|
Post by madmarx on Feb 1, 2021 16:27:24 GMT -5
I think it’s way to early to predict who gets protected other than the obvious..
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Feb 1, 2021 18:23:43 GMT -5
I think it’s way to early to predict who gets protected other than the obvious.. For sure.
|
|
|
Post by Losing my mind on Feb 1, 2021 19:14:33 GMT -5
What's the definition of first and second year players? I believe they aren't eligible to be picked, but I could be wrong.
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 2, 2021 13:04:43 GMT -5
Last season the #NHLBruins got 32 goals and 112 assists from the blue line in 70 games and the question raised was how were they going to make that up this season? Now they are on pace for 19 goals and 93 assists in a 56 game season.
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 2, 2021 13:14:22 GMT -5
Last season the #NHLBruins got 32 goals and 112 assists from the blue line in 70 games and the question raised was how were they going to make that up this season? Now they are on pace for 19 goals and 93 assists in a 56 game season. Love it!
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Feb 2, 2021 15:21:59 GMT -5
Last season the #NHLBruins got 32 goals and 112 assists from the blue line in 70 games and the question raised was how were they going to make that up this season? Now they are on pace for 19 goals and 93 assists in a 56 game season. I like our D this year, I was totally onboard with letting both Krug and Chara walk. Actually felt bad for Z last night on a few occasions. He can’t handle speed coming down his side at all. I’ll freak out about our young D making mistakes and trying to make the perfect pass when under pressure but I know it’s going to come eventually. McAvoy needs to be full time on the first PP unit, he’s capable of doing everything Krug did and more. Enough with the five forwards on the PP, it’s not necessary.
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Feb 2, 2021 16:09:28 GMT -5
Last season the #NHLBruins got 32 goals and 112 assists from the blue line in 70 games and the question raised was how were they going to make that up this season? Now they are on pace for 19 goals and 93 assists in a 56 game season. I like our D this year, I was totally onboard with letting both Krug and Chara walk. Actually felt bad for Z last night on a few occasions. He can’t handle speed coming down his side at all. I’ll freak out about our young D making mistakes and trying to make the perfect pass when under pressure but I know it’s going to come eventually. McAvoy needs to be full time on the first PP unit, he’s capable of doing everything Krug did and more. Enough with the five forwards on the PP, it’s not necessary. You are SO right!!
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 2, 2021 16:41:13 GMT -5
Last season the #NHLBruins got 32 goals and 112 assists from the blue line in 70 games and the question raised was how were they going to make that up this season? Now they are on pace for 19 goals and 93 assists in a 56 game season. I like our D this year, I was totally onboard with letting both Krug and Chara walk. Actually felt bad for Z last night on a few occasions. He can’t handle speed coming down his side at all. I’ll freak out about our young D making mistakes and trying to make the perfect pass when under pressure but I know it’s going to come eventually. McAvoy needs to be full time on the first PP unit, he’s capable of doing everything Krug did and more. Enough with the five forwards on the PP, it’s not necessary. He’s a riverboat gambler at times last night Pasta saved his ass when Obie picked his pocket pocket at the point , I think the reasoning is time management he will definitely ready soon enough..
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 2, 2021 20:19:17 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 2, 2021 23:38:53 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 3, 2021 11:24:43 GMT -5
2022 Olympic news: Team Canada names Don Sweeney assistant GM.
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Feb 3, 2021 18:51:35 GMT -5
2022 Olympic news: Team Canada names Don Sweeney assistant GM. Congrats and well deserved..
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 4, 2021 7:59:12 GMT -5
Amazing....but would prefer easier wins.
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 4, 2021 13:12:36 GMT -5
Most common goal/assist combinations since start of 2019/20 season:
Marchand to Pastrnak 27 Marner to Matthews 27 McDavid to Draisaitl 24 Marchand to Bergeron 24 Carlson to Ovechkin 23
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 5, 2021 9:37:39 GMT -5
Once he showed that he still had the hands to instinctively bang in a backhand pass from his linemate Carter Rowney, David Backes broke right into a big smile even as there was still a lot of serious hockey to play Tuesday night.
