What other sports did you play as a kid?
“Football in middle school and high school, but I played baseball the whole way growing up. I didn’t play basketball because I was always short.”
Who’s the fastest player you’ve ever gone up against?
“Michael Grabner. He sticks out in my mind.”
Who’s the last player you want coming in on a breakaway against you?
“I don’t care. I don’t want to see anyone coming in on a breakaway. Some of the guys who wouldn’t traditionally get breakaways can be the toughest to stop.”
If you could vacation anywhere, where would you go?
“There’s lots of different places I haven’t seen that I’d like to go to. I went to the Bahamas once and really enjoyed it there. I’d like to see Australia and some part of South America at some point, too.”
If your luggage was lost, what would you miss the most?
“Probably my camera.”
Do you have any pets?
“Two dogs named ‘Griffin’ and ‘Karmen,’ and a cat named ‘Ruby.’”
What was the worst course you had to take in school?
“I can’t remember the name of the class, but dead women’s poetry.”
If forced to do karaoke, what song would you pick?
“‘Thunder Rolls’ by Garth Brooks.”
If you could be any fictional character, who would you choose?
“There’s lots of superheroes I used to enjoy, but Superman has everything.”
FAVORITES
Movie: “Army of Darkness”
TV show: “Gold Rush”
Band/artist: Garth Brooks
Book: “Power of One” by Bryce Courtenay
NHL player growing up: Steve Yzerman
Restaurant: Border Cafe
Store: The Apple Store
Road city: Toronto
EQUIPMENT
Skates: Bauer
Blocker: Reebok
Stick: Reebok
Mask: Sportsmask
He doesn’t like running. He doesn’t swear by lifting weights. He eats cheeseburgers, and at 37—almost twice the age of the Bruins’ top goal scorer, 19-year-old Tyler Seguin—Tim Thomas is the best goalie in the NHL.

i didn’t do any write-ins because that would just be a waste of a vote. at this point, i’m just tryna get some bruins in there.
LETS GO TIMMY.
As we say farewell to 2011 and hello to 2012, now is as good a time as any to look back and see which players were at the top of their game during 2011.
After careful consideration, these are the three forwards, two defensemen and goaltender who excelled during 2011 calendar year in the regular season.
FORWARDS
Corey Perry, Anaheim Ducks: He had 30 goals in his final 41 games of the 20-11 season, propelling the Ducks into the Stanley Cup Playoffs and himself to a Hart Trophy. His first half of this season hasn’t matched his sizzling finish to last season, but that’s asking a lot. During 2011, few have posted anything close to what Perry has in Anaheim.
2011 numbers: 76 games, 44 goals, 40 assists, 84 points, minus-10
Daniel Sedin, Vancouver Canucks: He seemed like a sure bet to follow brother Henrik’s Hart Trophy campaign of 2009-10 with his own last year before Corey Perry’s second-half surge. But this Sedin had his own big second half and has continued it this season. After closing last season with 57 points in 46 games, he’s picked up right where he left off this season.
2011 numbers: 82 games, 36 goals, 62 assists, 98 points, plus-30
Thomas Vanek, Buffalo Sabres: His name is rarely bandied about in discussion about the game’s best power forwards, but his numbers always do the talking. He has a pair of 40-goal seasons, as well as a pair of 30-goal seasons under his belt, and he’s on his way to at least another 30 goals this season. We’re only counting the regular season here, but he also had 5 goals in the Sabres’ seven-round playoff loss to the Flyers in April.
2011 numbers: 82 games, 37 goals, 49 assists, 86 points, plus-14
DEFENSEMEN
Zdeno Chara, Boston Bruins: A switch seemingly flipped for Chara during 2011. He had 10 goals and 20 assists in the final 45 games of last season and is still playing Norris Trophy-worthy hockey this season. If he keeps going at this rate, the Bruins have a great chance at winning a second straight Stanley Cup with a maniacal Chara hoisting the trophy over his bearded head once again.
2011 numbers: 77 games, 17 goals, 36 assists, 53 points, plus-38
Shea Weber, Nashville Predators: Perhaps the game’s best overall defenseman did most of his damage last season once January rolled around. He had 31 of his 48 points from that point and had a strong case to with the Norris Trophy. If he keeps things up this season, perhaps he’ll finally wrangle it away from perennial contender and usual winner Nicklas Lidstrom of the Red Wings.
2011 numbers: 79 games, 19 goals, 40 assists, 59 points, plus-26
GOALTENDER
Tim Thomas, Boston Bruins: The hardest part about picking Thomas as the best goaltender of this calendar year was computing his numbers, which are broken up across two seasons. Calculating goals-against average can be a pain. Coincidentally, pain is what Thomas inflicted on just about everyone on his way to a Stanley Cup and Vezina Trophy last season. So far in 2011-12, he’s exceeding his numbers from last season. There’s no one better right now.
2011 numbers: 33 wins, 2.07 GAA, .935 save percentage, 8 shutouts
Follow Dave Lozo on Twitter: @DaveLozo