2015 AAA

Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 5:43 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 5:26 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 4:09 pm The parents who took off to tryout for brick teams this weekend, leaving their winter teams high and dry in the middle of playoffs shouldn't be allowed back for the rest of the year, shows zero commitment and if I'm those brick teams I'm cutting them right away, as why would I want a disloyal player on my brick team.

This will follow these kids forever and those parents that allowed this are in need of reality checks.


This is laughable knowing who wrote this. You sold your souls for your kid to be a brick kid.one of you even had to pay extra to be part of the program lol that will follow all of you and your kids much further then someone’s actions to follow their kids dreams and having enough charter to not buy their child’s spot. You guys are fuxking losers the whole gthl knows how sad you all are and always will be, enjoy your pitty party🤪 the reality check will be you not making it out of the round robin.
Your kid is just not good enough, if he was you wouldn’t have to bail on games to try to get a mercy spot somewhere else. There’s other kids who are trying to get on Brick teams and i’m sure they aren’t missing games.

some things can’t be bought… hard thing to swallow for spoiled brats…
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 4:09 pm The parents who took off to tryout for brick teams this weekend, leaving their winter teams high and dry in the middle of playoffs shouldn't be allowed back for the rest of the year, shows zero commitment and if I'm those brick teams I'm cutting them right away, as why would I want a disloyal player on my brick team.

This will follow these kids forever and those parents that allowed this are in need of reality checks.
Oh, look, another self-righteous keyboard warrior foaming at the mouth over something that has absolutely nothing to do with them. Let’s get one thing straight—if your mid-pack kid ever got the slightest sniff at an opportunity like The Brick, you’d be the first one packing the car, skipping town, and selling your soul to make it happen. So spare us all the fake outrage and misplaced morality.

The reality is, elite hockey doesn’t revolve around your fragile sense of “team commitment.” If a kid is talented enough to get invited to The Brick, their development and future opportunities take priority—period. You don’t like it? Too bad. Maybe instead of whining about other people’s kids, you should focus on your own and figure out why they weren’t invited in the first place.

Also, let’s be real—if a kid is good enough for The Brick, their winter team should be grateful they had them at all. Maybe instead of whining about “loyalty,” you should focus on why your team can’t survive without a single player. Sounds like a you problem.

And to everyone else in this chat crying about what other families are doing—do us all a favor and keep your worthless opinions to yourself, because your pathetic whining and hollow moralizing only make you look like a huge piece of shit with no business taking up space in a conversation about real opportunities.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 6:10 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 4:09 pm The parents who took off to tryout for brick teams this weekend, leaving their winter teams high and dry in the middle of playoffs shouldn't be allowed back for the rest of the year, shows zero commitment and if I'm those brick teams I'm cutting them right away, as why would I want a disloyal player on my brick team.

This will follow these kids forever and those parents that allowed this are in need of reality checks.
Oh, look, another self-righteous keyboard warrior foaming at the mouth over something that has absolutely nothing to do with them. Let’s get one thing straight—if your mid-pack kid ever got the slightest sniff at an opportunity like The Brick, you’d be the first one packing the car, skipping town, and selling your soul to make it happen. So spare us all the fake outrage and misplaced morality.

The reality is, elite hockey doesn’t revolve around your fragile sense of “team commitment.” If a kid is talented enough to get invited to The Brick, their development and future opportunities take priority—period. You don’t like it? Too bad. Maybe instead of whining about other people’s kids, you should focus on your own and figure out why they weren’t invited in the first place.

Also, let’s be real—if a kid is good enough for The Brick, their winter team should be grateful they had them at all. Maybe instead of whining about “loyalty,” you should focus on why your team can’t survive without a single player. Sounds like a you problem.

And to everyone else in this chat crying about what other families are doing—do us all a favor and keep your worthless opinions to yourself, because your pathetic whining and hollow moralizing only make you look like a huge piece of shit with no business taking up space in a conversation about real opportunities.
You Marlie parents need to stop hating on each other and remember the good ole days, you know, when Guido's hairline was only halfway to the back of his head.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 6:10 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 4:09 pm The parents who took off to tryout for brick teams this weekend, leaving their winter teams high and dry in the middle of playoffs shouldn't be allowed back for the rest of the year, shows zero commitment and if I'm those brick teams I'm cutting them right away, as why would I want a disloyal player on my brick team.

This will follow these kids forever and those parents that allowed this are in need of reality checks.
Oh, look, another self-righteous keyboard warrior foaming at the mouth over something that has absolutely nothing to do with them. Let’s get one thing straight—if your mid-pack kid ever got the slightest sniff at an opportunity like The Brick, you’d be the first one packing the car, skipping town, and selling your soul to make it happen. So spare us all the fake outrage and misplaced morality.

The reality is, elite hockey doesn’t revolve around your fragile sense of “team commitment.” If a kid is talented enough to get invited to The Brick, their development and future opportunities take priority—period. You don’t like it? Too bad. Maybe instead of whining about other people’s kids, you should focus on your own and figure out why they weren’t invited in the first place.

Also, let’s be real—if a kid is good enough for The Brick, their winter team should be grateful they had them at all. Maybe instead of whining about “loyalty,” you should focus on why your team can’t survive without a single player. Sounds like a you problem.

And to everyone else in this chat crying about what other families are doing—do us all a favor and keep your worthless opinions to yourself, because your pathetic whining and hollow moralizing only make you look like a huge piece of shit with no business taking up space in a conversation about real opportunities.
lol. Who is this loser.

Another failed drywaller living out their high school beatings through their kids.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 6:35 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 6:10 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 4:09 pm The parents who took off to tryout for brick teams this weekend, leaving their winter teams high and dry in the middle of playoffs shouldn't be allowed back for the rest of the year, shows zero commitment and if I'm those brick teams I'm cutting them right away, as why would I want a disloyal player on my brick team.

