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November 2007
November 29, 2007
Finally, a chance to relax

GERALD COLEMAN:

Hey fans. I’m talking to you from the nice warm comforts of my bed. With all the hockey games we’ve played and Thanksgiving last week, its nice to relax. Don’t get me wrong, I love hockey but the holidays are just as fun. But when they are so close together we need some little breaks to rest and get our health back and get back mentally, too. All in all this was a fun and exciting week.

This past week for me was a roller coaster as far as getting back to playing and feeling a part of the team again. Last Wednesday is what I needed to get back on track. It’s nice to get a shutout for me personally, but also for a team – they start believing in you. I always liked playing in Lowell so it was a fun game.

For me as a goalie you don’t want to be in those games because you feel that one more mistake it could cost you the game, but the guys did a great job scoring goals – which is something we were having problems with last year. It’s been fun watching our team come together this year – and since we’ve made that trade we have gotten only better. With some young guys and lots of new guys it was only a matter of time before we would gel together. With time I think we will hit ups and downs as we have shown already this year, but this team will only get better and more exciting to watch.

Besides the hockey, last week was for giving thanks, spending time with loved ones and of course eating good food. More so, I love a good home cooked meal. This year was the first year the my girlfriend (Lindsay) and I had a dinner with just the two us. Usually we go to a big team dinner, but with all the hockey going on there really wasn’t much time to plan anything. So Lindsay and I stayed home and she made her first Thanksgiving dinner. The thing with that is she’s Canadian – and their Thanksgiving is in October. It’s nothing like the Thanksgiving here. She was excited to make her first American Thanksgiving and I thought she did a great job – but nothing’s like mom’s dinner. Hey, she will have may more years to get better. After dinner we did the things I love to do on Thanksgiving, watch all the great football games.

Now that crazy week is over we have time off to relax and get back on track – but only for a little while because there are more games to come. And with the holidays ... I can’t wait with some family coming down ... going to buy some presents. I’m going to be wishing we had more games so I can get away and keep busy.

– Colsy

Posted by at 06:58 PM
Comments (3) | Permalink

November 20, 2007
Plenty of thanks to dish around

FROM MIKE HOFFMAN:

Hello, everyone. The holiday season is back again. I'm fortunate enough to be playing so close to home this year (hopefully I'll be spending some of it in southern Cali too), so I will be able to eat some of my mom and aunt's favorite Turkey Day dishes.

It will be nice to get home even for the afternoon because our scheduling is pretty tight these days – we're in the midst of 10 games in 15 days. Teammates Ryan Carter and Brian Salcido will be making the trot down to Scituate with me ... I wish I could take more guys with me but having around 14 cousins and 8 aunts and uncles joining the festivities, I'm not sure my mom and aunts would enjoy cooking for another 10. I'm excited to get home and relax and watch football (how about them Patriots) and show the boys around town ... but I can admit I am not the best table-manored person around. I think Salcido and Carter are in for a treat watching 20 or so eaters going at it because the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.

It is the season of thanks and giving right? Well, I have to thank every other NFL, MLB and NBA team out there for giving up on some of the best talent and athleticism they had for the beloved Patriots, Sox and Celtics. I think I have to thank the Minnesota teams the most for there efforts in making such powerhouse teams in the Boston area. David Ortiz for the Sox, Randy Moss for the Patriots. I'm not much of a basketball fan, but wow are the Celtics good and much of the thanks from that goes to Kevin Garnett.

I never got to write about the Red Sox winning the World Series, but wow was that domination. Was probably the biggest "team" effort ever seen in a World Series. You could have named half the guys MVP. Boy, it's gotta be tough to be a New York fan these days.

That brings me to my next topic: Is it OK to be a Yankees-Patriots fan (cough, cough) Eric Weinrich. To me that's like ordering chinese food on Thanksgiving. (Actually did that once playing junior hockey.) I can understand sometimes if you lived half your life in a place and half in another to cheer for different city's teams. New England is a special place and deep down it's wrong in my eyes to route for the Yanks and others.

I want to thank all the fans for their support so far this year and as you can see the team is really bonding these days. There is a real positive attitude in the locker room and even though it's tough to see teammates get traded, the talent we got in return has already helped.

Before I finish I want to list some of the things I am thankful for. I am thankful for a great family, friends, hockey, the people that have coached me along the way, the fans and support, New England seasons, wraps, family guy, holidays, summers off, caring, giving and honest people, and last but not least, a great group of teamates and coaching staff. Have a great Thanksgiving!

-Hoff

Posted by at 04:26 PM
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GERALD COLEMAN (at left), 22, is in his first full season with the Pirates. He was drafted by the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2003. He played in a couple of NHL games for Tampa but saw most of his action with the Lightning's AHL team in Springfield, Mass. He was traded last season to the Anaheim Ducks, parent team of the Pirates. Coleman grew up in Evanston, Ill., and played on the U.S. national team as a teenager. As a member of the London Knights in the Ontario Hockey League, he was on squad that won the Memorial Cup.

MIKE HOFFMAN, 27, took a different path than most hockey players on the Pirates. He graduated from Scituate (Mass.) High 1999, then went to prep school and the United States Hockey League before playing for the University of Connecticut. In the fall of his junior year, Hoffman got a call from his agent asking if he'd like a tryout with the Worcester Ice Cats. Before the first game the coach asked, "Do you fight?" and Hoffman said, "I do now." He had a fight that night against Graham Belak, and according to Hoffman, "that's how my pro career started."



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