Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Second hour of Overdrive. Overdrive is brought to you by FanDuel, bringing you more ways to play your game your way. Mark Rowan for Brian Hayes, alongside Jimmy McLennan and Jason Strudwick. The boys are out at Copetown Woods today, and we have some video. I should mention Peter Lavillette's going to join us in about five minutes, and Evan Bouchard at 5.30. I'm just...
We don't have the video necessarily ready for you at the moment, but I can explain to you guys that not only did O and Hayes get a Costco-sized box of Snickers, but they got t-shirts that say, in the Snickers logo, O-Dog and Hayes. Oh, I love it. This is really all worked out to their, like, if they had a plan, it's worked out to their plan.
I'm more concerned of how they played because apparently O is, like, a very great, I mean, we all know he's a great golfer, but apparently he's a very impatient partner. I can sense that.
Chapter 2: What are the latest headlines from the Stanley Cup Playoffs?
He doesn't want you, you know, let's move it along here. And if you're holding him up, he just drives ahead, that type of stuff. So I don't know if he'd like to golf with him. Strutty, are you a decent golfer?
Yeah, I'm pretty good. I mean, I can swing the wrenches pretty well. You know, I was out the last couple days. Pretty happy with my performance, actually. That guy you scratch? Are you kind of like a 10 handicapped? No, I'm like a 10 handicapped.
I think I'm 10 or 11. How do you feel about some of the guys here, and I know they're not alone, who go on to the Golf Canada app and check on the handicaps of their colleagues? It's public information.
I think if you put it on that app, you can look at anyone's because I can follow anyone's, can't I? That's my understanding.
No, no, for sure. But is that something that you do with your buddies? No, I don't care. They're just like, oh, I see your handicap's up to 13. What happened there? No, I don't care.
My favorite thing to do is ā I don't mind. People inflate them or whatever. I don't mind, but ā I just love chirping on the course. Man, do you remember a guy named Dorf? He was a character.
Do you remember Dorf? Dorf on golf.
Dorf on golf. So I play with this guy. He's a local doctor here in Edmonton, and he was standing in a sand trap, and he's already a short guy. And I said, this looks like a recreated Dorf on golf. I couldn't play the rest of the round. My buddies and I were laughing so hard. And he lost it. And it made it worthwhile. It was better than a hole-in-one.
He lost it for the rest of the round, and so did I. You got into his head, basically.
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Chapter 3: How did the Maple Leafs win the NHL Draft Lottery?
I think Montreal is one of those buildings. It's hard not to get juiced up when you walk onto the ice in Montreal and sometimes it goes dark and they've got the... They've got one of those songs going on, and the players that were around 40 years ago, 30 years ago, 20 years ago, and the highlights, you can just feel it kind of building inside of it.
Buffalo, I think, is a really tough place to play. You know, my first year was in the Nassau Coliseum. And, you know, it wasn't a wow type of building, but the ceiling was really low. We played Toronto in that first round. I could not even ā there's nobody that could hear me on the bench. You know, not my players, not my assistant coaches. It was just so loud in there.
You know, I think a lot ā it's playoffs, and everybody kind of gets that way. everybody's building is probably pretty good. I've been in Vegas, and Vegas can be really loud, really crazy. There's just great building. I think it's just the playoff hockey that brings it out, you know, and out of the fans and out of the players.
And they see the product on the ice, and then they react to what they're seeing. And usually their reactions are warranted. The game on the ice is so good, especially in the playoffs, that ā It just makes it really, really easy for the fans to become super involved in the game and to really shake that building.
Of the teams you took into the playoffs and the runs you had, do you remember a moment where ā and it could be a great play or a moment where someone settled the team down or took over a game for your club where you're like ā I coach younger kids. I just have moments where I remember the kid just ā he just does it. He just takes over.
So have you had that or a moment of talking that you can share with us? Yeah.
Yeah, so the biggest one for me is probably in the finals in Carolina. And we had lost in game five at home. And we got a power play with one second left in the third period. And so we were going to get a minute 59 on fresh ice in our building.
You know, they they showed on the TV, the TV might have been a TV on the locker room and the guy was polishing the cup up and he was getting it ready and the power play goal. And I remember that they scored a shorty about 30 seconds into the period and we had to go back to Edmonton. You know, we were up, I think, 3-1 in the series. So that made it 3-2. So we had to go to Edmonton for game six.
And I'm telling you that we got destroyed. I mean destroyed. I remember looking up at the second period and the shots were like 28-6. And we ended up losing the game. I think it might have been 4-0 or 5-0, something like that. And something had to be said after the game.
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