July 17, 2025

NHL Trivia I

NHL Trivia I
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NHL Trivia I

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🔵 Get right to the trivia at 9:26

NHL Trivia I hits the ice with Kelly in the TriviaMaster’s chair, ready to put your hockey knowledge to the test. 🏒 From iconic moments to deep-cut facts, this one goes glove-side high on the trivia scale.

But before the first question drops, the crew tackles a shockingly personal scenario that sparks some real hesitation... and a whole lot of laughter. Let's just say, no one's walking away from this one without second-guessing their digital life. 😬

Then it's trivia time—fast-paced, fiercely competitive, and just the right amount of chilly.

We close things out with a final challenge:

What’s your favorite hockey team or moment—without leaning on hometown loyalty?

One rule: no Blues allowed. The answers? Surprisingly passionate.

Frozen facts. Heated debates. And a trivia round that’ll leave you checking the scoreboard.

Hit play and see where you stack up. 🎧🥅

 Join us for trivia, stay for the laughs, and see who comes out on top!

Tune in and see if you can keep up with ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Kelly⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Brian⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Scott⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Andy⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Nick⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ on ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠The Ultimate Trivia Podcast⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Also find us on ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

And email the show at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠TheUltimateTriviaPodcast@gmail.com⁠⁠

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WEBVTT

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[SPEAKER_01]: Welcome into the ultimate trivia podcast that show where knowledge is power and laughter is the only thing you're going to take with you.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I am your host, Andy.

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[SPEAKER_01]: We got the whole crew here in the house.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Brian is already doing his research.

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[SPEAKER_01]: What's going on, buddy?

00:25.323 --> 00:26.344
[SPEAKER_01]: Hey, it's going on everybody.

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[SPEAKER_01]: We don't know the topic, officially.

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[SPEAKER_01]: That's what doesn't really matter.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Kelly, you're our host this evening.

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[SPEAKER_01]: How are you feeling?

00:31.830 --> 00:32.811
[SPEAKER_01]: I feel good about you.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I feel very good.

00:33.992 --> 00:34.853
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you for asking.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I like it.

00:35.914 --> 00:36.615
[SPEAKER_00]: Dr. Scott.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Andy always a pleasure to see you.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Well, that is time.

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[SPEAKER_01]: No, that's true.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Nicholas, hey, how's the sourdough world treat me today?

00:44.661 --> 00:46.283
[SPEAKER_02]: You had to bring that up in public?

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[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,

01:00.158 --> 01:02.359
[SPEAKER_02]: My cooking prowess has taken me to the sourdough room.

01:02.379 --> 01:07.582
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I'm very intrigued by the whole feeding it all week and all that stuff.

01:07.702 --> 01:09.143
[SPEAKER_02]: It's lame, but it's awesome.

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[SPEAKER_02]: But no, I just made a look today actually.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Awesome.

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[SPEAKER_01]: It's pretty.

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[SPEAKER_01]: It's a slated for the Thompson House protein.

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[SPEAKER_01]: No, this is a slice just sandwiched out.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Good stuff.

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[SPEAKER_01]: It's exciting.

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[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Friends very interested in sourdough.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Well, as we alluded to, Kelly is our host for tonight.

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[SPEAKER_01]: We do not know the topic yet.

01:27.837 --> 01:30.320
[SPEAKER_01]: We're going to get that revealed to us here in just a moment.

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[SPEAKER_01]: But in the meantime, we have a ridiculous question of the week to debate.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Here it is.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Would you rather have your internet search history published once a month or have your most awkward texts from the last five years be sent out to your entire phone book?

01:52.511 --> 01:53.652
[SPEAKER_01]: It's a very quick answer.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I'll look for loopholes.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: You will have it monthly, right?

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[SPEAKER_00]: The internet.

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[SPEAKER_00]: It's a month.

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[SPEAKER_01]: It's a month.

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[SPEAKER_01]: For our eternity.

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[SPEAKER_01]: For my tax.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Tax.

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[SPEAKER_01]: What tax?

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[SPEAKER_01]: You want your text out there?

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[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, absolutely.

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[SPEAKER_01]: And Kelly, you want search history.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, hundred percent.

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[SPEAKER_03]: I text out there.

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[SPEAKER_01]: You don't like what you're talking about, you text messages that makes me very curious what's happening.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Be curious.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Be curious, like Ted Lasso says.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Well, I mean, if you know the website you're going to, to me, that's not a search.

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[SPEAKER_00]: You're just typing in.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, there's your loop.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, loopholes.

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[SPEAKER_01]: So does that change then how you go, how you operate on the internet moving forward, knowing that it's once a month.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Now the text are the last five years.

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[SPEAKER_01]: You can't go back and undo it.

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[SPEAKER_02]: If you remember the text in the last five years, that's even worse.

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[SPEAKER_02]: I can kind of remember where I went on the internet yesterday.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I proofread my text before I send them.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I think I'd be more embarrassed about my search history.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Like sometimes you're like, how do you spell refrigerator?

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[SPEAKER_00]: And I'm not going to put that.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I'm not going to put that out into the world via text until I

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[SPEAKER_00]: I would search that.

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[SPEAKER_02]: That was my biggest concern.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I can spell work very well.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Why does refrigerator not have a D but fridge?

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[SPEAKER_01]: I'm with you Nick, the least of my concerns is my grammatical error.

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[SPEAKER_01]: It's like promissue.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Scott's is saying Disney.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I bet you that is what his internet search is.

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[SPEAKER_01]: He looks like to use his chat completely clean.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, so I don't know if that's a loophole since there all been deleted.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Well, that's a good point actually.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I'm just a tidy person and that includes my text message.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Wow.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I don't.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Or I mean, I'm assuming every email you've ever gotten you still have.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: For sure.

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[SPEAKER_01]: And most of them are still in the inbox.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I don't even really bother.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, that's insanity.

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[SPEAKER_01]: They're all red.

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[SPEAKER_01]: There's no, you know, email notifications.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I'm a deleter.

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[SPEAKER_01]: You are, too.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: On text messages, even.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Anything.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Really.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_02]: I'm a folder guy and put everything.

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[SPEAKER_03]: Did you look at my text yesterday?

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[SPEAKER_03]: I've like four texts.

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[SPEAKER_03]: I don't get rid of everything.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I changed it so that after a year it deletes.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: But as recently as

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[SPEAKER_01]: I'd say within the last twelve months, I still had text congratulating me on my fourteen-year-old being born.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Well, like I had him.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, that's good.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I think you're right about everything.

04:23.015 --> 04:29.998
[SPEAKER_00]: I delete text so frequently that I will get, if you have a chain going and you delete it, it messes up your phone.

04:30.198 --> 04:36.660
[SPEAKER_00]: Like your phone can't figure out what's going, someone will like or a heart comment from like last week that's been deleted.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I deleted that three days ago.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: In the phone can't can't handle it.

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[SPEAKER_00]: You have to turn the phone off turn it back on.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Do you permanently delete too?

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[SPEAKER_00]: What do you mean?

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[SPEAKER_00]: I just blew his mind.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I don't want to do it.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I don't want to do it.

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[SPEAKER_00]: You can still find them.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Those textures do it.

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[SPEAKER_03]: So recently deleted.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I understand that.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Same with pictures and you can find them.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: How long do they last though in that folder?

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[SPEAKER_02]: Definitely I said the recycle bin probably stays in there.

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[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know maybe it says after thirty days ago We have to take a break.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I don't think anybody really cares What do you choose and Brian you said you're choosing the text that's yeah, you're okay with those me.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, yeah Kelly you're saying search history you're fine with yep

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Is there anything that you would be embarrassed?

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[SPEAKER_01]: I realize we're picking the lesser of two evils here, but is there anything in there that you'd be like that?

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[SPEAKER_01]: Prefer people not know about.

05:30.879 --> 05:31.920
[SPEAKER_01]: Besides the obvious.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: No.

05:32.620 --> 05:32.920
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Fair enough.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Doc, what do you choose?

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[SPEAKER_01]: Uh, text.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Text you.

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[SPEAKER_01]: You're publishing your text last five years or thrown them to your contest.

05:41.995 --> 05:45.357
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm going search history at the unknown for the text is what stops you.

05:45.377 --> 05:46.377
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I think text who knows.

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[SPEAKER_02]: I have no idea five years a long time.

05:48.318 --> 05:49.339
[SPEAKER_02]: It is a long time.

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[SPEAKER_02]: A long time search history.

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[SPEAKER_02]: It's not going to be anywhere with you.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Some of the weirdos.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Which you people to to remember the the stuff that we text about sometimes.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, exactly.

05:58.164 --> 05:59.345
[SPEAKER_00]: Well, yeah, fair point.

05:59.425 --> 06:02.828
[SPEAKER_00]: To Andy's point, you want, you want mine, you know, call them FBI or the CIA.

06:02.848 --> 06:04.470
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I want them.

06:04.550 --> 06:06.772
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm going to get that court order over here from Doc.

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[SPEAKER_00]: But you know what, same browsing history.

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[SPEAKER_00]: I clear that every.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, yeah.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Internet session.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Really.

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[SPEAKER_02]: I don't have to.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Mine's like, it caught me in a mode at all times.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Nobody knows what I'm doing.

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[SPEAKER_02]: I sound the dark.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I'm off grid.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I'm choosing the search history also because I'm certain because that's more going forward and I can watch my piece and cues.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I have a lot of professional contacts in my phone and that would be very bad for there and so.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Fair enough.

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[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Well, nobody really submitted that question.

06:34.357 --> 06:36.179
[SPEAKER_01]: We just came up with it to debate on our own.

06:36.219 --> 06:37.240
[SPEAKER_01]: I think out of a book here.

06:37.300 --> 06:37.400
[SPEAKER_01]: So.

06:38.658 --> 06:39.018
[SPEAKER_01]: That's it.

06:39.158 --> 06:41.240
[SPEAKER_01]: If you want to send us a question, we'd love to hear from you.

06:41.941 --> 06:45.244
[SPEAKER_01]: Send them to our email at the ultimate trivia podcast at gmail.com.

06:45.684 --> 06:47.806
[SPEAKER_01]: Our website is our title name as well.

06:47.986 --> 06:50.428
[SPEAKER_01]: And you can find us on all the social media sites.

06:51.149 --> 06:52.910
[SPEAKER_01]: We are not hiding trust me.

06:53.050 --> 06:53.671
[SPEAKER_01]: You can find us.

06:53.751 --> 06:54.011
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

06:54.031 --> 06:55.793
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's Kelly show.

06:56.927 --> 06:58.208
[SPEAKER_02]: But what do you point at?

06:59.068 --> 07:00.549
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not playing none of us are.

07:01.069 --> 07:03.271
[SPEAKER_01]: We have entrepreneurs to bring in.

07:04.311 --> 07:06.873
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, I thought he was talking about that.

07:07.173 --> 07:09.174
[SPEAKER_01]: We have both the excuse me.

07:09.234 --> 07:10.975
[SPEAKER_01]: It's called the death nut challenge.

07:11.675 --> 07:14.717
[SPEAKER_01]: It's currently on the studio table and this isn't next bright idea.

07:15.317 --> 07:15.977
[SPEAKER_01]: One day we'll do it.

07:16.078 --> 07:17.658
[SPEAKER_02]: We did it like the Mallorque.

07:17.778 --> 07:19.419
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

07:19.539 --> 07:23.221
[SPEAKER_01]: We also have some bean boozle boxes, which I played that game once before.

07:23.241 --> 07:24.021
[SPEAKER_01]: Those are rules.

07:24.261 --> 07:25.021
[SPEAKER_01]: They're terrible.

07:25.041 --> 07:26.442
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't like jelly beans in general.

07:26.462 --> 07:27.963
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm going to put crappy flavors into that.

07:27.983 --> 07:29.924
[SPEAKER_00]: I'd rather do the jelly beans than vomit.

07:29.964 --> 07:44.870
[SPEAKER_02]: You're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to do fire, you're going to

07:46.631 --> 07:49.453
[SPEAKER_01]: Yes, but I mean, all right.

07:49.833 --> 07:52.695
[SPEAKER_01]: Anyway, Kelly, this is your operation, brother, take it away.

