Atd-MLD#10 Roster Thread

VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,287
6,484
South Korea
Oxford Dark Blues
since 1885, in hockey's oldest rivalry

coach: Viktor Tikhonov
captain: Dickie Boon
alternates: Rick Ley, Saku Koivu

Stephane Richer - Josef Malecek - Adam Deadmarsh
Jimmy Gardner - Moose Watson - Tom Hooper
Gaetan Duchesne - Jason Arnott - Rejean Houle
Martin Gelinas - Saku Koivu (A) - Petr Sykora
Viktor Zhluktov, Konstantin Loktev



Dickie Boon (C) - Oldrich Machac
Billy Coutu - Rick Ley (A)
Zin Bilyaletdinov - Dave Lewis
Jyrki Lumme


John Ross Roach
Don Edwards



John Ross Roach
Little Napoleon

johnrossroach.jpg


Stanley Cup Champion (1922) :stanley:
NHL First Team All-Star (1933)


He was remarkable in all three cities over his 14-year NHL career, winning a Stanley Cup early on backstopping Toronto and later on a First team All-star in Detroit but in between he also had four remarkable seasons in New York – justifying the $10,000 in 1928 paid in the trade for him - leading the team twice to the Finals and stands to this date as the franchise all-time record holder for goals against and shutouts in a season.

… one of the smallest and most exciting goaltenders ever to backstop in the NHL…. When he entered the playoffs, however, he just kept getting stronger and more exciting between the pipes as he led his club past the Vancouver Millionaires in a close battle to claim the Stanley Cup. His rookie season marked the beginning of a 14-year run in the NHL, a lengthy career by the standards of his day. And during many of those seasons, he was a league leader in games played by a goaltender.
In all, Roach played his feisty brand of acrobatics for the St. Pats and later, the Maple Leafs for seven seasons. In 1928-29, he was traded to the New York Rangers where he led the league in games played for each of his four years on Broadway.
In the Motor City, he played solidly and by season's end missed winning the Vezina Trophy by only a fraction of a percentage point. To ease his sorrow, however, he was selected to the All-Star team.
http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SearchPlayer.jsp?player=18678

Forget his cup in Toronto and all-star selection in Detroit, during his New York Ranger days alone:

NHL LEADER
Most games played by a goaltender — 1928-29, 1929-30, 1930-31, 1931-32
Most minutes played by a goaltender — 1930-31 (2,760)
Most shutouts — 1932
Most playoff games played by a goaltender — 1929, 1932
Most playoff minutes played by a goaltender — 1929, 1932
Lowet playoff goals-against average — 1931
Most playoff shutouts — 1929, 1932
one of the most successful goalies in team history, setting records that still stand for the lowest goals-against average in a season and most shutouts in one season.

Roach was instrumental in taking the Rangers to the Stanley Cup Finals in 1929 and 1932.
http://rangers.nhl.com/team/app?page=HistoricalPlayerDetail&pkey=8450103&service=page

John Ross Roach was living proof of the theory, "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em." As a Detroit opponent with Toronto and the New York Rangers, Roach posted eight shutouts and a 1.70 goals-against average in 34 games. He once blocked 60 shots to preserve a 1-0 Rangers win over Detroit.

Those sort of performances led many hockey people to suggest Roach was the NHL's best goalie and few in Detroit would form an argument. The $5,000 used to purchase his contract from the Rangers was well spent. Roach posted 10 shutouts and his 25 wins were a club record, earning him selection to the NHL's First All-Star team. He was the first Detroit player to be placed on a post-season all-star unit.

He garnered the first playoff series win and first playoff shutout in team history, blanking the Maroons 2-0 at Montreal on March 25. Roach broke in with Toronto in 1921-22 and backstopped the St. Patricks to a Stanley Cup title as a rookie, defeating Jack Adams and the Vancouver Millionaires in the final. Though he stood 5-foot-5 and weighed just 130 pounds - earning him the nickname "Little Napoleon" - Roach was remarkably durable, missing only four games during his first 12 NHL campaigns. Once, in need of knee surgery, but with no other goalie available, Roach donned the pads for the Wings, basically playing on one leg, grabbing his crossbar with his glove hand at opportune moments to maintain his balance.

His 58 career shutouts rank Roach 12th on the NHL's all-time list.
http://images.google.ca/imgres?imgu...ges?q=john+ross+roach&ndsp=18&um=1&hl=en&sa=N


Dickie Boon

P195201S.jpg


Stanley Cup Champion (1902, 1903) :stanley: :stanley:
Hockey Hall of Fame Induction (1952)

Fast and wiry, Boon is credited with being the first player to use the poke-check.
Rich "Dickie" Boon excelled at a number of sports while growing up at the family homestead located on the present site of the Windsor Train Station in Montreal. In addition to hockey, he enjoyed speed skating in his early teens and won the 1892 Junior Amateur Championship. He also participated in water sports such as rowing and canoeing.
Boon began playing organized hockey in 1894 at the age of 16 with the "Young Crystals" at the old Crystal Rink in Montreal before moving on to the Monarch Hockey Club in 1897. In 1900 he joined the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association Junior Hockey Club and was promoted to the senior team (MAAA) the following year where he played the position of cover point, similar to today's defenseman.

