena Bonham Carter
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junker-town · 5 years
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The NFL’s best remaining free agents
Many of the top names have already agreed to deals, but as free agency officially begins, these are the top names available.
The NFL’s official start to their new league year is here, but due to the league’s negotiating or “legal tampering” period, many of the big name free agents are already off the market. That’s because the negotiating period allows agents and teams to enter into contract talks even though pen cannot be put to paper until the start of the new league year.
Last year was a frenzy during the negotiating period, with most of the top players gone by the time the market actually opened. A whole bunch of deals were cemented right at 4 p.m. ET when the league year started, and that’s the case this year as well. Players can continue negotiating with other teams after agreeing in principle to a new deal — nothing is final until the contract is signed and submitted to the league office. But once something is reported as a done deal, there is minimal flip-flopping.
It’s likely this trend — the biggest players agreeing to deals before free agency actually starts — will continue.
That said, there are still plenty of good to great players still out there, waiting to find a team for the 2019 season. Below, we’re going to point you to the best still available — in alphabetical order — at each offensive and defensive position.
Quarterback
Signed: Derek Anderson, Nick Foles, Ryan Griffin, Taylor Heinicke, Brett Hundley, Matt Schaub, Tyrod Taylor Best Available: Teddy Bridgewater, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Colin Kaepernick
Nick Foles is getting paid a ton of money by the Jaguars, and after that the market gets a little bit stale. Obviously, the best available quarterback (Kaepernick) s probably not going to get signed. Another team will surely try and kick the tires on Blake Bortles if/when he’s relesed, while old standbys like Taylor, Fitzpatrick, and McCown are the more reliable of the group.
Others available: Sam Bradford, Matt Cassel, Mike Glennon, Robert Griffin III, Josh Johnson, Sean Mannion, Josh McCown, Brock Osweiler, Mark Sanchez, Tom Savage, Trevor Siemian, Geno Smith, Joe Webb
Running Back
Signed: Le’Veon Bell, Mike Davis, Andre Ellington, Frank Gore, Kareem Hunt, Carlos Hyde, Mark Ingram, Latavius Murray, Adrian Peterson, Zach Zenner Best Available: Jay Ajayi, C.J. Anderson, Tevin Coleman, Marshawn Lynch, T.J. Yeldon
There’s still a strong market for running backs, with young guys like Coleman, Ajayi, and Yeldon available. It’s a strong group of running backs, and even the players below all have shown they have something to offer.
Others available: Ameer Abdullah, LeGarrette Blount, Alfred Blue, Doug Martin, Alfred Morris, Ty Montgomery, Bilal Powell, Stevan Ridley, Darren Sproles, Jonathan Stewart, Spencer Ware
Wide Receiver
Signed: Danny Amendola, Cole Beasley, Josh Bellamy, John Brown, Jamison Crowder, Larry Fitzgerald, Devin Funchess, Adam Humphries, Cordarrelle Patterson, Breshad Perriman, Tyrell Williams Best Available: Randall Cobb, Michael Crabtree, Phillip Dorsett, Donte Moncrief, Golden Tate
The biggest names to change teams at the wide receiver position were not free agents — Antonio Brown and Odell Beckham Jr. were both traded — but there are still some talented pass catchers out there. Veterans Tate, Crabtree, and Moncrief are always looking to prove they still got it.
Others available: Tavon Austin, Kelvin Benjamin, Dez Bryant, Chris Conley, Pierre Garcon, Justin Hardy, Chris Hogan, Dontrelle Inman, Jermaine Kearse, Jordan Matthews, Rishard Matthews, J.J. Nelson, De’Anthony Thomas, Demaryius Thomas, Mike Wallace, Terrance Williams
Tight End
Signed: Dwayne Allen, Nick Boyle, Charles Clay, Demetrius Harris, Jesse James, Tyler Kroft, C.J. Uzomah Best Available: Jared Cook, Tyler Eifert, Austin Seferian-Jenkins
Most of what remains in the tight end market includes veterans who never quite developed as receiving threats or veterans who have a history of injuries. It’s not a great market, one of the weaker ones in recent years.
Others available: Darren Fells, Antonio Gates, MarQueis Gray, Jermaine Gresham, Jeff Heuerman, Michael Hoomanawanui, Lance Kendricks, Marcedes Lewis, Logan Paulsen, Richard Rogers, Dion Sims, Geoff Swaim, Levin Toilolo, Maxx Williams, Luke Willson
Offensive Line
Signed: Oday Aboushi, Jamon Brown, Trent Brown, James Carpenter, A.J. Cann, Jon Feliciano, Ramon Foster, Mark Glowinski, Denzelle Good, Jonotthan Harrison, Bobby Hart, Seantrel Henderson, Ja’Wuan James, Ted Larsen, Spencer Long, Cornelius Lucas, Bobby Massie, Mitch Morse, Ty Nsekhe, Michael Ola, Kevin Pamphile, Matt Paradis, Mike Person, Greg Robinson, Rodger Saffold, Ty Sambrailo, Brian Schwenke, Donovan Smith, J.R. Sweezy, Billy Turner, Daryl Williams Best Available: D.J. Fluker, Mike Iupati, Kendall Lamm, John Miller, Jeremy Parnell, Ryan Schraeder
As usual, teams did their best to re-sign their own offensive linemen. It’s rare that a high-end tackle or guard makes it to free agency, and when they do, they are quickly snatched up, as was the case with Brown and Paradis.
