Kobbie Mainoo is on ANOTHER LEVEL!πŸ”₯
Kobbie Mainoo is on ANOTHER LEVEL!πŸ”₯

Kobbie Mainoo Best Skills And Goals kobbie mainoo highlights mainoo highlights πŸ””SUBSCRIBE AND TURN ON POST NOTIFICATIONS TO NEVER MISS AN UPLOAD!πŸ”” πŸ“² Subscribe For More πŸ“© Please reach out for any enquiries! ➑️ contactmufcnation@gmail.com πŸ“ΉNEW VIDEO: ➑️https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=60Uun-EjMNA Music: 1.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2d_ckbqNV1c 2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrkymKKz2p8 3. Dread Pitt - you wish Β©MUFCNation Thank you for watching! #mufc #manchesterunited #eriktenhag



NHL '94 "Game of the Night"  Islanders at Sabres "1980 Stanley Cup Semifinal" game 1
NHL '94 "Game of the Night" Islanders at Sabres "1980 Stanley Cup Semifinal" game 1

The 1980 Stanley Cup playoffs, the playoff tournament of the National Hockey League (NHL) began on April 8, after the conclusion of the 1979–80 NHL season. This season saw the addition of four teams from the disbanded World Hockey Association (WHA) as expansion franchises, and thus the playoffs were also expanded from 12 to 16 teams. The expanded playoff format allowed two of those former WHA clubs, the Edmonton Oilers and the Hartford Whalers, to make the playoffs in their first season in the NHL. The playoffs concluded on May 24 when the New York Islanders defeated the Philadelphia Flyers 5–4 to win the final series four games to two and win the Stanley Cup. It was the Islanders' first Stanley Cup win and was the first of four consecutive Stanley Cup wins. With the league expansion from 17 to 21 teams, the playoffs were also expanded, from a 12-team tournament to a 16-team tournament. The sixteen teams were composed of the four divisional champions plus the top 12 finishers of the remaining 17 teams. The 16 qualifying teams were then seeded based on regular season points, with divisional rankings ignored. Division leaders no longer received first round byes. The teams were seeded 1 through 16, with the top team playing the 16th team in the first round, and so on. In subsequent rounds, matchups were similarly arranged, with the top remaining seed against the lowest remaining seed, and so on. The Preliminary Round was expanded to be a best-of-five set, up from a best-of-three. The Atlanta Flames played their final playoff games in this postseason, and moved to Calgary soon after; the playoffs returned to Atlanta in 2007. (2) Buffalo Sabres vs. (3) New York Islanders This was the third playoff series meeting between these two teams. New York won both previous meetings in consecutive years, the latter of which was a four-game sweep in the 1977 Stanley Cup Quarterfinals. Playoff seeds The sixteen teams that qualified for the playoffs are ranked 1–16 based on regular season points. Philadelphia Flyers, Patrick Division champions, Clarence Campbell Conference regular season champions, NHL regular season champions – 116 points Buffalo Sabres, Adams Division champions, Prince of Wales Conference regular season champions – 110 points Montreal Canadiens, Norris Division champions – 107 points Boston Bruins – 105 points New York Islanders – 91 points Minnesota North Stars – 88 points Chicago Black Hawks, Smythe Division champions – 87 points New York Rangers – 86 points Atlanta Flames – 83 points St. Louis Blues – 80 points Toronto Maple Leafs – 75 points Los Angeles Kings – 74 points Pittsburgh Penguins – 73 points (30 wins) Hartford Whalers – 73 points (27 wins) Vancouver Canucks – 70 points Edmonton Oilers – 69 points April 29 New York Islanders 4–1 Buffalo Sabres Buffalo Memorial Auditorium Recap May 1 New York Islanders 2–1 2OT Buffalo Sabres Buffalo Memorial Auditorium Recap May 3 Buffalo Sabres 4–7 New York Islanders Nassau Coliseum Recap May 6 Buffalo Sabres 7–4 New York Islanders Nassau Coliseum Recap May 8 New York Islanders 0–2 Buffalo Sabres Buffalo Memorial Auditorium Recap May 10 Buffalo Sabres 2–5 New York Islanders Nassau Coliseum Recap New York won series 4–2