The goal that Backes scored against the Los Angeles Kings gave the Ducks a two-goal lead early in the second period. But it was more than that. It was his first with Anaheim and the 246th of his career. It was also his first since Dec. 1, 2019, a span of 428 days.
And it confirmed what he had strongly felt inside. He can still play in the NHL. It was worth smiling over.
“Just the road I’ve been on,” Backes told The Athletic. “Obviously, everyone’s been on. It’s been a tough year for everyone. Socially distancing and changing some lifestyles. To have 11 months between games, train my butt off, waiting for an opportunity, getting an opportunity and then in my third game back able to score. I think the first two games, we were able to build and make some progress towards being an effective line certainly defensively but also starting to create some offensively.
“To put one into the net to help our team extend a lead, which we really needed after a lot of that work, it just felt like it was all meant to be, and I was in somebody’s bigger story that I’m doing exactly what I’m supposed to.”
At 36, Backes has no illusions as to what stage of his career he is on. He has lasted 15 seasons and 953 games, most of them playing in a tough, hard-nosed manner that exacted its share of wear and tear on his body. He won’t get to 1,000 even if he played in every Ducks game this season, which isn’t likely. This might be it for the Minneapolis native who became a standout captain for years in St. Louis and played in a Stanley Cup Final with Boston against his old team.
A trade last February brought him to Anaheim. And it gave him a chance to write a more suitable ending as a valued member of an NHL team.
“I’m just taking it all as a blessing,” Backes said. “I’ve gotten perspective that I don’t think many guys get while they’re still playing. I kind of had what I thought was there for me taken away and kind of felt a little mourning. But I got to appreciate that next time I get on the ice, you know every shift is truly a gift to go out there and put an NHL jersey on and play every night. Enjoy it. Don’t have any regrets. Leave it all out there.
“And you know what? Enjoy the wins and I hate to say this, enjoy the losses and the struggles. And when you get through it, what kind of growth that it makes on your team.”
It was quite an enjoyable night for Backes and his line. The Ducks played their best game of the season, controlling their Southern California rival from start to finish at Staples Center. If they weren’t such an offensively challenged squad, the score would have been more lopsided than the 3-1 result. But it was a complete effort throughout the lineup, with the fourth line being the headliner among the group.
There was Rowney and Backes teaming on the goal that gave John Gibson the kind of cushion he has rarely had. And there was Nic Deslauriers winning a puck battle that pushed the puck forward to Rowney, earning him an assist. Deslauriers opened the game with a fight against the Kings’ Kurtis MacDermid and closed it out with a clinching empty-net goal, giving him a Gordie Howe hat trick.
The 29-year-old earned a two-year contract extension with an effective season where he led the league in fighting majors and scored three straight Ducks goals against Ottawa for a natural hat trick.
“I think you can all tell how much we love Nic Deslauriers,” Ducks right wing Troy Terry said in a postgame television interview. “He’s such an energy guy and he’s such a great guy to have around the room. To start the game out like that and then to get an assist and then finish the Gordie Howe hat trick, I think we were all as happy as he was about it.”
But the night was also about Backes showing that he can be more than a voice of wisdom within the dressing room. An injury to Derek Grant opened the door for him to join the lineup after spending the first two weeks of the schedule on Anaheim’s taxi squad. He played in the two weekend games against St. Louis, which served as a primer for his highly effective game Tuesday. A game-high eight shots on goal. Twelve wins in 19 faceoff draws.
In the postgame, Ducks coach Dallas Eakins talked of the positive vibe that Backes brings to their bench. The vast knowledge that makes him, as Eakins said, “almost like a secondary coach.”
“His habits as a pro player are excellent,” he said. “He comes in every day looking to get better. And that does turn rare sometimes. The longer you go in your career, you almost start to look to maintain. But Backs comes in every day, looking to get better. Through that first long stretch when he was not in the lineup, not a peep from him. Just, ‘I’m ready.’ And he showed it in practice. And after morning skates. Full commitment.
