@Flames de Calgary

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#nhl #hockey #highlights #nhlnews Les faits saillants de la LNH de Jaromir Jagr Calgary Flames sont un moment inoubliable dont nous DEVONS discuter. Nouvelles de la LNH faits saillants du hockey 2023 nouvelles et rumeurs échangent aujourd’hui les flammes de Calgary Jaromir Jagr interview Kladno mais c’était spécial. Il aurait pu choisir les Oilers d’Edmonton les Maple Leafs de Toronto les Canadiens de Vancouver les Canucks de Vancouver, mais pour une raison quelconque, il ne l’a pas fait. Jaromir Jagr 2023 met en évidence par rapport à son temps avec les panthères de la Floride, les rangers de New York, les pingouins de Pittsburgh est inégalé mais toujours remarquable. Les rumeurs commerciales de la LNH aujourd’hui sur l’agence libre sont toujours en cours, après le repêchage de la LNH 2023, les séries éliminatoires de la LNH 2023 et toutes les étoiles, nous approchons de la saison prochaine. De plus, nous avons BESOIN de la bande-annonce de nhl 24 car elle sort bientôt. Jaromir Jagr met en lumière la LNH 2023

21 Comments

  1. The only person to win the art Ross in a 21 year stretch who's number wasn't 99 or 66.

  2. I liked when he crashed the interview with the travelling Jagrs.

    "I heard they needed another guy."

  3. I remember in his time in new york him and shanahan somehow ending up on a 2 on 0 and the annoucer goin well here comes 1300 goals flying at ya welcome to the show kid cant remember who the goalie was

  4. I know you probably get this a lot kid but I can tell that if you keep doing what you're doing you'll have hundreds of thousands of subscribers / followers, then millions – at which point your options will become limitless in life. You have something very special about you when you talk about sports. Keep on keeping on. Best of luck to you now as well as later on in life.

  5. Honestly, as a Panthers fan who died a little when they let him walk, I was just as shocked that he chose Calgary as his next (and possibly final) destination. I had the pleasure of intricately watching his strengths and weaknesses while he was in Florida and saw that basically, as long as his linemates could help gain the zone, then he could compete better than most. His biggest weakness was the neutral zone stretch because of a lack of speed on his part. However, even at that, he was better than half of the active players in the league because he could read the play like a psychic and was excellent with his defensive stick work. If memory serves me correctly, his plus/minus was pretty good those last few seasons in Florida. I think the only reason Florida crapped him out was because they were just beginning that monumental, negative self destruct sequence in which they also taxied Gerrard Gallant and massacred team culture. They certainly didn't let him go because he was a liability. So, what Jagr needed was a good fit. A team that had a good neutral zone game, a linemate that could position themself in scoring locations and await Jagr's pass. Jagr needed to be paired with a goal scorer and really strike up a dynamic duo sort of bond because yes, he was a bit slow but really, he almost untouchable and guaranteed to create a scoring opportunity if given the right linemate(s). He'd patrol around the offensive zone like a great white shark, circling and circling and either take the shot or feather a pass to a player waiting for a golden attempt. What did Calgary do? They let him down. That's my memory. They shīt the bed. I remember Jagr being given limited ice time and being shuttled up and down the third and fourth lines – very rarely being given time with the top six. It was aggravating as when he was finally given a shit with someone like Gaudreau, he'd have some great shifts. Unfortunately, that type of pairing just didn't fit with Calgary's broader game plan and they would immediately go back to stuffing him with the occasional shift with the bottom six. I honestly thought I could see the fire die within Jagr, watching Calgary abuse a mega talent like they did, which is ironic for a team called the Flames (to snuff his fire). It seemed to me that he got in a bad place mentally and then along with the negative thinking, he attracted the injury big. That combo dug him deeper down into the Flames' pit of despair and it sort of became apparent, if I read through the lines, that he wanted out of Calgary but that there were no takers because each team had it's mid-season chemistry going and just weren't in a place to re-jig their second line (or even first line) to accomodate Jagr, despite his existing top tier talent. Actually, it was my understanding that THERE WERE a few teams interested BUT that they had asked Jagr to wait until the trade deadline so they could make damn good and sure they needed his assistance. Jagr saw an entire season slipping away and at his age panicked and packed his bags for Europe. Not only did he not want to waste a season at such a late stage in his career, his body was also at a use-it-or-lose-it level and he needed to get things in motion, quickly. And with that we lost one of the greatest talents the game has ever seen. My guess is that of Calgary didn't bumble that situation and abuse their privilege, that we could have gotten another few seasons out of 68. He really was hell bent to play until he was 50 years old. But Calgary blew it, like they do so many things. The funny and tragic thing, in hindsight, is what difference did it make? Calgary wasn't anything special that season or the following. What was so precious about their playstyle that they couldn't accomodate Jaromir Jagr and his unique style of playing. The answer is obvious. Nothing. They just mismanaged and mis-coached the situation, which is a hallmark of that club… and that… that is the legacy they left behind. The stain on Jagr's career.

  6. I heard a pretty interesting rumour about Jagr while I was playing in Europe. Apparently, after each game he would have a case of beer delivered to the locker room. All the other guys knew it was jag’s and wouldn’t dare touch it! And yes he would down it all solo as well.

  7. I'm as die-hard an Oilers fan as they come, but I'm also a Jagr fan. So I can safely say this: Jagr is the only reason I ever owned any Flames merch. Bought a Flames Jagr t-shirt from a SportChek in Calgary not long after he went back to Kladno. Occasionally wore it on light, private days for a couple years, and then gave it to a former co-worker of mine who is an actual Flames fan, so he could frame it and put it on his wall.

  8. Off topic, I just saw Jagr at Resorts World. I called his name and he waved. Guys a Legend.

  9. I felt the same way when Gretzky played for the St Louis Blues for 15 minutes, just before heading to the Rangers. It was such a short stint, I don't think the sweater he wore even got sweaty.

  10. My Jagr story pretty much is a fever dream. I was working as a church missionary in Texas at the time and I caught wind of it after scrolling through Flames news on Google (I wasn’t allowed to do that). I was like “WHAT” and he had already played 6 games and was injured. I never really got to live the Jagr days. It’s freakin nuts this happeend

  11. I’m pretty sure (may be wrong going off memory) but he didn’t have a contract to start that season, even after those 2 years in flo Rida like you said. So I think for me I was more surprised even at his age he didn’t have a contract I though for sure he was gonna try for 2k

  12. I just saw it as a dead end from the beginning. They weren't very good that year and I couldn't see what Jagr could bring that would make them any better. I guess the only thing you could say about it was that it was the only time Jagr played for a Canadian team. You'd of thought it would have been another team, like Montreal. Also, it wouldn't have been any better if they brought Iginla back.

  13. Everyone always talks about Bennett & Gaudreau playing with Jagr, but why does no one mention Mark Jankowski in the same sentence? Kid’s had a brilliant career. And it really shows that he learned a lot from the scant games he got to play with The Living Legend. My favourite memory is that you can still see brief glimpses of Jagr’s skating and puck-handling whenever I catch a glimpse of Jankowski on the ice.

    Bennett & Gaudreau both have personalities that are wholly their own. But Jankowski’s contribution to the 17-18 Flames tends to be overlooked, and it’s something I’ve never really understood.

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