Dickie Boon was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1952. He was also honoured as one of Montreal's outstanding sportsmen by the Sportsmen's Association of Montreal in July 1954.
http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080...?mem=p195201&type=Player&page=bio&list=#photo


Oldrich Machac
MS%2072%20MACHAC%20Oldrich1.jpg


5'10 185 lbs

IIHHF inductee 1999
all-star team selection in 1972 WC
Gold medalists in '72, '76, '77 World Championships
Olympic medalist in 1968. 1972, 1976

...considered to be a very tough player who excelled with his fine physical play. Very sound defensively
http://www.azhockey.com/Ma.htm

By many accounts, one of the most reliable European defense players ever, extremely solid blueliner
http://www.chidlovski.com/personal/1972/misc/cssrbiod.htm

Bobby Orr accepted the MVP award of the 1976 Canada Cup wearing Machac's #4 jersey .... Machac tied the Czech lead in assists that tourney, setting up the first and third goals in the Sittler-scoring overtime loss to Canada... three of Machac's four assists that tourney were on the powerplay... Machac set up the lone Czech goal against Sweden but was in the penalty box for the Swedish winner

Machac scored the second Czech goal in what turned out to be a 7-2 historic drubbing of the Soviets, early in the '74 World Championships, though the Soviets went on to get gold.
http://www.iihf.com/iihf-home/the-iihf/100-year-anniversary/100-top-stories/story-67.html


Jimmy Gardner

GardnerJimmy.jpg


Stanley Cup Champion (1902, 1903, 1908, 1910) :stanley: :stanley: :stanley: :stanley:
Hockey Hall of Fame Induction (1962)

- some credit Gardner with coming up with the idea of the Canadiens but who all recognize as the captain and playing coach of the Habs' first ever playoff appearance

Jimmy Gardner honed his hockey skills alongside Hall of Fame legend Dickie Boon, playing together in the streets of Montreal.

Over the course of his career, Gardner won four Stanley Cups, the first two in 1902 and 1903 with the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association team, and again in 1909 and 1910 with the Montreal Wanderers.

Between 1904 and 1907, he played in the original IHL, earning one Second Team All-Star selection in that time.

A talented left-winger, Gardner played two seasons with the Canadiens as a player-coach. He scored 19 points in 17 games from 1913 to 1915, a few years before the team joined the NHL.

Gardner was inducted to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1962.
http://ourhistory.canadiens.com/player/Jimmy-Gardner


Billy Coutu

BillyCoutu.JPG


Cleghorn, Coutu and Corbeau who each stood at least 5-foot-10 and weighed in at over 190 pounds,
made the trio the first “Big Three” in Habs blue line history
.
http://ourhistory.canadiens.com/season/1921-1922

Coutu is remembered for his last year in the NHL, his only as a Bruin, headbutting Shore in a preseason practice so hard it severed Eddie's ear off and later in the Stanley Cup playoffs punching a referee at the behest of aggressive-minded hot-headed Bruins coach Art Ross. Coutu was banned from the NHL but that was overturned six years later, but by then Coutu was 41 years old and didn't return.

:teach2: Coutu was for a decade a loyal, hard working excellent defenseman on Montreal's top pairing, traded to the Habs alongside Cleghorn in the NHL's first multiplayer trade (they would eventually be traded together again later), eventually assuming the captaincy role of the Habs for his efforts. He was a perfect complement to Sprague's rushing style, not as much of a leader and not as violent (it was the older Cleghorn who injured three future HHOFers - Gerard, Nighbor, Denneny - in the 1923 Stanley Cup playoff game which saw both Cleghorn and Coutu suspended for rough play). In that era, Coutu fit right in, alongside Cleghorn and eventually on the Bruins with an Eddie Shore who'd go on to end Bailey's career with nastiness.

