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Showing posts with label Sidney Crosby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sidney Crosby. Show all posts

Monday, March 14, 2011

TOP 25 UNDER 25 - #1 Sidney Crosby

SIDNEY CROSBY - Center, Pittsburgh Penguins




Here we are, sports fans. Numero Uno. The Big Kahuna. The Bee's Knees. Cat's Pajamas. Whatever you want to call it, we've reached the top spot on out Top 25 Athletes Under the Age of 25 list. At #1 we have the young Canadian sensation, Sidney Crosby.

Crosby is our 2nd hockey player on the list and is as much a household name as the NHL has to offer these days. It wasn't easy for me to put a hockey guy at number one, but looking at his career accomplishments at such a young age combined with the way he has dominated every level he has played at it was pretty clear that this guy was deserving of being number one. As I mentioned in the Stamkos post, I am not by any stretch of the imagination a hockey aficionado. However, I don't live under a rock and I am, just like every other sports fan, at least aware of who this kid is and what he has to offer.

What he offers is pure brilliance on skates. Nicknamed, The Next One - in reference to Wayne Gretzky as The Great One - Crosby was considered one of the most sought after draft picks in hockey history. After dominating the QMJHL, also known as the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (yea I had to wiki that one), Crosby was selected first overall by the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2005. For hockey fans, and particularly Canadian hockey fans, this was not the first they had heard of Sidney Crosby.

After learning to skate at the tender age of 3, Crosby picked up the game of hockey at a rapid rate. By age 13 he was trying to play against 17 year olds, but ultimately lost a lawsuit challenging his right to play with the older kids. Whereas most super-talented youth are heralded and praised and generally get all they want out of life (see Lebron James) Crosby was the subject of much jealousy and hatred from opponents and league parents. Jealous of his superior talent many kids would try to injure Crosby and parents would often taunt him from the stands. As a result, Crosby attended a prep school in Minnesota. In 2002-03 his prep school won the U.S. National Championship, starting a lengthy string of championships for Crosby.

From there he was the 1st overall selection in the midget draft - surprisingly not a draft of little people - in the QMJHL. He dominated the league in his first year as the Player of the Year and also the Top Scorer. His amateur years caught the eye of Wayne Gretzky who said that Crosby was the best player he'd seen since Mario Lemieux, and that he thought Crosby could break his records some day.

Interestingly enough, like Lemieux Crosby was selected first overall by the Penguins in 2005. In his rookie season Crosby was able to play alongside Super Mario before he was forced to retire due to health. As a rookie in the NHL Crosby was everything that was expected and then some. He set franchise records for assists and points by a rookie - both Lemieux records. He was the youngest player in league history to tally 100 points in a season and the 7th rookie to do so. He finished 6th in scoring and 7th in assists, but lost out to Alexander Ovechkin for rookie of the year.

In his sophomore year, things got even better for Sid the Kid, as he became the first teenager since Gretzky to lead the league in scoring. He was the youngest ever winner of the Art Ross Trophy (scoring leader) and the youngest scoring champ of any North American sport.

By 2008-09 season Crosby was one of the biggest names in hockey, if not the biggest. He had established himself as one of the game's greats, albeit with a bit of a reputation as a whiner and a cry-baby. Mirroring his rise to stardom was the Penguins rise as one of the better teams in the league. In 2009 they won the Stanley Cup, led by Crosby their young Captain. He finished the season with 103 points, good for 3rd in the league, despite some minor injuries.



Hoisting the Cup cemented Crosby's status as the biggest name in hockey, and gave him a leg-up on the individual on-going battle with Ovechkin, who is perhaps more flashy but not quite the winner Crosby has proven to be. It also helped cement Crosby's spot on this list.

What truly puts Crosby apart from others on this list is the fact that he has dominated at every level. In the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Crosby broke the hearts of American hockey fans when he put home a rebound for the game-winning goal in overtime of the Gold Medal game against the upstart USA team. The win avenged an early loss to the American's in the preliminary round and basically avoided disaster for Canada who surely could not have suffered a Gold Medal loss to their big brother from the south.



This season, Crosby has been limited due to concussion suffered from multiple hits to the head in back to back games. He hasn't played since January 5th and it is questionable whether he will return at all this season. Despite playing about 30 less games than the points leaders Crosby still sits at #11 in points with 66. In fact, Stamkos the leader in goals has only managed 11 more than Crosby despite 28 more games played.



Although he is not the flashy highlight machine that Ovechkin is, Crosby is more substance. Think Derrick Rose compared to Rajon Rondo. He is a dominant force on the ice whether he is playing for Canada or the Penguins. And at just 23 years old the flapjack eaters in Canada and the Penguins fans in Pittsburgh alike are looking forward to many more seasons of brilliance and most importantly, winning. Duh!


Here is 2009's Top 25 Under 25 list. We did not do one in 2010.

