The wildest part about this video is that it’s a Hockey Night in Canada broadcast. A broadcast exclusively for primetime Saturday night games or the playoffs. Sid’s return was such a big deal up here they called an audible and broadcasted this game on a Monday in November. Just incase you didn’t know how big Crosby is in Canada, now you do.
Games like this never leave you, and games like this make the sport worth waiting for. At some point in the future the players will take again to the ice to indulge their passion and it will be a Great Day For Hockey. Also, Asham waiting on the bench to shake Sid's hand...what a man. It's the tiny moment like that that makes you tear up and understand just what a tremendous sport we're fans of. The lockout sucks, but videos like this remind us of all the good we've got to look forward to.
was at this match. lucky irishman on holiday and manged to get 2x tickets. still watch these highlights after being over in 2011 and still can remember it like it was yesterday
Is there an MP3 of the song they used when they came out? anyway you can hear it now is if, your outside the arena or inside right before they come out
@@him8012 I know it is. But the team never released the song online and the only place you hear it now is outside the arena before you come in. The song gets cut off for Seak and Destroy now
@@jsmithers. how do you know? Has he ever talked about this? Could it be that he just does the sign of the cross because of how superstitious he is? I’m genuinely curious about this thanks
@@hlz191 He wears a cross necklace and grew up in a catholic family. Do I know for sure he 100% believes Jesus is the son of god in his own thoughts? No. But it's pretty evident that he's catholic.
@@jsmithers. true but why catholic and not Protestant? Do we know Crosby’s ethnicity btw? Is he Scottish? Has he ever talked about his religion before? Thanks for the response btw
@@hlz191 Because wearing a cross necklace and making the sign of the cross like that is a catholic thing, not a protestant or other Christian denomination tradition.