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11. Coming from a guy with a huge beard born on the 13th, my question should be fairly obvious: Why is no facial hair allowed and why is a No. 13 sweater not allowed to be worn? From diofan34
"The word is called tradition. That's the identity of the Devils organization. Those are part of the systemic points that have given us our identity, like our home and away jerseys. Whether you look at the Yankees or the old Montreal Canadiens and their identity, this is the identity of the Devils. I look at it as something the players, and hopefully the fans, take pride in."
Nik the Trik said:L K said:No. I'd just like to see some accountability. I think there is a bit of a difference between writing a negative piece about the performance of the team and writing an essay on how fat Phil Kessel is and how much he loves hot dogs. I don't think the Leafs need to develop the Blue Jays media that fawns over them and is afraid to ask any tough questions but I think there could be a little more professionalism out of them.
Well, except you're clearly saying yes. You're saying the team should dole out access based whether or not they approve of what someone writes, you just think they should have a low bar to clear. That's not a path I'd want the team to go down as a fan.
As far as accountability...that's on fans. I didn't read any of the Kessel hot dog stuff. If people did, if the people who write the stuff you find objectionable have an audience, then your beef is really with the fanbase, not with the media.
Nik the Trik said:If I wanted to be a Devils fan I'd be a Devils fan. Maple Leafs tradition includes some sweet-ass moustaches:
Frank E said:I think there's some middle ground there though. I mean, sure guys can write about whatever they want, but pandering to the lowest common denominator of fan is probably not the kind of stuff the Leafs want to encourage.
herman said:Seems to be more about uniformity than facial hair exactly (Does anyone watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine?). So to that end, everyone can shave, but not everyone can grow a professional looking beard.
bustaheims said:herman said:Seems to be more about uniformity than facial hair exactly (Does anyone watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine?). So to that end, everyone can shave, but not everyone can grow a professional looking beard.
I guess it makes some sense from that perspective, but still . . . instead of no facial, have a standard for properly groomed facial hair/not just stubble. It's either fully-formed and maintained, or you go clean shaven.
bustaheims said:herman said:Seems to be more about uniformity than facial hair exactly (Does anyone watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine?). So to that end, everyone can shave, but not everyone can grow a professional looking beard.
I guess it makes some sense from that perspective, but still . . . instead of no facial, have a standard for properly groomed facial hair/not just stubble. It's either fully-formed and maintained, or you go clean shaven.
herman said:The policy sets them apart and goal was to get them to buy into a program with an air of exclusivity (like a cult!).
bustaheims said:herman said:Seems to be more about uniformity than facial hair exactly (Does anyone watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine?). So to that end, everyone can shave, but not everyone can grow a professional looking beard.
I guess it makes some sense from that perspective, but still . . . instead of no facial, have a standard for properly groomed facial hair/not just stubble. It's either fully-formed and maintained, or you go clean shaven.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Or, Lou could drag himself out of the 19th century and acknowledge that a person's physical appearance has absolutely nothing to do with his/her job performance.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:bustaheims said:herman said:Seems to be more about uniformity than facial hair exactly (Does anyone watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine?). So to that end, everyone can shave, but not everyone can grow a professional looking beard.
I guess it makes some sense from that perspective, but still . . . instead of no facial, have a standard for properly groomed facial hair/not just stubble. It's either fully-formed and maintained, or you go clean shaven.
Or, Lou could drag himself out of the 19th century and acknowledge that a person's physical appearance has absolutely nothing to do with his/her job performance.
Tigger said:I dunno, it seems to be about buying in/toeing the line overall. I mean, the same could be said about playoff beards.
Nik the Trik said:Tigger said:I dunno, it seems to be about buying in/toeing the line overall. I mean, the same could be said about playoff beards.
Exactly. You can say the exact same thing about playoff beards. It doesn't matter. Every post season we get a mountain of incontrovertible evidence that players play hockey perfectly well regardless of their facial hair. Whether you grow a beard like a homeless Pirate like Scott Niedermayer or like a 9th grader who hasn't learned to shave yet like Sidney Crosby, their performance and the performance of their team is unchanged.
This is not a matter of playing into society's prejudices either, like maybe for a high profile lawyer you might impress a client less if you show up looking like a hungover Mall santa, hockey players actually don't get judged on things like this.
These are just rules for the sake of rules. It is the definition of unreasonable.
He should have added "I know who Nelson Mandela is now"Patrick said:Bernier: The biggest thing is hard work, that's going to be the biggest difference.
Reporter: So have you not worked hard previously?
Bernier: You know the hard work is going to pay-off here, just committing to working.
Reporter: Yes and I'm asking you then, did you not work hard in previous years?
Bernier (puzzled/pissed off look on his face): I don't know how to answer that question.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:bustaheims said:herman said:Seems to be more about uniformity than facial hair exactly (Does anyone watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine?). So to that end, everyone can shave, but not everyone can grow a professional looking beard.
I guess it makes some sense from that perspective, but still . . . instead of no facial, have a standard for properly groomed facial hair/not just stubble. It's either fully-formed and maintained, or you go clean shaven.
Or, Lou could drag himself out of the 19th century and acknowledge that a person's physical appearance has absolutely nothing to do with his/her job performance.