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Can Canada break its ice hockey curse?
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For over 30 years, the winner of the National Hockey League's top prize has gone to an American team. It's a sorry legacy for a country where ice hockey is not just a sport, but part of the national identity. About 40% of players in the NHL, across all teams, are Canadian - more than any other country. Last year, the Oilers flopped during the final game of the seven-game series against the Florida Panthers. It's a sore point for many Canadians that the league's most die-hard fans have gone so long without a trophy, and yet remain willing to spend big money and travel big distances to support their team.
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H Hockey shared this topic
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For over 30 years, the winner of the National Hockey League's top prize has gone to an American team. It's a sorry legacy for a country where ice hockey is not just a sport, but part of the national identity. About 40% of players in the NHL, across all teams, are Canadian - more than any other country. Last year, the Oilers flopped during the final game of the seven-game series against the Florida Panthers. It's a sore point for many Canadians that the league's most die-hard fans have gone so long without a trophy, and yet remain willing to spend big money and travel big distances to support their team.
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For over 30 years, the winner of the National Hockey League's top prize has gone to an American team. It's a sorry legacy for a country where ice hockey is not just a sport, but part of the national identity. About 40% of players in the NHL, across all teams, are Canadian - more than any other country. Last year, the Oilers flopped during the final game of the seven-game series against the Florida Panthers. It's a sore point for many Canadians that the league's most die-hard fans have gone so long without a trophy, and yet remain willing to spend big money and travel big distances to support their team.
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It'll stay this way until Gary is gone and players stop getting tax breaks to play in the states.Curious what people think is good a solution to this. For example should teams in Alberta get a higher cap, or discounted cap hits for contracts? Should that also apply to teams in California vs Florida and Texas that don’t have state income tax?
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It'll stay this way until Gary is gone and players stop getting tax breaks to play in the states.
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For over 30 years, the winner of the National Hockey League's top prize has gone to an American team. It's a sorry legacy for a country where ice hockey is not just a sport, but part of the national identity. About 40% of players in the NHL, across all teams, are Canadian - more than any other country. Last year, the Oilers flopped during the final game of the seven-game series against the Florida Panthers. It's a sore point for many Canadians that the league's most die-hard fans have gone so long without a trophy, and yet remain willing to spend big money and travel big distances to support their team.Have they tried playing defense with even so much as _pretense_ of giving a shit about keeping the puck out of their net, at all? I didn't see it from the Oilers. Also, who are these Canadians for whom this is a sore point, outside Edmonton? Fans of every other Canadian NHL team are on cloud 9 right now gloating over the Oilers' humiliation. This is a team that theirs competes again, they are going to get fuck all out of watching that team win instead of theirs, and nationality is 1,000% meaningless. To give a shit about this, you need to either be a quasi-fan of the game of hockey but not any particular team, or a hack reporter who certainly isn't going to come up with real analysis and has to pinch off a drama turd instead.
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Curious what people think is good a solution to this. For example should teams in Alberta get a higher cap, or discounted cap hits for contracts? Should that also apply to teams in California vs Florida and Texas that don’t have state income tax?