Point21
Registered User
- Oct 23, 2018
- 9,134
- 7,155
This wifi password isn't strong enough, IMO.He shall now be known as WiFi
Lol here's hoping he's improved since that last training campThis wifi password isn't strong enough, IMO.
As far as Polish names go, this is probably one of the easiest you'll ever come across. If this causes you trouble you're lucky the Poles have never really gotten into the NHL.He shall now be known as WiFi
Hahahaha. You aren't kidding. Polish as a language looks like someone smashed their head into a keyboard and decided "those are words." The names are no exception. "Lady Sunny" (as I often called her) is from a little town on Long Island that might as well be Warsaw. She told me she was Polish on her dad's side and I'm like *gulp*As far as Polish names go, this is probably one of the easiest you'll ever come across. If this causes you trouble you're lucky the Poles have never really gotten into the NHL.
They probably wouldn't have pulled the trigger if he didn't. I would imagine there was a conversation before he went back to Kelowna on things we wanted to see over the course of the season, and I would assume they now feel good about what they've seen to give him a contract offer.Lol here's hoping he's improved since that last training camp
Just don’t call it a dragon!What the heck kind of cryptic creature is that Rockets logo supposed to be? And why is it the logo of a team called Rockets?
Ha. Does it upset the locals or something? That has got to be the goofiest dragon I've ever seen.Just don’t call it a dragon!
from wikipedia:Ha. Does it upset the locals or something? That has got to be the goofiest dragon I've ever seen.
Established in 1991, the team began as the Tacoma Rockets, previously playing in Tacoma, Washington, and playing their home games at the Tacoma Dome. Prior to the 1995–96 season, the team relocated to Kelowna, playing their home games at the city's Memorial Arena. Following the 1998–99 season, they moved into their then-new home arena, Prospera Place. The team's logo pays tribute to the famed Ogopogo monster, of the Okanagan Lake.
In Canadian folklore, the Ogopogo is a lake monster said to inhabit Okanagan Lake in British Columbia, Canada. Some scholars have charted the entity's development from First Nations folklore and widespread water monster folklore motifs. The Ogopogo now plays a role in the commercial symbolism and media representation of the region.