The revelution of beats monster headphones!
monster headphonesVANCOUVER, British Columbia — Injured Canucks forward Mason Raymond made it back from Boston in time to cheer on his Vancouver teammates in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals.www.spencerchandraherbert.caRaymond appeared on the overhead scoreboard during a break in the first period Wednesday night. Wearing a large corset to support the broken bone in his back, he waved his hands and incited the crowd, which gave him a standing ovation.Raymond was driven awkwardly into the boards by Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk just 20 seconds into the Canucks' 5-2 loss in Game 6. He spent the past two nights in a Boston hospital, but
monster beatsreturned to the West Coast in time for the conclusion to Vancouver's season.Raymond didn't score in the finals, but played solid defense on the Canucks' second line. Jeff Tambellini replaced him for Game 7."We obviously wish Mason was in the lineup right now," Vancouver defenseman Kevin Bieksa said. "But I've said from the beginning, we don't need extra motivation. The Stanley Cup is enough motivation for us, so we're not looking for any extras to help us get to that peak motivation. We're in the Stanley Cup finals. We would like to win it for him, and for everyone in
beats by dr drethis dressing room."___NO GUARANTEES: Daniel Sedin says he didn't mean to guarantee the Vancouver Canucks would win Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals.He's still quite confident in his Canucks heading into their biggest game of the season.The NHL scoring champion backed off what appeared to be a guarantee of victory to the Vancouver Sun after the Canucks' 5-2 loss in Game 6."That was probably me being excited, and the words came wrong out of my mouth," Sedin said Wednesday. "What I said was if we put our best game on the ice, I like our chances. That's the way it's been all year. When we play our best, we're a tough team to beat. We show
monster headphonesthat at home. We like our chances."Sedin hasn't been much of a factor in the finals except while scoring the tying goal and assisting on Alex Burrows' overtime winner in Game 2. The 104-point scorer has just two goals and two assists in the finals, scoring in only two of the six games.Yet he isn't the first superstar to end up as a role player under the tension and defensive pressure of the Stanley Cup finals.Chicago's Jonathan Toews had three assists and was a minus-5 during the Blackhawks' triumph last season. Sidney Crosby had one goal and two assists in seven games for Pittsburgh in 2009, but still raised the Cup.___TAMBELLINI'S TURN: Jeff Tambellini has only been with the Canucks for one season, but he knows better than any of his teammates how much a Stanley Cup would mean to his hometown and his boyhood team.The son of Edmonton Oilers general manager Steve Tambellini is the lone Canucks player who grew up in Vancouver, and his earliest playoff memories come from being on the ice with players like Trevor Linden and Cliff Ronning, the key figures in the 1994 run to Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals.Tambellini replaced Raymond in the Canucks' lineup for Game 7. He skated on Vancouver's fourth line in the first three games of the finals, but was a healthy scratch in the past three.Steve Tambellini played three seasons in Vancouver from 1985-88 before working his way up from public relations to assistant general manager during 17 years in Vancouver's front office. Jeff Tambellini was only 8 years old when he started going on the ice to skate after the Canucks
Commentaires
Il n'y a aucun commentaire sur cet article.