05-27-2023, 02:16 AM
CASCADIA JOINS NEW USA, DAKOTA IN TOP FLIGHT
They've done it! Cascadia has clawed its way up the ranks to join fellow former Old United States nations the New United States and Dakota in the championship proper, sealing the deal with a win over Austro-Bavaria to join Ural-Altai (the only team to actually beat them) in promotion. Said Pavel Datsyuk, "the talent level in Div I this year is comparable even to some past World Championships proper! We've seen more and more NHLers come from the six nations contained within the division - yes, even Hungary, think of Szekeres and Szabo - and the pro game really is growing.
Coming into the final day of Division I we also had a bit of a three-way scuffle to see who was headed in the other direction, but it ended up being Hungary dropping as they lost to Scotland on closing day and Novgorod managed to get a point out of their tilt against Ural-Altai as they took the larger ex-Russian nation to overtime before finally losing, Ural-Altai's second OTW (after the one against Cascadia) of the tournament. Scotland's Duncan Forbes got a surprise All-Star nod over the likes of Slava Voynov and Jaccob Slavin! Well, a surprise to anyone not watching the shot-block stats, anyway.
Final stats leaders:
G: Auston Matthews (CSC) - 8
A: Yevgeni Malkin (UAL) - 7
P: Matthews - 12
+/-: Malkin, Andrey Svechnikov, and Valeriy Nichushkin (all UAL) - +9
PIM: Bencze Stipsicz (HUN) - 12
Defence G: 5 defencemen - 2
Defence A: Jaccob Slavin (CSC) - 6
Defence P: Slavin - 7
Defence +/-: Nikita Nesterov, Vyacheslav Voynov (both UAL), Jaccob Slavin, and Brandon Carlo (both CSC) - +7
Forward PIM: Aonghas McIntyre (SCO) and Artyom Anisimov (NVG) - 10
GAA: Andrey Vasilevsky (UAL) - 2.00
Save %: Vasilevsky - .935
Shutouts: none. That's right. Not a single goalie had a shutout.
Awards:
MVP: Andrey Vasilevsky
Best Goalie: Andrey Vasilevsky
Best Defenceman: Brandon Carlo (CSC)
Most Sportsmanlike Player: Jason Robertson (CSC)
All-Stars:
G: Andrey Vasilevsky
D: Brandon Carlo (CSC)
D: Duncan Forbes (SCO)
LW: Andrey Svechnikov (UAL)
RW: Auston Matthews (CSC)
C: Yevgeni Malkin
Best Players From Each Team Per IIHF Directorate:
Ural-Altai - G Andrey Vasilevsky
Cascadia - C/RW Auston Matthews
Scotland - D Duncan Forbes
Austro-Bavaria - RW Dominik Bokk
Novgorod - D Ivan Provorov
Hungary - D Mátyás Szekeres
Ural-Altai and Cascadia promoted, Hungary relegated.
In Div II we saw a somewhat close tournament, but the X-factor was goaltending. You know where this is going - the New Confederacy ended up winning! While most of the teams (Belarus being a marked exception) had reliable goaltending, Lamar Bradshaw was a cut and a half above the rest and came out with goose eggs against Belarus, France, and Australia en route to the NewCons taking the group. But it's not like they didn't have offence either. The front line of Tevin Keane, Blake Coleman, and Ryan Hartman together with the defence of Seth and Caleb Jones really kicked butt, and they got extra depth later on with the arrival of Alex Gant. Still, they did only score fifteen goals over the five games, this year's low for a lower-level winning team. But this was a low-scoring group aside from Belarus getting shelled. The most trouble the NewCons had was from Japan and England, who in their match against each other went to a shootout - the hosts just managed to squeak by, 5-4, after several sudden-death rounds.
Belarus only had a single active NHLer on their entry list, and he was a no-show, being with the now Stanley Cup finalist New Jersey Devils. The main bright spot for them was a visibly frustrated Danila Klimovich, who scored all but one of Belarus' six goals over the five games. But he is probably better-known for suggesting that Belarus deserves better than what was given, and he's absolutely right. He has now been assigned to the Canucks' injury fill-in list.