07:53.415 --> 07:54.776
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, we're going back to the sports realm.

07:55.076 --> 07:56.477
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, all right, good.

07:56.657 --> 07:58.278
[SPEAKER_04]: The topic tonight is NHL.

07:58.578 --> 08:00.959
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, so the national hockey league.

08:01.660 --> 08:03.121
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, this is terrible.

08:03.161 --> 08:04.702
[SPEAKER_04]: Big four, this is my week.

08:04.722 --> 08:06.583
[SPEAKER_00]: That's played on ice, right?

08:07.023 --> 08:08.084
[SPEAKER_00]: Sometimes, I think.

08:08.204 --> 08:08.804
[SPEAKER_02]: I believe so.

08:08.984 --> 08:10.325
[SPEAKER_02]: The NHL specifically.

08:10.785 --> 08:13.427
[SPEAKER_02]: Right, the best chance of these Canadian now, after the last episode.

08:17.856 --> 08:27.462
[SPEAKER_04]: so not not real much story about the NHL I'm not gonna go through the history of the NHL you know we all know where it is one of the four major sports in America but these are

08:28.223 --> 08:30.425
[SPEAKER_04]: I would say more, more generalized questions.

08:30.445 --> 08:31.466
[SPEAKER_04]: She got a few tough ones in there.

08:31.546 --> 08:33.508
[SPEAKER_04]: So I think the scores would be halfway decent.

08:34.569 --> 08:36.711
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm over estimating my NHL skills.

08:36.751 --> 08:39.153
[SPEAKER_01]: I have a feeling, but yeah, I'm not overly confident.

08:39.334 --> 08:39.534
[SPEAKER_02]: No.

08:40.134 --> 08:40.355
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

08:40.535 --> 08:42.957
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I've watched it.

08:43.057 --> 08:46.721
[SPEAKER_00]: I've been a big watched, but I don't know that trivialized this.

08:46.761 --> 08:48.062
[SPEAKER_02]: This is like, wait to see.

08:48.242 --> 08:51.885
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it's a player specific, is it records, is it game play itself?

08:51.985 --> 08:54.607
[SPEAKER_02]: It's a little bit okay.

08:54.647 --> 08:56.788
[SPEAKER_02]: It's a little bit of a... I am not gonna do well.

08:57.269 --> 08:59.831
[SPEAKER_01]: I know the rules pretty well, so hopefully there's some rules questioned.

08:59.851 --> 09:00.591
[SPEAKER_01]: These are puck, right?

09:00.931 --> 09:01.732
[SPEAKER_01]: They do use a puck.

09:01.752 --> 09:01.852
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

09:01.872 --> 09:02.573
[SPEAKER_01]: There's some lines.

09:02.633 --> 09:03.894
[SPEAKER_02]: There's that question number one.

09:04.594 --> 09:06.375
[SPEAKER_02]: What type of ball do they use in hockey?

09:06.395 --> 09:08.537
[SPEAKER_02]: The trick question.

09:09.177 --> 09:09.678
[SPEAKER_02]: I like it.

09:10.438 --> 09:12.740
[SPEAKER_01]: That's brilliant.

09:13.100 --> 09:14.021
[SPEAKER_01]: Alright, are we ready then?

09:14.081 --> 09:15.222
[SPEAKER_01]: Since there's no synopsis.

09:15.522 --> 09:15.762
[SPEAKER_01]: I am.

09:15.882 --> 09:16.343
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's do it.

09:18.976 --> 09:21.018
[SPEAKER_01]: It's time for the main event.

09:21.078 --> 09:24.601
[SPEAKER_01]: Our ten question trivia game on the NHL.

09:24.641 --> 09:26.903
[SPEAKER_01]: Is it hockey or specifically the NHL?

09:27.323 --> 09:28.324
[SPEAKER_01]: I guess NHL.

09:29.465 --> 09:30.606
[SPEAKER_01]: And Kelly will be your host.

09:31.146 --> 09:31.927
[SPEAKER_01]: Here's how it works.

09:31.947 --> 09:33.228
[SPEAKER_01]: He'll read the questions aloud.

09:33.828 --> 09:36.851
[SPEAKER_01]: We will all write our answers on our whiteboard when he says reveal.

09:37.011 --> 09:38.072
[SPEAKER_01]: We'll show our answers.

09:38.812 --> 09:41.494
[SPEAKER_01]: If we get it right, Nick's going to give us a point, right?

09:41.895 --> 09:42.235
[SPEAKER_01]: Yes, sir.

09:42.755 --> 09:46.438
[SPEAKER_01]: And if we get it wrong, then we're going to make fun of each other because we're all big sports fans.

09:46.498 --> 09:48.140
[SPEAKER_01]: And we should all get ten out of ten on this one.

09:49.223 --> 09:51.004
[SPEAKER_01]: That's you who wins up on top today.

09:51.024 --> 09:51.264
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

09:51.284 --> 09:52.085
[SPEAKER_02]: That's a chance.

09:52.105 --> 09:52.545
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

09:52.565 --> 09:53.385
[SPEAKER_01]: Kelly your show brother.

09:53.405 --> 09:54.686
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

09:54.766 --> 09:56.607
[SPEAKER_04]: Jumping right in question number one.

09:57.247 --> 10:01.710
[SPEAKER_04]: This is you have potentially the opportunity to get two points for this.

10:01.910 --> 10:03.631
[SPEAKER_04]: You have to get the first part right.

10:03.691 --> 10:04.592
[SPEAKER_02]: That's how much a goal is worth it.

10:07.958 --> 10:34.409
[SPEAKER_04]: if you get the first right you have you can answer the second one okay you do not get the first one you can I get the second okay okay all right which NHL team has won the most Stanley Cups and how many so you have to get the team right okay to be able to answer the second one all right actually feel okay about both of my answers one don't not bad one don't bad nice sugar

10:35.762 --> 10:36.824
[SPEAKER_04]: I said that too many times.

10:37.645 --> 10:38.887
[SPEAKER_00]: Definitely know the team.

10:38.947 --> 10:40.529
[SPEAKER_00]: I'm the number.

10:40.589 --> 10:41.931
[SPEAKER_00]: I have a ballpark.

10:42.191 --> 10:42.432
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

10:43.513 --> 10:43.894
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody.

10:43.954 --> 10:44.575
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody got an answer.

10:44.615 --> 10:45.556
[SPEAKER_04]: I'll really move on the time.

10:45.757 --> 10:49.081
[SPEAKER_04]: Which NHL team is one of the most Stanley Cups and how many?

10:50.103 --> 10:51.024
[SPEAKER_04]: That's reveal our answers.

10:51.124 --> 10:51.405
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

10:52.776 --> 10:53.216
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's go.

10:53.537 --> 10:57.079
[SPEAKER_04]: Brian has the Montreal Canadians is correct with twenty-six.

10:57.299 --> 10:57.579
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, boy.

10:58.180 --> 11:01.362
[SPEAKER_04]: Andy has the Montreal Canadians with thirteen.

11:01.442 --> 11:01.522
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

11:01.923 --> 11:02.703
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, times two.

11:03.384 --> 11:09.108
[SPEAKER_04]: Nick has the Canadians with ten and Scott has the Montreal Canadians with twenty-four.

11:10.575 --> 11:12.215
[SPEAKER_04]: We, everybody got the team right, okay?

11:12.396 --> 11:12.756
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

11:12.916 --> 11:14.596
[SPEAKER_04]: Only one person got the number right.

11:14.796 --> 11:15.196
[SPEAKER_04]: Right.

11:15.516 --> 11:17.017
[SPEAKER_04]: And the number is twenty four.

11:17.757 --> 11:20.118
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, I thought I had it.

11:20.438 --> 11:21.318
[SPEAKER_00]: I knew that was over six.

11:21.378 --> 11:26.199
[SPEAKER_03]: I knew it was around twenty five, but I didn't know the exact number.

11:27.199 --> 11:27.920
[SPEAKER_04]: I thought you had it too.

11:28.220 --> 11:29.620
[SPEAKER_04]: So Scott gets two points.

11:29.820 --> 11:30.480
[SPEAKER_04]: Wow.

11:30.560 --> 11:31.821
[SPEAKER_04]: Out of the gate, dude.

11:31.901 --> 11:32.801
[SPEAKER_04]: Just an educate.

11:32.861 --> 11:33.741
[SPEAKER_04]: Swing and a goal.

11:33.841 --> 11:35.922
[SPEAKER_03]: Swing and a goal.

11:37.102 --> 11:38.063
[SPEAKER_02]: Wicked Hot Slapper.

11:38.163 --> 11:38.923
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it's hot.

11:38.943 --> 11:40.724
[SPEAKER_02]: Let's just make a snapshot.

11:42.425 --> 11:44.526
[SPEAKER_01]: Question one and Nick is two down already.

11:44.586 --> 11:47.087
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.

11:47.347 --> 11:48.708
[SPEAKER_02]: I got them all right.

11:48.768 --> 11:51.930
[SPEAKER_00]: I know they're way and I don't want to give away from the other ones.

11:52.010 --> 11:53.691
[SPEAKER_00]: I know they're way ahead of whoever number two.

11:54.091 --> 11:54.771
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, they are correct.

11:54.831 --> 11:57.133
[SPEAKER_04]: I mentioned that in a second.

11:57.633 --> 12:05.177
[SPEAKER_04]: No team in NHL history, both the legacy is rich to the Montreal Canadians with an unmatched twenty four Stanley Cup championships, proudly defining their dynasty.

12:05.797 --> 12:33.735
[SPEAKER_04]: From the early dominance of the nineteen tins to the golden areas led by legends like Excuse my pronunciation Maurice rocket reshared Jean Belivou and Gide La Flore Each cut tells the story of great glory and greatness the Canadians don't just set the standard they become it Every banner hanging in the rafters of the bell center is a reminder their place at the summit of hockey existence Excellence where tradition and triumph go hand in hand

12:34.400 --> 12:39.202
[SPEAKER_04]: Wow, so, and oh, time out, hold on.

12:42.564 --> 12:43.624
[SPEAKER_02]: I missed it.

12:43.664 --> 12:44.425
[SPEAKER_02]: No, you didn't miss it.

12:44.465 --> 12:45.305
[SPEAKER_02]: That was what we were laughing.

12:45.325 --> 12:46.026
[SPEAKER_03]: That's so great.

12:46.046 --> 12:48.327
[SPEAKER_02]: You started your attention to the entire time.

12:48.387 --> 12:49.187
[SPEAKER_02]: Kelly was reading.

12:49.207 --> 12:50.908
[SPEAKER_02]: We're just zoned out.

12:52.112 --> 12:54.534
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm going to do it this way.

12:54.734 --> 12:55.615
[SPEAKER_01]: Sorry, Kelly.

12:55.675 --> 12:56.495
[SPEAKER_01]: No, you're good.

12:56.536 --> 12:57.917
[SPEAKER_01]: This is all staying in here.

12:58.517 --> 12:59.078
[SPEAKER_02]: Man, okay.

12:59.438 --> 13:04.982
[SPEAKER_04]: So in order of most Stanley Cup championships, Canadians with twenty four, anybody know the second one?

13:05.002 --> 13:07.004
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm going to guess the oiler.

13:07.524 --> 13:21.035
[SPEAKER_04]: Maple Leafs with thirteen red wings, eleven, Bruin six, black hogs six, and boilers five, eight, five, Islanders, Rangers four, Devils Lightning with three, and then the flyers with two.

13:21.575 --> 13:23.456
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, like the blues with one.

13:23.616 --> 13:24.136
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

13:24.336 --> 13:24.717
[SPEAKER_05]: Sure.

13:24.897 --> 13:25.477
[SPEAKER_05]: Gloria.

13:25.977 --> 13:26.578
[SPEAKER_05]: Gloria.

13:28.218 --> 13:28.559
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

13:28.599 --> 13:30.700
[SPEAKER_04]: Now let's get on to the question number two guys.

13:34.041 --> 13:36.803
[SPEAKER_04]: What is the penalty for fighting in NHL?

