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stfrank -> RE: General NHL Talk (11/25/2016 6:47:10 AM)

A great story in todays Strib.

Matt Cullen counts his blessings at home for Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving with family and hockey is just the latest.
By Michael Russo Star Tribune

As Matt Cullen sat at the dinner table at the Burnsville home of his sister, Annie, on Thanksgiving night, the Minnesota native had a lot to be thankful for.

A loving wife, three healthy sons, three supportive siblings, eight nieces and nephews, two awesome parents and a really big-hearted NHL schedule-maker.

Right after Cullen re-signed with the Pittsburgh Penguins in August for his 19th — and latest “final” — NHL season for a chance to repeat as a Stanley Cup champion, Cullen’s wife, Bridget, was excited to see that the Penguins would be playing the Wild during a day-after-Thanksgiving matinee in St. Paul.

That meant her husband, who turned 40 earlier this month, would get to enjoy the holiday with his large family.

“I couldn’t have been more excited,” Bridget said, before laughing. “Matt doesn’t look too far ahead. I don’t think he knows where he’s going to be next week.”

It’s been an incredible year for the Cullen clan. On Thursday, Annie’s husband, Adam, prepared most of the feast and Bridget cooked the turkey.

Matt Cullen’s three sons ate Lucky Charms out of the Stanley Cup this summer.

COURTESY OF RIALEE PHOTOGRAPHY
Matt Cullen’s three sons ate Lucky Charms out of the Stanley Cup this summer.
“I’ll have a couple beers to start the day just to get through the rest of it,” Matt’s youngest brother, Joe Cullen, kidded.

In the summer of 2015, Cullen — born in Virginia, Minn., raised in Moorhead, Minn., and a former St. Cloud State standout — seriously considered retirement until maybe his biggest fan, Penguins GM Jim Rutherford, persuaded him to sign for another year in Pittsburgh.

Rutherford twice had acquired Cullen before as GM of the Carolina Hurricanes, and 10 years earlier, Cullen was a big part of the Hurricanes winning the Stanley Cup.

Rutherford thought the versatile, great-skating Cullen would be a perfect leader to throw into Pittsburgh’s locker room. He became so respected, teammates began calling him “Dad.”

The season ended perfectly.

Cullen not only hoisted the Stanley Cup at age 39, but he was a trusted contributor in the decisive game in San Jose. Elevated to Sidney Crosby’s line down the stretch, he played seven shifts in the final 10 minutes and was on the ice when Patric Hornqvist sealed the deal with an empty-netter.

After an emotional Cullen lifted the Cup, after he was surrounded by interview-seeking media, the Zamboni door swung open and out came his wife, three sons, three siblings and very proud father, his former high school coach and longtime mentor, Terry.

From the ice, Cullen then called his mom, Nancy, watching from Moorhead.

The reunion, the hugs, the tears, it could not have been a better experience for the hockey-loving family.

“It was beyond anything I ever hoped for,” Cullen said. “Especially seeing the boys run on the ice, oh man, they had tears in their eyes and it was just so cool to see how much they understood the magnitude of the moment and how much it meant to me. That was about the most special moment I’ve ever been a part of.”

His biggest fans

In 2006, when Cullen won the Stanley Cup the first time, Bridget was pregnant with their first child, Brooks. So the Cullens feel blessed that 10 years later, three children who weren’t around the first time could experience their dad’s career and understand what it takes to win hockey’s most treasured trophy.

Brooks is now 10. Wyatt is 8. Joey is 6. The night before every home playoff game, they’d stretch with Dad while Mom read aloud the opposing scouting report.

“They just get it,” Bridget said. “Even this summer they’d say, ‘Mom, we have to play for the Penguins again because we have to win the Cup again.’ ”

In Raleigh, when the Hurricanes beat the Edmonton Oilers, only Bridget, Annie and Terry celebrated on the ice with Matt. Hockey-playing brothers Mark and Joe attended Games 1 and 2 but not Game 7.

They watched on TV.

Matt Cullen and father Terry after Matt won the Cup in 2016.
Photo: Michael Russo

MICHAEL RUSSO
Matt Cullen and father Terry after Matt won the Cup in 2016. Photo: Michael Russo
“I think we were too young to realize how cool it was and how unbelievable it was then,” said Joe Cullen, 35, who retired from pro hockey in 2014. “Matt was still young, and it didn’t hit us as much then as it did the second time.

“Still to this day, you get emotional thinking about it. It was too good to be true.”

After Cullen greeted his wife and children and gave his dad the warmest embrace, he hugged his crying brothers. Mark Cullen, 38, is not officially retired from hockey. He’s in talks with a few European clubs.



“We train together, and I definitely wouldn’t be playing still if it wasn’t for them,” Matt Cullen said, adding with a giant laugh, “I have a great picture of Joe. He couldn’t handle it. He sat there during the whole [Cup-clinching game] with his head in his hands.”

It wasn’t quite the whole game, but Joe Cullen indeed was a nervous wreck in the third period.