“And then in the game, he gives you everything that he has. He’s physical. He knows his routes. He’s hard on pucks. And he really promotes on the bench verbally everything that we’re trying to do as a team. Where we’re at as a team, through our transition and trying to take a step forward. It’s certainly nice to have another leader like that in our room.”
The Ducks have made Backes feel wanted. It is a stark contrast from when his time with the Bruins ended, getting waived and remaining at home for nearly a month while they sought out a trade. Anaheim took on his contract, essentially buying another first-round draft pick that it would use in October on Jacob Perreault.
Even with Boston retaining 25 percent of Backes $6 million salary cap hit, Anaheim could have opted to buy itself out of the final year and gained an extra $1.5 million of cap space and be charged with $750,000 of dead money for 2021-22. But the Ducks insisted that the trade wasn’t only about gaining added draft capital. Backes was going in their plans for 2020-21.
And that remained so even when they brought back Grant on a three-year contract. This was not going to be a situation where Backes would be left in limbo.
“It was certainly a conversation that happened,” Backes said. “Going through what I went through in Boston where I was put on waivers and then told not to go anywhere because I was going to be bought out if they couldn’t find a trade partner for me, it was not out of the realm of possibility. Being a man with a wife and a couple of kids in the middle of a pandemic and hopefully having another hockey season, we had that conversation. Is there a role? Is this the end of the road? What’s going on here?
“I feel like I’ve still got game left in me. I’m hungry and I want to do all the work I can to be ready. But if that’s not going to happen, then that’s not going to happen. And if it is, we want to get our butts into Southern California so we’re settled and family life is taken care of. When the season starts and hopefully sooner than later, I could hit the ground running.”
Motivated to show the Ducks that he had plenty to offer, Backes worked out in Minnesota with power skating instructor Katie McDonough for four months. Their work together was borne out of the forward’s realization that he had to do whatever he could to keep up with an NHL that is much more geared toward speed than the emphasis on a heavy game he has played since entering the league in 2006.
“It had probably been 10 years since I had instruction on skating,” Backes said. “Certainly, I’ve done skating drills. Go around this cone, go around that cone. Conditioning. Things like that. But it hasn’t been breaking it down with an iPad and saying, ‘Hey, you need to bend your knees more. You need to extend your leg more.’ Intentionality in skating.
“Whatever came second nature was built in, was there. And I was just using that. Now I’ve got things to think about that make me faster, make me more efficient and I’m able to be more productive in my opinion. I’ve felt really good in the three games that I’ve played. I wanted to keep that feeling going moving forward.”
It will be up to Eakins if he decides to keep Backes in the lineup Friday against San Jose. Grant is expected to be ready after missing the last three games with an upper-body ailment. Max Jones is also available. The coach has to weigh whether to insert either of those players back in or stick with a lineup that delivers its best effort of the season. “It’s not going to be pleasant either way it goes,” Eakins said.
But while Backes is going to be a part-time player at best, the Ducks felt he could be more than a respected voice.
“We obviously thought that he could because if we thought that he couldn’t give us anything on the ice, then he wouldn’t be here,” Eakins said. “It’s as simple as that. We are very cognizant of the amount that he’s played over the years. Where he’s at. Did we envision him being an everyday, 82-game, 56-game full season guy? No.
“I think you want to look to manage his ice time. That’s what happens before a season. It’s kind of like putting a goalie plan together. You see certain players. You envision them playing so many games or so many minutes, whatever that is. The great thing about Backs, with his experience, is that he understands that. He understands where he’s at in his career. He understands what our organization’s trying to do. And as much as he does want to play every night, he certainly understands when he doesn’t as well.”
Whether he is playing often or sparingly, Backes is going to soak up every moment that he has left. He isn’t one of those athletes that scoffs at the suggestion that he might be nearing the end. In fact, he has talked with a few former players who have made the transition to other areas within hockey.
“Whatever comes will come,” he said. “We’ll jump through that hoop when it’s all said and done and this career is over.”
But there are still games he hopes to play. And there is still being able to do it at the highest level.
“I think it’s kind of the beautiful part of the story,” he said. “I was in a place leaving Boston thinking that I was probably not going to be able to play in the NHL ever again. I got perspective that I think a lot of guys don’t get until their career is actually over. And I’ve got a second life to make good on all those things that as I look back and said, ‘What are my regrets?’ What I wish I would have kind of (done) things that I had in my career? Which I’m not taking for granted at all.”
