Author Topic: More happy hockey news from Washington  (Read 8230 times)

mankie

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Re: More happy hockey news from Washington
« Reply #60 on: March 09, 2004, 04:28:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by sonickteam2:
  i think its racist, Doig is next.
Well...3pm has passed and I haven't heard wether Witt or Kolzig have gone.
 
 As for the bro's...you'd think they'd want to hang on to the black players in DC because it might get the locals behind the team.

vansmack

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  • Posts: 19722
Re: More happy hockey news from Washington
« Reply #61 on: March 12, 2004, 10:17:00 pm »
HASEK FOR MVP!!!!!
 
 
 No play, no pay: Hasek rejects Detroit's checks
 
 Associated Press
 DETROIT -- Red Wings goaltender Dominik Hasek has refused to accept about $3 million of his salary because he is out with a groin injury.
 
 
 Hasek, who announced Feb. 10 that he would miss the remainder of the season with the injury, has not accepted pay since Jan. 9, general manager Ken Holland said Friday.
 
 
   
 Hasek
 
 
 That was the day Hasek and the team agreed the goaltender should rest the injured groin for two to four weeks.
 
 
 Hasek tested out the groin in early February, but later said he could no longer play this season. The nagging groin injury has limited him to 14 games since he came out of a one-year retirement.
 
 
 "He just felt that he wasn't doing what he really had set out to do, which is to play hockey and play at a high level," Holland said. "At that time, he told me that he did not want to receive any further salary until he was ready to play."
 
 
 By Jan. 9, Hasek had received a little more than $3 million of his $6 million salary for the season.
 
 
 "I think it's an unbelievable gesture," Holland said.
 
 
 One of the NHL's greatest goalies, Hasek won two MVP awards and six Vezina Trophies, given to the league's top goalie, during a nine-year stint in Buffalo. He also led the Czech Republic to a gold medal in the 1998 Nagano Olympics.
 
 
 Hasek joined the Red Wings before the 2001-02 season, winning his first Stanley Cup that season. He retired in 2002, but came back to Detroit before this season.
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