1. Lebron James
2. Alexander Ovechkin
3. Sidney Crosby
4. Adrian Peterson
5. Evgeni Malkin
6. Chris Paul
7. Dwight Howard
8. Evan Longoria
9. Matt Ryan
10. Felix Hernandez
11. Mario Williams
12. Calvin Johnson
13. Rajon Rondo
14. Derrick Rose
15. BJ Upton
16. Deron Williams
17. Patrick Willis
18. Kevin Durant
19. Matt Cain
20. Justin Upton
21. Adam Jones
22. David Price
23. Josh Smith
24. Reggie Bush
25. Al Jefferson

Monday, November 29, 2010

Friday, May 28, 2010

Pittsburgh Gets 2011 Winter Classic


Heinz Field will host the 2011 Winter Classic, as the 2009 Stanley Cup Champion Penguins will host perennial powerhouse/chokers: the Washington Capitals. That's not surprising, but it does pose a few questions.

Has the NHL beaten the Crosby vs. Ovechkin horse to death? I mean one guy is as boring as wallpaper samples, and the other guy can barely speak English. The NHL has been trying to prop up this "rivalry," but the two teams play in different divisions, and have only played one forgettable postseason series against each other. How can you have a rivalry when you meet each other only 4 times out of 80 each season?

Then there's another question. Why not New York/New Jersey. Why can't the Devils host the Rangers in what would be a media extravaganza? Those teams are rivals, and it'd get as much media attention as anything in Western PA could. Also consider the fact that the Penguins have already played in a Winter Classic (they'd be the first to play in 2) in Buffalo, which was essentially a showcase for Crosby.

I don't have any major beefs with Pittsburgh vs. Washington in Pittsburgh for the 2011 Winter Classic. So long as the Penguins don't play in another Classic for some time.

And if the NHL wants to build rivalries, as they seemingly do with this move, then maybe they should eliminate the purposeless teams like Nashville, Tampa Bay, Florida, Phoenix, Columbus, the Islanders, Nashville.

-The Commodore

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

I Was Right, The Captain and BMack Have AIDs




I don't write much about hockey, but when I do I have never been wrong, not once in my life. I have been a giant advocate of Sidney Crosby over Alex Ovechkin, and Captain and Bmack always would jump up and say no way. They said Ovechkin's better because he scores more, likes to fight, and drives his cars fast and is a badass, however, the faggots forgot to talk about the most important part of the arguement, and that's winning. Badass Ovechkin got knocked out of the playoffs by an 8 seed, and has watched Sid the kid win the Stanley Cup last year and get the gold in the Olympics this past year, and watch his team who is STILL in the playoffs. Crosby wins, Ovechkin fights, and drives cars and that's that. So before BMack and the Captain pretend to be hockey experts, how bout you ask the real genius when it comes to hockey and that's DP.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Why I Want to See Sidney Crosby Lying Facedown on the Ice Tonight


As much as I dislike Crosby, he's a relatively clean player. And he bears no responsibility for what happened to Marc Savard.

Then again, it's a team sport, isn't it? And let's say the Bruins go after Matt Cooke tonight, and even injure him, does that seem fair? The Bruins' #1 offensive threat goes down, while the Penguins lose a 3rd line winger. That's about as balanced as The Treaty of Versailles, and as fair as Fox News' political coverage.

Is a fight gonna satisfy you? Shawn Thornton steps up to Cooke, they both drop their gloves, dance a little, maybe Thornton lands a big punch or two, but so what? 5 minutes later and it's forgotten. Is that sufficient justice?

And what about deterring future goons from harassing top-flight Bruins players. Will they bat an eye the next time they have a chance to light up Patrice Bergeron, for fear that they'll have to drop the gloves and fight? Nope.

Go after Crosby. Punish the PENGUINS for what THEY did to the BRUINS. Like when a pitcher throws at Youkilis, the Sox pitcher has to nail the opponent's best hitter, not the #8 hitting short-stop.

Punish Matt Cooke, but not psychically. Make his teammates blame him for what happens to Crosby. Make him and every other cheap-shotting goon think twice about blindsiding an opponent, knowing that it'll cost him their best teammate.

Most of all, punish the Penguins.



-The Commodore

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Top 25 Under 25 #3 Sidney Crosby


Born: August 7, 1987

Well we’re down to the top 3. As the dust begins to clear on our list of the top 25 athletes under 25 years of age, I present number three, Sidney Crosby. The 22-year old Canadian prodigy has played four full NHL seasons, in those four years Crosby has been a three-time all-star and an MVP , much like friend turned foe, Alex Ovechkin. However, what separates Sid the kid from OV is the Stanley cup victory that Crosby and the Penguins secured last season.

Aside from an injury shortened season in 2007-08, Crosby has put up 100 points every year, including a 120 point campaign in his sophomore season, which netted him the Art Ross trophy (most points in a regular season) in addition to the Hart trophy for the league’s most valuable player.

At such a young age Crosby has been able to accomplish a career’s worth of goals (no pun intended). The sky is the limit for this guy, and with guidance from close friend, Mario Lemieux, Crosby is on track for a hall of fame career.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009