Coutu is ranked 96th in Ken Campbell's book, Habs Heroes: The Greatest Canadiens Ever From 1 to 100
 
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Transplanted Caper

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Feb 24, 2003
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Peterborough Petes



Coach: Rudy Pilous
Assistant: Dick Todd

Captain: Ray Getliffe
Assistant: Tony McKegney
Assistant: Jason Smith

Tony McKegney-Clint Smith-Marian Stastny
Geoff Sanderson-Barry Pederson-Wally Hergesheimer
Ray Getliffe-Mike Ricci-Leo Labine
Darcy Tucker-Andrew Cassels-Rich Preston
Don Metz

Gilles Marotte-Mike Milbury
Fredrik Olausson-Dave Ellet
Bill Juzda-Jason Smith
Roman Hamirlik

Mike Liut
Frank McCool

1939 or earlier - Clint Smith, C.
1940-1965 - Bill Juzda, D.
1966-1979 - Gilles Marotte, D
1980-1989 - Mike Milbury, D.
1990-1999 - Mike Liut, G
2009 - Darcy Tucker, LW

Round 1: 12th Overall - G. Mike Liut
Liut was outstanding in his debut with St. Louis. His first two seasons saw him pile up 71 victories. In 1980-81, he was voted a runner-up to Wayne Gretzky for the Hart Trophy; he was selected as a First Team All-Star; and, he won the Lester B. Pearson Trophy as the league's MVP as determined by his peers.In 1985, Liut was traded to the Hartford Whalers where, in his second season, he led the league in shutouts with four. He also posted the league's best goals-against average in 1989-90.

Round 2: 13th Overall - C. Clint Smith
He was a mainstay with the Rangers the following year and became a key member of their 1940 Stanley Cup team. Smith won the Lady Byng Trophy for gentlemanly play in 1938-39 as a Ranger and again in 1943-44 as a member of the Chicago Black Hawks, and totaled a mere 24 penalty minutes in 483 regular season games. He played in the NHL for eleven years and was not signaled off for a penalty in four of those seasons.In 1943-44, Smith set an NHL record by recording 49 assists in a season while playing on a line with future Hall of Famers Bill Mosienko and Doug Bentley. The line set an NHL scoring record that season with 219 total points. Smith became the first player to score into an empty net after the league had revised the rules to allow teams to pull their goalie, and he shares the NHL record for most goals in a period with four, set on March 4, 1945, against Montreal.

Round 3: 36th overall - D. Gilles Marotte
Defenceman Gilles Marotte played over 800 NHL games for five different clubs in the 1960s and '70s. He was a fine playmaker who could work the point on the power play and handle the rough going in his own end.

Round 4: 37th overall - D. Mike Milbury
Mike Milbury was a rugged defenceman played over 750 games for the Boston Bruins in the 1970s and '80s. His defensive zone coverage was exemplary and he used an assortment of tactics to thwart opposition forwards.
 
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pitseleh

Registered User
Jul 30, 2005
19,164
2,613
Vancouver
New York Americans

Coach: Frank Boucher
Assistant Coach: Claude Ruel

Red Hamill (a) - Bill Thoms - Milan Hejduk
Nikolai Drozdetsky - Vyacheslav Anisin - Viktor Shalimov
Alex Tanguay - Vladimir Zabrodsky - Jaroslav Jirik
Dave Trottier - Dutch Reibel - Johnny Gagnon
Jack Marks

Joe Jerwa - Jack Laviolette (c)
Dave Babych - Yuri Fedorov (a)
Al Arbour - Bryan McCabe
Udo Kiessling

Viktor Konovalenko
Henrik Lundqvist


PP1: Hamill-Thoms-Hejduk-McCabe-Fedorov
PP2: Drozdetsky-Zabrodsky-Shalimov-Laviolette-Babych

PK1: Trottier-Reibel-Jerwa-Laviolette
PK2: Anisin-Hamill-Arbour-Fedorov
 
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papershoes

Registered User
Dec 28, 2007
1,825
131
Kenora, Ontario
sault ste. marie GREYHOUNDS
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gm: papershoes
coach: randy CARLYLE
captain: paul SHMYR
assistant captains: paul MACLEAN, doug BODGER

#20 anton STASTNY - #9 paul RONTY - #51 paul MACLEAN (A)
#13 ray WHITNEY - #15 dave GAGNER - #22 ulf DAHLEN
#12 mark OSBORNE - #91 alexander ALMETOV - #41 stu BARNES
#27 eric VAIL - #16 laurie BOSCHMAN - #14 bulldog FAIRBAIRN
extra: #10 marion GABORIK

#6 dick REDMOND - #23 jeff beukeboom
#3 paul shmyr (C) - #8 doug BODGER (A)
#5 rick GREEN - #4 jay BOUWMEESTER
extras: #2 curt GILES, #21 dennis KEARNS

#27 ron HEXTALL
#1 bouse HUTTON​
 
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God Bless Canada

Registered User
Jul 11, 2004
11,793
17
Bentley reunion
MELVILLE MILLIONAIRES
Celebrating 100 years of hockey
Co-GMs: raleh and God Bless Canada
Coach: Tom Johnson
Assistant Coach: Dwight McMillan
Captain: George Owen
Alternate Captain: Ryan Smyth
Alternate Captain:
Alternate Captain:

