Peter Forsberg will not be coming back to the NHL this year, TSN reported on Monday, but he may yet attempt to make a comeback for the 2010-11 season. If he manages to make it happen, it will be Forsberg’s third time returning from retirement.
We intercepted this email written from the NFL’s Brett Favre to Forsberg yesterday morning:
From: Brett Favre <agelesswonder@hotmail.com>
To: Peter Forsberg <foppa@yahoo.com>
Sent: Monday, November 16, 2009 11:03:56 AM
Subject: comeback…
Pete,
I heard that you’re trying to complete the comeback hat-trick like me! Well here’s some advice: pick a goddam good team - one that’s got great young talent. Just look how great Adrian Peterson is making me look here in Minnesota. The guy is unstoppable, and I’m getting all the credit in the world!
I hear that Ovechkin kid’s pretty good, why don’t you try to be on his team? Or Crosby? Just do what I do – hand it off and let em run! I tell you, these kids are scared of old guys like us, so just yell at em to giver!
Hey, is there anything better than a retirement press conference? And the highlight pack of your career that ESPN puts together? I can’t wait for that again this year. Makes me teary eyed just thinkin about it.
Good luck pal,
Brett
Favre Contacts Forsberg
By Omar R, Tuesday, November 17, 2009, 6:00 AM | Alexander Ovechkin, Brett Favre, Foppa, NFL, NHL, Peter Forsberg, Sidney Crosby | 1 comments »The Dynasty is Back
By Omar R, Monday, June 15, 2009, 10:57 AM | dynasty, Evgeni Malkin, Jordan Staal, Marc-Andre Fleury, Pittsburgh Penguins, Sidney Crosby, Stanley Cup Final | 0 comments »Head to the Net’s “Hockey Insider” Saj Karsan has advised me not to make predictions. He warns that in sports, nothing is predictable. No truer words could be spoken, yet, what fun is sports without picking sides? With this in mind, I predict that we have just witnessed the beginning of hockey’s first dynasty since the great Edmonton Oilers of the 80’s.
The Pittsburgh Penguins finally overcame their youth and inexperience on Friday night to win their first Stanley Cup since 1992. Sidney Crosby became the youngest ever captain of a Cup winning team, and it’s only a sign of things to come. For all the leadership provided by Crosby, Evgeni Malkin answered with scoring – becoming the highest ever point scoring playoff performer not named Gretzky or Lemieux. And for all the scoring Malkin provided, Marc-Andre Fleury answered with goaltending. Although he may have had his weak spots during the run, he showed championship mettle when it counted in game seven. Not only did he play a stellar game, he made two Stanley Cup winning saves in the final minute, on none other than Henrik Zetterberg and Niklas Lidstrom, two former Conn Smyth trophy winners.
The reason I label this team capable of a sustained dynasty is that the key players are all locked up with the team for years. Crosby is signed until the 2012-13 season, Malkin until 2013-14, Fleury until 2014-15, and even “checking centre” Jordan Staal is locked up until 2012-13. As long as they can continue to fill the role player positions, this hockey franchise has a very good shot at achieving four straight championships.
Looking for a bandwagon to jump on? Hop aboard the Pens’ train, you’re in for a fun ride.