France and Australia put on entertaining matches as well. Of particular note was Australia's brawny NHLer Warren Thomson, who both led Australia in goals and points, and the entire tournament in penalty minutes, and for once it wasn't because of a fight, but because of a unintentionally dangerous hit that got him a two-and-ten for hitting from behind on England's Brendan Perlini, who was a last-second turnaway as Thomson was trying to finish a check. Remorseful about the hit, he said he would've had no problem with a one game suspension. He only received a four-hundred Euro fine for recklessness, something which England took issue with at first but later said they were fine with after watching the footage.
He wasn't Australia's only good player as both Nathan Walker and Wehebe Darge played well, their second forward line looked good, and blueliners Jeffo Wylie and John Kennedy were solid. They were surprised by Japan in the first game, which set the tone of the tournament, but other than that they were about as good as expected, ending up third after a hard-fought overtime win over England. France did better than expected in play but still finished fifth.
Final stats leaders:
G: Tevin Keane (NCO) - 7
A: Seth Jones (NCO) - 6
P: Keane - 9
+/-: Seth and Caleb Jones (NCO) - +8
PIM: Warren Thomson (AUS) - 20
Defence G: Jefferson Wylie (AUS) and Alex Gant (NCO) - 2
Forward A: Kenzo Takahashi (JPN), Ryan Hartman (NCO), and Liam Kirk (ENG) - 5
Defence P: S. Jones - 7
Forward +/-: Keane - +7
Defence PIM: Dmitriy Kuzmin (BLR) - 16
GAA: Lamar Bradshaw (NCO) - 0.60
Save %: Bradshaw - .975
Shutouts: Bradshaw - 3
Awards:
MVP: Lamar Bradshaw
Best Goalie: Bradshaw
Best Defenceman: Seth Jones
Most Sportsmanlike Player: Yoshihiro Takahashi (JPN)
All-Stars:
G: Lamar Bradshaw
D: Seth Jones
D: Jefferson Wylie (AUS)
LW: Tevin Keane
RW: Kenzo Takahashi (JPN)
C: Ryan Hartman (NCO)
Best Players From Each Team Per IIHF Directorate:
New Confederacy - G Lamar Bradshaw
Japan - C/RW Kenzo Takahashi
Australia - RW Warren Thomson
England - C Liam Kirk
France - C/RW Stéphane da Costa
Belarus - C Danila Klimovich
New Confederacy promoted, Belarus regulated
Now to Division III, and the talk was of Yochanan Weisman being allowed to rep Israel-Palestine even though the Vancouver Canucks were in the Stanley Cup final, relieving Nir Tichon of his duties after two games. And he did not allow a single goal. But those first two matches weren't bad either, as the Mighty Men used their depth and offensive panache to score wins over hosts Italy and disappointing Korea. That first line of Sherbatov, David Levin, and Avi Milner was pure fire, to say nothing of their first defensive pair of Kalan and Abdul-Jabir. They also demonstrated good depth - their second line was really good as well - Ilya Spektor, Daniel Mazour, and Rahim Fadda - not the same one that plays for Jordan, remember! Weisman is actually headed back to Vancouver and will be on the bench alongside Artūrs Šilovs for at least Game 4, possibly even Game 3 (most people think he'll be too jet lagged, so he'll probably be in the press box instead!) but he was by far Israel-Palestine's MVP, and as you'll see in the awards, he wasn't just that!
The team that gave them the most trouble in spite of still getting goose-egged in the end was Croatia, led by big-shooting Pittsburgh Penguins defenceman Željko Miljanović. He didn't exactly endear himself to the hometown fans, though, because he belted their star defenceman Paolo Scibetta in open ice, leaving him a bit dazed. Forced to leave the game, he left Italy to lose that game 6-1. Another key player in that game was "The Croatian Sensation" Kevyn Mirković, who had a hatty in that game and spent most of the tournament challenging Sherbatov for top goalscorer honours. He didn't get nearly the same blowback as a frustrated Nikita Kucherov did for his actions against Italy, though. While Transcaucasia did end up winning that particular matchup, Kucherov got a one-game suspension for a two-handed slash on Italian (and HC Bolzano) forward Luca Frigo... not to mention several angry Italian fans wanting his head! Kuch was still his team's best player and helped the Transcaucasians defeat both the hometowners and Korea. The big surprise for most people is that New Zealand, in spite of goaltending deficit, did manage to beat Korea, due in large part to the grit of Kevin Biggs and Kahumanu Aranui keeping the shots on goal against the lowest in the group on average. They also kept it close against the third-place Transcaucasians in spite of Kucherov, and ended up beating Italy in overtime (5-4) on a brilliant goal by Justin Jovanovich!
