Chủ Nhật, 31 tháng 12, 2017

Waching daily Dec 31 2017

NEWS24 News 31 December 2017 Bangla latest News Today Bangla Breaking News BD News all Bangla

For more infomation >> NEWS24 News 31 December 2017 Bangla latest News Today Bangla Breaking News BD News all Bangla - Duration: 13:25.

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Jamuna tv News 31 December 2017 Bangla latest News Today Bangla Breaking News BD News all - Duration: 15:52.

Jamuna tv News 31 December 2017 Bangla latest News Today Bangla Breaking News BD News all

For more infomation >> Jamuna tv News 31 December 2017 Bangla latest News Today Bangla Breaking News BD News all - Duration: 15:52.

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NHL NEWS - Miller: Ryan Kesler and Ducks face a cold winter if things don't heat up soon - Duration: 7:50.

Miller: Ryan Kesler and Ducks face a cold winter if things don't heat up soon

ANAHEIM — Friday began with the Ducks one point out of a playoff spot and four points out of next-to-last in the West.

No, I'm not kidding.

The reigning five-time Pacific Division champions were essentially two games from being 14th in their 15-team conference, a reality as sobering as the December chill in Calgary.

And, Friday night, forecasters in the western Canadian city were calling for a "feels like" temperature of minus-39.

I'm not sure if that was Celsius or Fahrenheit.

But I'm almost certain it doesn't matter.

Once it reaches a point where it's cold enough to cause frost bite on a Slurpee, the details, much like everyone's extremities, tend to lose feeling.

So, the good news for the Ducks was their game against Calgary was here, at Honda Center, and not in whatever glorified igloo the Flames use to escape nature's numbing wrath this time of year.

The bad news was, with Christmas still ringing in their ears, the Ducks already were experiencing a tinge of urgency while four games short of the season's midway point.

"You see how tight the whole playoff race is," forward Ryan Kesler said.

"We gotta start looking at that now 'cause if we wait, it's going to be too late.".

He's right in feeling the schedule closing in on his team this early, and Kesler is just one game into his 2017-18 season.

Late-spring hip surgery delayed his debut until Wednesday, when Kesler returned just in time for the Ducks to score 100 seconds into their game against Vegas and then use that momentum to fall as flat as the ice surface.

They eventually lost 4-1 in a performance Randy Carlyle labeled "a stinker," the coach publicly choosing a G-rated description when, behind the closed doors of the locker room, his assessment was likely more adult-themed.

Captain Ryan Getzlaf said the Ducks "quit playing, simple as that," a disturbing evaluation in that they were rested — coming off a three-day holiday break — and facing in the Golden Knights an opponent they still haven't beaten.

Where there should have been great motivation there instead was glaring indifference, the sort of trait rarely attached to a Stanley Cup playoff qualifier.

Hit by a rash of injuries – a rash about the only ailment that hasn't sidelined a Duck so far — this group now is understandably having to come from behind.

It's almost as if the Ducks have been killing off a three-month penalty.

Given the number of games missed and the key players who've missed them, they could be buried by shovelfuls of standings points rather than just handfuls.

Still, it's not the most encouraging sign to hear Kesler talk about the Ducks playing "soft" and calling for an attitude that's more "mean.

Mean? This is still hockey, right? Hockey, with its slashing sticks and flashing blades, is pretty much the definition of cranky.

Kesler is equally famous for being an ornery type, his presence by itself enough to make the Ducks more delightfully grumpy.

At this point, however, it's going to take a thorny disposition that spreads throughout the roster.

"I don't know if you use the word 'meaner,' " Carlyle said.

"I think it's 'harder' in all areas, more competitive for loose pucks, more of an oomph in your game.".

As they've gradually returned to improved health and something closer to full strength, the Ducks need added oomph and a whole lot more.

The seconds ticking away loudly for late December, their season isn't on the line.

Not yet.

But the Ducks are without question on the clock, their best time to rebound starting, oh, about right now.

"Our expectations are the games are going to get tougher," Carlyle said.

"They usually do after Christmas.

The points are at a premium…I think you're naturally going to see the game get more intense.".

The Ducks better increase the intensity, as well.

So far, they've won consecutive games just six times, their longest streak of victories lasting only three games.

By comparison, the Kings won back-to-back six times in October alone.

This team also has lost an NHL-worst eight games after regulation.

The Ducks have a better record on the road than at home.

Only two teams in the Western Conference have a worse goal differential than the Ducks' minus-10.

These are all trends that can't continue if this club is going to do anything more than cling to the fringes of playoff consideration until the final horn sounds.

"If we control our emotions, we play better on edge and when we're physical," defenseman Kevin Bieksa said.

"We have to find a way to bring that emotion every night.

We've talked about somehow manufacturing that and getting that intensity.".

Whatever it takes, the Ducks better figure it out and any day now.

These healing players have to form a healthy team.

The Ducks still are close enough to force their way into the heat of another NHL spring.

Of course, they're also close enough to be frozen out entirely, iced as completely as a shivering Slurpee.

For more infomation >> NHL NEWS - Miller: Ryan Kesler and Ducks face a cold winter if things don't heat up soon - Duration: 7:50.

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BREAKING NEWS About SHERIFF CLARK… Corrupt FBI Just RETALIATED - Duration: 3:32.

For more infomation >> BREAKING NEWS About SHERIFF CLARK… Corrupt FBI Just RETALIATED - Duration: 3:32.

