In Antwort auf: Ich auch und dann zeig ich ma ner Lawinentucke wo der Haken hängt
muhahah alper
wie willst das denn machen he he he ____________________________________________ UUUUUUIIIIIIII -------------------------------------------- Forum am 07.08.2002 Bei den Frankfurt Lions soll es in der nächsten Saison der Deutschen Eishockeyliga (DEL) wieder aufwärts gehen. \"Wir wollen endlich wieder mal einen Playoff-Platz erobern und unter die besten acht Teams kommen\", sagte Clubeigner Gerd Schröder.
man bedenke von WEM du mal ein EA Games gekauft hast ... und mein lieber ... ich FREUE MICH schon sehr auf 2004 ... und darauf, dir dein SKARK´s hintern zu versohlen! ich glaub ich spinne .... den federhandschuh habe ich AUFGEHOBEN! und den von UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUIIIIUIUIUUUUUUU gleich mit!
ende september .. ihr zwei ... und die ergebnisse werden in einem thread VERÖFFENTLICHT! nur EINE frage habe noch dazu ... wir haben das immer mit computer spielt goalie gegeneinander gespielt ... solltet ihr den auch immer manuell steuern (und das schon seit ein paar versionen) dann hättet ihr vorteile, ich plädiere für GOALIE = EA KI! und KEINE ---> HOTSPOTS !!!
@ prob
das schafft deine kiste noch! wenn net ... schau nach was dein board verträgt und rüste nach! denn ... die preise für prozessor sind immernoch UNTEN!
@ holy
WAS´N ... "HITZ" ???? oder versteh ich das nur net richtig?
In Antwort auf: für den Cube z.B., oder für die X-Box
Was hat DAS denn mit "hirn weggetradet" zu tun???
DAS ist doch KINNERSPILLZEUSCH !!! SOWAS muss MANN doch net kenne .. so n QUATSCH!
spass beiseite .. ich kenn mich mit konsolen sachen überhaupt net aus ... wenn zogge .. dann uff m PC! und da ich auch net VIDEO OUT grafik karte hab, kann ich auch richtig uffm fernseher FEUERN !!!
In Antwort auf: nur EINE frage habe noch dazu ... wir haben das immer mit computer spielt goalie gegeneinander gespielt
was bist du denn fuer ne pussy?
bruestest dich hier mit deiner spielkunst,und kannst net mal deinen goalie selbst steuern??? na gut...dann lassen wir mal den comp deinetwegen den goalie steuern. aber moment.....wer sagt eigentlich,das ich gegen dich spielen will? hast du dir das überhaupt verdient...??? zieh mal ne nummer und stell dich hinten an
ich kann doch net gegen jeden zocken,der ne grosse klappe hat,um dann wieder tempos zu verteilen...weil sie mir was von ner unfairen niederlage vorflennen spiel erstmal gegen den comp..wenn du gegen den gewonnen hast...sagen wir mal..so 3 oder 4 mal....dann werde ich deinen antrag wohlwollend bearbeiten ____________________________________________ UUUUUUIIIIIIII -------------------------------------------- Forum am 07.08.2002 Bei den Frankfurt Lions soll es in der nächsten Saison der Deutschen Eishockeyliga (DEL) wieder aufwärts gehen. \"Wir wollen endlich wieder mal einen Playoff-Platz erobern und unter die besten acht Teams kommen\", sagte Clubeigner Gerd Schröder.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The cash-strapped Pittsburgh Penguins signed largely unproven goaltender Sebastien Caron on Friday to a four-year deal worth a guaranteed $3.2 million.
Caron, 23, made the NHL all-rookie team last season with a 7-14-2 record and 2.64 goals-against average in 24 appearances, even though the Penguins finished with the league's second-worst record.
The deal runs through the 2006-07 season and offers one of the longest contracts in the league to a player who had no NHL experience before being called up in January.
The Penguins also made the move despite making goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury the No. 1 pick in the June draft. The Penguins have not ruled out Fleury making the team this season.
The signing would seem to signal the Penguins have no plans to bring back Johan Hedberg, their primary starter since the 2000-01 season, after this season. Hedberg is in the final year of his contract.
Caron started 23 of the Penguins' final 38 games last season.
Caron's contract will pay him $650,000, $750,000, $850,000 and $950,000 the next four seasons. He had a two-way contract last season that would have been worth $625,000 if he played the entire season with Pittsburgh, but paid him much less while in the minors.
The Penguins also signed goaltender Martin Brochu, who has spent most of his career in the AHL. He played six games with the Vancouver Canucks during the 2001-02 season.
nhl.com
Méschda Hoschbess holy a.k.a. Rosebud ...und nichts ist wie es scheint!!
Brawls. Blood. Mayhem. Philly style. You want it - we got it!