Final stats leaders:
G: Eliezer Sherbatov (ISP) and Kevyn Mirković (CRO) - 11
A: David Levin (ISP) - 13
P: Sherbatov - 16
+/-: Sherbatov, Levin, and Avi Milner (ISP) - +18
PIM: Nikita Kucherov (TKK) - 33
Defence G: Ali Ishaq Abdul-Jabir (ISP) and Željko Miljanović (CRO) - 4
Defence A: Miljanović and Kevin Biggs (NZL) - 10
Defence P: Miljanović - 14
Defence +/-: Abdul-Jabir and Avi Kalan (ISP) - +15
Defence PIM: Park Jung-Woo (KOR) - 20 (all minors!)
GAA: Yochanan Weisman (ISP) - 0.00
Save %: Weisman - 1.000
Shutouts: Weisman - 3
Awards:
MVP: Yochanan Weisman (ISP)
Best Goalie: Weisman
Best Defenceman: Željko Miljanović (CRO)
Most Sportsmanlike Player: Eliezer Sherbatov (ISP)
All-Stars:
G: Yochanan Weisman
D: Željko Miljanović
D: Ali Ishaq Abdul-Jabir
LW: Eliezer Sherbatov
RW: Kevyn Mirković (CRO)
C: David Levin (ISP)
Best Players From Each Team Per IIHF Directorate:
Israel-Palestine: G Yochanan Weisman
Croatia: D Željko Miljanović
Transcaucasia: C/RW Nikita Kucherov
New Zealand: D Kevin Biggs
Italy: RW Enrico Tiraboschi
Korea: LW Kim Ki-Sung
Israel-Palestine promoted, Korea relegated.
FIRST MATCH IN NEWARK "BASICALLY DO OR DIE" - MACLEAN
With the Canucks having goose-egged New Jersey a second match in a row, winning 5-0 in a game that saw Dean Chapman turn a Gordie Howe hat trick after a scrap with Nolan Foote, scoring a goal and having two assists, Devils head coach John MacLean has said that the first game of the return back to New Jersey is "basically do or die."
"The Vancouver Canucks are unbeaten in the playoffs in the last four seasons when leading a series 3-0," MacLean said. "They don't rest on their laurels but are ruthlessly efficient in finishing off series. If anything, being up 3-0 almost puts them into an extra gear where they just want to finish the job and do it with oomph. We really need to smarten up when we go back to Newark."
Most pundits point to the physicality of Vancouver's whole defence corps as a major reason New Jersey hasn't been doing as well. Even without Kevin Biggs, one of three Canucks-system players who were in Division III (along with Yochanan Weisman and minor-leaguer Paolo Scibetta), the Canucks have had a major physical presence, with Dean Chapman, Artur Chingizov, Archer Freeman, and Lauri Lehtola being first, second, fourth, and sixth in the NHL in hits these playoffs, with New Jersey's best hitter, Dion Prince, coming in fifth. (Edmonton's ever-versatile Bronson McMahon was third.) They also protect their own, although Edgar Merk was injured by a suspect hit by Nolan Foote and took a Dean Chapman beating for it. The Canucks have called up Ryan Jimmy to replace Merk, who is day to day with a twisted ankle - the native of Greater Victoria plays a more smash-mouth game than Merk, being more similar to fellow BC Indigenous player TJ Billy than to Merk. Citing fatigue, Jack Rathbone will be replaced in the next match by Christian Wolanin and will arrive in Newark later. Everyone else is good to go.
It's expected that Yochanan Weisman and Kevin Biggs will be back in the lineup for Game 4 as they are flying directly to New York City rather than back to Vancouver first. Talk of Paolo Scibetta doing likewise was dashed when the big Italian stated that he was returning to his hometown of Bergamo to spend some time with family before returning to North America, as he and Bulgarian ECHL teammate Gordan Bogdanovič are both in the final five for ECHL Defenceman of the Year, even after the Alaska Aces were eliminated in the second round.
New Jersey had to make a last-minute callup to replace Foote as well as he suffered a Grade 0 concussion and is day to day.
