Panthers' Krys Barch goes on terribly structured twitter rant
Florida Panthers forward Krys Barch pulled his tooth out in the penalty box on Saturday, and took to twitter to talk about... a bunch of stuff on Monday.
He decided to give his own point of view on the brawl that happened between the Philadelphia Flyers and Washington Capitals, as well as disclosing his child was having a bath which encouraged him to express his view.
Barch sent out twelve tweets starting with the event that sparked the twitter rant.
Just bathing the little man. Wife is tackling homework the the other men. Own personal vie of Flyer/Caps situation from a players point ...
— Krys Barch (@krysbarch) November 4, 2013
Barch went on to say the situation could happen to any team in the league and did not comment on the individuals on either team. He stressed this is a players point of view, not a writers. (We know, Krys.)
.... My stats from from man's experience not a writers pen. The player who lost the battle will think twice next time when the score is 3-0.
— Krys Barch (@krysbarch) November 4, 2013
.... When that player thinks twice the Flyers may get one, then two because the other team/player doesn't want to go where they went before.
— Krys Barch (@krysbarch) November 4, 2013
If you're already confused, so are we. What he's trying to say (we think) is you have to fight in order to keep the lead because if you don't watch your back the other team will sneak up on you and take the lead.
... You see when u sit their and have bled, sweat or felt the limits of the body and mind then u can sit at my table and talk. Not before ..
— Krys Barch (@krysbarch) November 4, 2013
Barch continues to get away from his first point which was the fight that happened and why it happened. He decided to move to the subject of the NHL becoming a boys game.
Ones with the pens have you ever felt that? My wife when she first met me asked what I did. I said play"Hockey", she said good a mans game!
— Krys Barch (@krysbarch) November 4, 2013
Why are we trying to turn it into a boys game! It does take a man not a boy to face those fears. Most haven't forgot about the fight since
— Krys Barch (@krysbarch) November 4, 2013
The caps/flyers situation happened for a reason both mental and physical. There is a mans thought process behind it!
— Krys Barch (@krysbarch) November 4, 2013
In the words of the player, not the writer, Krys Barch, if you take fighting, or brawling out of hockey it automatically becomes a boys game.
This has been the first edition of Translating Krys Barch's Tweets.