13:37.863 --> 13:39.804
[SPEAKER_04]: What is the penalty for fighting in NHL?

13:39.844 --> 13:40.064
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

13:40.164 --> 13:42.866
[SPEAKER_04]: I think I.

13:51.620 --> 13:55.902
[SPEAKER_01]: Like, are we asking for the name or the actual punishment, the actual punishment?

13:55.942 --> 13:56.802
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, the answer I thought.

13:57.203 --> 13:58.943
[SPEAKER_04]: I can say the amount of time in the penalty box.

13:58.963 --> 13:59.604
[SPEAKER_04]: There you go.

13:59.764 --> 14:01.184
[SPEAKER_04]: I got the most specific answers.

14:01.344 --> 14:07.667
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, it was writing a paragraph over here, but now that I believe some punk band made a song about this.

14:07.687 --> 14:08.968
[SPEAKER_04]: Like, it's named this.

14:09.328 --> 14:10.408
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, cool.

14:10.849 --> 14:11.469
[SPEAKER_04]: I can't remember.

14:12.229 --> 14:13.890
[SPEAKER_04]: I should know that for flavor text, but I don't.

14:14.090 --> 14:14.430
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

14:14.450 --> 14:14.610
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

14:14.630 --> 14:16.731
[SPEAKER_02]: So you're asking them at amount of time that they serve.

14:16.851 --> 14:17.091
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

14:17.432 --> 14:19.132
[SPEAKER_04]: What is the penalty for fighting in the NHL?

14:19.152 --> 14:20.353
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's reveal our answers.

14:22.629 --> 14:25.090
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody has five minutes and that is correct.

14:25.150 --> 14:25.930
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, baby.

14:25.950 --> 14:28.951
[SPEAKER_02]: That was I actually thought you were going for like the cat like this five minute.

14:29.031 --> 14:30.172
[SPEAKER_02]: That's not the cat boy.

14:30.192 --> 14:30.632
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

14:30.652 --> 14:31.932
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, just a time in the family.

14:32.012 --> 14:32.893
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, so that's not so.

14:32.973 --> 14:35.053
[SPEAKER_00]: I'm impressed though.

14:35.093 --> 14:35.773
[SPEAKER_00]: Nick that you knew that.

14:35.793 --> 14:36.894
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

14:37.374 --> 14:38.774
[SPEAKER_00]: There was a band called Five for Fighting.

14:39.015 --> 14:39.815
[SPEAKER_00]: Is that the name of the band?

14:39.835 --> 14:39.915
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

14:39.975 --> 14:40.255
[SPEAKER_00]: Okay.

14:40.275 --> 14:47.978
[SPEAKER_00]: But they were more of a contemporary like, you know, guy played piano and because actually just one one guy, but yeah, five for fighting.

14:48.058 --> 14:48.738
[SPEAKER_01]: Were they Canadian?

14:49.625 --> 14:52.906
[SPEAKER_03]: I would was it that's a band that has a song about Superman.

14:53.786 --> 14:54.086
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

14:54.226 --> 14:54.586
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, yeah.

14:54.626 --> 14:55.446
[SPEAKER_03]: There's another one.

14:55.466 --> 14:56.146
[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, okay.

14:56.506 --> 14:56.886
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, Rick.

14:57.486 --> 14:58.687
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, that's been full.

14:59.027 --> 14:59.727
[SPEAKER_00]: It's been full.

14:59.767 --> 15:00.287
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, okay.

15:00.447 --> 15:01.107
[SPEAKER_00]: It's full five.

15:01.507 --> 15:02.707
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, five for fighting was it.

15:02.867 --> 15:04.048
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, you need to be me.

15:04.208 --> 15:06.168
[SPEAKER_01]: That's one of those before and after categories.

15:07.128 --> 15:07.328
[SPEAKER_01]: Right.

15:07.548 --> 15:08.929
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, and to full defy for fighting.

15:09.129 --> 15:10.249
[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, I got you guys.

15:10.369 --> 15:11.389
[SPEAKER_01]: I've got to jump again.

15:11.409 --> 15:12.469
[SPEAKER_02]: They have a five in their name.

15:12.489 --> 15:13.769
[SPEAKER_02]: Room five, Maroon.

15:13.909 --> 15:14.890
[SPEAKER_02]: Jackson five.

15:15.210 --> 15:16.130
[SPEAKER_02]: Jackson five.

15:16.150 --> 15:16.770
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

15:17.618 --> 15:39.625
[SPEAKER_02]: five finger death point I'd say that yeah yeah oh my best of days got I'm sure there's my hands shows part of it and full more oh hey I kicked the guy out originally so you know oh Dave Clark five yeah yeah just basically an NHL penalty is your break-up and then a minor double minor major penalties

15:40.265 --> 15:42.668
[SPEAKER_04]: Um, fighting apps is to be five minutes for fighting.

15:43.429 --> 15:47.893
[SPEAKER_01]: Do I remember correctly that a major does not cancel if the other team scores a goal?

15:48.494 --> 15:49.075
[SPEAKER_01]: Is that accurate?

15:49.835 --> 15:50.376
[SPEAKER_01]: I do not know.

15:52.078 --> 15:54.060
[SPEAKER_01]: We're gonna just give me the double and then.

15:54.080 --> 15:57.003
[SPEAKER_04]: All right question number three.

15:58.605 --> 16:01.388
[SPEAKER_04]: Who is the career leader in goal scored in the NHL?

16:08.443 --> 16:09.623
[SPEAKER_01]: T-shirt.

16:10.144 --> 16:12.445
[SPEAKER_01]: Can't be pretty about it.

16:12.645 --> 16:15.726
[SPEAKER_04]: Who is the career leader in goal scored in the NHL?

16:15.746 --> 16:21.708
[SPEAKER_02]: Nick, it's killing me right now.

16:22.268 --> 16:23.449
[SPEAKER_04]: Right on the tip of your tongue.

16:23.489 --> 16:23.869
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes.

16:24.449 --> 16:24.549
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh.

16:25.910 --> 16:27.290
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, it hit him.

16:27.590 --> 16:28.390
[SPEAKER_05]: There it is.

16:28.430 --> 16:30.051
[SPEAKER_04]: Got something.

16:30.071 --> 16:31.712
[SPEAKER_04]: He's running a higher glyphics right now.

16:31.752 --> 16:32.152
[SPEAKER_04]: I believe it.

16:32.872 --> 16:33.812
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know.

16:34.653 --> 16:34.993
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know.

16:35.033 --> 16:35.913
[SPEAKER_04]: The name popped in my head.

16:35.953 --> 16:37.134
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, everyone has an answer.

16:37.174 --> 16:37.654
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's reveal.

16:40.970 --> 16:42.950
[SPEAKER_04]: Ah, we have Alex Oveschen across the board.

16:42.970 --> 16:46.931
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that would not be the right answer about three weeks ago.

16:46.951 --> 16:48.451
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, correct.

16:48.471 --> 16:51.512
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, good call brother.

16:51.612 --> 16:52.892
[SPEAKER_04]: What did he finish with this year?

16:53.832 --> 16:54.312
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know.

16:54.692 --> 16:55.893
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, no, he had a couple more.

16:56.013 --> 16:58.973
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I mean, eight ninety five is a record, but I don't know.

16:59.013 --> 16:59.273
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

16:59.413 --> 17:01.154
[SPEAKER_00]: I think he scored one, you know, a couple more.

17:01.194 --> 17:01.494
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

17:01.514 --> 17:01.754
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

17:02.594 --> 17:04.394
[SPEAKER_00]: Well, I don't think he had nine hundred, though.

17:04.594 --> 17:05.314
[SPEAKER_04]: No, no, no.

17:05.474 --> 17:06.854
[SPEAKER_04]: But he's pretty, he might play ten more years.

17:07.015 --> 17:07.215
[SPEAKER_00]: Right.

17:07.295 --> 17:08.275
[SPEAKER_04]: And he had forty two.

17:08.715 --> 17:09.755
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, he's older.

17:10.785 --> 17:15.906
[SPEAKER_04]: So Alex Ivechkin is one of the greatest school squares in Asia history and the face of the Washington Capitals franchise.

17:16.550 --> 17:23.092
[SPEAKER_04]: drafted first of all overall in two thousand four the Russian winger quickly became known for his blistering shot physical play and passion for the game.

17:24.273 --> 17:26.914
[SPEAKER_04]: As of now, this is what it gave me.

17:26.954 --> 17:27.634
[SPEAKER_04]: He ranked second.

17:27.954 --> 17:29.895
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, we know that not to be the answer.

17:30.855 --> 17:42.500
[SPEAKER_04]: Passing Wayne Gretzky, and he's who is widely considered the most prolific pure goal score of the modern era of legend is Stanley Cup champion in two thousand eighteen three time heart trophy winner.

17:43.340 --> 17:46.543
[SPEAKER_04]: And rocket-reshared trophy leader nine times.

17:46.764 --> 17:47.745
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, Rocky was sharp.

17:47.765 --> 17:48.425
[SPEAKER_02]: What does that mean?

17:48.966 --> 17:49.426
[SPEAKER_02]: No, I did.

17:50.047 --> 17:53.570
[SPEAKER_01]: The hard trophies like the NBA and the league NBA sends leader in goals.

17:53.670 --> 17:53.830
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

17:54.011 --> 17:54.331
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

17:54.711 --> 17:54.992
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

17:55.432 --> 17:56.793
[SPEAKER_01]: So, gotcha.

17:56.813 --> 17:57.414
[SPEAKER_01]: That makes sense.

17:57.454 --> 17:58.135
[SPEAKER_01]: He scored a bunch.

17:58.195 --> 17:58.395
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

17:58.915 --> 17:59.236
[SPEAKER_00]: Sure did.

17:59.736 --> 17:59.956
[SPEAKER_04]: Cool.

18:01.238 --> 18:01.618
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

18:02.038 --> 18:03.420
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's go on to question number four.

18:05.153 --> 18:07.055
[SPEAKER_04]: This should be a layup.

18:08.976 --> 18:11.959
[SPEAKER_04]: Who won the two thousand nineteen NHL Stanley Cup.

18:11.979 --> 18:18.605
[SPEAKER_01]: Now very specific.

18:20.827 --> 18:21.968
[SPEAKER_01]: It's area specific.

18:22.008 --> 18:22.248
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

18:24.759 --> 18:26.501
[SPEAKER_01]: That's fans in Vancouver, man.

18:26.641 --> 18:27.081
[SPEAKER_01]: Crazy.

18:27.141 --> 18:31.144
[SPEAKER_02]: That was a trivial one time when they were just like, who won the two thousand fourteen this?

18:32.025 --> 18:33.186
[SPEAKER_02]: And they expect people just to know it.

18:33.246 --> 18:35.908
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, if they had nothing to do to get there, I bet.

18:36.889 --> 18:37.430
[SPEAKER_02]: It wasn't that.

18:37.470 --> 18:39.732
[SPEAKER_02]: It was like the H. Can't be a trip or something.

18:39.772 --> 18:40.012
[SPEAKER_02]: Again.

18:40.112 --> 18:40.552
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

18:40.592 --> 18:42.214
[SPEAKER_04]: But you can get pretty close.

18:42.334 --> 18:48.239
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, I was there one day when your brother Doug listed the MLB World Series champions back to.

18:48.259 --> 18:50.100
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, yeah.

18:50.741 --> 18:51.382
[SPEAKER_04]: It was impressive.

18:52.082 --> 18:53.123
[SPEAKER_04]: I didn't take liver along either.

18:53.223 --> 18:53.683
[SPEAKER_04]: No.

18:54.823 --> 18:56.084
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody have an answer for this reveal.

18:59.946 --> 19:00.826
[SPEAKER_04]: LGB St.

19:00.866 --> 19:01.847
[SPEAKER_04]: Louis blues.

19:01.947 --> 19:02.547
[SPEAKER_02]: There you go.

19:02.807 --> 19:03.608
[SPEAKER_02]: Explode of yeah.

19:04.928 --> 19:07.069
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody has the same loose and that is correct.

