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Buckey

06/15/09 10:54 AM

#1264 RE: Churak #1263

CHURAK you linked worng article. The one you linked has Cox making a case for him as MVP LOL. i read the Star. I also was at the game. I wacthed all of the celebrations. There is another smaller article on Crosby not immediately shaking lidstrom's hand and someone on detroit was being a whinny baby over it. I also have it DVR'd and if I ever get home again I will watch for this very very minor incident.

I have no idea WTF that whinny baby on detroit was talking about because I sure didnt see whatever he was crying about not getting his hand shaken soon enough

Buckey

06/15/09 10:56 AM

#1265 RE: Churak #1263

That was onlyt one small article. Many others said he basically could of been just as easily an Conn Smythe winner. BUT that is not an issue. They won that cup as a team the way it should be. Lots of glowing articles on him

Buckey

06/15/09 11:03 AM

#1268 RE: Churak #1263

Here is article

Here it is

'HEART AND SOUL' OF THE PENGUINS
TheStar.com | Hockey | Sidney Crosby shows true colours
Sidney Crosby shows true colours
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MALKIN NO. 4?


Only three players have won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP and the Hart Memorial Trophy for most valuable player during the regular season in the same year: Bobby Orr in 1970 and 1972, Guy Lafleur in 1977 and Wayne Gretzky in 1985. Evgeni Malkin could become the fourth: He won the Conn Smythe on Friday night and is one of the three finalists for the Hart (along with Pavel Datsyuk and Alexander Ovechkin). The winner will be announced June 18 at the NHL awards ceremony.
Draper takes exception to snub from Crosby The Red Wings can accept that Pittsburgh is the Stanley Cup champion. Getting snubbed by Sidney Crosby is another matter.Four years after being drafted, Pittburgh's captain delivers a Cup and emerges as a gritty leader

Jun 14, 2009 04:30 AM
Comments on this story (74)
Damien Cox
It wasn't perfect. First championships rarely are, or there would be nothing left for an encore.

So Sidney Crosby didn't get to score the winning goal in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final on Friday night at The Joe, or make a big pass or a significant defensive play. Instead, he sat nailed to the bench for the final half of the game, his left knee throbbing and useless after an illegal second-period bodycheck from Johan Franzen.

There were also three separate outbursts of boos after the Pittsburgh Penguins had won the game, with Detroit fans recognizing that Crosby was a tad slow getting over to shake the hands of the dethroned champion Red Wings.

Finally, all in all, Crosby didn't have a major offensive impact in the series, managing one goal and an assist in seven games.

But it would be a terrible mistake to suggest Crosby did not lead the Penguins to this championship. He did, as his reverential teammates would attest.

"He is our team," explained winger Max Talbot after Game 7. "He is the heart and soul of the Pittsburgh Penguins.

"Every day he thinks about hockey. Everything he does is about hockey. He respects the game."

Four years after being drafted, Crosby delivered the Cup. Without him, the Penguins would probably not have survived in Pittsburgh, and there would not be a new building – The House That Sid Built – going up across the road from Mellon Arena.

He has lived up to the hype, yet it also seems clear that the essence of Crosby is turning out to be somewhat different than what was anticipated.

He isn't turning out to be primarily a Fancy Dan, or merely a finesse player with his eye on breaking all the records.

Slowly, gradually, a character is emerging a little more like Bryan Trottier than Mario Lemieux or Wayne Gretzky, with perhaps a little Stan Mikita mixed in.

There's a harder edge to Crosby than might have been anticipated – remember the cross-check to the neck of Henrik Zetterberg in Game 1, and then a slash in Game 5 – that leaves him well short of Bobby Clarke territory but nonetheless a player unlikely to win the Lady Byng Trophy any time soon.

He specialized in scoring dirty goals throughout the post-season. Critically, it was the fact that Crosby attracted the attention of Zetterberg and Nicklas Lidstrom in the final that allowed Evgeni Malkin to play against Val Filpulla and Brad Stuart, helpful to the Pittsburgh cause since Stuart insisted on handing the puck to Malkin time after time.

If there's a parallel in another sport, Crosby seems to be on track to be the Derek Jeter of hockey – all about the business of winning.

The NHL, it's fair to say, dodged a bullet in Game 7 when the Penguins won.

Otherwise, the Pittsburghers would have been right to fume about Franzen's crushing hit – Crosby never had the puck – which was the final piece of evidence that once again, the NHL's worst instinct is to throw the rulebook out the window when times are going well.

That's what it did after the Rangers won the Cup in '94, which ushered in the Dead Puck Era.

In this year's final, it was truly unfortunate and worrisome to watch all the regular-season standards be ignored as the Wings and Pens fought for the Cup.

The NHL must continue to be about letting the skill players play, not allowing them to be illegally impeded and even injured in the process. The league once allowed that to happen with Lemieux, Crosby's mentor. Allowing the same to happen to The Kid now would truly defy logic.

Having Crosby injured in that fashion in such a historic game should be a warning to Gary Bettman.

He allowed the game to be dragged into the gutter once. He cannot let it happen again.



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