FORWARDS
Ryan Smyth-Brad Richards-Zigmund Palffy
Dennis Hextall-Pierre Larouche-Keith Crowder
Jay Pandolfo-George Gee-Doug Brown
Johnny Wensink-Mike Richards-Rob Niedermayer
Herb Carnegie

DEFENCEMEN
George Owen-Garry Galley
Ed Jovanovski-Andrei Markov
Kjell Samuelsson-Sylvain Lefebvre
Sylvain Cote

GOALTENDERS
Kirk McLean
Evgeni Nabokov​

Power play units:
PP1: Smyth-Richards-Palffy-Owen-Jovanovski
PP2: Hextall-Larouche-Crowder-Galley-Markov

Penalty killing units:
PK1:Pandolfo-Gee-Samuelsson-Lefebvre
PK2: Smyth-B. Richards-Owen-Markov
PK3: Crowder-M. Richards-Jovanovski-Galley
PK 4: Brown-Niedermayer-Samuelsson-Owen


Scouting reports:
G Kirk McLean:
A bona fide No. 1 goaltender in the Minor League Draft. McLean will be counted on to log big minutes and deliver in the playoffs, two things he showed he is quite capable of doing for much of his career. Plays the classic, low maintenance stand-up style and covers angles well. Outside of Ron Hextall, McLean is the puck-moving goaltender in the draft. Led the league in wins in 1992. A second-team all-star in 1992. Vezina finalist in 1989 and 1992. Was the Canucks MVP in the 1994 Cup run, making "The Save of the Century" off of Robert Reichel in Game 7 against Calgary, and stopping 50-some-odd shots in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final against the New York Rangers. Made nearly 50 saves in Game 7 against St. Louis in 1995.

G Evgeny Nabokov:
A goaltender who has a lot of similarities to McLean: a big goaltender who can move the puck and handle a lot of minutes. Not a traditional stand-up goaltender like McLean, but as close to a stand-up as you'll find in today's NHL. Has shown in the past an ability to succeed in a two-goaltender system or as a back-up. Was voted to the NHL's first all-star team in 2008, and won the Calder as top rookie in 2001. Several strong post-season performances. Made the save of the year in overtime of Game 6 against Dallas in 2008.

D George Owen:
Our franchise player, our MVP and our captain, George is the cream of the crop for MLD defenceman, and unquestionably the top offensive defenceman in the draft. He's one of the few defencemen in the draft capable of playing 28 to 30 minutes per night. Back-to-back seasons with 12 goals and more than 20 points in the early 1930s was a very impressive total. The only reason that he isn't a fixture in a 28-team ATD is his lack of longevity with only five seasons. He will be counted on to provide an excellent puck-moving presence from our blue-line, and quarterback our first power play unit.

D Ed Jovanovski:
A fixture in previous ATDs, Jovo-cop dropped to MLD this time around, and he is probably in the role that suits him best. Has played in five all-star games, and has won gold for Canada at the Olympics, the World Cup and the World Championships. Few defencemen are capable of bringing all that Jovanovski brings to the table: He's big, strong, mobile and very physical. He has a heavy shot from the point and he's very effective at moving the puck. He can play the point on the power play or clear the front of the net. We believe this is Jovo's best role: No. 2 in the MLD, where he can play a smarter, more controlled game.

D Kjell Samuelsson:
A towering force for our shut-down pairing. Few defencemen are a more imposing presence than the six-foot-six Samuelsson, whose size, reach, positioning, anticipation and defensive abilities make him very difficult to get around. He thinks the game very well, but he also brings a physical presence and he can play mean when he has to. The arrival of Samuelsson and Rick Tocchet in 1992 was a turning point for the Penguins that year, and a catalyst in their Stanley Cup victory. He will be counted on to anchor our shut-down pairing and our top penalty killing unit, clear the front of the net and control the play along the boards.

D Garry Galley: An excellent combination of toughness and offensive ability who will be counted on to compliment George Owen at five-on-five and on our first power play unit, and provide some contributions on the power play. An excellent MLD offensive defenceman who thinks the game well and moves the puck well. Garry also brings a good physical dimension to the table, and he's not afraid to drop his gloves and fight when necessary.

D Andrei Markov:
One of the top two-way defencemen in the NHL, Andrei will be counted on to play in all situations, and provide a stabilizing two-way presence alongside Eddie Jovanovski. Andrei sees the ice well, he moves the puck well, and he has a bullet of a shot from the point. All of these traits make him a strong player for our second power play unit. He also takes good care of his own zone and he is rarely caught out of position. He has topped 40 points each of the last four seasons, and he'll get consideration from some voters for this year's Norris Trophy.

