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Topic: [He] gave me another chance

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[He] gave me another chance

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SAN DIEGO -- As tough and nasty as any player in the NFL, whether it was putting Albert Haynesworth on his back or getting in the last shot in a tangle of large bodies, Kris Dielman found it hard to end his NFL career. Brandon Prust Canadiens Jersey . With one of his young sons babbling in the background, the four-time Pro Bowl left guard for the San Diego Chargers choked up as he announced Thursday that he was retiring due to a scary concussion that led to changes by the NFL. "I had nine great years," said Dielman, who recalled that no one thought hed make it past his first training camp after signing as an undrafted rookie in 2003. "It just sucks that it has to end this way, but it is." Dielman said it was his decision to retire 4 1/2 months after sustaining a concussion in a helmet-to-helmet collision with a New York Jets defender. "Ive got to get out when the getting outs good still," he said. "It wasnt worth what would happen if I would have kept on playing. Ive got a beautiful family I want to be around. I live in a great place, so I want to enjoy it. Its been a great nine years. I had a lot of fun; a lot of memories." Dielmans wife, Sandy, and sons Reid and Blake sat off to one side in the team meeting room, which was packed with players, coaches and front-office employees. At one point, Reid blurted out, "Its Daddy." The 320-pound Dielman was staggered by the injury early in the fourth quarter against the Jets on Oct. 23. He continued to play because the Chargers were out of offensive linemen due to other injuries. The team didnt diagnose his condition until after the game. Dielman suffered a grand mal seizure on the flight home. The team plane was met by an ambulance and he was hospitalized overnight. Ten days after Dielman was hurt, the leagues injury and safety panel told game officials to watch closely for concussion symptoms in players. Officials were told that if they believed a player had sustained a concussion, they were to take appropriate steps to alert the team and get medical attention for the player. "I dont want to have any more problems, or have problems as I get older," Dielman said. "I played a rough style of football. This one got me and Ive got to move on." Dielman was salty and blue collar to the end. Dressed in jeans, a blue T-shirt and flip-flops, he recalled how hed much rather block for a running play than a passing play. Dielman, who played at Indiana, mentioned that even though he became close friends with centre Nick Hardwick, who played at Purdue, he put a Boilermakers sticker on his toilet because of the intensity of the college rivalry. Dielman said Hardwick is the godfather of one of his sons. Quarterback Philip Rivers joined Dielman at the podium. "Ill certainly miss the great blocks and his ability to help us win, but Ill miss him more in the locker room, in the meeting rooms and the bus rides and all those things," Rivers said. "If you had 53 Kris Dielmans, youd win a bunch of games. He plays football the way you played it as a kid, the way we all played it in high school. Its never changed. While its a business at this level and theres a lot of things that change, he treated it the same way. I know I appreciated it. I know the guys appreciated it." Rivers got emotional as he recalled a pre-game ritual. "The one thing Ill miss most, and this is kind of a private thing with Kris and I, but I always kind of give the linemen a little head-butt before we go out for the first play of the game," Rivers said, sniffing back tears. "Kris always grabbed me a little tight and said, Lead us. Him saying that every week was special. That moment there is probably what Ill miss most Week One next year." Coach Norv Turner said hes heard Dielman described many ways, and added a few more: "Stubborn, irritable, moody. Thats on his good days." Whenever the Chargers play the Tennessee Titans, Turner shows the team a clip from San Diegos playoff win after the 2007 season. Marcus McNeill is blocking Haynesworth and Dielman comes in and puts the defensive tackle on his back. "Thats what playing in this league is about," Turner said. "The one thing that I will say Kris will leave with his teammates is a great example of how you play this game." As an unrestricted free agent after the 2006 season, Dielman left about $10 million on the table in Seattle and signed a six-year deal with the Chargers worth $39 million. He said he did it because of his friends on the Chargers. Hardwick said Dielman was the best guard hed ever seen because of his technique, tenacity, athletic ability and