They've done it! Cascadia has clawed its way up the ranks to join fellow former Old United States nations the New United States and Dakota in the championship proper, sealing the deal with a win over Austro-Bavaria to join Ural-Altai (the only team to actually beat them) in promotion. Said Pavel Datsyuk, "the talent level in Div I this year is comparable even to some past World Championships proper! We've seen more and more NHLers come from the six nations contained within the division - yes, even Hungary, think of Szekeres and Szabo - and the pro game really is growing.
Coming into the final day of Division I we also had a bit of a three-way scuffle to see who was headed in the other direction, but it ended up being Hungary dropping as they lost to Scotland on closing day and Novgorod managed to get a point out of their tilt against Ural-Altai as they took the larger ex-Russian nation to overtime before finally losing, Ural-Altai's second OTW (after the one against Cascadia) of the tournament. Scotland's Duncan Forbes got a surprise All-Star nod over the likes of Slava Voynov and Jaccob Slavin! Well, a surprise to anyone not watching the shot-block stats, anyway.
Final stats leaders:
G: Auston Matthews (CSC) - 8
A: Yevgeni Malkin (UAL) - 7
P: Matthews - 12
+/-: Malkin, Andrey Svechnikov, and Valeriy Nichushkin (all UAL) - +9
PIM: Bencze Stipsicz (HUN) - 12
Defence G: 5 defencemen - 2
Defence A: Jaccob Slavin (CSC) - 6
Defence P: Slavin - 7
Defence +/-: Nikita Nesterov, Vyacheslav Voynov (both UAL), Jaccob Slavin, and Brandon Carlo (both CSC) - +7
Forward PIM: Aonghas McIntyre (SCO) and Artyom Anisimov (NVG) - 10
GAA: Andrey Vasilevsky (UAL) - 2.00
Save %: Vasilevsky - .935
Shutouts: none. That's right. Not a single goalie had a shutout.
Awards:
MVP: Andrey Vasilevsky
Best Goalie: Andrey Vasilevsky
Best Defenceman: Brandon Carlo (CSC)
Most Sportsmanlike Player: Jason Robertson (CSC)
All-Stars:
G: Andrey Vasilevsky
D: Brandon Carlo (CSC)
D: Duncan Forbes (SCO)
LW: Andrey Svechnikov (UAL)
RW: Auston Matthews (CSC)
C: Yevgeni Malkin
Best Players From Each Team Per IIHF Directorate:
Ural-Altai - G Andrey Vasilevsky
Cascadia - C/RW Auston Matthews
Scotland - D Duncan Forbes
Austro-Bavaria - RW Dominik Bokk
Novgorod - D Ivan Provorov
Hungary - D Mátyás Szekeres
Ural-Altai and Cascadia promoted, Hungary relegated.
In Div II we saw a somewhat close tournament, but the X-factor was goaltending. You know where this is going - the New Confederacy ended up winning! While most of the teams (Belarus being a marked exception) had reliable goaltending, Lamar Bradshaw was a cut and a half above the rest and came out with goose eggs against Belarus, France, and Australia en route to the NewCons taking the group. But it's not like they didn't have offence either. The front line of Tevin Keane, Blake Coleman, and Ryan Hartman together with the defence of Seth and Caleb Jones really kicked butt, and they got extra depth later on with the arrival of Alex Gant. Still, they did only score fifteen goals over the five games, this year's low for a lower-level winning team. But this was a low-scoring group aside from Belarus getting shelled. The most trouble the NewCons had was from Japan and England, who in their match against each other went to a shootout - the hosts just managed to squeak by, 5-4, after several sudden-death rounds.
Belarus only had a single active NHLer on their entry list, and he was a no-show, being with the now Stanley Cup finalist New Jersey Devils. The main bright spot for them was a visibly frustrated Danila Klimovich, who scored all but one of Belarus' six goals over the five games. But he is probably better-known for suggesting that Belarus deserves better than what was given, and he's absolutely right. He has now been assigned to the Canucks' injury fill-in list.
France and Australia put on entertaining matches as well. Of particular note was Australia's brawny NHLer Warren Thomson, who both led Australia in goals and points, and the entire tournament in penalty minutes, and for once it wasn't because of a fight, but because of a unintentionally dangerous hit that got him a two-and-ten for hitting from behind on England's Brendan Perlini, who was a last-second turnaway as Thomson was trying to finish a check. Remorseful about the hit, he said he would've had no problem with a one game suspension. He only received a four-hundred Euro fine for recklessness, something which England took issue with at first but later said they were fine with after watching the footage.