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Syria's Wounded Are Not The Only War Casualties | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:20.

For more infomation >> Syria's Wounded Are Not The Only War Casualties | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:20.

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Uomini e Donne news, Sara in lacrime: la confessione su Nicola - Duration: 3:35.

For more infomation >> Uomini e Donne news, Sara in lacrime: la confessione su Nicola - Duration: 3:35.

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BREAKING NEWS About JAMES WOODS… What The HELL?! - Duration: 2:36.

For more infomation >> BREAKING NEWS About JAMES WOODS… What The HELL?! - Duration: 2:36.

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NHL NEWS - Canada-U.S. outdoor spectacle unspectacular - Duration: 9:30.

Canada-U.S. outdoor spectacle unspectacular

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.—Oh, it was a spectacle, but then every outdoor hockey game is a spectacle.

Like a Zamboni operator being able to drive, it's part of the job description.

The United States played Canada in the first-ever outdoor game at a world junior hockey championship, and the snow filled the freezing air and danced and swirled and, most of all, fell.

"I think our speed was fine, but the puck was in your feet," said Canadian captain Dillon Dubé, after Canada lost 4-3 to the United States in a shootout.

"You're almost just poking at it to make it keep up the same pace as you.

So it was tough, but it was fun.

When they were shovelling the snow, you could almost make a fort.".

In other words, it was ridiculous.

Yes, it was a spectacle.

So, if you use the loosest sense of the term, was the truck fire that closed the QEW on Friday morning, which combined with delays at the border caused some of the record junior crowd of 44,592 to arrive late.

The football stadium filled most of the way up in time for those fans to get snowed on, and snowed on some more, as they watched hockey attempt to be played between shovelling sessions.

The U.S.

came back from a 3-1 deficit in the third period.

On paper, not a bad game.

On the ice, it was absurd, as outdoor games tend to be.

Before the game the players spoke of how excited they were, and also how they would have to play simple hockey, cautious hockey, meat-and-potatoes hockey.

Which, if you have ever watched an outdoor game, is the only true common thread that runs though every single one.

Well, that and the money.

One of the great ironies of the plague of outdoor games is the factors that truly make them spectacles — snow, primarily, or in some cases rain — are what make the hockey itself so unspectacular.

Which is why, as the money-making venture has spread across the sport, another common thread is that outdoor games don't mean very much, by design.

They are one game of 82, or in some places all-star games.

You don't let the possibility of ridiculous conditions influence a game that matters.

But this game mattered.

In the end, the IIHF and USA Hockey dodged a real storm: Had the Americans lost they would have been in danger of finishing fourth in the group, and facing Sweden or Russia in the quarter-finals.

As it stood, Canada can still clinch first with a regulation win over Denmark, and the U.S.

can still finish second by beating Finland.

Still, what a silly thing.

The crowd, partly delayed by a morning vehicle fire near Grimsby, or lines at the border, filled in just in time for the precipitation to start, and only the top corners were empty when the lake-effect stuff hit, dropping an inch or two an hour.

The ice crew brought out both double-wheel wheelbarrows and garbage cans for the shovellers during every timeout; by the end of the second period they could have built a respectable child's toboggan hill behind one net.

But instead of a dazzling display of speed and skill, we got some power-play goals, long stretches of nothing much, and some flashes of brilliance.

The best player was probably American Sabres pick Casey Mittelstadt, who assisted on both American goals in the third period, and threw a pass at the end of regulation that nearly resulted in a regulation winner.

It could have been better, though.

"Heading into the second was almost the worst; towards the third, I think you couldn't really see it too well," said Dubé.

"Sometimes you could see it riffling in the snow, but you couldn't even see the black of it." Asked how the game might have played out differently on an NHL rink, Canada's Maxime Comtois said simply, "I could see the puck.".

Now, they loved it.

Canadian Boris Katchouk, who scored Canada's third goal, said he felt like a kid again.

Dubé said he thought he snow made the game better.

But then, they weren't watching.

There was nothing like Mittelstadt's thrilling goal against Slovakia Thursday night, when the Sabres pick turned and wheeled past a defender, slalomed to the net, and tucked the puck past a goalie he had turned into a doormat before doing a mini-Bobby Orr dive.

There wasn't an end-to-end goal like the Slovak winner from Samuel Bucek.

It was impossible.

And so the Canadians took some dumb penalties and turned over too many pucks, and you can't say the Americans didn't deserve to win.

As Comtois put it, "the conditions didn't do this to us.

We did it to ourselves.".

So yes, it was a spectacle: the snow, the shadows on the ice as night fell, the puffs of snow as players dug their blades into the ice.

But look at it this way: the best hockey game I saw this year — including the NHL regular season, the NHL playoffs, and the Stanley Cup final — was Canada and the United States on Jan.

5, in Montreal.

It was a swashbuckling, lurching, thrilling game, the best kind of junior game, full of the scrambling chaos of hockey before NHL coaches drill out all the mistakes.

The Americans won 5-4, and the only lousy part was that it went to a shootout.

In this game, the game began and ended with two-on-ones that bounced away, one for each team, and players were tripping in ruts on the ice.

Even the three-on-three OT wasn't so much scrambling glorious chaos as puck management.

There was real skill out there, sure.

The players made this thing about as good as it could be.

Not enough, though.

It wasn't a great hockey game, not really.

It was a spectacle, instead.

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