ECHL players go on strike nearly two months before season
Players in the East Coast Hockey League declared an offseason strike Friday, citing a lack of progress in negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement.
The Professional Hockey Players' Association announced the action in a faxed statement.
"The league's latest proposal is silent on issues the league understands must be part of a finalized agreement," said Larry Landon, the PHPA's executive director.
The decision to strike was made after a conference call Wednesday between the players' association and player representatives.
ECHL commissioner Brian McKenna was informed of the strike following the call, but expects that a deal will be struck, and the season will open on time Oct. 17.
"It's one of the tools at their disposal," McKenna said. "They're just trying to turn up the heat to get a deal done.
"They're on strike, but they're not due to show up for 60 days," McKenna said.
Training camps are due to open Oct. 3.
Landon said it's premature to say the scheduled opening of the season is in jeopardy, but he is concerned by what he called a "business-as-usual" attitude by some in the ECHL.
"The resolve of the players is a lot more serious an issue than the weight it's been given," Landon said.
The time issue is not just a matter of reaching an agreement, but the subsequent contract language once a tentative deal has been struck.
"We look at it that the clock is ticking," Landon said.
The PHPA is advising players in the 27-team developmental league not to negotiate or sign contracts or tryout agreements and to cease all relations with clubs.
"If the league wishes, as they continuously maintain, to become the pre-eminent AA professional hockey league, it should step up and prove this to its players -- the guys on the ice that would make it the pre-eminent AA league -- by providing them with adequate benefits, including year-round health insurance," Landon said.
McKenna said the ECHL delivered a proposal on Aug. 14. Landon hopes to deliver a counterproposal by Monday.
McKenna wasn't surprised a strike was called now, but could only speculate why it was done so far in advance of the season.
"I think it's probably to focus more attention. It doesn't change our position," McKenna said. "We've been committed to getting a deal done and plan to play hockey on schedule in October."
The PHPA has told players not to report to team cities that stretch from Trenton, N.J., to Baton Rouge, La., and out to the Midwest. Players are also advised to delay immigration paperwork requested by the clubs, and to not make any appearances on behalf of teams.
"We feel this action ensures less confusion in the event we are able to come to an agreement with the league," Landon said. "Players currently being signed are moving forward based on false promises, as we are uncertain as to what a finalized ECHL standard playing contract or salary structure will encompass.
"The reason we had to trigger it is that players have signed and clubs have contracts in the drawer. As a union we have to protect those players."
This could be a precursor for events a year from now when the NHL's collective bargaining agreement will expire. There has been talk for quite some time the NHL might be headed toward a lengthy work stoppage if a new agreement isn't forged in time for the 2004-05 season.
nhl.com
Méschda Hoschbess holy a.k.a. Rosebud ...und nichts ist wie es scheint!!
Brawls. Blood. Mayhem. Philly style. You want it - we got it!
Blues look forward to healthy Pronger By Shawn P. Roarke | NHL.com | August 22, 2003
There was very little turnover in St. Louis this summer, but the Blues should still be a markedly improved team come October.
All-everything defenseman Chris Pronger missed almost all of last season -- playing in just five regular-season games -- while recuperating from surgeries on both his knee and his wrist. Yet, the Blues still challenged for the West's top spot for a good portion of the season.
This time around, Pronger is healthy and ready to return to his dominating ways. Once again, he will be eating up huge chunks of ice time, often deployed against the opposition's top threat, and provide an offensive boost from the blue line.
Plus, he joins an even better blue line than the one he left last season. Pronger's injury allowed Barret Jackman to develop faster than anyone envisioned. Amazingly, Jackman jumped right into Pronger's place and responded with a Rookie of the Year campaign. This year, he should be even more polished and composed.
Pronger's return should also help address the team's nasty penchant for giving up careless goals. Last season the team scored 253 goals, the fourth best total in the League, but did not reap the benefits of that offensive production because the squad also let up an uncharacteristically high 222 goals -- ranking 16th in the League in that telling stat.
Blues management seems content, at least early on, to see how the return of Pronger impacts the always-contending club.
The only addition GM Larry Pleau engineered was the addition of center Mike Danton, acquiring the plucky pivot from the New Jersey Devils during the 2003 NHL Entry Draft in Nashville.
Danton, who wore out his welcome in New Jersey, proved in limited NHL action that he can be the grating, antagonistic player that comes in handy for third- and fourth-line duties. He should be able to nicely fill the role played by forward Tyson Nash last season.
Nash, a left wing, was traded to the Phoenix Coyotes during the summer. He had six goals, three assists and 114 penalty minutes last season for the Blues.
St. Louis also said goodbye to forward Valeri Bure, who rejoined the Florida Panthers after being obtained from that club at the trade deadline. Forward Cory Stillman was also traded at the NHL Entry Draft, shipped to Tampa Bay for a second-round draft pick.
