B R O A D W A Y***B L U E S H I R T S
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Bathgate66 wrote:did you fellas catch the news ?
seems some of the Rangers Brass had a list floating around of who was going to bang which of the Ranger Ice Girls a few seassons back- no wonder why theyve long been retired !
:eek:
:eek:
maybe xman can get the juicy details for us, you know- some names !
I dont know any names, but I know the intern that has been named in the Knicks fiasco.Reading 2004
Albany 2006 Camden 2006 E. Rutherford 2, 2006 Inglewood 2006,
Chicago 2007
Camden 2008 MSG 2008 MSG 2008 Hartford 2008.
Seattle 2009 Seattle 2009 Philadelphia 2009,Philadelphia 2009 Philadelphia 2009
Hartford 2010 MSG 2010 MSG 2010
Toronto 2011,Toronto 2011
Wrigley Field 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Philadelphia 2, 2013
Philadelphia 1, 2016 Philadelphia 2 2016 New York 2016 New York 2016 Fenway 1, 2016
Fenway 2, 2018
MSG 2022
St. Paul, 1, St. Paul 2 2023
MSG 2024, MSG 2024
Philadelphia 2024
"I play good, hard-nosed basketball.
Things happen in the game. Nothing you
can do. I don't go and say,
"I'm gonna beat this guy up."0 -
i wouldnt believe it even tho i saw it with my own eyes !
the kid Staal Has A Jump On Jagr
and wow
our new jersey basically eliminated the color across the shouldewrs with little done to the actual logo.
cant complain about that.
Drury Models The New Rangers JerseyFor the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
i saw that, but jagr really owned staal for most of the scrimmage. amazingly colton orr scored one of the goals.Reading 2004
Albany 2006 Camden 2006 E. Rutherford 2, 2006 Inglewood 2006,
Chicago 2007
Camden 2008 MSG 2008 MSG 2008 Hartford 2008.
Seattle 2009 Seattle 2009 Philadelphia 2009,Philadelphia 2009 Philadelphia 2009
Hartford 2010 MSG 2010 MSG 2010
Toronto 2011,Toronto 2011
Wrigley Field 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Philadelphia 2, 2013
Philadelphia 1, 2016 Philadelphia 2 2016 New York 2016 New York 2016 Fenway 1, 2016
Fenway 2, 2018
MSG 2022
St. Paul, 1, St. Paul 2 2023
MSG 2024, MSG 2024
Philadelphia 2024
"I play good, hard-nosed basketball.
Things happen in the game. Nothing you
can do. I don't go and say,
"I'm gonna beat this guy up."0 -
Bathgate66 wrote:i wouldnt believe it even tho i saw it with my own eyes !
the kid Staal Has A Jump On Jagr
and wow
our new jersey basically eliminated the color across the shouldewrs with little done to the actual logo.
cant complain about that.
Drury Models The New Rangers Jersey
awwwww nice0 -
10' O' Clock this morning , kids !
Best Of Luck To Everyone Trying !For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
not a single ticket to be had for January 24th against Atlanta.
StubHub, or even E- Bay, here I come .
$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
the story behind stickboy
Finding a bit of New York in Winnipeg
Evan Weiner | NHL.com correspondent Sep 15, 2007, 12:00 PM EDT
Brian Mullen saw some familiar faces when he reported to training camp with the Jets in 1982.
Walking into an NHL training camp for the first time is never easy for a rookie. No matter how talented the player, from Sidney Crosby on down to those on tryouts, it is a daunting experience.
But there are some rare occasions when the first day of camp can be fun. Just ask Brian Mullen, who showed up at the Winnipeg Jets’ training camp in 1982 and was given quite a welcome by his new teammates, who just happened to be old friends.
Before playing for “Badger” Bob Johnson at the University of Wisconsin, Mullen was the stick boy for visiting hockey teams at Madison Square Garden. In that capacity, he got to know personnel from the rangers and the visiting teamsd quite well.
At that time, John Ferguson was the Rangers’ general manager and he came to know the 16-year-old Mullen, too.
Ferguson landed in Winnipeg after being fired by the Rangers. By 1982, Ferguson had added former Rangers goaltender Doug Soetaert, defenseman Mario Marois and right winger Lucien Deblois to his Winnipeg roster. Mullen knew all of them when he showed up for his first camp.
That’s a big advantage in the room compared to 99 percent of the rookies that walk into their first NHL camp.
“I walked into the locker room, it so happened on that Winnipeg team there were a few ex-Rangers,” Mullen recalled. “Doug Soetaert, Lucien Deblois and Mario Marios were all on that team. I walked into the locker room thinking I would see my own stall and everything. I walked over to my stall and there were about three dozen sticks. A dozen of Mario’s, a dozen of Lucien’s and a dozen of Dougie Soetaert’s sticks.