D Sylvain Lefebvre:
As pure of a defensive defenceman as there is in the draft. He's not flashy. He's not spectacular. He isn't overly mean or physical. He's just a smart, steady, non-descript defensive defenceman. You might not notice him much during the game, but at the end of the night, he's a plus-2 in 18-21 minutes of play, and he's done it while logging big minutes against the opposition's top forwards. Widely considered one of the best defensive defencemen in the league during his years with Toronto and Colorado. Not a big point producer - he only scored 30 NHL regular season goals - but he's not being asked to put up points. Just play a lot against the opposition's top line. It's a role he's capable of.

D Sylvain Cote:
A solid No. 7 defenceman who can do it all. A former 20-goal scorer. Several seasons above 40 points. He can move the puck. He can play the point on the power play. We can slide him into the top pairing with George Owen, or have him as the stabilizing two-way presence for Ed Jovanovski. Also very good defensively. Can fill in nicely on our second pairing. People forget that he was chosen for Team Canada at the 1996 World Cup. (And before all the injuries set in, too). Just a solid, well-rounded No. 7 defenceman who can fill in no matter what we need from him.

LW Ryan "Captain Canada" Smyth:
A perfect compliment to our front line alongside Brad Richards and Ziggy Palffy, and a perfect addition to our locker room, too. Smyth's strengths aren't a secret: his play along the boards and in the corners, his effort, his work ethic, his character, his ability to forecheck and his great hands in tight that make him such a force in front of the net at five-on-five and on the power play. He takes care of his own zone and can be counted on to kill penalties. His character has never been questioned, either. He has earned the nickname "Captain Canada" because he captained Canada at the World Championships several times, winning gold twice.

LW Dennis Hextall:
An excellent combination of playmaking ability and grit, Dennis is a welcome addition to our second line. We believe he is a perfect compliment for Pierre Larouche. There are very few LWs in the draft with three consecutive 50-assist seasons, and I doubt any of those LWs would have brought the toughness that Dennis brought to the team. He'll set Larouche up for goals, and he'll open up room for Pierre, too. Good in the corners. Good fighter. Good overall team guy. A member of the Royal Family of the Prairie's hockey.

LW Jay Pandolfo:
An excellent, tenacious, reliable checking winger for our third line, alongside George Gee and Robbie Niedermayer. Jay is on our team for one reason: defensive ability. He's not overly physical. He's not skilled offensively. But he is an excellent in his own zone. Whether he's matched up against the top line or the fourth line, he's going to get the job done, and he's going to make it tough for the opposition to score. He's an excellent penalty killer, too. A two-time Stanley Cup champion, a one-time Selke finalist and one of the best defensive wingers of the decade.

LW Johnny Wensink:
A rough-and-tumble GBC/raleh favourite who has been a fixture on the fourth line. He's a Don Cherry favourite, too, so we're in good company. Wensink brings a good combination of toughness and goal-scoring ability to the fourth line. Hit a career high of 28 goals in 1979. Topped 100 penalty minutes every full season in his career. Good defensively, tough as nails, strong in the corners and not afraid at all to drop his mitts and stand up for his teammates. All in all, an ideal and very reliable asset for our fourth line.

C Brad Richards:
One of the top big-game players available in the MLD. He will be counted to log big minutes in all situations: five-on-five, power play, penalty kill, close games. He's skilled enough to play on our first line, but good enough defensively that he can play against an opponent's top line. The 2004 Conn Smythe Trophy winner is close to a point-per-game in the post-season for his career. A penchant for coming up with the big goal, or the big play, at the right time. Three top-10 finishes in assists and a commitment to good, two-way hockey make Brad an ideal player to centre a line with Zigmund Palffy.

C Pierre Larouche:
Arguably the top goal-scoring centre available in the draft. Twice he topped 50 goals, and three times he finished in the top 10 in goals. He's one dimensional, but for this level, it's a heck of a dimension. It helps that he has linemates who will compliment him well: a gritty playmaker in Dennis Hextall and a robust, physical, goal-scoring winger in Keith Crowder. Both players will open up room from Larouche to operate. Crowder will take care of anybody who tries to take liberties on Larouche. He's a dynamic goal-scorer, and at the MLD level, he's a game-breaker, too. Won two Stanley Cups with Montreal in the late 70s.

C George Gee:
One of the best defensive centres in the draft. He can do it all from the third line. He has skill (a top 10 finish in assists, six seasons with at least 35 points in the most defensive days of the O6). He gets involved physically. And he's excellent defensively. Picked up an assist on the Cup-winning goal for the Detroit Red Wings in the 1950 Stanley Cup final. Part of Detroit's Reproduction Line along with Metro Prystai and Gaye Stewart. Just a solid all-round option to centre our third line. Was behind only Charlie Burns on GBC's list for third line centres.