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 5, 2021 16:04:12 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Feb 5, 2021 19:03:47 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 5, 2021 22:36:46 GMT -5
Not hockey related but I thought it was funny 🤷♂️
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 6, 2021 13:41:42 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 7, 2021 18:21:29 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 9, 2021 7:37:35 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 9, 2021 7:39:30 GMT -5
Charlie McAvoy has 10 points in the Bruins’ first 11 games. As of Saturday, McAvoy’s 0.91 points-per-game rate placed him fifth in the NHL among defensemen with 10 or more appearances, behind Jeff Petry, Cale Makar, Quinn Hughes and John Carlson. McAvoy is averaging 2.24 points per 60 minutes of all-situations play, according to Natural Stat Trick, well above his previous career high (1.4 P/60 in 2018-19). The points are coming, mostly because the 23-year-old is stretching his legs into the attacking end more than ever.
Point production has blended with shot suppression. With McAvoy on the ice, the Bruins have totaled 122 shots on net while allowing only 70 during 5-on-5 play. His 63.54 shots-for percentage is the highest of any defenseman in the league with at least 150 minutes.
Part of this is because of McAvoy’s powers. The Bruins have always known he is capable of doing anything he wants.
But another part is circumstance. Namely:
• Torey Krug’s departure, compounded by Matt Grzelcyk’s injuries, opened the doors for McAvoy to snatch point duties atop the No. 1 power-play unit.
• At 5-on-5, McAvoy has a 54.55 percent offensive-zone start percentage. Last year, McAvoy was at 44.24 percent. He’s taken advantage of his offensive-zone starts, working seamlessly with the No. 1 line.
• Up front, the Bruins have consistently positioned a forward high in the offensive zone, freeing McAvoy to pinch.
• Jeremy Lauzon, 20 years younger than the departed Zdeno Chara, is McAvoy’s most common 5-on-5 partner. What Lauzon lacks in size, reach, strength and experience in comparison to Chara is offset by his livelier legs, which, in turn, expand McAvoy’s territory.
“The biggest change is probably a little more freedom,” coach Bruce Cassidy said. “(Chara), his partner he had for years, is obviously a coach on the ice. He talks to Charlie a lot. It worked out very well for them. Lauzy is not going to be that guy where he’s going to command or demand certain things. He’s going to talk about who’s got who and coverages. But not necessarily the style of play. So I think Charlie’s just a little more fluid in all areas.”
McAvoy’s game, in other words, is in tighter alignment with the Bruins’ infrastructure. Both player and team are reaping the rewards.
“I think it’s been really good for him in all areas, looking around knowing he’s probably the alpha dog back there,” Cassidy said. “Even though he’s a young guy.”
Power game McAvoy is averaging 2:22 of power-play time per game. That’s up from 1:21 per appearance last season. He has three man-advantage points, one more than he had last year.
So far, McAvoy has leaned more toward distribution than shot generation. It’s worked out well. He has zero goals and three assists on the power play, which is rolling along at a 33.3 percent success rate (No. 6 overall).
As well as McAvoy has performed on the power play, the job may not be his for keeps. The Bruins like having Grzelcyk, a lefty, in optimal position to set up David Pastrnak for one-timers or to rotate with Brad Marchand. The Bruins have liked how David Krejci has worked the point when they’ve deployed a five-forward unit.
If Cassidy has one critique of McAvoy, it’s how he could cede entries to Marchand and Pastrnak instead of trying it himself.
“They’re the guys that have carried it in for years,” Cassidy said. “He’s still learning to defer at that part of it.”
Good starts By now, opponents should know it’s coming. When McAvoy struts out for an offensive-zone faceoff with the No. 1 line, it’s a good bet he’s rolling down the right-side wall.
What’s easy to scout is impossible to defend. Bergeron has won 64.2 percent of his offensive-zone draws. There are few defenders who can keep pace with Pastrnak from a standstill. McAvoy is difficult to obstruct when that No. 73 train accelerates down the right side.
