Game Twelve Recap: San Jose Sharks 4, Dallas Stars 2
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Having been watching the Sharks since literally Day One, starting with Pat Falloon I've seen all kinds of Tiburones labeled as the Next Big Can't Miss Superduperstar Stud Thing. I'm still waiting for a player thus labeled to actually become one. Oh, there have been some decent players in this department. But live up to the hype? No.
Devin Setoguchi has never borne this tag. From the day he was drafted, there's been a vibe of "eh..." about him. Is he physical enough, does he want 'it' enough, and so on. Which actually is a good thing, not bearing unrealistic expectations before jumping on the ice for his first regular season NHL shift. As an example, I recall all too clearly how Brad Stuart was being called an all-world defenseman in the making pretty much every time he made an appearance in his early days with the Sharks. So how did that work out, anyway? (This explains why I cringe over such statements about Matt Carle. But I digress.)
For this reason I am cautious in the extreme about getting excessively amped over Setoguchi's two goal and oh so close to being a hat trick debut last night, same as I'm not ready to do handsprings over San Jose putting together a complete game. Joe Pavelski started out like gangbusters when he debuted last year, and ever since has far more often than not been in the "oh was he playing tonight" category. Certainly I'll take it; certainly I'm hopeful Setoguchi is a legitimate sharpshooter who can play at both ends of the ice and the Sharks are finally getting it through their heads they need to do something more on a nightly basis than throw their pre-season press clippings into the other team's bench in order to play winning hockey. But excited? No. Not yet.
I certainly wouldn't mind becoming that way, though!
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hey, look!
A Seals web page:
a bunch of stuff I did not know
A woman also streaked across the ice on skates during a home game in a plan that was engineered by one of pro sports' first professional cheerleaders, the inventor of the wave, "Krazy George" Henderson. Krazy George was a fixture at Seals home games and made crowds of 5,000 sound louder than 15,000 people. During the team's last two years in the league, their mascot was Sparky the Seal, drawn by "Peanuts" creator Charles Schulz, who was also a season-ticket holder
krazy george
i remember him from his days with the a's. i hated him.
by el tiburon on Nov 1, 2007 9:41 AM PDT reply actions

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