C Mike Richards:
A rising star in the MLD who will be in the ATD within the next two years. Like George Gee, he can bring it all to our bottom two lines, although we think Richards is a better player than Gee. Mike has quickly developed into one of the game's top two-way stars. He thinks and sees the game at another level. He's a physically aggressive centre. He takes very good care of his own zone, and he can play against the opponent's top line. He's not a tremendous skater, but he has a lot of hustle, he never gives up on the play, and he has done well against faster skaters. He's also one of the best young leaders to enter the league in a long time.

RW Zigmund Palffy:
One of the top offensive right-wingers in the draft. Ziggy brings top-notch skating and stick-handling abilities, a powerful shot, and strength on his skates. He's one of the most dangerous goal scorers in the draft. Three times he finished in the top 10 in goals, and four times he was top 10 in points. Not many guys in the MLD can say that. Better than a point-per-game for his career. Again, not many MLD guys with more than 600 games can say that. With Brad Richards feeding him the puck, and Ryan Smyth able to get him the puck from the corners, we're confident that Ziggy will be a top scorer in the MLD. An ideal MLD right winger.

RW Keith Crowder:
One of the few forwards in the MLD who fits the label of a power forward. We think he's the right compliment for our second line. He scores goals. He hits. He fights. In fact, he might be the best fighter on our team. He mucks and grinds in the corners. And he's actually pretty good defensively, good enough to play on our third line if we need him to. Topped 30 goals and 70 points three times. He might not be the most gifted second line right winger in the draft, but he's one of the best fits for our second line.

RW Rob Niedermayer:
There isn't a third line winger in the MLD like him. Nobody who brings Robbie's combination of speed, size and defensive smarts. There aren't many players out there, anywhere, who are that big, and skate that well. He has something of a scorer's touch, which he showcased earlier in his career, but he's on the team to be a defensive forward, and chip in offensively. And he will be able to get some points. Rob's career transformation is really quite impressive; once he arrived in Anaheim, he went from an underachieving scorer to a strong defensive player and penalty killer. It worked, too. He won a Stanley Cup with Anaheim and a World Championship with Team Canada.

RW Doug Brown:
A solid defensive winger who can bring something of an offensive presence to our fourth line. Had seasons of 55 and 42 points, but he's on his team for his work ethic, his defensive ability and his competitiveness, not for his scoring ability. An underrated contributor, an unsung hero, on Detroit's back-to-back Cup-winning teams in 1997 and 1998. Also played well for Detroit in the 1995 playoffs. We can slide him into our third line alongside Gee and Pandolfo, too.
 
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Know Your Enemy

Registered
Jul 18, 2004
6,817
391
North Vancouver
Dayton Ohio Mincer Rays

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Coach: Brian Kilrea
Assistant Coach: Bobby Kromm

Camille Henry - Marc Savard - Bill Goldsworthy (A)
John Ogrodnick - Billy Taylor - Frank "Pud" Glass (C)
Sergei Nemchinov - Peter Zezel - Claude Larose
Curt Fraser - Ron Duguay - Leeroy Goldsworthy
Ron Sutter

Ken Randall (A) - John Van Boxmeer
Darryl Sydor - Mario Marois
Doug Jarrett - Jim Morrison
Adrian Aucoin
Sean Burke
Johnny Mowers

PP1 - Henry - Savard - Goldsworthy - Sydor - Randall
PP2 - Ogrodnick - Taylor - Glass/Duguay - Morrison - Van Boxmeer

PK1 - Glass - Zezel - Jarrett - Marois
PK2 - Nemchinov - Larose - Randall - Van Boxmeer
 
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chaosrevolver

Snubbed Again
Nov 24, 2006
16,876
1,072
Ontario
Labatt Blues
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Head Coach: Mike Babcock
Captain: Dave Langevin
Assistant Captain: Mickey Redmond
Assistant Captain: Dave Christian

Herb Cain - Scott Gomez - Mickey Redmond
Geoff Courtnall - Billy Reay - Dave Christian
Steve Konowalchuk - Samuel Pahlsson - Jack Findlay
Dave Reid - Kelly Kisio - Joe Lamb
Oliver Seibert

Dave Langevin - Normand Rochefort
Wade Redden - Ron Stackhouse
Mike O'Connell - Darius Kasparaitis
Gord Fraser - Jack Campbell

Nikolai Khabibulin
Marty Turco
 
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Hedberg

MLD Glue Guy
Jan 9, 2005
16,399
12
BC, Canada
Tidewater Sharks

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Arena:
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Head Coach: Fr. David Bauer
Assistant Coach: Lloyd Percival
Captain: Jozef Golonka
Assistant Captain: Harry Trihey
Assistant Captain: Kenny Jonsson

Starting Goalie:
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Mike Karakas
Backup Goalie:
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Jose Theodore

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Kenny Jonsson -
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Dan Boyle
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Randy Gregg -
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Steve Chiasson
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Phat Wilson -
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Jack Ruttan
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Marty Burke