The Blues also shook up their goaltending, allowing backup Fred Brathwaite to walk away as a free agent. Brathwaite, pressed into action when starter Brent Johnson suffered an injury, went 12-9-4 with a 2.75 goals-against average. He became excess to needs after the Blues obtained Chris Osgood at the trade deadline.
Méschda Hoschbess holy a.k.a. Rosebud ...und nichts ist wie es scheint!!
Brawls. Blood. Mayhem. Philly style. You want it - we got it!
24.08. Die New York Rangers haben Verteidiger John Jakopin verpflichtet. + + + Die US Gesundheitsbehörde untersucht die Marktpraktiken von Biovail, einem Unternehmen des Konzerns, welches Eugene Melnyk gehört. Melnyk ist der neue besitzer der Ottawa Senators. Biovail hat offenbar US Ärzten, die ihren Patienten Cardizem LA, ein Herzmittel der Firma Bivail, verordnen, 1000 $ pro Patient gezahlt. Diese Art von Prämien verstoßen gegen das Ethikgesetz. Nach Melnyk's Aussage sind solche Zahlungen völlig normal und legitim. Er betonte auch, dass diese Zahlungen nur erfolgten, wenn es eine vollständige Dokumentation zur Verabreichung des Medikaments gab. + + +
23.08. Boston Bruins Besitzer Jeremy Jacobs sprach sich auf der Vollversammlung aller Teambesitzer nochmals für einen Salary Cap aus. Er betonte, eine Budgetbegrenzung sei unerlässlich für das Überleben der Liga. Weiterhin betonte er, die Bruins seien finanziell gesund, machen aber keine großen Gewinne. Nur aufgrund der Tatsache, dass man immer wieder wichtige Spieler ziehen lässt, sei man nicht im roten Bereich. Commisioner Gary Bettman bestätigte in seinem Statement dazu, dass er auf jeden Fall einen Salary Cap will. Die NHLPA weigert sich nach wie vor strikt einen Salary Cap einrichten zu lassen. Seit dem letzten Streik in der Saison 1994/1995 mussten 3 Teams umziehen und 3 weitere Teams Insolvenz anmelden. Für die NHLPA ist aber nur schlechte Vereinsführung daran schuld und nicht überhöhte Gehälter. Für Jacobs und Bettman steht aber fest, dass es einen Salary Cap gegeb wird. + + + Die Pittsburgh Penguins haben Torhüter Sebastien Caron für weitere 4 Jahre unter Vertrag genommen. Caron wird dabei 3,2 Mio $ verdienen. + + + Phoenix' Torhüter Jean-Marc Pelletier, der als potentieller Ersatz für Sean Burke geholt wurde, musste an der Leiste operert werden und wird nicht am Traningscamp teilnehmen können. + + + Verteidiger Bryan McCabe hat einen Ein-Jahres Vertrag in Toronto unterzeichnet. + + + Toronto's Verteidiger Karel Pilar wird am Traingscam in Schweden aus medizinischen Gründen nicht teilnehmen können. Er hatte bereits in der letzten Saison Herzprobleme, die ihn einen großen teil der Saison verpassen ließen. + + + Verteidiger Dave Tanabe hat einen neuen Vertrag in Phoenix unterzeichnet. + + +
22.08. Die Edmonton Oilers haben Stürmer Fernando Pisani und Verteidiger Dan Smith verpflichtet. + + + Die Pittsburgh Penguins haben Torhüter Andy Chiodo unter Vertrag genommen. + + +
21.08. Curtis Joseph musste sich einer Knöcheloperation unterziehen. Dabei wurde ein Stück Knochen aus dem Gewebe entfernt. Der Goalie wird vermutlich mindestens 6 Wochen pausieren müssen. + + + Die Washington Capitals haben den Vertrag mit Torhüter Rastislav Stana verlängert. Zudem verpflichteten sie Center Francois Methot. + + + Verteidiger Dan Boyle hat seinen Vertrag mit Tampa Bay verlängert. + + + Dany Heatley wird auf dem Cover für NHL 2004, des neuen Spiels aus der Serie von Electronic Sports, sein. + + + Rangers' Verteidiger Darius Kasparaitis wurde erfolgreich am Knie operiert und braucht etwa 2 Wochen Rehabilitationsmaßnahmen. + + + Die Florida Panthers haben Verteidiger Todd Gill verpflichtet. + + +
20.08. Mario Lemieux hat seine ersten Trainingseinheiten auf dem Eis absolviert. nach eigenen Aussagen fühlt er sich fit und freut sich auf die neue Saison. + + + Die Florida Panthers haben Mike Van Ryn und Jeff Paul verpflichtet. Beide Verteidiger waren Free Agents. + + + Der Senator von Minnesota will die die Eishalle in St. Cloud, Minnesota in Herb Brooks Arena umbennen lassen. Brooks wurde in Minnesota geboren und hatte durch seine Erfolge den Staat zum Eishockey Staat gemacht. Brooks war der Trainer der US Olympiamannschaft von 1980, die mit dem sensationellen Sieg über Russland das "Miracle on ice" vollbrachte. Brooks trainierte auch die New York Rangers, Pittsburgh Penguins, Minnesota North Stars und New Jersey Devils in der NHL. Er kam vergangenen Montag bei einem Autounfall ums Leben. + + +