He wasn't Australia's only good player as both Nathan Walker and Wehebe Darge played well, their second forward line looked good, and blueliners Jeffo Wylie and John Kennedy were solid. They were surprised by Japan in the first game, which set the tone of the tournament, but other than that they were about as good as expected, ending up third after a hard-fought overtime win over England. France did better than expected in play but still finished fifth.
Final stats leaders:
G: Tevin Keane (NCO) - 7
A: Seth Jones (NCO) - 6
P: Keane - 9
+/-: Seth and Caleb Jones (NCO) - +8
PIM: Warren Thomson (AUS) - 20
Defence G: Jefferson Wylie (AUS) and Alex Gant (NCO) - 2
Forward A: Kenzo Takahashi (JPN), Ryan Hartman (NCO), and Liam Kirk (ENG) - 5
Defence P: S. Jones - 7
Forward +/-: Keane - +7
Defence PIM: Dmitriy Kuzmin (BLR) - 16
GAA: Lamar Bradshaw (NCO) - 0.60
Save %: Bradshaw - .975
Shutouts: Bradshaw - 3
Awards:
MVP: Lamar Bradshaw
Best Goalie: Bradshaw
Best Defenceman: Seth Jones
Most Sportsmanlike Player: Yoshihiro Takahashi (JPN)
All-Stars:
G: Lamar Bradshaw
D: Seth Jones
D: Jefferson Wylie (AUS)
LW: Tevin Keane
RW: Kenzo Takahashi (JPN)
C: Ryan Hartman (NCO)
Best Players From Each Team Per IIHF Directorate:
New Confederacy - G Lamar Bradshaw
Japan - C/RW Kenzo Takahashi
Australia - RW Warren Thomson
England - C Liam Kirk
France - C/RW Stéphane da Costa
Belarus - C Danila Klimovich
New Confederacy promoted, Belarus regulated
Now to Division III, and the talk was of Yochanan Weisman being allowed to rep Israel-Palestine even though the Vancouver Canucks were in the Stanley Cup final, relieving Nir Tichon of his duties after two games. And he did not allow a single goal. But those first two matches weren't bad either, as the Mighty Men used their depth and offensive panache to score wins over hosts Italy and disappointing Korea. That first line of Sherbatov, David Levin, and Avi Milner was pure fire, to say nothing of their first defensive pair of Kalan and Abdul-Jabir. They also demonstrated good depth - their second line was really good as well - Ilya Spektor, Daniel Mazour, and Rahim Fadda - not the same one that plays for Jordan, remember! Weisman is actually headed back to Vancouver and will be on the bench alongside Artūrs Šilovs for at least Game 4, possibly even Game 3 (most people think he'll be too jet lagged, so he'll probably be in the press box instead!) but he was by far Israel-Palestine's MVP, and as you'll see in the awards, he wasn't just that!
The team that gave them the most trouble in spite of still getting goose-egged in the end was Croatia, led by big-shooting Pittsburgh Penguins defenceman Željko Miljanović. He didn't exactly endear himself to the hometown fans, though, because he belted their star defenceman Paolo Scibetta in open ice, leaving him a bit dazed. Forced to leave the game, he left Italy to lose that game 6-1. Another key player in that game was "The Croatian Sensation" Kevyn Mirković, who had a hatty in that game and spent most of the tournament challenging Sherbatov for top goalscorer honours. He didn't get nearly the same blowback as a frustrated Nikita Kucherov did for his actions against Italy, though. While Transcaucasia did end up winning that particular matchup, Kucherov got a one-game suspension for a two-handed slash on Italian (and HC Bolzano) forward Luca Frigo... not to mention several angry Italian fans wanting his head! Kuch was still his team's best player and helped the Transcaucasians defeat both the hometowners and Korea. The big surprise for most people is that New Zealand, in spite of goaltending deficit, did manage to beat Korea, due in large part to the grit of Kevin Biggs and Kahumanu Aranui keeping the shots on goal against the lowest in the group on average. They also kept it close against the third-place Transcaucasians in spite of Kucherov, and ended up beating Italy in overtime (5-4) on a brilliant goal by Justin Jovanovich!