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Simon Gagne -
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Doug Weight -
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Corb Denneny
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Sergei Kapustin -
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Harry Trihey -
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Blaine Stoughton
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Sergei Brylin -
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Jozef Golonka -
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Anders Kallur
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Greg Adams -
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Bob Gracie -
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Bill Flett
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Lorne Carr​
 
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Kyle McMahon

Registered User
May 10, 2006
13,301
4,354
Yaroslavl Manglers

Coach: Odie Cleghorn

Rick Nash -- Harry Oliver (C) -- Real Cloutier
Dubbie Kerr -- Skene Ronan -- Bruce Ridpath
Rabbit McVeigh (A) -- Cully Dahlstrom -- Andre Pronovost
Vic Lynn -- Andy Blair -- Willie Plett
Extra: Nick Fotiu


Pekka Rautakallio -- Dmitry Yushkevich (A)
Fred Lake -- Hamby Shore
Mattias Ohlund -- Sheldon Souray
Extra: Mac Colville, Howard McNamara

Olaf Kolzig
Rollie Melanson​
 
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Spitfire11

Registered User
Jan 17, 2003
5,049
242
Ontario
Adirondack Red Wings
Coach: Jimmy Skinner

Smokey Harris - Tom Lysiak(A) - Rick Kehoe
Alex Shibicky - Doc Romnes - Mush March
Percy Galbraith - Gregg Sheppard - Al MacAdam
Danny Grant - Eric Staal - Mud Bruneteau
Extras: Tim Young, Jan Erixon

George McNamara - Dunc Munro(C)
Doug Young(A) - Clem Loughlin
Doug Crossman - Dave Maloney
Jiri Fischer

Pete Peeters
Wilf Cude​
 
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pappyline

Registered User
Jul 3, 2005
4,587
182
Mass/formerly Ont
Newfoundland Fog Devils

Coach: Frank Patrick

Ed Sandford-Mike Rogers-Andy Hebenton
Ron Murphy-Bruce Macgregor-Bill Boucher
Dan Maloney-Charlie Burns(C)-Mark Napier
Danny Lewicki-Dennis Maruk-Pavol Demitra
Robbie Ftorek

Larry Hillman(A)-Kimmo Timonen
Lou Fontinato-Jack Evans(A)
Murray Henderson-Howie Young
Vitezslv Duris-Bob Armstrong

"Sugar" Jim Henry
Giles Meloche
 
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VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,287
6,484
South Korea
Rosters to be updated by tonight midnight eastern

PM me any changes in the rosters listed below​
 
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VanIslander

A 19-year ATDer on HfBoards
Sep 4, 2004
35,287
6,484
South Korea
Sir Montagu Allan division:


Newfoundland Fog Devils

Coach: Frank Patrick

Ed Sandford - Mike Rogers - Andy Hebenton
Ron Murphy - Bruce Macgregor - Bill Boucher
Dan Maloney - Charlie Burns (C) - Mark Napier
Danny Lewicki - Dennis Maruk - Pavol Demitra
Robbie Ftorek

Larry Hillman (A) - Kimmo Timonen
Lou Fontinato - Jack Evans (A)
Murray Henderson - Howie Young
Vitezslv Duris - Bob Armstrong

Jim Henry
Giles Meloche


Regina Capitals

Coach: Eddie Gerard

Steve Payne - Kent Nilsson - Yevgeny Babich (A)
Slava Kozlov - Paul Haynes - Tony Amonte
Brian Rolston - Brian Skrudland (A) - Jimmy Peters
Bob Probert - Syl Apps Jr. - Alf Skinner
Mike Krushelnyski, Cal Gardner

Glen Wesley (C) - Goldie Prodger
Robert Svehla - Hy Buller
Jeff Brown - Robyn Regehr
Yevgeny Paladiev

Miikka Kiprusoff
Ed Johnston


Labatt Blues

Coach: Mike Babcock

Herb Cain - Scott Gomez - Mickey Redmond (A)
Geoff Courtnall - Billy Reay - Dave Christian (A)
Steve Konowalchuk - Samuel Pahlsson - Jack Findlay
Dave Reid - Kelly Kisio - Joe Lamb
Oliver Seibert

Dave Langevin (C) - Normand Rochefort
Wade Redden - Ron Stackhouse
Mike O'Connell - Darius Kasparaitis
Gord Fraser - Jack Campbell

Nikolai Khabibulin
Marty Turco


Melville Millionaires

Coaches: Tom Johnson, Dwight McMillan

Ryan Smyth (A) - Brad Richards - Zigmund Palffy
Dennis Hextall - Pierre Larouche - Keith Crowder
Jay Pandolfo - George Gee - Doug Brown
Johnny Wensink - Mike Richards (A) - Rob Niedermayer
Herb Carnegie

George Owen (C) - Garry Galley
Ed Jovanovski - Andrei Markov
Kjell Samuelsson - Sylvain Lefebvre
Sylvain Cote