Evan Weiner is a radio and TV commentator, a columnist, an author and a college lecturer. Between 1988 and 1992, he was part of the Minnesota North Stars radio broadcasts with Al Shaver, doing the pre and post game show and in-between period interviews on all North Stars New York area games.
More by Evan Weiner:
[Off the Wall archive]
More NHL.com features
NHL.com History section
NHL.com Hall of Fame section
Grossman: Mullen returns home
“John Ferguson was the general manager at the time; they were all peaking around the corner, giggling. We had a good laugh over it. It really made me comfortable and made me feel like one of the guys right away.
“I threw them (the sticks) right back at them,” Mullen laughed. “It made me feel like I belonged there. There were good guys; I knew them, if I didn’t know them, I would never have thrown them back.”
Mullen’s Winnipeg story actually started out in the 1960s on West 49th Street in Manhattan, just blocks away from the old Madison Square Garden, which was then located on Eighth Avenue between 49th and 50th streets.
Mullen’s father worked as part of the Garden’s day-to-day crew and helped maintain the ice during the hockey season.
Brian Mullen was following in the roller-skate tracks of his older brother, Joey, by playing roller hockey in an open lot, which was then owned by New York Printing on 49th Street. Eventually, Brian Mullen was good enough on ice that he got a hockey scholarship to Wisconsin in 1980.
“That’s where I grew up playing roller hockey,” Mullen said of the notorious Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood. “My apartment building was across the street from the Garden, 416 West 49th Street between 9th and 10th avenues. And there was a schoolyard right across the street where we all played roller hockey. On any given day you could find anywhere between 50 to 100 school kids playing hockey. My neighborhood was a hockey hotbed. (Watch: Brian's brother Joe returns to the old neighborhood: 300K )
“The Police Athletic League started a league on Saturdays and Sundays. Saturdays was the little guys, they called them the Peanut League, and Sundays was the High School League, where the big guys played. That’s what all the Peanut leaguers wanted to play, in the high school games so we had something to look forward to.
“It’s not the usual story. When I was on some of the (Jets) teams, I brought some of the Canadian players around to the neighborhood there, you should have seen their reaction.”
But, Mullen made sure he was exposed to the NHL game, eventually landing a job as one of the visiting team’s stick boys.
“I was there when I was 16-, 17-years-old,” he remembered. “The Rangers made it to the Finals in 1979 with guys like Lucien Deblois, John Davidson, the Maloney Brothers (Don and Dave), (Ron) Duguay, all those guys were on the team. Nickie Fotiu, Pat Hickey. They had a great team. They made it to the Finals.
Brian Mullen, a native of New York City, ended his career with the Islanders in 1993.
“I was the stick boy there. They played Montreal and they had guys like Pierre Larouche, Serge Savard and all those guys. It was a great series. It was fun just being down on ice level with all those guys.”
But Mullen wasn’t watching the 1979 Stanley Cup Final as a fan. He was a hockey employee and that job helped him understand what he needed to do to get to the NHL level. It also showed him how to work a stick.
“I worked with the sticks,” he said. “So anytime they break a stick, I would grab one of their sticks and reach over the board, so I actually worked with the sticks and took care of the locker room a little bit there and learned a lot from both teams, both sides. I learned a lot from the Rangers and learned a lot from the teams that came into the Garden.”
The fact that Mullen got a college scholarship is maybe even more amazing than the fact that he ended up playing in the NHL.
Mullen started skating late and the youth league competition in the New York area, while improving, was not up to Canadian standards. Mullen learned how to play hockey using box roller skates and a roll of black electrical tape that served as the puck. The black electrical tape seemed to never wear out.
Still Mullen and his brother Joe (who was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2000) somehow made it to the NHL despite not having a traditional ice hockey background.
“The big difference is the surface, ice versus concrete,” Mullen said of his formative days as a player. “I think the hardest thing I had to learn when I made the transition to ice was how to stop on the ice. It took me a little while, all the other things I learned in roller hockey, all the fundamentals translated over to the ice, just like a normal hockey player would.”
Mullen started playing ice hockey at around 8, but he was about 6 when he got on ice for the first time at the old Garden.
“My father brought me down before it closed. He got me a Vic Hadfield stick; Vic was one of my favorite Rangers,” Mullen recalled. “He brought me on the ice, we shot the puck around, and that was basically the first time I stepped on ice.”
