http://thepipelineshow.blogspot.com/201 ... o-hum.html"If the nickname (State of Hockey) was taken on as a claim that it (Minnesota) is the #1 State in the country when it comes to production, development, success and championships... then it might be time for Minnesota to admit defeat. Judging from the evidence, these days the real State of Hockey is Massachusetts. "
State of Denial?
Moderators: Mitch Hawker, east hockey, karl(east)
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State of Denial?
Hey, I found some red meat for you guys ... Enjoy!
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An "impact player" has to have FIVE HUNDRED career points in the NHL! Joel Otto had 508, so basically he's the lowest you can be and be considered an impact player. In his 14 year career he was considered an excellent two-way player and was usually assigned to Mark Messier when the Flames played the Oilers. That's a pretty high standard!
Darby Hendrickson score 129 in what is basically 8 full NHL seasons and parts of several others, just for comparison.
Minnesota's top college team may not have won all the NCAA tournaments, but the state sends players to all of the WCHA and several other D1 programs too. In the words of a friend, California supplies the football players for almost all of the Pac 10, plus a slew other other schools west of the Mississippi.
Minnesotans don't equate pro success to being "the state of hockey". Kids play and several do well no matter the measure. Not sure they needed to gerrymander an argument to say something other than Minnesota, but they did. No idea who they are, so it isn't anything to be bothered about.
Darby Hendrickson score 129 in what is basically 8 full NHL seasons and parts of several others, just for comparison.
Minnesota's top college team may not have won all the NCAA tournaments, but the state sends players to all of the WCHA and several other D1 programs too. In the words of a friend, California supplies the football players for almost all of the Pac 10, plus a slew other other schools west of the Mississippi.
Minnesotans don't equate pro success to being "the state of hockey". Kids play and several do well no matter the measure. Not sure they needed to gerrymander an argument to say something other than Minnesota, but they did. No idea who they are, so it isn't anything to be bothered about.
Be kind. Rewind.
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I think that most Minnesotan hockey fans would agree with me when I say that we call ourselves the State of Hockey not based on the statistics of the very lucky, very fortunate few that play professional hockey, but rather the passion and support for the game held by all of us; players, fans, parents and coaches alike, for every level of the game, from mite youth hockey all the way up to our professional team.
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We call ourselves the "State of Hockey" because the Minnesota Wild marketing department came up with that catchy slogan about 10 years ago.hockeyfan893 wrote:I think that most Minnesotan hockey fans would agree with me when I say that we call ourselves the State of Hockey not based on the statistics of the very lucky, very fortunate few that play professional hockey, but rather the passion and support for the game held by all of us; players, fans, parents and coaches alike, for every level of the game, from mite youth hockey all the way up to our professional team.
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Because "Hockeytown" was taken in the mid-90s when the Red Wings marketing department did the same.muckandgrind wrote: We call ourselves the "State of Hockey" because the Minnesota Wild marketing department came up with that catchy slogan about 10 years ago.
I'm presently sitting in Hockeypalm and my son soon has a game at Hockeybeach. I'm really looking forward to February when the tournament is in the County of Hockey.
Be kind. Rewind.
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[quote="muckandgrind"][quote="hockeyfan893"]I think that most Minnesotan hockey fans would agree with me when I say that we call ourselves the State of Hockey not based on the statistics of the very lucky, very fortunate few that play professional hockey, but rather the passion and support for the game held by all of us; players, fans, parents and coaches alike, for every level of the game, from mite youth hockey all the way up to our professional team.[/quote]
We call ourselves the "State of Hockey" because the Minnesota Wild marketing department came up with that catchy slogan about 10 years ago.[/quote]
I stand corrected. You're right, that's where the slogan originated from. But I think that it has developed into something less meant as a marketing slogan for our pro team, and become something that Minnesotans identify with.
We call ourselves the "State of Hockey" because the Minnesota Wild marketing department came up with that catchy slogan about 10 years ago.[/quote]
I stand corrected. You're right, that's where the slogan originated from. But I think that it has developed into something less meant as a marketing slogan for our pro team, and become something that Minnesotans identify with.
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lol and and good job they did! I think Howard Stern is the self proclaimed king of media - and that stuck too unfortunately...muckandgrind wrote:We call ourselves the "State of Hockey" because the Minnesota Wild marketing department came up with that catchy slogan about 10 years ago.hockeyfan893 wrote:I think that most Minnesotan hockey fans would agree with me when I say that we call ourselves the State of Hockey not based on the statistics of the very lucky, very fortunate few that play professional hockey, but rather the passion and support for the game held by all of us; players, fans, parents and coaches alike, for every level of the game, from mite youth hockey all the way up to our professional team.
Citizens for one class hockey