19.08. Die New York Rangers haben sich mit Stürmer Anson Carter vor dem Termin beim Schiedsgericht auf einen neuen Zwei-Jahres Vertrag geeinigt. Carter wird 2,8 Mio $ plus Bonus pro Saison verdienen. + + + Die San Jose Sharks haben Stürmer Milan Michalek verpflichtet. + + + Die Vancouver Canucks haben Stürmer Ryan Kesler verpflichtet. + + + Die Dallas Stars haben Torhüter Dan Ellis unter Vertrag genommen. + + + http://www.nhl-tribute.de/index2.html
In Antwort auf: Die New York Rangers haben Verteidiger John Jakopin verpflichtet
LOOL. Da gehört er hin Frag mich sowieso, wieso der Kerl nit schon in der ECHL oder so gelandet ist, selten sone Gumpe von Verteidiger gesehen. Der würds nimma in der DEL zu was bringen
Friday, August 22, 2003 Updated: August 23, 2:39 PM ET
Associated Press
BOSTON -- Boston Bruins owner Jeremy Jacobs, breaking years of silence for the sake of a charity fund-raiser, vowed Friday that the NHL will have a salary cap in its next collective bargaining agreement.
"The commissioner is dedicated to cost-certainty when it comes to the labor agreement," Jacobs said at a "Breakfast with the Bosses" featuring Boston's four professional sports owners. "There will be cost-certainty."
Owners sought a salary cap in the last negotiations before an agreement was reached without one, ending the lockout that wiped out almost half of the 1994-95 regular season. Since then, three teams have moved and three others have declared bankruptcy, though in at least two cases the financial problems went far beyond salary costs.
The labor contract expires after next season, and NHL commissioner Gary Bettman has said he wants cost certainty in the next one. Officials from the NHL Players Association could not be reached for comment, but the union has always maintained that the market should set salaries.
A resident of Buffalo, N.Y., Jacobs is so rarely seen or heard from publicly in Boston that his appearance at the breakfast was itself news. Although he is said to attend many Bruins games, he sits in a luxury box and rarely, if ever, mingles among the fans; his last media interview is believed to have been more than three years ago.
Friday's event was broadcast on television and radio as part of the WEEI-AM radiothon to raise money for the Jimmy Fund, which serves children with cancer. The event raised more than $550,000 by the evening.
Jacobs was quickly asked about the perception that he cares more about milking money from the team than winning.
"Boston makes money, and it will continue to make money. When I say it makes money, it doesn't lose a lot, is a better way to put it," Jacobs said during a panel discussion with Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck, Red Sox owner John Henry and Patriots owner Bob Kraft.
"We've got teams that are losing 20 or 30 million dollars a year. These guys are close to going out of business. If we don't have a healthy league, we don't have a healthy team. So it's up to guys like us, in Boston, who have it good, to be able to help bootstrap up this entire league."
But he denied he is apathetic about the team, saying that he gets so involved in watching the Bruins play that his ankles hurt after the game, as if he skated a regular shift.
"I've been there, I've seen it," Grousbeck said. "He's a major fan."
Jacobs also denied that he has ordered Bruins management to run the team on the cheap.
"All you have to do is live in the city of Buffalo," which was in danger of losing the Sabres after they went bankrupt, Jacobs said. "You just have to be there with the financial uncertainty that existed about a franchise, and had a great following. And I said, 'This can't happen here.' "
Despite being in one of the NHL's healthy markets, the Bruins have routinely let their best players leave for free agency, or traded them away, rather than sign them for what they consider to be inflated market rates.
The Bruins traded future Hall of Famer Ray Bourque to Colorado so he could have a chance to win a Stanley Cup before he retired.
"Giving him the opportunity to raise that Cup was meaningful to us. That he did it in Colorado was hurtful," Jacobs said. "I have to say I'm very sad to see it. I wish we could have done it in Boston."
Fans wish the Bruins would have built a champion around Bourque in his two decades with the team. But Jacobs said he hasn't hesitated to spend money.
"Our payroll and New Jersey's are almost exactly the same. We just didn't spend it the same," he said. "So it's not a payroll-driven issue, it's a management issue. It will be very interesting when there is a cap and we all have to worry about the way we manage our teams. We'll see how good my management is." http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?id=1601440