willpower. "Hes not going to let you get one over on him," Hardwick said. "Hes not going to let you be the last one to throw a punch; hes not going to let you be the last one to move an inch. Youre going to go back before the end of the play. ... You dont know how hard it is to hate the person across from you every time you played him. He hated the person across from him every time." Dielman plans to be around. "Im excited to tailgate," he said. Henri Richard Canadiens Jersey . Henrik Zetterberg had two goals and an assist, and Pavel Datsyuk and Niklas Kronwall each had a goal and two assists to lead Detroit in a 5-2 win over the Philadelphia Flyers on Saturday night. Brendan Gallagher Canadiens Jersey . The 33-year-old right-hander was 14-7 with a career-low 3.64 ERA in 28 starts for his hometown San Diego Padres last season. He joins a rotation that includes NL Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw, Chad Billingsley, Ted Lilly and fellow newcomer Chris Capuano, who signed a $10-million, two-year deal last week.ANAHEIM – The Leafs knew this one meant a little bit more to their head coach and they required some heroics from Jonathan Bernier to capture it. Bernier made 43 saves – including 34 in the final two periods – as Toronto landed a statement victory over one of the leagues top teams, dealing Randy Carlyles former Ducks squad just their sixth loss in regulation at home this season. Scorching since early January, the Leafs have now snatched up points in 17 of the past 20 games (14-3-3), starting a challenging five-game road trip with a bang in California. Racing out to an unlikely 3-0 lead on this night, they needed more of the usual from Bernier as the Ducks pushed back with the expected fury of the leagues second-best team. The 25-year-old stopped 18 of 19 shots in an increasingly one-sided middle frame before adding another 16 saves to his resume in the third. Seemingly better the busier he gets, Bernier owns a sparkling .947 save percentage when he faces 40 shots or more in a game this season. A sponge on this night, he improved to 8-2-2 in such situations on the year. “Its crazy how the rebounds, they just kind of suck into him,” said Tyler Bozak, who had the games first goal. “Hes one of the few goalies Ive seen who can control his rebounds so well and doesnt let many come off him. He was a huge reason why we got the win tonight like he has been all year.” Quiet in his movements and a step ahead of the play in many instances, Bernier rarely required the big save, instead in prime position to absorb most that came his way. There was the stop on Rickard Rakell after a Phil Kessel neutral zone turnover, the glove save on Patrick Maroon high-slot and the Corey Perry short-side attempt on an early third period man advantage for the Ducks.All but one were turned aside. “Im not a goalie so I dont really know how they think,” said Paul Ranger, “but as a defenceman you anticipate plays and I think hes very good at anticipating plays from the offensive opponents. He just seems to know that its going to happen. He knows where theyre going to shoot.” Also helped by 24 blocked shots, Bernier rose to fourth in the NHL (tie) with a .926 save percentage. Like Carlyle on Monday, hell visit his former team in Los Angeles for the first time on Thursday night. Making his return to Anaheim for the first time as Leafs head coach, Carlyle was clearly revved up to face his old squad. His players sensed as much. “I think he mightve been a little more nervous for this one than the other ones,” said Bozak, “but were happy we could get one for him.” “Theres satisfaction when you beat your former hockey club,” Carlyle admitted. “Im not going to hide that fact.” Five Points 1. Carlyles Return I Strolling up to the Honda Center, where he spent seven seasons as the Ducks coach, Carlyle couldnt help but feel sentimental on Monday morning. He saw a familiar friend in the “big, happy” parking lot attendant and another gentleman who washes the players cars, most of cars newly replaced since Carlyle was dismissed in Dec. 2011. “Its always nice to come back and see the people you spent seven-plus years with,” Carlye said ahead of Mondays clash, calling himself “part of the enemy” now as the Leafs bench boss. “Its special.” Carlyle led the bench here when the Ducks captured their first and only Stanley Cup in 2007. And though he doesnt wear the ring from that epic summer much – “I kind of look at it as flaunting” – the memories and achievement remain an obvious point of pride. “I was very fortunate to coach the players that were here,” he said of a group that included Scott Niedermayer, Chris Pronger, Teemu Selanne, Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry. “We had a great group of players and we had a lot of things go