“I just looked at the floor and hoped I didn’t hear the extremely loud eruption of the [San Jose] crowd,” Joe Cullen said. “The three of us — me, Matt and Mark — we’re three best friends. I don’t think any of us would have gotten to where we got to without the others pushing the other, trying to make each other better, encouraging each other, always competing against each other.

“It’s truly amazing how much work Matt puts in, and Mark and I are so proud of what he’s done. It really did feel like we [won the Cup] together.”

That’s because, Bridget says, they did: “Mark and Joe are his motivation. They get him up every day in the offseason and get him going.”

The Cullen way

For the second year in a row, Matt and Bridget organized what teammate Trevor Daley has dubbed “the Matt Cullen Hockey Academy.”

During Cullen’s two years in Nashville after three seasons with the Wild, Bridget spent three hours daily shuttling her kids from home to school to all their activities. So last year, she came up with the idea of home schooling so their children wouldn’t have to enroll in a new school for only one year.

She went online and hired a teacher. Every day, from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Brooks, Wyatt and Joey attend school at the Penguins’ state-of-the-art practice facility.

One of the auxiliary locker rooms has been turned into a classroom. They have gym class in the Penguins’ fitness center, eat lunch cooked by the Penguins’ chef, skate on the Penguins’ ice. After Daley was traded to the Penguins last season, his son Trevor joined the class.

“This is such a cool concept and gives us stability where we don’t always have to switch schools,” Daley said. “And all of this was orchestrated by Matt and his wife.”

“It’s perfect,” said Cullen, a lifelong rink rat. “They’re well taken care of. If we have a practice day, I get to see them; if we have practice and then fly, I can stop in and say goodbye; our skills coach skates the boys a few times a week.

“It’s unbelievable.”

When Cullen re-signed with Pittsburgh, the Cullens organized the school again.

“The younger two, this is like their dream life,” Bridget said. “They get to play hockey every day during school. Wyatt, the other day, I said, ‘Do you need help with your math?’

“He goes, ‘No, Mom, this is easy. When I’m 18, Auston Matthews is going to be 29, and I’m coming for him!’ He just has it in his head.”

But at some point, reality will set in and they’ll have to re-enter school, preferably in Moorhead.

Allegedly, this is Cullen’s final year — again.

In July, when Cullen and his friends and family celebrated with the Cup for two days (his kids ate cereal out of it), the party in Frazee doubled as a potential retirement party.

Everybody who had something to do with Cullen’s hockey career and life was there because the Cullens weren’t sure if he’d re-sign in Pittsburgh or return to the Wild.

Cullen has played 1,414 regular-season and playoff games, the most of anybody from the 1996 NHL draft.

Asked if the goal is for her husband to indeed retire after this season, Bridget said with a big snicker: “That’s my goal. I’m hearing a lot from him lately, ‘When I go hunting next fall … when I go hunting next fall …’ ” Asked what she thinks life after hockey would entail for Matt, Bridget said, “I don’t know. Probably dive into our boys and what they’re doing. They’re only going to be this young for so long.”

The Cullens recently built their retirement home in Moorhead. They have so many friends at home and are especially close with the Wild’s Eric Staal and his wife, Tanya, and Zach Parise and his wife, Alisha.

And, of course, there’s the big Cullen clan, who got to enjoy each other’s company this Thanksgiving thanks to some perfect NHL scheduling.

Perhaps they’ll even get to reunite during the next Stanley Cup Final.

“That would be a dream,” Cullen said. “Last season does blow my mind in a year I was thinking probably was not going to happen. But it’s funny how things work out.

“As a family, it’s something we’ll cherish forever. It’s a special memory for all of us to share.”

mrusso@startribune.com RussoStrib




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (11/27/2016 7:31:48 AM)

Happy as hell for him.
Stuff that never happens if you STAY in Minnesota.




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (11/28/2016 1:42:04 PM)

When the Panthers and Hurricanes played the other night, 11 of the Canes were not even BORN when Jagr played in his first NHL game.
That's incredibly amazing, and cool.
Dude still keeps up. And often stands out. Amazing
And has no plans to walk away.




Black 47 -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/2/2016 2:53:04 PM)

Anybody see Sydney Crosby's amazing goal last night? Behind the net, he banked it off the goalie. Bounced right back to Crosby, he whacked it out of mid air and banked it off the goalie AGAIN, this time going in the net. One of the nicest I've seen.

Crosby is proof that it pays to do a full rebuild and TANK once in a while, rather than draft 15th every season like a certain team I know.




stfrank -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/2/2016 4:17:05 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Black 47

Anybody see Sydney Crosby's amazing goal last night? Behind the net, he banked it off the goalie. Bounced right back to Crosby, he whacked it out of mid air and banked it off the goalie AGAIN, this time going in the net. One of the nicest I've seen.

Crosby is proof that it pays to do a full rebuild and TANK once in a while, rather than draft 15th every season like a certain team I know.