It would not be the last time Mullen would step on Garden ice. About 14 years later, he became a Winnipeg Jets rookie. Winnipeg drafted Mullen in the seventh round of the 1980 draft. After two years in college, Mullen turned pro.
As a rookie, Mullen scored 24 goals and assisted in 26 others for 50 points.
He played in Winnipeg for five years and during the summer of 1987 got a call from Rangers GM Phil Esposito, which ended his Winnipeg career and started perhaps the happiest four years of Mullen’s NHL career.
“I got the call from Phil and he said; ‘You are coming home and this time you won’t have to work the sticks.’” Mullen said of the trade that took him home. “He brought me back. I got to play before all my family and friends. My dad was still working at the Garden. It was really a nice time when I played there.”
The Rangers traded Mullen to San Jose for Tim Kerr on May 30, 1991. He played one year in Daly City at the Cow Palace with the Sharks. In August 1992, he was traded to the Rangers bitter suburban rival, the Islanders.
On Sept. 8, 1993 Mullen suffered a career-ending stroke. Mullen has been involved with various aspects of hockey since then including being a Rangers radio announcer and an NHL ambassador.
During his playing career, Mullen always had a special place for the stick boys he encountered in his days with the Jets, Rangers, Sharks and Islanders. After all, he was once one of them.
“I got treated well in New York. Pat Hickey, Nickie Fotiu (a fellow New York City resident, although Fotiu was from the outer borough of Staten Island), the three guys, Lucien, Dougie and Mario, all treated me with respect. They talked to me all the time and it was a good feeling when I was the stick boy and I never forgot it and I always treated the stick boys good.”
growing up in NY he was always one of my idols/role model cause all I did was play street and ice hockey and always said if he could do it maybe I could...of course that never happened and I never got that job as a stickboy at msg either :( (besides stickman was taken lol)Aah, fuck it, I’m just gonna go home, turn on the fuckin’ TV...
Watch the nightly news and drink a beer...
Like I could even change the world, yeah right...
************************************0 -
got 3 for opening night,,surprised i was able to get thru at 10:20 am0
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For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
DRURY BRINGS WINNING WAYS
FORWARD EXCITED TO JOIN RANGERS
BY TIM BONTEMPS
September 17, 2007 -- Chris Drury is known for being a winner. He was the MVP and winning pitcher of the 1989 Little League World Series championship team from his hometown of Trumbull, Conn., and also won a state championship with his high school hockey team, a national championship at Boston University and a Stanley Cup with the Colorado Avalanche in 2001.
After those accomplishments, was there any doubt in his mind he would win a coin flip with fellow free-agent acquisition Scott Gomez for the right to wear No. 23 on his sweater when both men signed with the Rangers July 1?
"I was nervous," Drury said. "I really wanted it. I'm just glad it worked out."
Drury set career highs with 37 goals and 69 points with the Buffalo Sabres last season. The Rangers, who gave Drury a five-year, $35.25 million contract on the opening day of free agency this summer, would love to see that kind of point production. But the Blueshirts also awarded Drury the contract because of the intangibles he has become known for, and for the winning that has followed him everywhere he's been.
"My goal every day is to keep things as simple as possible," he said. "That includes being mentally and physically being ready to play and compete every day, whether it's practice or an exhibition, regular season or playoff game. I think if I keep doing those things it will lead to good weeks, good months and a good year."
Drury, the Sabres' co-captain the past two seasons, was at the center of the team's revival from the bottom of the NHL before the canceled 2004-05 season to a team that reached the Eastern Conference Finals each of the past two seasons. The 2006-07 Sabres also won the Presidents Cup for being the best team in the regular season, and defeated the Rangers in six games in the Eastern Conference Semifinals.
But despite all the success he had in Buffalo, Drury couldn't come to an agreement to stay with the Sabres. It's something Drury said he isn't spending time thinking about.
"I try not to look in the past too much," he said. "I loved my time there. I learned a lot, and I met a lot of great friends . . . coaches included, management included, ownership included. It was a great experience for me, and hopefully for them, and I'm just thrilled to be a Ranger."
Buffalo's loss was the Rangers' gain, as the Blueshirts landed one of the top free agents available. Now Drury will get a chance to take the ice at Madison Square Garden - something he could only dream about as a kid growing up about 60 miles from New York watching the team.
"It's enough of a dream to just play in the NHL, but to get to play for the team you grew up rooting for takes it to a whole new level," he said. "It's been a thrill. It's been great since July 1, and I'm looking forward to Oct. 4."0 -
NY PJ1 wrote:DRURY BRINGS WINNING WAYS
FORWARD EXCITED TO JOIN RANGERS
BY TIM BONTEMPS
September 17, 2007 -- Chris Drury is known for being a winner. He was the MVP and winning pitcher of the 1989 Little League World Series championship team from his hometown of Trumbull, Conn., and also won a state championship with his high school hockey team, a national championship at Boston University and a Stanley Cup with the Colorado Avalanche in 2001.