19:07.950 --> 19:11.792
[SPEAKER_04]: I have no flavor text because I wanted Scott and we're Brian to

19:12.667 --> 19:16.271
[SPEAKER_04]: give me a little blues knowledge just off the whim off the top of their head.

19:16.351 --> 19:19.034
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, the blues franchise was started in nineteen sixty seven.

19:19.174 --> 19:19.535
[SPEAKER_03]: Well done.

19:19.715 --> 19:22.658
[SPEAKER_03]: The first three years they went to the cup three years in a row.

19:22.759 --> 19:26.683
[SPEAKER_03]: Has an expansion team lost every year and then in two thousand nineteen.

19:27.504 --> 19:27.884
[SPEAKER_03]: They did it.

19:28.765 --> 19:30.306
[SPEAKER_04]: That was that was that was an awesome year.

19:30.326 --> 19:33.187
[SPEAKER_04]: I remember watching the game at the big peanut.

19:33.307 --> 19:35.228
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, it was packed people are going crazy.

19:35.268 --> 19:36.949
[SPEAKER_04]: I remember watching it at our friend's old house.

19:37.229 --> 19:39.270
[SPEAKER_03]: I remember getting in the hockey that year.

19:39.290 --> 19:42.431
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, having them over you and Scott were in the living room upstairs.

19:42.711 --> 19:42.911
[SPEAKER_03]: It was.

19:42.931 --> 19:46.053
[SPEAKER_03]: I remember any coming off the couch was needs a couple of times.

19:46.093 --> 19:47.413
[SPEAKER_01]: He was so into it.

19:47.454 --> 19:47.974
[SPEAKER_01]: I love that.

19:48.994 --> 19:52.736
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, I've been an avid hockey fan for my life with the CM get into it.

19:52.756 --> 20:09.662
[SPEAKER_01]: I love the game seven the star series which would I guess been the conference championship or whatever went to double overtime took your blood pressure to the maroon ended up scoring it, but yeah, I mean didn't the blues have like seventy shots in that game too, so they were just pepper in the goal.

20:09.742 --> 20:10.723
[SPEAKER_01]: It was so exciting.

20:11.323 --> 20:14.585
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, yeah, there's nothing like a game seven that goes into overtime.

20:14.886 --> 20:15.466
[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, you can't.

20:15.686 --> 20:15.906
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

20:16.126 --> 20:19.509
[SPEAKER_00]: At any split second, the game could be over season could be over.

20:19.529 --> 20:20.369
[SPEAKER_00]: Yes, that's true.

20:20.389 --> 20:24.372
[SPEAKER_00]: Unlike other game sevens where you can sometimes kind of see where it's going.

20:24.412 --> 20:25.273
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, they shot.

20:25.393 --> 20:26.453
[SPEAKER_00]: They're in lies to do.

20:26.513 --> 20:27.074
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

20:27.194 --> 20:27.774
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

20:27.834 --> 20:31.637
[SPEAKER_01]: So that got me so fired up about hockey that threw the summer.

20:31.977 --> 20:33.538
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm like, man, I'm a hockey fan.

20:33.578 --> 20:34.359
[SPEAKER_01]: Now I'm ready to go.

20:34.399 --> 20:34.579
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

20:34.799 --> 20:36.700
[SPEAKER_01]: And I start watching the first couple of games.

20:37.121 --> 20:39.102
[SPEAKER_01]: And they're like walking around the other side.

20:40.843 --> 20:43.064
[SPEAKER_01]: Welcome to professional sports.

20:43.084 --> 20:43.625
[SPEAKER_01]: Where is it?

20:43.745 --> 20:45.106
[SPEAKER_01]: So different.

20:45.146 --> 20:45.646
[SPEAKER_01]: Amazing.

20:45.666 --> 20:46.347
[SPEAKER_01]: Then really.

20:46.367 --> 20:47.127
[SPEAKER_01]: That is season.

20:47.267 --> 20:48.088
[SPEAKER_01]: That's every sport.

20:48.268 --> 20:48.848
[SPEAKER_01]: It is now.

20:48.908 --> 20:49.749
[SPEAKER_01]: It's more so now.

20:49.809 --> 20:52.110
[SPEAKER_01]: But hockey just seems to be so here.

20:52.130 --> 20:52.831
[SPEAKER_03]: Say, I've been hockey.

20:52.851 --> 20:54.712
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, this was the hardest trophy to win in sports.

20:55.232 --> 20:56.873
[SPEAKER_02]: It's the hardest one.

20:57.073 --> 20:58.494
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, you can't.

20:58.534 --> 21:00.195
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, that's the one.

21:00.275 --> 21:02.076
[SPEAKER_03]: But a lot of people say it's a hard, I mean, dude.

21:02.116 --> 21:02.356
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

21:02.396 --> 21:02.956
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, it's tough.

21:03.296 --> 21:04.977
[SPEAKER_02]: Longer than the physical game.

21:05.458 --> 21:07.259
[SPEAKER_03]: And the fact that seven games were out of the bat.

21:07.379 --> 21:07.639
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

21:07.659 --> 21:08.719
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, it's so physical.

21:08.739 --> 21:10.080
[SPEAKER_03]: That's, it's no joke, man.

21:10.100 --> 21:10.440
[SPEAKER_03]: That's tough.

21:10.460 --> 21:10.580
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

21:10.781 --> 21:10.981
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

21:12.481 --> 21:12.802
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

21:12.822 --> 21:14.443
[SPEAKER_04]: We got question number five coming at us.

21:14.563 --> 21:15.783
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

21:16.364 --> 21:17.964
[SPEAKER_04]: This should be fairly easy one.

21:18.285 --> 21:19.085
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, I could say that.

21:21.626 --> 21:24.028
[SPEAKER_04]: Who is the career points leader in the NHL?

21:29.718 --> 21:30.358
[SPEAKER_04]: We can get you there.

21:31.119 --> 21:34.021
[SPEAKER_04]: Who is the career points leader in the NHL?

21:34.041 --> 21:43.489
[SPEAKER_04]: We've everyone has an answer down.

21:44.169 --> 21:45.190
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's go ahead and reveal.

21:48.460 --> 21:49.201
[SPEAKER_04]: like clockwork.

21:49.261 --> 21:51.603
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody has the great one Wayne Gratzky.

21:51.663 --> 21:52.364
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, baby.

21:52.544 --> 21:54.066
[SPEAKER_01]: It is still shocking to me.

21:54.146 --> 21:57.729
[SPEAKER_01]: The few times I've been to blues, you know, the Enterprise Center.

21:58.190 --> 22:01.433
[SPEAKER_01]: You see how many blues Gratzky churches that are already was here.

22:01.453 --> 22:02.694
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, like six weeks.

22:03.995 --> 22:07.018
[SPEAKER_01]: It's like if Jesus was on your type of year.

22:07.058 --> 22:09.321
[SPEAKER_03]: I think what helps out those his wife's from here.

22:09.961 --> 22:11.382
[SPEAKER_03]: So like during nineteen he was here.

22:11.402 --> 22:13.163
[SPEAKER_03]: He was a lot of games.

22:13.223 --> 22:13.503
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

22:13.583 --> 22:13.863
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

22:13.923 --> 22:15.024
[SPEAKER_03]: That means why I'm saying.

22:15.044 --> 22:16.865
[SPEAKER_03]: So he's he kind of adopted the blues.

22:16.905 --> 22:18.966
[SPEAKER_03]: You know, so I mean, yeah, it's I think that helps.

22:19.086 --> 22:19.727
[SPEAKER_03]: That adds to it.

22:20.047 --> 22:23.709
[SPEAKER_03]: But any time you get the great one to where you're Jersey.

22:23.909 --> 22:24.910
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, it's only four teams.

22:24.950 --> 22:25.570
[SPEAKER_03]: I can say that.

22:25.790 --> 22:28.532
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, but that's how about the first courts nickname.

22:28.932 --> 22:29.592
[SPEAKER_02]: The great one.

22:29.632 --> 22:30.152
[SPEAKER_02]: The great one.

22:30.192 --> 22:30.613
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes, sir.

22:30.673 --> 22:33.154
[SPEAKER_02]: Better one is or one that says more than the great one.

22:33.214 --> 22:33.454
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

22:33.554 --> 22:34.255
[SPEAKER_03]: No, I don't think so.

22:34.655 --> 22:37.118
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, Jordan, they called Black Jesus, but I don't know.

22:37.138 --> 22:38.140
[SPEAKER_02]: That is even as prominent.

22:38.160 --> 22:39.401
[SPEAKER_02]: It's just saying you're the great one.

22:39.482 --> 22:40.803
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't want to say that anymore.

22:41.064 --> 22:42.566
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, yeah.

22:42.586 --> 22:43.147
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, you can.

22:43.607 --> 22:44.749
[SPEAKER_01]: No, what's going on?

22:44.889 --> 22:48.514
[SPEAKER_01]: And Kelly might be stepping on your flavor, but Brian likes to drop this fact.

22:48.594 --> 22:49.896
[SPEAKER_01]: It's the assists, right?

22:49.936 --> 22:50.156
[SPEAKER_01]: If he

22:50.957 --> 22:53.778
[SPEAKER_01]: If you erased all of his goals, he'd still the point at least.

22:53.818 --> 22:55.198
[SPEAKER_01]: Still the all-time point.

22:55.298 --> 22:57.258
[SPEAKER_01]: On massive level.

22:57.358 --> 22:59.478
[SPEAKER_03]: To me, dominated his sport like no other.

22:59.658 --> 23:00.839
[SPEAKER_03]: No one's like that.

23:01.039 --> 23:02.579
[SPEAKER_03]: We've debated that many times.

23:02.719 --> 23:04.079
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, I don't even know how you debate it, right?

23:04.139 --> 23:06.000
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, he is dominated his sport like no other.

23:06.060 --> 23:07.000
[SPEAKER_03]: It's unbelievable.

23:07.320 --> 23:07.520
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

23:07.540 --> 23:12.201
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, I mean, Wayne Gretzvi, known as the Great One, has universally regarded as the greatest hockey player of all time.

23:12.681 --> 23:19.982
[SPEAKER_04]: Over a twenty-season NHL career from seventy-nine to ninety-nine, he shattered records with unmatched vision, skill, and intelligence on the ice.

23:20.702 --> 23:22.643
[SPEAKER_04]: Gretzky holds a record from most career goals.

23:23.904 --> 23:25.225
[SPEAKER_04]: You, too.

23:25.285 --> 23:33.892
[SPEAKER_04]: He had the record for a long time at eight hundred and ninety four assists with one thousand nine hundred and sixty three and his career points are those two.

23:34.192 --> 23:35.733
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, is this a long story?

23:35.773 --> 23:37.975
[SPEAKER_04]: Is a sister was one thousand nine hundred and sixty three.

23:39.001 --> 23:39.802
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, wow.

23:39.922 --> 23:40.082
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

23:40.142 --> 23:42.204
[SPEAKER_01]: Any idea how many games he played total in his career?

23:42.424 --> 23:43.185
[SPEAKER_01]: I do not have that.

23:43.425 --> 23:46.688
[SPEAKER_01]: I mean, it's got to be he's got to be better than assist a game, right?

23:47.248 --> 23:49.170
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, you get a hundred of things.

23:49.490 --> 23:51.972
[SPEAKER_04]: Also in hockey, you get you there are two assists to some.

23:51.992 --> 23:52.292
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

23:52.532 --> 23:54.194
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, that's a good pass to a pass to assist.

23:55.735 --> 23:59.036
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it's still a directly responsible for almost three thousand goals.

23:59.076 --> 24:00.257
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, that's for Jake.

24:00.297 --> 24:02.658
[SPEAKER_04]: Two thousand eight hundred and fifty seven career points.

24:02.838 --> 24:03.678
[SPEAKER_04]: That is not.

24:03.998 --> 24:06.479
[SPEAKER_04]: Mark's a marks the number that may never be broken.

24:06.519 --> 24:07.440
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I don't know.

24:07.480 --> 24:08.860
[SPEAKER_00]: I don't see the happening.

24:08.920 --> 24:09.680
[SPEAKER_00]: I don't see it.

24:10.301 --> 24:10.701
[SPEAKER_00]: I don't see it.

