Cyril Sneer Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 I must be going crazy because I didn't find a dam thing offensive about this article. I think it's just cool to hate Botchford on CDC. I thought it was a decent read. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BedBeats™2.0 Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 ARRRRRRRGGGGGHHHHHHHH!!! Such shoddy work from him, AGAIN. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
amitriptyline Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Yeah the constant hate fest on Botchford is getting a little tiresome. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
5Fivehole0 Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 I must be going crazy because I didn't find a dam thing offensive about this article. I think it's just cool to hate Botchford on CDC. I thought it was a decent read. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Herberts Vasiljevs Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Again, like the majority of Botchford's articles, nothing new. Always writing "articles" that are really just the same as lengthy topics posted by any CDC user. His opinion means nothing more than anyone else on this board. @amitriptyline: says no one ever... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alex Burrows 14 Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 I think cdc should form a posse, go to luongos house and throw rocks at it Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alex Burrows 14 Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 I must be going crazy because I didn't find a dam thing offensive about this article. I think it's just cool to hate Botchford on CDC. I thought it was a decent read. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canuck or Die Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Umm, yeah, it actually does matter if he's happy. If he isn't happy, why would he be motivated? They aren't necessarily separate from each other. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Drouin Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 I agree. If he's motivated, thats all that matters. I bet he will be motivated consider the Olympics are this year. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Absent Canuck Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Lui is a professional. He will be plenty motivated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Baggins Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Umm, yeah, it actually does matter if he's happy. If he isn't happy, why would he be motivated? They aren't necessarily separate from each other. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Absent Canuck Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 If he isn't happy he'll want to use his out clause at the end of the season. He has to perform well enough for another team to be willing to take on his behemoth contract. There's your motivation. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cyril Sneer Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 What exactly is his out clause? Do the canucks have to trade the guy ? How does it work? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hudson bay rules Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 It's kinda pointless actually, it doesn't really change anything, it basically means he has a window in which he can request a trade to a list of 5 teams. It really isn't any different then what happend over the past year anyway, it's blown out of proportion IMO. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timberz21 Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Best case scenario... Luongo win gold again as the starting goaltender for Canada, then a few months later Luongo win a Cup as the starting goaltender for Vancouver, then, other teams will come in begging to acquire Luongo and Vancouver will pry another top 10 pick in the 2014 entry draft or even better. lol a man can dream. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPrince Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Did Luongo EVER say that he mentally left the Canucks? No matter what Gillis promised or said, at the end of the day Luongo was always a Canuck, and what kind of professional mentally leaves a team he plays for? Sure the Schneider trade was a shock but surprising trades happen all the time, plus, after all he's been through, I'm sure the thought "what if I never get traded?" crossed Luongo's mind at one point. Luongo should have been prepared for the unexpected, and I believe he was. The media is getting a good story by starting this whole Luongo being mentally/emotionally gone nonsense, but I refuse to believe anything till I hear it from the mouth of Roberto Luongo. I guess being happy is different from being motivated, and Luongo is "burning" for a Stanley Cup, yet he was willing to play for the Panthers? Anyway, GO LUUUUUUUUUU!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TimberWolf Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Well. Now Luongo has to go beyond twitter to earn the "classy" moniker he's been gifted. Classy people don't tank or sulk. Not that I am predicting Lu will do either. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
literaphile Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Tons of hate about this Botchford article, but nobody posting the hate actually gives any reason. It's just cool to hate Botchford. I didn't find anything offensive or hate-worthy here... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lolwut? Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 Tons of hate about this Botchford article, but nobody posting the hate actually gives any reason. It's just cool to hate Botchford. I didn't find anything offensive or hate-worthy here... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Me_ Posted August 21, 2013 Share Posted August 21, 2013 http://www.theprovince.com/touch/story.html?id=8789961 VANCOUVER — It’s mid-August, and the most-asked question in the city this summer still sits there, without an answer. Is Roberto Luongo happy? Even Canucks assistant GM Laurence Gilman tripped over it in an otherwise silky smooth co-hosting gig Wednesday on TEAM 1040’s midday show. "I’m not sure what the definition of happiness is, even when one is ecstatic," Gilman said on air. But, in defence of Gilman, how the heck would he know? Also, who cares? Is there any correlation between happiness and greatness? Luongo oozes ambition. He burns for a Stanley Cup. And another Olympic gold medal. He has long been motivated by the chips he hinges to his shoulders, not his level of happiness. When he got to the Florida Panthers in 2000, it was about erasing a caveat. Luongo loathed the label he was one of the game’s best "young" goalies. When he got to Vancouver in 2006, it was about proving he could get a team to the postseason, and then win a playoff game. Heading into this season, he has more motivational tools lying around this city than there are blades of burnt grass. Start with the upcoming Olympics in Russia, and splice in the stunning lack of credit he got for his role as the starting goalie on Team Canada’s 2010 gold-medal winner. Move to last year, which Luongo stamped a wasted season, a year of his prime he basically lost because he was cast as the backup. He won’t forget that he was passed over for an injured Cory Schneider for starts in the playoffs. He could even dovetail in the urban legend that no teams wanted him when the Canucks were trying desperately to trade him. But, of course, that last part is not true. Teams did want Luongo. There were at least two cities he wasn’t willing to consider. And then there was Toronto. There were two times the Canucks feel they could have done a deal with the Maple Leafs. One was at the 2012 NHL Entry Draft. The other was just before the lockout. In both instances, Luongo let the Canucks know he wasn’t interested in going to Hogtown and those deals died on the vine. So, some of the responsibility for what happened in the end will always rest with Luongo, and, by extension, his recently replaced agent, Gilles Lupien. Maybe he’s not happy about what went down, but does it matter if it now means Luongo won’t come to Canucks training camp bouncing like a golden retriever, tongue wagging and reciting his favourite scenes from Goonies? Well, actually, maybe it does matter. The Canucks are counting on getting an inspired Luongo this fall, and they should get it. But what happens next summer? Luongo has a limited out-clause written into his contract which he can trigger after the season. Maybe by then other teams will realize there is an easy loophole allowing them to get around the "cap recapture" penalty that haunts his contract. Find an ailment when he wants to retire and put him on the long-term injury list for the final years of his deal. If he’s on LTI, there will be no cap penalty. Suddenly that poison pill isn’t quite so poisonous. Luongo’s out-clause allows him to formally demand a trade next summer. He can pick five destinations, and it would be on the Canucks to try once more to deal him. And round and round we would go. That’s not a sequence the Canucks are keen to repeat, which is part of the reason they dispatched both Gilman and GM Mike Gillis to Florida in July to explain their side of things. The Canucks’ executives covered the timeline from the moment Luongo asked for a trade. They also explained their hands were tied in the end because ownership told them a buyout was a non-starter. They pushed the idea this can be the fresh start Luongo was seeking, right here in Vancouver with its new head coach. "We both have a good rapport with Luongo," Gilman said. "I think it went as well as it could have gone. "I understand where he’s coming from. He requested a trade after the 2012 season. He anticipated he was going to be traded. "I don’t think he ever contemplated that Cory (Schneider) would be traded. Neither did Cory for that matter. "I think it was a rather shocking turn of events for him and that’s the biggest emotion he experienced." After the July meeting, Luongo told people privately it didn’t change much. He still wanted his fresh start in a new town, though he understood he didn’t have leverage to make it happen. Will he feel the same way next summer? I guess that depends on how happy he is. Keep smiling, Torts. Ill keep smilling,when you do something that pisses off Torts. Release the dog Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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