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Duclair Talks “Black Ice” + What’s Going Wrong With Barracuda?



Anthony Duclair joins the San Jose Hockey Now Podcast!

But before we get to Duclair (1:04:33), who talks about his involvement with the “Black Ice” documentary, getting Joe Thornton to center him next year, and the Hockey Diversity Alliance/Evander Kane drama – Keegan (@half-wallhockey) and Sheng Peng talk about the biggest San Jose Sharks’ news of the week.

First, we got the latest Erik Karlsson trade rumors out of the way (2:30). We recorded this episode yesterday, so we didn’t talk about the Toronto Maple Leafs or Seattle Kraken’s now-confirmed interest in Karlsson.

Then, we drilled down on Martin Kaut’s accusations that a San Jose Barracuda coach tried to get him to fight in every game (8:36). It must be mentioned that the San Jose Sharks categorically deny Kaut’s claims.

Sheng talked with about a dozen league sources to get their opinion of Kaut’s claims and to investigate if there’s a deeper problem with the Barracuda.

Did the Barracuda try to coerce Kaut to fight every night (13:56)?

Sheng and Keegan agree with Kaut that there were Barracuda youngsters who were playing for themselves (23:19). Keegan felt it was team that lacked discipline, and Sheng adds that “selfish” young players are normal at the AHL level.

Sheng also thinks there was validity to Kaut’s problem with the Sharks’ contract offer, but it speaks to a larger question with how Mike Grier and Doug Wilson appear to be operating differently (28:14). What do Jeffrey Viel, Jonah Gadjovich, Ryan Carpenter, Andrew Agozzino, Evgeny Svechnikov, and Jacob Peterson have to do with all this?

Through it all, Kaut still wants to return to the NHL, and translated from the original Czech interview with Robert Rampa, had an interesting quote about his new HC Dynamo Pardubice head coach, former San Jose Sharks draft pick Vaclav Varada (37:30).

Moving beyond the Kaut story, Sheng digs into how all of the Cuda veterans left this off-season, and if that’s a red flag for a “culture” problem within the organization (39:23). Sheng talked to top AHL reporter Patrick Williams of NHL and AHL.com on his perception about what’s going on with the Barracuda.

Sheng expanded on what he’s heard about the departures of Agozzino (43:05), Montana Onyebuchi (45:06), and Viel (46:35).

Sheng then talked about JD Young’s recent Locked On Sharks podcast about the Barracuda’s culture problem (50:02).

Sheng talked about AHL norms with meals (51:37) and seating wives and girlfriends (53:58), which were issues brought up in JD’s podcast – and how it doesn’t appear that the Cuda have been doing anything unusual in those areas.

There was one random Joe Will complaint that Sheng got from his sources (56:45).

Besides Kaut’s fighting allegations, however, Sheng doesn’t think there’s a significant culture problem with the Barracuda (59:10). They aren’t necessarily considered a first-class AHL organization, and there are areas where they can improve, but they’re not necessarily dysfunctional or problematic either.

“The Barracuda are just another AHL organization.”

Now, Anthony Duclair (1:04:33)!

Duclair talks about “Black Ice”, a hockey documentary that details the gut-wrenching racism that Duclair and his peers faced in youth hockey (1:05:13).

“Black Ice”, produced by LeBron James and Drake, is out now, exclusively at AMC Theatres – it’s also the story of the pre-20th century Colored Hockey League, and its many innovations.

Sheng discusses his reaction to the documentary.

Duclair talks about the first time that he was subjected to racist remarks from another youth team’s parents – he was just nine or 10! – and how often he had to deal with that as a kid (1:07:15).

Duclair shares the message from his parents that got him through the racism (1:11:45).

Through his Duclair Foundation, Anthony held youth hockey camps in Florida and Montreal this summer, and he talked about how racism is still a real thing for kids playing today (1:13:10).

Keegan asks Duclair if he’s going to try to get Joe Thornton to center him next year. Duclair revealed that throughout the Florida Panthers’ Stanley Cup Final run, Thornton would frequently FaceTime with his ex-Panthers teammates (1:16:00).

Duclair shares his thoughts about Givani Smith (1:18:39), who’s coming with him from Florida.

He also touches on his chat with head coach David Quinn and GM Mike Grier after the trade (1:19:30) – Duclair revealed what he told them was his goal this season (1:20:25).

Duclair added his thoughts about the recent Evander Kane/Hockey Diversity Alliance Twitter spat (1:20:48).

And…is Duclair Barbie or Oppenheimer (1:23:48)?

Listen to the San Jose Hockey Now Podcast — it’s a new link — on Apple Podcasts and Spotify and Google Podcasts.

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6 Comments

  1. Thanks Sheng and Keegan for some real quality content and depth analysis of the Sharks and their farm team, this was really good due to the lack of hockey games and off season doldrums. I think that the results of Sharks development efforts in last 10 years speak for themselves, and due to the poor results, there must be changes to their development staff and medical advisors, and farm team coaches. The Sharks have not been developing their own home grown talent into proper NHL regulars in these years but struggling to find their team identity and giving up on each other. Keep digging up the dirt and cleaning off the plate so we can see when the Sharks strike out with prospects/trades/waivers, and when they really do their job right.

    Keep coming with more new faces interviews and study of the Sharks prospect pool and rumours of changes. An interview with coach David Quinn would be cool also if you could get him in an offseason, informal talk about the team and its future. Where are they going? What was his final analysis of last season and what it taught him for next season? Thanks for filling in the void of summerless hockey in Canada and the world.

  2. You guys are very nice, but I think you have to be more demanding of the players and management. This is a sphere of life where you have to be in the 99.9 percentile of your peers, or you don't belong. Being average is actually failure in this field.

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