India vs England 1st Test Day 2 Live | IND vs ENG Test Live Scores & Commentary | India 1st Innings
India vs England 1st Test Day 2 Live | IND vs ENG Test Live Scores & Commentary | India 1st Innings

India vs England 1st Test Day 2 Live Scores This Match Will be Played at Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium Hyderabad from 25th January 2024 to 29th January 2024 This Match Will Start at 9.30am From Indian Standard time. IND vs ENG 1st Test Live Commentary By Sports Updates by Chandan. Follow us on Social Media. Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/Sports-Updates-by-Chandan-108054670939374/?ref=bookmarks YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr2IiLqoVoqWHdyWW_inRkg YouTube 1: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdEtpnaEyqVJ3p5Xm3OqMEg Twitter: https://twitter.com/techindia251995?s=09 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chandan_singh1/ Telegram: https://t.me/sportsupdatesbychandan The session belonged to India despite losing a couple of wickets. Jadeja (45* off 68) and Srikar Bharat (9* off 37) will resume in 20 minutes with India leading by 63 runs. Rehan chipped straight after the luncheon interval removing the unsettled Shreyas Iyer for 35 with Jadeja joining forces with KL Rahul to take India into the lead. The left hand batter was also given out on field but the first successful referral in this Test saw him survive. The batters changed gears and batted in aggressive manner bringing up the 50-partnership in 51 balls. Rahul hit 8 fours and 2 sixes in his knock with the couple of sixes hit in a single over taking India into the lead. Rahul was dismissed soon after the drinks interval as he attempted a rash stroke and perished. KS Bharat batting at 7 joined Jadeja with the duo looking composed in their partnership of 21 runs. There was no bat involved and the Ultra Edge confirms it. Rehan accounted for Iyer and Tom Hartley for Rahul the only 2 dismissals in the afternoon session. Despite England managing to scalp 2 crucial wickets including the prized dismissal of KL Rahul who threw his wicket to Rehan Ahmed at 86 the partnership between Jadeja and Bharat has injected stability into the Indian innings. After the tea break England awaits the arrival of the second new ball due in the next 4 overs. England will be poised to utilize it to their advantage in a bid to make further inroads. The upcoming session promises to be pivotal in shaping the trajectory of the Test match with both teams eager to gain ascendancy. Session Summary: 26 overs 87 runs and 2 wickets. As the players take a well-deserved break for tea on Day 2 of the first Test match between India and England the stage is set for a captivating finale to the session. India finds themselves at 309/5 after 76 overs in the second innings holding a slender lead of 63 runs. Ravindra Jadeja batting on a composed 45 is accompanied by KS Bharat who stands firm on 9 not out. With the likes of Ravichandran Ashwin and Axar Patel yet to come India harbours aspirations of building a substantial lead of over 200 runs a target that seems not all that out of reach at this juncture. Excellent decision from Paul Reiffel. This session - 26 overs | 87 runs | 2 wickets. England started well after lunch. They conceded just 2 runs off the first four overs and Rehan had Shreyas Iyer caught at deep midwicket. India responded in style. They counterattacked and put the England spinners under pressure. India got into lead and the Rahul-Jadeja duo stitched a brisk 65-run stand. KL became the fifth Indian batter to get out playing an aggressive stroke. He pulled a half-tracker from Hartley straight to deep midwicket. Post that Jadeja and Bharat batted conservatively and ensured that there were no further setbacks in the session. While the left-hander has been solid the latter has looked a bit tentative. India are 63 runs ahead and with 5 wickets in hand they'll eye a pretty big lead. Hammered through the leg side. 82.5 kph. Bharat pulls in front of square picking up the googly well. Gets the boundary to the left of deep midwicket. Root invited Bharat hit and he obliges. A long hop pitched on middle and leg. Some good amount of bounce but no pace on it. Bharat rocks back and pulls it square of the wicket. Hits it up over the man at square leg to find the fence. Jadeja pulls off the backfoot and plays it wide of short fine leg. No chance for any fielder to chase the ball down. Fifty for Jadeja. Gets there in 84 balls and brings out the sword celebration. Audio Content Disclaimer For This Content This is self-created content and not copied content. The Audio in this stream is self-created and not a copy of any other source. The images displayed are only for information purposes and are made by myself. Copyright Disclaimer For This Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976 allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism comment news reporting scholarship and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Thank you for Watching Sports Updates by Chandan Please Subscribe to Our Channel For more Live Cricket Updates. #INDvsENGLIVE #ENGvsINDLIVE #INDvsENGTESTLIVE



UNVEILING KAWHI: THE NBA'S COURT COMPOSER REVEALED!
UNVEILING KAWHI: THE NBA'S COURT COMPOSER REVEALED!