24:11.721 --> 24:12.542
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I'm ballparking.

24:12.562 --> 24:14.922
[SPEAKER_00]: I'm as close to two points a game.

24:15.043 --> 24:16.583
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, good luck for real.

24:16.743 --> 24:17.784
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, for his career.

24:17.884 --> 24:18.104
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean,

24:19.084 --> 24:19.904
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, that's crazy.

24:20.044 --> 24:25.786
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, you want four Stanley cups with the admins and oilers and nine heart trophies as a league MVP.

24:26.747 --> 24:26.947
[SPEAKER_04]: Wow.

24:27.347 --> 24:28.927
[SPEAKER_04]: Is this a phenomenal hockey player?

24:29.327 --> 24:32.028
[SPEAKER_01]: That was that was pretty early in his career, right with Edmonton.

24:32.048 --> 24:32.688
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

24:32.728 --> 24:36.190
[SPEAKER_01]: Messier was on that team and yeah, they ran the table for a while.

24:36.210 --> 24:36.430
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, yeah.

24:36.790 --> 24:37.810
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, that's five questions Nick.

24:37.830 --> 24:38.490
[SPEAKER_02]: We got a score count.

24:38.890 --> 24:39.611
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we do.

24:41.739 --> 24:44.040
[SPEAKER_02]: Andy myself and Brian all have five for five.

24:44.800 --> 24:46.420
[SPEAKER_02]: And Scotty has six for five.

24:46.880 --> 24:47.661
[SPEAKER_00]: That was that even heaven?

24:47.741 --> 24:48.661
[SPEAKER_00]: I don't know.

24:49.301 --> 24:50.662
[SPEAKER_00]: Hockey's got weird rules man.

24:51.522 --> 24:53.802
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, so let's go.

24:54.123 --> 24:57.503
[SPEAKER_02]: You're the way gritsky of this game right now.

24:57.844 --> 24:59.744
[SPEAKER_01]: Four out of three people are better fractured.

25:04.525 --> 25:05.146
[SPEAKER_03]: That's great.

25:05.186 --> 25:06.306
[SPEAKER_04]: This may be too easy.

25:06.326 --> 25:07.386
[SPEAKER_04]: It's funny.

25:08.066 --> 25:09.267
[SPEAKER_04]: All right, we're coming in with number six.

25:11.095 --> 25:17.636
[SPEAKER_04]: There's a tradition observed by Detroit Red Wing fans, where they throw something on the ice, mostly during playoff games for good luck.

25:18.296 --> 25:19.617
[SPEAKER_04]: What do they throw on the ice?

25:23.818 --> 25:25.438
[SPEAKER_04]: Separates the men from the boys.

25:25.498 --> 25:26.618
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, Nick is faltering.

25:26.678 --> 25:27.238
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, you know this?

25:27.258 --> 25:28.578
[SPEAKER_02]: I got it down.

25:29.079 --> 25:29.479
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

25:29.519 --> 25:31.499
[SPEAKER_01]: One of the oddest traditions in all sorts.

25:31.599 --> 25:32.639
[SPEAKER_02]: It is my fault.

25:32.779 --> 25:35.620
[SPEAKER_02]: We did throw something on the ice.

25:35.640 --> 25:36.040
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

25:37.798 --> 25:41.179
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm assuming it's not what you would think for scoring three goals.

25:41.840 --> 25:43.720
[SPEAKER_03]: It's exactly what you think of it.

25:43.820 --> 25:44.661
[SPEAKER_03]: It's totally what it is.

25:44.821 --> 25:45.121
[SPEAKER_03]: It's not.

25:45.961 --> 25:47.642
[SPEAKER_00]: It's not what you're doing over there.

25:48.862 --> 25:50.283
[SPEAKER_00]: Well, I don't want to give Nick any.

25:50.863 --> 25:51.123
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

25:51.383 --> 25:52.143
[SPEAKER_00]: I'm writing down.

25:52.564 --> 25:52.784
[SPEAKER_00]: Sorry.

25:53.044 --> 25:54.044
[SPEAKER_00]: I'm away from the mic.

25:54.264 --> 25:59.066
[SPEAKER_00]: I was writing down a two kind of a two-part answer.

25:59.186 --> 25:59.506
[SPEAKER_00]: Okay.

25:59.666 --> 26:00.447
[SPEAKER_00]: I'll leave it with you.

26:00.527 --> 26:01.767
[SPEAKER_00]: I just second part of this answer.

26:01.787 --> 26:02.828
[SPEAKER_02]: I just know this all the stairs.

26:02.848 --> 26:04.248
[SPEAKER_02]: He was just trying to break it.

26:04.288 --> 26:04.948
[SPEAKER_02]: I just want to.

26:04.988 --> 26:06.109
[SPEAKER_02]: I do not feel bad about this.

26:06.789 --> 26:07.590
[SPEAKER_02]: Revealing suck.

26:08.090 --> 26:09.792
[SPEAKER_02]: So why would you care what they throw on the ice?

26:09.912 --> 26:10.473
[SPEAKER_03]: I love that.

26:10.493 --> 26:11.294
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, they do.

26:11.654 --> 26:13.356
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't we have a bunch of Revegan the face.

26:13.396 --> 26:13.716
[SPEAKER_02]: That was.

26:13.736 --> 26:15.798
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, that was a little down Randy Caracker.

26:15.858 --> 26:17.520
[SPEAKER_04]: You see that when the Revegan's came to town.

26:17.840 --> 26:19.642
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I went to Red Wing in the face.

26:19.662 --> 26:20.603
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, well, they spit on the ice.

26:20.663 --> 26:23.085
[SPEAKER_04]: They're teeth because we can put the face out.

26:23.425 --> 26:24.126
[SPEAKER_04]: I have no idea.

26:24.166 --> 26:25.347
[SPEAKER_04]: That's hilarious.

26:25.588 --> 26:26.008
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's go.

26:26.368 --> 26:26.769
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

26:27.670 --> 26:28.470
[SPEAKER_04]: No need to answer it.

26:28.510 --> 26:29.451
[SPEAKER_04]: We have read the question again.

26:29.491 --> 26:29.832
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's reveal.

26:32.308 --> 26:38.373
[SPEAKER_04]: Brian has squid, Andy has octopus, Nick has flowers, and Scott has octopus.

26:39.294 --> 26:40.716
[SPEAKER_04]: The answer is octopus.

26:43.053 --> 26:45.814
[SPEAKER_00]: I originally had squid slash octopus.

26:46.214 --> 26:47.815
[SPEAKER_02]: You talk, is this live squid?

26:48.455 --> 26:52.156
[SPEAKER_02]: They're these fake squids or these actual real octopus.

26:52.176 --> 26:52.836
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, octopus.

26:52.876 --> 26:53.417
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, octopus.

26:53.437 --> 26:54.657
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, they're dead.

26:54.677 --> 27:03.500
[SPEAKER_04]: But they're, I mean, I'm okay with taking squid as an answer because that was my initial answer, but as I searched more, they kept coming up octopus.

27:03.600 --> 27:05.161
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, you two definitely had octopus, right?

27:05.321 --> 27:05.521
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

27:05.681 --> 27:06.041
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

27:06.101 --> 27:08.162
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I will, I will accept squid.

27:08.522 --> 27:09.222
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

27:09.282 --> 27:11.663
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I think they throw both.

27:11.703 --> 27:11.883
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes.

27:12.103 --> 27:13.805
[SPEAKER_02]: but they're at the actual creature.

27:13.985 --> 27:15.707
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it's a robbery.

27:15.767 --> 27:17.249
[SPEAKER_02]: It's a robbery, tenacles.

27:17.549 --> 27:20.052
[SPEAKER_02]: So killing them all, he's occupied.

27:20.112 --> 27:28.522
[SPEAKER_04]: Nick, the tradition of the Detroit Weddings fans throwing octopuses onto the ice began in nineteen fifty two and it's become one of the most iconic and bizarre rituals in hockey.

27:29.243 --> 27:38.190
[SPEAKER_04]: It started when two Detroit brothers, Pete and Jerry Kusimano, who owned a fish market, tossed an octopus onto the ice at Olympia Stadium during a playoff game.

27:38.730 --> 27:42.573
[SPEAKER_04]: At the time, teams needed eight wins to capture the Stanley Cup and eight tentacles.

27:42.593 --> 27:45.795
[SPEAKER_04]: The octopus symbolized each needed victory.

27:46.296 --> 27:47.957
[SPEAKER_04]: So does that please just stand up?

27:48.077 --> 27:49.698
[SPEAKER_04]: It's not.

27:49.738 --> 27:51.500
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm sure back then, you've been as a change.

27:51.580 --> 27:57.084
[SPEAKER_04]: The Red Wings went on to suite the playoffs and win the Cup that year, giving birth to a superstition and tradition back that stuff.

27:57.824 --> 28:00.546
[SPEAKER_04]: Over the decades, the tradition is endured with trans-smuggling.

28:01.046 --> 28:02.207
[SPEAKER_04]: Octopus is into a arena.

28:02.427 --> 28:04.969
[SPEAKER_04]: Sometimes even freezing them to reduce the snow.

28:05.429 --> 28:05.909
[UNKNOWN]: Wow.

28:05.949 --> 28:06.150
[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah.

28:06.410 --> 28:10.873
[SPEAKER_04]: And hurling them onto the ice during playoff games, especially after I get hit the head with frozen octopuss.

28:11.473 --> 28:13.334
[SPEAKER_01]: No, it's just a pie first of all.

28:13.394 --> 28:14.235
[SPEAKER_00]: He's reading octopuss.

28:14.255 --> 28:15.656
[SPEAKER_02]: I thought it was octopuss.

28:15.736 --> 28:17.037
[SPEAKER_02]: I thought it was octopuss.

28:17.117 --> 28:18.317
[SPEAKER_02]: So did I. It says octopuss.

28:18.357 --> 28:18.658
[SPEAKER_02]: Is that it?

28:18.698 --> 28:20.659
[SPEAKER_00]: To be in a screening office or what?

28:20.699 --> 28:22.100
[SPEAKER_00]: We got in your jacket there, sir.

28:22.480 --> 28:23.601
[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, octopus, you're good.

28:23.621 --> 28:24.061
[SPEAKER_00]: Come on in.

28:24.521 --> 28:25.042
[SPEAKER_00]: It's all good.

28:25.062 --> 28:25.622
[SPEAKER_00]: Is it frozen?

28:25.722 --> 28:26.322
[SPEAKER_00]: Is it frozen?

28:27.283 --> 28:32.207
[SPEAKER_04]: So the Red Wings even embraced the tradition and the team's mascot named Aldoctopus and on a rabbit.

28:32.527 --> 28:33.828
[SPEAKER_04]: Wow, that's pretty cool actually.

28:34.128 --> 28:35.989
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, where's what is Red Wing come from?

28:36.110 --> 28:36.730
[SPEAKER_01]: What is the?

28:37.551 --> 28:39.712
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, the Red Wing octopus of the glob.

28:41.906 --> 28:46.287
[SPEAKER_04]: Darwin discovered that red wing has something to do with the tire or automotive industry.

28:46.308 --> 28:47.428
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, it's a wheel.

28:47.688 --> 28:48.248
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm not sure.

28:48.628 --> 28:48.788
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

28:48.808 --> 28:49.449
[SPEAKER_04]: Well Detroit.

28:50.149 --> 28:50.709
[SPEAKER_00]: I don't know.

28:51.189 --> 28:52.449
[SPEAKER_00]: Red wing fans let us know.

28:52.510 --> 28:53.190
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

28:53.310 --> 28:53.890
[SPEAKER_00]: But we don't care.

28:53.910 --> 28:54.170
[SPEAKER_04]: Shoot.

28:54.850 --> 28:55.250
[SPEAKER_00]: We don't care.

28:55.310 --> 28:55.611
[SPEAKER_00]: We'll.

28:55.871 --> 28:56.731
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

28:56.991 --> 28:58.712
[SPEAKER_04]: I believe that's what's most reference to.