our way. We had a lot of success and we enjoyed it. It was great for the franchise. But in reality its the players that go out there and earn it. The coaches, you swing the gate.” Selanne and Perry were among the current Ducks who looked back regretfully at the manner in which Carlyle departed. Anaheim started the season well enough then – winning four of their first five – before spiraling into the chaos of 16 losses in 19 games (3-12-4). Carlyle was dismissed on Dec. 1 and repllaced by Bruce Boudreau. P.K Subban Jersey. “He was a great coach here and it was unfortunate the way he had to go,” said Perry. “You cant fire all the players. We feel bad for what really happened.” “After all you still have to remember that the players are on the ice,” added Selanne. “And when you have a coach that you won the Stanley Cup together and a lot of the same players and you cant succeed its also a [leadership] problem that you couldnt turn things around. There were a lot of things that went wrong.” Carlyle received a standing ovation from the Ducks faithful during the first TV timeout. 2. Then & Now Carlyle believes hes calmed some since leaving the sunny California skies, also trying to offer a more positive outlook to his players where possible. Joffrey Lupul, who played for Carlyle twice with the Ducks and now with the Leafs, offered one subtle and maybe more revealing change in his head coach from then to now. “If anything I think now he maybe relies on his assistant coaches a little more,” said Lupul, “gives them a little more control to chip in where they may, lets them talk in the room a lot more whereas in Anaheim he seemed to, especially initially, control everything from the power-play to penalty kill. Now I think hes got a really good staff here and has a lot of faith in them.” 3. Bozak Marksmanship Tyler Bozak has been the most accurate shooter in the NHL to date this season. The 27-year-old scored his 15th of the year on Monday – snapping a long power-play slide – bumping up his league-leading shooting percentage to 22 per cent. Though buoyed by an uptick in luck, Bozak has actually proven an efficient shooter his entire career. He entered this season with a career 15.5 per cent mark. Bozak had three points against the Ducks, now with 40 points in 42 games. 4. Trending Upward Still third from the bottom, the Toronto penalty kill is trending in the right direction as the stretch drive heats up. Stuffing the Ducks on all four opportunities Monday the unit improved to 88 per cent in the past 12 games. “Obviously your goaltender is always your best penalty killer,” said Carlyle. “I thought Bernie made some big stops and we were able to box out and there wasnt a lot of second and third opportunities.” On the other side of the special teams equation, the Leaf power-play snapped an 0-19 slide when Bozak tapped in a Dion Phaneuf pass in the first frame. “It was nice to get out there on the power-play and not give one up and get one instead,” said Bozak with a grin. 5. Carlyles Return II Carlyle was just finishing his career when Selanne joined him in Winnipeg as a rookie. The two would connect again 12 years later when Carlyle took over for Mike Bab**** behind the bench in Anaheim following the second lockout. Selanne was joining the Ducks for a second go-around following a failed one-year experiment in Colorado. He was battling back from knee surgery, but was given an opportunity that year under Carlyle. “He was so great for me,” Selanne said of Carlyle. “[He] gave me another chance. Very thankful for that.” The now 43-year-old rewarded that faith in the 2005-06 season, scoring 40 goals and 90 points. Stats-Pack .947 – Save percentage for Jonathan Bernier when facing 40 shots or more. 8 – Blocked shots for Dion Phaneuf against the Ducks. 0-19 – Skid without a power-play goal for the Leafs, snapped with Tyler Bozaks 15th this year in the opening frame. 22% – Shooting percentage for Bozak this season, no. 1 in the NHL. 19-7 – Shots advantage for the Ducks in Mondays second period. 35 – Points in the past 21 games for Phil Kessel, who had three more points in Anaheim, up to six in two games versus the Ducks this season. 8-2-2 – Record for Bernier this season when facing 40 shots or more. 23:56 – Team-leading ice-time for Carl Gunnarsson, which included nearly five minutes on the penalty kill. Special Teams Capsule PP: 1-2Season: 21% (6th) PK: 4-4Season: 78.3% Quote of the Night “Theres satisfaction when you beat your former hockey club. Im not going to hide that fact.” -Randy Carlyle, after beating his former team for the first time in Anaheim Up Next The Leafs visit the Sharks on Tuesday night in the second leg of a five-game road trip. cheap nfl jerseys cheap jerseys ' ' '



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