Get ready for an unveiling of Kawhi Leonard's brilliance on the court. This video reveals the sheer genius behind his plays and ...



NHL '94 "Game of the Night" Flames vs Panthers "The Rat Trick Game!"
NHL '94 "Game of the Night" Flames vs Panthers "The Rat Trick Game!"

The rat trick was a celebration performed by fans of the Florida Panthers of the National Hockey League (NHL) during their 1995–96 season, in which plastic rats were thrown onto the ice to celebrate goals. The term, a play on hat trick, was coined by Panthers goaltender John Vanbiesbrouck after teammate Scott Mellanby killed a rat in the locker room prior to the team's home opener with his stick, then scored two goals with the same stick. By the time the Panthers reached the 1996 playoffs, thousands of rats hit the ice after every Panthers goal, resulting in an off-season rule change by the NHL that allowed for referees to penalize the home team if fans disrupted the game by throwing objects onto the ice. The 1995–96 season was the third in the NHL for the Panthers, who had been awarded as an expansion franchise in 1992. The team was composed of journeymen veterans and rookies and led by all-star goaltender John Vanbiesbrouck. As the team prepared for its home opener against the Calgary Flames on October 8, 1995, a rat entered the dressing room, startling several players. Scott Mellanby reacted by whacking the rat and making it fly across the locker room with his hockey stick, killing it. He then went out and scored two goals in a 4–3 victory over the Flames, leading the Panthers to their first win of the season. Vanbiesbrouck described the incident to reporters after the game, stating that while Mellanby failed to score a hat trick (three goals in one game), he did manage a "rat trick". During the next game, a fan threw a plastic rat onto the ice following a Panthers goal. The following game, a few more rats hit the ice. Eventually, over 100 rats were tossed to the ice following Panthers goals, as the Panthers emerged as a top team in the league by mid-November. Eventually, Florida finished the regular season in third place in the Atlantic Division, and qualified for the playoffs for the first time. Additionally, this Panthers' playoff appearance coincided with the Year of the Rat in the Chinese zodiac. This led fans to believe that the Panthers would have great luck in the playoffs. In the first round of the 1996 Stanley Cup playoffs, the Panthers defeated the Boston Bruins in five games, then the Philadelphia Flyers in six games, to reach the Eastern Conference Finals. Then, they defeated the Pittsburgh Penguins in seven games to win the Prince of Wales Trophy as the rat-tossing craze reached its peak as 3,000 rats rained onto the ice following goals. While officially frowning on the practice of throwing rats, the team nonetheless brought on Orkin as a sponsor and employed a crew of 40 rink attendants dressed up as exterminators to clear the ice after each Florida goal. The "year of the rat" in south Florida reached a fever pitch as the Panthers made their first trip to the Stanley Cup Finals. Area supermarkets sold "rat cakes" (cupcakes with rats drawn in icing), while baseball's Florida Marlins showed the Panthers' game seven victory against the Penguins, in Pittsburgh, on the Jumbotron between innings on June 1 and had the Panthers' arena announcer on hand to announce when the team scored a goal. The Panthers, who had sold out only 15 of 41 home games during the regular season, sold out their first two playoff games against Philadelphia and Pittsburgh in seven minutes. They were set to face the Colorado Avalanche in the 1996 Stanley Cup Finals. In Game 1, a 3–1 Colorado victory, Colorado fans responded by throwing rat traps onto the ice in Denver following Avalanche goals. Colorado won Game 2 8–1 to lead the series 2–0 as the teams returned to Miami for Games 3 and 4. In the first period of Game 3, Colorado goaltender Patrick Roy famously refused to duck under his net, as other goalies had, to hide from the barrage of rats after Rob Niedermayer's goal at 11:19 put the Panthers up 2–1. During the intermission, Roy promised his teammates that there would be "no more rats". True to his word, Roy did not surrender another goal in that series as the Avalanche came back to win Game 3 3–2 in regulation time, then shut out the Panthers 1–0 in triple overtime in Game 4 to sweep the series and win Colorado's first Stanley Cup. Directly as a result of the rat trick craze, the NHL amended its rules prior to the 1996–97 season to prevent a recurrence of this phenomenon and delays to the game that followed. The Panthers held a "Year of the Rat" alumni reunion in 2007 to celebrate the 1996 team and raise money for the Florida Panthers Foundation. As part of the event, the Panthers sold plastic rats for fans to toss onto the ice during the exhibition game, which saw the participation of at least nineteen members of the 1996 team. Mellanby, who retired in 2007, was always remembered for spawning the rat trick. "It became the motto of our team that season. When I played in the all-star game, a kid came up to me and said, 'You're the rat guy.' He didn't even know my name; he just knew I killed the rat."