28:58.732 --> 28:59.032
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

28:59.192 --> 28:59.732
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

28:59.752 --> 29:00.032
[SPEAKER_00]: Makes sense.

29:00.052 --> 29:00.472
[SPEAKER_04]: Just a guess.

29:02.293 --> 29:04.934
[SPEAKER_04]: So Andy Scott and Brian got that right.

29:05.094 --> 29:05.194
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

29:05.214 --> 29:07.794
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

29:07.834 --> 29:09.095
[SPEAKER_04]: We'll go on to question number seven.

29:10.481 --> 29:13.262
[SPEAKER_04]: Who is the career saves leader in the NHL?

29:14.842 --> 29:16.363
[SPEAKER_04]: We're asking for a gold tender.

29:17.423 --> 29:18.863
[SPEAKER_04]: Saves saves.

29:19.364 --> 29:20.204
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, it's good one.

29:20.564 --> 29:21.544
[SPEAKER_04]: That is a good one.

29:21.564 --> 29:22.985
[SPEAKER_04]: I was debating this.

29:23.085 --> 29:23.885
[SPEAKER_04]: Two names in my ass.

29:23.985 --> 29:25.625
[SPEAKER_04]: I have no idea if either one of them would be right.

29:25.645 --> 29:28.086
[SPEAKER_04]: I asked this myself and I came up with multiple, you know.

29:28.686 --> 29:29.326
[SPEAKER_04]: Did you get a right?

29:30.727 --> 29:31.127
[SPEAKER_04]: I did not.

29:31.327 --> 29:34.248
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, that's tough.

29:34.348 --> 29:35.248
[SPEAKER_03]: I like the question though.

29:35.848 --> 29:37.869
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I like the markers.

29:42.886 --> 29:44.108
[SPEAKER_02]: I thought like one gully names.

29:44.168 --> 29:44.669
[SPEAKER_02]: I put it down.

29:44.689 --> 29:45.751
[SPEAKER_02]: It's not a one one.

29:45.771 --> 29:48.215
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay, I remember the first name down.

29:48.395 --> 29:49.096
[SPEAKER_02]: I could be wrong though.

29:49.717 --> 29:52.281
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I mean, I'm going to jeopardy rules on the goal.

29:52.322 --> 29:52.902
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, go.

29:53.003 --> 29:53.503
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

29:53.543 --> 29:54.305
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't think it'll matter.

29:55.051 --> 29:56.371
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, yeah.

29:57.011 --> 29:59.192
[SPEAKER_00]: Do you do someone who played a long time?

29:59.212 --> 30:00.432
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, obviously, that makes sense.

30:00.452 --> 30:02.232
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know how many gold he's played a long time.

30:02.252 --> 30:06.173
[SPEAKER_02]: Like, I went out and had a pretty exciting time.

30:06.213 --> 30:07.573
[SPEAKER_02]: That's a, that's a position.

30:08.113 --> 30:09.754
[SPEAKER_02]: Your age doesn't play as big as it was.

30:09.774 --> 30:11.294
[SPEAKER_02]: Wait, does Wayne Gretzi also lead in this?

30:12.694 --> 30:13.914
[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, let me say, let me say.

30:13.934 --> 30:15.555
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, he would have more thousand.

30:16.035 --> 30:17.555
[SPEAKER_02]: But he saved his own goals.

30:17.575 --> 30:17.815
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

30:18.035 --> 30:20.555
[SPEAKER_02]: Potential goals saved his own.

30:20.595 --> 30:21.296
[SPEAKER_01]: He's a bunch of buddies.

30:21.436 --> 30:23.196
[SPEAKER_01]: Yes, he's shooting saved his own goals.

30:23.476 --> 30:23.756
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

30:24.376 --> 30:26.119
[SPEAKER_04]: Who was the career saves later in the NHL?

30:26.339 --> 30:26.900
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's reveal.

30:28.762 --> 30:30.024
[SPEAKER_04]: Brian has Martin Brodoor.

30:30.064 --> 30:30.545
[SPEAKER_04]: Andy has Patrick Waw.

30:34.291 --> 30:37.113
[SPEAKER_04]: Nick has Patrick Waw and Scott has Martin Brodure.

30:37.453 --> 30:39.694
[SPEAKER_04]: The correct answer is Martin Brodure.

30:39.814 --> 30:40.615
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, no.

30:41.455 --> 30:42.856
[SPEAKER_01]: Man, I was a coin flip.

30:42.916 --> 30:44.837
[SPEAKER_01]: I just chose the wrong damn one.

30:44.897 --> 30:47.079
[SPEAKER_02]: That name popped in my head, but I was like, I don't think that's a golly.

30:47.759 --> 30:48.199
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, right.

30:48.239 --> 30:49.200
[SPEAKER_02]: That's how little I know.

30:49.260 --> 30:50.661
[SPEAKER_02]: He's like blue for a minute, too.

30:50.881 --> 30:51.161
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

30:51.441 --> 30:51.801
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

30:51.841 --> 30:52.142
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

30:52.202 --> 30:52.862
[SPEAKER_00]: And an executive.

30:52.882 --> 30:54.103
[SPEAKER_00]: An executive for the world.

30:54.163 --> 30:54.423
[SPEAKER_00]: Okay.

30:54.443 --> 30:55.303
[SPEAKER_00]: Run office guys.

30:55.404 --> 30:57.305
[SPEAKER_00]: The devil's is where he.

30:57.405 --> 30:57.825
[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, yeah.

30:59.286 --> 31:00.306
[SPEAKER_00]: I know he has a lot of wins.

31:00.547 --> 31:01.287
[SPEAKER_00]: So that's why I guess.

31:01.547 --> 31:01.707
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

31:02.508 --> 31:02.748
[SPEAKER_02]: Smart.

31:03.715 --> 31:04.055
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I don't know.

31:04.075 --> 31:05.256
[SPEAKER_04]: I didn't have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:05.276 --> 31:05.677
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I don't know.

31:05.697 --> 31:07.038
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:07.058 --> 31:08.379
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:08.399 --> 31:09.700
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:09.720 --> 31:10.901
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:10.921 --> 31:12.142
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:12.162 --> 31:13.363
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:13.383 --> 31:14.564
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:14.584 --> 31:15.805
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't even have much flavor text about Martin Brewer here.

31:16.304 --> 31:18.626
[SPEAKER_02]: Thirty four It was a good weekend.

31:18.666 --> 31:21.569
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, it's really a team in front of him really low bar.

31:21.629 --> 31:25.852
[SPEAKER_03]: He said there no, but I do remember I didn't know I do the numbers but I do remember hearing.

31:25.892 --> 31:26.953
[SPEAKER_03]: It's a lot of the record.

31:26.993 --> 31:27.214
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

31:27.674 --> 31:29.816
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I'll I'll get back to that Okay, that's my bad.

31:29.836 --> 31:30.677
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, let's fill it in.

31:30.717 --> 31:31.698
[SPEAKER_02]: No worries.

31:32.078 --> 31:39.705
[SPEAKER_02]: It's still an interesting question even without knowing what did actually he told the record for the clip salty

31:44.401 --> 31:44.861
[SPEAKER_02]: or the buck.

31:47.102 --> 31:48.302
[SPEAKER_04]: The ball you play hockey with.

31:49.702 --> 31:52.063
[SPEAKER_00]: Could you imagine a Vanuite talk back to the host?

31:52.243 --> 31:54.323
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, that's what's happening right now.

31:56.624 --> 31:57.404
[SPEAKER_03]: He's a pretty one.

31:57.544 --> 31:58.424
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

31:58.504 --> 32:00.345
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm like even score and I'm the pretty one.

32:00.385 --> 32:01.825
[SPEAKER_00]: I don't know where you're flipping numbers.

32:02.145 --> 32:02.845
[SPEAKER_00]: Lost the shit.

32:02.985 --> 32:04.486
[SPEAKER_00]: I was probably the pretty one.

32:05.406 --> 32:06.106
[SPEAKER_04]: Question number eight.

32:06.226 --> 32:06.806
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay, go.

32:07.967 --> 32:08.287
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

32:08.407 --> 32:12.788
[SPEAKER_04]: I will give this answer a plus or three minus three years.

32:14.414 --> 32:15.195
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, okay.

32:15.335 --> 32:15.735
[SPEAKER_03]: I like that.

32:15.935 --> 32:20.039
[SPEAKER_04]: What was the last year in NHL Goli played without a mask?

32:21.020 --> 32:21.540
[SPEAKER_00]: Oh, I don't know.

32:21.560 --> 32:23.342
[SPEAKER_04]: I'll give you plus or minus three years.

32:23.362 --> 32:26.185
[SPEAKER_00]: That is a great question.

32:26.365 --> 32:26.925
[SPEAKER_00]: Great question.

32:27.045 --> 32:27.706
[SPEAKER_04]: That is a great question.

32:27.726 --> 32:30.268
[SPEAKER_04]: I will give you a bonus point if you can name that guy.

32:30.468 --> 32:32.230
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, wow.

32:32.290 --> 32:32.971
[SPEAKER_01]: Nothing on that.

32:33.431 --> 32:34.172
[SPEAKER_04]: Martin Bruder.

32:35.860 --> 32:36.820
[SPEAKER_03]: No, it's the other one.

32:36.840 --> 32:39.101
[SPEAKER_03]: Well done.

32:39.141 --> 32:44.262
[SPEAKER_03]: This, I have no idea on the name, by the way, but the name came up in last month between me.

32:44.302 --> 32:45.002
[SPEAKER_04]: We've talked about it.

32:45.082 --> 32:47.963
[SPEAKER_03]: We talked about this, but I have no idea, so I don't really know.

32:47.983 --> 32:49.284
[SPEAKER_04]: Jimmy no teeth.

32:49.444 --> 32:50.504
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, yeah.

32:50.584 --> 32:51.064
[SPEAKER_04]: That's who did it.

32:51.744 --> 32:54.825
[SPEAKER_04]: What was the last year in NHL Goldie played without a mask?

32:55.865 --> 32:56.626
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody have an answer?

32:56.766 --> 32:58.126
[SPEAKER_00]: No, give me a second.

32:58.246 --> 32:59.386
[SPEAKER_00]: Plus or minus three, right?

32:59.606 --> 33:01.367
[SPEAKER_04]: Plus or minus three years from the actual year.

33:01.447 --> 33:01.647
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay.

33:05.370 --> 33:10.335
[SPEAKER_01]: I have a specific reason for choosing the general era that I chose.

33:11.095 --> 33:12.777
[SPEAKER_01]: So we'll get to get to that in a minute.

33:13.978 --> 33:14.378
[SPEAKER_00]: I have no idea.

33:14.418 --> 33:15.039
[SPEAKER_00]: I think I'm way off.

33:15.439 --> 33:16.280
[SPEAKER_01]: That's a trick question.

33:17.381 --> 33:18.302
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I'm just here.

33:18.322 --> 33:20.323
[SPEAKER_04]: I never have it.

33:20.364 --> 33:21.404
[SPEAKER_04]: Is everybody having an answer?

33:21.525 --> 33:21.725
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

33:22.065 --> 33:27.310
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's reveal Brian with a nineteen eighty and he was nineteen sixty six.

33:28.150 --> 33:31.674
[SPEAKER_04]: Snick with nineteen seventy seven and Scott was seventy one.

33:33.697 --> 33:34.978
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, you do math it's here.

33:36.238 --> 33:38.019
[SPEAKER_04]: We have two correct answers.

33:38.059 --> 33:39.120
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

33:39.140 --> 33:41.241
[SPEAKER_04]: The answer is nineteen seventy four.

33:41.261 --> 33:43.622
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, give it to me.

33:43.802 --> 33:44.382
[SPEAKER_02]: They get scared.

33:44.422 --> 33:44.842
[SPEAKER_02]: You again.

33:44.922 --> 33:45.742
[SPEAKER_02]: Got to got a two.

33:46.083 --> 33:48.204
[SPEAKER_00]: That's very unfairly.

33:48.504 --> 33:54.246
[SPEAKER_02]: And the goalie was Chuck E. The concussion.

33:54.886 --> 33:57.027
[SPEAKER_03]: Black eye mount Andy.