Don't you find it interesting that Pittsburgh has been able to tank at just the right time to get not one, but two once in a generation players? First Mario and then Syndey........
Then you can look at Edmonton and see how great tanking and drafting first every year works.




joejitsu -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/3/2016 2:23:03 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Black 47

Anybody see Sydney Crosby's amazing goal last night? Behind the net, he banked it off the goalie. Bounced right back to Crosby, he whacked it out of mid air and banked it off the goalie AGAIN, this time going in the net. One of the nicest I've seen.

Crosby is proof that it pays to do a full rebuild and TANK once in a while, rather than draft 15th every season like a certain team I know.


Next to Chelios, Jagr is probably the best conditioned players I have ever seen on the ice. He is unreal, and it's fun to see him still playing at a high level.




joejitsu -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/3/2016 2:24:42 PM)

On the plus side, Richard Panik looks like a very solid player for the Hawks. On the minus side, they are still losing to the flyers with 6 minutes to go.




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/12/2016 2:23:14 PM)

Cannot believe Hakstols Schtik is working in the NHL.




stfrank -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/12/2016 5:21:59 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Cannot believe Hakstols Schtik is working in the NHL.


I suspect after a few more years he will on the outside looking in.......
or going back to the college ranks.




joejitsu -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/18/2016 3:11:44 PM)

After a Vikes game like today, I have the comfort of knowing that the Blackhawks can always make me feel a little better.




stfrank -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/18/2016 3:55:46 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: joejitsu

After a Vikes game like today, I have the comfort of knowing that the Blackhawks can always make me feel a little better.


Oh sure Joe, rub it in..... LOL




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/19/2016 10:39:56 PM)

First NHL games played 99 years ago today.
Super cool story.

https://www.nhl.com/news/first-nhl-games-remembered-99-years-later/c-284802546?tid=282169076




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/21/2016 12:04:53 AM)

Never seen so many 7-8-10 game winning streaks ....
Makes oyu wonder, juts who the hell is losing? [:D]




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/21/2016 12:06:02 AM)

443 kids have played in the NHL this season .... that were NOT BORN when Jaromir Jagr played his first NHL game.

oh
my
god




Black 47 -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/21/2016 12:49:22 AM)

It's almost unthinkable that he's a link to the 1991 Stanley Cup Finals against our North Stars. He was playing when I was 17 freakin' years old. Unfathomable.




joejitsu -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/28/2016 9:50:20 AM)

Uh, oh. Hawks lose three in a row, and Hoss is still out with the mysterious "upper body injury" (read concussion).




thebigo -> RE: General NHL Talk (12/28/2016 10:29:40 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Never seen so many 7-8-10 game winning streaks ....
Makes oyu wonder, juts who the hell is losing? [:D]


In the NHL, a win for one team is very often not a loss for their opponent.




Mr. Ed -> RE: General NHL Talk (1/31/2017 8:13:20 PM)

Checking scores, I see a lot of decent records,and several teams with good records, so I wondered who has the bad ones?

Some teams have to.

Then I saw Colorado

13 wins.

Darn. That's too bad [:D]

A lot of teams around .500

NHL parity [8|]




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (2/11/2017 11:33:32 PM)

Impressive numbers night in the NHL

King Henrik gets 400th win
TJ Oshie with his 400th point
Niklas Backstrom with his 700th point




SoMnFan -> RE: General NHL Talk (3/1/2017 2:22:31 PM)

LOTS of movement.

Love Vanek going to the Panthers with Jagr
I've got a new second-favorite east team now.




twinsfan -> RE: General NHL Talk (3/1/2017 3:00:46 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Checking scores, I see a lot of decent records,and several teams with good records, so I wondered who has the bad ones?

Some teams have to.

Then I saw Colorado

13 wins.

Darn. That's too bad [:D]

A lot of teams around .500

NHL parity [8|]

I think an engineering degree is needed to interpret the NHL standings. If they appear to be around .500, they are probably well below .500 in reality.




joejitsu -> RE: General NHL Talk (3/1/2017 3:37:33 PM)

Yay! Johnny Oduya is back in the Windy City! If there is a real soft spot on the Hawks, it's the depth along the blue line. Oduya can still skate well and move the puck, and he doesn't make many mental mistakes. A good get for us.




kevinemmer -> RE: General NHL Talk (3/1/2017 3:59:04 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: joejitsu

Yay! Johnny Oduya is back in the Windy City! If there is a real soft spot on the Hawks, it's the depth along the blue line. Oduya can still skate well and move the puck, and he doesn't make many mental mistakes. A good get for us.


Yup,

I wasn't happy to see that.

Would have rather he went somewhere else.




joejitsu -> RE: General NHL Talk (3/1/2017 4:11:33 PM)

Hey, Kevin. We need all the help we can get to keep playing catchup with you guys! Those kids can skate and shoot, and they are on a roll. I had a feeling that the big issue in the way of the Wild being a really good club was the coach. That's fixed, and the team responded accordingly. Get Dumba dialed in (he has a habit of skating himself out of position) and you should be set for the playoffs.




kevinemmer -> RE: General NHL Talk (3/1/2017 8:25:08 PM)

We need to get Dumba gone!

He never learns from his mistakes-scary! [:-]




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