Kirk McLean
Evgeni Nabokov


Sault St. Marie Greyhounds

Coach: Randy Carlyle

Anton Stastny - Paul Ronty - Paul MacLean (A)
Ray Whitney - Dave Gagner - Ulf Dahlen
Mark Osborne - Alexander Almetov - Stu Barnes
Eric Vail - Laurie Boschman - Bulldog Fairbairn
Marion Gaborik

Dick Redmond - Jeff Beukeboom
Paul Shmyr (C) - Doug Bodger (A)
Rick Green - Jay Bouwmeester
Curt Giles, Dennis Kearns

Ron Hextall
Bouse Hutton


Peterborough Petes

Coaches: Rudy Pilous, Dick Todd

Tony McKegney (A) - Clint Smith - Marian Stastny
Geoff Sanderson - Barry Pederson - Wally Hergesheimer
Ray Getliffe (C) - Mike Ricci - Leo Labine
Darcy Tucker - Andrew Cassels - Rich Preston
Don Metz

Gilles Marotte - Mike Milbury
Fredrik Olausson - Dave Ellet
Bill Juzda - Jason Smith (A)
Roman Hamirlik

Mike Liut
Frank McCool



Mickey Ion division:



Adirondack Red Wings

Coach: Jimmy Skinner

Smokey Harris - Tom Lysiak (A) - Rick Kehoe
Alex Shibicky - Doc Romnes - Mush March
Percy Galbraith - Gregg Sheppard - Al MacAdam
Danny Grant - Eric Staal - Mud Bruneteau
Tim Young, Jan Erixon

George McNamara - Dunc Munro (C)
Doug Young (A) - Clem Loughlin
Doug Crossman - Dave Maloney
Jiri Fischer

Pete Peeters
Wilf Cude


Yaroslavl Manglers

Coach: Odie Cleghorn

Rick Nash - Harry Oliver (C) - Real Cloutier
Dubbie Kerr - Skene Ronan - Bruce Ridpath
Rabbit McVeigh (A) - Cully Dahlstrom - Andre Pronovost
Vic Lynn - Andy Blair - Willie Plett
Nick Fotiu

Pekka Rautakallio - Dmitry Yushkevich (A)
Fred Lake - Hamby Shore
Mattias Ohlund - Sheldon Souray
Mac Colville

Olaf Kolzig
Rollie Melanson


Tidewater Sharks

Coaches: Fr. David Bauer, Lloyd Percival

Simon Gagne - Doug Weight - Corb Denneny
Sergei Kapustin - Harry Trihey (A) - Blaine Stoughton
Sergei Brylin - Jozef Golonka (C) - Anders Kallur
Greg Adams - Bob Gracie - Bill Flett
Lorne Carr

Kenny Jonsson (A) - Dan Boyle
Randy Gregg - Steve Chiasson
Phat Wilson - Jack Ruttan
Marty Burke

Mike Karakas
Jose Theodore


Dayton Ohio Mincer Rays

Coaches: Brian Kilrea, Bobby Kromm

Camille Henry - Marc Savard - Bill Goldsworthy (A)
John Ogrodnick - Billy Taylor - Frank "Pud" Glass (C)
Sergei Nemchinov - Peter Zezel - Claude Larose
Curt Fraser - Ron Duguay - Leeroy Goldsworthy
Ron Sutter

Ken Randall (A) - John Van Boxmeer
Darryl Sydor - Mario Marois
Doug Jarrett - Jim Morrison
Adrian Aucoin

Sean Burke
Johnny Mowers


New York Americans

Coaches: Frank Boucher, Claude Ruel

Red Hamill (A) - Bill Thoms - Milan Hejduk
Nikolai Drozdetsky - Vyacheslav Anisin - Viktor Shalimov
Alex Tanguay - Vladimir Zabrodsky - Jaroslav Jirik
Dave Trottier - Dutch Reibel - Johnny Gagnon
Jack Marks

Joe Jerwa - Jack Laviolette (C)
Dave Babych - Yuri Fedorov (A)
Al Arbour - Bryan McCabe
Udo Kiessling

Viktor Konovalenko
Henrik Lundqvist


Oxford Dark Blues

Coach: Viktor Tikhonov

Stephane Richer - Josef Malecek - Adam Deadmarsh
Jimmy Gardner - Moose Watson - Tom Hooper
Gaetan Duchesne - Jason Arnott - Rejean Houle
Martin Gelinas - Saku Koivu (A) - Petr Sykora
Viktor Zhluktov, Konstantin Loktev

Dickie Boon (C) - Oldrich Machac
Billy Coutu - Rick Ley (A)
Zin Bilyaletdinov - Dave Lewis
Jyrki Lumme

John Ross Roach
Don Edwards​
 
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