33:57.087 --> 33:58.508
[SPEAKER_04]: He doesn't know where he is brown.

33:59.516 --> 34:00.798
[SPEAKER_04]: We're all out.

34:00.898 --> 34:04.223
[SPEAKER_04]: This was on force seven nineteen seventy four eight played with Pittsburgh penguins.

34:04.284 --> 34:04.604
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm out.

34:04.784 --> 34:05.385
[SPEAKER_02]: No, you're still in it.

34:05.826 --> 34:06.587
[SPEAKER_02]: He's got nine.

34:06.848 --> 34:08.029
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, there's two questions left.

34:08.049 --> 34:08.510
[SPEAKER_02]: You get him right.

34:08.530 --> 34:09.432
[SPEAKER_02]: He gets him wrong boom.

34:10.884 --> 34:11.664
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh yeah.

34:11.784 --> 34:12.765
[SPEAKER_03]: There's one question left.

34:12.805 --> 34:13.105
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

34:13.145 --> 34:14.006
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, he's got nine.

34:14.066 --> 34:14.907
[SPEAKER_03]: He's got the nine.

34:14.927 --> 34:15.367
[SPEAKER_03]: Sorry.

34:15.667 --> 34:16.268
[SPEAKER_03]: There was a two.

34:16.508 --> 34:16.728
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

34:16.768 --> 34:17.088
[SPEAKER_03]: My bad.

34:17.108 --> 34:17.549
[SPEAKER_03]: My bad.

34:17.569 --> 34:18.349
[SPEAKER_03]: That was quite a number.

34:18.389 --> 34:19.370
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's get a score check.

34:19.390 --> 34:19.830
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

34:19.850 --> 34:21.351
[SPEAKER_02]: So hey, everybody.

34:21.612 --> 34:25.374
[SPEAKER_02]: We have partnered with Warrior Logo where there are official merch provider.

34:25.655 --> 34:26.615
[SPEAKER_02]: You can go to our website.

34:26.836 --> 34:28.377
[SPEAKER_02]: UltimateReviewPodcast.com.

34:28.937 --> 34:30.318
[SPEAKER_02]: Did you take it right to our merch store?

34:30.779 --> 34:33.621
[SPEAKER_02]: Or if you want to make your own gear, go to WarriorLogoWhere.com.

34:33.821 --> 34:36.543
[SPEAKER_02]: They're veteran owned, small town, family business.

34:36.883 --> 34:38.623
[SPEAKER_02]: The score check will go this route.

34:39.063 --> 34:40.124
[SPEAKER_02]: Andy myself have six.

34:41.264 --> 34:42.084
[SPEAKER_02]: Brian's got seven.

34:42.484 --> 34:43.324
[SPEAKER_02]: Scottie has nine.

34:43.864 --> 34:44.724
[SPEAKER_02]: Thanks to that bonus one.

34:45.225 --> 34:46.565
[SPEAKER_02]: Brian is still within two.

34:46.985 --> 34:48.065
[SPEAKER_02]: There are two questions left.

34:48.345 --> 34:49.205
[SPEAKER_02]: We still have Scott.

34:49.305 --> 34:52.546
[SPEAKER_02]: Scott can completely crap the bed and you come in like a hero.

34:52.726 --> 34:58.687
[SPEAKER_04]: Paul, let me see who pays attention.

34:59.507 --> 34:59.947
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

35:00.187 --> 35:00.687
[SPEAKER_04]: Number nine.

35:01.168 --> 35:03.328
[SPEAKER_04]: What is the Maurice Richard trophy?

35:08.618 --> 35:10.460
[SPEAKER_01]: Man, I don't remember which one was which.

35:11.541 --> 35:11.942
[SPEAKER_01]: Take it.

35:16.266 --> 35:16.627
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.

35:17.548 --> 35:18.028
[SPEAKER_01]: I'll pick one.

35:21.632 --> 35:22.333
[SPEAKER_01]: That's terrible.

35:23.254 --> 35:24.916
[SPEAKER_02]: What is wrong with us?

35:24.936 --> 35:25.296
[SPEAKER_01]: Remember?

35:25.316 --> 35:26.477
[SPEAKER_02]: I think so.

35:26.878 --> 35:27.558
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know.

35:27.658 --> 35:29.701
[SPEAKER_04]: What is the Maurice we shared with you?

35:32.552 --> 35:34.833
[SPEAKER_03]: I know the name, but I did those all confused.

35:34.913 --> 35:35.493
[SPEAKER_03]: I can't remember.

35:36.353 --> 35:38.434
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, I got a gas, but I don't know.

35:38.474 --> 35:39.734
[SPEAKER_02]: It was like four or five questions ago.

35:39.854 --> 35:40.094
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.

35:40.334 --> 35:41.275
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't need to do that.

35:41.295 --> 35:42.215
[SPEAKER_02]: This is like an eternity.

35:42.375 --> 35:43.155
[SPEAKER_02]: Everybody has something down.

35:43.295 --> 35:43.535
[SPEAKER_04]: Sure.

35:44.016 --> 35:45.056
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's see what you guys got.

35:46.196 --> 35:47.417
[SPEAKER_04]: Brian has best defenseman.

35:47.577 --> 35:48.737
[SPEAKER_04]: Andy has most goals.

35:49.357 --> 35:52.858
[SPEAKER_04]: Nick has top goal score and Scott has most goal scored.

35:53.258 --> 35:55.899
[SPEAKER_04]: The correct answer is most goals scored.

35:55.959 --> 35:57.720
[SPEAKER_01]: And it's the hard trophy with the MVP.

35:57.740 --> 35:59.500
[SPEAKER_01]: That trophy.

35:59.680 --> 36:01.101
[SPEAKER_04]: When you asked me that question earlier,

36:01.681 --> 36:03.662
[SPEAKER_04]: What is the Maurice Richard trophy?

36:03.782 --> 36:05.063
[SPEAKER_04]: I did not want to answer it, but.

36:05.843 --> 36:08.104
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I appreciate it.

36:08.645 --> 36:10.506
[SPEAKER_00]: He's always throwing us.

36:11.286 --> 36:12.167
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm trying.

36:12.667 --> 36:18.310
[SPEAKER_04]: The Maurice, Maurice, rocket Richard trophy is awarded annually to the NHL's top goal score during the regular season.

36:18.950 --> 36:24.673
[SPEAKER_04]: It was introduced in the nineteen eighty nine ninety nine ninety eight ninety nine season and named after Maurice, rocket Richard.

36:25.298 --> 36:32.821
[SPEAKER_04]: legendary Montreal Canadians forward who was the first player in NHL history to score fifty goals and fifty games and the first to reach five hundred career goals.

36:34.082 --> 36:34.842
[SPEAKER_01]: So nice.

36:35.302 --> 36:38.644
[SPEAKER_01]: Didn't hold in that one point as a blue fifteen and fifty somebody did.

36:38.864 --> 36:39.484
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, I'm sure.

36:39.504 --> 36:39.584
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

36:39.604 --> 36:41.605
[SPEAKER_01]: There's a season a lot better now.

36:41.725 --> 36:45.266
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, hold for like over like eighty six goals.

36:45.867 --> 36:47.087
[SPEAKER_02]: Right, but the fifty and fifty.

36:47.607 --> 36:50.849
[SPEAKER_04]: I imagine maybe which question to me like I

36:52.062 --> 36:56.044
[SPEAKER_04]: I thought that that would have been a goal for a long time, but it just started in the ninety eight ninety nine season.

36:56.104 --> 36:59.485
[SPEAKER_04]: No, so which beg me to ask the question like what did they do that before that?

36:59.525 --> 37:01.426
[SPEAKER_04]: They didn't have a trophy for the most goal score.

37:01.466 --> 37:06.088
[SPEAKER_04]: They just had a trophy to our raw trophy, which was point scored.

37:06.128 --> 37:07.949
[SPEAKER_04]: So goals and assists in the regular season.

37:07.969 --> 37:09.990
[SPEAKER_04]: And then that's been going on since forty seven forty eight.

37:10.150 --> 37:11.250
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

37:11.710 --> 37:15.352
[SPEAKER_04]: There was no official goal score trophy until ninety eight ninety nine season.

37:15.932 --> 37:16.473
[SPEAKER_04]: Just points.

37:17.633 --> 37:18.313
[SPEAKER_04]: Learning that's fun.

37:20.453 --> 37:22.573
[SPEAKER_04]: All right, I will accept two answers for this question.

37:24.274 --> 37:29.475
[SPEAKER_04]: Number ten, what is the name of the machine that cleans the ice during the animations of hockey games?

37:33.136 --> 37:39.517
[SPEAKER_04]: I did not want to accept two answers, but I talk myself into it because I'll explain later.

37:39.557 --> 37:42.818
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I'm anxious to hear the other answer.

37:42.878 --> 37:44.238
[SPEAKER_01]: I have one on lockdown here.

37:45.698 --> 37:46.419
[SPEAKER_04]: I think most do.

37:48.901 --> 37:49.722
[SPEAKER_02]: Everybody got an answer down.

37:50.082 --> 37:56.568
[SPEAKER_02]: I wonder is it because one is the brand name and one is the actual name of the device.

37:56.588 --> 38:00.211
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, it's a good team-tip situation going here.

38:00.632 --> 38:02.854
[SPEAKER_01]: Could be what it is, you know, situation.

38:03.394 --> 38:03.935
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

38:03.955 --> 38:04.655
[SPEAKER_04]: Go ahead and reveal guys.

38:04.675 --> 38:05.196
[SPEAKER_04]: There we go.

38:05.616 --> 38:10.000
[SPEAKER_04]: We got Sam Boni all the way around all the way around and I will accept Sam Boni.

38:11.121 --> 38:12.823
[SPEAKER_04]: The correct answer is an ice resurfacer.

38:13.863 --> 38:20.326
[SPEAKER_04]: But a majority of people call it a Zamboni and Zamboni as a brand name of a nice resurfacer, which is most commonly known.

38:20.786 --> 38:21.827
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I didn't know that.

38:22.347 --> 38:26.369
[SPEAKER_00]: What a very specific, like, it explains what it does.

38:26.389 --> 38:26.549
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

38:26.929 --> 38:27.109
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

38:27.469 --> 38:28.469
[SPEAKER_01]: Ice resurfacer.

38:28.649 --> 38:31.831
[SPEAKER_01]: What is the second most popular brand of ice resurfacer?

38:32.211 --> 38:33.612
[SPEAKER_01]: You have to be Canadian to know that.

38:37.845 --> 38:39.526
[SPEAKER_04]: That was that was ten questions guys.

38:39.546 --> 38:40.126
[SPEAKER_04]: What do we have?

38:40.146 --> 38:42.627
[SPEAKER_04]: This is a very very highly scored.

38:42.667 --> 38:42.888
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.

38:42.908 --> 38:44.268
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, it's not just a perfect game.

38:44.288 --> 38:45.669
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, if he would have missed

39:04.328 --> 39:06.549
[SPEAKER_01]: One of the regular questions he would not be getting the perfect.

39:06.569 --> 39:07.030
[SPEAKER_01]: That's true.

39:07.250 --> 39:08.911
[SPEAKER_01]: But this is, you know, I don't know.

39:09.351 --> 39:10.752
[SPEAKER_01]: You know, I get the super perfect game.

39:10.792 --> 39:14.034
[SPEAKER_00]: Beyond the perfect game earlier when I miss the bonus point.

39:14.294 --> 39:14.914
[SPEAKER_01]: Beyond perfect.

39:14.995 --> 39:15.995
[SPEAKER_01]: When you miss the bonus.

39:16.055 --> 39:16.335
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

39:16.395 --> 39:17.516
[SPEAKER_01]: You could miss the bonus.

39:17.636 --> 39:18.297
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

39:18.357 --> 39:20.438
[SPEAKER_00]: You could miss regular questions.

39:20.838 --> 39:21.078
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

39:21.458 --> 39:22.139
[SPEAKER_04]: Beyond perfect.

39:22.219 --> 39:23.380
[SPEAKER_04]: Congratulations.

39:23.420 --> 39:24.240
[SPEAKER_02]: Good job.