Final stats leaders:
G: Eliezer Sherbatov (ISP) and Kevyn Mirković (CRO) - 11
A: David Levin (ISP) - 13
P: Sherbatov - 16
+/-: Sherbatov, Levin, and Avi Milner (ISP) - +18
PIM: Nikita Kucherov (TKK) - 33
Defence G: Ali Ishaq Abdul-Jabir (ISP) and Željko Miljanović (CRO) - 4
Defence A: Miljanović and Kevin Biggs (NZL) - 10
Defence P: Miljanović - 14
Defence +/-: Abdul-Jabir and Avi Kalan (ISP) - +15
Defence PIM: Park Jung-Woo (KOR) - 20 (all minors!)
GAA: Yochanan Weisman (ISP) - 0.00
Save %: Weisman - 1.000
Shutouts: Weisman - 3
Awards:
MVP: Yochanan Weisman (ISP)
Best Goalie: Weisman
Best Defenceman: Željko Miljanović (CRO)
Most Sportsmanlike Player: Eliezer Sherbatov (ISP)
All-Stars:
G: Yochanan Weisman
D: Željko Miljanović
D: Ali Ishaq Abdul-Jabir
LW: Eliezer Sherbatov
RW: Kevyn Mirković (CRO)
C: David Levin (ISP)
Best Players From Each Team Per IIHF Directorate:
Israel-Palestine: G Yochanan Weisman
Croatia: D Željko Miljanović
Transcaucasia: C/RW Nikita Kucherov
New Zealand: D Kevin Biggs
Italy: RW Enrico Tiraboschi
Korea: LW Kim Ki-Sung
Israel-Palestine promoted, Korea relegated.
FIRST MATCH IN NEWARK "BASICALLY DO OR DIE" - MACLEAN
With the Canucks having goose-egged New Jersey a second match in a row, winning 5-0 in a game that saw Dean Chapman turn a Gordie Howe hat trick after a scrap with Nolan Foote, scoring a goal and having two assists, Devils head coach John MacLean has said that the first game of the return back to New Jersey is "basically do or die."
"The Vancouver Canucks are unbeaten in the playoffs in the last four seasons when leading a series 3-0," MacLean said. "They don't rest on their laurels but are ruthlessly efficient in finishing off series. If anything, being up 3-0 almost puts them into an extra gear where they just want to finish the job and do it with oomph. We really need to smarten up when we go back to Newark."
Most pundits point to the physicality of Vancouver's whole defence corps as a major reason New Jersey hasn't been doing as well. Even without Kevin Biggs, one of three Canucks-system players who were in Division III (along with Yochanan Weisman and minor-leaguer Paolo Scibetta), the Canucks have had a major physical presence, with Dean Chapman, Artur Chingizov, Archer Freeman, and Lauri Lehtola being first, second, fourth, and sixth in the NHL in hits these playoffs, with New Jersey's best hitter, Dion Prince, coming in fifth. (Edmonton's ever-versatile Bronson McMahon was third.) They also protect their own, although Edgar Merk was injured by a suspect hit by Nolan Foote and took a Dean Chapman beating for it. The Canucks have called up Ryan Jimmy to replace Merk, who is day to day with a twisted ankle - the native of Greater Victoria plays a more smash-mouth game than Merk, being more similar to fellow BC Indigenous player TJ Billy than to Merk. Citing fatigue, Jack Rathbone will be replaced in the next match by Christian Wolanin and will arrive in Newark later. Everyone else is good to go.
It's expected that Yochanan Weisman and Kevin Biggs will be back in the lineup for Game 4 as they are flying directly to New York City rather than back to Vancouver first. Talk of Paolo Scibetta doing likewise was dashed when the big Italian stated that he was returning to his hometown of Bergamo to spend some time with family before returning to North America, as he and Bulgarian ECHL teammate Gordan Bogdanovič are both in the final five for ECHL Defenceman of the Year, even after the Alaska Aces were eliminated in the second round.
New Jersey had to make a last-minute callup to replace Foote as well as he suffered a Grade 0 concussion and is day to day.
Spammers Beware! I will destroy you by the POWAH of the JARK SIDE! ALL SPAMMERS WILL BE EXTERMINATED ON SIGHT.
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(06-11-2022, 10:13 PM)Kyng Wrote: I love how [Abacab] has a track with a section named "Lurker", when the album title itself looks like Lurker's attempt to spell "Abacus" or something .
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