Paul Gascoigne Best Goals In Career
Paul Gascoigne Best Goals In Career

Paul Gascoigne Best Goals In Career Music : Song: Tunetank - Superhero Action (No Copyright Music) Composer: AudioTime ...



NHL '94 "Game of the Night" Habs vs Kings "1993 Stanley Cup Finals Rematch" A Nail Biter!
NHL '94 "Game of the Night" Habs vs Kings "1993 Stanley Cup Finals Rematch" A Nail Biter!

The 1993 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 1992–93 season, and the culmination of the 1993 Stanley Cup playoffs. It was contested between the Los Angeles Kings and the Montreal Canadiens. It was the first appearance in the Final for the Kings and the first appearance since the 1920 Stanley Cup Finals for a team based on the west coast of the United States. It was also the 34th appearance for Montreal, their first since the 1989 Stanley Cup Finals. The Canadiens won the series four games to one to win the team's 24th Stanley Cup. The year 1993 was the 100th anniversary of the first awarding of the Stanley Cup in 1893, and the first Finals to start in the month of June. To date, the 1993 Canadiens are the last Stanley Cup championship team to be composed solely of North American-born players, and the last Canadian team to win the Stanley Cup. The series is remembered for Kings defenceman Marty McSorley's penalty late in the third period of game two for using an illegal stick, in what proved to be the turning point in the 1993 Cup Finals. When McSorley entered the penalty box, Los Angeles held a 1–0 series lead, and a 2–1 score in the contest. The Canadiens then went on to score the equalizer on the ensuing power play, won game two in overtime, and then defeated the Kings in the next three games to win the Cup. From the moment that McSorley was called for the penalty, the Kings failed to win another postseason game for the remainder of the 20th century, losing all the remaining games of the Finals, failing to qualify for the playoffs in five of the next seven seasons, and being swept out in the first round the other two times. Their next postseason win did not come until 2001, against the Detroit Red Wings. Meanwhile, the Canadiens did not appear in the Stanley Cup Finals again until 2021. The 1993 Montreal Stanley Cup riot occurred in Montreal after the Montreal Canadiens won their 24th Stanley Cup. People poured into the streets of the city and some began to commit acts of vandalism and violence while the Canadiens were celebrating inside the Montreal Forum. In the epicentre of the riot on Saint Catherine Street, stores were looted and police cruisers were set ablaze. The riot caused $2.5 million in damage, $4.14 million in 2021 dollars. At the high point of the riot 980 officers were dispatched and they made 115 arrests. The police reported 47 police cars damaged, 8 of those 47 cars were completely destroyed. Rioters were arrested after they broke windows, looted stores and set fires. Some of the rioters were suspected of planning to loot stores using the Canadiens' victory celebration as a decoy. 168 were injured, including 49 police officers. Due to the Kings being the Canadiens' opponents, most of the Los Angeles news media, including the Los Angeles Times and the Daily News, also covered the riot; Times staff writer Helene Elliott was pressed into service as a news reporter minutes after the riot began. Television In Canada, the series was televised in English on the CBC and in French on SRC. In the United States, the series was broadcast on ESPN. This was the ESPN's first Cup Finals coverage since 1988. However, ESPN was blacked out in the Los Angeles market because of Prime Ticket's local rights to the Kings games. The Canadiens lost in the first round to the Boston Bruins in seven games. The Canadiens wouldn't return to the finals again until 2021, when they lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning in five games. The Kings, however, would miss the playoffs the next season. The Kings would not return to the Stanley Cup Finals until 2012, when they defeated the New Jersey Devils, in six games.




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