Against Washington on Jan. 30, McAvoy separated from Alex Ovechkin with assistance from a Bergeron pick. Once McAvoy got below the goal line, he sent a sharp-angle pass for Marchand to tuck home.
On Friday against Philadelphia, McAvoy went down the right side again. This time, the Flyers closed everything off down low. McAvoy recognized this. So he wheeled around the net. By the time he emerged on the other side, Bergeron had gained better net-front position.
The exchange didn’t work. But moments later, Marchand jammed in a loose puck.
“It’s just his instincts,” Cassidy said. “We give him the framework of, ‘Here’s what the other team’s doing.’ It’s up to him to find the ice. We’ll give him the freedom to do that. It’s one of the strengths of his game. Once he gets moving, he’s a pretty good player at seeing the ice and making something happen.”
It’s helped that McAvoy is a right shot. This allows him to skate the puck on his strong side and keep it away from defenders.
But his decision-making has been exquisite too.
Pinching away The two-man forecheck has worked well for the Bruins this year. They’ve put better pressure on opposing defensemen.
Their high forwards have been just as good. For the most part, F3, the third forward into the zone, has worked well above the puck to fill wide lanes and allow the defensemen to keep even tighter gaps. When the high forward’s been in place, McAvoy has blitzed down the wall and extended offensive-zone time.
Even when McAvoy hasn’t won the battle, a high forward put defensive reinforcements in place to blunt the counterattack.
“It certainly helps you keep pucks alive with any off-net shot, especially from a partner,” Cassidy said. “Say it goes low to high out of the left corner. Marshy throws it up to Lauzon and it’s off net. Charlie McAvoy knows that puck’s coming around. He’s probably got a 50-50 shot at it, at worst. The winger’s in the slot. He’s the one that’s going to contest on the other side against Charlie. If your forward’s high, he just slides into Charlie’s spot on the right (defenseman), and he can go knowing that guy’s there. He may or may not keep the puck alive. If he does, there’s stress on the other team. If he doesn’t, we know we’ve got at least two guys back, and hopefully your other two forwards are working their way back as well.”
A different partner McAvoy will carry Chara’s influence for the rest of his career. For three seasons, McAvoy’s partner taught him professionalism, competitiveness and positioning.
“His presence is pretty irreplaceable. Completely irreplaceable,” McAvoy said. “The magnitude of who he is as a player and a person. People like him don’t come around every day. That is obviously different, not having him here.”
But from McAvoy’s end, their partnership had reached its expiration date. In the defensive zone, McAvoy was regularly tasked to retrieve pucks because of his skating ability. This put him deeper in the Bruins’ zone.
At the other end, McAvoy had to be wary of Chara’s foot speed. McAvoy pulled the cord on some pinches and rushes because of the threat of a counterattack against Chara.
That concern is gone. Lauzon does not have Grzelcyk’s feet. But Lauzon can gap up more rapidly than Chara.
Against Washington on Feb. 1, McAvoy was the first man over the offensive blue line because of his aggressiveness in the neutral zone. The Bruins didn’t score on the initial rush. But Lauzon held the point, worked down low and found Craig Smith in the slot.
“I see him attacking more in the offensive zone,” Cassidy said. “He’s certainly taking a few more pucks down low, asking Lauzy or just the assumption that a forward will cover for him. There’s a little more of that. We’ve asked him to do some of that, produce more offense from the back end. Not just him. But he’s the guy that’s probably the most effective at it.”
The Bruins have asked McAvoy to do everything: Match up at even strength (19:44 per game), work the power play (2:22) and kill penalties (2:18). Still, they’ve kept him at 24:24 of total ice time per appearance, which he can handle just fine.
“You just never know where his best fit’s going to be,” Cassidy said. “Because he’s a little bit of everything. He can be physical. He moves pucks. He can play on the power play, play on the penalty kill. We’ve tried not to overload him. But he’s taken on everything we’ve given him.”
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 9, 2021 7:51:04 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 9, 2021 9:35:04 GMT -5
Connor Clifton has done everything his bosses have requested him to do. And more.