This will follow these kids forever and those parents that allowed this are in need of reality checks.
Oh, look, another self-righteous keyboard warrior foaming at the mouth over something that has absolutely nothing to do with them. Let’s get one thing straight—if your mid-pack kid ever got the slightest sniff at an opportunity like The Brick, you’d be the first one packing the car, skipping town, and selling your soul to make it happen. So spare us all the fake outrage and misplaced morality.

The reality is, elite hockey doesn’t revolve around your fragile sense of “team commitment.” If a kid is talented enough to get invited to The Brick, their development and future opportunities take priority—period. You don’t like it? Too bad. Maybe instead of whining about other people’s kids, you should focus on your own and figure out why they weren’t invited in the first place.

Also, let’s be real—if a kid is good enough for The Brick, their winter team should be grateful they had them at all. Maybe instead of whining about “loyalty,” you should focus on why your team can’t survive without a single player. Sounds like a you problem.

And to everyone else in this chat crying about what other families are doing—do us all a favor and keep your worthless opinions to yourself, because your pathetic whining and hollow moralizing only make you look like a huge piece of shit with no business taking up space in a conversation about real opportunities.
lol. Who is this loser.

Another failed drywaller living out their high school beatings through their kids.
Oh, spare me your whiny attempts at proving you’re some kind of tough guy. Your pathetic jab about being “another failed drywaller” is as transparent as it is pitiable. It’s downright laughable that you stoop to this level, throwing around insults like a little boy desperate to feel powerful, when in reality your words only expose your own deep-seated insecurities and miserable existence.

You really think calling someone a loser and dragging your high school beatings into the mix makes you some kind of heavyweight? Newsflash: it just shows you’re too weak—emotionally and mentally—to stand on your own two feet. You’re nothing more than a sad, emasculated little man trying to cover up your failures with cheap, juvenile insults. So why don’t you take a long, hard look in the mirror and realize that your desperate, hollow attempts to tear someone else down only confirm you have zero business playing in the big leagues of conversation.

Your words reek of bitterness and inadequacy, and every syllable you spew is a reminder that you’re not fooling anyone. Grow up, shut your mouth, and stop trying to compensate for your own lack of worth by spewing meaningless insults—because right now, you’re nothing but a crumbling testament to your own pathetic mediocrity.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

You lost everyone when you said “fragile sense of team commitment.” For someone who mentions the “big leagues” that often, you clearly don’t understand that in the big leagues, team commitment is everything.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 6:57 pm You lost everyone when you said “fragile sense of team commitment.” For someone who mentions the “big leagues” that often, you clearly don’t understand that in the big leagues, team commitment is everything.

Look, it’s cute that you cling to your tired mantra about team commitment like it’s some sacred doctrine, but let’s be real—if you truly understood what the big leagues are about, you’d know that talent and opportunity trump your recycled sentimental drivel every single time. Instead of spouting clichés and expecting to sound profound, maybe you should take a long, hard look in the mirror and ask yourself why your arguments are so pathetically shallow. Your response doesn’t just miss the mark—it makes one seriously question whether you should even be weighing in on a conversation where real insight matters. Perhaps next time, before you fire off another half-baked attempt at sounding important, you’d do well to think twice—because your empty words only prove you’re in way over your head.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 7:04 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 6:57 pm You lost everyone when you said “fragile sense of team commitment.” For someone who mentions the “big leagues” that often, you clearly don’t understand that in the big leagues, team commitment is everything.

Look, it’s cute that you cling to your tired mantra about team commitment like it’s some sacred doctrine, but let’s be real—if you truly understood what the big leagues are about, you’d know that talent and opportunity trump your recycled sentimental drivel every single time. Instead of spouting clichés and expecting to sound profound, maybe you should take a long, hard look in the mirror and ask yourself why your arguments are so pathetically shallow. Your response doesn’t just miss the mark—it makes one seriously question whether you should even be weighing in on a conversation where real insight matters. Perhaps next time, before you fire off another half-baked attempt at sounding important, you’d do well to think twice—because your empty words only prove you’re in way over your head.
Speaking of long, hard looks in the mirror, I heard Guido tried—but his hairline had already packed its bags and left.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

And your response said nothing of value. Just spouting off cliches and meaningless words, that you think hurt people but they don’t because most of us are good people and have good, solid relationships that will take us through life and you’ll just keep telling people to look in a mirror, because you can’t stand to look at yourself. Alas, I have a life to return to. You can keep writing your lame manifestos. Maybe they’ll help you when your kid joins the beer league.
Guest

Re: 2015 AAA

Post by Guest »

Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 7:24 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 7:04 pm
Guest wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 6:57 pm You lost everyone when you said “fragile sense of team commitment.” For someone who mentions the “big leagues” that often, you clearly don’t understand that in the big leagues, team commitment is everything.

Look, it’s cute that you cling to your tired mantra about team commitment like it’s some sacred doctrine, but let’s be real—if you truly understood what the big leagues are about, you’d know that talent and opportunity trump your recycled sentimental drivel every single time. Instead of spouting clichés and expecting to sound profound, maybe you should take a long, hard look in the mirror and ask yourself why your arguments are so pathetically shallow. Your response doesn’t just miss the mark—it makes one seriously question whether you should even be weighing in on a conversation where real insight matters. Perhaps next time, before you fire off another half-baked attempt at sounding important, you’d do well to think twice—because your empty words only prove you’re in way over your head.
Speaking of long, hard looks in the mirror, I heard Guido tried—but his hairline had already packed its bags and left.

Hahah I hope he takes a walk off his forehead and commits suicide.
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