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“I’m trying to make a career switch here,” Burke told Jeff Marek and Elliotte Friedman on the 31 Thoughts Podcast. “I’m sick of the commute. My daughters are going to be here no matter what — they’re 14 and 12 so it’s not like they’re one year away from graduation. Abaqus welding interface crackberry strain.
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I want to spend more time with them so yes my plan is to make a career shift to go to the dark side.” But while it’s most likely this is a role he’ll stay in for the foreseeable future, he didn’t completely close the door on the NHL. “There are a couple owners I really like in this league. Most of them not.
Most of them I’m indifferent about or don’t like. There are a couple situations I would have to think hard about given the people involved. But they’d involve commuting too much and so I’d think the answer is no. “I wouldn’t rule out anything.
I taught law school for 10 years, a lot of people don’t know that. When I worked for the Canucks I taught at UBC law school and I really enjoyed that. I might do some of that.” Burke adds another set of experienced eyes to the Sportsnet team as someone who served as GM for four different teams and worked in the league head offices, including the most thankless job as the league’s chief disciplinarian.
The 62-year-old started as a player agent in the 1980s before joining the Canucks front office and then getting his first GM job with the Hartford Whalers in 1992. He most recently stepped away from his role as president of hockey operations for the Calgary Flames. Burke played in the NCAA and in the AHL and can speak as a veteran on a wide array of topics. Here are some highlights from his interview on the 31 Thoughts Podcast this week, which touched on topics from how a supplemental discipline hearing unfolds, to his biggest regret, first big trade, and more.
You can listen to the full audio here. ON WHY THE LEAGUE CAN’T HAND OUT EXTREME 10-GAME SUSPENSIONS TO CURB BAD HITS “There will be people who watched last night’s game (Tom Wilson hit) and say it should be 10 games. I saw a commentator on TV say ‘well if they gave 10 for all of these they’d stop.’ We don’t want to do that.
We want these things to stop, but if you’re too hard then the hitting disappears. If you said anything like we’re going to give 10 games for this, well then you’re going to stop having bodychecking. None of us want that.
“The hitting will disappear where a player is not sure and he says ‘well maybe I’ll do this or whatever. When you take out even 10 per cent of the hitting you might as well have taken out 30 per cent of the hitting. “My point is someone will say it’s worth 10, someone will say it’s worth two, Capitals fans will say it’s worth nothing.” ON THE REGULAR SEASON/PLAYOFF WEIGHING SYSTEM FOR SUSPENSIONS “There is a weighing system on playoff games. So the notion that one regular season game is the same as a playoff game: no it’s not, never has been. I won’t tell you what the weighing system is because I don’t know what it is, but certainly two for one in the first round. So if it’s a four-gamer in the first round it’s not going to be more than two, it’s a minimum of two and it went up.” Burke was in charge of supplemental discipline for the league in the mid-1990s. In 1996, he suspended Colorado’s Claude Lemieux for two Stanley Cup final games after he brutally checked Detroit’s Kris Draper into the boards from behind during Game 6 of the conference final.
Free download pc game igi 5. “I think in the final our unofficial rule might have been four or five to one. So Lemieux might have got 20 games for that; he got four instead and missed games in the final.”. In July of 2007 Burke was GM of the Anaheim Ducks and Dustin Penner was an RFA. Edmonton Oilers GM Kevin Lowe swooped in and signed Penner to an offer sheet worth $21.25 million over five years, which infuriated Burke. The Ducks didn’t match the contract, which resulted in Penner heading to Edmonton and Anaheim receiving the Oilers’ first-, second- and third-round picks in 2008.
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