To the latter point, it is unlikely coach Bruce Cassidy asked Clifton to turn Nicolas Aube-Kubel’s face into a slab of pounded veal cutlet. Nevertheless, in the first period of the Bruins’ 2-1 win over Philadelphia on Feb. 8, Clifton jacked Aube-Kubel with a ringing uppercut.
Clifton has accompanied the punch with contributions towards five wins and one overtime loss in six games — all while playing his weak side. Yet on Wednesday against the Rangers, barring any unexpected occurrences, Clifton will be back in suit and tie.
Matt Grzelcyk, out the last four games because of a lower-body injury, will return to his second-pairing spot next to Brandon Carlo. Clifton practiced on the extra pair with John Moore on Monday.
“It’s no fun,” Cassidy said of telling Clifton he’s the odd man out. “But he’s such a terrific guy. And so is Johnny Moore, for that matter. They make my job easier. I’m not going to lie. I’m thankful for that and grateful.”
The Bruins have an oversupply of a commodity that is usually scarce around the NHL: right-shot defensemen. Rare is the team that can roll a rotation of Charlie McAvoy, Carlo and Kevan Miller and still have a righty to spare.
So it was only because of Grzelcyk’s bad injury luck that Clifton got his opportunity. He made the most of it. As Carlo’s running mate, Clifton skated briskly, rubbed out opponents at every chance and played with enthusiasm in all three zones. Clifton was on the ice for just one 5-on-5 goal allowed, which ties him with Grzelcyk for a team low.
You may think, then, that Clifton has earned a spot even with Grzelcyk back to full health. Grzelcyk, however, better fits the Bruins’ needs. He is a lefty. This helps him in 5-on-5 play with Carlo and also atop the No. 1 power-play unit, where he can feed pucks to David Pastrnak or rotate with Brad Marchand.
Clifton is undoubtedly the more punishing checker of the two. It doesn’t necessarily make him a stingier defender. By using his feet, stick and hockey sense, Grzelcyk, according to Natural Stat Trick, has allowed 39.23 attempts and 1.28 expected goals per 60 minutes of 5-on-5 play, both team lows. In comparison, Clifton is seventh (52.38 CA/60) and fourth (1.63 xGA/60) in those categories.
Meanwhile, Grzelcyk is more of an offensive pace-pusher than Clifton. On Jan. 28 against Pittsburgh, his last game before pulling out because of his injury, Grzelcyk was involved in the Bruins’ first three goals, all with pinches down the left-side wall. Grzelcyk is averaging 1.78 points per 60 minutes of 5-on-5 play, most of any team defenseman.
“Even though I am a little bit of a smaller guy, something I take pride in is defending well for my size,” Grzelcyk said. “I have to defend a little differently than most other guys, relying on my skating and quickness. As a player, you want to form an identity. Losing some guys on the back end, we needed to step up a little bit offensively. I know I am capable of more from that aspect.”
Clifton could stay in at the cost of Jeremy Lauzon or Jakub Zboril. But neither of the lefties has played poorly enough to require a healthy scratch.
“The good news is the guys on the left side have been solid,” Cassidy said. “There’s been no discussion here saying, ‘Well, they’re not ready. They’re not handling it. They’re regressing.’ They’ve certainly had games where they’ve been better on other nights. But for the most part, they’ve been fairly consistent.”
So Clifton will sit. He’ll stay ready.
He will be needed again.
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 9, 2021 12:12:21 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 9, 2021 18:44:21 GMT -5
My friggin head hurts reading this but I would love if the Bruins went all in this year .. Laine anyone?
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Feb 9, 2021 18:44:28 GMT -5
Happy Birthday 🎂Newfie.
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Feb 9, 2021 18:47:58 GMT -5
Again !!Lord Thundrin He’s Old ..Happy Birthday Newfie
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Feb 9, 2021 22:04:24 GMT -5
Happy Birthday NF. 🎂
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Feb 10, 2021 0:51:08 GMT -5
Lol,thanks guys, appreciate it..AGAIN??? That's exactly what I said when I woke this morning Madmarx..Again Grandpa!!
|
|