Others available: Jeff Allen, Joe Barksdale, T.J. Clemmings, Chris Clark, Nick Easton, Cameron Fleming, Ereck Flowers, Max Garcia, Garry Gilliam, Ryan Groy, Ulrick John, T.J. Lang, Andy Levitre, Jordan Mills, OT Marshall Newhouse, Cedric Ogbuehi, Tyler Shatley, Quinton Spain, John Sullivan, Travis Swanson, Jared Veldheer, LaAdrian Waddle, Josh Wells, Stefen Wisniewski
EDGE
Signed: , Anthony Chickillo, Frank Clark (franchise tag), Jadeveon Clowney (franchise tag), Dee Ford, Trey Flowers, Dante Fowler Jr., Brandon Graham, DeMarcus Lawrence (franchise tag), Steven Means, Brooks Reed, John Simon, Preston Smith, Za’Darius Smith, Terrell Suggs, Cameron Wake Best Available: Ezekiel Ansah, Shaq Barrett, Markus Golden, Justin Houston, Clay Matthews, Shane Ray
Just look at the signings to determine the value of the EDGE position in the NFL — all of the top players got franchise tags except for Flowers and Fowler, who were quickly locked up.
Others available: Sam Acho, Jerry Attaochu, Connor Barwin, Vinny Curry, Kony Ealy, Eli Harold, William Hayes, Bruce Irvin, Michael Johnson, Dion Jordan, Matt Longacre, Aaron Lynch, Benson Mayowa, Pernell McPhee, Derrick Morgan, Alex Okafor, Nick Perry, Frostee Rucker, Derrick Shelby, Frank Zombo
Defensive Tackle
Signed: Tyson Alualu, Henry Anderson, Angelo Blackson, Carl Davis, Johnathan Hankins, Margus Hunt, Malik Jackson, Grady Jarrett (franchise tag), Jordan Phillips, Sheldon Richardson, Shamar Stephen Best Available: Christian Covington, Timmy Jernigan, Corey Liuget, Darius Philon, Ndamukong Suh, Muhammad Wilkerson
There weren’t many top-end defensive tackle talents available in free agency. The ones who have had recent success on the field either agreed to terms quickly, or were given the franchise tag.
Others available: Allen Bailey, Malcom Brown, Tyeler Davison, Dominique Easley, Mario Edwards, Rodney Gunter, Ziggy Hood, Ricky Jean-Francois, Zach Kerr, Brandon Mebane, Earl Mitchell, Haloti Ngata, Mike Pennel, Ahtyba Rubin, Danny Shelton, Brent Urban
Linebacker
Signed: Kwon Alexander, Ray-Ray Armstrong, Anthony Barr, Preston Brown, Deone Bucannon, Bruce Carter, Thomas Davis, Jordan Hicks, Justin March-Lillard, C.J. Mosley, Denzel Perryman, Craig Robertson, Adarius Taylor, Damien Wilson, Paul Worrilow Best Available: Mark Barron, Jamie Collins, Gerald Hodges, Brandon Marshall, K.J. Wright
C.J. Mosley, Kwon Alexander, and Anthony Barr got big-time deals to kick off free agency and there’s still a few quality players left on the market — especially for teams looking for run stoppers.
Others available: Stephone Anthony, Josh Bynes, Will Compton, Kyle Emanuel, L.J. Fort, Najee Goode, Mike Hull, Mychal Kendricks, Cameron Lynch, Kevin Minter, Mark Nzeocha, Kevin Pierre-Louis, Vincent Rey, Kelvin Sheppard, Nathan Stupar, Manti Te’o, Ramik Wilson
Cornerback
Signed: Robert Alford, Justin Coleman, Pierre Desir, Kareem Jackson, Kevin Johnson, Jason McCourty, Steven Nelson, Darryl Roberts, Bradley Roby, Eric Rowe, Buster Skrine, Blidi Wreh-Wilson Best Available: Ronald Darby, Darqueze Dennard, Jason Verrett
There weren’t many big name cornerbacks on the market this year, but there are still a few names that can help people. Teams looking for a quality cornerback that isn’t a world-beater, but still effective should be able to find some value in free agency.
Others available: Briean Boddy-Calhoun, Bashaud Breeland, Tramaine Brock, Morris Claiborne, E.J. Gaines, Phillip Gaines, Brent Grimes, Davon House, Nevin Lawson, Tony Lippett, Rashaan Melvin, Captain Munnerlyn, Brian Poole, Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, Orlando Scandrick, Sam Shields, B.W. Webb, Kayvon Webster, Shareece Wright
Safety
Signed: Adrian Amos, Chris Banjo, Antoine Bethea, Landon Collins, Tashaun Gipson, Colin Jones, LaMarcus Joyner, Tyrann Mathieu, Eric Reid, Earl Thomas, Kenny Vaccaro, Jaylen Watkins, Eric Weddle Best Available: Tre Boston, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Johnathan Cyprien, Glover Quin, Jimmie Ward
Yet another strong year for the safety position, and this time, they didn’t wait around to get deals done. Big names like Landon Collins and Tyrann Mathieu made it to the open market, and quickly agreed to deals with their new teams. However, there is still some meat left on the bone at the position.
Others available: Mike Adams, Jahleel Addae, Kurt Coleman, Chris Conte, Clayton Geathers, Marcus Gilchrist, George Iloka, Kendrick Lewis, Mike Mitchell, Reggie Nelson, Ron Parker, Adrian Phillips, Curtis Riley, Andrew Sendejo, Darian Stewart
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