:eek:
wow
what hasnt this guy done ? ! ? Can he play football, the NY Football Giants could use him ,...NY PJ1 wrote:" I'm just thrilled to be a Ranger."NYPJ1 wrote:Buffalo's loss was the Rangers' gain, as the Blueshirts landed one of the top free agents available. Now Drury will get a chance to take the ice at Madison Square Garden - something he could only dream about as a kid growing up about 60 miles from New York watching the team.
"It's enough of a dream to just play in the NHL, but to get to play for the team you grew up rooting for takes it to a whole new level," he said. "It's been a thrill. It's been great since July 1, and I'm looking forward to Oct. 4."
you mean he wasnt rooting for The Hartford Whalers ?
thats cool- I love the fact that he wears # 23 in tribute to Donny Baseball.
cant wait for them to drop the puck .
[size=+3]- _/ Lets Go Rangers \_ -[/size]For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
not only do we get the inside scoops from the x-man, theres a plethora of reading up on the boys in Blue all at The Bulletin
some highlights :
Sean Avery Is Now Sporting A Mohawk
Kaspar The Rock Hard Ghost
:eek:
he sounds determined- i'd love for him to crack the roster
Post
Dubinsky told to lose weight
Hate The New Jerseys, Love The New Lines
( i have a soft spot in my heart for Darius - after meeting him at the PJ gig @ MSG in 03' )For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
d'oh, i meant to mention that. the trainers put that up i think.Reading 2004
Albany 2006 Camden 2006 E. Rutherford 2, 2006 Inglewood 2006,
Chicago 2007
Camden 2008 MSG 2008 MSG 2008 Hartford 2008.
Seattle 2009 Seattle 2009 Philadelphia 2009,Philadelphia 2009 Philadelphia 2009
Hartford 2010 MSG 2010 MSG 2010
Toronto 2011,Toronto 2011
Wrigley Field 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Philadelphia 2, 2013
Philadelphia 1, 2016 Philadelphia 2 2016 New York 2016 New York 2016 Fenway 1, 2016
Fenway 2, 2018
MSG 2022
St. Paul, 1, St. Paul 2 2023
MSG 2024, MSG 2024
Philadelphia 2024
"I play good, hard-nosed basketball.
Things happen in the game. Nothing you
can do. I don't go and say,
"I'm gonna beat this guy up."0 -
Bathgate66 wrote:
tell me what it is i cant see it until i get home0 -
NY PJ1 wrote:tell me what it is i cant see it until i get home
it's his name plate above his locker. instead of reading lundqvist, it reads "hankenstein"Reading 2004
Albany 2006 Camden 2006 E. Rutherford 2, 2006 Inglewood 2006,
Chicago 2007
Camden 2008 MSG 2008 MSG 2008 Hartford 2008.
Seattle 2009 Seattle 2009 Philadelphia 2009,Philadelphia 2009 Philadelphia 2009
Hartford 2010 MSG 2010 MSG 2010
Toronto 2011,Toronto 2011
Wrigley Field 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Brooklyn 2013 Philadelphia 2, 2013
Philadelphia 1, 2016 Philadelphia 2 2016 New York 2016 New York 2016 Fenway 1, 2016
Fenway 2, 2018
MSG 2022
St. Paul, 1, St. Paul 2 2023
MSG 2024, MSG 2024
Philadelphia 2024
"I play good, hard-nosed basketball.
Things happen in the game. Nothing you
can do. I don't go and say,
"I'm gonna beat this guy up."0 -
xavier mcdaniel wrote:it's his name plate above his locker. instead of reading lundqvist, it reads "hankenstein"
??? i missed that joke somewhere but thanx lol0 -
NY PJ1 wrote:tell me what it is i cant see it until i get home
it also has Hanks new helmet, but the details of it are too far off to get a good look,... but as X Man said it says " Hankenstein " on his locker, # 30 .
definitely new painting. at the site theres also a closeup of montoyas helmet as well. it has an angry looking apple with a fat cigar in his mouth with the words " Big Cubano " underneath .For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside
That it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive
ORGAN DONATION SAVES LIVES
http://www.UNOS.org
Donate Organs and Save a Life0 -
F'n_Circus wrote:what a fucking liar...................
but i still miss him.hey he wanted to play in the big city can ya blame him?
0
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