39:24.440 --> 39:24.720
[SPEAKER_04]: Good job.

39:24.760 --> 39:25.381
[SPEAKER_04]: Dr. Ice.

39:26.081 --> 39:27.262
[SPEAKER_00]: Good job.

39:27.342 --> 39:29.703
[SPEAKER_00]: No way I get there without the plus or minus three though.

39:30.244 --> 39:30.684
[SPEAKER_01]: That's true.

39:30.944 --> 39:31.845
[SPEAKER_00]: That's true.

39:31.885 --> 39:32.405
[SPEAKER_00]: Nice and lean.

39:32.425 --> 39:33.906
[SPEAKER_00]: Great question, but it's very tough one.

39:34.758 --> 39:36.119
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I against the leeway.

39:36.560 --> 39:36.760
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

39:37.601 --> 39:37.821
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

39:38.302 --> 39:38.982
[SPEAKER_01]: That's the leeway.

39:39.323 --> 39:40.003
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

39:40.043 --> 39:40.704
[SPEAKER_01]: Nice work, brother.

39:41.405 --> 39:41.585
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

39:41.925 --> 39:48.071
[SPEAKER_04]: So speaking of hockey, do you guys does anyone have a favorite hockey team?

39:48.892 --> 39:49.532
[SPEAKER_04]: Sans St.

39:49.572 --> 39:50.954
[SPEAKER_04]: Louis blues because that's where we live.

39:51.454 --> 39:53.456
[SPEAKER_04]: And I know a lot of we don't have a huge hockey fans.

39:53.476 --> 39:54.637
[SPEAKER_04]: We got two good hockey fans.

39:55.498 --> 39:58.443
[SPEAKER_04]: or a specific hockey moment, Sean St.

39:58.463 --> 39:59.524
[SPEAKER_04]: Louis blues winning in nineteen.

39:59.945 --> 40:00.225
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

40:00.846 --> 40:02.008
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't think I have a moment.

40:02.068 --> 40:02.509
[SPEAKER_02]: That was a kid.

40:02.549 --> 40:06.595
[SPEAKER_02]: I was a San Jose shark fan when they first, you know, when they first, uh, and I'm good.

40:06.635 --> 40:07.336
[SPEAKER_02]: No, not the man I'm good.

40:07.376 --> 40:07.897
[SPEAKER_02]: Got the ducks.

40:08.017 --> 40:08.257
[SPEAKER_02]: No.

40:08.337 --> 40:09.779
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, like the islanders for a while.

40:10.600 --> 40:30.596
[SPEAKER_03]: my boss he already carry fantastic okay one three cups in the early eighties you're fantastic team okay my boss is one of my favorites I think the one four in a row at one point didn't it yeah maybe was four I'm sorry yeah but Mike boss he was just I love my boss yeah everything heard that name before yeah I mean he was yeah when the

40:31.357 --> 40:39.389
[SPEAKER_00]: I mean, I know the blues beat the Bruins in nineteen, but when I'm gonna say middle school in high school at a cam Neely poster in my room.

40:39.530 --> 40:39.730
[SPEAKER_00]: Nice.

40:40.030 --> 40:42.114
[SPEAKER_00]: So we played for the the Bruins.

40:42.735 --> 40:44.137
[SPEAKER_00]: So I wasn't really a Bruins fan.

40:44.157 --> 40:45.799
[SPEAKER_00]: I don't even know how I came to

40:46.400 --> 41:08.502
[SPEAKER_00]: like the guy is a hockey player maybe just from watching hockey no same reason why I don't exactly know why I was a marino fan we don't live near Miami right watching football yeah you know you're at that age where it doesn't matter you're your sports fan you like this guy doesn't matter sure teamy plays for so anyway came nearly in the the Bruins in the late eighties early nineties

41:08.842 --> 41:10.603
[SPEAKER_04]: I always like to, I always like Mario Lemue.

41:10.803 --> 41:11.384
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't like him.

41:11.444 --> 41:12.464
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, you're in a jogger.

41:12.484 --> 41:13.765
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, yeah.

41:13.825 --> 41:16.206
[SPEAKER_04]: So I didn't really care about the pen.

41:16.286 --> 41:24.531
[SPEAKER_04]: The penguins at the time, but yeah, Lemue just, I think it was just watching sports and highlights and seeing him a bunch, just turned me on to him.

41:24.931 --> 41:29.294
[SPEAKER_04]: But when my limited hockey knowledge, that was the gist of it.

41:29.494 --> 41:29.714
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

41:29.774 --> 41:30.795
[SPEAKER_00]: They were really good in them.

41:31.575 --> 41:32.416
[SPEAKER_00]: May of nineties.

41:32.676 --> 41:32.896
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

41:33.197 --> 41:41.844
[SPEAKER_01]: So when the sharks came on much to next point, you know, they were teal and teal was a hot color there in the early nineties when they became an expanded team.

41:41.884 --> 41:44.086
[SPEAKER_01]: So I Charlie Hornets some of there.

41:44.126 --> 41:44.286
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

41:44.306 --> 41:44.406
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

41:44.426 --> 41:44.506
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

41:44.606 --> 41:46.408
[SPEAKER_03]: Another time to strike myself there.

41:46.448 --> 41:47.569
[SPEAKER_03]: Look, I'm only very curious.

41:47.669 --> 41:48.310
[SPEAKER_03]: I said Islanders.

41:48.350 --> 41:49.030
[SPEAKER_03]: Now here's the evidence.

41:49.090 --> 41:49.411
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, okay.

41:49.491 --> 41:49.791
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

41:51.432 --> 41:59.839
[SPEAKER_01]: And then I remember kind of paying attention to the Colorado ambulance ambulance blank.

42:00.199 --> 42:01.981
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm a huge hockey fan as you can tell.

42:02.441 --> 42:05.003
[SPEAKER_01]: But you know, the Peter Forzburg and Patrick Waw era.

42:05.063 --> 42:06.304
[SPEAKER_01]: They had a bunch of superstars.

42:06.324 --> 42:08.926
[SPEAKER_01]: They had a nice big run and ran the league for a while.

42:09.046 --> 42:09.987
[SPEAKER_01]: Hey, the big hockey fan.

42:10.007 --> 42:11.528
[SPEAKER_01]: I always really liked hockey video games.

42:17.646 --> 42:23.168
[SPEAKER_01]: Those are super fun, which is why they're still inside and out, but it's a steal.

42:23.748 --> 42:26.489
[SPEAKER_01]: More the EA version, the more simulation it's supposed to be.

42:26.509 --> 42:27.669
[SPEAKER_02]: Probably favorite sport to watch live.

42:27.689 --> 42:29.230
[SPEAKER_01]: Old Nintendo live.

42:29.290 --> 42:29.590
[SPEAKER_01]: No doubt.

42:29.610 --> 42:30.430
[SPEAKER_01]: I agree with that.

42:30.450 --> 42:32.771
[SPEAKER_04]: I saw minor league hockey game years ago in college and it's just as fun.

42:32.791 --> 42:33.131
[SPEAKER_04]: But really.

42:33.171 --> 42:33.311
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

42:40.813 --> 42:47.074
[SPEAKER_00]: It's kind of like, you know, you get that minor league baseball kind of vibe when you go to one of those kind of similar, but, you know, just pocket game.

42:47.154 --> 42:49.235
[SPEAKER_01]: Anybody ever sat right like right on the glass?

42:49.595 --> 42:49.875
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

42:49.955 --> 42:50.535
[SPEAKER_01]: Nope.

42:50.595 --> 42:51.215
[SPEAKER_01]: I did one time.

42:51.235 --> 42:53.035
[SPEAKER_03]: It's the one that's being the blues run.

42:53.215 --> 42:55.356
[SPEAKER_01]: It's a different perspective on it at all.

42:55.556 --> 42:57.656
[SPEAKER_01]: I mean, being right there.

42:58.116 --> 43:00.917
[SPEAKER_03]: My dad and I, we were sitting right by the penalty box.

43:01.417 --> 43:03.417
[SPEAKER_03]: So like, we had to stand up to let the refs on the ice.

43:03.837 --> 43:04.477
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, that's wow.

43:04.777 --> 43:07.158
[SPEAKER_03]: And so like the glass literally the dividers right.

43:08.058 --> 43:08.838
[SPEAKER_03]: But my seat.

43:09.058 --> 43:12.180
[SPEAKER_03]: So like I got to see the interactions between the ruffs and the players.

43:12.920 --> 43:16.021
[SPEAKER_03]: Stair call makes it really hard.

43:16.441 --> 43:18.802
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, like my favorite kind of words being said.

43:18.822 --> 43:20.402
[SPEAKER_03]: One of the best hockey memories is his friend.

43:20.482 --> 43:21.323
[SPEAKER_03]: I remember the phone me.

43:21.503 --> 43:25.324
[SPEAKER_03]: Braden Shen was arguing with the ruff and the ruff turned around and he said something.

43:25.944 --> 43:27.205
[SPEAKER_03]: And he turned around and I was like, I heard that.

43:27.385 --> 43:29.005
[SPEAKER_03]: It like, Shen looked over me and smiled.

43:29.346 --> 43:31.786
[SPEAKER_03]: It was like, I can't say what he said.

43:32.327 --> 43:33.167
[SPEAKER_03]: But it was hilarious.

43:33.207 --> 43:34.607
[SPEAKER_03]: He just said it means like, yeah.

43:34.968 --> 43:35.128
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

43:35.168 --> 43:35.628
[SPEAKER_01]: I said that.

43:35.648 --> 43:35.768
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

43:36.965 --> 43:42.449
[SPEAKER_01]: I enjoy going to a game without ever even knowing any of the teams playing where the, you know, the importance of it.

43:42.769 --> 43:43.790
[SPEAKER_01]: I agree with you completely.

43:44.030 --> 43:44.250
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah.

43:44.390 --> 43:44.790
[SPEAKER_00]: It's awesome.

43:44.851 --> 43:47.673
[SPEAKER_00]: It's like with all, at least for me, obviously, I wouldn't know them short.

43:47.713 --> 43:48.273
[SPEAKER_00]: We joke about it.

43:48.973 --> 43:54.337
[SPEAKER_00]: But even if you're not short, when you get up next to professional athlete, you're just in awe about how big they are.

43:54.918 --> 43:59.961
[SPEAKER_00]: And with hockey when they're on skates and you're sitting down there and I said, well, they just look like they're all seven, too.

44:00.041 --> 44:00.802
[SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, yeah.

44:00.822 --> 44:02.563
[SPEAKER_00]: They're just big guys.

44:03.101 --> 44:04.842
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, congratulations, Dr. Rice.

44:04.862 --> 44:06.262
[SPEAKER_01]: Dr. Rice.

44:06.302 --> 44:06.862
[SPEAKER_01]: Dr. Rice.

44:07.303 --> 44:08.783
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you, Kelly, for writing that trivia.

44:08.823 --> 44:09.323
[SPEAKER_01]: That was fun.

44:09.503 --> 44:10.724
[SPEAKER_01]: We always like sports topics.

44:10.984 --> 44:13.985
[SPEAKER_00]: Yep, and for listeners, he's still using a legal pad to do.

44:14.045 --> 44:15.546
[SPEAKER_00]: It's a paper.

44:15.786 --> 44:16.406
[SPEAKER_00]: It's a paper.

44:16.426 --> 44:17.066
[SPEAKER_00]: Not like it.

44:17.086 --> 44:18.046
[SPEAKER_00]: It's a forgotten art.

44:18.287 --> 44:18.427
[SPEAKER_00]: Yep.

44:19.723 --> 44:23.785
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, guys, that's gonna do it for this episode of the Ultimate Trivia podcast.

44:24.186 --> 44:25.086
[SPEAKER_01]: Thanks for tuning in.

44:25.486 --> 44:29.769
[SPEAKER_01]: Don't forget to subscribe and drop a knee mount or leave us a review.

44:30.129 --> 44:32.590
[SPEAKER_01]: We'll see you next time with more trivia and more fun.

44:33.070 --> 44:37.333
[SPEAKER_01]: Until then, keep your brain sharp and those bellies laughing.